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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, London in the Sixties, by One of the Old
+Brigade
+
+
+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.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: London in the Sixties
+ with a few digressions
+
+
+Author: One of the Old Brigade
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 11, 2013 [eBook #44163]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LONDON IN THE SIXTIES***
+
+
+This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler
+
+ [Picture: Logo of Everett & Co.]
+
+First Edition, June, 1908.
+Second ,, September, 1908.
+Third ,, March, 1909.
+Cheap ,, March, 1914.
+
+ London in
+ The Sixties
+
+
+ (WITH A FEW DIGRESSIONS)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By
+ ONE OF THE OLD BRIGADE
+
+London:
+EVERETT & CO. LTD.
+42 ESSEX STREET,
+STRAND, W.C.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER PAGE
+ I. 1860 1
+ II. THE TOWER 13
+ III. MOTT’S AND CREMORNE 25
+ IV. KATE HAMILTON’S AND LEICESTER SQUARE 37
+ V. THE NIGHT HOUSES OF THE HAYMARKET 48
+ VI. EVANS’S AND THE DIALS 61
+ VII. THE RATCLIFF HIGHWAY 73
+ VIII. THE BOOTHS ON EPSOM DOWNS 83
+ IX. RACING _par Excellence_ 94
+ X. THE EPIDEMIC OF CARDS 111
+ XI. THE COUP DE JARNAC 127
+ XII. THE PUBLIC HANGING OF THE PIRATES 130
+ XIII. THE HOSTELRIES OF THE SIXTIES 140
+ XIV. THE DRAMA (LEGITIMATE AND OTHERWISE) 151
+ XV. MOSTLY “OTHERWISE” (CONTINUED) 163
+ XVI. USURERS AND MILLIONAIRES 175
+ XVII. SOME CURIOUS FISH OF THE SIXTIES 182
+ XVIII. SPIRITUALISM AND REALISM 192
+ XIX. THE ROCK AND THE CAPE 205
+ XX. EASTWARD-HO! 222
+ XXI. THE GUILLOTINE AND MADAME RACHEL 232
+ XXII. REMINISCENCES OF THE PURPLE 243
+ XXIII. DHULEEP SINGH AND FIFTY YEARS AFTER 257
+ XXIV. THE LAST OF THE OLD BRIGADE 264
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+1860.
+
+
+LONDON in the sixties was so different from the London of to-day that,
+looking back through the long vista of years, one is astonished at the
+gradual changes—unnoticed as they proceed. Streets have been annihilated
+and transformed into boulevards; churches have been removed and flats
+substituted; night houses and comfortable taverns demolished and
+transformed into plate-glass abominations run by foreigners and Jews,
+whilst hulking louts in uniform, electro-plate and the shabby-genteel
+masher have taken the place of solid silver spoons and a higher type of
+humanity. So extensive indeed has been the transformation, that, if any
+night-bird of those naughty days were suddenly exhumed, and let loose in
+Soho, he would assuredly wander into a church in his search of a popular
+resort, and having come to scoff, might remain to pray, and so
+unwittingly fall into the goody-goody ways that make up our present
+monotonous existence.
+
+The highest in the land in those benighted days turned up their coat
+collars and rubbed shoulders after dusk with others of their species in
+recreations which, if indulged in now, would be tantamount to social
+ostracism, or imperilling the “succession.”
+
+It was, in short, the tail end of the days of the Regency, changed,
+virtuous reader, for better or worse. It was, nevertheless, distinctly
+enjoyable and straightforward, for it showed its worst, and blinked
+nothing in hypocrisy.
+
+The only recommendation for this appearance is its authenticity; every
+incident passed within (or very near) my ken, for I was a veritable
+“front-rank man” in that long-ago disbanded army—a veteran left behind
+when better men have passed away—one of the few who could attend a muster
+parade of that vast battalion of roysterers, and who, by sheer physical
+strength, has survived what weaker constitutions have succumbed to—a
+living contradiction of the theory of the “survival of the fittest.”
+
+It was one morning early in 1860 that I proudly saw my name in the
+_Gazette_—as a full-blown ensign. I had scanned every paper for weeks,
+although aware that our late gracious Sovereign (or her deputy) could
+hardly have had time to decide the momentous question as to whether I was
+to be a fusilier, a rifleman, or a Highlander, so short was the period
+between passing my examination and the announcement I so fervently
+awaited. But I had great Army interest, and so it came to pass that,
+within six weeks of leaving Chelsea Hospital (where the examinations took
+place), I held a commission in a distinguished regiment.
+
+To give the number of the dear old corps would at best be misleading, for
+numerals and the prestige that attached to them were wiped out long ago
+by one scratch of the pen of that great civilian who remodelled our Army
+from what it was when it suppressed the Mutiny to what it became before
+the Boer War.
+
+England at this period bristled with soldiers—bronzed old warriors with
+beards down to their waists, who had not seen their native shores for
+twelve or fifteen or twenty years; who, till they were scraped (in
+conformity with St. James’s campaigning ideas), looked fit to do
+anything, or go anywhere—men who had survived the trenches and the twenty
+degrees of frost in the Crimea, and sweltered twelve months later at
+Gwalior, Jhansi, Lucknow, and Delhi, and had at last found their reward,
+amidst cocked hats, red tape, recruits’ drill, and discharge, in that
+haven of rest, “merrie England.”
+
+My future regiment, then on its way home, was no exception to the rule,
+and I remember, as but yesterday, the comparisons I drew a few weeks
+later on the Barrack Square of the (then) new barracks at Gosport,
+between the pasty-faced “strong-detachment” from the depôt and the grand
+old veterans that towered over them.
+
+And every man-jack of them was possessed of valuable jewels. Where the
+worthy rogues had captured the loot needs not to inquire, suffice to say
+that oriental stones worth hundreds were retailed for a few shillings,
+and found their way to the coffers, and tended to build up the fortune,
+of an astute Hebrew who, by “the encouragement of British industries,”
+eventually became a knight, and died not long ago in the odour of
+sanctity, rich and respected—as all rich men do.
+
+It was amid these surroundings that I began my military career, despite
+the fact that every rascal with anything to sell had radiated towards
+Gosport from every point of the compass.
+
+Gosport and Portsmouth were in those days the first stepping stones in
+the filtration towards Aldershot, after which, and only after a drill
+season, the grandest soldiers England ever possessed, were considered as
+presentable troops.
+
+The barrack squares in those happy days, after a regiment had landed,
+resembled oriental bazaars rather than the starchy, adamant quadrangles
+familiar to the present generation. Every forenoon officers and men were
+surrounded by hucksterers of every care and creed, and one’s very
+quarters were invaded by Jews and Gentiles anxious to sell or buy
+something.
+
+“This is the most arakristic trap in the west of England, so ’elp me
+Gawd; isn’t it, Cyril?” one Hebrew would inquire of another, as the
+points of an ancient buggy and a quadruped standing in the square were
+extolled to ambitious youngsters; and “Yes it is, so ’elp me Gawd,” often
+succeeded in selling a rattle-trap that had done duty in every regiment
+stationed at Gosport from time immemorial. Old clothes-dealers, too,
+abounded by the score, ready to buy anything for next to nothing. But
+some of us youngsters were not to be caught like the veterans who were
+unfamiliar with depôt ways, and the judicious deposit of a farthing in a
+pocket now and again resulted in phenomenal prices for cast-off garments
+till the hucksterers “tumbled,” and the harvests ended; and so, between
+the goose step and a thousand other delights, the happiest days many of
+us ever enjoyed (though unaware of it at the time) passed slowly on.
+
+At this period the Volunteers had just come into existence, and, not
+having developed the splendid qualities they proved themselves possessed
+of during the Boer War, naturally came in for considerable chaff and
+ridicule.
+
+As a specimen of the senseless jokes that abounded at the time, I may
+quote what was generally mooted in military messes, that at a recent
+levée the volunteers who had attended had shown so much _esprit de corps_
+that Her Majesty had ordered the windows to be opened; and it is, I
+believe, an absolute fact that on one occasion an inspecting officer
+nearly had a fit when the major of a gallant corps appeared with the
+medal his prize sow had won pinned upon his breast.
+
+It was the Volunteer review in Hyde Park in 1860 that was responsible for
+my first appearance in uniform. Determined that the review should lack
+nothing of military recognition, stands had been erected, for which
+officers in uniform were entitled to tickets for themselves and their
+relations. In an unlucky moment the announcement had caught the eye of a
+sister, with the result that, terribly nervous, nay almost defiant, I was
+marched boldly down to Bond Street on the day of the review, and, _nolens
+volens_, dressed at Ridpath and Manning’s in my brand new cast-iron
+uniform.
+
+Conceive, kind reader, a wretched youth—dressed inch by inch by a
+ruthless tailor in broad daylight on a sunny afternoon, incapable of
+deceiving the most inexperienced by his amateur attempts of appearing at
+home—huddled into the clothes, and then hustled into the street by a
+proud sister and father, and some idea of my abject misery will be
+apparent to you.
+
+It was at the moment, whilst waiting on the pavement to enter our
+carriage, that a huge Guardsman passed and thought fit to “salute.” My
+first instinct was to wring him by the hand and present him with a
+sovereign; then all became indistinct, and I tumbled into the carriage.
+
+The excitement was too much for me—I almost fainted.
+
+A splendid specimen of the Hibernian type in my regiment was a man called
+Madden (and by his familiars “Payther”), who, as a character, deserves
+special mention. This giant had not long previously been “claimed” by an
+elder brother whilst serving in a Highland Regiment, and it was reported
+that on one occasion, when on sentry at Lucknow, the general officer
+impressed by his six feet three in full Highland costume, having pulled
+up and addressed him with, “What part of the Highlands do you come from,
+my man?” was considerably nonplussed by being informed, “Oi come from
+Clonakilty, yer honour, in the County Cork.” Our colonel, too, was an
+undoubted Irishman by birth; but had succeeded, after forty years’
+service, in being capable of assuming the Scotch, Irish, or English
+dialect as circumstances seemed to require. In addition, moreover, to an
+excessive amount of _esprit de corps_, he had the reputation of being the
+greatest liar in the Army; not a liar be it understood in the offensive
+application of the term, but incapable of accuracy or divesting his
+statements of exaggeration when notoriety or circumstances gave him an
+opening. This failing of “Bill Sykes,” as he was called, was so
+universally known throughout the Army, that one evening a trap was laid
+for him by some jovial spirits in the smoking-room of a famous Army club.
+
+“Here comes old Bill,” was remarked by Cootie, of the Bays, as the
+Colonel sauntered in with a toothpick in his mouth. “I’ll bet a fiver
+I’ll start a yarn he’ll never be able to cap.”
+
+“Done!” cried Kirby, “and if he doesn’t keep up his reputation I’ll pay
+you on the nail, and send in my papers in the morning.”
+
+“Good evening, Colonel,” began Cootie. “I was just relating a most
+extraordinary coincidence that was lately told me by a man whose veracity
+I can vouch for—Shute of ours.”
+
+“Indeed,” replied the Colonel, filling a pipe—Bill invariably smoked a
+dudeen at the head of the regiment. “By all means let me hear it.”
+
+“It is simply this. Coming home on sick leave in a P. and O. not long
+ago, the look-out man descried half a mile out at sea what appeared to be
+a huge box; a long boat was immediately lowered, and when the derelict
+was brought on deck, conceive the astonishment of everybody in
+discovering that it was a hencoop, and a live man inside. It was a case
+of shipwreck it appears, and the man saved was the only survivor of some
+180 souls. Rum thing, wasn’t it? but some people have infernal luck.”
+
+“Yes,” replied the Colonel. “I believe I was horn under a lucky star;
+perhaps you will be surprised to hear that _I_ was the man.”
+
+A roar of astonishment greeted this admission, whilst Cootie, hastily
+thrusting a fiver into Kirby’s hand, whispered, “I presume you won’t send
+in your papers to-morrow?”
+
+But, despite his peculiarity, old Bill was universally popular. A
+splendid billiard player, he had in India created such excitement in a
+match for £500, that even Lord Faulkland, the Governor of Bombay, who
+never parted with a sixpence without looking at it twice, was said to
+have put a gold mohur on it, and in later times I can remember the Club
+House at Aldershot being crammed to suffocation when the same redoubtable
+warrior licked Curry the Brigade Major, who till our arrival had no
+compeer.
+
+One curious experience he had had which he never tired of narrating: “I
+was once waiting for the d— packet at Dover to take me over to Calais,
+and at the hostelry I met a d— Frenchman, who asked me if I could ‘parley
+vous,’ and I said ‘no,’ but offered to play him a game of billiards. We
+had a fiver on it, but I soon discovered that no matter where I left the
+balls the d— fellow made a cannon. I was only about three ahead of him,
+so when next I played I knocked a ball off the table. The first time the
+d— fellow sympathised with me, and picked up the ball; after two or three
+repetitions the coincidence appeared to puzzle him. ‘I can’t play if
+Mooser does this,’ he said angrily. ‘I can’t help that,’ I replied, and
+ran out with a break. He declined to go double or quits, so I pocketed
+the fiver, and often found myself laughing over it in the d— boat, where
+I was d— ill.”
+
+This persistent swearing may sound curious to the student of to-day, but
+in those halcyon days everybody swore. The Iron Duke, it is well known,
+never opened his mouth without a superfluous adjective, and General
+Pennefather, who commanded at Aldershot in my time, literally “swore
+himself” into office. On one occasion, when the Queen was on the ground,
+he wished every regiment so vehemently to the “bottom of the bottomless
+pit” that it frightened the gracious lady, who sent an equerry to remind
+him of her presence. The monition had the desired effect for ten
+minutes, when the bombardment commenced afresh, and brought the field-day
+to an abrupt termination. The Queen had bolted in sheer trepidation of
+an earthquake.
+
+Military examinations for direct commissions in those long-ago days were
+held at Chelsea Hospital, and extended over a week. On the occasion of
+my public appearance an extraordinary incident occurred. Every
+precaution, it was stated, had been taken against the papers getting into
+unauthorised hands, but hardly had the first day passed when every
+candidate was aware that the tout of a sporting tailor was prepared to
+sell the paper of the day correctly answered at £2 a head. The
+conspirators met at the “Hans Hotel,” and donkeys incapable of spelling,
+and with no knowledge of any language but their own, passed examinations
+worthy of a senior wrangler.
+
+The miscreant who thus tampered with Her Majesty’s stationery was one
+Pugh, and his employer (if I remember rightly) was one Cutler; but the
+golden shower came to an abrupt ending, as on one fateful morning (the
+last day) General Rumley ascended the gallery, and amid the silence of
+the Catacombs briefly announced:
+
+“The late examination is cancelled; candidates will attend again next
+Monday.”
+
+The consternation that ensued is beyond description. Jolliffe, who, I
+believe, had been measured for his uniform, did not join for at least a
+year after, and poor old Plummy Ruthven, who couldn’t spell six words
+correctly, abandoned all further idea of the Army. He was sitting next
+me on the first day, and I remember as if it were yesterday his whispered
+inquiry as to the correct reply to a mathematical question: “At what hour
+between two and three are the hands of a clock opposite one another?”
+The reply, it is needless to add, had to be “worked out” by figures, but
+thinking in the excitement he was asking the time I hurriedly whispered,
+“Twenty minutes to one,” and down it went on poor old Plummy’s paper.
+During the subsequent days his papers, I fancy, were vastly improved, as
+he was a constant visitor at the “Hans Hotel.”
+
+The Aldershot of the sixties was a very different place to what it is
+to-day. Three rows of huts—as the lines of three regiments—constituted
+the North Camp, and about an equal number and two blocks of permanent
+barracks represented the South Camp. During the drill season everything
+else was under canvas, and heaven help those who ever experienced the
+watertight capacity of the regulation bell tent. I can well remember one
+night, when the windows of heaven had been open for days, a dripping
+figure in regimental great-coat and billycock hat appearing in the mess
+tent with, “The horse is disthroyed, and I don’t know what the Jasus to
+do,” and as he dripped at “attention” we realised it was only the
+adjutant’s Irish groom that had been washed out of the temporary stable.
+
+These wooden huts were peculiarly adapted for practical joking. Within a
+week of my joining whilst contemplating with admiration, previous to
+turning in, my brand new possessions of portable furniture, I was
+astonished by a brick rattling down the chimney. Barely had I dodged it
+when bang came another, whilst not a sound disturbed the peaceful repose
+of the camp. “Great heavens,” I thought, “there must be an earthquake,”
+and rushing out frantically to give the alarm, I paused, and on second
+thoughts returned. But in the few seconds that had elapsed there must
+have been another violent shock, for everything in my room was upside
+down—the bedding was capsized, my boots were swimming in the tub,
+table-cloths, carpet, everything one huge mass. It was then that it
+dawned upon me, “this is the finger of man,” and I proceeded to adjust my
+belongings. “Anything up?” now sounded through the window, and the
+appearance of two brother ensigns explained the rest. I was never
+molested afterwards.
+
+Practical joking, however, occasionally assumed serious proportions, and
+ended in courts-martial, as did the Crawley case. It was on this
+occasion that Sir William Harcourt first came prominently to notice by
+the brilliant oration he put into his client’s mouth: “Give me back my
+sword,” was the dramatic phrase with which the old bully ended his
+address. As if Crawley cared one rap what became of his sword so long as
+the £10,000 attached to his commission as colonel of the Inniskillings
+was safe.
+
+The Robertson court-martial, of which I was an eyewitness, also created a
+stir in the long-ago sixties. The colonel of the 4th Dragoon Guards was
+at the time one Bentinck, who, despite his heirship to the Dukedom of
+Portland, was about as uncouth a being as can well be conceived. As
+field officer of the day, no matter how late, he never missed dismounting
+and walking through the officers’ guard room without a word, as if he
+were inspecting the married quarters, and it was this amiable creature
+who eventually prosecuted, in conjunction with Adjutant Harran, as
+harmless an individual as ever posed as a sabreur. Captain Robertson was
+the son of a Highland laird, and, if I remember rightly, had a very
+handsome wife. What it was all about I have long since forgotten, though
+the cloud of witnesses that radiated towards the Royal barracks is in
+many ways impressed on my memory. Captain Owen—an important witness as
+he described himself—was an officer of militia, and, more military than
+the military, he revelled in things military. His staple conversation
+was military; a sort of peakless cap his everyday head-dress; his very
+dressing-gown was frogged like a light dragoon’s frock coat; for gloves
+he affected the buckskin class, and carried glove-trees and pipeclay, at
+least whilst in Dublin. These peculiarities were grafted on my memory by
+his having doubled up for six weeks in my solitary room in Dublin. I had
+spoken to him on one occasion, and in a weak moment invited him to mess.
+How it all came about I have no recollection beyond finding him located
+on me; having every meal at my expense, and incurring a mess bill of over
+£8, which I eventually had to pay. “D— it, old man,” he often said,
+“this is like old times” (when the annual training was on, presumably);
+“I can’t tear myself away from the bugles.” And he didn’t, till
+peremptorily requested to go.
+
+Other witnesses of a more desirable type also swarmed for weeks at our
+mess. Ginger Durant, who had never been out of London since he left the
+12th Lancers, was daily to be heard bellowing “To the rag, to the rag” to
+the tune of “Dixey’s Land,” and General Dickson, a grand old warrior
+(happily still as fresh as paint) who commanded the Turkish contingent in
+the Crimea, champed his bit and cursed the necessity that detained him in
+Dublin.
+
+At Aldershot was a regiment that was supposed to have stormed some place
+with ours a hundred years before, and in those days of “Regent’s
+allowances” and tolerably hard drinking the occasion of again meeting in
+camp could not be allowed to pass without various reciprocal
+hospitalities. Their colonel was an old toper who never consumed less
+than fifteen brandies-and-sodas after dinner, and well I recollect
+hearing a mess waiter, as he helped him on with his coat, expressing the
+hope, in a whisper, that if a man came before him in the morning for
+being drunk, he would not think it necessary to give him forty-eight
+hours cells. But the interchange of civilities was by no means over with
+the dinner, and a dozen of our heroes insisting on seeing their guests
+home, deliberately swam the Canal, and their comrades not to be outdone,
+insisted on seeing our contingent back, till the innumerable duckings
+restored sobriety and every one retired to his respective hut.
+
+Not having been at the storming in the Peninsula, I had retired to bed
+early.
+
+The purchase system, however personally delightful, was undoubtedly a
+very cruel regulation. I myself within seven years passed over five men
+who had joined when I was two years old; but the injustice of it never
+struck me till on one occasion the junior major of a regiment in the same
+brigade, who had got his commission on the same day as I had, turned me
+out as subaltern of a guard. But he had not obtained this luck without
+risking “Yellow Jack,” for exchanging to a West India regiment and
+jumping from bottom to top in every grade by bribing the entire regiment
+was a thoroughly recognised arrangement by our amiable authorities.
+D’Arcy Godolphin Osborne was an exponent of this brilliant bare-backed
+(or bare-faced) vaulting, and despite being the brother of the Duke of
+Leeds was not an ideal field officer.
+
+“Purchase” literally killed poor ’Gus Anson, brother of the Earl of
+Lichfield. With a constitution shattered since Lucknow, where he won the
+V.C., night after night found him arguing against its abolition in the
+House of Commons; and the almost nightly intimations I sent him, at his
+request, “that we had enough for Baccarat” did the rest, and I eventually
+saw the best and bravest of men on his death-bed at Dudley House.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+THE TOWER.
+
+
+ABOUT this time all England was ringing with what was known as the “Trent
+affair”; 10,000 troops had been ordered to Montreal, of which a
+considerable portion were Guards, and so it devolved on certain line
+battalions to garrison London, and we were ordered to the Tower.
+
+It was the regimental guest-night, and all the plate of which the
+regiment was so proud decked the table in the dark wainscoted room of the
+Mess House. In the middle of the table stood a centre-piece displaying
+the soldiers in the uniforms of the days of Marlborough, the Peninsular,
+and later on, when the hateful Albert Shako did duty as the headgear of
+British infantry; extending down each side were scrolls containing the
+names of brave men who had fallen with their faces to the enemy at
+Quebec, Quatre Bras, and the Redan, whilst flanking the massive trophy
+were silver goblets varying in size—from those that held a quart down to
+others of more modern dimensions, indicative of presentations on
+promotion, marriage, or “selling out.” It had, indeed, once been a
+custom for the last joined ensign to drain the largest tankard on his
+first appearance at mess; but that was in the days when four bottles
+under a man’s belt was deemed a reasonable amount, and before the
+Regent’s allowance enabled every one to consume nightly a half-glass of
+port or sherry free of expense.
+
+The Colonel, as may be supposed, was in great form, each of his yarns
+exceeding in improbability the one preceding it. “Yes, gentlemen,” he
+was saying, “I remember my father saying how at Quatre Bras the regiment
+found itself confronted by the 88th French Infantry Corps, and he
+overheard the right-hand man of his company saying, as he bit off the end
+of his cartridge, ‘Jasus, boys, here’s a case—here we are opposite the
+French Connaught Rangers!’”
+
+“I was saying, gentlemen,” the Colonel’s voice was here heard declaring,
+“that I shall never forget”—and then followed a tissue of fabrications
+every one had frequently heard before, but which nobody but the worthy
+old warrior for one moment believed.
+
+Coffee and cigars had meanwhile made their welcome appearance, and as
+guests began to think of home, and others settled down to muff whist, the
+ante-room resumed the humdrum appearance so familiar to every one who can
+speak from experience.
+
+By the irony of fate, also, the regiment was furnishing the guards on
+this special guest-night, a circumstance that claimed more than one
+punter; not satisfied with which, the field officer’s “roster” had
+apparently joined issue and requisitioned the old Major who, on these
+festive occasions was always a sure hand at loo, and who at the identical
+moment when he should have been “taking the miss,” was probably bellowing
+out “Grand Rounds,” to some distant guard in tones that belied his
+amiable genial disposition.
+
+George, on these occasions, was the recognised organiser, and by
+herculean efforts had secured some half-dozen recruits to commence loo as
+soon as old Hanmer returned.
+
+Games of chance—even in the long-ago sixties—were rarely indulged in in
+the ante-room, which was reserved exclusively for solemn whist for
+nominal stakes, where the players bottled up trumps, misdealt, and
+revoked, regardless of all the canons of the game.
+
+“Damn it, sir!” once exclaimed an irate General at an inspection dinner
+to his trembling partner—the assistant surgeon—“Are you aware that 3,000
+shoeless men are tramping the streets of the Continent for not leading
+trumps?” to which the medico—who was a Kerry man—replied respectfully:
+
+“Oi apalagoise, surr, most humbly; but oi disremembered me abligation.”
+
+“Obligation be d—, sir!” replied the genial old warrior as he lighted a
+fresh cheroot.
+
+“The Major’s late,” remarked George to a confirmed loo player; “let us go
+up to my room and get the table ready. Come on,” he continued to four or
+five others, “we’ll make a start anyhow; he can’t be long.”
+
+The officers’ quarters in the Tower can hardly be described as spacious,
+and so by the addition of chairs from other rooms; with the table lugged
+into the centre, and brandy and sodas piled on the bed it was not long
+before some half-dozen punters were securely wedged together and
+indulging in unlimited loo for stakes that were not always nominal.
+
+The Major, meanwhile, had joined the party and without divesting himself
+of either cloak, shako, or sword, dashed into the fray with considerably
+greater zeal than he had displayed when going the rounds. Not that he
+was any feather-bed soldier; on the contrary, he had borne his full share
+of the trenches, and then often found himself told off to march to
+Balaclava with a fatigue party, and eventually to enjoy a few hours’
+sleep in wet clothes on wet ground, whilst blankets and boots were
+rotting within six miles, and all because brave men were at the front,
+and old women were at the back of that rickety machine called the War
+Office.
+
+Billy Hanmer, amid the ordinary walks of life, was of a chilly
+temperament; the thermometer in his quarters was never permitted to
+register less than 65 degrees; he wore flannels all the year round, which
+in winter were duplicated, even to his socks; when he became
+excited—which never occurred except at loo, or when suddenly called upon
+to drill the battalion—the three hairs that were usually pasted across
+his martial skull rose like the crest of a cockatoo, and he was apt to
+give vent to expressions seldom or never heard at a bishop’s. Swearing
+in those long-ago days was considered a necessary adjunct to military
+efficiency, as any one who was under Pennefather when he commanded at
+Aldershot can testify, and so it was that the Major was now swearing like
+a trooper. As a fact, he had just been “loo-ed,” and was counting some
+forty sovereigns into the pool, and every sovereign was accompanied by an
+oath as unique as it was unavailing.
+
+George Hay, sportsman though he was, was also a bad loser, but this
+evening, in his capacity as host the Fates had happily protected him.
+The grilled bones that appeared at 2 a.m., and the inordinate amount of
+brandy and soda that had been consumed, were all put down to him; but the
+hundred he had won left ample margin for the hospitality, and towards
+five our hero fell into a profound and refreshing sleep, periodically
+enlivened by sweet visions of huge pools that he persistently raked in,
+whilst Billy Hanmer, divested of cloak, sword, and shako, was swearing
+till the old rafters rattled.
+
+In those days the club most affected by subalterns was the “Raleigh,” a
+charming night-house, approached by a tunnel, whose portals opened at
+dusk and closed reputedly at four a.m., or whenever its members vacated
+it. And the comfort of that long, delightful single room! Ranged round
+its entirety were fauteuils, suitable alike for forty winks, or brandy
+and soda, or the only eatables procurable—bacon on toast sandwiches with
+a dash of biting sauce. Here might be seen the best men in London
+percolating through at every moment, and exchanging badinage as brilliant
+as probably it was naughty—poor old George Lawrence of “Sword and Gown”
+fame, and Piggy Lawrence, killed not long after in a regimental
+steeplechase; Fred Granville, who assisted at a once celebrated elopement
+by waiting at one door of an Oxford Street shop for the beautiful
+_fiancée_ of a wealthy landowner whose brougham had deposited her at
+another; Freddy Cooper, the best four-in-hand whip of the day; the wicked
+Marquis who ran through a fortune almost before he was of age; and young
+Wyndham, another Croesus of the duck-and-drake type; Sir Henry de Hoghton
+of the red tie and velvet suit who thought he could play ecarté; and
+King-Harman, then a sinner, but eventually a saint, who died in the
+sanctity of respectability. These, and a hundred others, all, alas gone
+to the inevitable dustbin, and yet the old building exists, _externally_
+apparently the same—the haunt of aspiring youths seeking a club with a
+past, respectable and cautious to the highest degree, where cheques are
+not cashed over £5, and the doors close at one a.m. to the tick.
+
+But even in these long-ago days, the membership increased to such an
+extent that elbow-room had to be sought, and so Sally Sutherland’s, a
+high-class night-house that abutted on the premises, was eventually taken
+in, and became the card room of the old Raleigh. To see this room in its
+glory it was necessary to enter it during the Derby week, where, as far
+as the eye could reach (and farther), one dense mass of human faces
+watched the proceedings at the card table, and fought and hustled to pass
+fivers and tenners and fifties towards building up the mountain of bank
+notes that flanked either side of the table.
+
+Seated composedly were the two champions with their bankers alongside
+them, then a fringe ten deep of pasty-faced cornets and rubicund old
+sinners with sheaves of bank notes in their hands, while beyond were the
+“fielders”—landsharks who never played—eagerly watching every turn of the
+cards to take advantage of any bet that appeared slightly in their
+favour. “Chalky” White—the master of the Essex as he was ironically
+called—because he affected horsy overalls, and was once seen on a screw
+at the Boat Race; Captain Mulroony, an Irish buckeen who joined the
+“North Corks” to be eligible for “the cloob”; “the Rapparee,” another
+warrior with a brogue of a pronounced order, all ready to plunge on a
+reasonable certainty and retail their experiences later on, on their
+return to Dublin. Needless to add, we youngsters had put down our names
+_en bloc_ for membership as soon as we had settled down at the Tower, and
+on the memorable night to which we refer were in great force in the long
+room. George Hay, one of our lieutenants who was being entertained by a
+venerable member, was wrapped in contemplation as he watched a decrepit
+old gentleman sipping a gin sling. “That man”—his cicerone was telling
+him—“fought the last duel in England; look at him now, about eighty if
+he’s a day, and barely able to crawl down here, and yet fifty years ago
+he had a drunken brawl with his best friend at Crockford’s, and shot him
+dead before breakfast at the back of Ham House. Wait till the play
+begins and you’ll see him ‘fielding’; he never plays, but if he sees a
+chance, no matter how slightly in his favour, he still pulls out a
+crumpled fiver and invites you to cover it. He only bets ‘ready,’ and
+would probably ‘call you out’ if you suggested ‘booking’ it. That man in
+the blue shirt is the Duke of Hamilton; he only turns up in the Derby
+week, and has probably just arrived by special train. We call him ‘the
+butcher,’ because of his shirt and his punching proclivities. He
+plunges, too; wait a bit till the Leviathans turn up. You’ll see some
+sport yet.”
+
+“What are you going to do, George?” inquired a youngster; “why not have a
+look in at Kate Hamilton’s? This is all d— rot, and I’ve put my name
+down for 2 a.m.”
+
+Putting one’s name down, it may be explained, was a necessary formality
+indicating at what hour an officer intended to return when the wicket at
+the Tower was opened and closed, and punctuality was a necessity of the
+greatest moment.
+
+On one occasion, indeed when “Payther” Madden was on sentry, the wife of
+an officer who gave herself considerable airs having arrived five minutes
+late was challenged from inside by “Who goes there?” “I’m the Major’s
+lady,” was the haughty response. “Divil a bit do I care if ye were the
+Major’s wife!” yelled Payther from inside; “you’ll not get in till the
+wicket is opened agin.”
+
+And the approaches to the Tower in those days were not the broad and
+well-lighted avenues such as the Eastcheap of to-day; tortuous alleys and
+dingy, narrow streets had to be traversed, and the garrotter was very
+much in evidence. Officers returning late carried knuckle-dusters and
+short blades in their right-hand overcoat pockets, ready to job any
+footpad who attempted to seize them from behind. Men seldom returned but
+in parties of twos or threes, and so it was that the Major’s “lady” found
+herself constrained to hug the walls of the grim old fortress during the
+early hours of that memorable night in the long-ago sixties.
+
+It was the night after the big race, when Caractacus was responsible for
+much that followed, that the crowd at the Raleigh was phenomenal, and
+champagne was being consumed in tumblers from the entrance hall to the
+card room. Thousands had changed hands within the past dozen hours, and
+old Jimmy Jopp with his chocolate wig over his left eye was scrambling
+sovereigns from the doorstep amongst the fair guests of our country who
+thronged the boulevard. The card room had not as yet entered on its
+usual function, the window was indeed open in an endeavour to dilute the
+stifling atmosphere, and a corpulent old lady with a Flemish accent was
+half-way in the sacred precincts through the combined efforts of a bevy
+of fair compatriots on the pavement.
+
+“Curse these races,” ejaculated Biscoe, “where have the plungers got to?
+Nearly one o’clock by G—, and a pile to be got home before daylight.”
+
+This Biscoe was not a favourite in the club; of a hectoring disposition
+he added to his unpopularity by the pursuit of sharp practices. If he
+won he invariably found an excuse to retire with his gains, and if he
+lost he became cantankerous and offensive in his remarks. Some there
+were, indeed, who went so far as hinting that he was not above unfair
+dealings. He was partial to shuffling the cards with their faces towards
+him and placing a king at the bottom of the pack. This he explained was
+mere force of habit, and when remonstrated with—as he often had
+been—added that he was superstitious and that one of his superstitions
+took this form. No actual act of foul play had ever been brought home to
+him; he was nevertheless under suspicion, and being otherwise unpopular,
+his eccentricities assumed a graver form when balanced by hostile
+critics.
+
+Cheating in those long-ago days was happily a rare occurrence; a man
+about town might beggar his parents, or drive his wife into the
+workhouse, and still hold up his head as a man of honour if he met his
+card debts on the nail; but “sharping” was practically unknown till some
+years later, when a scandal that thrilled Europe and involved a deep
+erasure in the Army List was enacted at Nice.
+
+The Raleigh, meanwhile, was gradually simmering down; choice spirits had
+started for Cremorne or Mott’s; the more soberly amused had wended their
+steps towards Evans’s, and the residue might have been classed as either
+punters or puntees—if such base coin will bear alloy.
+
+Seated in the card room, Biscoe still smoked in his solitude; before him
+was a gilt-bound volume such as betting men affect, and its contemplation
+apparently did not afford unalloyed pleasure. “Egad,” he muttered,
+“£4,000, more or less, and not a hundred to meet it with; to-night it’s
+neck or nothing, and if nobody bleeds I shall be unable to face the music
+on Monday. Ah, De Hoghton,” he exclaimed, barely looking up as an
+apparition in velvet and red tie appeared, “been at Epsom? No? Perhaps
+you were wise.”
+
+Paddy was too clever to suggest a game, knowing as he did the eccentric
+baronet’s peculiarities. “Never mind,” he continued, “better luck
+to-morrow, perhaps. I’m half asleep. Good-night,” and he rose as if
+about to depart.
+
+“What’s the hurry?” inquired the new arrival. “If you want to keep awake
+I’ll play you half a dozen games of ecarté, but only for small stakes,
+mind.”
+
+Want indeed! It was what Biscoe had wanted for hours, and as to the
+stakes, did he not know from delightful experience that if they began at
+£5 it would not be long before the game was for hundreds, and that his
+adversary’s rent roll might be counted in thousands?
+
+“My dear Sir Henry,” replied Biscoe, “name your own stakes. No fear of
+making them too low. I feel in bad form to-night, and your science will
+be altogether too much for me.”
+
+“Say a pony then,” continued the baronet, and they cut for deal.
+
+Meanwhile the room began gradually to fill, and as the unmistakable
+flutter of crisp notes—for which no resemblance has ever been
+discovered—made itself heard in the long room, George Hay and a troop of
+others sauntered negligently into the room.
+
+“Sit beside me, Colonel,” De Hoghton requested a grizzly, rubicund
+warrior, “you’ll be able to advise me when they make a pool.”
+
+“And, Rapparee, I want you,” exclaimed Biscoe. “We must show these
+English boys how we play at Stephen’s Green,” and a fire-eating
+pronounced Hibernian took post alongside his compatriot.
+
+For a considerable time the luck appeared to fluctuate, and if hundreds
+were passed across the table on one game, they returned more or less
+intact at the subsequent encounter. Play was now in real earnest, and
+stakes were hazarded that were simply appalling. Biscoe, too, appeared
+to be in for a run of luck, and the excited whisperings between him and
+the Rapparee left little room for doubt that he contemplated a retreat on
+the first defeat.
+
+His winnings, indeed, were considerable, and a smile pervaded his
+hitherto scowling face as he contemplated the Monday’s settling with
+equanimity. Again the bank was declared, and a pile of notes larger than
+any of its predecessors lumbered each side of the table; eyes,
+apparently, had no other vocation than to watch their respective
+champion’s hands; the ticking of the clock on the mantelpiece became a
+nuisance, and the grasshopper literally became a burden; the silence of
+the Catacombs pervaded the entire assembly, when a voice, shrill and
+excited, was heard: “Do that again, Mr. Biscoe, and I’ll expose you.”
+
+It was the Colonel, who leaning across the table bore down Biscoe’s hands
+with a strong right arm as he was in the act of shuffling.
+
+“What am I to understand by this?” inquired Biscoe looking towards the
+Rapparee. “If it’s by way of an insult you’ve met the right boy to
+resent it. Hands off, sir!” he shouted, as shaking off the Colonel’s
+hand, he hurled the pack of cards in his face.
+
+“Hold, hold, gentlemen, for God’s sake,” implored De Hoghton, as a dozen
+men interposed between the belligerents. “Some explanation is surely
+forthcoming that may avoid a scandal. Colonel, tell those gentlemen what
+you saw, and let them decide on the merits before it gets into the
+papers.”
+
+“What I saw I am prepared to prove,” replied the Colonel, excitedly; “but
+even that sinks into insignificance, as far as I am personally concerned,
+in face of the man’s assault. Meanwhile, pick up these cards, count them
+carefully, and if you don’t find five kings in the pack I’ll apologise to
+Mr. Biscoe, and take his assault like a coward.”
+
+And then a scramble on the floor began, which was followed by breathless
+silence.
+
+“Count them, please,” requested the Colonel, and sure enough 33 was the
+result.
+
+“Now turn the faces towards you, sir,” continued the Colonel; “and
+extract the kings.” And lo! before a dumbfounded crowd, two kings of
+hearts were displayed.
+
+“This, gentlemen, is my accusation. I charge Mr. Biscoe with being a
+card-sharper and a cheat. To-morrow I’ll lay my charge before the
+Committee; meanwhile, I retire and will ask you, Hay, to act as my
+representative.”
+
+The Rapparee meanwhile had been in whispered conversation with his
+friend, and on the Colonel’s departure, addressed himself to Hay.
+
+“Oi presume, surr, your principal will meet my man unless he’s a coward,
+and we shall be pleased to let him fix his own day, either before or
+afther his complaint to the Committee.”
+
+“This is hardly the time, sir, to enter into such arrangements,” replied
+Hay, courteously; “but I vouch for Colonel George doing what is right and
+honourable.”
+
+But one of the younger members seemed inclined to treat the matter as a
+joke, and turning towards the Rapparee, remarked, “But, surely, sir, you
+must see that if it’s a duel you are hinting at, it would hardly be fair
+considering that Colonel George is considerably stouter than Mr. Biscoe.
+May we assume, sir, that you won’t object to a chalk mark down each side
+of the Colonel’s waistcoat, and a hit outside not to count?”
+
+“Surr!” scowled the Rapparee.
+
+“Please,” pleaded Hay; “this is not a joking matter, the honour of the
+Club and of every member who was present is at stake till the affair is
+cleared up. I appeal to you, gentlemen, one and all, to retire.”
+
+Turning to the Rapparee, and raising his hat, he continued: “My name,
+sir, is Lieutenant Hay, and I’m stationed at the Tower.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+MOTT’S AND CREMORNE.
+
+
+LONDON in the sixties possessed no music-halls as at present except the
+London Pavilion and a transpontine establishment unknown to the West End.
+This former had not long previously been transformed from a swimming bath
+into an undertaker’s shed, which in its turn gave place to the dingy hall
+which eventually made the fortune of a waiter from Scott’s. But such
+excitement (!) hardly met the requirements of progressive civilisation,
+which found an outlet in the Argyll, Cremorne, the Café Riche, Sally
+Sutherland’s, Kate Hamilton’s, Rose Young’s, and Mott’s. It seems but
+yesterday that one was sipping champagne at Boxall’s stall in the Café
+Riche (now a flower shop adjoining the Criterion) waiting for young
+Broome the pugilist, who was to pilot one in safety to “the big fight
+between King and Heenan.” In those halcyon days cafés remained open all
+night, and three a.m. was the hour appointed for our start for London
+Bridge. What splendid aid was then given legitimate sport by the
+authorities, as driving through rows of police across London Bridge one
+reached the terminus in comfort by simply displaying one’s ticket. With
+a pork pie in one pocket, and a handkerchief in another, one’s peace of
+mind was delightful, and hands in every pocket—aye, and knives to cut one
+out if necessary—were accepted only as a portion of a novel and
+delightful excitement.
+
+Pitching the ring again in one field and being warned off by the Kent
+constabulary, how invigorating the tramp through ploughed fields, till
+again we found a spot—this time undisturbed—in the muddy plains of
+Sussex. Wisps of straw provided for the more favoured by the attention
+of their punching cicerones, the biting of King’s ear to bring him to
+“time,” the two giants half blind, swinging their arms mechanically, the
+accidental blow that felled the brave Heenan, and the shameful verdict
+that denied him the victory ten minutes previously, the return to the
+“Bricklayers’ Arms”—how vivid it all seems! And yet principals, seconds,
+lookers-on, where are they?
+
+The Café Riche of the long-ago sixties was perhaps the most successful
+and best regulated of the haunts of vanished London. Slack to an extreme
+till about 11 p.m., the huge mass of humanity as it poured out of the
+Argyll made straight for it. As one traversed the almost impassable
+Windmill Street along the narrow path kept by a bevy of police, all
+thoughts turned towards the Café Riche, where the best of suppers,
+oysters, and champagne prepared one for the more arduous exertions of
+Cremorne or Mott’s. Cremorne in those days was a delightful resort, with
+an excellent band, and frequented by the most exalted of men and the most
+beautiful of women. Here might be seen nightly during his stay in London
+a late ruling monarch (then Crown Prince) whose moustache the ladies
+insisted on twisting; here, too, occasionally big rows took place,
+affairs that originated in some trifle, such as the irritation of an
+excitable blood on seeing a harmless shop-boy dancing in the ring.
+King-Harman probably was the principal originator of these encounters.
+Naturally of an amiable but plethoric disposition, a sight such as the
+above was like a red rag to a bull, and in no time the fight became
+universal and furious. Gas was turned off, the ringleaders bolted,
+pursued by police. A run as far as Chelsea Hospital with a “bobby” in
+full cry was by no means an uncommon occurrence.
+
+On the occasions when exalted foreigners like Prince Humbert were going,
+the ground in a way had to be salted. Intimation was privately conveyed
+to certain well-known roysterers at Long’s, the Raleigh, and elsewhere,
+that an exalted personage asked them to abstain from rows; a puncher and
+two or three bloods were told off to accompany, and a special envoy was
+instructed to warn Johnny Baum (the lessee) not to be aware of the angel
+he was harbouring and to resist the temptation of any gush and “dutiful”
+toadyism; and so on the eventful night Humbert lolled unrecognised
+through the revelling crowds, whilst ghastly veterans in harlotry twitted
+him on his huge moustache and thrust cards into his fist as tokens of
+British hospitality.
+
+Mott’s, too, was a unique institution, select it might almost be termed,
+considering the precautions that were taken regarding admittance. Every
+man who entered was known by name or sight. A man of good birth or
+position, no matter how great a roué, was admitted as it were by right,
+whilst parvenus, however wealthy, were turned empty away. It was told
+indeed that on one occasion, being importuned for admission by a wealthy
+hatter, old Freer, having been requested by the indignant shop-boy to
+take his card, had replied, “Not necessary, sir. Not necessary. I have
+your name in my hat.” And so the line that divided the classes in the
+sixties was religiously respected. In those benighted days tradesmen
+sent in their bills apologetically, and if a tailor began to importune, a
+fresh order met the case. Flats were unbuilt, and people did not hear
+what was going on all day and all night at their next door neighbour’s;
+inferiors said “Sir,” and “Right you are” was a phrase uncoined; if you
+dined at Simpson’s or Limmer’s you were served on silver, and no waiter
+ventured to ask you who won the 3.45 race; club waiters literally stalked
+one as they approached with a dish, and the caravanserais that now
+dominate the entire length of Piccadilly had not pulled down club
+averages nor reduced the prestige that attached to club membership. The
+great gulf was fixed as immovably as between Dives and Lazarus when
+Abraham was the umpire, and things probably found their level as well as
+in these advanced days, when money is everything, and £20,000 judiciously
+applied will ensure a baronetcy.
+
+The ladies who frequented Mott’s, moreover, were not the tawdry
+make-believes that haunt the modern “Palaces,” but actresses of note,
+who, if not Magdalens, sympathised with them; girls of education and
+refinement who had succumbed to the blandishments of youthful lordlings;
+fair women here and there who had not yet developed into peeresses and
+progenitors of future legislators. Among them were “Skittles,”
+celebrated for her ponies, and Sweet Nelly Fowler, the undisputed Queen
+of Beauty in those long-ago days. This beautiful girl had a natural
+perfume, so delicate, so universally admitted, that love-sick swains paid
+large sums for the privilege of having their handkerchiefs placed under
+the Goddess’s pillow, and sweet Nelly pervaded—in the spirit, if not in
+the flesh—half the clubs and drawing-rooms of London.
+
+This remnant of old-fashioned homage was by no means unusual, and at
+fancy bazaars it was an almost invariable custom to secure the services
+of the belle of the hour to sell strawberries at 2s. 6d. apiece, which
+the fair vendor placed to her lip and then pushed between the swain’s.
+Years later a matronly creature, forgetting that her charms had long
+since vanished, essayed to fill the coffers of a charity bazaar by
+similar blandishments, and as one looked at the hollow cheeks and
+discoloured tusks one was fain to wonder what the effect of the
+“treatment” would be on the most robust constitution.
+
+Situated in an unpretentious house in Foley Street, the ballroom at
+Mott’s (as it appeared in the sixties) was a spacious octagon with a
+glass dome. At the side, approached by a few steps, was the supper room,
+where between 2 and 3 a.m. cold fowl and ham and champagne were
+discussed, the fiddlers descending from their loft, and revelry fast and
+furious took the place of the valse.
+
+Not many years ago, impelled by an irresistible impulse, I visited the
+hall of dazzling light; a greasy drab opened the street door, and
+conducted me into a dingy apartment, which she assured me was the old
+haunt. Sure enough, there stood the dilapidated orchestra perch, and,
+yet a little way off, the steps that led to the supper room; and whilst I
+was contemplating them with something very like a lump in my throat, a
+squeaky voice addressed me, and I beheld a decrepit old man—all that was
+left of poor old Freer—whom memory associated with an expanse of white
+waistcoat, essaying hints such as, “Now, then, lady’s chain,” or
+hob-nobbing with some beauty, or remonstrating, “Really, my lord, these
+practical jokes cannot be permitted.” This temple of the past may still
+be seen with all the windows smashed and on the eve of demolition.
+
+Lord Hastings in those far-off days was the chief culprit in every
+devilry. Beloved by police and publican, he occupied a privileged
+position; nothing vicious characterised his jokes, and he had but one
+enemy—himself. His advent at a ratting match or a badger drawing was a
+signal to every loafer that the hour of his thirst was ended, and that
+henceforth “the Markis was in the chair.” Six cases of champagne
+invariably formed the first order, and as old Jimmy Shaw shouted, “’Ere,
+more glasses there, and dust a chair for ’is Lordship,” the four ale bar
+closed in, as it were, and duke and dustman hobnobbed and clinked glasses
+with a deferential familiarity unknown in these levelling days.
+
+Lord Hastings selected his companions on facial and other merits, and no
+meeker, more guileless-looking youths existed than Bobby Shafto and
+Freddy Granville. “Bobby,” said the Marquis, on one occasion, when he
+had arranged a surprise at Mott’s, “we must go round to Jimmy Shaw’s.
+I’ve to pick up a parcel there, and, look here, old man, you must smuggle
+it in somehow; old Freer always looks carefully at me, but he’ll never
+suspect you; you must carry it under your cape, and when we get inside
+mind, don’t go down to the supper room. I’ll run down for a second, and
+then join you; you know the spot I showed you near the meter?”
+
+Arriving in Windmill Street, no time was lost in preliminaries.
+
+“Is it all right, Jimmy?” inquired the Marquis, and in reply a cadaverous
+individual dressed like a gamekeeper respectfully approached his
+lordship. This was the professional rat-catcher, who traversed the main
+drains half the day, and supplied the various sporting haunts with
+thousands of rats nightly.
+
+If a dog was backed to kill one thousand rats in a specified time the
+supply never failed to be equal to the demand, despite the hundreds that
+were pitted nightly against ferrets, or produced at so much a dozen for
+young bloods to try their dogs on.
+
+To see this rat-catcher plunge his hand into a sack full of huge and
+ferocious sewer rats and extracting them one by one by the tail count the
+requisite amount into the pit was a sight beyond description, as
+legislators, cabinet ministers, peers, and army men threw sovereigns at
+him in payment of the sport supplied.
+
+Carrying a sack in his hand this individual respectfully replied: “All
+right, my lud, two hundred as varmint a lot as iver I clapped eyes on.
+Thanks, your lordship, good luck to yer,” and he pocketed his fee.
+
+“But are they tied all right?” inquired Bobby, as the parcel was
+presented to him.
+
+“Right, sir? Why, you’ve only to slip this string like, and there you
+are.”
+
+“Yes, I know where I should be,” suggested Bobby; “but I mean now. I’ll
+be d—d if I’ll put them under my cloak for a thousand till you make a
+regular knot.”
+
+“Well, there you are, sir,” replied the expert with a pitying smile, as
+he performed the requisite function.
+
+“Now we’re all right, Bobby,” added the Marquis. “Come on, we must catch
+them at supper. I’ve got a knife, come on,” and directing the hansom to
+Foley Street, the conspirators proceeded on their mission.
+
+“Very quiet!” remarked the Marquis, as Freer received them at the door.
+
+“Supper, my lord, supper; and, beg pardon, my lord, no larks to-night,
+please; we’ve a rare lot here to-night, my lord; Lord Londesboro’ is here
+with Miss Fowler and no end of toffs.”
+
+“Why, Freer, what are you talking about? Look at me,” and he displayed
+his white waistcoat, “and Mr. Shafto here, he doesn’t know London or your
+infernal place. I’m showing him the rounds, Freer; we shan’t stay long,”
+and, preceded by the unsuspecting old sinner, the pair proceeded as
+arranged.
+
+Sitting in the deserted room, Bobby scanned the empty orchestra loft,
+whilst shouts intermingled with the popping of corks arose from the
+supper room beyond, so shifting his position to nearer proximity to the
+meter, he awaited the return of his companion.
+
+“All right, old man, they’ll be up in ten minutes, but don’t budge till
+the fiddles strike up; here’s the knife, blade open; don’t cut till I say
+‘Now,’ and bolt like h— once the gas is out.”
+
+The requisite wait was not of long duration. First came old Freer, as,
+casting a sheep’s eye at the Marquis, he contemplated the orchestra;
+next, producing a watch, he shouted, “time, gentlemen,” and half a dozen
+seedy instrumentalists ascended the stairs. The pianist, it was evident,
+was in his cups, but no notice was taken of this—it being admitted that
+he played better when drunk than when sober, and had even been known to
+supply impromptu variations and improvements to the “Mabel Valse” and
+“Blue Danube” when under the exhilarating influence of Freer’s brut
+champagne. Then followed a bevy of fair women—Nelly Fowler and her
+worshipful lord; “Shoes,” who eventually became Lady W—; Baby Jordan,
+Nelly Clifford, the innocent cause of dynastic ructions twelve months
+later at the Curragh—closely followed by Fred Granville, Lyttleton,
+Chuckles, John Delapont, of the 11th, and a mob of flushed men, and as
+the fiddles began to twang, and the dancers took up positions, the
+Marquis thought fit to add a word in season. “Talk away, old man, as if
+it was something private, or some one will be coming up and spoiling the
+game; go on, man; now then, look out, is the knife all ready? Shake ’em
+well out, old man, they can’t hurt you; look out, are you ready? Now.”
+
+To describe what followed is impossible. Two hundred men and women, and
+two hundred sewer rats, compressed within the compass of forty feet by
+thirty, and in a darkness as profound as was ever experienced in Egypt.
+
+Bobby and Hastings meanwhile were driving towards Cremorne with the
+complacency of men who had done their duty.
+
+Cremorne on a Derby night baffles description; progress round the dancing
+platform was almost impossible. The “Hermit’s Cave” and the “Fairy
+Bower” were filled to repletion, and to pass the private boxes was to run
+the gauntlet of a quartern loaf or a dish of cutlets at one’s head. Fun
+fast and furious reigned supreme, during which the smaller fry of
+shop-boys and hired dancers pirouetted within the ring with their various
+partners. But as time advanced, and the wine circulated, the advent of
+detachments of roysterers bespoke a not-distant row. A Derby night
+without a row was, in those days, an impossibility, and the night that
+our contingent started from the Raleigh was no exception to the rule.
+
+No man in his senses brought a watch, and if his coat was torn and his
+hat smashed, what matter? And if he lost the few shillings provided to
+meet cab fare and incidental expenses the loss was not a serious one,
+always supposing a cab was to be found, and one was not in the clutches
+of the law.
+
+“There’s King-Harman,” remarked Hastings, “let us stick near him; there’s
+bound to be a row before morning, and we may as well be together. Can
+you run, Bobby? Not with that cape, though; you’ll have to chuck that;
+but what does it matter, it’s done its duty, and it’s unworthy of a less
+honourable distinction?”
+
+“Yes,” replied Bobby. “I don’t fancy wearing it after those infernal
+rats. But why should there be a row?”
+
+“A row, man,” replied his mentor, “of course there’ll be a row; what did
+we come here for but a row? What did King-Harman come here for, do you
+suppose, but a row? And look here, when they turn the gas out—as they
+always do—run like blazes; you’re not safe till you get to Chelsea
+Hospital, and don’t run into the arms of a policeman; they sometimes stop
+chaps running, on spec.,” and with these words of wisdom they mingled
+with the crowd.
+
+The expected dénouement was not long in coming, and in a second, and
+without apparent warning, sticks were crashing down on top hats, tumblers
+flying in every direction, and fists coming in contact with anything or
+anybody whose proximity seemed to suggest it.
+
+The fiddlers had meanwhile made a hasty retreat, the gas was put out, and
+with the exception here and there of an illumination (a dip steeped in
+oil), the free fight continued till a bevy of police appeared upon the
+scene.
+
+_Sauve qui peut_ was then the word, and helter skelter, old and young,
+Jew and Gentile, soiled doves and hereditary legislators dashed like the
+proverbial herd of swine towards the gates. Often did this stampede
+continue for a mile, till straggling cabs, on their way to their stables,
+picked up the stragglers, and landed them in less disturbed districts.
+But the night was by no means over, not certainly the Derby night for
+roysterers like Lord Hastings.
+
+“We’ll have a rasher of bacon, Bobby,” he explained, as they descended in
+Piccadilly Circus. “Why, it’s barely five o’clock,” and they entered an
+unpretentious coffee-house in rear of the colonnade, much frequented by
+roysterers and market gardeners.
+
+“_Qui hi_;” shouted a voice as they took their seats in an uncomfortable
+pew, and old Jim Stewart, of the 93rd, and a companion hailed them from
+behind a mountain of eggs and bacon.
+
+But their adventures were not to end with this wholesome repast, as,
+coming out, they espied an empty cart, into which they all proceeded to
+climb.
+
+“Hi, master,” shouted the owner, disturbed at his meal, “that be moine.”
+
+“Not it, man,” yelled Hastings; “it’s mine; jump in,” and, without a
+murmur, the worthy man obeyed.
+
+“Where to, master?” was the next inquiry. “I be going for a load of
+gravel to Scotland Yard.” And within half an hour four bucks with white
+ties were shovelling in gravel as if their lives depended on it.
+
+Scotland Yard in those days was a public gravel-pit, and its name did not
+convey the painful suggestions of after years.
+
+“Where now, master?” inquired the yokel again, and St. John’s Wood was
+the order.
+
+Here, before a palatial mansion, the cart pulled up, and the load was
+shot on to the steps. Johnny MacNair, the handsomest man in the Highland
+Brigade, who was too “exhausted” to be moved, was then pushed into the
+hall, and the cortège again departed.
+
+To describe further would be a physical impossibility. Exhausted nature,
+bad wine, possibly the bacon and eggs, all combined to make memory a
+blank. Suffice that the house was the private residence of a corpulent
+ratepayer and respected member of St. Stephen’s Church, who appeared in
+the “Court Directory” as Mrs. Hamilton.
+
+The final episode was the appearance of Johnny MacNair at Rawling’s Hotel
+at three in the afternoon very irate, and only appeased on being assured
+that the episode was a blank to others beside himself.
+
+People may say how scandalous all this reads, and how thankful we ought
+to be to be living in these decorous twentieth century days! But
+reflect, virtuous reader. The sixties, if apparently bad, were not so
+bad as the days of the Georges, which again compare favourably with the
+golden days when Charles (of blessed memory) was King. Vigilance
+societies did not then exist as now, and fifty institutions with their
+secretaries and staff had not to be supported by seekers after morality.
+London was not even blessed with a County Council, and John Burns
+probably could have robbed a birds’ nest as deftly as the veriest
+scapegrace in those long-ago roystering days.
+
+Place a file of the Divorce Court proceedings in the scales, add the
+scandals that occasionally get into print, and, having adjusted them
+carefully, decide honestly whether the balance is much against the London
+of the long-ago sixties.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+KATE HAMILTON—AND LEICESTER SQUARE.
+
+
+THE entrance to Kate Hamilton’s may best be located as the spot on which
+Appenrodt’s German sausage shop now stands, although the premises
+extended right through to Leicester Square.
+
+“Don’t go yet, dear,” appealed a sweet siren as Bobby, looking at his
+watch, swore that when duty called one must obey, but eventually
+succumbed to a voice like a foghorn shouting, “John, a bottle of
+champagne,” and the beautiful Kate bowed approvingly from her throne.
+Kate Hamilton at this period must have weighed at least twenty stone, and
+had as hideous a physiognomy as any weather-beaten Deal pilot. Seated on
+a raised platform, with a bodice cut very low, this freak of nature
+sipped champagne steadily from midnight until daylight, and shook like a
+blanc mange every time she laughed.
+
+Approached by a long tunnel from the street—where two janitors kept
+watch—a pressure of the bell gave instant admittance to a likely visitor,
+whilst an alarm gave immediate notice of the approach of the police.
+
+Finding oneself within the “salon” during one of these periodical raids
+was not without interest. Carpets were turned up in the twinkling of an
+eye, boards were raised, and glasses and bottles—empty or full—were
+thrust promiscuously in; every one assumed a sweet and virtuous air and
+talked in subdued tones, whilst a bevy of police, headed by an inspector,
+marched solemnly in, and having completed the farce, marched solemnly
+out.
+
+What the subsidy attached to this duty, and when and how paid, it is
+needless to inquire. Suffice to show that the hypocrisy that was to
+attain such eminence in these latter enlightened days was even then in
+its infancy, and worked as adroitly as any twentieth-century policeman
+could desire.
+
+“Now we’re all right,” explained the foghorn, as the “salon” resumed its
+normal vivacity. “Bobby, my dear, come and sit next me,” and so, like a
+tomtit and a round of beef, the pasty-faced youth took the post of honour
+alongside the vibrating mass of humanity. The distinction conferred upon
+our hero was a much-coveted one amongst youngsters, and gave a
+“hall-marking” which henceforth proclaimed him a “man about town.” To
+dispense champagne _ad libitum_ was one of its chief privileges—for the
+honour was not unaccompanied with responsibilities—and Florrie or Connie
+(or whoever the friend for the moment of the favoured one might be) not
+only held a _carte blanche_ to order champagne, but to dispense it
+amongst all her acquaintances, by way of propitiation amongst the higher
+grades, and as an implied claim for reciprocity on those whose star might
+be in the ascendant later on.
+
+Bobby, it is needless to say, was a proud man. But six months ago he had
+left school, and it seemed but yesterday that loving hands of mother and
+sisters had vied with one another in marking his linen and making brown
+holland bags with appropriate red bindings that were to contain his
+brushes and other requisites of his toilet. But these had long since
+been discarded as “bad form,” and a dressing case—on credit—with silver
+fittings had taken their place. It had been a question, indeed, whether
+the pony chaise would have to be put down to enable the worthy rector to
+provide the requisite £100 a year that was essential over and above the
+pay of a youngster in the service, and here was a young scamp swilling
+champagne like water, whilst the sisters’ allowance had been cut down to
+enable their brother to meet necessary expenses, and the boy that cleaned
+the knives had to look after the pony vice Simmons, the groom, dismissed.
+Not that Bobby was vicious by nature; on the contrary, his follies were
+to be attributed to that short-sighted policy that drives a youth on the
+curb up to a given moment, and then gives him his head; a lad who had
+never tasted anything stronger than an aperient suddenly engulfed in a
+deluge of champagne. In appearance he was delicate almost to effeminacy,
+with a gentle, courteous address, fair curly hair waved around his silly
+head, and he was popular alike with men and women. His good looks were
+his misfortune, and his amiability of temper led him into numerous
+scrapes, such as entanglements with designing chorus girls and the
+accompanying folly of too much champagne with too little money to pay for
+it. Not long previous to his arrival in London he had fallen desperately
+in love at Taunton with a strolling actress old enough to be his mother,
+who played very minor parts, and whose forte was pirouetting and pointing
+her huge foot at any patron in front whom she desired to signal out for
+honour. It had taken the combined talents of the adjutant, the rector,
+and George Hay to buy the sweet siren off with a promise that her son
+(nearly as old as poor Bobby) should get a berth on a sea-going
+merchantman. As a fact, he had promised to marry the charmer, and
+eventually to find money to run a company, and it was only by the
+accident of the show being in pawn in a Somersetshire village (where
+Julia Jemima was playing Juliet to a drunken former admirer’s Romeo) that
+an urgent appeal for funds brought the escapade to light.
+
+“Of course,” Julia had once said by way of exciting his enthusiasm, “we
+can’t expect you to ‘go on’ all at once, but in time you could play up to
+me. You just study Romeo and get up Rover while you’re about it, and
+Hamlet and some of Charlie Matthews’s parts—you can easily knock them
+off, and one part do so ’elp another, dear.” Not that Master Bobby had
+been brought to realise at once the histrionic fame in store for him; on
+the contrary, he had jibbed considerably at the contemplation of having
+to don the spangled velvets and tights that constituted the “property” of
+the strollers, and it was only the herculean exertions of the lovely
+Julia Jemima—on her benefit night—smiling more bewitchingly, pirouetting
+if possible more gracefully, and gliding on one toe across the stage till
+the muscles of her calves stood out like a Sandow’s, that poor Bobby
+succumbed, and vowed that come who, come what, nothing should tear him
+from the divine creature. Happily our hero had not anticipated the
+effects of a combined attack of adjutant and father, and so, being
+rescued from one pitfall, we find him sailing steadily towards another
+amidst the brilliant scenes at Kate Hamilton’s.
+
+“I’ve been in the profession, dear,” Connie was explaining as Bobby
+leaned over the throne to gaze on her, “and I often have half a mind to
+go back to it.” (She had once carried a banner through the run of the
+pantomime at the “Vic.”) The word “profession” acted like an electric
+shock; the lad blinked as the scales appeared to fall from his eyes;
+Julia Jemima appeared visibly before him; the spangles, the tights, and
+the muscular calf in mid-air floated through his brain in deadly
+proximity, as pulling out his watch with a shudder he bade a hurried
+good-bye, and dashed off in the fleetest four-wheeler to join the Major’s
+“lady” under the inhospitable walls of the Tower.
+
+In the long, long ago the entertainments provided by Leicester Square
+were not of an exciting nature. The “Sans Souci,” Walhalla, and
+Burford’s Panorama (where Daly’s Theatre now stands) divided the honours
+till ’51, when Wylde’s Globe occupied the entire enclosure. This huge
+erection was sixty feet in diameter, and remained in existence till 1861,
+when it was pulled down to make way for entertainments combining
+instruction with pleasure.
+
+In 1863 the “Eldorado” Café Chantant, which was leading a precarious
+existence, put up the shutters, when a section of the (non-speculative)
+public made the brilliant, loyal, and dutiful suggestion that somebody
+should erect a “Denmark” Winter Garden as a memento of the Prince of
+Wales’s recent marriage, but the loyal, dutiful, sycophantic proposal did
+not commend itself as it no doubt ought to have done, and probably would
+to-day. The requisite capital was not forthcoming, and so not till 1873
+did the new era commence, when £50,000 was offered for the Square by that
+monument of aspiring greatness, “Baron” Grant, who burst upon the horizon
+and then fizzled into space as meteors are wont to do.
+
+It is impossible to deny the fascination that Leicester Square has for a
+considerable majority of Londoners. Up to the days of Charles II. the
+entire space was composed of rustic hedge-rows and lanes. Then Castle
+Street, Newport Street, Cranbourne Alley, and Bear Lane came into
+existence, the Square was railed round, and all the chief duels of the
+day were fought within its historic precincts.
+
+Lord Warwick, Lord Mountford, the Duke of Hamilton, and Lord Mohun (a
+professional bully and expert shot), and a host of smaller fry have
+avenged their honour within its boundaries—and then adjourned to Locket’s
+Coffee House in its immediate vicinity. This ancient institution must
+not be confused with the palatial establishments known as Lockhart’s.
+
+In the days of which we are writing, Leicester Square was a barren waste
+surrounded by rusty railings, trodden down in all directions; refuse of
+every description was shot into it, whilst in the centre stood a
+dilapidated equestrian statue that assumed various adornments as the
+freaks of drunken roysterers suggested. On the north side (where now
+stands the Empire) was The Shades, a low-class eating-house in the
+basement, approached by steps, where every knife, fork and spoon was
+indelibly stamped “Stolen from The Shades” as a delicate hint to its
+patrons. On the opposite side stood a huge wooden pump, of which more
+anon. At the adjoining eastern corner were the “tableaux vivants,”
+presided over by a judge in “wig and gown” where more blasphemy and filth
+was to be heard for a shilling than would appear possible, all within one
+hundred yards of such harmless (if disreputable) haunts as Kate
+Hamilton’s, which were overhauled nightly. It was many years afterwards
+(July, 1874) that the barren wilderness was made beautiful for ever by
+the generosity of “Baron” Grant. One can see him now, arrayed in white
+waistcoat and huge buttonhole, accompanied by an unpretentious bevy of
+councillors and Board of Works men, over whom a few bits of bunting
+fluttered, presenting his gift of many thousands in a speech that was
+quite inaudible. But, like medals and decorations, gifts in those days
+were not rewarded in the lavish manner of to-day. Had such a public
+benefit been conferred now, the donor would have been dubbed a baronet,
+or a privy councillor at least, with every prospect of a peerage should
+he again spring £20,000. Apropos of this gift, there was a peculiar
+sequel. When asked at the time whether he gave or retained the
+underground rights in addition to the recreation ground, the great man,
+in the zenith of his success, replied, “Yes, yes; I give it all.” Years
+after, however, when poor and friendless, hearing that underground works
+had made the subsoil more valuable than the surface, he enquired whether
+some remnant could not be claimed by him, but was forcibly reminded of
+the follies of his youth by a prompt negative, and left to die in penury
+without a helping hand.
+
+Perhaps never was the irony of Fate more clearly exemplified than when,
+years after, two yokels who were gazing on Shakespeare’s monument were
+heard to say “That’s ’im as give the place.”
+
+Situated exactly on the site of the Criterion Buffet was the “Pic,” a
+dancing saloon of a decidedly inferior class, where anybody entering
+(except perhaps the Angel Gabriel) was bound to have a row. Hat smashing
+in this delectable spot was the preliminary to a scrimmage, and when it
+is recollected what “hats” were in the long-ago sixties, it will be
+easily understood that any interference with them was an offence to be
+wiped out only with blood. Hats, it may be asserted without fear of
+contradiction, were the Alpha and Omega of dress amongst every section of
+the community; the postmen wore hats with their long scarlet coats;
+policemen wore hats with their swallow-tails; boys the height of
+fourpence in copper wore hats; the entire field at a cricket match wore
+flannels and hats; and the yokels and agricultural classes topped their
+smocks with hats. Not hats, be it understood, of the modern silky
+limited style, but huge extinguishers, with piles varying from solid
+beaver to the substance of a terrier’s coat; and to enter the “Pic” was
+tantamount to the annihilation of one of these creations. The
+“Kangaroo,” of whom mention is made elsewhere, was a standing dish at
+this establishment, and to such an extent was his position recognised
+that many men tipped him on entering to obviate molestation.
+
+The “Pic,” despite its central position, never attained popularity, and
+was the resort of pickpockets, bullies, and “soiled doves” of a very
+mediocre class. On Boat Race nights, however, an organised gang of
+University “men” invariably raided it, and by smashing everything
+balanced the account to a certain extent.
+
+No place of amusement has passed through so many convulsions as the
+edifice now known as the Alhambra. Erected in the sixties, it began life
+as a species of polytechnic, where it was hoped that the instruction
+afforded by the contemplation of two electric batteries and a diving
+bell, in conjunction with the exhilarating air of the neighbourhood,
+would attract sufficient audiences to meet rent and expenses; but the
+venture not having fulfilled the expectations of its youth, its portals
+were closed, and it next came into prominence during the Franco-German
+war. Here “patriotic songs” were the _pièce de résistance_, and towards
+11 o’clock a dense throng waved flags and cheered and hooted
+indiscriminately the “Marseillaise,” the “Wacht am Rhein,” and everything
+and everybody. Jones, calmly smoking, would, without the slightest
+provocation, assault Brown, who was similarly innocently occupied, and
+who in turn resented the polite distinction. Stand-up fights took place
+nightly, and, as was anticipated, drew all London to the Alhambra towards
+11 o’clock.
+
+These indiscriminate nightly riots attracted, as may be assumed, all the
+bullies and sharpers in London, amongst whom stands prominently the
+“Kangaroo,” a gigantic black, who was known to everybody in the sixties.
+This ruffian, who was admittedly an expert pugilist, was the biggest
+coward that hovered round Piccadilly. No place was free from his
+unwelcome visits, and his ubiquity showed itself by his nightly
+appearance at the Pavilion, the Alhambra, the Café Riche, Barnes’s, the
+“Pic,” the Blue Posts, the Argyll, and Cremorne. From such places as
+Evans’s and Mott’s he was absolutely barred, and the moral effect of the
+reception he would have received deterred him—in his wisdom—from making
+the attempt.
+
+His _modus operandi_ was simplicity itself; seating himself at some
+inoffensive man’s table, he helped himself to anything he might find
+within reach; if remonstrated with, he knocked the remonstrator down, and
+coolly walked out of the room.
+
+On other occasions he would demand money, and if refused, applied the
+same remedy; if a party were seated at the Alhambra watching the
+performance, a black arm would suddenly appear over one’s shoulder, and
+glass by glass was lifted and coolly drained. Occasionally he met his
+match, when, having pocketed his thrashing, he commenced afresh in an
+adjoining night-house.
+
+A plethora of coloured ex-prizefighters roamed about these latitudes in
+the long-ago sixties. Plantagenet Green, an admittedly scientific boxer
+unaccompanied by any heart, was everywhere much in evidence, and Bob
+Travers, one of the best and pluckiest that ever contested the
+middle-weight championship, might have been seen years after selling
+chutnee in the streets. In those unenlightened days prizefighters,
+although made much of, never forgot their place, and the illiterate
+abortions in rabbit-skin collars that intrude into every public resort at
+the present day and dub themselves “professors” were creations happily
+unknown.
+
+Needless to add that the Alhambra, with its miscellaneous attractions,
+stood very high in the estimation of our subalterns, or a considerable
+portion who deferred to Bobby on all matters relating to “form.”
+
+Armed with diminutive flags of every nationality in Europe, a select team
+were one evening enjoying the delights that led up to the “patriotic
+era,” as sitting around a table on the balcony they agreed upon the
+rendezvous should circumstances—and the fights—separate them. Ladies,
+moreover, graced the board, and sipped from time to time the exhilarating
+fluid that sparkled in various tumblers. George Hay meanwhile was
+explaining to an interested houri how by an extraordinary coincidence
+red, white, and blue predominated in most of the National colours of
+Europe, while Bobby was urging some argument on a fair creature in
+inaudible tones, when an apparition a yard long, and as black as ebony,
+passed over his head and deliberately seized a tumbler. Dazed for a
+moment, and ignorant of the notoriety of the “Kangaroo,” one and all sat
+spellbound as the ruffian deliberately emptied the glass and replaced it
+on the table.
+
+George was the first to grasp the situation, as, springing from his
+chair, he confronted the bully, and inquired: “What are we to understand
+by this?” But, “What you d— please!” was barely out of his mouth when a
+swinging blow on the jaw sent him staggering towards the counter.
+
+Dropping his cane and hat, the “Kangaroo” now advanced in an attitude
+that meant business, and dashing in his long left arm, essayed to fell
+George with one blow. But his adversary was prepared for this, and
+springing back lightly, got beyond danger. The “Kangaroo’s” arms, when
+reposing by his side, reached almost to his knees, and gave him an
+incalculable advantage with any but the most nimble. Realising this
+fact, George decided to change his tactics, and to direct all his blows
+for the neck or body of his opponent; he had been taught, indeed, that a
+negro’s head is practically invulnerable, but that a swinging slog in the
+loins would double up the most seasoned. A shower of blows now rattled
+on the black’s sides, as springing out of danger after every onslaught,
+the “Kangaroo” began to show signs of distress; standing well out of
+range, he appeared but to wait the opportunity, and picking up his hat
+and cane, he bolted down the stairs.
+
+The “Kangaroo” had learnt a lesson, and was profoundly ignorant of the
+fact that his meek-looking opponent had a heart as big as a lion’s and
+was a pupil of Ben Caunt.
+
+But patriotism and loyalism of the blatant type are apt to cloy even on
+the most gushing, and the fever pitch having been attained, the cooling
+process set in, and then a series of experiments ensued to try and keep
+up the demand for the disrated Alhambra.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+THE NIGHT HOUSES OF THE HAYMARKET.
+
+
+IF any of the Bucks of the sixties were suddenly brought to life and
+placed in the centre of Piccadilly Circus, no labyrinth could more
+completely puzzle them than the structural alterations of to-day.
+Abutting on to where Shaftesbury Avenue commences was a dismal row of
+houses, with here and there an outlet into the purlieus of more dismal
+Soho; where the obstruction for the accommodation of flower-sellers now
+raises its useless head, another block of houses ran eastwards, dividing
+the present broad expanse into two narrow thoroughfares; the huge
+monument to the profitable industry in intoxicating drinks takes the
+place of the ancient “Pic,” and the Haymarket, from the exalted position
+of centre of the surging mass of nocturnal corruption, has descended to
+the status of a dimly-lighted thoroughfare, with here and there an
+unlicensed Italian restaurant and a sprinkling of second-class
+pot-houses.
+
+Instead of the promenade from which strollers are now hustled off the
+pavement by a zealous police, the strip between Windmill Street and the
+Raleigh Club was the favoured lounge, and the Haymarket literally blazed
+with light (till daylight) from such temples as the “Blue Posts,”
+Barnes’s, The Burmese, and Barron’s Oyster Rooms. This latter place,
+although palpably suffering from old age and the ravages of time, and
+propped up by beams innumerable, was the nightly rendezvous of
+oyster-eaters, where, sandwiched in between “loose boxes” upstairs and
+down, champagne and other drinks were consumed to excess.
+
+Often amid these sounds of revelry, ominous cracks and groans warned the
+revellers that all was not right, till on one never-to-be-forgotten night
+a sound that vibrated like the crack of doom caused a stampede, and
+leaving wine, oysters, hats, unpaid bills, every one rushed
+helter-skelter into the street. Old Barron, staring disconsolately from
+the pavement at his fast-collapsing house, suddenly appeared to remember
+that his cash-box was in the doomed building, and rushing frantically in,
+was seen hurrying out with the prized treasure. And then a crash that
+might have quailed the stoutest heart rang through the night, and Barron,
+cash-box, and lights, all disappeared in a cloud of dust that ascended up
+to heaven. Days after the old man was found firmly clutching his
+treasure. Let us hope its possession compensated him in his passage
+across the Styx.
+
+The decorous Panton Street of to-day was another very sink of iniquity.
+Night houses abounded, and Rose Burton’s and Jack Percival’s were
+sandwiched between hot baths of questionable respectability and
+abominations of every kind. Stone’s Coffee House was the only redeeming
+feature, and, as it existed in those days, was a very spring of water in
+a dry land.
+
+But it must not be assumed that, although Percival’s was a “night house,”
+it was to be classed with its next door neighbours. Here the sporting
+fraternity radiated after all important events; here Heenan lodged after
+his fight with Tom King; and one can see him—as if it were
+yesterday—receiving his friends and backers on the following Sunday with
+his handsome features incrusted in plaster of Paris and smiling as if he
+had been awarded the victory he was undoubtedly choused out of.
+
+But perhaps no spot has undergone more structural and social change than
+Arundel Place, an unpretentious court that leads out of Coventry Street.
+At one corner now stands a tobacconist’s shop, and at the other an eating
+bar, where hunks of provender are devoured at the counter, and cocoa
+retailed at a penny a bucket; whilst the court itself is practically
+absorbed by the Civil Service Stores, through whose windows “gentlemen”
+may be seen weighing out coffee, and “bald-headed noblemen” tying up
+parcels.
+
+In the sixties, however, the place had considerably more vitality—after
+nightfall. On the eastern side stood a public-house of unenviable
+repute, owned by an ex-prizefighter, to which the fraternity congregated
+in considerable numbers; whilst at the end furthest from Coventry Street
+was a coffee-house, whose open portals discovered nothing more dangerous
+than an oil-clothed floor, chairs and tables over its surface, and an
+unassuming counter for the supply of moderate refreshments. During the
+day a spirit of repose pervaded the entire area; the public-house
+appeared to be doing little or no trade, whilst the coffee-house was
+chiefly remarkable for the persistent scrubbing and emptying of buckets
+that went on, as a mechanical charwoman, in the inevitable bonnet,
+oscillated to and fro between the door and the pavement. But for the old
+woman, and an occasional apparition in a startling check costume that
+flashed in and out between the coffee-house and the pot-house, one might
+have imagined the entire place was uninhabited, so subdued and reposeful
+was everything.
+
+Tall and angular by nature, with skin-tight overalls and a coat the
+colour of a Camden Town ’bus, Jerry Fry was the undisputed landlord of
+the unpretentious coffee-house, and recognised director of a gang of
+sharpers who made human nature their study, and scoured the highways and
+byways nightly in search of profitable quarry. Not that the above
+costume was the sole one in Jerry’s extensive wardrobe, which boasted
+amongst others the huge cape and whip associated with rustic drivers, a
+clerical outfit, evening clothes, and a white tie the size of a poultice.
+Jerry as a strategist was without a rival, and it requires but little
+effort of imagination to assume that he has turned in his grave times
+innumerable in the contemplation of the sorry sharpers of the present era
+who have usurped his functions in the despoiling of their species. Any
+promising subject that appeared on the horizon immediately became the
+object of Jerry’s personal solicitude, and once the victim’s besetting
+sin was accurately diagnosed, no time was lost in placing a specialist on
+his unsuspecting track. It was not long after the arrival of the “Line”
+garrison in London that George Hay was focussed as an inveterate gambler,
+and as the “Landed Gentry” vouched for his being the eldest son of a
+county magnate, no time was lost in laying lines in every direction in
+the hope of catching him. Not that play—in which he was by no means an
+expert—was his only delight; on the contrary, he excelled in every kind
+of manly sport, and could hold his own with the gloves with many a man
+who had the advantage of him in height and weight.
+
+When in the country cards never entered his mind; in London, however,
+with the fascination ever before him, the temptation was irresistible,
+and the three fly-blown cards of a racecourse manipulator or _chemin de
+fer_ at the Arlington held him like a vice whilst the fever was upon him.
+
+It was a sultry evening in September when everybody (except four
+millions) was out of town that George and Bobby elected to stroll to the
+West End after an uneventful dinner at mess. Threading their way through
+the slums that abutted on the Tower, nothing worthy of record occurred
+till, casually stopping to light a cigar, they were accosted on the
+threshold of Leicester Square by a courteous individual who asked for a
+light.
+
+George was nothing if he was not a gentleman, and without waiting to
+consider why the person should seek a light from him when gas jets were
+blazing outside every shop, he considerately acceded.
+
+But the stranger apparently was of a sociable disposition, and persisted
+in hanging on to their skirts and essaying remarks on objects on their
+way.
+
+“What have we here?” he inquired as, passing Arundel Place, a dense crowd
+outside the pot-house riveted his attention. “The fight, of course,” he
+continued, “the seconds and backers are squaring up, I expect. Will you
+step in, gentlemen, it’s all right, but I’d better perhaps go in and
+inquire, they all know me; one minute, gents, by your leave,” and he
+disappeared into the crowded court.
+
+“Shall we go in, George,” inquired Bobby, “or have a peep at the ‘Pic’?
+D— it! we must have some sport after twenty-four hours of the Tower.”
+
+“Go in? Of course we will if there’s anything to be seen,” answered
+George; “I’m half-inclined to shake up my liver by arranging with Ben
+Caunt to resume my ‘studies’ at the Tower, and there’s one consolation,
+Bobby, it’s not as expensive as the Arlington, and we haven’t much to
+lose if they do pick our pockets.”
+
+So summed up the situation Solon George, as their cicerone made his
+reappearance.
+
+“Right, gents; step this way,” intimated the stranger; “but we had best
+wait awhile in the coffee-house yonder; leave it to me to give you the
+tip,” and without further ado they all entered the hostelry.
+
+George, with all his common sense, was a very tyro in the rudiments of
+the unwritten law of knavery, and certainly no match for a shrewd London
+rascal; to enter into conversation with an absolute stranger appeared
+nothing extraordinary to him, and when a punching match was the basis of
+the acquaintance, and the chance of meeting certain leading—if
+illiterate—lights of the fraternity the prospect, conventionalism with
+him was an infinitesimal quantity, and he entered into the sport with the
+enthusiasm of a schoolboy.
+
+“But why here?” inquired George, as they found themselves the sole
+occupants of the oilclothed room.
+
+“Wait a bit, gents, they’ll come presently,” replied their cicerone;
+“I’ve given them the office, but they’re a bit busy just now settling up
+the scores for this morning, maybe.” And then he proceeded with what
+purported to be a personal description of the fight, looking frequently
+at a huge clock that ticked in the corner, and fervently hoping that
+Jerry would not be long.
+
+Bobby meanwhile was champing his bit, and bewailing the time that might
+so much more profitably have been passed at the “Pic,” when a man in the
+immaculate disguise of a coachman walked hurriedly through the room.
+Peering into every corner, and examining crevices that a cat would have
+been incommoded in, he hurriedly approached our heroes, and asked
+excitedly whether they had seen a gentleman such as he described.
+Without waiting for a reply, he next dropped his whip and rug on to a
+vacant chair, and whipping out a pack of cards, continued: “It drives me
+mad to think I should have lost such a stupid game; but I was drunk,
+gentlemen—forgive the admission—yes, drunk; but he has promised me my
+revenge here to-night,” and pulling out a watch the size of a frying-pan,
+he contemplated it as if wrapt in thought. Replacing it with a spasmodic
+jerk, he continued: “Just fancy, gentlemen, this was the simple thing;
+but I was drunk, alas!—happy thought, ’ware drink,” and he gave a halloa
+such as foxhunters give on the stage, and proceeded to rattle three
+cards.
+
+“Now, gentlemen, just for fun, which is the knave?” And Bobby, without a
+check, selected the correct cardboard. “Again, gentlemen, if you please,
+it will bring my hand into practice; shall we say half a crown? Thanks!”
+and again, with the accuracy of a truffle dog, Bobby discovered the card.
+
+Again and again was this farce perpetrated, till Bobby’s winnings
+amounted to £4, and in his generosity he seemed loth to take advantage of
+such a greenhorn.
+
+George meanwhile had caught the infection and bet and won as the stakes
+were made higher.
+
+“Five pounds for once, gentlemen? I think I’ve earned my revenge,”
+pleaded Jerry, and fickle Fortune as if of the same opinion, decided in
+his favour.
+
+Any one but the veriest tyro would have deemed this a favourable
+opportunity to stop, but George, as we have seen, had his own ideas of
+honour; the fever, moreover, was upon him, and, producing the contents of
+his own pocket, he again backed his opinion.
+
+Gone in a twinkling, he next turned to Bobby, and the lad at once
+proceeded to supply him with his cash. Meanwhile their original
+acquaintance whispered imploringly to George to have done with it, but he
+might as well have spoken to the winds. “D— it, man, if I’m cleaned out
+of ready money I’ve still my ring and sleeve links; go on, sir,” he
+continued to Jerry. “I’ll bet my jewellery against a tenner.”
+
+But fortune was still against our friends, and divested of his trinkets,
+in his turn he appealed to his opponent.
+
+“Come, sir, I gave you your revenge, now give me mine, and anything I
+lose I’ll give you my cheque for.”
+
+But Jerry was of a practical nature; cheques were occasionally stopped,
+and officious detectives might come to hear of it, so he decided to
+decline the tempting offer, but promised revenge on the morrow. The
+first stranger meanwhile came to the rescue. “I know you’re a
+gentleman,” he whispered, “and mayn’t like to lose those things, why not
+offer the gent to redeem them to-morrow?”
+
+The idea seemed a happy one, and the party dispersed, on the
+understanding that at twelve the following day they should all meet at
+the Pump in Leicester Square.
+
+But our heroes were not yet done with casual acquaintances, as passing
+along the Haymarket they were again accosted by a man. “Excuse me,
+gentlemen,” was the abrupt introduction, “I saw you parting company just
+now with two well-known sharpers; I’m Detective Bulger of the police, may
+I ask if you’ve been robbed?”
+
+And then the painful truth began to dawn upon the victims that two
+officers in Her Majesty’s Service had been overreached at a game that a
+Blue-coat boy would have jibbed at.
+
+The sequel is briefly told. The next day the appointment was punctually
+kept by all except Jerry, who, oddly enough, deputed another man to
+explain that he was sending off an urgent telegram, and had requested him
+(if the coast was clear) to conduct our friends to him.
+
+Followed at a respectful distance by the detective, the jewellery was
+duly redeemed; but just as Jerry was pocketing the money, a hand was laid
+upon his shoulder, and he found himself in the clutches of Sergeant
+Bulger.
+
+George refused to prosecute; his money was however, restored to him, and
+binding Bobby to secrecy, he thus escaped the chaff that would have
+cleaved to him for life.
+
+The “Kitchen” was situated in St. Martin’s Court, abutting on Castle
+Street, now known as Charing Cross Road; adjoining it was a famous _à la
+mode_ house kept by two brothers, each of whom could turn the scale at
+thirty stone. It was explained by way of accounting for this
+extraordinary freak of nature that, by never leaving the establishment
+and inhaling the greasy fumes from night to morning, their pores were
+constantly imbibing from a thousand sources the oleaginous vapours that
+conduce to obesity; be that as it may, the entire front of an upper
+chamber had to be removed to allow of the usual formalities of Christian
+burial when one of the firm died, and it is doubtful if the place was not
+afterwards demolished.
+
+Here nightly were to be found actors since known to fame; journalists
+such as Horace (Pony) Mayhew and his brother Gus, George Augustus
+Sala—then writing to measure—and a sprinkling of golden calves with
+theatrical proclivities. The refreshments, of course, left nothing to be
+desired on the score of satisfying, and _à la mode_ gravy in pewter pots
+stimulated many a jaded reveller during the small hours of the morning.
+
+It was on our way to this refined hostelry that we on one occasion met
+Polly Amherst, and the sequel was so absurd that I give the story special
+prominence.
+
+Polly was a delightful companion. Just down from Oxford, he was destined
+to take up a fat family living in the neighbourhood of Sevenoaks, but
+being seen one night in a bird’s eye tie amid the revels of Cremorne, and
+the birds of the air having carried it to his bishop, it was pointed out
+to the worthy fellow that free scope for his undoubted talent was
+impossible in the Church, and so posterity was the loser of much pulpit
+oratory that would doubtless have thrilled the present generation.
+
+As we entered the “Kitchen” Jack Coney—a promoted scene-shifter lately
+come into prominence by his marriage with Rose Burton—was retailing to
+the assembled revellers the spot which had been kept secret to the last
+moment where a big fight was to take place in the morning.
+
+“Of course, I’ll go,” replied George Hay to someone’s inquiry.
+
+“I’m too seedy,” continued Bobby, who had not spared the punch.
+
+“I, too,” added Oliver.
+
+“I should like to, but I daren’t,” chimed in Polly. And so a detachment
+was added to the contingent that were piloted by the irrepressible Coney.
+
+Bobby during the past night had, alas! not followed the paths of
+sobriety, and so it came to pass that the blind agreed to lead the blind,
+and Polly Amherst and Harry Turner (a genial comedian) agreed to escort
+him to the Hummums.
+
+Passing Hart’s Coffee House we, of course, “looked in,” and, sure enough,
+there was Hastings and a dozen boon companions; but the night air had
+been too much for many of us; we saw a dozen Marquises and only one boon
+companion, so taking the wisest resolve we had taken that night, we bade
+each other farewell on the steps of the Hummums, and proceeded to our
+virtuous couches.
+
+Arising late on the following afternoon, a circumstance occurred that
+drove everything else out of my head, and to the elucidation of this
+inexplicable coincidence are to be attributed the monotonous details I
+have just described.
+
+It was towards three on the following afternoon, when, having completed a
+refreshing toilette, my left arm was entering my sleeve that I became
+aware of a foreign substance that bulged to an abnormal extent the inner
+pocket of my coat; proceeding to examine the cause with that
+self-possession for which I was so justly conspicuous, my equanimity was
+considerably tried by coming into contact with a watch; extracting it
+carefully, I discovered that it was attached to a massive chain adorned
+with numerous seals and lockets. Surprised, I continued my
+investigations, my surprise turning to anxiety as a second watch (a
+repeater) made its appearance. By this time thoroughly alarmed, I dived
+again, and out came three or four rings and a purse stuffed full of
+sovereigns. Fairly staggered, my _sang-froid_ left me, and reeling
+towards the bed, I endeavoured to solve the mystery.
+
+Had I in my cups robbed a jeweller’s? Had I picked somebody’s pocket?
+Had I had a row, and after the fray put on my opponent’s coat? But every
+argument failed to elucidate the mystery, and my thoughts wandered to
+such an extent that in it all I saw a distinct judgment on my
+back-sliding.
+
+To make matters worse, I knew not where Amherst or Harry Turner resided,
+and so resolved to have breakfast and await developments.
+
+But breakfast under such circumstances was a sorry farce; every gulp of
+tea appeared to choke me, and in every waiter who approached I recognised
+a constable on the track of the burglar. Flesh and blood could not long
+stand this strain, and my pent-up feelings received a still greater shock
+by the waiter thrusting a card into my hand. “Ask him in,” I replied,
+and Harry Turner, with a face a yard long, hurriedly shuffled towards me.
+
+“An awful thing has occurred,” began the unhappy mummer, “and I’ve come
+to you in the hope that you’ll be able to explain it. Look at this,” he
+continued, as he proceeded to untie a bundle. “When I was putting on my
+coat just now I found two watches, a cheque-book, a ring, and a packet of
+papers. Can you recollect what we did? By Gad, I’m half disposed to go
+and give myself up. One would get off lighter then, perhaps.”
+
+Whilst we were discussing ways and means, a second card was brought to
+me, and again the waiter was requested to “show him in,” and then Polly
+Amherst came upon the scene, the ghost of his former self, pale and
+haggard, but otherwise externally irreproachable as regards white tie and
+High Church clerical attire. “Billy,” he began, “a terrible thing has
+occurred, and I’ve come here in the hopes that you will be able to set my
+mind at rest. Conceive my horror, when opening my eyes this afternoon,
+to see at my bedside a watch, a pile of sovereigns, and a valuable ring.
+What silly jokes did we indulge in last night, old man? ’Pon my word as
+I came here I shuddered as I passed a policeman. The matter can’t rest
+here. I’ve locked the accursed things in my portmanteau, and now what’s
+to be done?”
+
+But the consolation he received from his dismal companions in no way
+tended to allay his anxiety. “We have neither of us the smallest
+conception of how we became possessed of these things,” replied Turner,
+“and it seems to me our only course is to walk round to Bow Street and
+voluntarily give ourselves up.”
+
+Our teeth had now begun to chatter, and, hoping against hope, we agreed
+it would be best to await George Hay’s return, and act as he should
+advise.
+
+Three weary hours later, George Hay, Oliver Montagu, the irrepressible
+Jack Coney, and Harry Ashley (afterwards of _Pink Dominoes_ fame),
+returned from the fight, and it having been arranged that the three
+latter should be permitted to depart before the culprits broke the news
+to George, a magnum was called for by way of a stirrup cup.
+
+“By the way, Polly,” remarked Montagu, “I may as well relieve you of my
+gimcracks, and, by Gad, it’s as well we didn’t take them. Did you ever
+see a rougher lot?” he added, turning to George.
+
+And then a cloud rose from off the countenances of Polly, Harry Turner,
+and myself; the magnum that had hitherto tasted like jalap appeared as
+nectar to our lips, and we began to recollect that prior to leaving the
+“Kitchen” our comrades had entrusted their valuables to us.
+
+We never told our terrible experience.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+EVANS’S AND THE DIALS.
+
+
+BEFORE the Embankment came into existence, Salisbury Street and Cecil
+Street—where the hotel now stands—consisted for the most part of lodging
+houses. Overlooking the river, stairs led to shanties to which wherries
+were moored, whilst a verandah, running the entire length of the house in
+which I once had rooms, enabled shade and muddy breezes to be indulged in
+during the hot summer evenings. At the side could be seen the arches
+known as Fox Hill, which, still visible from the (now) Tivoli Music Hall,
+were in those days capable of being traversed for a considerable
+distance.
+
+In ancient days the haunt of smugglers and desperadoes, it had not lost
+its popularity with the lawless classes even in the more modern long-ago
+sixties, and weird stories of murders that had never been discovered, and
+crimes of every description, were currently reported as of almost daily
+occurrence in the impenetrable “dark arches of the Adelphi.” No sane
+person would have ventured to explore them unless accompanied by an armed
+escort, and even Wych Street, Newcastle Street, and Holywell Street were
+“out of bounds” after nightfall.
+
+The dead body of a female having one morning been discovered, it was
+currently reported that the assassin was in concealment in the “dark
+arches;” the police—from information received—were convinced of it, and
+the authorities, having a mind to probe the mystery, organised search
+parties, which scattered amongst the labyrinths, and eventually emerged
+no nearer an elucidation than before.
+
+Passages, it was asserted, led to various exits on the river bank, and
+extended in an easterly direction to Whitefriars, all of which in later
+years have been gradually filled up till now nothing more pernicious than
+a peaceful beer-store a few yards from the entrance and an occasional
+board-man who ought to be traversing the street, give signs of vitality
+to what was once a sink of iniquity.
+
+It is refreshing after this weird retrospect to turn to the modern
+Adelphi Terrace, where years ago I participated in many enjoyable
+reunions. Here each Sunday night such lively company as the late Kate
+Vaughan and her husband, Freddy Wellesley, Billy Hill, Marius, Florence
+St. John, Sweet Nell Hazel, and other vestals congregated; whilst the
+“Savages” have made it their headquarters, and can lean over the balcony
+without risking typhoid, and eventually cross the Strand at no greater
+risk than an invitation to air their French.
+
+And the changes in the Adelphi suggest the changes that have taken place
+in other historical resorts, than which nothing has been more marked than
+in the Burlington Arcade. Here every afternoon, between six and seven,
+throngs composed of all that made up the pomp and vanity of this wicked
+world disported themselves. Here Baby Jordan and “Shoes”—since become
+the mother of a present-day baronet—Nelly Fowler, and Nelly Clifton held
+court with their attendant squires and lords of every degree. Here at
+seven the entire mass surged towards the Blue Posts in Cork street and
+indulged in champagne and caviare toast. Here about the same time
+Hastings, Fred Granville, and roysterers of a more pronounced type looked
+in for a breakfast of “fixed bayonets” by way of appetite for the dinner
+at Limmer’s that most of them would barely touch. Here (in Cork Street)
+a little head might be seen cautiously peeping over the blinds at No. 17
+in the hope that some eligible client might seek pecuniary relief before
+entering on the night’s enjoyment. Here in later years the same head,
+but transformed into the appearance of a Fitzroy storm signal, might be
+seen more shiny, more haughtily posed, dictating terms to Lairds of
+Aboyne and owners of Derby favourites. After which the rich man died,
+and the shekels made by usury have gone (as was only right) to bolster up
+impecunious subalterns and Christian hospitals.
+
+In the palmy days of Paddy Green, Evans’s provided perhaps the only
+tavern where a weary sojourner might sit in peace and realise that he was
+surrounded by comfort and tone. Hovering near the door was the genial
+old proprietor, with white hair and rubicund face, a smile for every one,
+and capable of passing anywhere for a chairman of directors at least.
+Around the walls were the priceless oil paintings belonging to the
+Garrick, deposited temporarily after the fire that made havoc with that
+historical building; whilst covering the entire floor were tables where
+the best (and the best only) of chops, steaks, mealy potatoes, and welsh
+rabbits, with wines of heaven knows what age, beer, and spirits were
+procurable.
+
+Nor must the old establishment be confounded with the modern fungus that
+continued its name under the pilotage of an enterprising Jew, and
+eventually got closed by the police for developing into an ordinary night
+house.
+
+To see a genuine old English waiter crumble a huge potato with a spotless
+napkin creates a pang when one thinks of his German and Italian prototype
+asking “’Ow many breads you have?” and on being told “one,” looking as if
+he could swear you had had two.
+
+And no accounts were discharged at the time—sit, as one might, from 10 to
+2 a.m., and eat and drink variously, and as often as one pleased—all the
+reckoning was one’s own as one imparted it on leaving to the most
+courteous of butlers at the door.
+
+And then the stage, what comparison is possible between the healthy
+singing of glees and solos one then heard and the elephantine wit of the
+modern serio-comic? And poor old Van Joel, who, as the programme
+explained, was retained on account of past services, retailing cigars in
+the hall and obtaining fancy prices for “Auld Lang Syne”—how a lump comes
+even now into one’s knotty, hoary old throat at the recollections of
+these long-agos!
+
+Monotonous as all this may sound to the modern up-to-date sightseer,
+there was a homeliness and an indescribable delight associated with
+Evans’s that surely the recording angel will not fail to remember when he
+sums up the sins of the sixties.
+
+Across the market, again, was a hostelry, long since disappeared except
+in name, “The Hummums,” and who shall find to-day such rare old English
+fare, served on silver by the most typical of English waiters?
+
+The rooms may have been dingy, the smoking-room a little stuffy, but the
+spirit of Bob Garnham must surely hover over the modern imitation that
+has arisen on its ashes and assumed everything but its indescribable
+comfort.
+
+The approaches to Evans’s after dark were by no means free of danger in
+the long-ago sixties. The market porters, who for the most part were
+cut-purses and pugilists, were apt to waylay solitary foot passengers
+whilst awaiting the arrival of the vegetable vans, and I recollect an
+Uxbridge farmer named Hillyard entering the hotel one night with a broken
+wrist after being waylaid and robbed in Russell Street.
+
+The old Olympic, hard by, was another nasty place to leave after the
+performance, except in a cab. Within fifty yards the alleys bristled
+with footpads, and any foolhardy pedestrian traversing the dimly-lighted
+Drury Lane or Newcastle Street was pretty sure not to reach civilisation
+without a very rough experience from the denizens of Vinegar Yard and
+Betterton Street.
+
+The Forty Thieves were an organised bevy of sirens, whose headquarters
+were the Seven Dials, and whose mission it was to entice, decoy, and
+cajole any fool who had the temerity to listen to their cooing.
+
+The Clock House on the Dials, now an apparently well-conducted pot-house,
+was in those days a hotbed of villainy. The king of pickpockets there
+held his nightly levée, and the half-dozen constables within view would
+no more have thought of entering it than they would the cage of a cobra.
+
+If a man lost a dog the reward was offered there; if one’s watch
+disappeared it was there that immediate application was desirable; and if
+the emissary was not “saucy” he might with luck save it from the
+melting-pot that simmered all day and all night within fifty feet of
+Aldridge’s horse repository.
+
+The walk through the Dials after dark was an act none but a lunatic would
+have attempted, and the betting that he ever emerged with his shirt was
+1,000 to 60. A swaggering ass named Corrigan, whose personal bravery was
+not assessed as highly by the public, once undertook for a wager to walk
+the entire length of Great Andrew Street at midnight, and if molested to
+annihilate his assailants.
+
+The half-dozen doubters who awaited his advent in the Broadway were
+surprised about 1 a.m. to see him running as fast as he could put legs to
+the ground, with only the remnant of a shirt on him; after recovering his
+breath and his courage he proceeded to describe the terrific slaughter he
+had inflicted on an innumerable number of assailants. A scurrilous print
+that flourished about this time in its next issue narrated the incident
+in verse by: “Oh, pray for the souls that Corrigan kilt,” etc. Corrigan,
+it may be added, was an Irishman, and not a particularly veracious one.
+
+Any list of queer fish would be incomplete without introducing the name
+of Bill Holland, who, although he struggled on till the eighties, was in
+his zenith in the sixties. Rosherville being too far, and Vauxhall
+having disappeared, the North Woolwich Gardens came into favour with
+those who sought recreation of a less boisterous kind than that at
+Cremorne.
+
+Bill Holland had all his life been a showman; amusing and full of
+exaggerated anecdote, he had catered for the public from time immemorial;
+every monstrosity had at some period passed through his hands; every
+woman over seven feet, and every man under four, had appeared under his
+auspices: the tattooed nobleman, the dog-faced man, the whiskered
+lady—all recognised him as master at one period or another. He had
+“directed” the Alhambra, the Surrey, the Blackpool Gardens, and, in later
+years, the Battersea Palace, and signally failed with each; but,
+sphinx-like, he invariably reappeared irreproachably groomed and waxed,
+with some confiding creature ready to finance him. His constant
+companion was Joe Pope, an abnormally fat little man, and a brother of
+the Q.C. who not long ago died. It was the brains of this obese little
+man, in conjunction with Bill Holland’s assurance, that kept the wheels
+going for over thirty years.
+
+Across the river at Greenwich were the historical Trafalgar and Ship
+Taverns, where the famous fish dinners, served in the very best style,
+were procurable. Only fish, but prepared and served in irreproachable
+form; beginning with boiled flounder, one progressed by seven stages of
+salmon in various forms, filleted sole, fried eel, each with its special
+sauce, till whitebait plain and whitebait devilled found the wayfarer
+well-nigh exhausted.
+
+It was only then that the folly of ordering dinner on a hungry stomach
+became manifest, and when the duckling that the smiling waiter had
+suggested made its appearance it was almost with tears that one turned
+away from its pleading savour and reluctantly confessed one’s inability
+to do it justice. And then the coffee on the lawn, and the scrambling
+for coppers amongst the water arabs in the surging mud below, were
+adjuncts that never failed in the completing of enjoyable evenings now
+for ever gone.
+
+Why the resort went out of fashion seems an enigma. Forty, thirty, aye,
+twenty years ago both taverns were the almost daily resorts, during the
+summer and autumn, of the highest in the land. In one private room would
+be heard Her Majesty’s judges, cracking jokes as if they were incapable
+of judicial sternness; in another legislators by the score, who had
+travelled down by special steamer to eat and drink as if no such things
+as fiscal questions existed; whilst in the public room cosy couples
+dined, and roysterers smoked and joked, and yet all has passed like a
+pleasant dream. The Trafalgar has long since been pulled down, the Ship,
+if not closed, is very much changed for the worse, and Londoners swelter
+annually with the patience of Job, and are apparently indifferent to the
+delightful resorts they have lost.
+
+It was during a May meeting, when rural deans and other provincial Church
+luminaries were staying at Haxell’s and the Golden Cross Hotels, that
+Satan prompted certain roysterers to raid these establishments when the
+reverend lodgers might be supposed to have retired to their respective
+closets. It was Nassau Clarke—a subaltern in the Life Guards—who
+conceived the brilliant idea, and collecting Jacob Burt, Charlie Buller,
+Lennon, and a few other well-known roysterers, we proceeded towards the
+Strand. The joke, if such it may be called, was to change every pair of
+boots reposing peacefully outside the various doors, and the
+development—which none of us was likely to witness—was the scare that
+would ensue at 8 a.m., when sober ecclesiastics might be expected to
+swear at the prospect of being late for their platform prayer at 9.
+Charlie Buller in those days was reputedly the handsomest man in the
+Household Brigade; an excellent bruiser, and not slow of wrath, he was,
+moreover, a desirable companion when altercations were likely to occur.
+
+Lennon, on the other hand, was not a cockney, and only up on leave, but
+willing to assist in anything original or exciting. Not many months
+previously he had been awarded a brevet-majority and the Victoria Cross
+for a conspicuous act of bravery at the Taku Forts. I lost sight of him
+for years, and when I again met him he had left the Army and fallen
+apparently on bad times. In consideration of his past services, he was
+nominated years later for a Knight of Windsor; but the poor old fellow
+was “not himself” when he went down to be installed, and the appointment
+was cancelled. He was an excellent actor in comic parts, and has a son,
+I believe, on the London stage.
+
+The winter of ’61 was an unusually severe one, and the river that washed
+the walls of the grim old Tower was covered with a thick coating of ice,
+which in its turn afforded a convenient asylum for the dead cats and
+other refuse that drifted upon it from the neighbourhood of the adjoining
+wharves. Locomotion in those pre-Embankment and underground railway days
+was not so convenient as now, and as cabs had practically ceased running
+by reason of the mountains of snow intervening between the Tower and the
+Monument, I had, together with a few boon companions, decided that the
+time had come for a migration, and went in for “first leave.”
+
+And the choice we had made was by no means an unhappy one, for the
+weather that had made existence in London well nigh intolerable had
+driven the woodcocks into the coverts, and we all declared that a week of
+such surroundings would compensate for all the vicissitudes we had
+undergone from Kangaroos, Tower, and five o’clock bacon and eggs in
+London. The “route,” too, had come, and we reasoned, not unwisely, that
+the journey to Ireland was at best an unpleasant one, and that if we
+delayed, 1000 to 60 were by no means extravagant odds that we might get
+no leave at all.
+
+It was about a fortnight after this that, having returned to grimy old
+Lane’s, I received a characteristic letter from my old chum, George Hay.
+“Most of my time” (he wrote) “is spent in accompanying the old squire on
+his various peregrinations over the estate, and by pointing out various
+agricultural developments that were absolutely necessary, or structural
+alterations that would improve the holdings. He leads me to understand
+that my place was on the spot I would one day inherit, and the fitting
+moment would arrive after I got my company. ‘D— it, sir,’ he would
+continue, ‘in my time no eldest son remained longer than a year in the
+army unless he was prepared to pay £10,000 over regulation for the
+regiment as Cardigan did.’
+
+“‘But in the infantry, sir,’ I suggested, ‘things are different.
+Promotion is slower, and I can’t help thinking that the bonds that unite
+officers to the regiment are stronger than is usually the case in the
+cavalry. But I see no prospect of my company till we are under orders
+for foreign service, and we shan’t be at the top of the roster for
+another two years at least.’
+
+“‘I have nothing to say against the line, sir,’ he would reply, ‘except
+that your officers can rarely ride to hounds.’
+
+“‘But surely, sir,’ I answered, ‘there are other virtues you will not
+deny to the linesman; in garrison towns they at all events appreciate
+hospitality, and don’t insult worthy folks by accepting their invitations
+only to turn them into ridicule. You may remember the story of a young
+puppy who replied to a kindly hostess by “The King’s never dance, and the
+King’s never sing,” and this in a regiment, forsooth, where every
+man-jack of them was a shopkeeper’s son, and which was known as the
+“Trades Union.”’”
+
+Great excitement meanwhile prevailed at the Tower; the route had come,
+the mess was closed, and everybody was packing in preparation for an
+early departure for Ireland. Transports in those long-ago days were not
+the floating palaces inaugurated years later by the Indian troopers.
+Cranky steamers—whose principal industry was the transporting of pigs and
+cattle—were hurriedly chartered by the War Office, and with the men
+packed like herrings, and the junior officers billeted amongst the band
+instruments, regiments proceeded at five knots an hour from London to the
+Irish ports.
+
+The Colonel, during these preparations, lost no opportunity of describing
+his experiences when last stationed in Dublin; how he and certain boon
+companions were within an ace of being tried for their lives for throwing
+into the Liffey an old watchman deposited in a sentry-box; how they
+started the “Pig and Whistle” in Sackville Street, run on lines that
+would shock you, virtuous reader; their nightly visits to the “Quane’s”
+Theatre, where Mikey Duff performed _Hamlet_, and declined to accede to
+the demands of the gallery for “Pat Molloy and the roising step” with the
+indignant retort: “D— yer oise, what do you expect for toppence;” the
+orgies of “Red bank” oysters at Burten Binden’s, and the dinners at the
+Bank of Ireland, when the regiment furnished the guard; how old Bill,
+after a drinking bout, would stamp through every corner of the
+guard-rooms, cursing at everything, and winding up by the consumption of
+half-a-dozen brandies and sodas, and “very different to what it was in
+the Peninsula!”
+
+“Payther” Madden, too, was holding forth on what he would show them in
+Cark, if “plase the Lard the rigimint was quarthered in the ould
+station,” and went on to describe how Barny Magee “wad come on and sing
+at the Hole in the Wall with a gaythaar in his fist, looking for all the
+world like a hamstrung moke,” and how the gallery would shout, “For the
+love of dacency, Barny, dhrop yer concertina and pull up yer stockin’,”
+and how Mrs. Rooney, bless her soul, would pass yer the toime of day with
+that grace—so genteel loike, so obsarvent—as ye paid toll to go in, with:
+“God bless you, Carporal, it’s you that has the lip,” or ilse: “Go an wid
+ye, Carporal, for a flirrt that ye are.”
+
+“A sort of bloomin’ sing-song,” suggested a cockney comrade, “but give me
+London, with ’er bloomin’ orange peel and hashfelt, with ’er boats down
+to North Woolwich, with yer gal on yer knee and a new clay in yer face; a
+pint of shrimps maybe, and a pint of ale down yer neck, and no bloomin’
+guards.”
+
+Amid these conflicting sentiments the regiment quitted the Tower.
+
+And what a delightful station the Dublin of the sixties was; here Lord
+Carlisle as Lord-Lieutenant reigned supreme, and though compelled by
+usage to keep up the mock court, with its mock “Master of the Horse” and
+“Gentlemen at Large,” diffused hospitality like the fine old English
+gentleman he was.
+
+Nightly the captain and subaltern of the Castle Guard were invited to the
+Viceregal table, during which the kind old man clinked glasses and
+invited his every guest to take wine with him. How His Excellency could
+retain his head after all these courtesies was once a marvel till it
+transpired that the huge decanter before him was the weakest brandy and
+water diluted to the exact colour of Amontillado. And then the whist
+that followed at sixpenny points, when His Excellency rigorously
+prevented his partner—and his partner only—from seeing every card in his
+hand. How refreshing it all was!
+
+No contortions short of dislocating their necks could prevent his
+adversaries from taking advantage of the dishonest opportunity, for the
+old gentleman cracked jokes throughout the entire rubber, and claimed and
+paid his sixpences with the scrupulousness of a confirmed gambler.
+
+Among the Viceregal staff were some inflated specimens of
+vice-flunkeydom. Foster, Master of Horse, whose death occurred lately,
+was reputed as not knowing one end of a horse from another, and never
+ventured on a purchase for the Viceregal stables, at Farrell’s or
+Sewell’s, unless fortified by the close proximity of Andy Ryan or some
+other horse-coper. Burke, a Gentleman at Large and an ex-colonel of
+militia, was another warrior of the offensive type, and I shall never
+forget the scene when a youngster of the 16th Lancers at one of the
+levées gave him a peremptory order when he was officially glued to the
+staircase, under pretence that he mistook him for a flunkey. But the
+matter was not to end there, and before the réveille had ceased blowing
+at Island Bridge he was waited upon by a fiery buckeen to demand
+satisfaction on behalf of Kornel Burke.
+
+Captain Stackpool (everybody had a military title) was another Dublin
+curiosity. Member of Parliament for Ennis, he affected Dublin and the
+delights of the Unoited Service from one year’s end to the other.
+Dublin, he assured me, was the most “car-driving, tea-drinking,
+money-spending city in the world,” and he was not far wrong.
+
+Lord Louth, who weighed eighteen stone, and stood five foot seven in his
+stockings, had served some years in a kilted regiment; but he, too, has
+long since been gathered to his fathers.
+
+About this time an amusing incident occurred to Lord Louth. The very
+best of fellows, his vanity was insatiable, and only London-built clothes
+were good enough to set off his graceful figure.
+
+In the 14th Hussars was a diminutive cornet who also patronised the same
+tailor as Louth, and both these dandies—as appeared later—had telegraphed
+on the same day for a pair of the most bewitching trousers in preparation
+for some social event to which they had both been invited. Conceive the
+consternation of the two recipients when at the last moment a pair of
+diminutive pants revealed themselves to the enraged peer, and a garment
+sufficiently voluminous to engulf three Deal boatmen reached the
+expectant cornet. This latter was known as the “Shunter” from the
+extraordinary talents he developed later as a gentleman rider, and still
+later as a hanger-on of Abingdon Baird.
+
+One of the most brilliant surgeons that Ireland or any other country has
+ever produced was just coming into prominence in those long-ago days.
+Dr. Butcher, who in appearance resembled the portraits of Disraeli in his
+younger days, was known professionally to nearly every man in the
+garrison; of the most enthusiastic type, he thought nothing of producing
+two or three stones from his waistcoat pocket and exultantly explaining
+that he had that morning taken them from certain patients’ interiors, and
+nothing gave him greater offence than refusing to attend one of his
+private séances. But the most marvellous operation he ever performed was
+on Billy Deane, of the 4th Dragoon Guards, who, having consulted every
+specialist in Europe, appealed to Butcher to save his arm and enable him
+to remain in the service.
+
+A fall whilst hunting had resulted in the disease of the elbow-bone of
+the left arm.
+
+“Nothing but taking your arm off will save your life,” was the universal
+fiat.
+
+“D— nonsense!” was Butcher’s retort, and he cut a square clean out of the
+elbow.
+
+Within six months Billy’s bridle arm was stronger than the other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+THE RATCLIFF HIGHWAY.
+
+
+SOME months had elapsed since the regiment landed in Ireland, when one of
+those inscrutable ways of Providence gave another opportunity of renewing
+one’s London experiences, and obtaining a month’s leave in the height of
+the drill season for the purpose of visiting the Exhibition of ’62. The
+temptation so gratuitously offered was altogether too much for me, and,
+in conjunction with the rest of the Army in Ireland, I gratefully seized
+the opportunity of “studying” the various exhibits of foreign countries,
+and applied for leave for that specific purpose.
+
+Limmer’s, where a select band took up its quarters, was at this time one
+of the chief resorts of young bloods and subalterns, for the most part of
+the cavalry, who revelled in sanded floors and eating off the most
+massive of silver.
+
+Entering the coffee room on the afternoon of our arrival, I was greeted
+by a cheery voice, and descried Hastings lingering over his breakfast.
+Truth to say, his lordship had not a robust appetite. The mackerel bone
+fried in gin, and the caviare on devilled toast remained apparently
+untouched, whilst a _hors-d’œuvre_, known as “Fixed Bayonets”—of which
+the recipe is happily lost—failed to assist his jaded appetite; alongside
+him stood a huge tankard of “cup,” and pouring out a gobletful for his
+newly-found chum, and gulping down a pint by way of introduction, he
+gasped: “By Gad, old man, I’m d— glad to see you! To begin with, you
+must dine with me at 8—here. I’ve asked Prince Hohenlohe and Baron
+Spaum, and young Beust and Count Adelberg, and if you’ll swear on a sack
+of bibles not to repeat it, I expect two live Ambassadors—it’s always as
+well” (he continued in a confidential tone) “to have a sacred person or
+two handy in case of a row with the police. First we go to Endell
+Street—to Faultless’s pit. I’ve got a match for a monkey with Hamilton
+to beat his champion bird, The Sweep, and after that I’ve arranged with a
+detective to take us the rounds in the Ratcliff Highway. No dressing,
+old man; the kit you came over in is the ticket, and a sovereign or two
+in silver distributed amongst your pockets; you’re bound to have a fist
+in every wrinkle of your person—why, if you’re dancing with a beauty
+she’ll be going over you all the time. I often used to laugh and shout
+out, ‘Go it, I’m not a bit ticklish!’—still, what the h— does it matter?”
+And his lordship sucked down another libation to the gods.
+
+“I suppose you can speak French or German; if not you can try Irish—not
+that it matters, for I expect Fred Granville and Chuckle Saunders, and
+Hamilton is sure to bring a mob, so I think we may count on having the
+best of it if it comes to a row. How long are you up for? A month, eh?
+Oh, well, then we’re right for the Derby, and I’ll tell you what we’ll
+do. We’ll go down the evening before—the night before the big race
+amongst the booths is the nearest approach to hell vouchsafed to unhappy
+mortals.”
+
+Punctually to time our party assembled, and it would have been difficult
+for the unenlightened to have realised that the gaitered,
+flannel-shirted, monkey-jacketed assembly embraced diplomats, peers, and
+obscure Army men who have since made their mark in history. Here might
+have been seen Charlie Norton, the youngest and handsomest major in the
+service, who years after developed into a Pasha amid the Turkish
+gendarmerie; Ned Cunyinghame, in the zenith of his fortune, dilating
+(with the dessert) on the superior attributes of Nova Scotia baronets,
+and how an ancestor had once told the Regent “it was a title he could
+neither give nor take away;” Count Kilmanseg, the best whist player that
+ever came out of Hanover; Prince Hohenlohe, a charming attaché just
+beginning his career; Baron Spaum, the best of the best, now
+Commander-in-Chief of the Austrian Navy, and president of the recent
+Anglo-Russian Arbitration in Paris; Count Adelberg, a genial Muscovite,
+who considered _menus_ superfluous, and once shocked a very correct
+hostess by exclaiming “_Je prends tout_,” and a host of others
+unnecessary to enumerate. Presiding at the head of the table was the
+genial young Hastings—not yet a married man—faced, as vice-president, by
+Freddy Granville, whose wavy hair, gentle manners, and frank and English
+appearance were boring their way into the hearts of the best women and
+men in Society, except, perhaps, the strict Exeter Hall school.
+
+To approach a cockpit, even in the long-ago sixties, required a certain
+amount of discretion, and so it came to pass that the sporting team broke
+up into twos and threes, and by a series of strategical advances by
+various routes, arrived within a few minutes of each other at the
+unpretentious portals in Endell Street. Descending into the very bowels
+of the earth, the party was considerably augmented by his Grace of
+Hamilton’s contingent, and within half an hour, the spurs having been
+adjusted and all preliminaries arranged, the two champions faced one
+another in the arena.
+
+Ten minutes later it was a piteous sight to see the brave old champion
+Sweep attempting to crow, although he seemed aware he had received his
+quietus.
+
+Suffice to say Hastings won the wager, and the party hurried eastward,
+leaving the brave old bird like a warrior taking his rest.
+
+One of the most popular pastimes of the long-ago sixties was going the
+rounds of the dens of infamy in the East End and the rookeries that then
+abutted upon the Gray’s Inn Road. In this latter quarter, indeed, there
+was one narrow, tortuous passage that in broad daylight was literally
+impassable, and to escape with one’s life or one’s shirt was as much as
+the most sanguine could expect.
+
+The Ratcliff Highway, now St. George’s Street East, alongside the Docks,
+was a place where crime stalked unmolested, and to thread its deadly
+length was a foolhardy act that might quail the stoutest heart.
+
+Every square yard was occupied by motley groups; drunken sailors of every
+nationality in long sea-boots, and deadly knives at every girdle; drunken
+women with bloated faces, caressing their unsavoury admirers, and here
+and there constables in pairs by way of moral effect, but powerless—as
+they well knew—if outrage and free fights commenced in real earnest.
+Behind these outworks of lawlessness were dens of infamy beyond the power
+of description—sing-song caves and dancing-booths, wine bars and opium
+dens, where all day and all night Chinamen might be seen in every degree
+of insensibility from the noxious fumes.
+
+The detective who was to be our cicerone was known to every evil-doer in
+the metropolis. Entering these dens when not in pursuit of quarry was to
+him a pilgrimage of absolute safety, and a friendly nod accompanied by
+“All right, lads, only some gents to stand you a drink” extended the
+protection to all who accompanied him. A freemasonry, indeed, appeared
+to exist between these conflicting members of society whereby, by some
+unwritten code, it was understood that when either side passed its word
+every one was on his parole to “play the game.”
+
+The first place the explorers entered was a singsong in the vicinity of
+Nile Street, but it was evidently an “off night,” for, with the exception
+of a dozen half-drunken men and women, the place was practically empty.
+As we entered, however, a sign of vitality was apparent, and the chairman
+announced that a gent would oblige with a stave; but the cicerone with
+commendable promptitude called out, “Not necessary, thank you all the
+same,” and prompted his followers to lay five shillings on the desk. But
+the compliment was not to be denied, and a drunken refrain soon filled
+the air, which was absolutely inaudible, except:
+
+ “She turned up her nose at Bob Simmons and me.”
+
+The next place was infinitely more interesting—the “Jolly Sailors,” in
+Ship Alley. “A dozen,” explained our cicerone as he tendered a coin, and
+our party awaited admission. “Keep your money, sergeant,” was the
+ominous reply. “Of course, I know you; but we’ve got a mangy lot here
+to-night; they won’t cotton to the gents. If they ask any of their women
+to dance it will be taken as an affront, and if they don’t ask them it
+will be taken as an affront; leave well alone, say I. Most nights it
+might do, but not to-night, sergeant; the drink’s got hold of most of
+them, and there’s a lot of scurvy Greeks about who will whip out their
+knives afore you can say what’s what.”
+
+“Nonsense, man,” cut in Bobby, “we don’t want to have a row, we’ve come
+for a spree; there’s the money, we’ll take our chance.” The Baron also,
+who prided himself on his mastery of our vernacular, interposed with:
+“Posh, I snaps my finger at eem! Am I afraid of a tirty Greek? Posh!
+All our intent is larks; we want no rows. Posh!” And regardless of the
+friendly monition, our party trooped into the room. The scene that
+presented itself was not an encouraging one; perched on a rickety stool
+was a fiddler scraping with an energy only to be attained by incessant
+application to a mug of Hollands that stood at his elbow, and to which he
+appeared to resort frequently. Polkaing in every grotesque attitude were
+some twenty couples, the males attired for the most part in sea-boots and
+jerseys, their partners with dishevelled hair and bloated countenances,
+all more or less under the influence of gin or beer; here and there
+couples, apparently too overcome to continue the giddy joy, were propped
+against the wall gurgling out blasphemy and snatches of ribald song,
+whilst in alcoves or leaning over a trestle table were knots of men,
+smoking, cursing, swilling strong drinks, and casting wicked eyes at the
+intruders. “’Aven’t they a leg of mutton and currant dumplin’s at ’ome
+wi’out comin’ ’ere?” inquired a ferocious ruffian. “What for brings ’em
+a-messing about ’ere, I’d like to know?”
+
+“Blast me if I wudn’t knife ’em; what say you, lads?” replied a
+stump-ended figure, stiffening himself.
+
+“Bide a while, lads; let’s make ’em show their colours. What cheer,
+there?” shouted a huge Scandinavian, as a contingent detaching itself
+from the main body lurched towards the explorers.
+
+“What cheer, my hearties?” sang back Hastings, and, with a diplomacy that
+might have done credit to a Richelieu, the entire party were fraternising
+within a minute.
+
+“The Jolly Sailors” was admittedly the most dangerous of all the dens,
+even amid such hotbeds of iniquity as “The King of Prussia,” “The Prince
+Regent,” “The Old Mahogany Bar,” “The Old Gun,” “The Blue Anchor,” and
+“The Rose and Crown,” and had decoys in all directions to lure drunken
+sailors or foolish sightseers within its fatal portals. Situated at the
+extremity of Grace’s Alley, it led directly into Wellclose Square, a _cul
+de sac_ it was easier to enter than to leave; but sailors of all
+nationalities are admittedly the most impressionable of mortals, and
+happily in the present case the _sang-froid_, the unexpected rejoinder,
+the devil-may-care bearing, disarmed apparently their rugged hostile
+intentions, and within half an hour visitors and regular
+customers—Germans, English, Scandinavians, and nondescripts—were
+shouting:
+
+ “What’s old England coming to?
+ Board of Trade ahoy!”
+
+What any of us knew of the Board of Trade or the Mercantile Marine
+history does not say.
+
+The opium dens in this delectable quarter were situated higher up at
+Shadwell, but the charms of the “Jolly Sailors” proving too much for our
+heroes, they elected to explore no further.
+
+How different is the entire neighbourhood to-day! The very name Ratcliff
+Highway has disappeared, and been replaced by that of Saint George’s
+Street East; where constables once patrolled on the _qui vive_ in twos
+and threes a solitary embodiment of the law may now be seen, strolling
+along in a manner that once would not have been worth an hour’s purchase;
+where drunken sailors in sea-boots and knives at every girdle lurched
+against inoffensive pedestrians, unwashed women may now be seen at
+corners knitting stockings, whilst unsavoury tadpoles are constructing
+mud-pies in the gutter; here and there may still be seen an inebriated
+foreigner and rows of loafers—with a striking resemblance to the
+“unemployed” hanging about the public-houses, but the solitary specimen
+in blue seems to exercise a salutary hypnotising effect, all which
+(justice demands) shall be placed to the credit of these enlightened
+days. Not that this welcome change has been long arrived at; not four
+years ago a respectable tradesman, Abrahams, a naturalist, of 191, St.
+George’s Street East, was attacked at 2 p.m., within fifty yards of his
+own door, and succumbed to his injuries within twenty-four hours, and
+even to-day to ostentatiously show a watch chain passing certain corners,
+say Artichoke Lane, would not be without danger; but when all is said and
+done, there is much to interest the seeker after novelty by a visit to
+the Ratcliff Highway of to-day. Here at the “Brown Bear” may now be seen
+the rooms, once devoted to orgies, filled to their utmost capacity with
+canaries sending up songs to heaven purer far than those of the long-ago
+sixties. Continuing along St. George’s Street will be found Jamrach’s
+menagerie, whence filter most of the rarities that find their way to the
+Zoological Gardens; and the place is no ordinary bird shop, but a museum
+of information in more ways than one. Here one large room will be found
+stuffed with bronzes and curios from all parts of the world, which every
+American visiting London, who fancies he is a critic, does not fail to
+inspect; for Mr. Jamrach—like his father—is an authority, and a
+naturalist in the highest acceptation of the term.
+
+Lovers of animals will not regret a pilgrimage to “the Highway,” a
+pilgrimage which, by the aid of the District Railway and broad,
+electric-lighted streets, is no longer attended with discomfort or
+danger.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+THE BOOTHS ON EPSOM DOWNS.
+
+
+WHILE racing men have gained by the railway’s close proximity to the
+course, others are now deprived of many of the sights there used to be
+seen along the road. From Westminster Bridge to the historical heath was
+almost one continuous panorama of life, joviality, cheer, and fun; every
+hedgerow was lined with open-mouthed yokels, gaping at the “coves from
+Lunnon” of whom they had heard so much, but had never before seen; every
+ditch supported a natural artificial cripple; every beerhouse was fronted
+by holiday crowds quaffing ale and inviting one to join; and to cap all
+this, the miles of vehicles with their accompanying dust gave every one
+the complexion of chimney sweeps, despite veil, artificial nose, and
+other guises incidental to a real journey by the road.
+
+The party Lord Hastings had organised was a thoroughly representative
+one: Fred Granville, Peter Wilkinson, Ginger Durant, Fred Ellis—not yet
+blossomed into Howard de Walden—Bobby Shafto, The Baron, Young Broome (on
+duty), and a host of smaller fry; all united in one purpose, one aim—to
+enjoy life to its uttermost limit, and to lose not one fleeting moment of
+the night preceding the first summer meeting at Epsom. Booths in those
+wicked days _were_ booths, not devoted as now to penny shots with pea
+rifles and the excitements permitted by our prudish legislature, but
+receptacles of every conceivable impropriety, to recount many of which
+would shock you, virtuous reader.
+
+Here were gipsies of the old original form, who, if permitted to tell a
+modest girl her fortune, invariably wound up by informing her “she’d be
+the mother of six,” dancing booths, and tableaux vivants booths; booths
+where sparring and booths where drinking might be indulged in freely,
+booths where terrible melodramas were given, gambling booths, and thimble
+rig booths; roulette and three-card establishments, where every vice come
+down from the days of Noah might be indulged in without let or hindrance.
+
+Leaving Limmer’s in the afternoon, and proceeding by easy stages, we
+reached the Downs shortly before eight. No time was lost in commencing
+business, and within an hour we were assisting at the erection of a
+theatre booth, whilst a “fragment” here and there was being rehearsed.
+
+“And what does your Lordship think of that?” inquired a perky little man
+who had known the Marquis as a patron at a dozen other meetings.
+
+“Splendid, Simmons,” replied his patron; “but why such serious scenes,
+why not a jolly jig with sailors; poor Nelson, surely he’s out of place?”
+
+“By no means, my Lord; on the contrary, my audiences will ’ave it, and if
+only Mr. Fuljome would act up to ’Ardy’s part it would bring down the
+’ouse. It’s this way, my Lord: Nelson says: ‘’Ardy, I’m wounded
+mortually,’ and then, of course, ‘’Ardy must say melancholy like: ‘Not
+mortually, my Lord?’ But blow me if I can get it right.”
+
+“D— the drama,” replied the kindly Marquis. “Have you any one to send
+for a drink?” And pulling out two or three sovereigns the party
+proceeded on their quest.
+
+“Now, my Lord,” was next shouted from a roulette booth. “We’re just
+ready for the swells. Step in, gentlemen,” continued a flash-looking
+rascal. “Ah! Mr. Broome,” he added, as he recognised the ex-puncher, “no
+need for you, I hope.”
+
+“Perhaps not, Levi,” replied the Marquis. “But we’ve got some
+quarrelsome chaps about; best be prepared.” And again we proceeded on
+our pilgrimage.
+
+“Where are the tableaux vivants, Hastings?” inquired Fred Ellis. “Damn
+it, we must show the Baron.” But at this moment an unrehearsed incident
+occurred which stopped the future legislator’s eloquence.
+
+“A word with you, Mr. Wilkinson,” said one of a couple of very shady
+individuals. “You’ll ’ave to come wi’ us,” he whispered, “a capias at
+the suit of Beyfus—£200 with costs.”
+
+“Hang it,” replied Peter, with _sang-froid_. “Can’t you let it stand
+over? If you nab me now I can’t pay, but if you’ll let me alone till
+after the meeting I’ll make it right, not only with Beyfus, but with you.
+Now, look here, here’s how it stands. On Saturday next I’m going down
+with Lord Hastings to Castle Donington. Send one of your chaps after me,
+and about eight send a letter in to me. We shall be at dinner—leave the
+rest to me.”
+
+On the following Saturday, the programme was carried out in its entirety.
+Peter Wilkinson was staggered by the unexpected blow! and the
+much-abused, kindly Hastings paid the claim on the spot.
+
+And this is how boon companions requited the most generous man in
+England. What wonder, the target of friends and foes, the deepest well
+at length dried up! The party meanwhile had moved on, and Peter on
+rejoining it found the champagne flying with a vengeance. The site was a
+huge marquee, the audience the entire company that had journeyed from
+London, blended with the full strength of the tableaux vivants cast.
+
+Fred Ellis was holding forth in an incoherent speech till, offended by
+being told to “shut up,” he walked out of the tent. Within ten minutes,
+shouts of “Help! murder, help!” were wafted into the marquee, and groping
+amid tent ropes, the cause was not far to seek.
+
+On his knees, in an attitude of supplication, was the honourable Fred;
+standing within a yard of him was a huge white goat. “Oh, go away; don’t
+take me. Oh, I know he’s come for me at last. Oh, take the devil away,
+I know it’s him, and I swear I’ll never touch wine again. Help! murder!”
+Lanterns meanwhile approaching from various directions, the position
+appeared simple enough. The unhappy man on lurching amid the tent ropes
+had unfortunately caught his leg in a harmless goat’s tether; in
+endeavouring to extricate himself he had dragged the inoffensive
+quadruped close to him, and being at the time in a state (presumedly)
+unusual for him, the surroundings, grafted on to a strong religious
+tendency, had distorted a very ordinary billy-goat into the devil
+specially on his track, and standing over him waiting to waft him to
+where—no matter how thirsty—drink was absolutely unattainable. Fred
+Ellis had once won the Grand Military, but that was before—
+
+Luncheon on the Derby and Oaks days in the long-forgotten sixties was an
+institution that dwarfs the most ambitious displays of hampers and cold
+pies consumed on the tops of drags. Conceive a huge marquee with tables
+the entire length groaning under every delicacy, from plovers’ eggs at a
+shilling a-piece to patés and blanc-manges of the Gunter school of
+creation. Imagine vats six feet high around the entire walls distilling
+the best champagne into goblets filled by the most expert of footmen.
+Conceive all this, free, gratis, and for nothing by simply presenting
+your card with the name of your regiment inscribed; behold the genial
+host smiling contentedly, as supporting on his arm a live Duchess of
+Manchester—now her Grace of Devonshire—he administered to the internal
+wants of one of the most beautiful women of the day!
+
+Cynics, not contented with accepting the gifts the gods provided, were
+prone to remark that assuming the feast cost Tod Heatly a thousand, he
+would gladly have doubled it, if only to enable his fellow-creatures to
+feast their eyes on that supreme moment of his life when he piloted his
+fair charge across the crowded course.
+
+Tod Heatly, it may be explained, possessed almost the entire monopoly of
+supplying champagne to the various messes of the Army. Amassing wealth
+hand over hand by this profitable connection, he returned the compliment
+by giving a general invitation to any officer of any regiment who dealt
+with his firm.
+
+Incredible as it may appear, no instance ever occurred of enterprising
+chevaliers entering without a right, and the delightful custom only
+ceased when the usages of society, the abolition of purchase, and our
+advanced ideas made it absolutely necessary.
+
+A similar experiment in these enlightened days would require admission by
+parole and countersign and a squad of constables within measurable
+distance.
+
+Perhaps the most unique individual that has ever risen to a prominent
+position on the Turf was Captain Machell, whose death occurred not long
+since.
+
+Joining the 14th Foot some time in the fifties, he exchanged as a captain
+to the 53rd, and, retiring a few years later, invested his entire
+fortune—his commission money—in a pitch at Newmarket. It was during his
+earlier soldiering days that he had the good fortune to be stationed with
+the depôt of his regiment at Templemore, a desolate bog in the heart of
+Tipperary, where commanded as clever a judge of a horse—Colonel Irwin, of
+the Connaught Rangers—as ever came out of “ould Oireland.” The permanent
+staff of depôt battalions in those remote days retained their
+appointments indefinitely, a regulation that enabled them to settle down
+very cosily, undisturbed by anything more formidable than an annual
+inspection conducted on the most comfortable lines. Needless to add that
+Templemore was no exception to the rule.
+
+The drill field adjoining the barracks was converted into a paddock for
+brood mares and yearlings; the entire stabling and any superfluous
+out-houses became roomy loose boxes; hens cackled, cocks crowed, and pigs
+grunted from every point of the compass, and any youngster prepared to
+purchase a promising hunter—“a bit rough, but likely to shape well”—from
+the Colonel need perform no more arduous duties than eating his dinner in
+uniform and chewing a straw all day.
+
+This equine elysium continued till young men began to grizzle and
+two-year-olds became “aged”; it might, indeed, have continued much longer
+had it not been for the unfortunate Fenian scare and the military
+precautions that attended it. Suffice it to say, that in one single day,
+and without the slightest warning, the Commander-in-Chief—Lord
+Strathnairn—suddenly appeared in the Square, and within twenty-four hours
+the happy community was for ever broken up, the farm produce sent off to
+various auction rooms, and the battalion half-way across the Channel.
+
+Machell, when he arrived at the depôt, was not long in ingratiating
+himself with the Colonel, and within a year the pair were joint owners of
+Leonidas, a chestnut gelding that beat everything at all the surrounding
+meetings at Thurles, Cashel, and Tipperary.
+
+Machell, after his retirement, disappeared below the horizon till
+summoned to assist at the pulverisation of the unhappy Hastings in the
+spring of ’67, and it was after that, with £80,000 to his credit, that he
+loomed into sporting publicity.
+
+A splendid judge of a horse, possessed of a wiry frame, an expressionless
+face, and a shrewd and calculating temperament, little wonder that he was
+more or less associated from ’67 to his death with every wealthy
+horse-owner aspiring to a career and every ass desirous of pilotage by
+the astutest man of his day.
+
+Machell as a young man had few equals in all feats requiring agility; he
+could hop, apparently without effort, on to the mantelpiece in the
+smoking-room at Mackin’s Hotel, Dublin; he could out-run most men for any
+distance between 100 and 1,000 yards, and as a middle-weight could hold
+his own amongst the best of amateur boxers. It was not until years
+after, when he came to blows with Bob Hope-Johnstone, at the “Old Ship,”
+Brighton, that the scientific bruiser, hopping round his colossal
+opponent, caught a chance blow that felled him like an ox, breaking three
+ribs. “Here, take this carrion away,” shouted the Major, and the
+senseless Machell was removed to his rooms in a cab.
+
+But the redoubtable Bob was, not long after, himself the victim of a
+cowardly mauling at the hands of two Bond Street Hebrews, who since have
+developed into the highest authorities on knick-knacks and articles of
+vertu generally. For even the rugged major, it would appear, had a weak
+point near his heart, and seeking on one occasion a fair seducer at the
+Argyll, he traced her to Rose Barton’s, and, attacking the two mashers
+who were entertaining her, was belaboured with champagne bottles by the
+cowardly Israelites, till, bleeding from a score of gashes, he was
+removed to the “John o’ Groat” in Rupert Street, a hostelry now known as
+Challis’s, after a waiter at Webb’s Coffee House who aspired to
+perpetuate his name.
+
+It is satisfactory to be able to add that in terror of possible
+consequences, the brothers paid £200 to their victim before he attained
+convalescence—a circumstance we have probably to thank for their still
+being amongst us.
+
+Machell, from the exigencies of his profession, was unquestionably the
+ruin of numerous aspiring punters whose interests clashed with his own.
+Beaumont Dixie, whose inclinations tended towards always backing
+“Archer’s mounts,” was a notable example, and any one who witnessed the
+scene in the paddock after a race where Machell’s horse _did not win_,
+will not be likely to forget the ruined Baronet wringing his hands in
+despair, and the irate owner standing over him with “Now, Mr. b— Beaumont
+Dixie, I’ll teach you to back Archer’s mounts.” It will be said by many
+that Machell was a popular man, that he was generous, and deserving of
+every credit for repurchasing an ancestral estate that was supposed to
+have once belonged to the family; others, however, will contend that he
+was of a selfish and over-bearing disposition, that his charity was
+dispensed when and where it was likely to become known, and that no
+better or wiser investment than an estate could have been made by a man
+whose capital must have been enormous, and who hoped, by becoming a
+landed proprietor, to gain the position seldom attained by a landless
+man. Probably Machell was never so good a fellow as when he was hopping
+on and off mantelpieces, and when an accident would have broken his neck
+and his fortune—the value of his commission—at one blow.
+
+That Machell was born under a lucky star goes without saying, and is
+proven by his career from the day he sold out with nothing but his
+commission money to his death, when he died worth a quarter of a million.
+Popular as a poor man, he every day became more morose as his pile
+increased, and his first success through the introduction of his
+brother-in-law, Prime (or his wife), to Lord Calthorpe (for whom he
+eventually trained), led him by easy stages to Mr. Henry Chaplin, Joe
+Aylesford, and finally to Harry McCalmont, where all his paths were
+peace.
+
+His marvellous capacity for “out-touting” the touts with which Newmarket
+was infested was once exemplified during the trials for the Stewards’ Cup
+at Goodwood. Suddenly dismounting and diving into his pocket he dropped
+(apparently) by accident a paper which purported to contain the weights
+at which the favourite and others were being tried. Needless to add, the
+list had been carefully prepared, and what if true would have been fatal
+to the favourite’s performance was, in fact, a highly satisfactory trial.
+
+Within an hour it was reported at the Victoria Club that the favourite
+had gone wrong, and 30 and 40 to 1 against him literally went begging.
+Two hours later a pre-arranged telegram reached his agent, and the money
+that was piled on by the stable brought a golden harvest at Goodwood.
+
+Doncaster stands out through the long vista of years so prominently with
+charms that appealed to every taste that a reference to the old Assembly
+Rooms may be pardonable.
+
+Every one who has rambled through the quaint old streets of Doncaster
+must have noticed these unpretentious-looking rooms, which, for aught I
+know, may still echo during the Leger week with the blatant babble of the
+cheap excursion sportsman, but which in ’67 were the nightly rendezvous
+of the various house-parties, and where Major Mahan, who did most of
+James Merry’s commissions, was the recognised master of ceremonies.
+
+In the smaller room on the left as one entered, hazard, fast and furious,
+raged pretty well through the night under the auspices of Atkins, a lank,
+white-bearded man, who had an unofficial monopoly at Goodwood and other
+meetings which no rival dared to dispute. During the Sussex week he
+rented a large house near where the Brighton Aquarium now stands, and the
+best of everything was provided gratis.
+
+Old Mahan, who in his youth had been a well-known duellist, had at this
+period simmered down to a fiery punter with a shiny forehead that
+extended to the nape of his neck, and a grizzly fringe in the vicinity of
+his ears. Superstitious to a degree, if the dice went against him he
+would seize any youngster entering the room whose physiognomy looked
+“lucky,” and forcing him into a chair would insist on his calling the
+main, and then backing him blindly. “Aren’t yer surproised at me losing
+so incessantly?” he once inquired of Sir Robert Peel, who happened to be
+standing at his elbow.
+
+“Not in the least,” was the caustic answer; “but we all wonder where you
+get the money to play with.”
+
+Not that sharpers did not occasionally wriggle in, who, after the soberer
+players had left, resorted to reckless measures to rook the more
+adventurous spirits, who in the small hours were more or less tipsy.
+
+An Irish peer (still living) suspecting on one occasion that the dice
+were loaded—as no doubt they were, having been changed—and just sober
+enough to pocket them and leave the room, was surprised next morning
+after having them broken, to find that they were perfectly genuine, and
+thereupon paid his losses, which were considerable. It transpired later
+that the sharpers, who were staying at the same lodgings (hotels were not
+patronised in those days), had entered his room whilst he was sleeping
+off the night’s debauch and changed the guilty “bones.”
+
+On another occasion a man with large estates in the Riding who had sense
+enough to know he was too drunk to play, and had been heard to refuse,
+was considerably astonished next day on the course at being accosted by a
+gentlemanly stranger, who, producing twenty pounds in bank notes, thanked
+him for his courtesy in allowing his debt of overnight to stand over, and
+despite his protests of having “no recollection of the transaction,” was
+literally forced to accept the money.
+
+Two hours later, however, another stranger approached him and reminded
+him of ninety pounds he had won from him overnight, and again R. R.
+protested he had no “recollection of the transaction,” when a friend
+passing by chance, the matter was referred to him. He promptly asserted
+he was in the rooms all the evening, and distinctly remembered R. R.
+refusing to play; whereupon the sharper, threatening to have
+satisfaction, walked away, and neither he nor his twenty-pound colleague
+was seen again.
+
+It was surprising the number of Scotsmen that came in those long-ago days
+to see the Leger run, and who, night after night foregathered in the
+Assembly Rooms for no object apparently but to drink “whusky.”
+
+“Come awa, mon, come awa!” I once heard an old Scot insist as he escorted
+an inebriated countryman out, and from a discussion that ensued after the
+delinquent had disappeared I gleaned that he was an “elder,” and that
+“Brother Dalziel was very powerful in prayer.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+RACING PAR EXCELLENCE.
+
+
+A VISIT I once paid to Castle Donington had initiated me into many of the
+mysteries of racing of which I had hitherto been in profound ignorance.
+I had learnt that heavy plungers often deputed minor satellites to bet
+according to instructions, and had witnessed “private” trials—which it
+was well known were being watched—where ruses were resorted to that would
+have impressed the most sceptical by their realism. I had seen a
+“favourite” pulled up, and within half a minute a blood-stained
+pocket-handkerchief hurriedly smuggled into the rider’s pocket; I had
+witnessed a horse backed for thousands go lame without apparent cause a
+week before a race, and hobble through the village as if on its way to
+the knacker’s, and I marvelled—till I gradually became more
+enlightened—at the profound acumen of those in authority who could bring
+such invalids to the post in the best of health and spirits.
+
+I also made the acquaintance of numerous shining lights of the Turf, some
+that blazed with universally admitted lustre, and some that emitted a
+shady, indescribable glimmer apt to mislead the wayfarer.
+
+Amongst the former none held a more honourable position, or was a greater
+favourite, than Mr. George Payne. A man of likes and dislikes, he had
+apparently taken a fancy to me and often gave me hints that sturdier
+recipients would have converted into thousands.
+
+Mr. George Payne, although at this period close upon sixty, was the
+centre of every fashionable gathering that met for racing or card
+playing; a favourite of the highest in the land, he had come direct from
+Norfolk to Nice in company with the chief actor in a notorious drama
+enacted many years later, and no man had raised his voice with greater
+indignation when, _nolens volens_, he found himself in the very centre of
+the unsavoury vortex, “By —, sir! By —, sir!”—an invariable adjunct—“D—
+scoundrel!” dominating considerably amid the numerous _pourparlers_ that
+ensued.
+
+As a card player his stakes were simply appalling, and it is a well-known
+fact that on one occasion he won £30,000 from the late Lord
+Londesborough, who immediately afterwards hurried off to be married.
+£100 a game was to him a normal stake, and any aspirant attempting to
+“cut in” at the table who was not prepared to have an extra hundred on
+the game was “By —, sir’d!” _ad infinitum_ for depriving a better man of
+the seat.
+
+Opinions on that remarkable meteor—Henry Plantagenet Hastings—who first
+came into public notice at the Newmarket Spring Meeting of ’62, will
+always differ. By those who knew him intimately he will be remembered as
+a weak, amiable, and generous youngster, terribly handicapped by a
+colossal rent roll, a splendid pedigree, a generous, impulsive
+disposition, and an entire ignorance of the value of money. To the
+present generation, who have only heard of his escapades, he will appear
+as a reckless, unprincipled reprobate, preferring low company to that of
+his equals, incapable of restraining his passions in pursuit of the
+object of the moment, and sacrificing anything and anybody for their
+attainment. Barely had he left Oxford than he became the target of that
+sporting world that pursued him to his grave, and was swindled out of
+£13,500 for a “screw” that ended his days in a cab; after which he
+settled down to racing as a serious occupation, and had fifty horses in
+training; thence (1862) to 1867 he won the Cambridgeshire, the Grand
+Prix, the Goodwood Cup, and a host of minor races, besides such a
+colossal sum as close upon £80,000 on Lecturer in the Cesarewitch of ’66.
+
+But although the fates had apparently condoned his infringement of the
+Tenth Commandment in ’64, Nemesis was even then on his track, and it
+would seem that the colt foaled about the very time he was exploiting the
+structural merits of Vere Street was to be the humble instrument in the
+hands of Providence for the ruin of the wicked Marquis.
+
+It is needless here to repeat the threadbare story that once interested
+people of how the most beautiful woman of her day stepped out of a
+brougham one fine morning at the Oxford Street entrance to a
+linen-draper’s, and emerged from another door in the vicinity of Vere
+Street with the Marquis’s boon companion, Fred Granville. Suffice for
+our reminiscences, that if all this had not occurred in ’64, there would
+probably have been no “Hermit’s year” in ’67; that Captain Machell would
+not have commenced his career by netting £80,000 over the event, and that
+poor Hastings would never have lost and paid the 103,000 sovereigns he
+did. One cannot follow the ups and downs of this unhappy sport of
+Fortune without comparing the cheers that everywhere greeted him up to
+’67 with the execrations with which he was assailed by the same rabble at
+Epsom the following year, and all because one of the most generous of
+golden calves had been tricked and swindled out of a colossal fortune in
+less than six years, and had met every obligation till plucked of his
+last feather.
+
+Nor can one forget that the yelpings of his indignant judges (!) were
+mingled with the hacking cough that carried him to his grave five months
+later; yet nobody who saw him drive off the course would have imagined
+that the incident had affected him in the least. “I did not show it, did
+I?” he remarked to an intimate friend almost from his death-bed; “but it
+fairly broke my heart,” and so Henry Plantagenet Hastings was gathered to
+his fathers at the early age of twenty-six, and almost before the howls
+of the mob had ceased to ring in one’s ears.
+
+Whilst on the fascinating but occult science of racing, the licence
+invariably accorded by an indulgent public will not it is hoped be here
+withheld if one jumps for a moment into the early seventies, an era,
+alas! as far removed from the present generation as the long-ago sixties.
+With railway facilities very different from those of to-day, it was the
+custom of “bloods” to make a week of it at Newmarket during the great
+meetings, and so it came to pass that a distinctly representative party
+took up their quarters at the residence of Mr. Postans, the courteous
+postmaster at Mill Hill, for the Two Thousand festival of ’72.
+
+In those long-ago days class distinctions were religiously observed even
+in such trifles, and whilst the “second chop” resorted to the “White
+Hart” and other comfortable hostelries, the upper crust engaged houses at
+fabulous prices, to the advantage of owner and tenant.
+
+The existence was as regular as it was exciting, the racing being
+followed by an excellent dinner and a stroll about nine to “The Rooms.”
+It was on the night before the big race that Forbes-Bentley—a lucky dog
+who owned a number of horses, and who had recently been left a fortune of
+£140,000 conditional on his adding a second barrel to his name—suggested
+to a sportsman at dinner that to avoid notice he should put some money on
+for him on Prince Charlie for the Two Thousand.
+
+Beginning his racing career in a pure love of the sport, he eventually
+developed into a colossal punter, and discovered—it is feared too
+late—that the game is not a paying one. “Tommy,” he whispered to his
+next-door neighbour over their cigars, “I want a monkey on Prince
+Charlie; will you, like a good fellow, put it on for me with as little
+publicity as possible?”
+
+Prince Charlie during the past twenty-four hours had been a little shaky
+in the betting, and from being firm at 2 to 1, 5 to 2 was at the moment
+being laid, and was to be had to any amount.
+
+Entering the Rooms about midnight the air resounded with “5 to 2
+against,” as, cautiously approaching the then leviathan of the Turf,
+Tommy inquired: “What price Prince Charlie?” “I’ll lay you 1000 to 400,
+Captain,” was the reply, and the bet being duly booked, he continued:
+“And now you can have 3 monkeys to 1 if you like.” “Put it down,”
+replied Tommy, who although exceeding his commission decided that what
+was good enough for Forbes-Bentley was good enough for him.
+
+But barely had he left the bookie when up came T. V. Morgan, who had a
+score of horses with Joe Dawson, and inquired what he had been doing.
+
+“Your horse is not going well in the betting, old man. I’ve just taken 3
+monkeys to 1,” was the reply.
+
+“My —, there must be something wrong!” he gasped. “I’ll go at once to
+Joe,” and without waiting a moment, he disappeared on his midnight
+mission.
+
+Knocking up Joe Dawson, who had long retired to rest, the two proceeded
+to the stable, where it was found that the first favourite’s near fore
+leg was inflamed, with every indication of a swelling.
+
+“By —, Morgan!” exclaimed the trainer, “this is d— serious; the horse has
+been got at, and may be again; we mustn’t stir from here for the
+remainder of the night.” And so the two kept vigil alternately till the
+saddling bell rang next afternoon. The head stable lad meanwhile and
+certain helpers were not admitted into the stable, and peremptorily
+discharged in the morning, and bonnie Prince Charlie won the Two Thousand
+fairly easily. But during the race there was a critical moment as the
+horses entered the Dip and his jockey was seen to move in the saddle. “A
+thousand to a carrot against Prince Charlie!” was now shouted by a
+hundred stentorian voices, but the shouts were happily short-lived, as
+the grand old roarer shot out of the crowd and won with apparent ease.
+
+Joe Dawson and his colleague Morgan meanwhile were inundated with
+congratulations, and when Joe recounted the marvellous escape the good
+old horse had had, the congratulations were not unaccompanied by fervent
+hopes that the delinquents might yet be discovered and lynched.
+
+On the authority of the late Joe Dawson it may be accepted that what
+occurred was of the simplest but most effective nature, and comes briefly
+to this: “That the fittest horse if gently tapped with a piece of wood on
+the back sinew will become dead lame, and leave no trace of the
+nobbling.”
+
+But what led to the discovery appears more marvellous. If Forbes-Bentley
+had not commissioned Tommy to get his money on, and if Morgan had not
+casually asked what he was doing, the fact of Prince Charlie’s
+unpopularity might never have been brought home to the former; Joe Dawson
+might have continued in his undisturbed slumber, and Prince Charlie at
+daylight would have been found to be hopelessly lame.
+
+It was the year in which Aventuriere ran for the Oaks that George Payne
+told me that he thought she had a chance of winning, and a hint of the
+kind meaning a lot from such a man as Mr. Payne, I decided to invest £15
+in the hopes of landing £500. Meeting my friend after the race, I
+expressed my fear that the mare had not fulfilled his expectations.
+“Wait till you’ve seen her over a long distance,” was the encouraging
+reply. “Don’t repeat what I’m saying, but when the weights are out for
+the Cesarewitch get your money back if she carries anything less than
+7st.”
+
+Laying this monition to heart, I decided to trust her for a big stake,
+but waiting, alas! to see how Alec Taylor’s lot would be quoted before
+acting on the hint, I proceeded to Newmarket with a sporting team.
+
+“Come and dine with me to-night,” suggested Fred Gretton, “if you don’t
+mind meeting Swindells; you know what he is, but he’s d— amusing.”
+
+Swindells was the owner of the first favourite, The Truth gelding, a
+patched-up old crock that had been pulled at every small meeting for
+months, and rewarded his enterprising owner by being given a nice light
+weight for the Cesarewitch.
+
+“I hope you’re both on my ’orse for to-morrow,” inquired the genial
+Swindells. And I explained I had determined to back Aventuriere.
+
+“What’s she got on?” asked Swindells. “What, 6st. 12lb.? D— me if any —
+three-year-old has a chance against my ’orse.”
+
+It was then that I faltered, and, impressed with the speaker’s cuteness,
+decided to go against my original intention, and backing The Truth
+gelding, had the mortification next day of seeing Aventuriere win by a
+neck with little Glover up.
+
+“Well, got home, I hope?” inquired Mr. Payne after the race, and when I
+told the truth, he added: “Never ask me for a tip again.”
+
+It was thus that I lost the biggest chance of my life.
+
+But it was before the above blow had descended that Mr. Swindells was at
+his best, and during the dinner that we have referred to told story after
+story which, however creditable to his resourceful genius, would by many
+be considered “fishy.”
+
+“Ah, the Chester Cup was the race for getting money on in those days,”
+remarked the genial Swindells. “I once ’ad a crock called Lymington; ah,
+a rare useful one, too. At the October Meeting I put ’im in for an
+over-night race, the stable lad up, with orders to pull him up sharp soon
+after the start, jump off and wait. The ’orse was dead lame, of course,
+and for why? The lad ’ad slipped a bit of ’ard stuff into his frog.
+
+“‘Bad case; breakdown,’ everyone said, so we took ’im back to the stables
+in a van. First the local vet. saw him, and then a big pot from London,
+and we humbugged ’em both. Not long after I entered ’im for the Chester
+Cup, but told everybody my d— fool of a clerk had made a bloomer of it,
+as the ’orse could never be trained, and so when the weights came out he
+was chucked in at nix. My eyes! what a cop! and, my Gawd, didn’t he win!
+Oh, no; only as far as from ’ere to nowhere!”
+
+At Doncaster, too, the hospitalities were even of a more lavish style,
+and all the principal owners gave dinner parties nightly to their various
+friends.
+
+The name of Sir Robert Peel recalls many episodes in the career of that
+most blustering baronet.
+
+Beginning as an attaché at Berne, the first performance that brought him
+into prominence was an outburst of temper at a local Kursaal, when,
+seizing the rake, he belaboured an innocent croupier as the cause of his
+run of bad luck.
+
+The Foreign Office, deeming change of air desirable, we next hear of him
+following the noble sport of racing, when I had the distinction of coming
+within the sphere of his amiable influence. It was in ’69 that I found
+myself on one occasion travelling to Newmarket in the same compartment as
+Lord Rosslyn and Sir Robert Peel; in the same train was Lord Rosebery,
+making his début as an owner of horses, and still unknown to fame as the
+most brilliant of orators and one of the best Foreign Secretaries England
+has ever had.
+
+“What kind of fellow is young Rosebery?” inquired Lord Rosslyn; to which
+the most opinionated of men replied:
+
+“He looks a fool, but I’m told he’s a bigger one than he looks.”
+
+And this was the verdict of a man whose claims to celebrity were based on
+being the son of a brilliant father, on one who, in addition to a most
+successful racing career, is universally admired as a sound politician, a
+genial friend, and the most versatile of living public men.
+
+It was about the same period that the fates again destined me to be
+within measurable distance of the over-bearing baronet, when young Webb,
+the jockey, had lost a race through no fault of riding. As he was fuming
+and abusing the unhappy youth, Mr. George Payne, who was present,
+protested against the unjust charge, adding that although he had lost
+considerably by the race, he in no way blamed Webb, who had carried out
+his instructions implicitly.
+
+It was at this point one of the most amiable of men interfered, and
+laying his hand on George Payne’s arm, said: “My dear George, it will
+take three or four more crosses to get the cotton out of the Peel
+family.”
+
+Of a commanding presence, and faultlessly attired in heavy satin cravat
+and large-brimmed hat, Sir Robert gave the impression of patrician down
+to the heels; it was only—as Sir Joseph Hawley suggested—when the
+crustation was tampered with that the plating gave indications of alloy.
+Peel was an inveterate gambler, and an admittedly fine whist player, and
+even so late as the early eighties might be seen daily at the Turf Club
+at the 2 and 10 table, and a pony on the rub. It was in this most select
+of establishments that a fracas occurred between this most irascible of
+baronets and a noble marquis (still living), when the pot called the
+kettle black. It ended in both members being suspended, then mutually
+apologising, and eventually being restored to the privileges of the fold.
+
+A bad loser, he was deficient in one quality that makes a successful
+gambler, and so remained a failure, despite all the advantages that
+political interest gave him.
+
+Of a different type was Sir Joseph Hawley; succeeding to a huge fortune
+before he was out of his teens, he went through the usual finishing
+school of those days, and served a few months in the 9th Lancers, after
+which he devoted his attention to yachting and visiting the various
+Mediterranean ports in the vain search of the pursuit for which nature
+had intended him.
+
+It was at Corfu, then occupied by a small British garrison, that he had a
+unique experience. Entering upon one occasion the chief bakery of the
+island, he sought enlightenment on the process by which the bread was
+kneaded. Around a vast room, surrounded by a shelf, sat some half-dozen
+swarthy naked natives, whilst here and there lumps of dough were arranged
+in piles; on the floor stood two or three youths, whilst suspended from
+the ceiling dangled various ropes, which the respective squatters
+clutched firmly in their hands. At a given signal, away they flew,
+whilst the urchins deftly turned the dough, and then, with a flop, down
+came the naked natives, with eyes starting out of their heads, only again
+to fly into space, whilst their next resting-place was being duly
+adjusted.
+
+No fear of indigestion where such perfect kneading was in force; indeed,
+the bread of Corfu bore an excellent reputation, and the island was
+considered one of the most popular of Foreign Stations.
+
+It would be absurd to recount the numerous victories of the “cherry and
+black” colours, although the unique experience of Blue Gown being
+disqualified at Doncaster for carrying “over weight” in the Champagne
+Stakes may come as a surprise to many.
+
+Scotland was represented on the Turf in the sixties by two shining lights
+of diametrically different types, the patrician Earl of Glasgow and the
+plebeian James Merry (of Glasgow), and whilst the former, during his
+fifty years, only once won a classic race—the Two Thousand—the latter
+swept the boards of everything over and over again.
+
+Lord Glasgow was not a lovable man; bluff to a degree, and sensitive as
+lyddite, the brine that he imbibed in his youth never appears to have
+left him, for his lordship was in the Navy when keel hauling was in
+vogue, and the sixties found him as foul-mouthed, irritable, and
+cross-grained as any British tar ought to be.
+
+Suffice that in those hard-drinking, hard-swearing days, no head was
+harder, no répertoire more complete than that of this belted Earl (why
+belted?), who, with all his faults, was a grand landmark of what a
+patrician of the old days was, as surrounded by his boon companions,
+General Peel, George Payne, Lord Derby, and Henry Greville, the magnums
+of claret flowed in the historical bay-window at White’s. But this was
+before membership was “invited” by advertisement.
+
+James Merry, on the other hand, was a typical semi-educated Scot, game to
+the backbone, but not up to the standard then required in a gentleman.
+He came, indeed, before his time; had he lived to-day, a baronetcy, or
+certainly the Victorian Order, would have been his reward.
+
+It has been the lot of few men to own such horses as Thormanby, Dundee,
+Scottish Chief, MacGregor, Sunshine, Doncaster, and Marie Stuart, and
+despite the fact that no suspicion ever rested on James Merry’s fair
+name, it is an open secret that when MacGregor was backed for more money
+than any Derby favourite before or since, the Ring told him, “If he wins
+we are broke”—and he did not win.
+
+Devout Presbyterian though he was, he succumbed, alas, on one occasion,
+to French blandishments, and ran a horse on the Sawbath. Summoned by the
+“Elders” of Falkirk to explain the terrible lapse, he freely admitted his
+sin, and only obtained absolution by presenting the entire siller to the
+Kirk.
+
+But no reference—however superficial—to the Turf in the sixties would be
+complete without one word of homage to the great Englishman who did so
+much for the honour of old England both in sport and politics. Not that
+his greatest admirer can place Lord Palmerston in the front rank either
+as a diplomatist or an owner of racehorses, though none can deny him the
+marvellous combination of attributes that endeared him to his countrymen,
+whether in office or opposition, as when crying “hands off” when his
+prerogative as Prime Minister was being tampered with; or when leaving a
+debate to come out and shake hands with his trainer; or when at
+Tattersall’s watching the fluctuations in the betting over his hot
+favourite, Mainstone, for the Derby; or when twitting his political
+opponent (Lord Derby), whom he had just replaced as Prime Minister; or,
+again, whilst watching Tom Spring or John Gully punching in the ring long
+before any of us were thought of. Ah, there was a man; an Englishman
+without guile, and of a type well nigh extinct!
+
+Lord Palmerston never attained pre-eminence on the Turf, and when
+Mainstone—as was suspected—was tampered with before the big race, and
+when, on a later occasion, Baldwin broke down in his training, he decided
+to abandon the sport; what more noble than the letter he wrote to Lord
+Naas giving him his favourite to place at the stud? No auctioneering, no
+huckstering—but a free gift such as only a great Englishman would have
+conceived.
+
+And who that frequented the Curragh meetings in the long-ago sixties has
+not admired the noble form of this same Lord Naas (assassinated in ’72 in
+the Andaman Islands), accompanied by those stalwart Irishmen, the late
+Marquises of Conyngham and Drogheda?
+
+England must indeed “wake up”—to quote a phrase as old as the hills—if
+such records are to be maintained, and seek—perhaps in vain—for other
+giants such as these mighty dead, if we are to be what we were in sport
+and politics amongst the nations of the earth.
+
+For like the ripples on a placid lake before some great convulsion of
+nature, a Cromwell is succeeded by a Charles, and the Palmerstons make
+way for less sturdy clay, and then the great upheaval comes, which ends
+in chaos, or the prosperity that is associated with “a great calm.”
+
+Whether these momentous events will occur, simultaneously with the
+establishment of a Duma, and a great penny daily in Jerusalem, and the
+abandonment of historical English and Scottish seats for castles on the
+Rhine, it would require a modern Jeremiah to foretell, but the pendulum
+is oscillating ominously, with a throb that is not to be mistaken.
+
+Lord Falmouth, whom no earwig ever ventured to associate with a fishy
+act, holds the proud distinction of never having backed his opinion in
+his life, if we except the threadbare tale that every biographer sets out
+as if it were not known to everybody, of how he once bet sixpence, and
+paid it in a coin surrounded by diamonds.
+
+With this attribute universally known, it is perhaps not difficult to
+explain the immunity he obtained from innuendo when his horse Kingcraft
+won the Derby in the memorable year that the Ring “approached” James
+Merry, despite the fact that he only ran third to MacGregor in the Two
+Thousand.
+
+That Lord Falmouth was a successful horse-owner may be accepted by the
+£300,000 he undoubtedly won in stakes during the twenty years of his
+career; that no one begrudged it him is shown by the unanimous regret of
+the racing public when he practically retired from the Turf, and that
+even so “close” a man as Fred Archer, the jockey, should have subscribed
+towards a presentation silver shield speaks volumes for his popularity.
+
+Lord Falmouth, like his grand old naval ancestor, is now a matter of
+history, and nothing remains but the two guns outside the family town
+house in St. James’s Square to remind the passer-by of two great men, who
+in their respective spheres were _sans peur et sans reproche_.
+
+To Fred Archer, as a phenomenon of a later period, who was latterly Lord
+Falmouth’s jockey, it is out of the sphere of these annals of the sixties
+to refer, but seeing him as I often have over his usual breakfast of hot
+castor-oil, black coffee, and a slice of toast, it seems incredible that
+he should have lived even to his thirtieth year.
+
+Constantly “wasting” to try and attain 8st. 7lb. his mind and body soon
+became a wreck, and then the sad end came by his own hand with which we
+are all familiar.
+
+Bob Hope-Johnstone and his brother David (“Wee Davy”) were two as fine
+specimens of the genus man as can well be conceived; but like
+Napoleon—who, according to experts, ought to have died at Waterloo—Bob
+outlived the glory of his youth, and became a morose, cantankerous
+wretch, who spent half his time at the hostelry now known as Challis’s,
+which in the sixties was the resort of every jockey—straight or
+crooked—that held a licence from the Jockey Club.
+
+Another shining light about this period was Prince Soltykoff, whose wife
+was one of the handsomest women in England.
+
+It was after her death that he came into prominence as an admirer of
+beautiful women in general, and of little Graham of the Opera Comique in
+particular, and—later on—of goodness knows how many more. Many a time
+have I seen him at Mutton’s at Brighton, loaded with paper bags full of
+every indigestible delight, which the imperious little woman beside him
+continued unmercifully to add to.
+
+Lord Glasgow, who was distinguished in the sixties as possessing the
+longest string of useless yearlings, was, in addition to other
+peculiarities, the most hot-tempered explosive that epoch produced. Kind
+of heart in the bluffest of ways, and throwing money about with a lavish
+hand, I remember on one occasion finding myself on the railway station at
+Edinburgh as his plethoric lordship was purchasing his ticket. Tendering
+a £5 note, the clerk requested him to endorse it, which, having been done
+with a churlish air, his temper rose to fever pitch when the clerk,
+returning it, said, “I didn’t ask you where you were going; I want your
+name, man!” A volley of abuse, in which he was a past-master, then
+followed, and the abashed official realised that what he had mistaken for
+a grazier was the redoubtable Earl of Glasgow.
+
+The sporting critic of the _Morning Post_, who wrote under the name of
+“Parvo,” once felt the weight of his indignation for what, after all, was
+a fair criticism of the great man’s stud, and when, in ’69, an obituary
+article appeared in the _Post_, the incident and the exact wish his
+lordship had given expression to were conveyed in flowery symbolism as a
+hope “that he might live to water his grave, but not with tears.”
+
+The Earl of Aylesford in the sixties was the owner of Packington Hall,
+and a princely income, and it was whilst I was staying with George Graham
+(owner of the famous Yardley stud where the great Stirling “stood”) that
+a jovial party drove over from Packington. Luncheon as served in those
+days was an important item in the programme, and long before the
+Packington party began to think of returning more than one had succumbed
+to the rivers of champagne that flowed. Bob Villiers (a brother of the
+then Earl of Jersey) was one of the first to collapse, and as he
+disappeared under the table the kindly host’s anxiety was curbed by a
+shout from Joe Aylesford, “Never mind, George, he’s only tried himself a
+bit too high.”
+
+A few years later Joe was one of the party, selected in company with
+Beetroot (as Lord Alfred Paget was affectionately called) and others, to
+accompany the Prince of Wales to India, and it was during his absence
+that the troubles that culminated in disaster overtook the popular Earl.
+“Don’t go to India, Joe, if you value your domestic happiness,” was the
+advice of an old friend, but go he did, and then began the intrigues of a
+titled libertine, which ended in strong drinks and the mortgaging of the
+ancestral acres.
+
+Amid this genial phalanx no better host was to be found than old Fred
+Gretton, and it was apropos of the Cambridgeshire that the following
+incident occurred.
+
+Seated round the festive board were some dozen sportsmen, young men from
+town and old men from the shires; dear old George Graham (the breeder of
+Stirling) and his brother; Duffer Bruce (father of the late Marquis of
+Aylesbury), deafer than usual, but shouting the house down; myself, Peter
+Wilkinson, and three or four worthies of the farmer class who had come in
+the wake of Fred Gretton.
+
+“I should like you to win a large stake,” whispered to me a jolly old
+squire who had been my neighbour at dinner.
+
+“Nothing would give me greater pleasure,” I replied; “the more so as this
+is positively the last meeting I am ever likely to be at before going to
+Gibraltar.”
+
+“Eh, lad, and why so?” persisted my well-wisher. “I should like you to
+win a large stake,” and realising that it was now or never, I boldly
+replied: “Look here, Mr. Bowden, if you can put me on to a good thing I
+shall be eternally grateful.”
+
+“I suppose you’ve never heard of Playfair?” inquired Mr. Bowden. “He’s
+Fred’s horse, and he’s certain to win the Cambridgeshire; he’s only got
+6st. 3lb., the acceptances are just out, but, for God’s sake, don’t let
+Fred know. Now, lad, do as I tell you; I’ve taken a liking to you.”
+
+It must be admitted I had never heard of Playfair—very few had—but acting
+up to the tenets I had learnt during my two years’ intimacy with the late
+Hastings, I boldly took 1,000 to 15 within the hour with the leviathan
+Steele.
+
+“What are you backing?” inquired Mr. Gretton, who that moment came
+hurriedly up, and on being informed by the bookie, he turned to me and
+whispered into my ear, “There’s only one man could have told you, and
+that’s that d— drunken old blackguard Bowden; but not a word, mind you,
+you keep to that 1,000.” And so the kind old man toddled off. Shortly
+before the race, at the Bath Hotel, Piccadilly, where he always stayed in
+Town, he inquired of the two barmaids if they would like a sovereign each
+on his horse; and whilst the foolish virgin expressed a preference for
+the coin, the wise virgin elected to be “on,” and after the race received
+from the genial punter £35—a sum considerably in excess of the price.
+
+Suffice to say, Playfair won the Cambridgeshire for Mr. Gretton in ’72,
+and it is no exaggeration to add that his taking to racing to the extent
+he then did suggested the idea—afterwards elaborated—of turning Bass and
+Co. into a limited liability company.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+THE EPIDEMIC OF CARDS.
+
+
+THE Commander-in-Chief in Ireland, at the time of which I am writing, was
+as crotchety a specimen of the old school as the Peninsular had ever
+turned out. Clean shaved, with a Waterloo expression of countenance, Sir
+George Browne was about the last of Wellington’s veterans who held a high
+command. Despotic and vindictive if thwarted, he had a squabble with the
+railway companies, and retaliated by vetoing henceforth the transit of
+troops by rail, and a regiment ordered from Londonderry to Cork did the
+entire distance by route march. Not that the ordeal was without its
+advantages, for it enabled British regiments to form their own opinions
+of Irish hospitality and the numerous good qualities of that
+much-misunderstood race. Proceeding in detachments of two and three
+companies, every night found them billeted in the towns or villages
+through which they passed, and it was no rare occurrence for the landed
+proprietors to ride out and insist that every officer should stay at the
+Manor House, and to send supplies of comforts wherewith to regale the
+men.
+
+Mr. Kavanagh, M.P. for Kilkenny, was a brilliant specimen of a real old
+Irish gentleman, and though deformed from his birth, could hold his own
+amongst the best. Without arms, this grand sportsman could ride, drive
+four horses, and shoot to perfection, and his prowess in Corfu and other
+distant sporting haunts is remembered to this day.
+
+Riding out to welcome the regiment, no refusal was listened to, and
+within an hour every officer was comfortably settled at Borris Castle,
+and the men fared proportionately as well.
+
+But the monotony of these tedious pilgrimages will not bear narration.
+Suffice it that having landed at Cork we received orders, much to our
+delight, to proceed direct to Dublin instead of to dismal Templemore.
+
+The craze for punting that we had experienced in London seemed, indeed,
+to have crossed the Channel, and when the officers had severally been
+elected honorary members, it was found that the Hibernian United Service
+Club was the hotbed of about the highest play they had yet encountered.
+Nightly, with the precision of a chronometer, ten o’clock found the
+spacious card room crammed to its uttermost limits, and Irish banknotes,
+varying from one to ten sovereigns in value, were literally stacked a
+foot high on either side of the table. All through the night these
+terrible duels continued, and it was no uncommon thing to leave the room
+and drive like blazes for morning parade at ten. The garrison in this
+memorable year was an exceptionally “high-play” one, consisting, amongst
+others, of the 4th and 11th Hussars, 9th Lancers, the Royal Dragoons,
+Highlanders, and Rifle Brigade, and during that winter fabulous sums were
+lost by men incapable of meeting their obligations.
+
+The Committee, meanwhile, were roused to action, and peremptory orders
+were given that the gas was to be turned off punctually at 2 a.m.; but
+the extinction of the gas was the signal for the appearance of
+substitutes, and out of some two hundred pockets wax candles were brought
+forth, and the game proceeded as vigorously as ever.
+
+Further pressure was now applied, and under pain of expulsion members
+were ordered to quit the card room at the prescribed hour; but even this
+did not meet the case, and the punters ascended _en bloc_ to the largest
+bedroom above.
+
+It may be explained that this really delightful club possessed a dozen
+bedrooms, and on the particular occasion of which we are writing, one was
+in the occupation of Sir James Jackson, G.C.B., as irritable an old
+Peninsular veteran as a merciful Providence had spared to the sixties. A
+cavalry man of the old school, he invariably wore spurs, and no human eye
+had ever seen him without these useful appendages—a small blue moustache
+carefully waxed, and a bald head with blue tufts on either side completed
+the picture of this irritable old warrior who ate his dinner every day in
+the club, and never spoke to a soul.
+
+Play, meanwhile, was proceeding apace, with calls of “King,” “Fifty more
+wanted this side,” “D— it, blaze away,” “The pool’s made,” gracefully
+interspersed, when the door suddenly opened, and an apparition in flowing
+dressing-gown, nightcap, slippers, and spurs demanded peremptorily that
+the game should cease. To refuse the colonel-in-chief of the Carabineers
+would, of course, have been impossible, and as the old warrior retired to
+his couch the punters left the club.
+
+Ruin, meanwhile, had overtaken many an irreproachable man, and L—, of the
+Royals, K— of the Rifle Brigade, and a score of others, had no
+alternative but to send in their papers, and then the Commander-in-Chief
+came upon the scene, and swore, as only a Waterloo veteran could, that if
+any officer again transgressed he would send the regiment to the worst
+station between Hell and Halifax.
+
+But the wave of punting that appeared to have engulfed the land was by no
+means confined to the Arlington, Raleigh, and Hibernian Clubs, and the
+“Rag,” and later on the Whist Club—known as the “Shirt Shop”—caught the
+infection, and fabulous sums were wagered on the turn of a card night
+after night without intermission.
+
+Two-pound points to £10 on the rubber were the staple stakes of even the
+sober old Whist, and then one was looked upon as depriving a better man
+of the seat unless prepared to bet an extra hundred. Old fogies, who had
+never previously risked a shilling, would cautiously creep to the table,
+and nervously tender half-crowns, till frightened out of their lives by
+Tony Fawcett, of the 9th Lancers, shouting, “D— it, sir, this isn’t a
+silver hell!” and then, not to be beaten, they would club together and
+make up the requisite sovereign.
+
+Gus Anson, V.C., M.P., the most popular man of the day, was so
+impregnated with the epidemic that although at the time piloting an
+important Bill through Parliament, he had given me a standing order that
+as soon as a sufficient number were assembled for loo or baccarat, a
+telegram was to be despatched to him forthwith, and numerous were the
+messages that found their way to the sacred precincts of the House
+between ten and twelve at night, addressed to Colonel the Honourable
+Augustus Anson, V.C., M.P., presumedly from constituents.
+
+Brighton, too, suffered from the epidemic, and during the Sussex
+fortnight the fever spread to an alarming extent. The London detachments
+came down _en bloc_, and all the best houses and leading hotels were
+filled with roysterers, and high play was the rule from night till
+morning.
+
+Progress along the King’s Road after dusk was a matter of difficulty, and
+at every lamp-post one was importuned by eager touters, and invitation
+cards thrust into one’s hand to visit this house or that. Every roof
+sheltered punters of a lower strata anxious to emulate their betters, and
+the family knick-knacks and the family Bible, left exposed by their
+worthy owner in his desire to participate in the golden harvest, might
+have been seen huddled together in a corner, or intermingled with cards,
+whisky bottles, and tumblers.
+
+In preparation for the nightly orgies that commenced about ten, the
+bloods inaugurated a delightful system whereby the maximum of fresh air
+with the minimum of exertion might be obtained prior to the inhaling of
+the foul currents amid which they proposed to revel for the rest of the
+night.
+
+To meet the requirements of the case, every wheelchair was bespoken or
+engaged for the entire week at a considerable advance in price, and a
+procession, usually headed by George Chetwynd, Billy Milner and Billy
+Call—to whom the honour of the inception is credited—might nightly be
+seen wending its way to the end of the pier, selecting the most suitable
+parts, and generally inconveniencing everybody not of the “inner circle.”
+
+The costume _de rigueur_ on these progresses was white tie, evening
+trousers and vest, and silk hat, with the oldest shooting coat in one’s
+wardrobe.
+
+Later in the season some Hebrews of imitative dispositions aspired to
+emulate the bloods, but although their get-ups were irreproachable, the
+fraud was detected, and the jackdaws ruthlessly suppressed.
+
+It is painful to remember the numerous edifices that toppled, and the
+many good men that “went under” in the inevitable crash that ensued, and
+picturing in one’s mind the huge table and the fifteen or twenty players
+that congregated nightly around the board in the various clubs—winners
+and losers and lookers-on—a lump rises in one’s throat as one remembers
+how few are left! Carlyon and Augustus Webster, Jauncey, Cootie
+Hutchinson, Sam Bachelor, Lord Milltown, Crock Vansittart, La Touche,
+Hastings, De Hoghton, Tom Naghten, Sir George O’Donnel, Dick Clayton, Gus
+Anson, Freddy Granville, George Lawrence, Jimmy Jop, Jim Coleman, and a
+host of others, all good men and true, and all long since swept away into
+the inevitable dust-bin.
+
+Not to have known Jinks was not in itself a reproach, but not to have
+known Jonas Hunt in the long-ago sixties was to have admitted that one
+was without the pale of Society, or certainly that section of it which
+gambled, raced, and drank all day and all night, if circumstances
+permitted. A fine horseman of iron nerve and unbounded assurance, he had
+ridden in the Balaclava charge before he was out of his teens, and on
+retiring from the service a few years later, developed into one of the
+best gentleman riders ever seen in England or France.
+
+In a chronic state of impecuniosity—as he insisted on asserting—he never
+omitted to add that a good knife and fork was always ready at home.
+Jonas had certainly run through pretty well all he had had, but still he
+always possessed an income.
+
+Always ready to gamble, and always cheery, Jonas, as may be supposed, was
+popular with a certain set, and if he had a fault it was a forgetfulness
+in regard to the settlement of small scores, which by some was attributed
+to the excitement when he rode in the “six hundred,” and by others to
+various causes not sufficiently interesting to enumerate. Brave as a
+lion, he had actually been recommended for the Victoria Cross—in those
+days less lavishly awarded than now—and as he was quite ready to “go out”
+on the slightest provocation, timid natures preferred to put up with
+eccentricities arising out of his forgetfulness rather than risk a
+daylight meeting at twelve yards rise.
+
+Whilst riding in France his performances were a revelation to his foreign
+critics, and when on one occasion his bridle broke and he steered his
+mount to victory with his whip, he received such an ovation at Chantilly
+as seldom falls to the lot of a perfidious Briton.
+
+On one occasion, Jonas, who had allowed a comparative stranger to leave
+the table without settling, was met by the indignant creditor a few days
+later and reminded of his obligation; but Jonas, in no way disconcerted,
+let the amazed punter understand that such a demand was highly
+ungentlemanly and insulting, offering as an alternative to retire with
+him forthwith and fight it out with either pistols or fists.
+
+In the duel between Dillon, a gentleman rider, and the Duc de
+Grammont-Caderousse, which created such an unjust scandal in the sixties,
+Jonas, as might have been expected, was the former’s second. Neither man
+had ever had a rapier in his hand before, and when on the following
+morning both began slashing and thrusting, and Dillon was run through the
+heart, a clamour arose as to the butchery of an Englishman by an expert
+swordsman; all which was bosh. Had de Grammont been anything but the
+veriest tyro, the regrettable incident could not have occurred.
+
+It was subsequent to the various thrilling incidents we have narrated
+that Jonas selected Brighton as his headquarters.
+
+Jinks’ Club was not located in a palatial mansion, nor did it even
+present the modest exterior of the local Union Club; as a fact, it was
+limited in its dimensions, and consisted of two rooms in an unpretentious
+house in Ship Street.
+
+In the front room was a long table and some two dozen chairs, an iron
+safe, and a side table, convenient for the support of such light
+refreshments as sandwiches, hard-boiled eggs, and beverages of a popular
+kind.
+
+The back room was more or less a sealed subject, and supposed to contain
+club memoranda, Jinks’ books, and to be the spot where the “proprietor”
+carried on the business.
+
+Membership of the club was within the reach of all, and a “quorum” of
+Jinks and Jonas could on emergency elect a member without general meeting
+or ballot; but those specially introduced by Jonas were received with
+marked favour. Nor were there apparently any fixed rules as to meetings,
+which were left to circumstances, and an urgent three-lined whip on
+emergency.
+
+The procedure in the latter case may briefly be described as follows:—
+
+If Jonas met a “likely” man—from town—he would tell him that his
+appearance was the luckiest thing in the world, as that very night a rare
+round game was “coming off,” that baccarat would begin at nine, and that
+the rendezvous was Jinks’ Club. This point being settled, an urgent whip
+was sent round by the indefatigable Jonas, and by 8.45 a representative
+company awaited the desirable plunger from town.
+
+Prior to the commencement of the game, Jonas, it must be conceded, was a
+mass of energy. Attired in evening clothes he would first unlock the
+mysterious safe, and after the local members had come one by one,
+presumably to deposit money, and returned with counters conspicuously
+displayed, he would turn with his most winning smile to the visitor with:
+“Now, old man, how much do you want to buy; it saves a lot of bother by
+having counters? You’ve only to plank your counters after it’s over, and
+get their value; good rule, don’t you think? It’s what they do at ‘le
+Cercle’ at Nice; saves a lot of bother.”
+
+Occasionally, during the excitement of the game, strangers had been known
+to put into the pool brand new crisp notes to save the bother of buying
+counters; but these were always exchanged for counters by the
+ever-obliging Jonas. “It’s much better to have one sort of settlement,
+don’t you think, old man?” he would add, as stuffing the notes into his
+pockets he eagerly rushed into the fray.
+
+“By Jove! it’s later than I thought,” was often a familiar exclamation as
+daylight appeared over the pier. “How many counters have you got, Jack?
+Count them, old man, or keep them till morning. You and I are old pals;
+you know where to come in the morning. Name your own hour; good-night.”
+And the genius was round the corner like a hurricane.
+
+An amusing incident once occurred where Jonas was a big winner, and his
+debtor Master Fred Granville; Jonas on this occasion was immeasurably
+chaffed. “You’ll never get a bob,” he was told right and left.
+
+“Oh, yes I will, he’s all right,” was the half-hearted reply.
+
+“But he’s going away in the morning,” added another; “you must look
+sharp, Jonas.” And Jonas intimated he had been promised that a cheque
+should be sent him in the morning.
+
+Next morning a cab drove rapidly to the Norfolk, and Jonas, jumping out
+excitedly, said: “Look here, you chaps,” and he waved a cheque excitedly.
+
+“Let’s have a look at it,” asked Ernest Neville. “Why, man, it isn’t
+signed.” And Jonas’s face lengthened inordinately as he realised the
+terrible omission.
+
+Shouting for a cab after a hurried glance at a railway guide, he in due
+time reached the station, and had the satisfaction of seeing the last
+carriage slowly receding from view.
+
+It was the winter that Garcia—a Spanish miscreant—who had won colossal
+sums at every hell in Europe, had just been detected in a trick that had
+long baffled the ingenuity of the world.
+
+The scheme was nothing less than procuring the contract for the supply of
+cards at the principal gambling resorts of Nice, Monaco, St. Petersburg,
+Homburg, Paris, and Ostend.
+
+Shiploads of his ware thus found their way into every quarter, and
+wherever he played he was confronted by his own cards. Knowing their
+backs as well as their faces, the result was obvious, and it was only
+after innumerable golden harvests that a clumsy accident brought the
+fraud to light in a salon in the Champs-Elysées.
+
+The scare thus created had not been lost upon the Riviera, and every
+precaution that ingenuity could devise was taken to make foul play
+impossible.
+
+It was during this winter, too, that the culprit, detected cheating at
+the Raleigh, put an end to his career.
+
+Le Cercle de la Méditerranée is one of those majestic buildings that
+meets the enormous revenue required for its support by making the pastime
+of cards an absolute luxury. On the first floor is a spacious saloon,
+with no better light than that afforded by plate-glass panels
+communicating with the card room and other chambers; liberally provided
+with lounges, weary punters resorted to it for repose, and waiters, when
+not otherwise occupied, hovered near it as within easy call of
+everywhere. In the adjoining room cards were usually set for possible
+whist and ecarté, or until every available spot was required for the more
+exciting claims of chemin de fer.
+
+Biscoe had on more than one occasion rambled through the empty room, and
+oblivious of the proximity of the servants, had been seen pocketing a
+pack of cards. This having been duly reported, he was made an especial
+object of interest to the committee; though, until he essayed to play, it
+was looked upon as the act of a kleptomaniac.
+
+All this, however, was unknown to the culprit, who, with but one object,
+one aim in life, laughed at every reverse, and raked in his winnings when
+Fortune smiled on him. His luck as a whole had been fairly good, and
+thinking the moment a favourable one, he decided to increase his stakes.
+
+It was now his deal, the “chemin de fer” was with him. “Come, gentlemen,
+let us plunge,” he jokingly remarked, as, producing a pocket-book, he
+placed it upon the pack. “I call twenty-five thousand francs.”
+(£1,000).
+
+A keen observer might have detected certain ominous glances that passed
+between the polite Count and the bland Professor, but nothing was said,
+and amid the silence of the Catacombs, the game proceeded.
+
+Five minutes later Biscoe was raking in £1,000 (in counters).
+
+“Again, gentlemen!” he shouted, as flushed and excited, he had not
+observed that two or three players had risen, and the remainder,
+bewildered at so unusual a proceeding, stared at one another in blank
+astonishment.
+
+“What’s up?” inquired Biscoe.
+
+“D—d if I know,” was the laconic reply, as an Englishman left the table.
+
+“The Committee, sir,” replied the Count, “have decided to count the
+cards, and on their authority I take possession of those before you.”
+
+Meanwhile groups discussed the position and ominous expressions, such as
+“Il nous faut un agent de police,” and “C’est clair que nous avons été
+volés” were bandied about. A _procès verbal_ also took place, presided
+over by the Duc de Richelieu, and within an hour it was known to every
+_gamin_ in Nice that an English “milor” had descended to the level of a
+thimble-rigger, that his spurs had been hacked off by the fiat of public
+opinion, and that henceforth his place would know him no more.
+
+The rest is briefly told. A dozen extra cards were found in the packs
+that had been correct before play commenced; the counters in Biscoe’s
+possession were _not_ redeemed by the club, and the “acceptance” was as
+far from redemption as ever.
+
+Next morning, as the gardeners were sweeping the grounds, a dead body
+with a gun-shot wound in the head was found in a shrubbery.
+
+Within a few yards lay the tideless Mediterranean, calm and sparkling as
+the morning sun played upon its waters; whilst here lay an upturned face,
+cold and rigid and ghastly white save for a clotted disfigurement on the
+brow, and the same sun, in all the irony of its grandeur, was lighting up
+all that was left of blighted hopes, fallen greatness, and a tragedy
+never to be forgotten. Later on, the mangled remains were buried at the
+expense of the Municipality.
+
+A week or two later a paragraph appeared in a Dublin paper, and there the
+matter ended.
+
+This is the usual procedure in these fashionable resorts. If you’ve lost
+your last penny you are provided with railway fare and seen off the
+premises; if you blow out your brains, you’re buried out of sight.
+Decency must be maintained! _Faites vos jeux, messieurs_!
+
+A convenient custom obtained at Le Cercle de la Méditerranée whereby a
+player temporarily cleaned out was permitted to deposit a pencil on the
+table to represent a stake, it being understood that he immediately
+proceeded to the bureau to purchase counters to redeem his symbolical
+investment. This was known as “au crayon.”
+
+It was on one occasion that Bob Villiers, who was usually limited as
+regards capital, was seen to place his pencil on the table and address
+the courteous dealer with, “Cent louis au crayon.”
+
+“By Gad,” whispered George Payne, who stood near me, “Bob Villiers has
+put up a hundred louis ‘au crayon,’” and it was in breathless anxiety,
+and with an eventual sigh of relief, that we saw him rake up his
+winnings.
+
+It was some years later, whilst once standing on the steps of the Hôtel
+des Anglais at Nice, at a time when the one topic of conversation was the
+terrible scandal that had lately taken place in Le Cercle de la
+Méditerranée, that George Payne expounded the irrefutable axiom that
+there were only two offences that might not be indulged in with impunity,
+and yet how extraordinary it was that men of wealth with every enjoyment
+capable of gratification should yet founder on one or other of these two
+unspeakable rocks, and instanced the recent H— affair, where the brother
+of a peer and major of a crack regiment had resorted to one of the
+unpardonable offences. And then he quoted George Russell, who had
+married a duke’s daughter, and Lord de Ros and Lord Arthur
+Pelham-Clinton, another ducal branch, all of whom, in a species of
+insanity, had fallen from their high estates.
+
+Many will recall the weird rumours that floated around the Clinton case;
+how the culprit had died and been duly buried; how weeks later an old
+gun-room companion had recognised his former ship-mate in a railway
+compartment, and how subsequent inquiry revealed the fact of a coffin
+filled with lumber.
+
+And in the H— affair the surroundings were, if possible, more dramatic;
+how a youngster of the 7th, at Nice at the time, at once wrote the story
+to a brother officer in order that “the first intimation to ‘the
+Regiment’ might not come from the papers;” how the recipient intercepted
+the commanding officer (Colonel Hale) in the barrack square, and handed
+him the letter with: “This, sir, I have just received, and I feel it’s my
+duty to show it to you”; how within a week the pen was ruthlessly run
+through the culprit’s name, and the nine days’ wonder was forgotten.
+
+That the publicity had been far-reaching, the following from the Paris
+_Figaro_ will show:—
+
+“One had hoped that chevaliers of industry were things of the past, but
+it is not so; the game goes on as ever, to judge of what occurred last
+Monday at le Cercle de la Méditerranée—a place where one always imagined
+one only met persons with whom one’s purse would be safe.
+
+“It was last Monday that an amiable personage—whose assumed manners
+suggested imbecility—carried on a system with cards which has no
+connection with honesty.
+
+“Ever since yesterday Major H— has been the object of a stringent
+surveillance, called into existence by the extraordinary fortune of
+having ‘passed’ only seventeen times on Sunday last during a game of
+chemin de fer.
+
+“Suspicion was all the stronger from the cards when counted being found
+to exceed the proper number by twenty-seven.
+
+“It was under these circumstances that the Major bought the bank at
+auction last Monday, and lost the first two coups.
+
+“It was evidently sowing to reap, for after the second coup, not having
+sufficient on the table to pay the winners, and while still holding the
+cards in his left hand, he drew with his right hand a note case from his
+pocket under which were a certain number of packed cards.
+
+“He then placed the case and the packed cards on the pack he had already
+in his left hand, and putting the entire packet before him, deliberately
+opened his note case, whence protruded several notes that had evidently
+been exposed with intention.
+
+“At this moment a member who had not lost a single detail of this scene
+of ‘prestidigitation,’ stood up and said: ‘Gentlemen, I play no longer,
+and if you take my advice you will do the same!’
+
+“The warning was not in vain.
+
+“It was accepted by all but one player, who placed on the table about
+sixty Louis.
+
+“The Major H—, in no way disconcerted, again dealt, and turned up nine—a
+nine of diamonds.
+
+“There was no further room for doubt, and all the players left their
+seats.
+
+“The game was suspended, the cards were counted; there were twenty-seven
+too many; and contained five nines of diamonds instead of four.
+
+“Immediately the committee was called together, and the expulsion of
+Major H— was unanimously decided upon. It was also decided that the
+Major should be turned out of the room he had occupied in the club for
+two days.” I approve entirely the decision of the committee, but regret
+that these Major H—s get off with expulsion, when the proper place would
+be the _correctionnelle_.
+
+No more liberal player ever existed than George Hay.
+
+On one occasion at a humdrum station in India, where he had started an
+unpretentious club, a sporting tailor who had lost considerably begged
+him to continue. “Give me my revenge,” he implored, and for three days
+and three nights, with periodical adjournments for a tub, this amiable
+punter continued giving the revenge. But Fate, alas! was against the
+little Snipper, and on the third day the score showed a colossal sum
+against him.
+
+“This can’t go on,” pleaded George. “Why, man, I shall be placed under
+arrest for absence without leave; besides which, I can’t keep my eyes
+open.”
+
+“Only one more chance,” whined the tailor.
+
+“Very well,” replied George, “you owe me” (and he named a considerable
+sum). “I’ll play you one game double or quits.”
+
+The tailor pondered for some moments, and then replied:
+
+“Look here, Captain Hay, I have a wife and four children, and I can’t
+afford to go ‘sudden death,’ but I’ll play you the best out of three,
+double or quits.”
+
+Failing to catch the subtlety of this logic, George consented, and the
+result was again against the tailor.
+
+“Now,” said this noble punter, “I’ve complied with all your requests.
+Nature won’t permit me to continue, but I’ll tell you what I _will_ do,”
+and ringing the bell, he ordered the waiter to bring in the list of
+members.
+
+Scanning the names and counting the number, he again addressed the
+tailor:
+
+“Look here. We have, I see, fifty-four members; but old Crutchley and
+the Chaplain needn’t count. You shall make every member of the club a
+black velvet knickerbocker suit with scarlet hose, and a cap, and
+henceforth we are quits.”
+
+Prudes and strict sticklers for propriety may argue that the man was a
+gambler, and consequently heartless and good for nothing; but after
+events proved that although dire calamity overtook him, he was of a
+noble, generous nature.
+
+Despite the above incident, the Pindee Club played a very strict game,
+and every member before sitting down carefully adjusted a pair of green
+spectacles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+THE COUP DE JARNAC.
+
+
+THE importance of the following subject—as many a fool has found to his
+cost—entitles it to a chapter to itself. It’s short, but instructive.
+
+Card-sharping—pure and simple—is such a low and contemptible subject that
+we would not presume to present it to our readers were it not
+occasionally reduced to a “fine art,” and, as such, worthy of notice,
+like the infallible formula that was in vogue in Europe some years ago,
+and, for aught we know, may still be practised by the “past-masters” of
+the fraternity.
+
+One may dismiss with contempt such fumblers as the scion of a ducal house
+who staked and lost his social position some years ago in a high-class
+Pall Mall club by what has been described as one of the two unpardonable
+offences against society; and were it not for the unique way his clumsy
+attempt was accidentally discovered the story would not bear repetition.
+
+There had been a Court function, and Lord Sydney, the Lord Chamberlain,
+innocently watching a rubber, was considerably surprised by a card
+cannoning against his silk stockings and striking him on the calf.
+Whether the fumbler had selected this course of throwing away a card
+because he had a bad hand, and so claiming a mis-deal, or was supplied
+with a relay like an amateur conjurer, suffice that he was detected and
+henceforth disappeared below the horizon.
+
+Nor will we detail how Prince Sapieha, of the 5th Dragoon Guards, playing
+écarté with a subaltern of Lancers, at the Raleigh, caught his adversary
+in the act of passing the king, and so cut short a promising military
+career, for although Sapieha, in his generosity, promised not to disclose
+it, conditionally on the culprit never again presuming to play at the
+club, the story leaked out, and the inevitable result followed.
+
+Nor will we discuss the questionable taste—considering the company—that
+permitted publicity to the silly tactics of an impecunious Baronet who,
+by moving a bone counter, endeavoured to realise a few ill-gotten
+sovereigns.
+
+But what we propose to do is to place before our readers a formula so
+capable of expansion, so incapable of detection, that one is staggered at
+the misplaced ingenuity that discovered the combination.
+
+Nor do we here refer to the public casinos of France and Monte Carlo,
+where at worst one is playing against about 2½ per cent. above the odds
+at roulette, and about 1¾ per cent. at _trente et quarante_, but to those
+accursed private parties in Paris, and possibly nearer home, where the
+following was in full blast many years ago.
+
+Assuming, then, that we have not all experienced a plucking, the
+procedure at (say) baccarat may be given.
+
+Conceive a long oblong table; in the centre sits the banker, whilst
+before him are two or three packs of new cards from which he tears the
+wrappers, shuffles them, and, placing them on the table, invites a player
+to cut. What fairer than this? What possibility of sharp practice when
+every eye is riveted on him, who, dealing one card to the right and one
+to the left, finally deals to himself?
+
+Now study the following table, and realise that the wrappers have been
+previously steamed and then re-gummed, and that the cards have been
+packed in rotation (face upwards) reading from left to right:—
+
+ 7 0 5 9 0 2 6 0 4 1 3 6 0
+
+ 8 0 1 2 6 9 0 8 7 0 9 7 0
+
+ 4 9 0 2 5 0 4 8 0 3 2 0 8
+
+ 1 1 3 5 5 3 4 0 0 0 6 0 7
+
+ (0 represents tens and court cards.)
+
+Cut the cards as often as you please, and the sequence and _consequence_
+remain unimpaired; before testing this, however, it must be understood
+that we refer to experienced players who know when to draw and when to
+stand, and it will be found that the dealer never loses, but for decency
+occasionally ties.
+
+“Lightning shuffling,” whereby the _artiste_ (!) appears to dislocate
+every card whilst really disturbing none is added to complete the
+illusion.
+
+Here, then, is a problem worthy of such Solons and “system-mongers” as
+Messrs. Wells, Rosslyn, and others, who, having found disciples, are
+invariably in pawn within a week.
+
+There is, however, one system one should invariably follow: avoid play,
+as a _private_ enterprise, however alluring the surroundings, unless you
+are perfectly confident—and how can one be?—that the gentleman who takes
+the bank and his familiars have not been educated up to the “Coup de
+Jarnac.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+THE PUBLIC HANGING OF THE PIRATES.
+
+
+IN the sixties “hangings” were done in public, and anything of an unusual
+kind attracted large parties from the West End; this was as recognised a
+custom as the more modern fashion of making up a party to go to the Boat
+Race or to share a _coupé_ on a long railway journey.
+
+And so it came about that the phenomenal sight of the execution of the
+seven _Flowery Land_ pirates in ’64 created, in morbid circles, a stir
+rarely equalled before or since. Members of the Raleigh, as may be
+supposed, mustered in considerable numbers, and days before the fatal
+morning trusty agents had visited the houses that face Newgate Gaol and
+secured every window that gave an unobstructed view of the ghastly
+ceremony.
+
+The prices paid were enormous, varying from twenty to fifty guineas a
+window, in accordance with the superiority of the perspective from “find
+to finish.”
+
+The rendezvous was fixed for 10 p.m. on Sunday at the Raleigh, but as it
+was raining in torrents it was a question with many whether to face the
+elements, or content themselves with a graphic description in the next
+day’s papers. But the sight of three or four cabs, a couple of servants,
+and a plentiful supply of provender decided the question, and the
+procession started on its dismal journey.
+
+Cursing the elements, the sightseers little knew in what good stead the
+downpour served them, and with nothing worse than being drenched to the
+skin the party arrived safely.
+
+A cab-load of young Guardsmen, however, preferring to wait till the storm
+abated, never got beyond Newgate Lane—where they were politely invited to
+descend, and, after being stripped to their shirts, were asked where the
+cabman should drive them to.
+
+The scene on the night preceding a public execution afforded a study of
+the dark side of nature not to be obtained under any other circumstances.
+
+Here was to be seen the lowest scum of London densely packed together as
+far as the eye could reach, and estimated by _The Times_ at not less than
+200,000. Across the entire front of Newgate heavy barricades of stout
+timber traversed the streets in every direction, erected as a precaution
+against the pressure of the crowd, but which answered a purpose not
+wholly anticipated by the authorities.
+
+As the crowd increased, so wholesale highway robberies were of more
+frequent occurrence; and victims in the hands of some two or three
+desperate ruffians were as far from help as though divided by a continent
+from the battalions of police surrounding the scaffold.
+
+The scene that met one’s view on pulling up the windows and looking out
+on the black night and its still blacker accompaniments baffles
+description. A surging mass, with here and there a flickering torch,
+rolled and roared before one; above this weird scene arose the voices of
+men and women shouting, singing, blaspheming, and, as the night advanced
+and the liquid gained firmer mastery, it seemed as if hell had delivered
+up its victims. To approach the window was a matter of danger; volleys
+of mud immediately saluted one, accompanied by more blaspheming and
+shouts of defiance. It was difficult to believe one was in the centre of
+a civilised capital that vaunted its religion, and yet meted out justice
+in such a form.
+
+The first step towards the morning’s work was the appearance of workmen
+about 4 a.m.; this was immediately followed by a rumbling sound, and one
+realised that the scaffold was being dragged round. A grim, square,
+box-like apparatus was now distinctly visible, as it slowly backed
+against the “debtors’ door.” Lights now flickered about the scaffold—the
+workmen fixing the cross-beams and uprights. Every stroke of the hammer
+must have vibrated through the condemned cells, and warned the wakeful
+occupants that their time was nearly come. These cells were situated at
+the corner nearest Holborn, and passed by thousands daily, who little
+knew how much misery that bleak white wall divided them from. Gradually
+as the day dawned the scene became more animated, and battalions of
+police surrounded the scaffold.
+
+Meanwhile, a little unpretending door was gently opened; this was the
+“debtors’ door,” and led direct through the kitchen on to the scaffold.
+The kitchen on these occasions was turned into a temporary mausoleum and
+draped with tawdry black hangings, which concealed the pots and pans, and
+produced an effect supposed to be more in keeping with the solemn
+occasion. From the window opposite everything was visible inside the
+kitchen and on the scaffold, but to the surging mass in the streets below
+this bird’s-eye view was denied.
+
+Presently an old and decrepit man made his appearance, and cautiously
+“tested” the drop; but a foolish impulse of curiosity leading him to peep
+over the drapery, a yell of execration saluted him. This was Calcraft,
+the hangman, hoary-headed, tottering, and utterly past his usefulness for
+the work.
+
+The tolling of St. Sepulchre’s bell about 7.30 a.m. announced the
+approach of the hour of execution; meanwhile a steady rain was falling,
+though without diminishing the ever-increasing crowd. As far as the eye
+could reach was a sea of human faces. Roofs, windows, church-rails, and
+empty vans—all were pressed into service, and tightly packed with human
+beings eager to catch a glimpse of seven fellow-creatures on the last
+stage of life’s journey. The rain by this time had made the drop
+slippery, and necessitated precautions on behalf of the living if not of
+those appointed to die, so sand was thrown over a portion, not of the
+drop (that would have been superfluous), but on the side, the only
+portion that was not to give way. It was suggestive of the pitfalls used
+for trapping wild beasts—a few twigs and a handful of earth, with a
+gaping chasm below. Here, however, all was reversed; there was no need
+to resort to such a subterfuge to deceive the chief actors who were to
+expiate their crime with all the publicity that a humane Government could
+devise. The sand was for the benefit of the “ordinary,” the minister of
+religion, who was to offer dying consolation at 8 a.m., and breakfast at
+9.
+
+The procession now appeared, winding its way through the kitchen, and in
+the centre of the group walked a sickly, cadaverous mob securely
+pinioned, and literally as white as marble. As they reached the platform
+a halt was necessary as each was placed one by one immediately under the
+hanging chains. At the end of these chains were hooks which were
+eventually attached to the hemp round the neck of each wretch. The
+concluding ceremonies did not take long, considering how feeble the aged
+hangman was. A white cap was first placed over every face, then the
+ankles were strapped together, and finally the fatal noose was put round
+every neck, and the end attached to the hooks. One fancies one can see
+Calcraft now laying the “slack” of the rope that was to give the fall
+lightly on the doomed men’s shoulders so as to preclude the possibility
+of a hitch, and then stepping on tiptoe down the steps and disappearing
+below. At this moment a hideous _contretemps_ occurred, and one poor
+wretch fell fainting, almost into the arms of the officiating priest.
+
+The reprieve was, however, momentary, and, placed on a chair, the
+inanimate mass of humanity awaited the supreme moment in merciful
+ignorance. The silence was now awful. One felt one’s heart literally in
+one’s mouth, and found oneself involuntarily saying, “They could be saved
+yet—yet—yet,” and then a thud that vibrated through the street announced
+that the pirates were launched into eternity. One’s eyes were glued to
+the spot, and, fascinated by the awful sight, not a detail escaped one.
+Calcraft, meanwhile, apparently not satisfied with his handiwork, seized
+hold of one poor wretch’s feet, and pressing on them for some seconds
+with all his weight, passed from one to another with hideous composure.
+Meanwhile, the white caps were getting tighter and tighter, until they
+looked ready to burst, and a faint blue speck that had almost immediately
+appeared on the carotid artery gradually became more livid, till it
+assumed the appearance of a huge black bruise. Death, I should say, must
+have been instantaneous, for hardly a vibration occurred, and the only
+movement that was visible was that from the gradually-stretching ropes as
+the bodies kept slowly swinging round and round. The hanging of the body
+for an hour constituted part of the sentence, an interval that was not
+lost upon the multitude below. The drunken again took up their ribald
+songs, conspicuous amongst which was one that had done duty pretty well
+through the night, and ended with
+
+ “Calcraft, Calcraft, he’s the man,”
+
+but the pickpockets and highwaymen reaped the greatest benefit. It can
+hardly be credited that respectable old City men on their way to
+business—with watch-chains and scarf-pins in clean white shirt-fronts,
+and with unmistakable signs of having spent the night in bed—should have
+had the foolhardiness to venture into such a crowd; but they were there
+in dozens. They had not long to wait for the reward of their temerity.
+Gangs of ruffians at once surrounded them, and whilst one held them by
+each arm, another was rifling their pockets. Watches, chains and
+scarf-pins passed from hand to hand with the rapidity of an eel;
+meanwhile their piteous shouts of “Murder!” “Help!” “Police!” were
+utterly unavailing. The barriers were doing their duty too well, and the
+hundreds of constables within a few yards were perfectly powerless to get
+through the living rampart.
+
+Whilst these incidents were going on 9 o’clock was gradually approaching,
+the hour when the bodies were to be cut down. As the dismal clock of St.
+Sepulchre’s chimed out the hour Calcraft, rubbing his lips, again
+appeared, and, producing a clasp knife, proceeded to hug the various
+bodies in rotation with one arm whilst with the other he severed the
+several ropes. It required two slashes of the feeble old arm to complete
+this final ceremony, and then the heads fell with a flop on the old man’s
+breast, who staggering under the weight, proceeded to jam them into
+shells.
+
+And then the “debtors’ door” closed till again required for a similar
+tragedy, the crowd dispersed, and the sightseers sought their beds to
+dream of the horrors of the past twelve hours.
+
+After the trapeze performance we have just read of, given by the
+venerable Calcraft to a delighted audience in front of Newgate Gaol, it
+appears to have dawned upon the “Hanging Committee” of the Home Office
+that, although much of the solemnity of the “painful” performance would
+be lost by the removal of the patriarchal beard, counter advantages might
+be attained by the substitution of a younger man to fill the Crown
+appointment so popular amongst the masses. A new era was thenceforth
+inaugurated. Instead of the length of the drop being left to the
+discretion of the _artiste_, the exact measurement was not only fixed,
+but the rope itself supplied by the Hanging Committee, after a careful
+calculation by dynamics of the height and weight of the principal
+performer. But the immediate successor of the venerable Calcraft was
+found wanting in certain material qualifications, and although admittedly
+an expert operator, had a habit of talking when under the genial
+influence of stimulants.
+
+An unrehearsed incident, when the head rolled off at a private execution,
+thus got into the papers, and it became apparent that a combination of
+expertness and reticence was the desideratum to be sought and found.
+
+It was thus that the hero we are discussing came upon the scene some few
+years later.
+
+Marwood allowed nothing to interfere with business, and he would as soon
+have hanged his grandmother—if duly instructed—as the most brutal ruffian
+that ever passed through his hands. To arrive over-night with a modest
+carpet-bag and be up betimes the following morning were to him matters of
+routine; to truss his subject with a kicking strap 6 in. wide and then
+drop into the procession with a face like a chief mourner’s were to him
+sheer formalities; to give evidence later in the day before an
+enlightened but inquisitive coroner’s jury was to him a matter of
+courteous obligation; and to step into the street half an hour afterwards
+with the same bag—but with evidently less hemp in it—all came to him as
+part of a routine to be henceforth cast from memory till the service of
+his country again demanded his undivided and best attention.
+
+Any one looking at the retiring little man, dressed in the most funereal
+of clothes, clutching a pint pot with his long and nervous fingers, would
+have found it difficult to associate him with anything more formidable
+than a bagman hawking samples for “the firm,” and it was only when a sort
+of intimacy had been struck up and a certain quantity of swipes had been
+consumed that, yielding to pressure, the great man launched out upon his
+unique experiences.
+
+Marwood’s invariable resort was the Green Dragon in Fleet Street, and so
+certain as a malefactor met his doom at eight so certain was the hangman
+to be found at twelve in the “select” section of the pub. This
+peculiarity, of course, by degrees got to be known, and so it came to
+pass that young bloods with a thirst for knowledge resorted thither, and
+“hanging days” raised the “takings” of the fortunate house in Fleet
+Street.
+
+Incredible as it may appear, this morbid craving is by no means confined
+to a few, and large sums used to be paid by reckless young scamps thirty
+years ago to assist at these ghastly functions. It is an undeniable
+fact, moreover, that a baronet still alive posed as the hangman’s
+assistant at numerous executions.
+
+But with the reaction that came as regards public hangings, the
+stringency connected with the private performances made these hobbies
+impossible, and the present era may take credit for having advanced
+considerably in this respect on the usages of the long-ago sixties.
+
+Before quitting this dislocating subject, it may interest the student of
+ancient days to know that where now stands an imposing public-house, next
+St. Giles’s Church, Bloomsbury, was once the Beer House where every cart
+freighted with living victims from Newgate to Tyburn pulled up for their
+“last drink.” After which, wending their way along Oxford Road (Street),
+they alighted at Tyburn Tree, now the garden of 1, Connaught Place,
+opposite the Marble Arch.
+
+Surely no passer-by can walk under the porch of Gilbey’s offices in
+Oxford Street without shuddering at the many sad scenes that ancient
+portico and that ancient street have witnessed.
+
+It was beneath it that De Quincey nightly waited for poor Anne when both
+were on the verge of starvation; and it was there that he poured out his
+lamentations of the stony-hearted stepmother—Oxford Street.
+
+The same miseries exist in the present day, and every night bundles of
+human rags lie huddled together under its inhospitable shelter; whilst
+within, the old Pantheon—delight of our childhood when it was a huge
+bazaar—blazes with electric light as the headquarters of a certain whisky
+which, advertisements tell us, may be procured of 3,000 agents.
+
+The trial and execution of Müller in ’64 for the murder of Mr. Briggs in
+one of the tunnels on the Brighton Railway, created more universal
+excitement than anything before or since, except, perhaps, the case of
+Mrs. Maybrick. On the night before his execution, the German Ambassador
+was closeted with the Home Secretary at the urgent request of his
+Government, and petitions innumerable were presented; but the Home
+Secretary was a firm man, and the culprit was duly hanged next morning in
+front of Newgate. Personally, I was sceptical of his guilt, and so
+interested was I that I obtained an order to visit Newgate, and by the
+judicious expenditure of a shilling, peeped through the observation hole
+of the condemned cell; later on I saw him hanged, and it was only on his
+confession to the Lutheran minister, just before the bolt was drawn, that
+I admitted the justice of the sentence. But the fair-haired Saxon youth
+of refined and prepossessing appearance had got on my nerves, and when, a
+week later, his effigy was advertised as having been added to Tussaud’s
+Wax-works, I determined to again see the youth, whom I had last seen
+being jerked into eternity.
+
+In those days the exhibition was in the Baker Street Bazaar, and if the
+premises were not as roomy as the present palatial building, they
+certainly appeared to me “snugger.” The Chamber of Horrors was snugness
+itself.
+
+It was whilst exploring this dismal chamber that an attendant told me
+that wax figures were the most improvident creatures in the world; that
+they ran their toes through their stockings with reckless unconcern, and
+that two or three people were constantly employed darning and mending the
+belongings of these weird beings.
+
+As I left the building I pondered over what I had seen and heard, and
+soon discovered I had not heard the last of Müller yet. This is what I
+saw, or fancied I saw, in my dreams:
+
+As I entered the Chamber of Horrors a few nights after, Müller—whose pose
+is of the meekest and most becoming—suddenly shot out his arm, and,
+pointing at me, exclaimed in a loud and guttural voice: “Seize him, seize
+him; the man!” Then Rush and Greenacre and a host of others yelled and
+execrated me, and Mrs. Manning (whose crime was probably the cruellest on
+record) shrieked like a curlew: “Seize him, seize him!” On this I
+dropped my umbrella—a weakness that I trust will be deemed
+pardonable—under the circumstances—and immediately followed it with a
+terrific flop on the floor; so terrific, indeed, was it that it brought
+me to my senses, and I awoke in a cold perspiration in Jermyn Street.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+THE HOSTELRIES OF THE SIXTIES.
+
+
+LONG’S Hotel, in Bond Street, as it appeared in the sixties, was a
+species of adjunct to half the clubs in London. Men playing till three
+or four in the morning in clubs that aspired to being considered
+“correct” usually adjourned to Long’s, and one man having engaged a
+bedroom, the rest trooped in after him. To such an extent, indeed, was
+this recognised, that a commodious bedroom on the ground floor was
+especially set apart for these nocturnal emergencies, and within five
+minutes of entering the most methodical of night porters produced cards,
+candles, and the inevitable brandy and sodas. Here play of a very high
+order frequently took place, and here also drunken rows and card disputes
+often ensued, unrestrained by the unwritten sanctity of a high-class
+club. It was here that a well-known baronet—long since dead—had a
+barging match with a peer still above the horizon, but rarely visible to
+the naked eye, where, after strong language, blows were exchanged, and a
+meeting arranged across the Channel, which happily never came off, the
+belligerents agreeing, after calm reflection, that dirty linen was best
+washed at home, as their respective laundry baskets were considerably
+overfreighted as it was and needed no further handicapping in the way of
+publicity; it was here that a young ass—still living—paid £4,000 for a
+broken-down ex-Derby horse that would have been dear at £100.
+
+It was here that poor old Jim Stewart—seldom sober, and long since
+dead—gave a baccarat party to some twenty plungers, where it was agreed
+that no deal should commence after 6 a.m., at which hour he was the
+winner of £1,500, and where, yielding to the earnest request of a heavy
+loser, he consented to extend the time to 6.30, and rose a loser of
+£5,000; it was here that the fastest and best men in London lounged in
+and out of the coffee room from breakfast time till well on in the
+afternoon, and smoked, drank champagne, talked horsy, and swore loudly.
+
+Not that Long’s was not a highly-respectable hotel; on the contrary, the
+entire upper part was conducted on strictly correct lines, and patronised
+by the best county people of the day, and the latitude granted to the
+ground floor must be set down rather as a desire of the management to
+please all parties, and bow before the inevitable there was no resisting.
+
+An amusing story may here be introduced of Colonel Oakes, of the 12th
+Lancers, the most irascible of cavalry officers, with a command of
+language that few, if any, could excel, and who invariably put up at
+Long’s.
+
+Stationed at Aldershot, the Colonel about this time got married, and,
+anxious to avoid publicity, he decided to bring his bride up to London
+and, to make matters still less noticeable, to bring his soldier-servant
+with him.
+
+Things went happily till the faithful attendant, who was an Irishman,
+knowing the Colonel’s impatient nature, and considering the luggage was a
+long time coming up, put his head over the banisters and shouted: “Will
+you be plased to bring up the Colonel’s and Miss Black’s boxes?”
+
+The tableau half an hour later in the Colonel’s apartments may reasonably
+be left to the reader’s imagination: the politest of landlords expressing
+his astonishment, the most irritable of Dragoons cursing his impudence,
+and the innocent cause of this comedy of errors trembling for the
+consequences.
+
+Colonel Oakes was admittedly a good soldier, and second only to Valentine
+Baker as a cavalry leader; popular with both officers and men, he was one
+of the last of the old swaggering school, a man of likes and dislikes,
+who, although free and easy and very plain-spoken, was a martinet in
+other ways.
+
+“R—,” he once said to one of his officers (who certainly was not the
+accepted ideal of a sabreur), after an inspection, “the General asked me
+if you had come from the infantry,” and when the remark failed to elicit
+the reply he desired, he continued: “D— it, sir, you spoil the look of my
+regiment. I wish to — you’d exchange!” and when the culprit lost his
+temper and said he considered he was insulted, and that he was the son of
+a baronet, the irresponsible Colonel shouted: “D— it, sir, I’m the son of
+a shoemaker, and I wish to — you’d leave my regiment!”
+
+On another occasion, strolling into the stables, he overheard two
+recruits discussing him: “I say, Bill,” remarked one of the warriors,
+“the Colonel’s a d— rum old buffer.” To which the other acquiescing, the
+Colonel advanced, and standing before the trembling culprits, began:
+“Yes, I heard what you said—that I was a d— rum old buffer—and I tell you
+what it is; if you had drunk as much as I have in the last thirty years
+you’d be a d— rum old buffer.”
+
+Despite all these circumstances, no smarter regiment existed than the
+12th in the long-ago sixties, although it was commanded by a “d— rum old
+buffer.”
+
+Jack Peyton, who commanded the 7th Dragoon Guards, was another patron of
+Long’s. Shortly after his second marriage with a wealthy widow, his boon
+companion, Tom Phillips, of the 18th, asked him, “Is she good-looking,
+Jack?” “No, by —, Tom,” was the reply, “d— near as ugly as yourself.”
+
+The fashion of dining at restaurants had not taken root in those days,
+and the feeding resorts were few and good and very far between.
+
+Their numbers, indeed, were to be counted on one’s fingers, and were
+resorted to either for lunch or supper, and seldom, as now, for the more
+serious ceremony of dinner.
+
+People dined at their hotels, for the plate-glass abominations that now
+cumber the ground at every point of vantage had not suggested themselves
+to undesirable aliens and our own home-grown Israelites.
+
+When the (present) Berkeley Hotel first started the new idea under the
+auspices of the renowned Soyer, the separate-table system was a nine
+days’ wonder, and people were impressed when it was currently reported
+that Lady Blantyre and her most unimaginative of husbands might be seen
+nightly at the next table to Skittle’s enjoying the creations of that
+most marvellous of chefs.
+
+It was here that that distinguished siren once rebuked a waiter who had
+clumsily splashed her with some viand, by: “You infernal lout, if I
+wasn’t a lady I’d smack your ugly face!” and it was at St. James’s (as it
+was then called) she was nightly entertained by her numerous worshippers.
+
+A noble marquis—eventually a duke, and lately deceased—was for years
+supposed to be her lawful husband, but the devotion of a life-time and
+subsequent events have since given the lie to this evident _canard_.
+
+“The Guildhall Tavern,” “The Albion,” and Simpson’s long reigned supreme
+as places where saddles and sirloins, marrow-bones and welsh rabbits were
+to be obtained in perfection; but all have now disappeared, except in
+name, nor will the expenditure of fortunes in their resurrection ever
+bring back the indescribable air of solid comfort that characterised
+these hostelries of the Sixties.
+
+It was in the last-named house, even then on the wane, that my solitary
+(active) interest in the drama afforded me numerous occasions of delight.
+
+Off the entrance hall was an unpretentious room, and here every day for
+weeks a divine being from the Gaiety partook of a hurried lunch in the
+company of my enraptured self.
+
+Nothing could have been more decorous than the tone that pervaded our
+frugal meal; nothing so incapable of giving offence to Exeter Hall
+opposite; the door of our retreat was intentionally kept ajar, yet
+despite these precautions I was one day informed that the manager
+declined to let the room for two, but that three would always be welcome.
+
+“The School Board is on the warpath,” was my inward comment, and I never
+entered the place again. The “correct” old hypocrite is long since dead;
+the scene of these innocent repasts has long since been demolished, and
+the sweet lady who honoured me with her company has long since had a
+prefix to her name and become the proud mother of a subaltern in the
+Guards.
+
+The inauguration of the Civil Service Stores, and the subsequent
+appearance of the Army and Navy Stores, gave the first fillip to that
+union between the Army and trade which the abolition of purchase and the
+changes in public opinion have since developed to such an extent.
+
+Captain MacRae, late director-general in Victoria Street, who in the
+sixties was a plodding captain of foot, set the fashion by turning his
+sword into a tape-measure, and having taken the plunge lost no time in
+converting a general officer (some say his parent) into a laundry-man.
+Then followed the rush that saw bonnet shops and costumiers springing up
+in every fashionable street, and as Kitties and Reillys and Madges looked
+favourably on the military, the crop of Mantalinis increased and
+multiplied, and penniless officers became well-to-do men-milliners and
+accepted authorities on things military amid their new clientèle. And so
+the last nail was driven into that class distinction that was one of the
+chief characteristics of the long-ago Sixties.
+
+Whilst on the subject of hostelries, a reference to Lane’s will not be
+amiss. This unique establishment was in St. Alban’s Place, and was
+affected by the rowdier class of youngsters, with a sprinkling of
+permanent residents in various stages of delirium tremens. Dirty and
+apparently never swept, the rooms might best be described as cosy. The
+beds, however, were scrupulously clean, and as the majority of the
+lodgers spent a considerable portion of their existence between the
+sheets, apple-pie order reigned in this department, ready for any
+emergency by night or day.
+
+The ruling spirit was old John, an octogenarian in shiny snuff-coloured
+tail suit and slippers, who apparently never slumbered nor slept, and
+whom no human eye had ever seen otherwise attired. Assisted by two
+youngsters of fifty—Charles and Robert—this extraordinary trio knew the
+habits and tastes of every one; not that eating was extensively indulged
+in; and beyond the best of joints for dinner, and bacon and eggs for
+breakfast, the staple consumption for all day and all night might briefly
+be described as brandy and soda, rum and milk, whilst the more sedate
+confined themselves to sherry and bitters before breakfast, and a glass
+of brandy in their tea. How human nature stood such persistent floodings
+of the system seems beyond comprehension, yet nothing seemed to occur
+beyond revellers being periodically chaperoned to bed, and now and then
+an ominous long box being smuggled upstairs, and one hearing a day or so
+after that “the Captain” had had his last drink, and had been duly
+gathered to his fathers.
+
+Even in those long-ago days the brevet rank was frequently assumed by
+ex-militia ensigns, but not to the same extent nor by such sorry
+specimens as twirl their moustaches in these more enlightened times and
+stand on the doorstep of the Criterion.
+
+Whisky at this period was literally an unknown beverage in
+London—possibly because the supply could never have equalled the demand,
+or more probably because science had not yet evolved the diabolical
+concoctions that now do duty for the wine of bonnie Scotland. And so it
+came to pass that the staple drink at Lane’s was brandy and soda. Come
+in when one chose, there stood battalions of soda with brandy in reserve,
+and rarely did a wayfarer return at the small hours without calling for a
+libation from old Peter. Occasionally, after an unusual run, the supply
+might become exhausted, but no temptation could induce the old janitor to
+retail what had been reserved on “special order.” “What, give you that
+one? Why, it’s the Captain’s; every morning at five I takes it to his
+bedside, and if he’s asleep in the smoking-room I gives him a sniff of
+it, and he follows me to his room like a dog.”
+
+Visiting the “Cheshire Cheese” not long since, I was struck by the
+marvellous change that the advance of civilisation (!!) had effected in
+that most cosy and unconventional of rooms. The steaks and puddings are
+still as good as ever, but the rollicking Bohemians, bristling with wit,
+with churchwardens and brown ale that one met at every table, have long
+since been replaced by their modern prototypes who sip their beer out of
+a glass, call for a _serviette_ in evidence of a trip to Boulogne, and
+bolt after depositing a penny on the table. And where are the jolly old
+waiters in rusty tail-coats, shambling along in their carpet slippers,
+who never inquired how many “breads” you had had nor what had won the
+3.40 race? And the Americans who now invade the place are not an
+unalloyed blessing, as males and females appear to consider it a _sine
+quâ non_ to flop on to the seat where Doctor Johnson is once supposed to
+have sat, in order to be able to tell poppa and momma in the old Kentucky
+home how, if they could not rub shoulders with the mighty living, they
+had at least rubbed something with the mighty dead. This aspiration is
+indeed almost a disease with these Transatlantic trotters, and one rich
+and pronounced snob, despite his wealth, who lives amongst us, is known
+to pay for reliable information of the movements of European
+heirs-apparent in order to meet them by accident (!) and perhaps secure
+some fragment of recognition. The sequel is usually to be found in an
+inspired paragraph (4d. a word) hinting at possible alliance between the
+two families, which in its turn is flatly contradicted!
+
+“Blood,” some genius discovered, “is thicker than water”—and the most
+unobservant must admit that some of it is very thick indeed.
+
+And apropos of Doctor Johnson, what evidence is there that the great
+lexicographer’s rhinoceros laugh ever vibrated through the “Cheshire
+Cheese”? Boswell makes no reference to it, and surely such an omission
+would be impossible in the chronicles of that irrepressible toady—but
+when all’s said and done, what importance attaches to it so long as the
+fare maintains its pristine excellence and the American bumpings are
+restrained within reasonable limits?
+
+When Piccadilly did not consist almost entirely of clubs, public
+billiard-rooms were patronised by many who would not enter a modern one.
+Many of these were run on the very best lines, and a regular clientele
+met every afternoon for sixpenny and half-crown pools.
+
+The best was Phillips’s, at 99, Regent Street, where Edmund Tattersall,
+Lord St. Vincent, Colonel Dawes, Attenborough, the king of pawnbrokers,
+and a few members of 14, St. James’s Square Club never missed
+resorting—wind and weather permitting—from three to seven of an
+afternoon.
+
+No goat from an alien flock dared hope to browse on that
+jealously-guarded pasture, and if, as occasionally, one wandered in, he
+speedily wandered out under the withering glances of old Phillips and his
+son.
+
+Almost opposite were Smith’s rooms, where pool of a high class (in
+execution) was indulged in, and any amateur with a local reputation who
+took a ball soon disabused his mind of any exalted idea of his play.
+
+Dolby’s, near the Marble Arch, had also its regular patrons, and even in
+the select region of Portman Square such correct old gentlemen as Sir
+James Hamilton, Mr. Burgoyne, and other residents in the neighbourhood
+met daily at an unpretentious tobacconist’s in King Street and played
+pool in a dingy room behind the shop.
+
+But in the clubs of those long-ago days the most cold-blooded
+inhospitality obtained. If you called upon a friend you had to wait on
+the door-mat, and the offering of a glass of sherry was attended by the
+risk of expulsion. Smoking-rooms—if tolerated—were placed in the attics,
+and a “strangers’ room” was an innovation that only came into existence
+years after.
+
+For long many clubs held out against the recognition of “strangers,” and
+only within the last few years have the “Senior” and the more exclusive
+establishments over-ruled the snarling objections of the few old fossils
+who use a club from morning to night without adding one cent to its
+revenue.
+
+It was the privilege of the Army and Navy Club to make the first drastic
+move in the right direction, and to Louis Napoleon’s frequent visits for
+luncheon and its attendant cigarette and coffee may be traced the present
+accepted theory that “clubs were made for man, and not man for clubs.”
+
+The best tobacconists also supplied the need now provided by the
+ubiquitous club, and Harris’s, Hoare’s, Benson’s, Hudson’s, Carlin’s in
+Oxford Street and Regent Street, each had their following, where every
+afternoon such men as Lord William Lennox, Lord Huntingtower, Mr. George
+Payne, the Marquis of Drogheda, Lord Henry Loftus, and Colonel Fitzgerald
+might be seen seated on tobacco tubs and cigar chests, smoking big cigars
+and drinking sherry which flowed from casks around the shop.
+
+This last-named individual was a morose, fire-eating Irishman, whose life
+had been soured by the seduction of his wife by his own colonel, and
+later by the ravages of small-pox that had seared his once-handsome face.
+
+The son of a famous duellist of the days of the Regency, it was told how
+on one occasion on entering the Cocoa Tree a comparative stranger
+exclaimed: “I smell an Irishman!” To which “Fighting Fitz” replied: “You
+shall never smell another!” and sliced off his nose on the spot.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+THE DRAMA—LEGITIMATE AND OTHERWISE.
+
+
+THE tercentenary of Shakespeare in ’64 suggested an experience that many
+of us were anxious to participate in. That we were likely to be
+successful was by no means certain, for numerous meetings, held at the
+Café de l’Europe, Haymarket—where motions innumerable and brandy _ad
+libitum_ were proposed and carried—had decided that an event so strictly
+dramatic should not be diluted by outside association, but rather that
+scene shifters, stage carpenters, actors, everything and everybody
+strictly “legit.” should have the preference of guzzling and swilling to
+the memory of the immortal poet. But if our claims were weak, our
+advocates were strong, and so it came to pass that on the eventful
+evening we found ourselves awaiting the feast in the banqueting room of
+the Freemason’s Tavern.
+
+That the thing was to be unique we were not long in discovering, as Ben
+Webster began grace by “For what we are about to receive may the spirit
+of Shakespeare hover over us.”
+
+Whether it was Shakespeare’s spirit or the more powerful libations
+included in the dinner ticket must be left to greater dramatic
+authorities; suffice that long before the speeches began, practical jokes
+were in full blast, and eventually developed into a free fight.
+
+It appears that some scene shifters with voracious appetites were sending
+again and again for a slice more ’am, till wags of a higher grade, who
+acted as croupiers, worn out and disgusted, piled plates with meats,
+custards, oranges, and mustard till the blood of every carpenter rose as
+one man, and dishes began to fly right, centre, and left. Even the
+waiters joined in the tournament, and one, in the act of placing a plate
+before me, yelled out, “Wait till I give this — his grub, and then I’ll
+let you know.” “Damn it,” whispered one of our party, “this isn’t
+Shakespearian, surely! For God’s sake let us clear out.” But “clearing
+out” was by no means so easy, for at that moment two or three repulsive
+ruffians in leather coats and rabbit-skin caps came upon the scene,
+whilst one, scowling in strictly melodramatic style, confronted us with
+“Well, what’s the matter with _you_?” But we managed to slip out without
+giving the desired explanation, and so ended the tercentenary and the
+spirit Ben Webster had invoked.
+
+People nowadays would hardly realise that theatregoers in those long-ago
+days could wade through alleys and side streets by no means safe after
+dark to visit the (then) Prince of Wales’s in a slum off the Tottenham
+Court Road. With an excellent company, however, and with houris since
+translated to the peerage and knightage, the little house was nightly
+crammed, and white ties by the score blocked the thoroughfare in the
+vicinity of the modest stage door as resolutely as in later years they
+besieged the Philharmonic and the Gaiety.
+
+Valentine Baker at the time was running the show, or a material portion
+of it, and much of the profits of his wife’s soap-boiling industry, it
+was said, found their way into the coffers of the unpretentious little
+temple in the slum. A wealthy cabinet maker, also in the vicinity, whose
+profits permitted the luxury of a four-in-hand, might usually be seen
+worshipping at the shrine, and a tag-rag and bobtail of less wealthy but
+aspiring young bloods fought and hustled for one glance, one sign of
+recognition, from the bevy beyond the footlights.
+
+When Valentine Baker began casting sheep’s eyes at the demure maiden
+reading the _Family Herald_ in a South-Western compartment, he little
+realised that the price he was paying might have been commuted elsewhere
+by the judicious expenditure of a five-pound note. Twenty thousand in
+hard cash, the command of a great regiment, and social annihilation—for
+what? And when Mr. Justice Brett began his charge to the jury by “a man
+we looked to to protect our women and children,” there was not an Army
+man present (and the Croydon Court House was crammed with them) that did
+not internally vow that henceforth, be it in a first-class or a
+third-class compartment, be it Piccadilly Circus or the British Museum,
+woman should be his constant care, and, if necessary, any tadpole that
+lawfully pertained to her.
+
+The rumour came like a thunderbolt, and in every Army club the whispered
+communication ran: “Valentine Baker is arrested, by Gad!”
+
+No man at this time had such a universal personality—the colonel of the
+crackest of all crack regiments; the admittedly best cavalry leader of
+the day; the patron of the drama, and in intimate touch with the Prince
+of Wales’s Theatre, then under the management of Marie Wilton, since
+developed into a pillar of Holy Church—the thing seemed incredible, and
+curiosity ran high to gaze upon the houri that had been so fatally
+misread by this experienced veteran.
+
+The crowds that surrounded the Court House made access impossible; to
+hope for admission was the aspiration of a lunatic, when “Come this way,
+my lord”—as my companion was recognised—reached our ears, and we found
+ourselves under an open window, ten feet from the ground, at the back of
+the court.
+
+“I’ll stand next the wall,” continued our guide, “and you get on my
+shoulders,” and then an acrobatic performance took place that would have
+insured an engagement at any music-hall.
+
+The sequel is matter of history.
+
+Years after—in ’94—I met him in Cairo, an altered, broken man, in daily
+expectation of being appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Army.
+But Nemesis had not done with him yet—prudery, hypocrisy,
+blue-stockingism were still rampant, and a telegram from London vetoed
+the intended appointment.
+
+The official explanation was that a “cashiered man” could not command
+full-pay British officers with which the Egyptian Army swarmed, whilst
+the universal opinion was that a brave man was being hounded to his death
+under the cloak of that charity that flourished in its prime during the
+days of the Inquisition.
+
+Next year he died in Egypt—broken in health and broken in heart—and those
+that knew his brilliant attainments, and the heights they would assuredly
+have led to, agreed that—like Napoleon—he should have died years before
+at the head of his men.
+
+The Strand Theatre also was a highly popular resort, run exclusively by
+the Swanborough family and their numerous sisters, cousins, and aunts.
+
+To “The Old Lady,” rightly or wrongly, was attributed every _malaprop_
+that ingenious wits invented, and in later years, when the Doré Gallery
+and the Criterion Restaurant simultaneously came into existence, she was
+reputed to have expressed intense admiration of the Doré masterpiece,
+“Christ leaving the Criterium.”
+
+A pothouse—pure and simple—across the Strand was a favourite
+after-theatre resort of this (then) brightest of companies, and in a
+specially reserved room might nightly be seen sweet Nelly Bromley, young
+as ever, despite her youthful brood of dukes and duchesses and his Grace
+of Beaufort; Eleanor Bufton, Fanny Josephs, Fanny Hughes, and a host of
+others, all charming, clever, and young, and, alas! all passed away.
+
+The proprietor of this unpretentious hostelry was a pimply, fly-blown
+individual, who before you had been five minutes in his company told you
+that _he_ was the rightful Duke of Norfolk, who by some legal jugglery
+had been choused out of his birthright; he, too, has long been swept
+away, and so the present peer remains unmolested in his title.
+
+Passing through the Strand not long since, I was attracted by the new
+Tube station, and entering its portals for “auld lang syne” I was
+distressed, but not surprised, to find nothing of the happy hum that once
+characterised the transformed spot. For here stood the little Strand
+Theatre of the sixties in all the glory of its original popularity before
+it was improved (?) and modernised, only to find it had become out of the
+perspective, and so to be handed over to eternal obliteration.
+
+The old Strand may surely claim to be the root of the theatrical
+genealogical tree, for from its original stock (company) sprang every
+sprig that struck root elsewhere to became famous either through
+theatrical enterprise, matrimonial enterprise, or any of the lucrative
+channels that commend themselves to commercial talent.
+
+For the phalanx that once worked as a whole, would according to present
+custom, be split into a dozen “one-part” companies, with the necessary
+embroidery of Bodega men, motor-cum-masher women, and a sprinkling of
+earnest artistes by way of cohesion.
+
+A few years later the family grouping that originally characterised the
+Strand was intruded upon by one H. B. Farnie, whose forte was the
+adaptation of opera-bouffe. Unquestionably an adept in this particular
+line, the man was a libertine of a pronounced character, with the result
+that the chorus at the Strand and the Opera Comique was the very
+daintiest conceivable. If a houri yielded to this Blue Beard’s
+blandishments, her advancement was assured, and she was fitted to minor
+parts; if his overtures fell on deaf ears, nothing was too bad for her,
+and her lot was not a successful one. Occasionally, as a consequence,
+the hum-drum routine of a rehearsal was enlivened by such unrehearsed
+incidents as the appearance of an irate brother, and, on one occasion, an
+exasperated fishmonger from the Theobald’s Road (the combination sounds
+boisterous), burst in at a critical period of a comic duet and belaboured
+the unhappy impresario to within an inch of his life.
+
+These cases are, happily, rare at the present day, although, if rumour is
+correct, a Hebrew of dramatic tastes, who, a few years ago, developed
+into theatre owner, and staged his own pieces, could tell of a similar
+experience which practically led to his abandonment of the active pursuit
+of the drama.
+
+When the fair Lardy Wilson, whom we last heard of at the Surrey, had
+risen into prominence by reason of her exalted connection, she joined the
+old Philharmonic, at Islington, in the zenith of its glory; so privileged
+indeed had this darling of Alfred become that, appearing in the “green
+room” on one occasion with an infant swaddled in purple and fine linen,
+the manager, band conductor, principals—male and female—and the chorus
+_en bloc_, are said to have bowed down and worshipped, as was only meet
+and proper and to be expected of a “loyal and dutiful” people.
+
+“Wiry Sal” was also a delightful member of the company, and soon obtained
+European fame by being able to kick higher, in a graceful, abandoned way,
+than any exponent of the art before or since.
+
+Pretty little Camille Dubois, who eventually developed into a Stanhope,
+was also at this delightful house. Her father at the time was conductor
+at the Opera Comique, and on one occasion having congratulated him on the
+execution of an excruciating _morceau_ that I was aware had emanated from
+his inspired brain, I expressed a desire to procure a copy.
+
+“Ach, mein Gott!” he replied, “it is a gavotte in F.”
+
+Gavottes in F are, happily, rare inspirations!
+
+For although burlesque lent itself to the display of a bevy of beautiful
+choristers, mashing had not then attained its present barefaced
+dimensions, and the cab outside and the calf (just) inside were the
+exception, not the rule, in those jovial days.
+
+But when Ada and Lizzie—as sometimes occurred—were sisters, it often
+happened that some system was necessary to insure a properly balanced
+larder, for from a conversation once overheard, two hams had come from
+the guardsman and the lordling, whereas the smallest forethought would
+have insured otherwise.
+
+But the belle of the show was one Laura, who, discovered in the purlieus
+of Islington, developed into the rage of London, and her beautiful face
+was to be seen on Easter eggs, Egyptian cigarettes, and at the picture
+shops, as Connie Gilchrist, the Countess of Lonsdale, and other beauties
+figured at a later day.
+
+Her personality attracted—as may be assumed—all the front rank mashers,
+and Harry Tyrwhitt, Douglas Gordon, and Jimmy Douglas were nightly
+imploring D’Albertson and Hitchins to present them to the goddess.
+
+But this fatal beauty led to a row, and the jealous swain who was
+responsible for the fair Laura’s well-being was not long in bringing
+matters to an issue.
+
+It was on Ash Wednesday, when our national hypocrisy—since taken other
+shapes—closed the theatres, with the exception of the Alhambra, that the
+fair chorister decided to “visit her parents.” Nothing loth to encourage
+such filial piety, her inamorato put her into a cab, and then—with an eye
+to business—judiciously followed.
+
+The sequel was a sad disillusionment, for getting out at the stage door,
+she proceeded towards the Embankment, and there by easy
+stages—accompanied by an admirer—the pair proceeded to a private box at
+the Alhambra.
+
+The rest is briefly told; a thundering knock at the box door, shouts of
+“Hush!” from all parts of the house, the orchestra stopped, old Jacobi
+standing in his stirrups, and an ignominious exit for all concerned.
+
+Later the sweet girl went on tour with one of Alec Henderson’s companies,
+and met a bagman she eventually married.
+
+The bagman has since developed into one of the largest shopkeepers in
+Knightsbridge, and so good came out of evil, and the course “true love”
+usually runs in marrying an Italian waiter and living on macaroni was
+diverted, and everything a real “loidy” should have became hers for life.
+
+And the development of the fair creature’s life was frequently under my
+observation. Beginning with a preference for a “steak and a glass of
+stout,” she soon developed into an authority on champagne; instead of
+worsted gloves—or no gloves—nothing but Dumont’s mauve mousquetaires
+would satisfy her, and so blasée did she become during her nightly visits
+to Romano’s that she could not sum up sufficient energy to remove her
+sixteen-franc gloves when picking an artichoke. One marvels at the true
+origin of these phenomena when under observation during the transition
+state from gutter to Debrett, for although all of us have seen the
+mothers, no human eye has ever seen the male progenitor of any of these
+extraordinary beings, who toil not neither do they spin, yet rise to the
+highest positions, have their babies kissed by the Kaiser, and all by
+sheer superficial excellence.
+
+Yet another face arises before me, and sweet Grace O—, resisting every
+blandishment of Jew and Gentile, stands prominently out in the simple
+attire of a modest maiden, amid the sables and baubles by which she was
+surrounded. No adorers waited for her, although the bombardment by
+letter and overture was incessant; smirky acting-managers enlisted
+against her, reminded her that no stalls were booked by her _clientèle_,
+parcels at the stage door remained as they were left, and nightly the
+sweet girl trudged across Waterloo Bridge to her humble abode at
+Kennington, whilst half a dozen broughams only awaited the chance of
+flicking her to a _cabinet particulier_ at the Café Riche or Kettner’s.
+Often, as she told me at a later period, she entered her hovel tired and
+hungry with nothing better than a herring and a crust with which to
+fortify herself for the monotonous routine of next day and every day, the
+lot then, and now, of many a tender plant in uncongenial soil.
+
+But every created thing has its breaking point—the balloon overflated
+will eventually burst, and the egg pressed too hard will assuredly break;
+and sweet Grace, no exception to the unalterable law of Nature, like a
+lily before the hurricane, bent before the assault that assailed her on
+every side.
+
+It was like an ironclad charging an outrigger, when men of the Farnie
+type entered the lists against an honest and attractive chorister, and
+the sequel of short duration in Ashley Place was told me by the unhappy
+girl. Gold at this stage was lavished upon her, and a miniature brougham
+and tiger—intended as a surprise—was scornfully ignored as it waited for
+her at the Royalty, and was eventually on sale—as unused as on the day it
+left its builders—in Long Acre. “I can endure this gilded cage so long
+as no one knows it, but the shame of the brougham! I would rather have
+dropped than enter it.” So spoke the woman, and within a month she
+walked out of the palatial establishment to revert to her humble life.
+
+It was a perky Jew, enormously rich, with great back-door theatrical
+influence, that sought to shape this phenomenal disposition into a regard
+for his uncongenial charms. But manly beauty of such matured and
+pronounced types, with its Malacca canes and vulgar jewellery—like olives
+and a love for babies—are acquired tastes, and not the baits to allure
+the “Graces” of this sordid world, and years after, when chance again
+threw me across her path, our heroine was the happy wife of a worthy City
+clerk, and Ashley Place and the Jew and the brougham had long since been
+forgotten like the incidents of a hideous nightmare.
+
+This is no overdrawn fairy tale, and what existed then exists now, at
+least in one popular resort, and two sisters with youth, good looks, and
+stage experience now “resting,” could tell how the only accomplishment of
+which they were deficient was their inability to fill a few stalls—on
+terms.
+
+In later years the infant phenomenon became the craze, and Topsey, of the
+Royalty, and Connie, of the music-halls, and a cloud of imitators all bid
+for recognition. Some—like Esther—had the golden sceptre held out, and
+“came and sat beside the king,” whilst others less fortunate fulfilled
+their natural destiny and became the wives of the local tobacconist or
+greengrocer, and many of them would now be shocked if asked the number of
+yards between the pond and the Hampstead Fever Hospital, or the
+sensations of dancing to a hurdy-gurdy on the boulevards of Camden Town.
+
+And so history is made, and pedigrees traced to “de” something—who came
+over with the Conqueror—with here and there a stiffening from a Chicago
+pork butchery, and it only remains for you and me, my brother snobs, to
+pray that whatever trials the Fates may have in store for us, we may not
+be bereft of our old nobility.
+
+The recent death of the once-popular Chief of the Fire Brigade, Eyre
+Shaw, recalls many stirring scenes that lit up the West End in the
+long-ago sixties, when theatres bore a considerable share of the
+conflagrations that partially or entirely destroyed some of our most
+notable playhouses.
+
+It was in ’65 that the old Surrey was in flames, to be replaced later on
+by the present structure, more familiar to the present generation as
+associated with the début of such popular artistes as Lardy Wilson, Nelly
+Moon, Val Reece (Lady Meux of the 20th century), Rose Mandeville, and
+others under the management of Bill Holland, and the distinguished
+patronage of names too sacred to mention save with bated breath and in
+reverential tones.
+
+Three years later the Oxford Music Hall was burned down, but those caves
+of harmony were less pretentious in those days, and so the conflagration,
+except as a sight, did not provoke much interest. But a blaze that
+occurred in December, ’67, roused all London, and as a “spectacle”
+surpassed anything that had ever been depicted on its stage, and put in
+the shade the Guy Fawkes celebrations of the previous month.
+
+In that memorable year Her Majesty’s Theatre, without any apparent rhyme
+or reason, burst into flame, and despite herculean efforts was soon a
+heap of cinders. For the construction, as may be supposed, was wood and
+old, and those chiefly interested were probably gainers by the drastic
+accident, except perhaps Mapleson, who was said to have lost £12,000, and
+Madame Tietjens, £2,000. But Tod Heatly, the ground landlord, could
+hardly have regretted it, for it opened up possibilities of improving the
+site which, after many years, culminated in the present establishment,
+with its profitable addenda of an hotel with its “lardy-da” luncheon and
+supper rooms.
+
+In those remote days the Metropolitan Board of Works was the controlling
+authority, and bone counters which emanated from them passed the holders
+within the cordon on any of these interesting occasions.
+
+Eyre Shaw, too, about this time was appointed chief officer, and being an
+enthusiastic patron of the Gaiety (then only a precocious infant with
+every promise of its present development) little wonder that the bone
+counters were in considerable evidence amongst the present-day old ladies
+who then represented the Connies and Dollies and Lizzies of burlesque.
+
+Contemplating the still-smouldering ruins, how complete appeared the
+obliteration of many notable incidents. Here Mario—approaching
+seventy—was acclaimed to the echo by a gushing house, after having been
+hissed off the stage in Paris for mumbling what he once used to sing;
+here Giulini thrilled the world with the purest tenor ever heard, and
+died in the madhouse in the zenith of his fame; here later, Moody and
+Sankey bellowed in solo and in duet, and stopped the traffic by the eager
+crowds that sought admission (free) to bellow in the chorus; here, too,
+sweet little Chiomi essayed to make her début in _Lucia_ and failed; and
+here Lord Dudley, Carpenter, Vandeleur-Lee, Goodenough, and a host long
+since swept into the universal dust-bin, beamed nightly on Tietjens and
+Fanchelli with expressions supposed to denote familiarity with the text;
+here under its dismal porticoes sights of distress and
+starvation—forgotten in slumber—were nightly to be met with, as painful
+as anything that ever appealed to De Quincey outside the Oxford Street
+Pantheon, and here old Leader, prince of Bohemians and managing director
+of the Alhambra in the zenith of its pranky days, had a box office till
+he dropped from old age; here on one occasion on the son of one of the
+celebrated Irish Army agents being presented to him, the Royal George
+patronisingly greeted him with, “Oh, indeed, a son of ‘Borough and
+Armit,’” and received the explanatory reply: “No, sir, only of Armit;”
+and on the ghosts of all these departed memories not one stone now stands
+upon another to bridge, as it were, the present with the glorious past.
+
+In these latter days, a conflagration such as this would, of course, be
+impossible, as witness the blaze not long since in Holborn. But then
+that was a _fire proof_ construction.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+MOSTLY “OTHERWISE” (continued).
+
+
+IN the long-ago sixties the Artillery Ball at Woolwich was the most
+select and the most sought after function that the dancing community
+yearned for, and about the same time Major Goodenough, a popular officer
+of this distinguished regiment—although close upon eighteen stone—fell
+desperately in love with Tietjens, herself of large pattern. Rumour,
+indeed, asserted that the ponderous couple were engaged, and so it came
+to pass that poor old Goody was nonplussed almost to distraction when his
+application for a ticket for his fiancée was politely but firmly refused.
+
+“But she’s engaged to me,” the poor old chap pleaded.
+
+“And when she’s Mrs. Goodenough we shall always he delighted to see her,”
+was the stern, uncompromising reply.
+
+Such exclusiveness—which shows that snobbery was even then approaching
+with gigantic strides—contrasts amusingly with what was then the
+composition of many of our “crack” regiments.
+
+Otway Toler—a brother of the Earl of Norbury—was one of the best amateur
+musicians, and it was through his kindly offices that I became acquainted
+with Giulini and other leading opera singers in London.
+
+No such voice as that gifted being’s has ever been heard before or since,
+and it is sad to recollect that whilst yet in the zenith of his fame he
+was ruthlessly struck down by insanity, and eventually died in a
+madhouse.
+
+It was during this painful period that his voice is said to have reached
+a pitch of pathos that far exceeded anything it attained when he thrilled
+London nightly.
+
+To compare it with any tenor that may suggest itself to the reader would
+be as absurd as comparing an English concertina to the most glorious
+notes of the most fluty instrument, and yet this divine voice was
+silenced without apparent cause, and the world—the operatic world—will
+never hear its like again.
+
+As an old lady in tears was once overheard to say to her unmusical spouse
+at the opera: “It is the voice of a god, and not of a man,” to which her
+phlegmatic better-half replied: “Bosh, you should hear Sims Reeves; he
+can go an octave higher.”
+
+Sims Reeves, indeed! But no matter—may they both rest in peace.
+
+To go to an unpretentious Italian eating-house in Old Compton Street,
+Soho, that has long disappeared, was as good as attending the opera—if
+one was in the magic circle. Here all day, and every day, congregated
+the leading exponents, male and female, of Italian opera. At a piano on
+the first floor finishing touches were given to morceaux, duets were
+tried over, and, in addition to the vocalists, soloists of the highest
+order “ran through” special passages of their scores, while below, viands
+of the strictest Italian type were being consumed from morning to night.
+
+Here osso-buco, and minestrone, and spaghetti were to be found as
+undiluted as at Savini’s in Milan, and washed down with such productions
+of the vine as Chianti, Lacrima Christi, and Capri.
+
+No abominations in imitation of French cookery were to be found here. No
+half-crown dinners of half-a-dozen courses, with their deadly
+accompaniments of artichokes fried in tallow (_au Cardinal_) would have
+been permitted here; no New Zealand mutton garnished with turnip-tops
+(_ris dé veau garni aux truffes_) could have showed its unhallowed head
+in those sacred precincts and lived, for no mashers of the present-day
+type existed, and shop boys and shop girls knew their places too well to
+venture into such reserved pastures, even with the prospect of eating a
+veritable dinner as served on the Continong.
+
+One cannot leave the subject of music without a reference to the
+promenade concerts that came into being about this period at the Queen’s
+in Long Acre.
+
+It was here that the first public exhibition of the telephone was given,
+and when a series of grunts had vibrated through the hall and a
+bald-headed old patriarch had told us that the sound actually came from
+Westminster, the surprise and delight of the enraptured audience was
+intense, and we marvelled where such discoveries would end.
+
+And the fun and the frolic at these gatherings was beyond description,
+often more delectable than correct, but nevertheless delightful and
+invigorating. The orchestra, moreover, was superb, and the vocalists the
+best that money could provide, and all these delights were presided over
+by one Rivière, a pushing musical instrument-maker in Leicester Square,
+who by sheer impudence had forced himself into prominence before an
+ignorant public whilst all the time incapable of reading the most
+ordinary score at sight.
+
+So far as execution and diabolical contortions were concerned he was
+immense, and as big an impostor as Jullien himself.
+
+When Offenbach was all the rage, and Schneider (under Lord C.’s wing) was
+his principal exponent, I had the honour of being one of a privileged
+half-dozen who did homage to the Diva at a dinner party in a private room
+at Limmer’s. Although in the zenith of her fame, her personal charms at
+the time were unquestionably on the wane, and I can recollect her
+comments on popularity and what it was worth as she told us how ten years
+previously, when young and beautiful, she had appeared in London only to
+be ignored, and that now everybody was at her feet. And then she
+shrugged her shoulders with an indescribable fascination peculiarly her
+own, and complacently puffed away at her cigarette.
+
+It may have been a few years later that Major Carpenter, a wealthy
+amateur musician, introduced to the operatic world a charming English
+girl, who, under cover of the Italian name of Chiomi, was to electrify
+London with her singing.
+
+The opera the fair débutante selected was probably the most formidable a
+nervous subject could have chosen; and so one night every one attended at
+Her Majesty’s to hear _Lucia_ expounded. Everything went well up to the
+mad scene, when, unaccompanied by orchestra, the unhappy heroine has to
+sing and toss straws about amid a series of impossible runs and shakes.
+With the straw tossing no fault could be found, but the voice that should
+have been moving us all to tears was a series of gurgles that eventually
+subsided into silence.
+
+Sir Michael Costa meanwhile sat grim and immovable, when a few bars would
+probably have nerved up the fluttering victim, but _that_ to that
+orthodox Italian would have been “trifling with the text,” and so no aid
+was forthcoming, and the trumpet blasts that had emanated from Ashley
+Place ended in a fiasco, and sweet little Chiomi was heard of no more.
+
+That the drama is occasionally unjustly disparaged is nothing new; that
+it occasionally produces indirect beneficial effects and even prolongs
+life may be gleaned from the example of a deceased colonel of the Bays,
+who, returning from India in the sixties with a life not worth six
+months’ purchase, married a lady connected with the Canterbury Music
+Hall, and, after increasing the music-hall population, literally died of
+senile decay within the last year or two.
+
+It was my privilege, on one occasion, in the company of Otway Toler, who
+knew all the stars, to visit the great tenor Mario and his wife, the
+equally celebrated Grisi, who had a house during the opera season in the
+vicinity of Cavendish Square. Grisi, it may be explained, at the time of
+her marriage, was the proud mother of two children who, by one of those
+extraordinary freaks of nature one occasionally meets with, resembled in
+a remarkable degree the family that followed.
+
+“These,” pointing to one group, was Grisi’s usual introduction, “are the
+_Marionettes_, and these”—indicating the others—“are the _Grisettes_.”
+
+Incredible as it may appear, one of the purest tenors the world has ever
+produced did not know one note of music, and everything had to be drummed
+into him by a fiddle. It was at the house at Eaton Place of one of the
+leading ladies of society that one often met the great tenor, where music
+alternated with the cotillon and other delights of one’s youth.
+
+About this time the Alhambra, which for some years had been waning in
+public estimation, obtained a new lease of popularity under the
+broad-minded direction of one Leader.
+
+This worthy man, to use the familiar expression, “grasped the situation,”
+and with the able co-operation of his co-directors—Nagle, head of a
+celebrated firm of bill-stickers; Willing, an enlightened philanthropist
+and patron of the drama; Captain Fryer (who was accorded that title
+because he had a second cousin in the Dragoons)—inaugurated an
+enlightened policy that seemed to provide “a want long felt,” and met the
+requirements of their numerous patrons (_vide_ daily papers, etc.).
+
+The directors’ box was a huge omnibus capable of holding goodness knows
+how many, and consisted of partitions innumerable that had been dealt
+with by the carpenters; a convenient door led to the stage, and to the
+managing-director’s room—the objective of all visitors—as was only to be
+expected in a well-conducted theatre. Here were to be met nightly Alfred
+Paget, a septuagenarian lord, who, when not in attendance at Court, as
+was supposed, seemed to spend his declining years in wandering from one
+green room to another. Harmless to a degree, it was pitiable to see the
+dyed old sinner, chewing a cigar, and indulging in such antics as an
+occasional double-shuffle with any chorus girl he had selected for his
+attention.
+
+The Maharajah Dhuleep Singh, too, was in nightly attendance, and never
+failed to bring some gimcrack which he displayed in the green room with
+the inquiry: “What nice little girl going to have this?” This, however,
+was before he had concentrated his affections on pretty Polly Ash, who
+appearing nightly in white kids up to her elbows gave mortal offence to
+her fellow-choristers by showing up the cotton “sevens” supplied by the
+management. Polly, however, was not devoid of common sense, and retired
+shortly after into a sumptuous flat in Covent Garden and an annuity that
+survived the donor.
+
+The green room of the old Alhambra was of extensive dimensions, and
+contained more deal tables than probably any green room before or since.
+By a magnanimous minute of the directors, ladies of the chorus and ballet
+had the entrée, and, although none of the plainer members of the company
+appeared to take advantage of the privilege, every table was fully
+furnished with champagne (brand doubtful), and giggling artistes and
+their adorers. Every one smoked like a donkey-engine, and the genial
+managing director percolated amongst his guests with a kindly inquiry as
+to how you were getting on. History does not make it quite clear whether
+any of the fair members were eventually translated to the Upper House;
+but whether as fortunate in this respect as Mott’s and in later years the
+Gaiety, it was undeniable that no more beautiful bevy of women were to be
+found than the representatives of the drama at the Alhambra in those
+long-ago days.
+
+Captain (!!) Fryer as a director was in considerable demand during the
+orgies, and a youthful ensign on one occasion (when under the
+fraternising influence of the stock champagne) having invited the
+“Captain” to mess, was considerably put about on being informed by the
+colonel that he was at once to cancel the invitation. With the ingenuity
+of youth, however, he wriggled out of the difficulty by changing the venu
+to Limmer’s, and taking him and a select party to Mott’s.
+
+In appearance the Captain gave the idea of having just missed being a
+gentleman; with a waist abnormally small, and a waistcoat abnormally
+tight, his shoulders stood out by the aid of whalebone in a manner
+intended to convey herculean proportions. When he walked it was with the
+swinging motion attributed by “Ouida” to heroes who crumple pint pots
+without knowing it, and kick garden rollers about as one would a pebble;
+he stamped also occasionally with one foot as heavy dragoons once did
+when they desired to clink their spurs, but which, after all, may only
+have been a habit contracted by the contemplation of his second cousin
+who had been in the cavalry.
+
+“Do come here, you provoking Captain,” and “Did you hear what that absurd
+Captain just said?” and Captain this, and Captain that vibrated through
+the room to the no small annoyance of the “civilians” present. From all
+which it will be seen that he was a very fine fellow indeed, and the idol
+of the ladies of the ballet. But Bobby and some of the youngsters also
+swore by him to a man; to have the run of the entire back premises, and
+to be introduced to any siren their fickle fancies desired, was not a
+privilege to be lightly appraised, and they vowed, till forbidden by the
+adjutant, that he would be the life and soul of the mess on the next
+guest night, and that the very rafters would tingle as he recounted his
+multifarious experiences.
+
+Another theatre that afforded amusement of a different type was the
+Grecian, and night after night parties of from ten to twenty were made up
+during the pantomime season to witness the best of pantomimists in his
+incomparable part. Not that such a privilege was lightly undertaken,
+for, to begin with, Conquest had to be warned to knock two or three boxes
+into one, then dinner in the (private) Octagon Room of the “Ship and
+Turtle” in Leadenhall Street had to be ordered, and then—and then
+only—the organised party proceeded eastwards in a private omnibus about 5
+p.m.
+
+It may seem silly and suggestive of senile decay to descant on such
+frivolities, but who of the present generation can realise the homely,
+sumptuous repast that awaited one at the famous old hostelry of the
+sixties? The milk-punch specially served by Painter himself, the
+incomparable turtle soup and turtle steaks, the saddle of mutton one felt
+it a sin to mutilate, and the honest English pancakes washed down with
+port—fifty years old—and champagne in magnums were one and all
+incomparable; and then the start as the omnibus pulled up at the door,
+and the smoking of cigars of brands now unknown, till one alighted at the
+portals of the Grecian in the City Road, adjoining the celebrated
+“Eagle,” made famous by the antics of the eccentric weasel that we are
+assured went “pop” every time it entered its hospitable doors. Can
+anything of to-day compare with it? But the days of regret for these
+honest old enjoyments are sadly out of place in these enlightened times,
+where comic opera has superseded the transformation scene with its
+adjuncts of clown, pantaloons, and harlequin. The performance and the
+historian are alike out of perspective.
+
+“Come, Mabel, shall we go to the Covent Garden ball?”
+
+Let us extend our ramble to merry Islington and peep in at the
+Philharmonic, where now stands the Grand; and although we take a leap
+into the seventies for the nonce, the “long ago” is sufficiently distant
+to be beyond the ken of many of our readers.
+
+The rage for Offenbach was at this time at its height, and Soldene and
+Dolaro drew all the golden calves from the West to gaze on the things of
+beauty that were provided for their delectation.
+
+A sporting bookmaker—Charley Head—who ran the show, realising that the
+majority of his patrons were incapable of distinguishing “Hunkey Dorum”
+from the National Anthem (“The Honeysuckle and the Bee” was, happily,
+unknown in those days), decided that if the principals were of the
+highest class, the chorus might fairly be selected for perfection of form
+rather than perfection of voice, and some seventy of the most beautiful
+girls in London were engaged to add _éclat_ to the performance.
+
+It was currently reported that half their weekly salary of three
+shillings was paid in counters, to be expended in the salon after the
+performance; and the roaring trade in champagne that ensued amply repaid
+the astute manager’s calculations.
+
+The drama, run on these lines, naturally produced impresarios of a
+questionable class, and Leo Egremont, in an expanse of white waistcoat
+and a stripe down his trousers, was nightly ubiquitous and effusively
+gushing in his attendance on the golden calves. A ballad singer (at the
+Cave of Harmony) before he lost his voice—a basso of the deepest dye—he
+had lately opened a “bureau” and advertised for novelties which he
+“placed”—as he termed it—as the demand and circumstances suggested.
+
+The streaky nobleman and the toothless lady who could sing three octaves
+had been presented through his enterprise to an East-end audience, and
+when the “Phil” opened under such unique auspices, Egremont lost no time
+in securing a footing.
+
+He also belonged to the “Howlers,” a half club, half pot-house, in the
+vicinity of the Strand.
+
+But the poor old “Phil” has long since been burnt to the ground, Egremont
+has disappeared below the horizon, and the memories of the seventies are
+gone to join the mountain of reminiscences of the long-ago Sixties.
+
+Across the river, the Surrey—run on broader lines—was also responsible
+for the hatching of numerous future hereditary legislators, and during
+the pantomime season might be found such goddesses as Val Reece, Lardy
+Wilson, and a score of others, many of whom have since swelled the pages
+of Debrett and similar works of our religion.
+
+It is no more than the truth to assert that this latter lady—for she had
+a way with her not strictly histrionic—very nearly upset by her
+personality a certain Anglo-Russian marriage at a critical period of the
+negotiations.
+
+The Lamp of Burlesque had not yet been lighted, nor even trimmed, in the
+future Gaiety—which at the time was a “rub-a-dub” of the lowest class—and
+so the rumours of duels that filled the air years later between a
+military attaché and an _off-shoot_ of the noble House of Clanricarde
+still slumbered in the womb of futurity, only to be roused to vitality by
+the nimble graces of Kate Vaughan and sweet little Nell Farren.
+
+Passing the Charing Cross Hotel one day, an old semi-theatrical warrior
+returned visibly to my mind, and I could again see Alfred Paget
+descending the stairs after one of those informal meetings of directors
+that occasionally took place in Edward Watkins’s rooms. For the would-be
+juvenile on the high road to senile decay that the present generation may
+remember was a very different man to the Lord Alfred of the Sixties, or,
+looking further back, to the handsome young equerry who pranced beside
+the late Queen’s carriage in all the glory of manhood. And then
+incidents long forgotten were re-enacted in my muddled brain; how as a
+director of the South-Eastern he claimed, or obtained, or arranged, that
+all repairs on his steam yacht should be done by the artificers and
+engineers of the company. And then, by no great effort, the _Santa
+Maria_ appeared lying off Margate Pier, and Old Alfred—as he was
+gradually becoming—faultlessly attired on “post captain” lines, waiting
+for his boon companion, Alec Henderson, or possibly a “Poppit,” as all
+his “frivolities” were christened. And then the launch lying at the
+steps, and the revels on board, and the grateful “poppits” going over the
+side after being presented with a straw hat or some article of female
+attire found in the state cabin, belonging to heaven knows who, during
+the more respectable cruises. And then the trips to Boulogne and the
+stocking the store-room with cheap wines, which the genial old sinner
+chuckled would thus evade duty and come in handy at second-chop
+gatherings. For with all his display his lordship was undoubtedly
+thrifty, and could have stated blindfolded the exact number of cigars or
+cigarettes that were lying about, no matter how apparently negligently.
+
+Lord Alfred had been a yachtsman all his life, and he would tell how our
+late Queen—with that characteristic woman’s tact that never left
+her—wrote to him on the occasion of a former yacht being run down by a
+Channel mail packet, “You must not be ashamed to accept the enclosed £500
+as a gift from the Sovereign to a subject.”
+
+“Mighty different woman now,” he would add, pouting his lips, and then
+toddling off with a six-foot telescope to take the harmless bearings of
+any “poppits” within hail.
+
+His chum “Alec” was a charming man, and when he and Lionel Brough—as on
+one occasion—began capping one reminiscence by another on the deck of the
+_Santa Maria_ the show was as good as anything to be seen at the Opera
+Comique or Strand, or any of the various theatres of which he was lessee.
+Years before he had married Lydia Thompson, a name that conveys nothing
+to the present generation, but who in the sixties was the cleverest and
+prettiest of burlesque actresses, and there was not a youngster worth his
+salt that was not desperately in love with her. Lydia Thompson was aunt
+to Violet Cameron, who attained a certain position in the later seventies
+at the Strand, but was overshadowed by Florence St. John, one of the very
+few who, in addition to being the most chic of actresses, possessed a
+pure and cultivated voice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+USURERS AND MILLIONAIRES.
+
+
+WHEN “Purchase” was in full blast the chosen race had some data to go
+upon as regards the “possibilities” of their clients, who for the most
+part were Army men, and when the mystic P appeared after a name in the
+Army List, they felt fairly safe that their investments were recoverable;
+many, however, found to their cost that “charging” one’s commission was
+not recognised by the Horse Guards, and that despite the production of a
+sackful of mortgages, Cox dared not part with a cent of the commission
+money to any one but the actual reprobate. Barely had a name appeared in
+the _Gazette_ when a squad of these harpies hustled each other before the
+modest portals in Craig’s Court, and “the widows of Asher were loud in
+their wail” when they heard that their co-religionists had been turned
+empty away. In the citadel itself they, of course, had numerous paid
+spies, who “posted” them as to any imminent appearance in the _Gazette_,
+and no one earned more shekels by this illicit traffic than a clerk, who
+eventually had to leave, but who may still be seen shambling about
+Leicester Square in the futile endeavour to raise small loans for his
+shoddy clientèle. In pot-houses that he “uses” he is known as “the
+Captain,” and affects the old dragoon limp. For the human species, as
+everybody is aware, is composed but of two distinct races: the men who
+borrow, and the men who lend; under which two original diversities may be
+reduced all those impertinent classifications we are familiar with, such
+as Celtic and Gothic origin, white men, black men, red men, and such
+like. It is of the latter class during the sixties we propose to speak.
+
+At the head of the list was Callisher—known in the family as Julius—then
+followed Bob Morris (“Jellybelly”) and a bad third was Sam Lewis, only
+then emerging from the status of a traveller in cheap jewellery, who
+addressed one as “Sir,” and ready at a moment’s notice to produce a
+ten-pound note and draw out a bill for £15, with which his pockets were
+invariably lined.
+
+An undoubtedly leading usurer of the sixties was Bob Morris, who—it was
+no secret—was originally financed by Sir Henry De Hoghton, an eccentric
+baronet referred to elsewhere. “Jellybelly,” as he was familiarly known,
+transacted business in the vicinity of the Raleigh. A noiseless bell in
+a blaze of brass, and a door that opened without any visible agency, were
+the first objects that struck one on the threshold of the outer world.
+Introduced first into an ante-room, a client—subject to satisfactory
+scrutiny—was filtered into the presence of the great man.
+
+No indecent hurry was permitted during these important preliminaries, and
+one might as reasonably have hoped to enter the library of a bishop as to
+approach Bob Morris without a scrupulous regard to decorum.
+
+Numerous applicants were to be found at all hours in meek and becoming
+attitudes waiting for the moving of the waters, some to be rebuffed by
+deputy, and others only to be admitted and immediately bowed out.
+
+A second waiting-room above relieved the congestion of the one below when
+unusual circumstances taxed its resources; it was heavily curtained,
+dark, on Turkish bath lines, and it was considered a bad sign—as the
+precursor to a snub—when one was promoted to this retreat.
+
+“Jellybelly” was strictly honourable according to his lights; if he could
+get 100 per cent. he preferred it to 80, and if 80 was not forthcoming he
+would accept 60 on the security of the Consols. The variety of his
+transactions would have embarrassed a less brilliant mind, and at one
+time or another he had found himself owner (by mortgage) of the three
+first favourites for the Derby, the foundations and a partially completed
+wing of a skating-rink, and two miles of a submarine tunnel on which work
+had been stopped. That such multifarious responsibilities might
+reasonably be supposed to tax the patience of an ordinary mortal would
+have been matter of no surprise, but nothing appeared to give him the
+least concern.
+
+It was Sam Lewis’s pluck that obtained him the colossal fortune he
+eventually died possessed of, and, ever ready to run the most infernal
+risks, it was seldom he did not come out top. During Goodwood week he
+did business in his bedroom at the “Grand,” and a telegram from the other
+end of the kingdom, followed by an acceptance, invariably produced
+banknotes by return post.
+
+It was only after he began to feel his legs and to dabble in title deeds,
+that he abandoned the genial habits of his youth, became _Mr._ Lewis,
+could be seen only by appointment, and assumed an expression between that
+of a bank director and an Egyptian sphinx.
+
+When I “met” him first he was not above a swap, and a bill for, say, £50,
+paid in £20 cash and the balance in tawdry gimcracks, was the usual style
+of transaction. At the time I refer to he lived in an unpretentious
+house in Gower Street; later on, as a younger generation are aware, he
+possessed a mansion in Grosvenor Square; rode in the Park at daylight
+during the Season, and gave dinner parties where any one from a member of
+the Victorian Order upwards was always assured of a hearty welcome. So
+keen, indeed, was the little man (or his wife) to be considered members
+of the fringe of Society that an enterprising young man—related to the
+noble House of Somerset—was unquestionably on a fixed scale of
+remuneration, and given _carte blanche_ to bring any sprig of nobility at
+prices ranging from a guinea upwards. In addition, a few minor
+under-strappers, such as the late lamented Patty Coleman and others, had
+a free hand to produce “desirables.”
+
+The little man—as we all know—is now a matter of history, his widow not
+long after again married and then followed him, though her memory is
+still cherished in the Synagogue as “Lewis of the Guards.”
+
+Of the smaller fry, Fitch of Southwark; Sol Beyfus; Finney Davis of Mount
+Street; Lazarus of Dublin; Cook of Warwick Street, all assisted in
+spoiling the Egyptians; whilst their sons, almost without exception, have
+risen in the minor social scale as attorneys or chartered accountants,
+and their sons will assuredly figure in “Debrett’s” or the “Landed
+Gentry,” as instanced in a glaring case, where a railway navvy—who left
+his three sons a million sterling each in the Sixties—we are now informed
+in the peerage was undoubtedly descended from de—, who came over with the
+Conqueror, and that his genealogy is lost in antiquity—not always an
+unmixed evil.
+
+In the old days the usurer used his own name, now they cull the peerage
+for the most historical they can find. But
+
+ “Brown, Jones, or Moses
+ Can change their names but not their noses.”
+
+Perhaps no more marvellous example of Nature’s constant care for the
+wants of her needy creations is to be found than in the periodical
+appearance above the horizon of some nobody who, having amassed a
+colossal fortune, is henceforth ordained by a merciful Providence to
+rescue impecunious lords from the slough of despair, level-up princes who
+have exceeded their income, and to put upon their legs livery stablemen;
+authorities on horseflesh and their superiors generally by birth and
+education.
+
+In the long-ago Sixties these providential phenomena were not appreciated
+as much as in these more enlightened days, and, even in such sinks of
+iniquity as Mott’s, an impecunious gentleman was assessed as a
+considerably more desirable quantity than knighted shop-boys, “H”-less
+capitalists, or promoted horse copers.
+
+That even then they existed goes without saying; that they did not assist
+in making history is equally undeniable.
+
+Amongst these one of the most remarkable was one Hirsch—Baron of
+somewhere—but whose untimely death before he attained to Debrett makes
+his genealogy difficult to trace with any degree of accuracy. Suddenly
+springing into prominence, he at once broke out into horseflesh; and
+although probably not knowing one end of a horse from another, soon
+collected a magnificent stud, and being surrounded by disinterested!
+councillors of the highest attainments, soon swept the board in most of
+the classic races. But the subject that brought him chiefly into
+prominence was his solicitude for his co-religionists: first, he proposed
+to buy Jerusalem, but meeting with obstacles that even money could not
+overcome, he contemplated a “personally-conducted tour,” whereby the Holy
+City should again become the habitation of the chosen race. But his
+premature death, alas! nipped all these aspirations in the bud, and the
+gimcrack shops in Bond Street still flourish, and the successors of
+Callisher, Bob Morris, and Sam Lewis continue to batten on Christian
+flesh. The sums that he expended and bequeathed on this desirable object
+were not without significance, and the leaves of the Talmud were
+ransacked to show that he was the undoubted 666, or some equally
+unintelligible hieroglyphic that had been predicted by the Prophets; and
+then death entered Bath House and snapped the various theories—_Quod erat
+demonstrandum_.
+
+Baron de Forest, whom we occasionally hear of as one of the shining
+lights of modern Society, inherited a considerable portion of the
+deceased “nobleman’s” fortune, and is said to be related to him.
+
+A phenomenon of another type was Colonel North. Soldier, philanthropist,
+and nitrate expert, it matters not what regiment had the privilege of
+being commanded by him; it was in the latter industry that he endeared
+himself to his species. Liberal, bluff, and accessible to all, his daily
+free lunches at the “Woolpack” were partaken of by all the halt and the
+maim—and occasionally the blind—within the four-mile radius.
+
+Impecunious Irish lords, with ancestral bogs sadly in need of re-digging,
+now saw their opportunity, and a huge industry sprang into existence,
+where, for a consideration—in shares—the meteor was introduced to certain
+higher lords who, holding broad theories on “meum and tuum,” in their
+turn arranged dinner parties where the most exalted were to be met with.
+Often did the rafters of Connaught Place rattle during these festive
+gatherings, and sheaves of shares changed hands till no one was sent
+empty away, and so by the aid of nitrate, “the Colonel” was wafted amid
+the highest pinnacles of Society. Occasionally a false note was struck
+when some over-eager recipient put his shares on the market—but even
+these _faux pas_ were soon forgotten, for “the Colonel,” if not
+“Plantagenet blood,” had the instincts of a gentleman. That the owner of
+such vast wealth must needs own racehorses goes without saying, upon
+which ’bus drivers and unsuccessful authorities on horseflesh came upon
+the scene, and thus the sphere of Nature’s bountiful providence became
+more extended. North, however, never attained prominence in a pursuit he
+was probably utterly indifferent to, though his colours were frequently
+to be seen (last) at the various race meetings.
+
+It was a sad day in Bohemia Minor when “the Colonel” was gathered to his
+fathers; and the diminution in white waistcoats and immaculate attire in
+Gracechurch Street and Northumberland Avenue was lamentably apparent; the
+rockets that had temporarily fizzled gradually expended themselves, their
+very sticks were soon untraceable; straw hats and macintoshes (during the
+dog days) gradually resumed their ascendency, and Society recovered from
+the topsy-turveydom with which it was once temporarily threatened.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+SOME CURIOUS FISH OF THE SIXTIES.
+
+
+SIR Henry De Hoghton, a wealthy baronet who was above the horizon in the
+Sixties, though possessed of a fine estate and a palatial residence,
+preferred the hand-to-mouth existence of an hotel, and lived at
+Meurigy’s, now the supper-house yclept the Chatham. Never visible to the
+naked eye by day, he wandered into the Raleigh about midnight, and
+casting furtive glances in various directions, would settle down without
+a word. To punters he was a very oasis in a dry land, for, although the
+very worst écarté player in Christendom, no stakes were too high for him,
+and after losing a game or two his proposals were literally appalling.
+
+To ask him to play was the signal for his abrupt departure; to ignore his
+presence was tantamount to £100 a game within twenty minutes.
+
+Fred Granville, who about this period was considerably out of his depth,
+had a peculiar experience with him. On one occasion, having lost to the
+eccentric baronet some £3,000, De Hoghton, who evidently knew that a
+settlement was precarious, said, “Why don’t you go to ‘Jellybelly’?”
+
+What occurred at the suggested interview it is difficult to arrive at,
+but within the week it was generally known that De Hoghton financed the
+Hebrew money-lender, and by such disinterested advice as above was
+invariably paid, leaving the onus of recovery to the astute Bob Morris.
+
+Another drunken baronet who lived in Eaton Square, and had married an
+houri of a very inferior type, had for his chief hobby the surrounding
+himself with pugilists and comic singers.
+
+Living entirely on the ground floor, the drawing-room, which was
+carpetless, was got up like a cockpit. Here nightly orgies were held, to
+the annoyance of every one within hearing, and when too much port—with
+which the cellars were filled—had done its duty, rows were not infrequent
+between this disreputable couple. On one occasion I can recollect her
+drunken ladyship—very lightly clad—ordering a powdered six-foot flunkey
+to put out the lights instantly, and her drunken spouse’s rejoinder, “If
+you dare to touch a candle, you leave my house this moment.” After which
+a domestic scrimmage and a stampede ensued, and, seizing hats and coats,
+the guests hurriedly departed.
+
+An eccentric old lady who died about this time left her large fortune to
+a distant relative on the condition that she was never to be put below
+earth.
+
+To obviate the slightest risk of losing the legacy, the astute recipient
+immediately purchased a house in London, and with all the pomp worthy of
+the occasion, placed the mass of corruption, securely boxed, on the roof,
+after which it was soldered on to the leads and encased in a glass shade.
+
+The eyesore has long disappeared, but twenty years ago it was an object
+of interest to strollers in Kensington Gardens.
+
+Ned Deering was a well-known figure in Pall Mall in the long-ago Sixties.
+The heir to one of the oldest baronetcies in the kingdom, he distorted
+his handsome features by wearing his hair down to his shoulders in
+imitation of Charles I. (of blessed memory), whom he imagined he
+resembled.
+
+Eccentric to a degree, he married a few years later the lady known to
+posterity as Mrs. Bernard Beere, and great was the consternation in Kent
+lest a “small Beer” might eventually be enrolled in their local patrician
+ranks; but the scare was short-lived, and Ned, who meanwhile had turned
+Papist—as he would have turned Mohammedan had he lived in Morocco—died in
+a picturesque cottage with garden in front in Jermyn Street, imbibing
+buckets of champagne to the last, and with the encouraging assurance of a
+sure and joyful resurrection. The spot is now represented by the back
+entrance of the Criterion Theatre. No more amusing companion existed
+than Ned Deering, when the spirit moved him.
+
+Amongst military characters, Lord Mark Kerr must assuredly be given the
+palm. Of overwhelming family interest, he ruled the 13th Somersetshire
+Light Infantry as a veritable despot. Mad as any March hare, he
+frequently appeared on parade with his shako reverse-ways on his head,
+and if his eagle-eye spotted some awkward-looking recruit, he would
+paralyse him by, “Ha! you come from Bath, eh? I suppose you consider
+yourself a Bath brick? But I consider you a Bath—” In the mess, too, he
+was equally harmlessly autocratic, and no officer was expected to take
+his seat till Lord Mark had said, “Be seated, gentlemen.” But there was
+no vice in this eccentric branch of the house of Lothian. Whether he
+would have been tolerated in these later days is another affair.
+
+Major Francis, who was on the Smoking Room Committee of the Turf Club,
+was an admitted authority on cigars. Small in stature, the little man
+carried a cigar-case in every pocket of his numerous coats; not a cigar
+entered the docks but was sampled as a labour of love for the large
+importers by this unquestionable expert. And often have I accompanied
+him to St. Mary Axe, where box after box has been opened, and cigar after
+cigar lighted for our delectation, only to be laid aside after one whiff
+as we passed on to other brands. “But what becomes of all these wasted
+samples?” I inquired of Mr. Dodswell. “They’re not wasted,” he replied;
+“they become ‘Regalia Britannicas,’ such as these,” and he handed me a
+gilt-edged box of the most approved pattern that might well deceive any
+but an expert.
+
+Major Francis created a revolution in the cigars that were supplied at
+the Turf, and instead of the “Golden Eagles” such as Dicky Boulton
+considered cheap at three shillings apiece, and others assessed as dear
+at any price, the finest exports of the Havanas were to be had for less
+than half the money.
+
+Every youngster aspiring to importance in those days affected the
+possession of countless thousands of two-shilling cigars, and the walls
+of a large establishment in Bond Street were covered with boxes bearing
+in conspicuous type the various names and designations.
+
+It may be stated, however, that the venture was a “credit” one, which,
+whilst pandering to the vanity of the owner, in no way injured the
+tradesman, who delicately withdrew any surplus stock where settlement
+appeared doubtful.
+
+Lord Alexander Russell—a brother of the Duke of Bedford—when in command
+of the Rifle Brigade invariably smoked a short clay when at the head of
+his regiment, and Colonel Warden, another eccentric, who commanded the
+19th Foot, seldom rose till one or two in the afternoon, and would keep
+the whole regiment dangling about the orderly room for hours, to the
+amusement of the rest of the camp.
+
+But this was in the days when every regiment was a principality ruled by
+a despot, who, twice a year at most, underwent formal inspection by some
+amiable old gentleman, who received £600 a year for wearing a cocked hat
+as commander of such and such a regiment.
+
+That the state of preparedness that often then existed would hardly meet
+the requirements of the present-day alertness may best be exemplified by
+what I once assisted at.
+
+The Inspecting General was Sir Percy Douglas, who had expressed the
+desire of seeing and hearing that instructive manœuvre, a _feu de joie_.
+Proudly did the commanding officer give the requisite command, and with
+one accord 800 muzzle-loading barrels pointed defiantly heavenwards; then
+pop here, pop there a hundred yards down the line, a charge here and
+there exploded.
+
+Every barrel was choked with mutton fat—a favourite recipe against rust
+amongst the old warriors of England.
+
+Some startling stories of the mad Marquis of Waterford might be
+introduced, if their production were possible. One or two incidents,
+however, of the Sixties may not be amiss. Constantly was this privileged
+lunatic to be seen walking the Haymarket at breakneck speed, and being
+known to every cabman, waterman, and policeman, his antics attracted
+little attention. On one occasion he appeared in an exceptionally
+dishevelled condition, and a constable remonstrating with him in a
+friendly tone, he produced a large knife, and, hacking off what purported
+to be a finger, threw it into the street.
+
+His lordship had apparently been exploiting the shambles, and brought
+away a blade-bone for possible emergency.
+
+On another occasion he had been annoyed by being overcrowded in a railway
+carriage, and retaliated a few days after by appearing at the station
+with a chimney-sweep in full canonicals, for whom he purchased a
+first-class ticket, and whom he took with him into the carriage. His
+lordship and his companion were on this occasion in no way incommoded.
+
+Sir Charles Ross, a wealthy Highland baronet, visited London every season
+for exactly fourteen days, accompanied by a gillie. At the old
+“Tavistock,” where he invariably stayed, his daily meals consisted of
+mutton chops and steaks; his gillie, by express order, was to be given
+“anything”—salmon and grouse were good enough for him.
+
+On one occasion he imagined he had dropped a sixpence in the
+entrance-hall, and half the staff of the hotel were employed for two
+hours at half-a-crown an hour, with express orders to _find_ it.
+
+A substitute was eventually found, and the routine of the establishment
+resumed its normal condition.
+
+Some years later his eccentricities assumed a more serious form, and
+having nearly frightened an old woman out of her life by suddenly rising
+in his birthday suit with his ribs painted black from among furze bushes,
+he was placed under restraint, and, I believe, died in a madhouse.
+
+Lord Ernest Bruce, who eventually blossomed into Marquis of Ailesbury,
+had a chronic deafness that apparently descended to his sons—“The
+Duffer,” long since dead, and the present holder of the title (Henry)—and
+it was better than any play to see the father and two sons narrating
+anecdotes to one another, with their hands to their respective ears, and
+bellowing like fog-horns, and then roaring like rhinoceroses as their
+jokes permeated their skulls over the family gatherings that periodically
+took place at Boodle’s.
+
+At this time an excellent foreign restaurant had made its appearance in a
+side street of Soho, and many of the foreign attachés gave it their
+(private) patronage.
+
+A joke that obtained was the scrambling for coppers from the window of a
+private room, and it was on one occasion when Baron Spaum was revelling
+in the excitement that the crowds became so dense that an appeal from the
+landlord necessitated a resort to a ruse.
+
+A suitable (!) person who was dining in the public room kindly consented
+to don the Baron’s light overcoat and to scramble coppers that had been
+provided as he leisurely left the premises. The deception succeeded
+admirably, as the crowd followed the supposed benefactor. The assumption
+of the Baron’s coat was also a profound success, at least so all but the
+Baron agreed. He never saw his paletot again.
+
+An old member of the Conservative, who was well known during the Sixties
+and Seventies, made it an invariable practice to sip brown sherry for two
+or three hours every afternoon. So monotonous were the constant
+applications to his pocket that he directed the total should be paid in
+one instalment before he left.
+
+Fifteen and twenty glasses were the old toper’s average, but on one
+occasion when his consumption amounted to twenty-five, he fixed a glazed
+eye on the footman, and gurgled out: “Ten probable, eighteen possible,
+but twenty-five, _never_!” After which he paid up, and toddled into the
+attendant four-wheeler.
+
+It was during the sixties that Mr. Justice Maule was in the zenith of his
+fame. Devoted to his profession, and to the old port of his Inn, no
+dinner of his brother benchers would have appeared complete without the
+adjunct of his beaming countenance, when, having stowed away three
+bottles under his belt, he would “tack” the few yards to his chambers in
+Paper Buildings, and hang a man in the morning with the decorum only to
+be attained by experience.
+
+It was after one of these festive gatherings that Paper Buildings was
+burnt to the ground. The Judge, it appears, was a great reader; whether
+he always understood what he read (or did) under given circumstances is
+not quite clear, suffice that, having popped into bed and adjusted a vase
+conveniently on a chair, he proceeded to place a moderator lamp under his
+couch, after which the only reliable evidence obtainable was that the old
+gentleman woke with a start to find himself enveloped in flames.
+
+As he himself described it, he thought he was dead and that he had _not_
+been carried to Abraham’s bosom. He never, indeed, got over the shock,
+and, moderating his partiality for old port, he exhibited more serious
+tendencies, and so good came out of evil, and the occupiers of the
+present palatial chambers are indebted to Mr. Justice Maule for having
+gone to bed tipsy and burnt down the crazy old buildings.
+
+Mr. Justice Maule had a grim humour of his own, and Serjeant Ballantine
+used to tell of how on one occasion during the Guildford Assizes a murder
+case hinged on the evidence of a child to which the Crown attached
+importance, but to which the prisoner vehemently objected.
+
+“Come here, my little girl,” said his lordship. “Now, if you were to
+tell a story do you know where you would go to?”
+
+“No, sir,” was the candid reply.
+
+“Neither do I,” was the judicial endorsement; “an excellent answer; swear
+the witness.”
+
+But that was before the “shock” that brought him to his senses.
+
+Every Army man in the sixties will remember George Goddard. A cheery
+Irishman, full of anecdotage, universally popular, but, alas! with the
+proverbial lack of the one thing needful. Appointed by Tod Heatly as one
+of his touts, he combined business with pleasure by radiating between the
+various regiments and billeting himself on any one he knew at the Raleigh
+or Army Clubs.
+
+“Now, Major,” he once said to Gussy Brown after a hilarious mess dinner,
+“you see that stain on the floor? I bet you I’ll remove it without
+touching it.”
+
+“Impossible,” replied the little man. “I’ll bet a fiver you don’t,” and
+before the astonished audience could say “Jack Robinson” the gallant
+Gussy had been seized by his spurs and smeared across the floor.
+
+But all this was in the days of practical joking.
+
+Gussy Brown, although the most diminutive of cavalry field officers, was
+also the most pompous, and on one occasion when the 4th were invited to a
+humdrum dance at Brighton the little man, to show his displeasure, walked
+slowly round the room with his “Gibus” under his arm, and making three
+stately bows to the astonished hostess slowly left the room.
+
+On the occasion of the Goddard joke, his only remark was, “D— stupid!”
+
+At this period touting for brewers and wine merchants was the curse of
+the Army. Every club contained retired colonels and others who
+buttonholed one on every occasion. Before a troopship entered the
+harbour a tout came on board with the pilot; dining at an Army club, the
+man at the next table inquired if your regimental canteen was well
+served; indeed, they penetrated the most sacred precincts with the
+pertinacity of a sandstorm.
+
+As a cranky old general once exclaimed “D— it, I thought we were safe
+when militia men were not eligible; but these touts and store-keepers and
+bonnet-shop keepers will make the Rag a den of thieves, by Gad!”
+
+The association of these respective vocations in the old warrior’s mind
+was evidently based on the legend that then obtained that when the
+captain was inspecting the front rank of the Tower Hamlets the rear rank
+was faced about by way of precaution.
+
+Every one who knew Jonas Hunt must have been astonished to read that he
+left over £35,000 at his death a few months ago. As brave as a lion, he
+would assuredly—had he not been such a rip—have received the Victoria
+Cross for his share in the Balaclava charge, and when he sold out two
+years later, he was literally without a shilling, and continued in the
+same happy condition for twenty years after—not that Jonas stinted
+himself in anything, on the contrary, he would plunge to any extent,
+dunning you if chance made him your creditor, and forgetting any debt
+almost as soon as contracted. A bruiser of no mean class, he invariably
+suggested a round if any one had the temerity to remind him.
+
+A highly objectionable individual, whose father was a buggy master in
+Calcutta, and actually got a commission in the “Blues” till ordered to
+sell out for writing anonymous letters to a celebrated beauty of the
+Sixties not long since dead, once had the impudence to remind Jonas of a
+debt, and was replied to as follows: “I should have thought it more in
+your line to have written anonymously to my wife, but if you prefer to
+settle the matter with your fists I am entirely at your disposal.” The
+man who procured the retirement of the anonymous letter-writer was at the
+time an officer in the Guards, and though still to be seen radiating
+between minor restaurants and 100 per cent. bureaus, has nothing left of
+his former self but a fly-blown prefix to his name, and even that has
+lost its commercial value amongst Hebrew financiers of shady enterprises.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+SPIRITUALISM AND REALISM.
+
+
+THE craze for “table-turning,” “spirit-rapping,” and every conceivable
+trash connected with the occult sciences, was in full blast in the
+long-ago Sixties, and old ladies would form tea parties and sit all day
+and half through the night at round tables with their knotty old mittened
+thumbs pressed convulsively against those of their neighbours waiting for
+the moving of the waters. Lord Ashburton, who lived near Portman Square,
+was the arch-priest and arch-culprit that disseminated this fashionable
+twaddle, and there was not a spinster in that (then) highly-fashionable
+district that did not devour the leaflets that were periodically issued
+broadcast by the inspired old humbug. Occasionally invitations were
+issued for séances, when refreshments (more or less light) were provided
+to fortify poor human nature against possible unearthly attacks after the
+lights had been judiciously lowered.
+
+It was at one of these functions that I on one occasion found myself,
+and, possessing in those days an appetite like a cormorant, was terribly
+disillusioned after two hours’ waiting for the “spirits” to hear his
+lordship order the butler to “bring in the urn.” (In those long-ago days
+tea without an urn the dimensions of a safe was an absolute
+impossibility.) Nor did spiritualism end here, for numerous haunted
+houses were in the market where apparitions and unearthly sounds could be
+seen and heard and which no one would rent.
+
+It is the experience of a man I knew intimately that I will now—without
+expressing an opinion—relate, as far as I can recollect, in his own
+words:
+
+ “Looking for a house with plenty of elbow room and of reasonable
+ rent, my attention was attracted by a dilapidated building—with
+ garden in front and noseless statues liberally besprinkling
+ it—situated in the Marylebone Road. Proceeding to the agent’s, I was
+ considerably surprised by his terms. ‘The house,’ he began, ‘has a
+ bad name; no caretaker will live on the premises. In a word, sir,
+ here’s the key, and if you are willing to occupy it you shall have it
+ rent free for six months.’ I at once closed with his offer, and
+ seeking out a chum—lately ordained—we spent the next night in the
+ haunted house. It was in the dining-room we proposed to make a first
+ night of it, and barely had we settled down for a chat when footsteps
+ were distinctly heard in the hall. ‘Our lantern!’ I whispered as we
+ excitedly opened the door. Nothing was to be seen, nothing to be
+ heard. ‘Hush!’ whispered my friend, ‘I hear something behind me.’ I
+ heard the sound also. ‘Who’s there?’ I called out. ‘Who’s there?’ I
+ repeated; but still the silence of the Catacombs. Then the sound of
+ footsteps ascending the uncarpeted stairs was unmistakable till they
+ gradually died away in the attics. A moment of indescribable
+ stillness followed; a cold blast chilled the very marrow of our
+ bones, and our lantern went out like the crack of a pistol.
+
+ “We returned to our armchairs after carefully locking the door, but
+ we heard no more. And so we sat till welcome daylight made its
+ appearance, and as the kettle simmered on the hob and the sound of
+ awakening life made itself manifest in the Marylebone Road, it seemed
+ impossible to realise the weird manifestations we had witnessed.
+
+ “‘—,’ said my friend, ‘we have learnt a terrible experience; Satan
+ has been unloosed amongst us. Let us pray.’”
+
+The house has long since been pulled down; majestic flats now occupy the
+site, and instead of the sepulchral moans of disembodied souls the
+untrained, throaty voice of lovely woman may be heard shrieking to the
+accompaniment of a hired piano, and producing a discord as damnable, if
+more up-to-date, than ever was heard in a haunted house.
+
+In Surrey Street there was a house that rumour asserted had been
+hermetically sealed, and was not to be re-opened till a hundred years had
+passed, where, in the eighteenth century, a terrible tragedy had occurred
+during the progress of a bridal feast, and the distracted bridegroom,
+rushing out, had commanded that God’s sun should not again settle on the
+accursed board till the generation yet unborn was in being. And I have a
+vague recollection of having read, years later, a description of what was
+seen as the portals were thrown back after their century of peace, and
+light and air had percolated through the room. One can picture the table
+decked with its moth-eaten cloth, the piles of dust that represented the
+viands, the chairs pushed back in weird array, and the odour of the tomb
+that pervaded everything!
+
+To all which, my enlightened twentieth-century reader, there is probably
+another side. The whole thing may be an absolute fable.
+
+In the days before Trade had made those gigantic strides which have since
+dumped its votaries amid the once sacred pages of Debrett, when knights
+were not as common as blackberries, and the Victorian Order had not
+become a terror in the land, when buttermen sold butter, and
+furniture-men sold furniture, and before huge emporiums for the sale of
+everything had come into existence, it was “bazaars” that supplied the
+maximum of selection with the minimum of locomotion, such as to-day is to
+be found in the huge caravanserai yclept “Stores” and in Tottenham Court
+Road and Westbourne Grove in particular.
+
+In Soho Square, on the western side, where to-day—and all day—men with
+pronounced features, forbidding countenances, and of usurious tendencies
+may be seen in a first floor window exchanging views on the iniquitous
+restrictions associated with stamped paper, a bazaar existed in the
+long-ago sixties where dogs that squeaked and elephants that wagged their
+tails might have been bought by children of tender years who, for aught
+we know, may have since been plucked of their last feather by the
+vultures that now hover over those happy hunting grounds.
+
+Turning into Oxford Street there was the Queen’s Bazaar, afterward
+converted into the Princess’s Theatre, still with us, with its dismal,
+dingy frontage and limited shelter for ladies with guttural voices;
+whilst almost opposite was the Pantheon, with perhaps the most chequered
+career of all, having been, in turn, the National Opera House, the
+accepted Masquerade house, a theatre, and a bazaar till 1867, when it
+attained its present proud position as the main tap for the supply of
+Gilbey’s multifarious vintages.
+
+Still further west was the St. James’s Bazaar, built by Crockford, and
+soon converted into a hell, where more monies changed hands and more
+properties were sold than in all the other bazaars in the universe.
+
+But perhaps the most tenacious of life was the Baker Street Bazaar. In
+its spacious area was situated an unpretentious shop (since spread half
+up the street) with two or three windows in Baker Street, while on the
+hinterland was the bazaar, and over it Tussaud’s Waxworks. Entering from
+King Street was the area occupied annually by the Cattle Show, whilst
+still further space was available—as we were lately informed by the
+police reports—for empty coffins, false beards, volatile dukes, lead and
+bricks in bulk, sleeping and reception rooms, scores of flunkeys, and
+addenda too multifarious to mention. Never having seen the subterranean
+Duke nor the bewhiskered Druce, one may be permitted to marvel where all
+this ghastly conglomeration found shelter, and whether the confusion that
+must have occurred amongst the Dutch dukes, the English shopmen, the
+cattle, and the Waxworks can in any way be held responsible for the
+startling contradictions with which we have lately been regaled.
+
+But does any one who traverses the historic area between Soho Square and
+Charing Cross give a thought to the interest that once clustered round
+where Crosse and Blackwell’s factory now stands? Does any one realise
+whilst “held up” in a broken-down “Vanguard” in Shaftesbury Avenue that
+the neighbourhood once echoed with the Royalist battle-cry “So-ho” in the
+days of that greatest of Englishmen—Cromwell? Does any one ever give it
+a thought that Charing Cross was not so very long ago a resort of
+footpads, and that even so late as the Sixties the sweet waters of the
+somewhat putrid Thames oozed and bubbled where the District railway
+station now stands? And how few are aware that, when Drummond’s Bank was
+in course of construction, fossils of mammoth, cave lions, rhinoceros,
+and Irish deer were found; and that in future ages, excavations will
+probably unearth skeletons of hybrids we all try to dodge and whom
+naturalists will describe as voracious, living on suction, apt to beg,
+borrow, or steal, migratory to a limited extent, and usually to be met
+with between Charing Cross and St. Paul’s or on the plateaus that abut on
+the Criterion?
+
+As an observant judge once remarked to one of these pariahs who filled up
+his cup of iniquities by snatching a fowl from a confiding poulterer’s,
+“God has given you intelligence; your parents have given you a good
+education; your country has provided you with excellent prospects both
+for the present and future, instead of which you go about stealing
+ducks.”
+
+Passing still further west along the Strand, the changes of time and idea
+become more apparent as one contemplates that stronghold of
+Christianity—Exeter Hall—plastered with bills and lately passed into
+alien hands; and the period, the surging crowd, all lend themselves to
+the illusion, and one might almost fancy one heard the echo of 1,000
+years ago, “Not this man, but Barabbas.”
+
+Oh, the irony of Fate! methought; truly does Time turn the old days to
+derision; and one knows not whither one’s vapourings might have landed
+one as a zealous constable fixed his official eye upon the stoic who,
+deeming it advisable to “move on,” sought consolation, but found none, in
+an adjoining tobacconist’s by indulging in one of Salmon and Gluckstein’s
+real Havanas (five for a shilling).
+
+Skimming (not wading through) the report of the Court of Inquiry lately
+dragging its monotonous length in the vicinity of the Chelsea embankment,
+one was struck by the change that has come over these senseless
+preliminaries, which occasionally end in smoke and sometimes in legalised
+military or civil tribunals. For such courts are as old as the hills,
+and are convened on every possible excuse. If a soldier loses a
+shoebrush it is (or was) a Court of Inquiry that established the
+interesting fact; if an officer was accused of a more heinous offence, it
+was a Court of Inquiry that heard what was to be said.
+
+The only difference is that, whereas the old style cost no more than a
+few sheets of foolscap and the unnecessary lumbering of regimental
+records, the identical luxury cannot now be indulged in without an array
+of Old Bailey lawyers, who harangue the old warriors that constitute the
+court for hours, utterly oblivious of the fact that they are better
+judges of things military, and not likely to be carried away by those
+bursts of eloquence that so impress the twelve jack-puddings of which our
+bulwarks and liberties are said to be composed.
+
+The earliest of these Courts of Inquiry was in ’41, when Lord Cardigan
+killed Captain Tucket in a duel—and ended in his trial and acquittal by
+his brother peers.
+
+Later on, in ’44, Lord William Paget and the same bellicose Earl had a
+domestic squabble in which the former said “he had,” and the latter said
+“he hadn’t,” and this began by a Court of Inquiry and culminated in the
+High Court.
+
+Again, in ’54 Lieutenants Perry and Greer were hailed before a Court of
+Inquiry for practical jokes of a pronounced character, but the inquiry
+ended in smoke, as it was “revised” by the Minister of War.
+
+In ’61 was the Court of Inquiry in the 4th Dragoon Guards which,
+disclosing undoubted bullying on the part of Colonel Bentinck (the
+present Duke of Portland’s father), ended in a court martial, when
+nothing but interest saved the old gentleman’s bacon.
+
+Later on, there was the Mansfield affair, when a disagreement arose
+between Sir William Mansfield (afterwards Lord Sandhurst), or his wife,
+and an aide-de-camp that elicited much that was amusing in regard to
+purloined jams and other preserves, for which her ladyship was supposed
+to be celebrated; all which instances ended in the usual way after an
+infinity of positive assertion met by flat contradiction.
+
+Whether the farce lately enacted, with its lawyers and their speeches,
+affected the result, or benefited anybody except the lawyers, is a point
+upon which most people will agree; all which, however, sinks into
+insignificance in comparison with the question as to when and how did
+this interference with military tribunals first become tolerated, and how
+can our Military Council or our Military anything, or the officers
+constituting the Court, submit to be harangued by “only a civilian,” as
+one of Robertson’s plays describes outsiders?
+
+In all the military tribunals of the past such an innovation was unheard
+of. Colonel Crawley, on his trial, had words put into his mouth by Sir
+William Harcourt (whose reputation as an orator it made), but he was not
+permitted to address the Court. In the Robertson Court Martial it was
+the same, and in the Navy to-day a prisoner is defended by “a friend,”
+but no civilian would be permitted to “quarter deck it” in that
+conservative service.
+
+Even Colonel Dawkins—who, by the way, was a Household Brigade man—amongst
+all his eccentric experiences, never got so far as suggesting that a
+civilian should bridge the chasm that has hitherto existed between the
+Law Courts and the Horse Guards by all this special pleading, and one
+wonders what old Sir George Browne or General Pennefather would have said
+(or sworn) if such a suggestion had been proposed to them! It may be too
+much to say there would have been an earthquake, but the foundations of
+the house would certainly have vibrated.
+
+And it is the ignorance of what the present privileges of the Guards are
+that makes it difficult to form any opinion on the merits of the case.
+The friction that these “privileges” used to cause when a Household
+regiment was occasionally brigaded at Aldershot or Dublin or the Curragh
+with regiments of the line was, however, undeniable.
+
+It pained old captains with Crimean and Indian medals to be “turned out”
+by a field officer with a fluffy upper lip and a youthful voice that had
+not long before sounded at Eton; it was irritating (at least) for
+colonels commanding distinguished regiments to see a Guard’s sentry
+fumbling with his rifle and deliberately coming to the “carry,” and five
+minutes after “presenting” to a brevet major of the Guards, who was
+trundling a hoop when the old warrior was in the trenches before
+Sebastopol; it was annoying to read in general orders special reminders
+as to the prohibition regarding imperials and capricious shaving, and to
+see half-a-dozen Guards officers with beards like pioneers; it was
+amusing to hear (as one did) the son of old Sir Percy Douglas (who was
+for a little season in the Guards) inform a distinguished field officer
+that the “executive” command could only be given by a Guardsman to a
+Guardsman; and still more amusing to hear the retort which made mincemeat
+of the privilege, at least, on that occasion—all which nonsense has,
+however, been considerably modified. By all means let the Guards retain
+their privileges and licences—but let them in mercy be “consumed on the
+premises.” And if the physique of these favoured regiments is not as
+fine as of yore, no one will deny that their “marching past” and their
+“dressing” are far superior to that of the line and “pretty” enough to
+please even Admiral Scott himself.
+
+It may further be conceded without fear of contradiction that the Queen’s
+Company of the Grenadiers in 1862 was a magnificent specimen of physique
+and drilled to perfection under Lord Henry Percy and Micky Bruce.
+
+Beards, indeed, have always been a cause of offence. In the tropics
+(except in India) a man is compelled to shave; with the thermometer below
+zero, the same regulation is rigidly enforced.
+
+It was Colonel Crealock’s beard at Gibraltar that was the indirect cause
+of an officer being tried by Court Martial; it was Prince Edward of
+Saxe-Weimar’s and Colonel Phillip’s beards that led to invidious remarks
+in the Dublin Division; and, until the razor is abolished beyond the
+precincts of the four-mile radius, so long will a link remain between the
+grand old days of the muzzle loader and cold steel and the modern
+requirements for potting an enemy at a thousand yards rise.
+
+When the Metropolitan Board of Works was at the zenith of its power, and
+thoroughfares were being projected, and whole streets were disappearing
+and ancient rookeries being demolished, it was incredible the leakage
+that appeared to exist, and how the friends of indiscreet or dishonest
+employés reaped a harvest by acquiring dilapidated buildings for a song,
+and standing out for huge compensation when the day for demolition drew
+nigh.
+
+An astute former hanger-on at Faultless’s cock-pit in Endell Street
+surprised me considerably on one occasion as he stood at the door of a
+dilapidated beer-house in Covent Garden by informing me that he had
+bought it for a trifle, and six months later I was literally staggered by
+again meeting the rascal shovelling out potatoes at a little greengrocery
+shop where now stands the London and Westminster Bank opposite the Law
+Courts.
+
+He explained that he had a brother in a humble but trusted position at
+Spring Gardens, and that his old beer-house had ceased to exist, and he
+expected his “present property” would “come down” before long.
+
+Green Street, leading from Leicester Square, was another channel for the
+acquisition of large profits, and when every house was a bug-walk, and
+demolition a matter of a few months, the news was actually “offered” to a
+man I knew well able to find the requisite purchase money, but rejected
+from misplaced prudential motives.
+
+The present London Pavilion was another glaring instance of jobbery, and
+years before it was necessary to hustle the ex-Scott’s waiter from the
+cosy nest-egg he so diligently nursed, the Board of Works descended on
+him like an avalanche with a peremptory notice to quit.
+
+At this stage one Villiers comes upon the scene, but whether he was a
+scion of the noble house of Jersey or Clarendon is not clear. Suffice
+that tradition credited him with having once been a considerable actor
+who had made a great hit in a minor part in the _Overland Route_ at the
+Haymarket during the fifties. Later, he appears to have become lessee of
+the transpontine Canterbury Hall, where he was a dismal failure, and
+spent the latter portion of his tenancy in bed—a victim of gout and the
+importunities of irrepressible bill-stickers.
+
+It was in these darkest hours that the Board of Works entered into his
+life, and in an incredibly short space of time he had enlisted the
+co-operation of a sporting furrier, had hustled the unhappy Loibel out,
+and was in undisputed possession of the London Pavilion. How the
+£103,000 was found to pay the out-going man is of no particular
+importance, suffice that so indecent was the haste that an auction was
+deemed superfluous; the entire contents were turned over at a valuation,
+and as Loibel toddled out Villiers toddled in, and—undisturbed by
+parochial or other demands—he gradually rose to affluence, periodically
+visited Continental watering-places, was a person to be reckoned with in
+a mushroom political club, and died recently worth a considerable
+personalty.
+
+The juggle over the Pavilion never attracted much interest, and the
+gladiators being respectively a German and a Jew the transaction was
+forgotten almost at its inception.
+
+Passing through the Opera Colonnade I tried not long ago to locate the
+exact shop—once a cigar merchant’s—in which the Raleigh, originally known
+as the “Old Havana Cigar Club,” may be said to have had its being, for it
+was whilst sitting on tubs one afternoon in the fifties that three or
+four Mohawks of the first order persuaded Tod Heatly—the ground
+landlord—to provide some sort of superior night-house which, by opening
+its doors at 10 p.m. and not closing them till the last roysterer had
+reeled home, would “meet a want long felt,” as modern advertisements
+occasionally describe their worthless wares.
+
+It was later—in the early seventies—that the proprietorship changed
+hands, and was worked on more commercial lines by the Brothers Ewen
+(triplets), who, believing in quantity rather than quality, periodically
+sat as a committee under the chairmanship of an amiable old gentleman
+(Lord Monson) and elected everything and everybody capable of producing
+the increased subscription.
+
+It was in the solitary long room of the Tod Heatly era that details were
+arranged for the duel (which never came off) in regard to an accusation
+of foul play that was made in a Pall Mall club, when an old gentleman,
+who was in Court dress, was considerably astonished at receiving a flip
+on his calf from an erratic trump. And in this room, too, enough
+Justerini’s brandy was consumed of a night to float the motors which now
+lumber that once-sacred chamber. For whisky and other emanations of the
+potato were then practically unknown and only heard of by the privileged
+few who had seen an illicit Boucicault still on the stage.
+
+Proceeding yet further west I passed the College of Surgeons—presented by
+George IV. in a fit of after-dinner generosity to that distinguished body
+to be held for all time on a pepper-corn rent. One can almost picture
+the burst of humble gratitude that gushed forth at the gracious act, and
+the bland smile that illumined the anointed features at the consciousness
+of having done a generous deed without being one penny the worse for it.
+It was condescensions such as this that endeared “the first gentleman” to
+a loyal and dutiful people. And then across the square, where
+Northumberland House once stood, I wondered if one human being could
+locate the spot within fifty yards, and whether the old lion that topped
+it pointed his tail to the east or west, a subject on which more bets
+have been made than ever fell to the lot of man or beast.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+THE ROCK AND THE CAPE.
+
+
+THE providential success of Playfair in the Cambridgeshire of ’72 had
+released more than one of our clique from the jaws of the usurer, and
+Bill Stourton, by the judicious investment of a fiver, was in expectation
+of being the proud owner of £300 on the following Monday.
+
+Dashing down to Somersetshire overflowing with filial duty and in
+anticipation of our early embarkation for Gibraltar, a considerable scare
+was created one morning by a groom running up to the house and reporting
+that the sheriff’s carriage and two grimy beaks from Taunton had pulled
+up at the “George” and were making tender inquiries as to Mr. William’s
+whereabouts.
+
+All this occurred on Monday, when, as it happened, Billy was speeding
+towards London to realise at Tattersall’s the result of his sagacity at
+Newmarket. And so, when the oleaginous visitors inquired at the
+ancestral porch, the reply they received was discouraging in the extreme.
+
+“That is Mr. William’s bedroom,” pointing to a window, was the ingenuous
+servitor’s reply; “you can go and examine it if you wish; but I give you
+my word he left for London this morning.” And so it came to pass that
+the astute “Fitch and Son,” of Southwark, failed to serve the capias, and
+the rascally Israelite who had made “affidavit” as to his intention of
+“leaving the kingdom” (as embarking with the regiment might certainly be
+construed by a quibble) had to pay the cost of the imposing coach that
+had been provided for his conveyance to Taunton.
+
+The faithful butler had omitted to add that the young reprobate was
+returning the same evening, and that the dog-cart was to meet him at
+nine.
+
+But the reprieve was not of long duration, and within a year Bill had
+sold his commission and become a full private in the Blues.
+
+Passing into the Horse Guards one day a former brother officer chanced to
+inquire of the sentry the way to the military secretary’s, and was
+considerably startled by the reply, “First door to the left, Polly.”
+
+The sentry was ex-Lieutenant Stourton.
+
+Gibraltar then—as now—was a favourite winter resort, and the “Club House
+Hotel” opposite the main guard did a roaring trade.
+
+Here Lady Herbert of Lea and her youthful son, the present Lord Pembroke,
+sojourned for some weeks in the Sixties, and it was to the inquiring turn
+of mind of the young nobleman’s tutor that Gibraltar was almost indebted
+for a very promising row.
+
+In one room, it appears, a cantankerous Irishman and his wife were
+staying, in the next the tutor, and whilst the Irishman positively swore
+he had one morning seen the prying tutor’s face glued to the fanlight as
+vehemently did the pedagogue swear on a sack of bibles that he had never
+glued his nose to a fanlight in his life.
+
+What there was to peep at was not quite clear, for the supposed “object”
+in any costume was not fair to look upon, and so after mutual
+recriminations and mutual apologies the affair was hushed up, and
+expectant Gibraltar was robbed of a lawful excitement.
+
+A fly-leaf that appeared weekly—why, no one could explain—although less
+original than one might have wished, yet possessing a symbolism that was
+unquestionable, on one occasion appeared with a verbatim extract from a
+Spanish paper of the escapades of an adventurer who was exploiting the
+neighbourhood of Madrid.
+
+Weeks apparently had elapsed before it had caught the eye of our
+lynx-eyed editor, and one day when Ansaldo invited certain of us to
+compare a recent resident at his hotel with the description in the very
+latest “local intelligence” it became apparent to all that a lately
+departed wayfarer was the redoubtable personage referred to. “By Jove! I
+lost fifty to him last week at loo, and then gave him a shakedown,”
+remarked one; and, “D—d if I didn’t lend him my horse to go as far as
+Cadiz, and it’s not to be back till to-morrow,” added another; and then
+the local tailor came running down to the Club House, and Ansaldo
+remembered he had paid his hotel bill by a cheque, and within a week a
+dozen victims realised that they had assisted in one way or another to
+make the gentleman’s Mediterranean trip a pleasant one.
+
+But money at the Rock was literally a drug, thanks to the existence of
+Sacconi, a Genoese grocer. This extraordinary man was everybody’s
+banker; if one lost at the races it was Sacconi who settled the account;
+mess bills were paid by Sacconi; fifty—one hundred Isabels—were only to
+be asked for to be obtained by initialling the amount at the shop.
+
+Apparently indifferent to risk, the astute Italian was, however, working
+on a certainty. Immediately a regiment was under orders for the Rock, a
+list of every officer’s “length of tether” was transmitted by Perkins,
+his London agent, a city knight; whilst, in addition to the value of
+one’s commission, the impossibility of leaving the Rock without his
+knowledge, and the “Moorish Castle” frowning on the heights, enabled
+Sacconi to amass a huge fortune, to marry his daughters to officers of
+the garrison, and be an honoured guest in after years at the “Convent,”
+the Governor’s official residence.
+
+But all this was in the days of purchase.
+
+Meeting the ex-Governor, Sir William Codrington, one day in Bond Street
+on the point of being run over, he jocosely remarked, as I went to his
+assistance, “Different from Gibraltar, eh?”
+
+To any but enthusiasts of riding, Gibraltar was (and probably is) a most
+overrated station, with nothing to recommend it but its proximity to
+London. Every afternoon was devoted to couples riding to the Cork woods,
+and returning from its shaded glades just before gun-fire.
+
+No one ever dreamt of riding with his own wife; indeed, so accepted was
+this custom that on one occasion a couple having been seen riding
+together, an excited newsmonger rushed about inquiring, “What’s up?
+Holroyd has been seen riding with his own wife!”
+
+But the advent of Fitzroy Somerset gave an immense fillip to sport, and
+when, later, six couples of cast hounds came direct from Badminton every
+jack-pudding purchased a screw and became an ardent fox-hunter.
+
+A German apothecary, who had not straddled a quadruped since he left the
+Vaterland, became an enthusiastic rider, and thrilled the less daring
+horsemen by descriptions of runs, and how “der ’orse svearved to him
+right, and I ’it ’im on the ’ead to his left, and den he svearved to the
+left, and I ’it ’im on the ’ead to his right,” till everybody became more
+or less horsy, and not to keep a crock with four legs, or three, was
+tantamount to an admission that one was literally past praying for.
+
+Every youngster purchased a quadruped—some vicious and young, others
+blind and in the last stage of senile decay—and Staines, an assistant
+surgeon, was so frequently sent whirling into space that his animal was
+christened “Benzine-Collas,” because it was “warranted to remove
+Staines.”
+
+Here, too, was a fox-hunting chaplain known as “Tally-ho Jonah,” who
+ended his days as shepherd of a peculiarly desirable flock amidst the
+rich pastures of the Midlands.
+
+On his death-bed some years ago, his valet consoled him with the
+assurance that he was going to a better land, to which the worthy divine
+replied: “John, there’s no place like old England.” R.I.P.
+
+But the mania by no means ended here, and Grant, the Principal Medical
+Officer—a bony Scot with the largest feet ever inflicted on man—literally
+paralysed a group who one day saw him in the distance leisurely
+approaching on horseback.
+
+“Great heavens!” was the universal exclamation as he came nearer, “why,
+it’s ‘Benzine-Collas’ going as quiet as a lamb,” and it was agreed that
+the fiery little Mogador stallion was being imposed upon by old Grant,
+under the impression that he was between the shafts.
+
+Across the bay was Tangier, and many found an inexhaustible store of
+delight in visiting that most Oriental of towns.
+
+Within four days of Paris, it seemed incredible that here was a spot that
+civilisation had apparently overlooked, and which still retained all the
+barbaric pomp of a thousand years ago. Fowls with their throats cut lay
+about the streets awaiting preparation for pilau; malefactors for the
+most trifling offences had their hands hacked off in the leading
+thoroughfares; whilst under the windows of the Sherif of Wazan’s palace
+half a dozen naked musicians blew their insides out from morning to
+night, and discoursed a series of diabolical sounds that made the
+contemplation of anything but their music impossible.
+
+Here Martin—late messman of the _Racoon_—had started the “Royal Hotel,”
+and after providing his visitors with an excellent dinner, favoured them
+with morceaux on a flute, of which he prided himself on being a virtuoso.
+
+Martin was as black as the blackest hat, and from the suspicious slits in
+his ears justified the assumption that he was a liberated West Indian
+slave. The music he emitted with eyes closed, possibly the most soulful,
+was certainly the most doleful, and had evidently been picked up when
+watching the anchor being weighed on H.M.S. _Racoon_.
+
+“Where do you come from, Martin?” on one occasion inquired an inquisitive
+officer.
+
+“Devonshire,” was the unexpected reply; “but I left home in my infancy.”
+
+He had made this assertion so often that there is no doubt he believed
+it.
+
+Returning from Tangier on one occasion, I brought with me a quantity of
+Kuss-Kuss cloth, which catching the eye of a voracious brother subaltern
+he inquired where I had got it.
+
+“Oh,” I said, “the Sherif of Wazan sent it over for distribution in
+return for the guard of honour we supplied last month when he was here.”
+
+“Then I’m entitled to some?” he remarked.
+
+“I’m afraid it’s all been claimed,” I replied, and to keep up the
+illusion I got half a dozen youngsters to cross and re-cross the square
+with a piece under their arms and deposit it somewhere, for another to
+fetch it and leave it elsewhere. It seemed, indeed, that the traffic was
+never to end, and next morning an official complaint was made by the
+aggrieved one, and he discovered he had been the victim of a practical
+joke.
+
+Apropos of this class of grumbler, an amusing story was once told me by
+the captain of a P. and O. It was in the days that the skipper “messed”
+the passengers, and it was this officer’s habit to have a saucerful of
+porridge every morning about seven on the bridge.
+
+The feeding on a P. and O. is proverbially liberal, yet not content with
+the enormous breakfast provided, certain grumblers complained that
+considering the price they paid they surely were entitled to porridge.
+Inwardly chuckling, the skipper reluctantly consented, with the result
+(as he told me) that instead of devouring two mutton chops, eggs, and
+marmalade _ad libitum_ at eight, he was a considerable gainer by the
+satisfying effect of two-pennyworth of porridge at seven.
+
+During my two years at Gibraltar cholera appeared, and anything more
+terrible than such a visitation in such a circumscribed spot can hardly
+be conceived. With a strict “cordon” established, there was no getting
+away from it, and men who the night before were in rude health were often
+buried at gun-fire.
+
+To be afraid of it was tantamount (so doctors asserted) to courting it,
+and so regimental bands were ordered to play daily on the Alameda by way
+of diverting the public mind, and not a drum was heard at the numerous
+military funerals that wended their way towards the north front.
+
+By night the “corpse-lights” over the burial ground emitted a weird glow,
+and many a subaltern visiting the sentries before daylight would shiver
+and his teeth rattle as he skirted the unearthly illumination.
+
+To such an extent did downright funk seize upon some that an officer now
+living in London—a C.B. of overwhelming interest—asked everybody the best
+preventive, and jokes were indulged in at his expense, and he swallowed
+tablespoonfuls of salt and raw porpoise liver, as this or the other
+prescribed.
+
+Distracted, one afternoon he sought consolation by proceeding to the
+house of a fair scorpion (persons born on the Rock) he had known in
+happier days, and literally collapsed as he met her coffin emerging from
+her door.
+
+Apropos of this terrible scourge, an instance that many can vouch for
+occurred some years previously in India.
+
+My regiment was being decimated by cholera, and corpses were hurriedly
+placed in an outhouse that was infested with rats.
+
+The sentries had orders to periodically tap with their rifles on the
+door, and on one occasion tapping too hard, the door opened, and the
+Armourer Sergeant, who had been brought in a few hours previously, was
+seen sitting up on the trestle.
+
+Years after I saw the man daily, and he completed his twenty-one years’
+service instead of being buried alive, as many a poor wretch has been.
+
+Colonel Zebulon Pike was by way of being a consul representing the United
+States in South Africa and the most amusing liar I have ever had the good
+fortune to meet.
+
+The embodiment of generosity, no yarn he ever spun could have injured a
+fly; that there never was a word of truth in them was an accepted axiom.
+
+“Yes, sir,” as he invariably prefixed his remarks, “it was when I was
+commanding my regiment during the rebellion that Captain Crusoe reported
+to me he had captured a spy. ‘Bring him before me,’ I said sternly, and
+when the rascal appeared I pointed to the sun, saying: ‘Before yon
+luminary disappears behind yon hills you die’; and turning to Crusoe, I
+added: ‘Remove him, Colonel Crusoe.’ ‘Colonel, sir?’ inquired he. ‘Yes,
+sir,’ said I, ‘you’re colonel from this very moment.’”
+
+The Colonel once expressed a desire to attend the Governor’s levée; but
+bewailing the fact that he had not brought his uniform, he proceeded to
+describe it.
+
+“The pants, sir, are a rich blue, with a broad lace stripe down their
+sides; my tunic is also blue, and my breast is covered with medals—I have
+a drawerful of them. Around my waist, sir, is a crimson sash, and in my
+hat a long ostrich feather sweeps down to my shoulder.”
+
+“But that’s all easily arranged, Colonel,” we explained, and on the
+eventful day we proceeded to truss him.
+
+Never was a more imposing sight, and as the guard of honour marched down
+to Government House the Colonel stood on the pavement, immovable as a
+rock, with hand to his feathered billycock. And the men (as had been
+arranged) came to the “carry,” and passed him with all the “honours of
+war.”
+
+“My God, sir, it brought tears to my eyes,” he afterwards told us in his
+pride, “to see yon fine fellows swinging past; it reminded me of my own
+regiment. I thank you, gentlemen, for the compliment you paid a
+comrade.”
+
+These colonial levées of the past were often held of an evening to enable
+the introduction of refreshments, without which the attendance would
+certainly have been meagre.
+
+The local grandees liberally prepared for the coming feast, and having
+eaten to repletion proceeded to fill their pockets.
+
+“You may as well have the sauce,” once interposed an irate A.D.C. as he
+saw a native pocketing a fowl, and he deliberately poured the contents of
+a tureen into his lap.
+
+At these “go-as-you-please” functions, speeches more or less impromptu
+invariably took place, and it was then that the “Colonel” was literally
+in his element.
+
+Panting for his opportunity, it was only after some wag had proposed his
+health, and described how we had “one amongst us who had seen the mighty
+buffalo on its native prairie” (which he assuredly never had), etc., that
+the Colonel rose and delighted his hearers with a string of most amusing
+lies.
+
+Lady Shand, the wife of the Chief Justice, once sitting near him, after
+one of his flowery orations, began to tell him of her own native home in
+Scotland, and of the loch that stretched for miles before the ancestral
+hall, and was considerably surprised by the Colonel’s rejoinder: “Aye,
+and the swans; I can see them now.”
+
+“But there were no swans, Colonel,” she gently corrected; but henceforth
+held her peace when the staggering retort was given: “Oh, yes there were;
+at least, in my time.”
+
+No function was considered complete without “the Colonel,” and he was a
+frequent guest at one place or another. Apparently capable of dispensing
+with sleep, no matter how late the night’s orgy daylight found him on the
+verandah with a green cigar, after which he proceeded towards the Grand
+river ostensibly to bathe.
+
+“Can’t do without my morning swim,” he once told a man who met him with a
+bath-towel over his arm; but the towel showed no signs of having been
+used, and it was recognised that the Colonel never stripped, and that his
+ablutions were primitive to a degree.
+
+But the Cape Town of to-day has undergone quite as much change as our
+modern Babylon, and where a railway station as big as St. Pancras now
+exists, a wooden shanty with a single line fifty miles long was all that
+represented railway enterprise in the long-ago sixties.
+
+It was by the courtesy of Captain Mills, the Assistant Colonial
+Secretary—afterwards Sir Charles Mills, agent general in London—that a
+delightful party was organised for the shooting of the “Sicker Vlei,” a
+vast expanse of water in the vicinity of Wellington.
+
+This magnificent lake is the resort of every kind of wild beast and bird.
+Strings of flamingoes wade leisurely about it, whilst wild geese and
+swans of enormous proportions float lazily over one’s head; antelopes and
+buck of every description come down to water, and the Cape leopard—the
+most treacherous and cowardly of four-footed creatures—is to be met with
+in considerable numbers as day begins to break. The procedure that
+obtains is similar to that in all ordinary mountain loch shooting, with
+the solitary exception that it necessitates a start about 3 a.m., so that
+every one is posted amongst the rushes at two hundred yards’ intervals an
+hour before daybreak. The excitement, the delight, the profound silence
+of that hour when Nature seems to rouse itself for its daily routine of
+activity, requires an abler pen than mine to describe.
+
+With a rifle in hand and a shot gun at one’s side, there is, however,
+nothing for it but to wait for daybreak, wondering whether buck or
+antelope, cheetah or wild fowl will be the first to come within range.
+
+“Trekking” with our span of oxen to a farmhouse, where only two cots were
+available, it was our nightly custom to play “nap” as to who should
+occupy the beds and who the kitchen table and dresser, and the excitement
+ran just as high as it did in the days when fifties and hundreds were at
+stake in the card room of the old Raleigh.
+
+But the losers did not lose much, for almost before one was asleep it was
+time to be up for our usual 3 a.m. start.
+
+With me was placed dear old Arthur Barkly, the worst shot and most
+passionate of good fellows, last Governor of Heligoland, and long since
+gone over to the majority, and it evokes a smile when even now I think of
+how, having missed with both barrels two huge wild geese that leisurely
+floated twenty yards over his head, he threw a cartridge box and then a
+ramrod in his passion at the unoffending birds.
+
+But the shot had scared other denizens of the plain, and bang, bang in
+every direction indicated that all our guns were in action as cheetahs
+and antelopes might be seen scuttling on all sides. Nothing further
+being left for us, we proceeded to count our bag and return to the
+farmstead.
+
+After a few days devoted to “braying” the skins and “curing” the antelope
+meat for future consumption, we resumed our dreary bumping “trek” into
+the interior in the hope of meeting with big game.
+
+Lions are occasionally, but rarely, met with in these parts, and it is
+with reference to a dramatic incident that might have ended fatally that
+I will confine my present remarks. Returning one evening to our
+location, with literally only three ball cartridges amongst us, one of
+the Kaffir boys descried in the distance a lion and lioness and three
+cubs. With bated breath and excitement running high, a council of war
+was hastily convened, and the pros and cons., the direction of the wind,
+and the dearth of ammunition having been variously discussed, it was
+decided that to attack them would be unwise, if not absolutely foolhardy.
+A wounded lion or lioness with its cubs is probably as dangerous as a
+man-eating tiger; yet, despite all our entreaties to the contrary, one
+daring spirit determined to attempt to stalk them.
+
+Loading both barrels of his rifle with ball, with the other solitary
+cartridge placed handily in his pocket, and divested of all other
+impediments, he hastily retired to make a circuit and so get within shot
+against the wind.
+
+Suddenly we heard the sharp report of his rifle, and then, after a
+second, we saw the lion make for the spot whence the smoke had come,
+whilst the lioness and the cubs scampered off in the opposite direction.
+
+Again there was a report, and next we saw Fellowes running with all his
+might, followed by the lion.
+
+What ensued may best be given in his own words, as narrated to us that
+night.
+
+“I had evidently missed my first shot, and whilst putting in my other
+cartridge, I saw the brute making for me; again I fired, and I saw it
+staggered him, but still he came on, and seeing a small pond a few yards
+off I decided to make for that. Barely had I risen to my feet when, with
+a roar, the brute was close behind me, and at the very moment I dashed
+into the pond he aimed a blow at me which grazed my forehead, and I fell
+prostrate into it. On recovering I cautiously peeped, and there the
+brute stood on the edge within three yards of me. Again I submerged, but
+every time I moved for air he roared, although afraid to enter the water.
+This went on for an hour, when conceive my delight at seeing him roll
+over from loss of blood.
+
+“Cautiously approaching, I found he was stone dead.”
+
+Fellowes had literally escaped death by a hair’s breadth; but the scar he
+carried with him to his grave affected his brain, and he was never the
+same man again. Had the lion been one inch nearer his skull would have
+been smashed like an egg shell. Years after I saw the lion’s head and
+shoulders at a well-known naturalist’s in Piccadilly, depicted life-like
+dashing out of the rushes that encircled the African pond.
+
+Our excitement for big game being temporarily satiated after our
+comrade’s narrow escape, we decided to direct our steps towards more
+peaceful pastures in the neighbourhood of Stellenbosch. Here large
+ostrich farms exist, and it was a unique experience to watch drafts of
+these huge birds being transferred from one farm to another. The
+procedure is original. Two or three mounted Kaffirs with long driving
+whips circle round and round the twenty or thirty birds, lashing them
+unmercifully on their bare legs till they start into a trot, which
+eventually ends in a pace that the riders at full gallop have difficulty
+in keeping up with. In my search for information I was assured that the
+feathers so much in demand for “matinee hats” were moulted from the
+birds; but this I found to be not strictly accurate, and much cruel
+“plucking” passed under my own observation. Ostrich egg omelette is
+delicious; six of us breakfasted off _one_ egg, and my sensations were as
+if I had swallowed an omnibus.
+
+But perhaps the most ridiculous experience to be obtained in South Africa
+is associated with the (apparently) inoffensive penguin. Any one looking
+at these sedate creatures at the Zoological Gardens would hardly believe
+that they can bite and take a piece out of one’s calf with the dexterity
+of a bull-terrier. It was shortly after the experience above related
+that we turned our steps towards Penguin Island, which lies to the south
+of Table Bay. We had been offered a “cast over” in one of the fishing
+boats that proceed there periodically in the interests of the lessee who,
+renting this valuable island for a few pounds a year, makes an enormous
+income by the sale of the guano.
+
+We had landed cheerily, and were roaring at the absurd attitudes taken up
+under every ledge and stone by these pompous old birds, when poor Bobby,
+going a little too close, was seized by the leg with the grip of a
+rat-trap.
+
+When the guano parties visit the island they combine another industry,
+and collect some thousands of eggs, which are considered a delicacy by
+the Africander gourmets.
+
+Personally, I found them too strong, although I plead guilty to having
+massacred some fifty penguins by knocking them on the head for the sake
+of their breasts. The oil that exhales from them for months, despite the
+alum and sifted ashes, is incredible; but they will repay the trouble,
+and after scientific manipulation by a London furrier are highly
+appreciated for muffs and boas.
+
+The albatross that swarm in the vicinity of Table Bay, and which are
+caught in large numbers by the Malay fishermen, enabled me to create a
+new industry. Finding that the flesh only was used by the Malays, I
+offered the handsome price of one penny for every pair of pinion bones
+duly delivered at the barracks; these I forthwith filed off at each end,
+and tying them into bundles, stuffed them into ants’ nests. Within a
+week they were as clear as whistles, and within a month I possessed a
+fagot of some hundreds. The recital of an absurd sequel may not be
+amiss. Albatross quills of twelve and fifteen inches are a popular
+species of pipe stem, which, when encircled with a threepenny silver band
+attached to a shilling amber mouthpiece, may be seen in leading
+tobacconists’ labelled twenty shillings. Entering a palatial
+establishment in Regent Street on my return home, I got the proprietor
+into conversation, and was assured that they were very difficult things
+to procure, and that he would gladly “pay anything” if only he could get
+some more. Having thoroughly compromised him, I returned next day with a
+cab full, and although exceptionally long and perfect, I was surprised to
+hear they were by no means up to the mark, and in my desperation accepted
+a box of cigars in exchange for what he probably cleared £50 on.
+
+Yet another experience—not strictly of a sporting character—was connected
+with sticks. On my return home I brought with me some hundreds of the
+rarest specimens from Ceylon, Mauritius, and the Cape. Conceive my
+disappointment, after an animated barter with Briggs, of St. James’s
+Street, to be grateful to accept any three of my own sticks mounted to
+order in exchange for what must have supplied half the golden calves of
+the West End with sticks varying from two to three guineas a-piece.
+
+The above two incidents exemplify what is described as the encouragement
+of British industries.
+
+At the risk of wearying the reader I will give an absurd incident that
+once occurred in India. We had organised a party to hunt up a tiger that
+had been seen near the village of Dharwar, not far from Belgaum. On our
+way to the rendezvous—where the serious search was to commence—one of our
+party who had wandered a little out of his course rushed frantically up
+to us, exclaiming: “I came suddenly within thirty yards of the brute fast
+asleep at the foot of the nullah.”
+
+“Well,” we all asked, “why didn’t you shoot him?”
+
+“’Pon my word, I had half a mind to,” was the heartfelt reply—“but, so
+help me bob, I funked it.”
+
+Touching the fringe of these vast hunting grounds will, I hope, be
+forgiven me, for although six thousand miles from London, they
+nevertheless bring up very happy memories of the long-ago sixties.
+
+Sir John Bissett, afterwards commanding the Infantry Brigade at
+Gibraltar, but at the time a resident at Grahamstown, was the Great
+Nimrod of the Cape.
+
+It was he that organised the elephant hunts for the Duke of Edinburgh, at
+one of which the Prince shot the immense beast whose head confronted one
+on entering Clarence House. Although I did not actually see it shot, I
+was not far distant at the time.
+
+It was weeks after our party’s return to Cape Town that Colonel Zebulon
+Pike brought me two splendid stuffed specimens of the boatswain bird, the
+rarest of the gull tribe.
+
+As I admired their mauve and white plumage and the two long scarlet
+feathers that constitute their tail, I could not resist remarking: “Why,
+Colonel, where did you get these?” To which he replied: “I shot them one
+morning after bathing, before you fellows were up.”
+
+There was not a boatswain bird within fifty miles of where we had been,
+and the specimens had evidently been cured for years.
+
+It was only a righteous lie, such as the generous “Colonel” could never
+resist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+EASTWARD HO!
+
+
+PERHAPS no ingredients are more certain to produce an explosion in a
+limited space than a Post Captain proceeding as a passenger on the ship
+of an officer some months his junior. It was my privilege once to watch
+one of these preliminary simmerings during the latter sixties and the
+subsequent inevitable dénouement.
+
+George Malcolm, who in his younger days had had a distinguished career as
+flag-lieutenant at Portsmouth, but for a decade had lived the indolent
+life of a German at Frankfort, being compelled by the regulations to put
+in sea time as a Post Captain, was proceeding with a new crew to
+recommission the _Danae_ on the West Indian station. It was not long
+before he developed his Teutonic acquirements. Smoking half the night in
+his cabin, he intimated to his crew that they might smoke when they
+pleased. Keeping his lights burning after hours, he next came into
+collision with the master-at-arms, who reported the irregularity to the
+captain, a peremptory order being issued that Malcolm was not to be made
+an exception, and that the regulations were to be enforced. The little
+man—Captain Grant, of the _Himalaya_—who thus entered the lists at the
+first challenge was well-known throughout the Navy as a veritable tartar.
+Standing little over five feet high, he had the body of a giant; his
+lower proportions were short and far from comely. These were the
+combatants for whom the arena was now cleared. Malcolm opened the attack
+by repeating the light-burning after hours. Grant retorted by ordering
+the master-at-arms to enter if necessary and carry out his orders. Next
+morning the two captains met in presence of their respective first
+lieutenants, and abused and accused each other of insubordination and
+mutiny.
+
+The crews meanwhile took up the quarrel, and some of the _Danae_ men had
+the temerity to cheek the master-at-arms. To this little Grant replied
+by tying up six of them to the shrouds, and giving them four dozen apiece
+with the cat. This checked the effervescence, and a few days later the
+ship entered Port Royal.
+
+Then followed reports. But the admiral was one of the psalm-singing
+school, and not possessing sufficient character to adjudicate upon it
+himself, referred the matter home. Meanwhile the _Danae_ was
+recommissioned and sailed away, the _Himalaya_ returned to Portsmouth,
+and so the matter ended.
+
+A flogging in the old days was a very “thorough” affair, and lost nothing
+in the matter of detail. Four stalwart boatswains stripped to their
+shirts stood like statues, on the deck reposed four green baize bags,
+each containing a cat.
+
+When all was ready the captain’s warrant was read—for it may or may not
+be generally known that every skipper, from battleship to pigboat, is a
+justice of the peace, and has the power of life and death on the high
+seas—and then the operation began. Occasionally some genius, having
+prearranged to outwit the authorities, would feign collapse by suddenly
+tucking up his legs; but a feel of the pulse and a nod soon adjusted
+matters, and the culprit was in “full song.” And then the little man
+made a speech, not too long, but very much to the point: “Now, my lads,
+when you want any more, you know where to come for it.” After which he
+cocked his cap, and descended to his cabin with his sword clanking
+behind. It’s a way they had in the Navy.
+
+All this, of course, was before the central authority was transferred
+from Whitehall to Whitechapel, and without expressing an opinion on the
+merits or demerits of corporal punishment, one may be permitted to ask:
+Are the bluejackets of to-day any better than Peel’s Naval Brigade in the
+Crimea, or the tough old tars that helped to quell the Mutiny? Are the
+specimens one occasionally meets smoking cigarettes and Orange Blossom
+tobacco superior to the old sea dogs that chewed what would have killed a
+rhinoceros and rolled quids of ’baccy saturated in rum? Perhaps yes,
+perhaps no. Be that as it may, flogging has ever been found the only
+deterrent for a certain class of scum which occasionally rises to the
+surface even in the Navy.
+
+On another occasion, when I was embarking at Portsmouth, barely had the
+_Himalaya_ left the side of the quay when the Honourable Mrs. Montmorency
+(afterwards Lady Frankfort), accompanied by her father, Sir John Michel,
+and a crowd of sisters, cousins, and aunts, might have been seen rushing
+frantically towards the slowly-moving trooper; but the cries fell on deaf
+ears, and the good ship continued her course.
+
+Next night in Queenstown Harbour a bumboat might have been seen
+struggling against wind and tide to reach the trooper lying a mile out at
+sea, which, on getting alongside, was found to contain the lady, who,
+since we last saw her, had undertaken a journey of four hundred miles,
+attended by every discomfort that travelling flesh is heir to, and all
+because she did not know little Grant, and expected to impress him by
+arriving five minutes late. The same lady very nearly had a similar
+experience a month later at St. Helena, and only just reached the deck as
+the “blue Peter” was being hauled down.
+
+It was on this same voyage that a subaltern, whose duties compelled him
+to be on deck at daylight, remarked to the navigating-lieutenant later in
+the day: “How splendid the sun looked this morning rising over the
+hills.” “Oh! yes,” was the snubbing reply, “we call that Cape Flyaway.
+Why, man, we are five hundred miles from the West coast.”
+
+That night, when hammocks were being issued, a cry of “Land on the port
+bow” brought all hands on deck, and lo! we were steaming full speed for
+land with 1,400 souls on board. Almost in front of us was an angry surf,
+a little beyond it tropical foliage was distinctly visible, and then
+followed the silence as when engines are stopped, and with extra hands at
+both wheels, the shout of “Hard a-starboard!” pierced the darkness, and
+we were going full speed in the opposite direction.
+
+Cape Flyaway cost poor little Piper a reprimand and half-pay for life,
+and an innocent wife and family—God help them—may still be suffering for
+that disregarded sunrise.
+
+When dear old Admiral Commerell succeeded Purvis as Commander-in-Chief at
+the Cape, things at Government House hummed as they had never done
+before, and the energy that the little man put into his hospitality was
+as conspicuous as when fighting on sea or on land. With more than the
+lives attributed to a cat, it is incredible that he should have survived
+a blunderbuss full of slugs on the Prah a few years later, which, fired
+point blank, drove half a monkey-jacket into his lungs. Though brought
+to Cape Town on the _Rattlesnake_, more as a formality than with any
+hopes of recovery, and for months after spitting up pieces of blue serge,
+he rallied as he had often done before, and the last time I saw him was
+in a Maxim gun show-room in Victoria Street, where, as “Managing
+Director,” he explained the intricacies of the weapon to every ’Arry that
+chose to look in, and so trade laid hands in his declining years on as
+brave a recipient of the Victoria Cross as ever trod a quarter-deck.
+
+When the flying squadron under Beauchamp Seymour was expected at
+Ascension on its return from the Cape, great excitement prevailed from
+the possibility of a visit, and a trooper that was “laying off” was in
+such deadly fear of any want of smartness being observable that the
+washing by the soldiers’ wives that had been permitted was made short
+work of, and petticoats, shirts, and socks that were fluttering in the
+breeze were ruthlessly ordered down, for fear some signalman should
+detect a strange signal and note it in the log-book. For this lynx-eyed
+race is incapable of being hoodwinked; indeed, so dexterous did they
+become in the Channel Squadron some years ago (and doubtless are so
+still) that they read the signals for fleet manœuvres before the flags
+were broken, necessitating the entire bunch being rolled into one, and so
+giving every ship an equal chance of displaying their smartness. Of the
+turtle we discussed recently, the “last phase” is to be seen in the
+smoking-room of a well-known hostelry in Leadenhall Street, where,
+peeping through the tanks, numerous specimens may be seen blinking and
+winking as if in reproach at the unfair advantage taken of them by
+perfidious Albion in leading them into captivity when guests of the
+nation and in an interesting condition.
+
+Ascension, as most of us are aware, is on the direct road to the Cape and
+within easy distance of St. Helena—a by no means unpleasant place,
+despite an unjust prejudice that attaches to it.
+
+It was on board a Union steamer that the absurd incident I witnessed took
+place, when the diamond fields were coming into notice and attracting
+speculators in every kind of ware likely to find favour amongst the
+natives, who had not then been educated in Houndsditch ways to the extent
+they have since arrived at. The genius who contemplated a rich harvest
+not discounted by any such absurd formalities as paying “duty,” declaring
+contraband, or propitiating officials apt to be too inquisitive, was a
+Hebrew jeweller of a pronounced type with the unusual adornment of
+carroty hair, who afterwards developed into a Bond Street shopkeeper, and
+may still be seen shorn of his sunny locks, which nevertheless still
+retain a pleasing suspicion of the blaze they once emitted. The chief
+officer was a shrewd individual, who long before we arrived at Table Bay
+had taken his passenger’s measure, and what added insult to injury was a
+presentation to him of a wretched ring the wholesale price of which could
+not have exceeded ten shillings. Had he pressed a five-pound note into
+his hand it would have proved a less expensive procedure. The sequel was
+disastrous, as, passing through the dock gates, ’Enery was requested to
+turn out his pockets, and the percentage to the informant amounted to a
+very handsome sum. Who the informant was—actuated by duty!—it is
+needless to discuss, but our friend got to the Fields at last and turned
+a considerable profit on his “Brummagem” wares.
+
+Years later his enterprise again brought him into notice by providing a
+young ass (whom many will recollect), who had come into £70,000 on
+attaining his majority, not only with a flat, but completely furnishing
+it, and then smothering him with bracelets and bangles for personal wear,
+and trinkets and gimcracks that made him rattle to a greater extent than
+the historical lady of Banbury Cross.
+
+The sequel was more melodramatic. Within a year the entire £70,000 was
+gone, within another year the prodigal was in his grave, and, despite the
+strenuous efforts of an elder brother to recover a trifle from the
+clutches of a philanthropist, a feather merchant, and dramatic author—all
+since gathered into Abraham’s bosom—the shekels never changed
+hands—s’help me—and ’Enery is still one of the most respected Elders in
+Israel.
+
+It was in ’65 on the island of Ascension, where I happened temporarily to
+be, that an awful tragedy was on the verge of being investigated by a
+Court of Inquiry, but it was realised that the terrible Atlantic rollers
+that perpetrated the cruel deed and the innocent children that were the
+victims had left no data for the groundwork of the conventional farce.
+
+It was on that dismal rock whose only merits are its strategical coaling
+position and its inexhaustible supply of turtle that during the season
+when those insidious rollers of unbroken water, without sound, without
+warning, suddenly spread over the sandy beach, two or three children of
+an officer of Marines were suddenly swept off their legs and carried by
+the back-wash with the velocity of a millstream towards the coral reefs a
+hundred yards out at sea, where death awaited them.
+
+On the one side an expanse of sand that forthwith resumed its placid,
+shining surface, on the other a ripple literally bristling with fins of
+the most voracious species of shark known to naturalists.
+
+In a second it was all over, and the crimson pall that covered the face
+of the blue Atlantic told all there was to tell of the terrible
+catastrophe.
+
+The few observation boxes containing niggers on the look-out for turtle
+had seen nothing, heard nothing; the only eye-witness was the helpless
+nursemaid, and only because there was nothing to tell was the farce of a
+“Court of Inquiry” abandoned.
+
+The turtle industry is simplicity itself: so soon as one advances
+sufficiently inland a couple of niggers rush out and turn her over and
+lug her into the tank, when her laying days are over, for it is the
+female only that is captured as she comes to deposit her eggs, and no
+human eye has ever seen nor any alderman ever guzzled amid the green fat
+of the male animal.
+
+Ascension is best described as the most God-forsaken spot in creation,
+except perhaps Aden, to which must be given the palm. Here the naval
+garrison seem to have grown into a mechanical routine, and only change
+their monotonous wading through sand by an occasional day’s leave to
+Green Mountain, on whose summit the only three blades of grass on the
+island struggle for existence. How these gallant men are chosen for this
+dreary duty it is difficult to say; no alien princeling attached to the
+British Navy ever appears to have his turn; and one must assume that
+“merit tempered with non-interest” is the qualification that controls the
+roster. Of the turtle there can be no two opinions; in unlimited
+supplies, two huge tanks, through which the tide ebbs and flows, contain
+some hundreds of these delectable creatures, delectable only with the aid
+of the highest embellishments, but the most nauseous sickening of
+“_plats_” in the shape of rations. Every man-of-war calling at Ascension
+is compelled to ship a dozen, which lie for weeks on deck, their heads
+resting on a swab, and the hose playing on them of a morning, while a
+stench more insidious than the vapours of a fried-fish shop attaches
+itself to everything; one’s hair-brush reeks like a turtle fin, and
+whether one eats, drinks, or smokes, it’s _toujours tortue_.
+
+During the Ashanti war, Ascension appeared at its best; in its
+comfortable hospital the wounded from spear and slug, and the dying from
+West Coast fever, obtained the best of attendance. In it I saw Thompson,
+of the Inniskilling Dragoons, just brought down from the Prah—one of the
+most popular men in the Army—die; whilst from it many a brave man has
+been carried to his last home, and many a sufferer who has entered its
+portals in apparently the last stage of fever and ague has been pulled
+round, and put on board with renewed life to return to England to bless
+the surgeons and curse Ascension.
+
+It was on my return home in ’69 that I met old Toogood (whom everybody
+knew) at Aden—who, rushing up to me, whispered, “Come along, I’ve secured
+a carriage,” and following with that glee that all who have crossed the
+Desert will appreciate, I was horrified to find he had all his bundles in
+the quarantine carriage.
+
+“Great heavens,” I exclaimed, “do you know what this means?” and he
+hardly gave me time to explain the pains and penalties before he was in
+full cry after the rascally Egyptian guard, who, realising he was dealing
+with a novice, had accepted a sovereign for placing him in a carriage by
+himself.
+
+In those long-ago days—and possibly still—every train had a quarantine
+carriage, entering which meant vigorous isolation till fumigation had
+taken place, and “even betting” that one’s cabin in the trooper at Cairo
+would have remained vacant homeward bound.
+
+When the Japanese were airing their aspirations at becoming the great
+naval power they now are, I witnessed one of their virgin attempts at
+navigating a warship under the control of British officers. Confident of
+their ability, and fretting to show what they could do, they one day
+insisted on landing their instructors and assuming temporary control of
+the ship. The development was not long in coming. Away flew the ship,
+in graceful circles round and round the bay, when suddenly a dashing
+manœuvre beyond the comprehension of the most enlightened observer, and,
+lo! she was steaming full speed for the shore. Within the hour she was
+well wedged on a sandy bottom, and a tidal wave not long after having
+considerately lifted her a few hundred yards higher up, the hull was
+converted into an hotel, and for years gave ocular proof of Japan’s first
+triumph in navigation. That was in the later sixties, when Togo was
+still in the womb of futurity.
+
+In those long-ago days, Yokohama had not attained its present respectable
+civilisation; top hats were sought after as the daintiest of fashionable
+attainments; every battered specimen on board fetched its weight in gold;
+open baths for mixed bathing were to be met with in the public
+thoroughfares; British regimental guards disarmed fanatics before
+allowing them to enter the town; inlaid bronzes, miniature trees, and
+genuine curios were procurable; massive Birmingham products had not
+become an industry wherewith to catch the unwary; public crucifixions by
+transfixing with bamboo stakes (such as I witnessed in the case of the
+murder of a British officer) were still in full blast, and the sweetest
+little girls were to be bought for domestic service, and sent to be dealt
+with by the nearest magistrate on the breath of a suspicion of breach of
+fidelity. To go a mile beyond the Treaty Port was to court certain
+death, whilst to remain peacefully within the town and visit the various
+day and night entertainments was as delightful an existence as the most
+blasé reprobate could desire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+THE GUILLOTINE AND MADAME RACHEL.
+
+
+ON one of my numerous visits to Paris a notorious
+poisoner—Le-Pommerais—was awaiting execution by the guillotine.
+
+I am not of a cruel disposition, but I confess that certain sights afford
+me a morbid gratification, the more so as I know that one witness more or
+less can in no way affect the victim, who, in nine cases out of ten, is
+dazed, despite the bravado that is sometimes assumed.
+
+I had seen Müller and the pirates hanged in London, and a man “garrotted”
+at Barcelona; I had seen two soldiers shot at Bregenz on the Lake
+Constance, and now for the first time in my life I was within measurable
+distance of the Place de la Grève, where the most hideous drama,
+accompanied by all the pomp that a dramatic nation can introduce, was to
+be enacted one morning. But what morning? There was the rub, for the
+French are nothing if not original, and whilst permitting the unhappy
+victim to drink and smoke and play cards till 2 a.m. ruthlessly rouse him
+a couple of hours later, and roughly proceed to prepare his toilette.
+
+Inquire as I did, nobody could give me the day, and although on more than
+one occasion I had driven to the accursed spot and waylaid officials
+likely to know, their replies were invariably the same; nobody knew,
+nobody cared, it would be time enough when the fateful morning arrived,
+and then _voilà_; a rush of two powerful men on a defenceless, trussed
+fellow-creature; a shove with unnecessary violence on to a plank, a strap
+or two unnecessarily tight to secure the unresisting wretch; a jerk and a
+flash of burnished steel; a quivering trunk, and a head squirting blood
+yards high, and the handful of sawdust, and the roar of a delighted
+multitude as “Monsieur de Paris” leisurely proceeds to light a cigarette,
+and within five minutes the whole ghastly paraphernalia has disappeared
+within the gloomy parallelograms of La Roquette.
+
+Terrible as all this sounds, is it not less terrible than the secret
+executions indulged in by our own merciful laws? There at least
+excitement must for the time hold the victim till the supreme moment
+arrives, whilst here the granite walls, the grim officials, the parson
+mumbling prayers, divest the function of everything but strict
+officialism, which to the culprit must indeed be the very bitterness of
+death.
+
+When the name of Count La Grange was more familiar to English ears than
+it is in these forty years later days, it was my delightful privilege to
+know—if not the redoubtable Count himself—a fair and important member of
+the distinguished sportsman’s family circle. I had, indeed, seen
+“Waterloo avenged” at Epsom in the June of 1864, when Gladiateur left the
+field miles behind; but it was only in the following autumn that I made
+the personal acquaintance of the goddess who professed a kind of
+allegiance to the sporting Frenchman, and re-avenged, as it were, the
+vengeance that had been meted out to my country the previous summer.
+
+I was in Paris under the wing of Bob Hope-Johnstone, the terrible major,
+whose dislike was a thing to be avoided, and whose blow, as a certain
+bric-à-brac pair of Israelite brothers once discovered to their cost, was
+like the kick of a horse. We had dipped pretty freely into the delights
+of that most delightful of cities, when, sipping our coffee one evening
+on the terrace of the Café de la Paix, we were transfixed—at least, I
+was—by what appeared a heavenly being stepping out of a brougham. In
+those benighted days a brisk trade was done in the “Cabinets particulier”
+that extended over the upper floors of the historical café, and night
+after night the best men and the loveliest women of the Third Empire
+resorted thither by battalions and indulged in every delight that the
+best of cookery and the best of wines never failed to stimulate.
+
+An obliging _maître d’hôtel_ had informed me who the lady was, and
+possessing a reserve of assurance, since happily simmered down into a
+reserved and retiring disposition, I sent up my name without further ado
+and craved permission to pay my homage. It would be absurd and nauseous
+to repeat the beautiful phrases one poured into the ear of a being who,
+if alive now—which is doubtful—has probably not a tooth in her head;
+suffice to say she was a superb écarté player, and initiated me into the
+rudiments of the game. It seemed marvellous to me that such a goddess
+should strive so laboriously to overcome in me the violation of every
+canon of the game, but in those long-ago days I was fair of hair and of a
+ruddy countenance, and the coincidence may not have been so extraordinary
+after all. Often of an afternoon I visited her hotel in the Bois de
+Boulogne, and it was only when La Grange was known to be in Paris that my
+going in and coming out was in the least circumscribed.
+
+Sitting at a table, with his blubber lips lingering over a glass of
+absinthe, was our old acquaintance, “Jellybelly,” who, noticing the late
+Duke of Hamilton and Claud de Crespigny within hail, bellowed out, “Will
+your Grace tell me the French for crab, I feel itching for one at
+dinner?” and on being told a species—not of the sea—shouted in his purest
+Franco-Houndsditch, “_Garsong_, _apporty moir un morphion rôti_.”
+
+As the police have lately been somewhat in evidence over the commission
+as to whether they are as corrupt as some people consider them, an
+instance of over-zeal that occurred long ago will, I trust, be laid to
+heart in future criticisms.
+
+Lord Chief Justice Cockburn and his boon companion, Serjeant Ballantine,
+once witnessed an act of unnecessary brutality towards a female in the
+Haymarket.
+
+“Why this unnecessary violence, my man?” inquired the amiable Sir
+Alexander.
+
+“Mind your own business, or I’ll show you,” was the reply of the zealous
+constable, and within a trice the female was forgotten and her two
+champions found themselves in Vine Street.
+
+“Name,” inquired a priggish inspector of the Lord Chief Justice, and on
+being informed, he added: “No doubt—we’ve heard this kind of thing
+before.”
+
+“Yours,” he continued, addressing the great serjeant. “Quite so,” he
+added, on being told, and nothing but the entry of an official who
+recognised them prevented the two great legal luminaries from spending a
+night in the cells.
+
+As every one is aware, neither of these distinguished men were saints,
+but they respected the ordinary laws of humanity, and did not admit that
+every poor wretch who had stooped to folly was the legitimate target for
+kicks and cuffs and lying testimony.
+
+Although a leap into the seventies is necessary, the sensation that the
+so-called “Great Turf Fraud” caused must excuse a brief reference to it.
+It was in 1877 that an old lady with ample means conceived the brilliant
+idea of adding to her income by speculating on the Turf. Her choice of
+colleagues, however, was not a happy one, and before long she was led
+blindly by a genius known to posterity as Benson. Amongst his staff was
+a brilliant phalanx, the two brothers Carr, Murray, Bates, and the
+inevitable solicitor, one Froggatt.
+
+A house in Northumberland Street, since pulled down, was where these
+worthies matured their plans, and by the irony of fate, in the very next
+house lived Superintendent Thompson, of Bow Street, who, astute as he was
+reputed to be, was oblivious of the cauldron that was simmering for
+months under his very nose.
+
+It was in the suitable month of April—possibly the first—that the old
+lady (Madame Goncourt) opened the ball by paying out in driblets £13,000.
+When the sum rose to £40,000 she became sceptical, and took her first
+sensible step and consulted a lawyer.
+
+At this point the police came on the scene, and again the genius of
+Benson appears, for he, grasping the situation, bought up certain
+Scotland Yard inspectors who, for a consideration—and a large
+one—undertook to warn the chief culprits how and when danger was to be
+avoided.
+
+Consultations in Northumberland Street were now deemed risky, so the
+venue was changed to the “Rainbow Tavern” (now known as the “Argyll”), a
+pot-house abutting on Oxford Street, and there the original conspirators
+and their solicitor, augmented by Inspectors Druscovitch, Meiklejohn, and
+Palmer, arranged for telegrams and other details to defeat the ends of
+justice.
+
+The commonplace sequel will suggest itself to most people. Benson, the
+two Carrs, Bates, and Froggatt were sent to penal servitude for fifteen
+and ten years respectively. Later on Benson “peached” on his police
+allies, who in November were tried, Druscovitch and Meiklejohn receiving
+two years each, and Palmer being acquitted.
+
+Madame Goncourt, it may be added, was still without her profits.
+
+After his fifteen years, Benson was currently supposed to have burst out
+as the director of numerous shops in the metropolis, where electric
+appliances for the instant cure of gout and inhalers warranted to contain
+“compressed Italian air” and to make everybody a Patti or a Mario were to
+be had for a guinea; whilst a further guinea entitled the purchaser to a
+consultation with the specialist.
+
+This, however, did not last long, and Benson ended his career shortly
+after by throwing himself over the balustrade of an American gaol.
+
+Surely never was a commonplace affair dignified with such a high-sounding
+title! ’Twas the novelty that did it.
+
+Where one voracious old woman existed in the seventies, the twentieth
+century could produce a dozen, and where two policemen were caught
+accepting blackmail, a battalion exists to-day, only their tactics have
+marched with the times, and instead of receiving their levies in
+pot-houses, they secrete themselves in cupboards and receive “hush money”
+from alien brothel-keepers. At the same time, they affect the sorry
+appearance associated with badly cut frock-coats and brimless tall hats.
+The boots, however, beat them.
+
+Very few of the _dramatis personæ_ appear to be left.
+
+Druscovitch for some years was employed as a Strand hotel detective.
+Meiklejohn may occasionally be seen, unkempt and down-at-heel, in the
+vicinity of mediocre saloon bars (glasses only), and Madame Goncourt has
+long since explained to the Recording Angel that though she was the
+first, she certainly won’t be the last, who has missed the certainties
+that go begging on the Turf.
+
+But the sixties were celebrated for a much more amusing and widespread
+example of human credulity and vanity than the humdrum so-called “Turf
+frauds,” with their unsavoury, commonplace ingredients of a voracious old
+woman, a bevy of sharpers, and a file of flat-footed police-inspectors.
+
+It was in 1868 that London heard that a divine being was amongst them,
+coming no one knew whence, and whose age no one could guess, gifted with
+the power of arresting Time, restoring youth and beauty, and ready—for a
+consideration—to impart these blessings to all who sought her aid.
+
+It was in the narrowest part of Bond Street that the goddess pitched her
+tent, and to say that the traffic was impeded would convey but a poor
+idea of the congestion that retarded locomotion in that worst-built of
+thoroughfares. Old men desirous of enamelling their bald old pates,
+ponderous females with scratch wigs and asthma, and girls, pretty and
+ugly, with defects capable of improvement, hustled and tussled to pay the
+fee of the wonderful enchantress who guaranteed to restore youth to old
+age and make one and all “beautiful for ever.”
+
+Madame Rachel was a bony and forbidding looking female, with the voice of
+a Deal boatman and the physique of a grenadier. The robes she affected
+when receiving her clients, and the crystals and gimcracks that clattered
+at her girdle, might well inspire awe, as, emerging from behind massive
+curtains, she approached her victim with some phrase suggestive of
+“knowing all about it,” which, indeed, was part of the system when time
+and opportunity permitted, or the status of the client justified it.
+
+Rachel rarely smiled; when she laughed—which was rarer still—it was the
+laugh of a rhinoceros. Assisting her was a beautiful girl, of the
+_beauté du diable_ type, with the suspicion of a cast in one of her
+heavy-lashed eyes, which made her more bewitching than ever.
+
+“How old do you think my daughter?” once inquired the arch-impostor of a
+man from whom I had it direct. He having replied “Seventeen,” she turned
+to the siren with, “Tell this gentleman, my child, what you saw during
+the French Revolution, and how I took you to see the execution of Marie
+Antoinette.”
+
+And then “Alma,” coached to perfection, turned her bewitching eyes as if
+peering into eternity, and began a string of twaddle that ought not to
+have deceived a Bluecoat boy.
+
+Everybody consulted Madame Rachel. If a youth got a black eye at young
+Reed’s sparring rooms (at the “Rising Sun” in Whitehall) it was in Bond
+Street he was made presentable for any fashionable function in the
+evening, and in every conceivable walk of life one met evidence of the
+universal sway of enamel; whilst nightly at the Opera, Rachel and her
+daughter occupied a box on the grand tier and surveyed the battalions of
+old men and old women, youths and maidens, who had passed through their
+hands.
+
+But despite Alma’s charms, she had a narrow squeak of being implicated
+with her mother in the prosecution that followed later on—instead,
+however, she was taken in hand by Lady Cardigan, and made a success in
+Grand Opera. But her troubles were not yet over, and aspirants to her
+heart and hand (enamelled and otherwise) were in considerable evidence
+nightly at the Opera house in Paris.
+
+It was at the hands of one of these she met her fate. Carried away by
+jealousy or scorn, he shot her from the stalls, though, happily, not
+fatally. After this she disappeared, but not before displaying a
+magnanimity that was refreshing in the reputed daughter of the
+flint-hearted Rachel, for she refused to prosecute her assailant, who
+escaped with a nominal imprisonment.
+
+A controversy afterwards ensued in the daily Press as to the becoming
+height of female dress; some advocated up to the shoulder, others below,
+some a tape, some nothing; but the important question has not yet been
+set at rest, and never will be, despite County Council edicts in the name
+of propriety, or the hypocrisy and flunkeydom that stalk over the land.
+
+Alma in all her glory had her own ideas, and appeared invariably and
+literally in “semi-nude.”
+
+Years after she was recognised by a former adorer at the Concordia Music
+Hall in Constantinople, but all the _beauté du diable_ had vanished; the
+cast still remained, but failed to ravish—Nature had worked through the
+enamel with which her skin had been saturated, and Alma pure and simple
+remained—a living example of how “Time turns the old days to derision.”
+
+Madame Rachel’s experiences were of a more prosy description, and,
+prosecuted a few years later by a Mrs. Pearce—said to have been a
+daughter of Mario’s—whose jewels she had annexed in addition to a
+considerable sum, she was relegated to five years’ penal servitude.
+
+But the most amusing incident has yet to be told, although it seems
+incredible that even so foolish a woman should court publicity by joining
+in the prosecution. The report of the trial in any old paper of the
+period will convince the most sceptical of the absence of exaggeration in
+this ungarnished recital.
+
+Mrs. Borrodale was a frivolous old lady of some forty years, whose
+wealth, vanity, and frequent visits to Bond Street marked her out as a
+desirable client to the astute Rachel.
+
+“You’ve won the heart of a great lord,” was her greeting one day, “who
+desires to see you in your natural beauty.”
+
+Mrs. Borrodale, having first blushed through her enamel, was not long in
+consenting, and having stipulated for a subdued light, and that the
+“view” should be through a curtain, proceeded to be enamelled from head
+to foot. On a given day she posed in all the beauty of her birthday
+suit, and Lord Ranelagh, who was the reputed admirer, peeped through a
+slit in the tapestry—and, let us hope, then fled.
+
+His lordship, it may be added, eventually died a bachelor. The very
+title is extinct, and the enamelled old Venus never assumed a coronet.
+After this, the old sinner was known as “Peeping Tom,” and the foal by a
+thoroughbred stallion of repute, Peeping Tom (which, however, never
+attained any position on the Turf), was christened Ranelagh.
+
+Incredible as it may appear, this silly old woman capped her indiscretion
+by joining in the prosecution instituted by the stockbroker’s wife, and
+so published to a gaping world what might have better been left to the
+imagination.
+
+Rachel has, it is currently reported, two sons at the present moment
+practising as solicitors under high-sounding names, who not long ago
+wriggled out of a nasty case by the skin of their teeth, whilst their
+less acute Christian colleagues suffered the penalty attendant on
+blackmailing.
+
+But the Rachel establishment was by no means the only type that
+flourished in the long-ago sixties by pandering to human frailty, and the
+premises occupied by Madame Osch, situated at the corner of Piccadilly
+and St. James’s Street—and now, like Babylon, with not one stone standing
+upon another—could have told some curious tales of wards in Chancery and
+Hebrew jewellers, and of Tommy and John, and of how Tommy was arrested as
+he started for Monte Carlo, and how John, smelling a rat, evaded ill
+effects; but the recitation would only bore a twentieth-century reader,
+for human nature then is the same nature as now, and what flourished then
+in one shape still flourishes in another, and the only reflection worthy
+of consideration is that, if these things were done in the green tree,
+what is being done in the dry?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+REMINISCENCES OF THE PURPLE.
+
+
+THE death of the Duke of Cambridge recalled many instances of the kindly
+nature of the old warrior. Abused and ridiculed by the ignorant and
+unwashed for actions—more or less imaginary—that he was supposed to have
+been guilty of in the Crimea, it is established on the testimony of
+eye-witnesses that no man showed more personal bravery at Inkerman than
+the late illustrious Duke. Oblivious to danger, and literally wandering
+in and out amongst the dense masses of Russians, he seemed to bear a
+charmed life, and if on any occasion he selected an umbrella—which is by
+no means admitted—what greater proof of absolute indifference to danger?
+As well might one accuse Fred Burnaby of cowardice for confronting the
+Dervishes in the Soudan with a simple blackthorn. But royalty has its
+penalties as well as its advantages, and if the grandson of George III.
+was subject to intense excitement verging on delirium under exceptionally
+trying circumstances, let us be fair, gentlemen, and give the bluff old
+warrior his dues.
+
+In the zenith of his career, so unable was his Highness to refuse almost
+any personal request, that it was found necessary to chain a bulldog of
+the most pronounced Peninsular type on the very threshold of the
+Commander-in-Chief’s office.
+
+For this service General MacDonald was selected as military secretary,
+and any one who had the capacity of passing his meshes was enabled to
+present himself at his Royal Highness’s next levée.
+
+These functions were divested of all formality; an extension of leave, a
+request to go to the depôt, an application to join the service companies,
+was invariably more successful if preferred personally, and “Well, sir,
+what is it?” with a kindly shake of the hand saved many a heart-burning
+and protracted filtration through a dozen departments, usually ending in
+a snub.
+
+Seated in the room was his aide-de-camp—the solitary specimen in uniform.
+Colonel Fraser, V.C., had commanded for years the celebrated
+“Cherry-bobs” (11th Hussars), and if a little unsociable whilst in actual
+command, the mannerism had entirely disappeared in the courteous
+mouthpiece of the Duke.
+
+Gazing one afternoon on the placid features of the “Royal George” before
+the new War Office, the occasion on which he once visited a station not
+100 miles from London and told the colonel and officers generally that he
+didn’t believe a word they said, and stamped and fumed and swore and
+threatened, came vividly to my mind. There had been a fracas in the
+canteen during the officers’ mess hour, which eventually developed into a
+riot, and then was quelled. No one in the mess-house appears to have
+heard it, and it was only next morning that the matter, after
+investigation, was reported to the Horse Guards. The “Royal George,” who
+was distinctly apoplectic, ran many such chances of combustion in his
+younger days, for the old warrior was by no means mealy-mouthed and was
+not above playing to the gallery, as represented by the Press, and
+although he could never aspire to rank with General Pennefather, he
+could, when circumstances demanded, swear like any trooper.
+
+It was the 11th that Lord Cardigan brought to such a wonderful state of
+perfection and for the command of which he had paid upwards of £20,000
+over regulation. It was in the 11th that the fire-eating Colonel shot a
+captain of his regiment dead in a duel, and only saved his commission by
+his overwhelming interest. It was a regiment in which every private was
+dressed and redressed at his Captain’s expense as if his uniform had been
+made by Poole, and where the overalls and sleeves were so tight that one
+marvelled how officers or men ever got in or out of them.
+
+What a beautiful regiment it was in the old sixties. And one felt it was
+a national crime to send such troops to India. But all that, alas! is
+long since changed; the Pimlico Clothing Works, economy, and paternal
+letters to _The Times_ have done the rest; and the abolition of purchase,
+the breech-loader, and the new type of British officer have completed the
+inauguration of the “slops” period, and abolished once and for ever
+well-dressed regiments and _esprit de corps_.
+
+Whilst on this delicate subject memory suggests many presumptuous
+reminiscences.
+
+When Prince Alfred was a supernumerary Lieutenant of the _Racoon_, what
+an ideal brick he was! Scraping on a fiddle, myself at the piano, and
+Arthur Hood (lately become Viscount Bridport) with a brass instrument of
+deafening intensity, what harmonious discord has not shaken the rafters
+of the old Casemates at Gibraltar; and when the Prince seated himself at
+the piano and sang “In ancient days there lived a squire,” one forgets
+the retiring potentate that eventually ruled over Gotha.
+
+It was on one of these occasions that during a lull in the festivities a
+steady tramp outside was wafted to our musical ears, and going out to
+discover the cause, I was horrified to see an elderly gentleman, ablaze
+with decorations, in evening attire, who, with numerous apologies, was
+conducted into the room.
+
+He was in fact the Duc d’Alençon’s equerry, who had honoured the private
+concert with his presence, and for the past hour had sat a transfixed
+witness of our marvellous harmony. At this time the _Racoon_ was
+commanded by Count Gleichen—a nephew of the late Queen’s—who once
+happened to be on the P. and O. at the same time as myself, both
+returning from leave to Gibraltar.
+
+In those days life on a P. and O. was a mass of enjoyment: youngsters
+joining their regiments, old officers—naval and military—returning from
+leave, the ship’s officers, all joined nightly in harmless jokes, and as
+lights were put out and the steward’s room closed, each roysterer
+ascended to the upper deck and songs and what-not ensued. No one entered
+into the revelry more than Count Gleichen, as, with a tumbler of
+contraband grog, he quaffed and laughed as only a British sailor can.
+
+Years later, when the Duke of Edinburgh commanded the _Galatea_, he still
+remembered his musical colleague, and a pretty snake ring with a
+turquoise in the head that he presented to me was lost in an accident
+that nearly cost me my life.
+
+Boating has never been my forte, and in endeavouring on one occasion to
+enter a boat, it drifted with the impact, and, with one leg on the jetty
+and another in the boat, I soused into six feet of the muddiest “old
+Mole” water. Eventually I was hooked out, more “mud than alive,” but the
+ring was gone, and still reposes in the turgid waters of the
+Mediterranean.
+
+Amongst the ship’s officers was Lord Charles Beresford, at the time the
+most inveterate Fourth Lieutenant of practical jokers. After a function
+at which the Duke and the ship’s company were on one occasion present,
+the local Inspector-General of Police, who had deemed his presence
+necessary, was staggered next morning by shouts of laughter as he
+peacefully slumbered in his bungalow.
+
+Rushing to the window, conceive his horror on seeing Charlie Beresford,
+in his full uniform, strutting about and giving words of command in
+imitation of the original. But he was a bumptious buckeen, and no one
+sympathised with his discomfiture.
+
+When the King was doing his goose-step at the Curragh, it was my high
+reflexed privilege to be doing mine in the next lines.
+
+It was during this season that a march for the whole division was ordered
+to Maryborough, twenty-two miles distant.
+
+The Prince, who was attached to the Grenadiers, accompanied us to and
+fro, and even after the fatiguing march might later on have been seen in
+the streets of Maryborough, accompanied by “his governor,” General Bruce,
+as if nothing unusual had occurred. It was lamentable the effect it had
+on those splendid types of humanity, the 1st Grenadiers, and their superb
+“Queen’s Company,” every man six feet and upwards. But the misfortune
+can hardly be laid to their charge; suddenly transferred from their sweet
+pastures in London, what wonder that the good things they had revelled in
+should seek an outlet on the dusty plains of Kildare! And so it came to
+pass that every ditch contained a guardsman, and long before the
+twenty-two miles had been covered every ambulance in the division was
+filled by the warriors.
+
+The Vansittart family in those long-ago days were represented by some
+interesting scions.
+
+“The Croc,” in many ways perhaps the most unique, was a remnant of a past
+generation who adapted surroundings to modern requirements, and was the
+terror of gouty old members who dined before four when “table money” came
+into force, consumed a loaf in a sixpenny bowl of soup, and drank their
+beer for nothing.
+
+“Pop,” on the other hand, was of the highly-refined class, had a flat in
+Paris, and only occasionally flashed upon London immaculately clothed in
+ultra-fashionable attire. But the gem of the family was the dear old
+Admiral, who combined apparently the better points of “The Croc” and
+“Pop” in his own weather-beaten person. At the time I knew him he was in
+command of the _Sultan_, and had the reputation—in conjunction with
+Admiral Hornby—of being the highest authority on ironclads. But what
+brought him into notice was a combination of fearless seamanship and
+bluff loyalty whilst in command of the _Hector_ that convoyed the Prince
+of Wales from Canada. For days the weather had been rough till, coming
+up Channel, Vansittart hailed a fishing smack, and possessing himself of
+the pick of the last haul, bore down upon the _Serapis_. Attached to her
+yard-arm was a basket, and as the spars of the two frigates literally
+rattled against one another, down dropped the offering at the feet of the
+heir-apparent.
+
+No greater exhibition of nerve and seamanship can well be conceived; had
+the manoeuvre resulted in accident no explanation would have satisfied
+“my lords,” for a nasty sea was running and sea room was advisable,
+however commendable the motive. It was an action worthy of association
+with Sir Harry Keppel sailing out of Portsmouth Harbour in sheer devilry
+with every stitch of canvas set, and showed Admiral Vansittart as in
+every way worthy of being bracketed with that grand old bluejacket of the
+past.
+
+The man who commanded the _Galatea_ and afterwards the _Sultan_, was a
+very different person to the lieutenant of the _Racoon_, and genial and
+adventurous as he once was, the captain soon developed into a morose and
+unpopular commander.
+
+On board the _Galatea_ was the pick of the Navy, whilst the social
+addenda associated with the supposed requirements of Royalty were
+represented by the present Lord Kilmorey, Eliot Yorke, Arthur Haig, and
+sprigs of nobility, “interest,” and nonentity. Of the two equerries
+Eliot Yorke’s forte may best be described as of the delicate type; so
+delicate, indeed, that it may be left to the imagination. Arthur Haig,
+on the other hand, was of the firm and reliable sort—a reasonable
+proportion of “suaviter” with a superabundance of the other thing. It
+was he whose daily duties included an epitome of the events of the day,
+intended for no eyes but those of the Queen, and carefully included in
+every “bag” that left the ship. Haig, in short, had been nominated by
+the Queen, and was the only man on board of whom the Prince had a
+wholesome dread. Eliot Yorke, on the other hand, was the selection of
+the Royal Alfred. Not that the Prince was without his appreciation of a
+practical joke, and when a fat old gentleman that had been specially
+invited to a farewell lunch at one of the foreign stations suddenly
+discovered that the ship was under way and a jump into the bumboat
+imperative, no laugh was heartier nor louder than that of the Royal
+joker.
+
+The Duke, it was said, was one of the best commanders of an ironclad; he
+had the technique at his fingers’ ends, and knew every bolt and screw
+from the keel to the upper deck; some toadies even asserted he was
+superior to Hornby or Vansittart, and was a typical British tar in the
+truest acceptation of the term. His sympathies, as I have heard him
+assert, however, were German to the backbone, and his eyes would fill
+with tears when singing some guttural sonnet of the Vaterland. His
+marriage brought things to a head, and the curtain was rung down on Lardy
+Wilson and all other workers of iniquity after the garden party at
+Clarence House in honour of his wedding.
+
+With an excellent piper like Farquharson, engaged to combine grooming and
+boot cleaning with occasional pibrochs and reels, it may be accepted that
+H. R. H. was a thorough believer in the precept that “it is more blessed
+to receive than to give.”
+
+His proficiency as a musician was another fable, and though he
+“graciously condescended” to be first violin at the Albert Hall
+Orchestral Society (founded by himself), uncharitable people are known to
+have asserted that the royal bow was soaped. But a point on which no two
+opinions can exist was the questionable taste he displayed on one
+occasion when entering Simon’s Bay. Every commander, as is well known,
+is bound to salute the commodore’s flag after taking up moorings; but the
+Prince had run up the Royal Standard—and so the commodore had to salute
+first. Etiquette demanded that this should be done—after, and not
+before—and the “reports” that followed ended as might be expected, and
+the good old sailor was shelved, and a scandal hushed up that some
+attributed to von-Kümmel and others to less potent causes.
+
+It was the most beautiful woman of the day in the long-ago fifties—the
+Empress of the French—that introduced the diabolical “appanage” known as
+the crinoline to conceal her “interesting condition,” and the peg-top
+heels that followed as a consequence, to give height to the unpleasant
+beam the crinoline involved on the wearer, were answerable for more
+accidents, _faux pas_, and unpleasantries than any combination of female
+adornments before or since.
+
+Once at St. Peter’s, Eaton Square, whose incumbent was known as Saint
+Barnabas, a fair worshipper was noticed still in a devotional attitude
+when the rest of the congregation had settled down to the fashionable
+discourse their souls thirsted for, but the posture continuing, the
+verger delicately approached, and found that nothing more serious had
+occurred than that her heels had caught in the hoops and that she was
+unable to move a peg. The hopes of an advertisement over a fashionable
+proselyte were thus shattered, and his reverence resumed his theme.
+
+On another occasion, returning from Cremorne at 2 a.m., when every cab
+had been taken, my attention was attracted by a handsome young cavalier
+tenderly supporting a fair sinner, who was leaning trustfully on his
+shoulder. It appears he had found her motionless and in tears on an area
+grating, her heel through her hoop, and the heel itself wedged as in a
+vice. Nothing but prompt action could save the situation, and the last I
+saw of the interesting couple was progressing by easy stages and heading
+towards Oakley Square.
+
+The same young cavalier might have been recognised not long since as a
+grim old warrior, munching a sandwich in the vestibule of Stafford House
+after the levée in honour of the Mutiny heroes!
+
+And the charming lad who was responsible for the introduction of the
+diabolical appendage. We all remember the shock that literally smote
+every heart when the news of the Prince Imperial’s untimely death reached
+England.
+
+A youth divested of every suspicion of affectation, possessing to an
+inordinate degree that fascination of manner rarely to be found except
+amongst the old nobility of France, discarding every comfort to fight in
+the ranks of an alien army, to be assegaied by a handful of Zulus! Was
+ever such irony of fate for the great-nephew of Bonaparte, who, had he
+lived, would assuredly by his charm have eventually won back his throne.
+
+One voice only struck a discordant note, the overrated Quaker Solon of
+Rochdale. “Perish India,” he once said in his wisdom. “He went out to
+kill the Zulus, and the Zulus killed him” was this time his funeral
+oration.
+
+It was in the early seventies—if I remember rightly—that I had many
+acquaintances amongst the various embassies and legations, which
+frequently brought me to the St. James’s, the club of the foreign
+attachés generally. My most intimate friend was Baron Spaum—at the time
+naval attaché at the Austrian Embassy—and at the present moment
+Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Austrian Navy. I was also familiar
+with Prince Hohenlohe and Count Mongela, of the same embassy, and, in a
+lesser degree, with Count Beust, son of the Austrian Ambassador. Amongst
+the Russians I knew Count Adelberg well, and it was through his
+representations that I eventually came into contact with that wonderful
+man Count Schouvaloff. Count Paul Schouvaloff at the time was Russian
+Ambassador in London. An intimate and trusted friend of the Czar, his
+Excellency had filled every office in his country that called for
+administrative and diplomatic talents of the first order. As Chief of
+the Secret Police his power was literally absolute and irresponsible; as
+governor of a vast province he had ruled almost as an independent
+sovereign; and in later years was the ruling spirit—and certainly the
+most difficult nut to crack—at the Congress of Berlin, when Lord
+Beaconsfield was accredited with having returned with “Peace with
+Honour.”
+
+It was as the guest of this historical personage that I one day found
+myself at Chesham House, eating the most delightful lunch, drinking the
+rarest Crimean wines, and marvelling at the courteous, retiring-mannered
+man who plied me with the most delicate attentions.
+
+His English, as may be supposed, was faultless, and so it was that my
+admiration was turned to astonishment when a personage to whom I assumed
+there could be nothing new under the sun asked me if I would do for him
+the great favour of piloting him amongst the sights of London.
+
+Not many nights later a muster of some dozen souls paraded at my rooms in
+Charles Street, and as all were scrupulously attired in pot hats and
+shooting coats it would have been difficult for the most observant to
+have sorted ambassadors or attachés from the less diplomatic clay made in
+England.
+
+The muster roll contained the Russian Ambassador, Count Adelberg, Count
+Beust, Count Mongela, Baron Spaum, Prince Hohenlohe, Colonel (Charlie)
+Norton, Sir Edward Cunynghame (Ned), the Duke of Hamilton, and my humble
+self.
+
+The programme had been settled prior to all this with the assistance of
+an ex-detective, who made a princely addition to his slender pension by
+piloting exploration parties to latitudes where much depended on
+diplomacy.
+
+Our first visit was to Turnham’s, a pot-house in Newman Street, where
+extensive arrangements had been made for some badger drawing under the
+personal auspices of Bill George. In later years this canine authority
+developed into a trusted dog-provider to the nobility, and resided in the
+vicinity of Kensal Green; at the time of which I write his transactions
+in dog-flesh were of a more miscellaneous character, and, as he once told
+me with pride, a letter addressed “Bill George, Dog Stealer, London,”
+would reach him without delay.
+
+Our next move was to Jimmy Shaw’s, but whether it was to Windmill Street
+or to a new house he took when his old place was demolished (next to the
+stage door of the Lyric Theatre) I cannot recollect.
+
+Here rats in sackfuls were awaiting us, amongst others a rough-haired
+mongrel terrier, which not long previously had performed the astounding
+feat of killing 1,000 rats in an incredibly short space of time.
+
+To see 1,000 sewer rats not long in captivity together in a pit, after
+having seen each one counted out by an expert rat-catcher diving into a
+sack, is something my enlightened twentieth-century reader will never
+again see in London.
+
+For, although not absolutely prohibited, the shadow of Exeter Hall was
+already spreading over the land, and the police—already tainted—were not
+to be trusted, even when a live ambassador was present.
+
+Tom King—ex-champion—had also consented, for a consideration, to again
+put on the gloves, and brought with him a burly opponent; the slogging
+that ensued was really splendid, and Count Schouvaloff was literally in
+ecstasies.
+
+Our next move was to Endell Street, and here greater precautions were
+necessary, for cock-fighting was the unpardonable sin, and the pains and
+penalties terrible. So we split into twos and threes, and going by
+different ways eventually found ourselves in the cock-pit below ground.
+
+Tom Faultless was the last of the old type of British bulldog sportsman.
+Over seventy years old, he had in his youth assisted at bull-baiting,
+dog-fights, cock-fighting, and every sport that once gave unalloyed
+delight to high and low.
+
+To his able hands the conduct of this particular department was
+entrusted; nor were we long in realising that the supply was more than
+enough to meet the most extravagant demands, as, banging the door to, we
+were assailed by the defiant crows of a dozen gladiators, and this not
+far from midnight, when the denizens of that virtuous quarter were
+courting gentle sleep, and sounds carried like steam whistles.
+
+It was close upon 2 a.m. before we again resumed our pilgrimage, and with
+the aid of half a dozen four-wheelers wended our way towards the Mint.
+
+It is unnecessary here to repeat what is fully set out in a previous
+chapter, suffice to say our experiences on this occasion were equally as
+interesting of those of ’62, and that his Excellency vowed that amid all
+his miscellaneous experiences nothing so unique had ever equally
+delighted him.
+
+Five o’clock was striking as we drove past Covent Garden, and having
+suggested that excellent eggs and bacon were to be obtained at Hart’s
+Coffee House, all alighted and all ate as only diplomatists and night
+birds can.
+
+As we drove still further West the strings of market carts wafted the
+odours of country life and green things into our debauched nostrils, and
+we slunk away to our respective homes more or less delighted with our
+adventures.
+
+Whilst on the subject of Russian diplomatists a deafening experience I
+had a few years later may not be without interest.
+
+It was on the Grand Duke Alexis’s flagship that I had the honour of
+finding myself one of some sixty guests. In addition to the Russian
+battleship there were men-of-war of England, France, and Sweden in the
+harbour, and the Grand Duke was presiding at the table.
+
+Needless to describe the excellent cookery—for Russian cookery is very
+difficult to beat—nor the choice Crimean wines, many of which are
+unobtainable except at the Imperial table, but when the dinner was over
+the row _literally_ began.
+
+First the Grand Duke proposed the Czar’s health, smashing the glass so
+that no less worthy toast should again defile it, and 101 guns began a
+salute on the deck immediately over our heads.
+
+Barely had it ceased when the battleships of England, France, and Sweden
+followed—not simultaneously, but one after another—and again the Grand
+Duke arose and proposed the Queen of England to a repetition of the same
+diabolical accompaniment. And then followed the toast to the rulers of
+France and Sweden till the viands we had consumed seemed to rattle in
+their astonishment, and our heads to whirl with after-dinner loyalty.
+
+And when the adjournment to the main deck for coffee and cigarettes took
+place, it is no exaggeration to assert that we waded ankle deep through
+broken glass.
+
+The impetus given to that industry must have been enormous!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+DHULEEP SINGH—AND FIFTY YEARS AFTER.
+
+
+WE must pass back to the fifties to introduce a personage who figures
+conspicuously in the sixties and seventies, both in comedy and tragedy,
+and then shuffled off this mortal coil and has long since been forgotten.
+
+It was in ’56 when England had annexed Oude, that the ex-Queen and a
+considerable retinue arrived in London to “protest”—a process that must
+have enlightened, if it did not benefit, them in the ways of Imperial
+Policy.
+
+Half-a-dozen houses in Marylebone Road were secured as a temporary
+palace, and it was thither, as a lad, that I accompanied my father, who
+had once held high office in the Punjaub.
+
+The exact spot was where the Baker Street station now stands, and as one
+is nothing unless one is accurate, conceive entering the present dismal
+premises and finding in the “reception room” two or three beds, in one of
+which was the Queen; about the floor various courtiers were littered,
+whilst the atmosphere was so sour that one felt thankful the old woman’s
+reign had been cut short, and that henceforth sanitary arrangements, a
+tub, and other adjuncts of Christianity would prevail in Oude after the
+family had realised that “No mistakes were rectified after leaving the
+counter,” and that “Don’t you wish you may get it?” embodied our
+beneficent policy in the abstract.
+
+Baker Street at the time swarmed with Mohammedans, for, by a coincidence,
+Lord Panmure, the Earl of Dalhousie, and Sir John Lawrence—all more or
+less associated with India—had houses in that then fashionable
+neighbourhood, and so enabled the “protesters” to combine business with
+pleasure at comparatively slight physical inconvenience.
+
+Dhuleep Singh, another reputed Punjaubee, had also at this time been
+brought to England, and, although then pursuing the ordinary course of a
+schoolboy under General Oliphant, it was only later, as a Norfolk
+landlord, a masher, a burlesque conspirator, and the owner of the finest
+emeralds in the world, that he came into prominence.
+
+It is in these latter roles that we purpose to interest our readers.
+
+During the minority of this most fortunate Asiatic the savings out of his
+annuity of £40,000 a year had amounted to a colossal sum, and so Dhuleep
+Singh first comes into prominence, on attaining his majority, as a
+Norfolk squire and the owner of Elvedon Hall.
+
+An excellent shot, it was some few years later that he made the
+sportsmanlike wager with Lord Sefton to slaughter a thousand head of game
+within a day. Rabbits were included in the bet, and impossible as such a
+feat may appear, the tameness of the pheasants in the over-stocked home
+preserves made it quite feasible. For some reason, however, it never
+came off.
+
+At this period the Maharajah was in high favour at Court; his children,
+after his marriage with the unpretentious little lady he wooed and won at
+Singapore, were permitted to play with British Royal sprigs, and the
+Heir-apparent invariably had a week’s shooting with his dusky neighbour
+and a suitably selected party in the autumn.
+
+But despite the glamour these reunions may be supposed to have spread
+over him Dhuleep Singh had ever an eye to business, and a contract was
+made with Baily, the poulterer in Mount Street, for a shilling a head all
+round for all surplus hares, rabbits, pheasants, and what-not slaughtered
+at Elvedon Hall.
+
+The Maharajah’s behaviour meanwhile was all that was desirable. At Court
+functions he was resplendent in emeralds and diamonds, and the slab, six
+inches by four, on his swordbelt was said to be the finest emerald in the
+world.
+
+The jewellers to whom was deputed the task of cutting, setting, and
+otherwise improving the barbaric gems of the youthful prince are said to
+trace their present Bond Street position to this fortunate selection.
+
+It was only when his Highness assumed evening dress that visions of
+Mooltan, Chilianwallah, and Goojerat faded from one’s brain, and a podgy
+little Hindoo seemed to stand before one, divested of that physique and
+martial bearing one associates with either warriors or Sikhs, and only
+requiring, as it were, a chutnee-pot peeping out of his pocket to
+complete the illusion.
+
+During the sixties and seventies Dhuleep Singh was in evidence
+everywhere. An excellent whist player amongst such admitted champions as
+Goldingham, Dupplin, “Cavendish” (on whist), and others, he was to be
+found every afternoon at the Marlborough, or East India, or Whist Club
+backing his opinion, and damning his partner if he ignored his “call for
+trumps;” whilst every evening found him at the Alhambra graciously
+accepting the homage of the houris in the green-room, and distributing
+9-carat gimcracks with Oriental lavishness.
+
+During this period apparently the Punjaub occupied only a secondary
+position in his mind, and we next find him occupying a spacious flat in
+King Street, Covent Garden, and it was there, doubtless, that visions of
+charging at the head of the splendid horsemen of the Punjaub and the
+wresting of India from British rule first entered his romantic brain; for
+the Maharajah was a poet, though happily none of his effusions appear to
+have been preserved. He may also have recollected that the Koh-i-noor
+was once a crown jewel of Runjeet Singh, and his Highness was
+passionately found of baubles.
+
+Often have I seen him of an evening pacing to and fro outside the “Shirt
+Shop” (as the Whist Club was affectionately called) maturing those
+foolish plans that deprived him of his income for a while and led him
+into straits that it is painful to realise. Occasionally, indeed, he
+would rave at the injustice of the beggarly income the Government of
+India accorded him, and then it was he conceived the brilliant idea of
+coquetting with Russia for the simultaneous rising of the Punjaub and a
+Russian invasion of India.
+
+Not that one Sikh would have stirred at his call, and his proclamation
+fizzed and went out like any squib at a Brock benefit. Added to this,
+Russia rucked on him and his Highness fell into disgrace.
+
+But still his vanity led him on, and he essayed to start for India, and
+shipped as Pat Casey, though why Pat, and what part of Ireland Casey
+hailed from will ever remain an unfathomable mystery.
+
+The hero, however, never got beyond Aden, where he was politely invited
+to retrace his steps. The “last phase” was as brief as it was
+lamentable. Settling in Paris he again married. Then poverty
+necessitated the sale of his jewels, sickness overtook him, and, broken
+in body and mind, he asked and received pardon for his many foolish acts.
+
+After his escapades in Paris he is said to have written to the British
+Government, “_Capivi_,” evidently intending to reiterate the cypher
+telegram attributed to Sir Charles Napier, the conqueror of Scinde,
+“_Peccavi_” (a mot that will appeal to all classical readers). Thereupon
+he was forgiven, and shortly after he died, and so the race of the “Lion
+of the Punjaub” went out like a lamb.
+
+What became of the second wife I never heard, what became of the Alhambra
+lass and the dusky tadpoles that drove about the King’s Road at Brighton
+history does not tell, for “Love is a queer thing, it comes and it goes,”
+and all that remains to the present generation is the nebulous tale of a
+misguided man who kicked down wealth, position, and a happy old age in
+the reckless pursuit of a silly ambition.
+
+
+
+FIFTY YEARS AFTER.
+
+
+I cannot permit this opportunity to pass without reminding every reader
+of the momentous issues that were for ever set at rest by the incredible
+heroism of our army during the Mutiny in September fifty years ago, and
+without encroaching on the beautiful story by W. H. Fitchett, within the
+reach of everybody for 4½d., one may legitimately ask why many incidents
+that then occurred have never been explained.
+
+What is the _true_ version of the “_Stone_ Bridge” being left _open_ at
+Lucknow?
+
+Why is it invariably confused with the “_Iron_ Bridge?”
+
+What was the _true_ reason of the Cawnpore reverse?
+
+No history yet written has ever explained these points, which, however
+justifiable at the time, may surely, after fifty years, have light thrown
+upon them, and if Lord Roberts would give his version, many—including the
+old brigade—would have their curiosity set at rest.
+
+And touching those glorious days, what return has a grateful (!) country
+made to the remnant that remains? An invitation to a levée and a
+sandwich and a photographed group afterwards! A 5th Class Victorian
+Order would have left nothing to be desired. For my part if I pass a
+drummer boy of the brave 93rd I feel an irresistible inclination to raise
+my hat in homage to a successor of those invincible Highlanders. And
+then the irony of it! MacBean, the adjutant who passed through those
+continuous hurricanes of shot and shell without a scratch, died of
+lock-jaw, when in command of the regiment some twenty years after, from
+cutting a corn.
+
+Every patriot will forgive a digression on the day (December 6th) these
+lines are being written, for it is a landmark in the annals of the Army
+as recording the _last_ occasion (fifty years ago) that British infantry
+advanced in line in old Peninsular formation—in slow time—halting
+periodically and dressing on their coverers as we see on a Hyde Park
+parade, under a terrific fire of shot and shrapnel, and then, breaking
+into the old-fashioned charge, the irresistible cheer, and cold steel as
+a climax.
+
+For on that decisive day the Gwalior contingent, 80,000 strong,
+splendidly drilled, the flower of the Sepoy Army, was shattered by Colin
+Campbell and his handful of 3,400 men, and the neck of the great Mutiny
+was broken.
+
+No man living to-day who heard that crumpling sound and that avenging
+cheer can ever—will ever—forget it, and it behoves you, my masters, to
+remember, when you see the red and white-striped ribbon on the mendicant
+selling matches, or his more fortunate comrade patrolling outside a shop
+door, that in the words of Colin Campbell: “Every man of them that day
+was worth his weight in gold to England.”
+
+And here one is reminded of a German prejudice of the Dowager Queen
+Adelaide (whom we all prayed for in our youth), who at levées and Court
+functions insisted on kilted officers appearing in “trews”—the absence of
+the “breeks” being too shockingly shocking.
+
+And whilst on this subject I am reminded, by the recent death of George
+FitzGeorge at Lucerne, of many incidents more or less military.
+
+At Gibraltar as late as ’65 was a sentry posted on a promontory that
+originally commanded a view of the Straits—but which a high wall had
+subsequently obliterated—whose orders were “To keep a sharp look out and
+immediately to report if the Spanish fleet was in sight.”
+
+The Governor at the time was Sir Richard Airey, the most courteous of the
+old English school of gentlemen, but probably the worst
+Quartermaster-General that ever permitted boots and blankets to
+accumulate at Balaclava and brave men to freeze and starve at the front.
+It was an inspiration of his to utilise the stores with which Gibraltar
+is permanently provisioned by a periodical issue of salt pork rations
+that had accumulated since the Crimean War. Needless to add, much was
+mouldy, and many the complaints, and on one occasion when a vehement
+report reached him, he replied: “Leave it here, it shall be seen to.”
+Not long after invitations were issued for a dinner at the Convent, to
+which the “Board” on the rotten pork were invited.
+
+The banquet was the finest a French cook could produce, and one dish with
+“_Sauce Robert_” especially appreciated.
+
+“That, gentlemen, is your rotten pork, and shows you how some men are
+never satisfied,” was his Excellency’s appropriate (!) comment. But
+there is not a _cordon bleu_ in every regimental cook-house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+THE LAST OF THE OLD BRIGADE.
+
+
+I WILL now relate as a fitting end to these long reminiscences what I
+witnessed forty years ago in the island of Mauritius, when death was
+having a fine harvest by the ravages of a plague, and how a
+hurricane—terrific in even that so-called focus of hurricanes, and
+compared with which the storms we occasionally encounter in Merrie
+England are but gentle zephyrs—obliterated all the germs of infection.
+
+It was in ’67 that a terrible epidemic—new to science—burst without
+warning on the beautiful island of Mauritius. Its very symptoms were
+unfamiliar to the faculty, and so, for a better name, it was called
+jungle fever. Fever and ague were its chief characteristics, followed by
+absolute prostration, and death with alarming rapidity.
+
+Like its dread ally cholera, its first appearance was irresistible; then
+the attack became less formidable, and as the atmosphere became saturated
+with its poisonous germs, every living thing suffered from exhaustion,
+and man and beast literally dragged one leg after another, and almost
+prayed for release.
+
+The scourge, it was supposed, had been introduced by the 100,000 Madras
+coolies who worked on the sugar plantations under conditions as nearly
+approaching slavery as our beneficent Government would admit.
+
+It was under these depressing circumstances that a British regiment, 800
+strong, and in the best of health, was landed, and within a month not 100
+would have been available for duty. Not daring to keep them in Port
+Louis, where the deaths were some 400 a day, the regiment was split into
+fragments and billeted wherever an empty outhouse or a few obsolete tents
+could afford temporary shelter. But the ingenuity of the inefficient
+staff in no way averted the danger, and within a month a dozen minor
+centres were created, where British soldiers succumbed and died who ought
+never to have been disembarked.
+
+Not an officer who was sufficiently well but had to read the burial
+service almost daily over Protestant and Catholic comrades, and not a
+drum was heard whilst the scant ceremony was being repeated and repeated
+in its terrible monotony.
+
+To make matters worse quinine, which ordinarily costs a few pence, was
+selling at auction at £30 per ounce. Then the supply ran out, and so
+valuable did the drug become that the dose a dying man’s stomach could
+not retain was carefully bottled up for the next urgent case.
+
+Soon the very wood for coffins ran short, and the carpenters who made the
+ghastly necessaries were themselves dead or dying, so long trenches were
+improvised in which the dead were laid in rows.
+
+Every house bewailed a departed relative, for there was no pitying angel
+to sprinkle the door-posts in that remote isle of the sea, and the sound
+of wailing went up from Indian compound and European cantonment alike as,
+smiting their breasts, the cry ascended to Brahmah and the God of the
+Christians to stay the hand of the destroying angel.
+
+Truly the grasshopper had become a burden and desire failed, when a
+change as sudden as the arrival of the terrible scourge ensued, and a
+hurricane, unprecedented in its violence, swept over the island for days.
+
+Fields of sugar cane, ripe for the sickle, were laid low in a twinkling;
+houses were unroofed, and tents blown into space; huge bridges were
+twisted like corkscrews, and bolts weighing a ton were hurled about like
+cricket balls. A heavily-laden goods train, standing outside the station
+(as instanced by the Governor in his official report), was turned on its
+side, and, joy of joy, the terrible plague and its insidious germs were
+wafted into eternity. And when the death roll was called a few months
+later, what a cloud of victims did it show! Bishop Hatchard, not long
+arrived, whose funeral I attended; the General, who came home to die; the
+wives and daughters of many it is needless to recapitulate, and brave
+soldiers innumerable discharged as medically unfit or still sleeping in
+that distant oasis of the Indian Ocean.
+
+But even this awful drama has associations that lend themselves to
+comedy. A representative of a Deep Sea Cable Company, who was
+conspicuous for his flowing mane and superabundant hair, emerged from his
+illness as smooth as a billiard ball, and the local snuff-coloured wig he
+donned to hide his nakedness was as bewildering as it was irresistible.
+
+The coolies, too, desirous of apprising their friends in Madras of their
+safety, and thinking it a favourable opportunity to defraud the Revenue,
+would slip unstamped letters into the post, oblivious of the columns of
+names that appeared weekly in the local paper as not having been
+forwarded in consequence of insufficient postage. And then the Creoles—a
+snuff-and-butter combination of English, French, and Indian—desirous of
+airing their European pretensions, would hail one with: “Ah, the
+plague—we are now far from IT,” or, anxious to be polite, would add: “I
+have heard your name with great advantage.”
+
+Sitting round a blazing fire some few years ago at Christmas, in the
+comfortable chambers (since demolished) at the corner of Hanover Square
+and George Street, three friends were discussing the various changes they
+had witnessed together in the past forty years. Not that the
+conversation was unattended with drawbacks, for a gang of “waits” were
+disseminating discord through the still hours of the night. An asthmatic
+harmonium was the chief culprit, and bore on its back the blasphemous
+inscription, “Let everything that hath breath praise the Lord,” the
+remainder of the orchestra being a clarionet and a fiddle; all the
+operators had red noses, and the instruments suffered accordingly. A
+public-house within measurable distance may explain the welcome silence
+that occasionally intervened and justify the assumption that it was
+responsible for the discord.
+
+Be that as it may, “The voice that breathed o’er Eden”—with whisky
+variations—does not lend itself to concentration of thought or deed, save
+of an irreverent kind, so I will conclude by describing my companions
+whom we’ve frequently met in our various rambles.
+
+Of these, one was a country-looking squire with grey hair and cropped
+beard, who, on closer inspection, was recognisable as the wiry bruiser
+who had thrashed the “Kangaroo” thirty years previously at the Alhambra;
+the other was Bobby Shafto, still erect and soldier-like, but divested of
+the curly locks that had won their way into everybody’s favour a decade
+previously.
+
+For Bobby had only just left the Service, after holding a series of
+personal staff appointments through the influence of powerful friends of
+the days of his youth.
+
+So great, indeed, had been his interest at the Horse Guards
+that—admittedly, the worst of company officers—he was discovered to
+possess military talents of the highest order. He was “a born leader of
+men” it was asserted; he had a “capacity for organisation” and for
+“licking a hopeless rabble into a military force.” Had he continued
+soldiering he would doubtless have been covered with “orders,” appointed
+Governor of one of our important fortresses, given the command of an Army
+Corps, or created a peer—as many an amiable donkey with interest has been
+before and since.
+
+But both these good fellows have since passed away, and I—only
+I—remain—like a modern Elijah—to commune within myself of the various
+incidents with which we were associated in the long-ago sixties.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE END.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Printed at The Chapel River Press_, _Kingston_, _Surrey_
+
+
+
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, London in the Sixties, by One of the Old
+Brigade
+
+
+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.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: London in the Sixties
+ with a few digressions
+
+
+Author: One of the Old Brigade
+
+
+
+Release Date: November 11, 2013 [eBook #44163]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LONDON IN THE SIXTIES***
+</pre>
+<p>This ebook was transcribed by Les Bowler</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">
+<a href="images/logo.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Logo of Everett &amp; Co."
+title=
+"Logo of Everett &amp; Co."
+src="images/logo.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p><a name="pageiv"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+iv</span>First Edition,</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>June, 1908.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Second ,,</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>September, 1908.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Third ,,</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>March, 1909.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p>Cheap ,,</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>March, 1914.</p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h1>London in<br />
+The Sixties</h1>
+<p style="text-align: right">(WITH A FEW DIGRESSIONS)</p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p class="gutindent">By<br />
+ONE OF THE OLD BRIGADE</p>
+<p>London:<br />
+EVERETT &amp; CO. LTD.<br />
+42 ESSEX STREET,<br />
+STRAND, W.C.</p>
+<h2><a name="pagevii"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+vii</span>CONTENTS</h2>
+<table>
+<tr>
+<td><p><span class="GutSmall">CHAPTER</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p>&nbsp;</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="GutSmall">PAGE</span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">I.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p>1860</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page1">1</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">II.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Tower</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page13">13</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">III.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Mott&rsquo;s and Cremorne</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page25">25</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Kate Hamilton&rsquo;s and Leicester
+Square</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page37">37</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">V.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Night Houses of the
+Haymarket</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page48">48</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Evans&rsquo;s and the Dials</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page61">61</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Ratcliff Highway</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page73">73</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">VIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Booths on Epsom Downs</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page83">83</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">IX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Racing</span> <i>par
+Excellence</i></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page94">94</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">X.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Epidemic of Cards</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page111">111</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Coup de Jarnac</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page127">127</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Public Hanging of the
+Pirates</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page130">130</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Hostelries of the
+Sixties</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page140">140</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Drama (Legitimate and
+Otherwise)</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page151">151</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Mostly &ldquo;Otherwise&rdquo;
+(continued)</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page163">163</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Usurers and Millionaires</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page175">175</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Some Curious Fish of the
+Sixties</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page182">182</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XVIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Spiritualism and Realism</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page192">192</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><a name="pageviii"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. viii</span>XIX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Rock and the Cape</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page205">205</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XX.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Eastward-ho</span>!</p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page222">222</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XXI.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The Guillotine and Madame
+Rachel</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page232">232</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XXII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Reminiscences of the Purple</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page243">243</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XXIII.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">Dhuleep Singh and Fifty Years
+after</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page257">257</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><p style="text-align: right">XXIV.</p>
+</td>
+<td><p><span class="smcap">The last of the Old Brigade</span></p>
+</td>
+<td><p style="text-align: right"><span class="indexpageno"><a
+href="#page264">264</a></span></p>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<h2><a name="page1"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 1</span>CHAPTER
+I.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">1860.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">London</span> in the sixties was so
+different from the London of to-day that, looking back through
+the long vista of years, one is astonished at the gradual
+changes&mdash;unnoticed as they proceed.&nbsp; Streets have been
+annihilated and transformed into boulevards; churches have been
+removed and flats substituted; night houses and comfortable
+taverns demolished and transformed into plate-glass abominations
+run by foreigners and Jews, whilst hulking louts in uniform,
+electro-plate and the shabby-genteel masher have taken the place
+of solid silver spoons and a higher type of humanity.&nbsp; So
+extensive indeed has been the transformation, that, if any
+night-bird of those naughty days were suddenly exhumed, and let
+loose in Soho, he would assuredly wander into a church in his
+search of a popular resort, and having come to scoff, might
+remain to pray, and so unwittingly fall into the goody-goody ways
+that make up our present monotonous existence.</p>
+<p>The highest in the land in those benighted days turned up
+their coat collars and rubbed shoulders after dusk with others of
+their species in recreations which, if indulged in now, would be
+tantamount to social ostracism, or imperilling the
+&ldquo;succession.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page2"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 2</span>It was,
+in short, the tail end of the days of the Regency, changed,
+virtuous reader, for better or worse.&nbsp; It was, nevertheless,
+distinctly enjoyable and straightforward, for it showed its
+worst, and blinked nothing in hypocrisy.</p>
+<p>The only recommendation for this appearance is its
+authenticity; every incident passed within (or very near) my ken,
+for I was a veritable &ldquo;front-rank man&rdquo; in that
+long-ago disbanded army&mdash;a veteran left behind when better
+men have passed away&mdash;one of the few who could attend a
+muster parade of that vast battalion of roysterers, and who, by
+sheer physical strength, has survived what weaker constitutions
+have succumbed to&mdash;a living contradiction of the theory of
+the &ldquo;survival of the fittest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was one morning early in 1860 that I proudly saw my name in
+the <i>Gazette</i>&mdash;as a full-blown ensign.&nbsp; I had
+scanned every paper for weeks, although aware that our late
+gracious Sovereign (or her deputy) could hardly have had time to
+decide the momentous question as to whether I was to be a
+fusilier, a rifleman, or a Highlander, so short was the period
+between passing my examination and the announcement I so
+fervently awaited.&nbsp; But I had great Army interest, and so it
+came to pass that, within six weeks of leaving Chelsea Hospital
+(where the examinations took place), I held a commission in a
+distinguished regiment.</p>
+<p>To give the number of the dear old corps would at best be
+misleading, for numerals and the prestige that attached to them
+were wiped out long ago by one scratch of the pen of that great
+civilian who remodelled our Army from what it was when it
+suppressed the Mutiny to what it became before the Boer War.</p>
+<p>England at this period bristled with soldiers&mdash;bronzed
+old warriors with beards down to their waists, who had not seen
+their native shores for twelve or fifteen or twenty years; who,
+till they were scraped (in conformity with St. James&rsquo;s
+campaigning ideas), <a name="page3"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+3</span>looked fit to do anything, or go anywhere&mdash;men who
+had survived the trenches and the twenty degrees of frost in the
+Crimea, and sweltered twelve months later at Gwalior, Jhansi,
+Lucknow, and Delhi, and had at last found their reward, amidst
+cocked hats, red tape, recruits&rsquo; drill, and discharge, in
+that haven of rest, &ldquo;merrie England.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>My future regiment, then on its way home, was no exception to
+the rule, and I remember, as but yesterday, the comparisons I
+drew a few weeks later on the Barrack Square of the (then) new
+barracks at Gosport, between the pasty-faced
+&ldquo;strong-detachment&rdquo; from the dep&ocirc;t and the
+grand old veterans that towered over them.</p>
+<p>And every man-jack of them was possessed of valuable
+jewels.&nbsp; Where the worthy rogues had captured the loot needs
+not to inquire, suffice to say that oriental stones worth
+hundreds were retailed for a few shillings, and found their way
+to the coffers, and tended to build up the fortune, of an astute
+Hebrew who, by &ldquo;the encouragement of British
+industries,&rdquo; eventually became a knight, and died not long
+ago in the odour of sanctity, rich and respected&mdash;as all
+rich men do.</p>
+<p>It was amid these surroundings that I began my military
+career, despite the fact that every rascal with anything to sell
+had radiated towards Gosport from every point of the compass.</p>
+<p>Gosport and Portsmouth were in those days the first stepping
+stones in the filtration towards Aldershot, after which, and only
+after a drill season, the grandest soldiers England ever
+possessed, were considered as presentable troops.</p>
+<p>The barrack squares in those happy days, after a regiment had
+landed, resembled oriental bazaars rather than the starchy,
+adamant quadrangles familiar to the present generation.&nbsp;
+Every forenoon officers and men were surrounded by hucksterers of
+every care and creed, and one&rsquo;s very quarters were invaded
+<a name="page4"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 4</span>by Jews and
+Gentiles anxious to sell or buy something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the most arakristic trap in the west of
+England, so &rsquo;elp me Gawd; isn&rsquo;t it, Cyril?&rdquo; one
+Hebrew would inquire of another, as the points of an ancient
+buggy and a quadruped standing in the square were extolled to
+ambitious youngsters; and &ldquo;Yes it is, so &rsquo;elp me
+Gawd,&rdquo; often succeeded in selling a rattle-trap that had
+done duty in every regiment stationed at Gosport from time
+immemorial.&nbsp; Old clothes-dealers, too, abounded by the
+score, ready to buy anything for next to nothing.&nbsp; But some
+of us youngsters were not to be caught like the veterans who were
+unfamiliar with dep&ocirc;t ways, and the judicious deposit of a
+farthing in a pocket now and again resulted in phenomenal prices
+for cast-off garments till the hucksterers &ldquo;tumbled,&rdquo;
+and the harvests ended; and so, between the goose step and a
+thousand other delights, the happiest days many of us ever
+enjoyed (though unaware of it at the time) passed slowly on.</p>
+<p>At this period the Volunteers had just come into existence,
+and, not having developed the splendid qualities they proved
+themselves possessed of during the Boer War, naturally came in
+for considerable chaff and ridicule.</p>
+<p>As a specimen of the senseless jokes that abounded at the
+time, I may quote what was generally mooted in military messes,
+that at a recent lev&eacute;e the volunteers who had attended had
+shown so much <i>esprit de corps</i> that Her Majesty had ordered
+the windows to be opened; and it is, I believe, an absolute fact
+that on one occasion an inspecting officer nearly had a fit when
+the major of a gallant corps appeared with the medal his prize
+sow had won pinned upon his breast.</p>
+<p>It was the Volunteer review in Hyde Park in 1860 that was
+responsible for my first appearance in uniform.&nbsp; <a
+name="page5"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 5</span>Determined that
+the review should lack nothing of military recognition, stands
+had been erected, for which officers in uniform were entitled to
+tickets for themselves and their relations.&nbsp; In an unlucky
+moment the announcement had caught the eye of a sister, with the
+result that, terribly nervous, nay almost defiant, I was marched
+boldly down to Bond Street on the day of the review, and,
+<i>nolens volens</i>, dressed at Ridpath and Manning&rsquo;s in
+my brand new cast-iron uniform.</p>
+<p>Conceive, kind reader, a wretched youth&mdash;dressed inch by
+inch by a ruthless tailor in broad daylight on a sunny afternoon,
+incapable of deceiving the most inexperienced by his amateur
+attempts of appearing at home&mdash;huddled into the clothes, and
+then hustled into the street by a proud sister and father, and
+some idea of my abject misery will be apparent to you.</p>
+<p>It was at the moment, whilst waiting on the pavement to enter
+our carriage, that a huge Guardsman passed and thought fit to
+&ldquo;salute.&rdquo;&nbsp; My first instinct was to wring him by
+the hand and present him with a sovereign; then all became
+indistinct, and I tumbled into the carriage.</p>
+<p>The excitement was too much for me&mdash;I almost fainted.</p>
+<p>A splendid specimen of the Hibernian type in my regiment was a
+man called Madden (and by his familiars &ldquo;Payther&rdquo;),
+who, as a character, deserves special mention.&nbsp; This giant
+had not long previously been &ldquo;claimed&rdquo; by an elder
+brother whilst serving in a Highland Regiment, and it was
+reported that on one occasion, when on sentry at Lucknow, the
+general officer impressed by his six feet three in full Highland
+costume, having pulled up and addressed him with, &ldquo;What
+part of the Highlands do you come from, my man?&rdquo; was
+considerably nonplussed by being informed, &ldquo;Oi come from
+Clonakilty, yer honour, in the County Cork.&rdquo;&nbsp; Our
+colonel, too, was an <a name="page6"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+6</span>undoubted Irishman by birth; but had succeeded, after
+forty years&rsquo; service, in being capable of assuming the
+Scotch, Irish, or English dialect as circumstances seemed to
+require.&nbsp; In addition, moreover, to an excessive amount of
+<i>esprit de corps</i>, he had the reputation of being the
+greatest liar in the Army; not a liar be it understood in the
+offensive application of the term, but incapable of accuracy or
+divesting his statements of exaggeration when notoriety or
+circumstances gave him an opening.&nbsp; This failing of
+&ldquo;Bill Sykes,&rdquo; as he was called, was so universally
+known throughout the Army, that one evening a trap was laid for
+him by some jovial spirits in the smoking-room of a famous Army
+club.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here comes old Bill,&rdquo; was remarked by Cootie, of
+the Bays, as the Colonel sauntered in with a toothpick in his
+mouth.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet a fiver I&rsquo;ll start a
+yarn he&rsquo;ll never be able to cap.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Done!&rdquo; cried Kirby, &ldquo;and if he
+doesn&rsquo;t keep up his reputation I&rsquo;ll pay you on the
+nail, and send in my papers in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good evening, Colonel,&rdquo; began Cootie.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I was just relating a most extraordinary coincidence that
+was lately told me by a man whose veracity I can vouch
+for&mdash;Shute of ours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed,&rdquo; replied the Colonel, filling a
+pipe&mdash;Bill invariably smoked a dudeen at the head of the
+regiment.&nbsp; &ldquo;By all means let me hear it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is simply this.&nbsp; Coming home on sick leave in a
+P. and O. not long ago, the look-out man descried half a mile out
+at sea what appeared to be a huge box; a long boat was
+immediately lowered, and when the derelict was brought on deck,
+conceive the astonishment of everybody in discovering that it was
+a hencoop, and a live man inside.&nbsp; It was a case of
+shipwreck it appears, and the man saved was the only survivor of
+some 180 souls.&nbsp; Rum thing, wasn&rsquo;t it? but some people
+have infernal luck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page7"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+7</span>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied the Colonel.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+believe I was horn under a lucky star; perhaps you will be
+surprised to hear that <i>I</i> was the man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A roar of astonishment greeted this admission, whilst Cootie,
+hastily thrusting a fiver into Kirby&rsquo;s hand, whispered,
+&ldquo;I presume you won&rsquo;t send in your papers
+to-morrow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But, despite his peculiarity, old Bill was universally
+popular.&nbsp; A splendid billiard player, he had in India
+created such excitement in a match for &pound;500, that even Lord
+Faulkland, the Governor of Bombay, who never parted with a
+sixpence without looking at it twice, was said to have put a gold
+mohur on it, and in later times I can remember the Club House at
+Aldershot being crammed to suffocation when the same redoubtable
+warrior licked Curry the Brigade Major, who till our arrival had
+no compeer.</p>
+<p>One curious experience he had had which he never tired of
+narrating: &ldquo;I was once waiting for the d&mdash; packet at
+Dover to take me over to Calais, and at the hostelry I met a
+d&mdash; Frenchman, who asked me if I could &lsquo;parley
+vous,&rsquo; and I said &lsquo;no,&rsquo; but offered to play him
+a game of billiards.&nbsp; We had a fiver on it, but I soon
+discovered that no matter where I left the balls the d&mdash;
+fellow made a cannon.&nbsp; I was only about three ahead of him,
+so when next I played I knocked a ball off the table.&nbsp; The
+first time the d&mdash; fellow sympathised with me, and picked up
+the ball; after two or three repetitions the coincidence appeared
+to puzzle him.&nbsp; &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t play if Mooser does
+this,&rsquo; he said angrily.&nbsp; &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t help
+that,&rsquo; I replied, and ran out with a break.&nbsp; He
+declined to go double or quits, so I pocketed the fiver, and
+often found myself laughing over it in the d&mdash; boat, where I
+was d&mdash; ill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This persistent swearing may sound curious to the student of
+to-day, but in those halcyon days everybody swore.&nbsp; The Iron
+Duke, it is well known, never opened <a name="page8"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 8</span>his mouth without a superfluous
+adjective, and General Pennefather, who commanded at Aldershot in
+my time, literally &ldquo;swore himself&rdquo; into office.&nbsp;
+On one occasion, when the Queen was on the ground, he wished
+every regiment so vehemently to the &ldquo;bottom of the
+bottomless pit&rdquo; that it frightened the gracious lady, who
+sent an equerry to remind him of her presence.&nbsp; The monition
+had the desired effect for ten minutes, when the bombardment
+commenced afresh, and brought the field-day to an abrupt
+termination.&nbsp; The Queen had bolted in sheer trepidation of
+an earthquake.</p>
+<p>Military examinations for direct commissions in those long-ago
+days were held at Chelsea Hospital, and extended over a
+week.&nbsp; On the occasion of my public appearance an
+extraordinary incident occurred.&nbsp; Every precaution, it was
+stated, had been taken against the papers getting into
+unauthorised hands, but hardly had the first day passed when
+every candidate was aware that the tout of a sporting tailor was
+prepared to sell the paper of the day correctly answered at
+&pound;2 a head.&nbsp; The conspirators met at the &ldquo;Hans
+Hotel,&rdquo; and donkeys incapable of spelling, and with no
+knowledge of any language but their own, passed examinations
+worthy of a senior wrangler.</p>
+<p>The miscreant who thus tampered with Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+stationery was one Pugh, and his employer (if I remember rightly)
+was one Cutler; but the golden shower came to an abrupt ending,
+as on one fateful morning (the last day) General Rumley ascended
+the gallery, and amid the silence of the Catacombs briefly
+announced:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The late examination is cancelled; candidates will
+attend again next Monday.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The consternation that ensued is beyond description.&nbsp;
+Jolliffe, who, I believe, had been measured for his uniform, did
+not join for at least a year after, and poor old Plummy Ruthven,
+who couldn&rsquo;t spell six <a name="page9"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 9</span>words correctly, abandoned all further
+idea of the Army.&nbsp; He was sitting next me on the first day,
+and I remember as if it were yesterday his whispered inquiry as
+to the correct reply to a mathematical question: &ldquo;At what
+hour between two and three are the hands of a clock opposite one
+another?&rdquo;&nbsp; The reply, it is needless to add, had to be
+&ldquo;worked out&rdquo; by figures, but thinking in the
+excitement he was asking the time I hurriedly whispered,
+&ldquo;Twenty minutes to one,&rdquo; and down it went on poor old
+Plummy&rsquo;s paper.&nbsp; During the subsequent days his
+papers, I fancy, were vastly improved, as he was a constant
+visitor at the &ldquo;Hans Hotel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Aldershot of the sixties was a very different place to
+what it is to-day.&nbsp; Three rows of huts&mdash;as the lines of
+three regiments&mdash;constituted the North Camp, and about an
+equal number and two blocks of permanent barracks represented the
+South Camp.&nbsp; During the drill season everything else was
+under canvas, and heaven help those who ever experienced the
+watertight capacity of the regulation bell tent.&nbsp; I can well
+remember one night, when the windows of heaven had been open for
+days, a dripping figure in regimental great-coat and billycock
+hat appearing in the mess tent with, &ldquo;The horse is
+disthroyed, and I don&rsquo;t know what the Jasus to do,&rdquo;
+and as he dripped at &ldquo;attention&rdquo; we realised it was
+only the adjutant&rsquo;s Irish groom that had been washed out of
+the temporary stable.</p>
+<p>These wooden huts were peculiarly adapted for practical
+joking.&nbsp; Within a week of my joining whilst contemplating
+with admiration, previous to turning in, my brand new possessions
+of portable furniture, I was astonished by a brick rattling down
+the chimney.&nbsp; Barely had I dodged it when bang came another,
+whilst not a sound disturbed the peaceful repose of the
+camp.&nbsp; &ldquo;Great heavens,&rdquo; I thought, &ldquo;there
+must be an earthquake,&rdquo; and rushing out <a
+name="page10"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 10</span>frantically
+to give the alarm, I paused, and on second thoughts
+returned.&nbsp; But in the few seconds that had elapsed there
+must have been another violent shock, for everything in my room
+was upside down&mdash;the bedding was capsized, my boots were
+swimming in the tub, table-cloths, carpet, everything one huge
+mass.&nbsp; It was then that it dawned upon me, &ldquo;this is
+the finger of man,&rdquo; and I proceeded to adjust my
+belongings.&nbsp; &ldquo;Anything up?&rdquo; now sounded through
+the window, and the appearance of two brother ensigns explained
+the rest.&nbsp; I was never molested afterwards.</p>
+<p>Practical joking, however, occasionally assumed serious
+proportions, and ended in courts-martial, as did the Crawley
+case.&nbsp; It was on this occasion that Sir William Harcourt
+first came prominently to notice by the brilliant oration he put
+into his client&rsquo;s mouth: &ldquo;Give me back my
+sword,&rdquo; was the dramatic phrase with which the old bully
+ended his address.&nbsp; As if Crawley cared one rap what became
+of his sword so long as the &pound;10,000 attached to his
+commission as colonel of the Inniskillings was safe.</p>
+<p>The Robertson court-martial, of which I was an eyewitness,
+also created a stir in the long-ago sixties.&nbsp; The colonel of
+the 4th Dragoon Guards was at the time one Bentinck, who, despite
+his heirship to the Dukedom of Portland, was about as uncouth a
+being as can well be conceived.&nbsp; As field officer of the
+day, no matter how late, he never missed dismounting and walking
+through the officers&rsquo; guard room without a word, as if he
+were inspecting the married quarters, and it was this amiable
+creature who eventually prosecuted, in conjunction with Adjutant
+Harran, as harmless an individual as ever posed as a
+sabreur.&nbsp; Captain Robertson was the son of a Highland laird,
+and, if I remember rightly, had a very handsome wife.&nbsp; What
+it was all about I have long since forgotten, though the cloud of
+witnesses that radiated towards the Royal barracks is in many
+ways impressed on my <a name="page11"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 11</span>memory.&nbsp; Captain Owen&mdash;an
+important witness as he described himself&mdash;was an officer of
+militia, and, more military than the military, he revelled in
+things military.&nbsp; His staple conversation was military; a
+sort of peakless cap his everyday head-dress; his very
+dressing-gown was frogged like a light dragoon&rsquo;s frock
+coat; for gloves he affected the buckskin class, and carried
+glove-trees and pipeclay, at least whilst in Dublin.&nbsp; These
+peculiarities were grafted on my memory by his having doubled up
+for six weeks in my solitary room in Dublin.&nbsp; I had spoken
+to him on one occasion, and in a weak moment invited him to
+mess.&nbsp; How it all came about I have no recollection beyond
+finding him located on me; having every meal at my expense, and
+incurring a mess bill of over &pound;8, which I eventually had to
+pay.&nbsp; &ldquo;D&mdash; it, old man,&rdquo; he often said,
+&ldquo;this is like old times&rdquo; (when the annual training
+was on, presumably); &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t tear myself away from
+the bugles.&rdquo;&nbsp; And he didn&rsquo;t, till peremptorily
+requested to go.</p>
+<p>Other witnesses of a more desirable type also swarmed for
+weeks at our mess.&nbsp; Ginger Durant, who had never been out of
+London since he left the 12th Lancers, was daily to be heard
+bellowing &ldquo;To the rag, to the rag&rdquo; to the tune of
+&ldquo;Dixey&rsquo;s Land,&rdquo; and General Dickson, a grand
+old warrior (happily still as fresh as paint) who commanded the
+Turkish contingent in the Crimea, champed his bit and cursed the
+necessity that detained him in Dublin.</p>
+<p>At Aldershot was a regiment that was supposed to have stormed
+some place with ours a hundred years before, and in those days of
+&ldquo;Regent&rsquo;s allowances&rdquo; and tolerably hard
+drinking the occasion of again meeting in camp could not be
+allowed to pass without various reciprocal hospitalities.&nbsp;
+Their colonel was an old toper who never consumed less than
+fifteen brandies-and-sodas after dinner, and well I recollect
+hearing a mess waiter, as he helped him on with his <a
+name="page12"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 12</span>coat,
+expressing the hope, in a whisper, that if a man came before him
+in the morning for being drunk, he would not think it necessary
+to give him forty-eight hours cells.&nbsp; But the interchange of
+civilities was by no means over with the dinner, and a dozen of
+our heroes insisting on seeing their guests home, deliberately
+swam the Canal, and their comrades not to be outdone, insisted on
+seeing our contingent back, till the innumerable duckings
+restored sobriety and every one retired to his respective
+hut.</p>
+<p>Not having been at the storming in the Peninsula, I had
+retired to bed early.</p>
+<p>The purchase system, however personally delightful, was
+undoubtedly a very cruel regulation.&nbsp; I myself within seven
+years passed over five men who had joined when I was two years
+old; but the injustice of it never struck me till on one occasion
+the junior major of a regiment in the same brigade, who had got
+his commission on the same day as I had, turned me out as
+subaltern of a guard.&nbsp; But he had not obtained this luck
+without risking &ldquo;Yellow Jack,&rdquo; for exchanging to a
+West India regiment and jumping from bottom to top in every grade
+by bribing the entire regiment was a thoroughly recognised
+arrangement by our amiable authorities.&nbsp; D&rsquo;Arcy
+Godolphin Osborne was an exponent of this brilliant bare-backed
+(or bare-faced) vaulting, and despite being the brother of the
+Duke of Leeds was not an ideal field officer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Purchase&rdquo; literally killed poor &rsquo;Gus Anson,
+brother of the Earl of Lichfield.&nbsp; With a constitution
+shattered since Lucknow, where he won the V.C., night after night
+found him arguing against its abolition in the House of Commons;
+and the almost nightly intimations I sent him, at his request,
+&ldquo;that we had enough for Baccarat&rdquo; did the rest, and I
+eventually saw the best and bravest of men on his death-bed at
+Dudley House.</p>
+<h2><a name="page13"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+13</span>CHAPTER II.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE TOWER.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">About</span> this time all England was
+ringing with what was known as the &ldquo;Trent affair&rdquo;;
+10,000 troops had been ordered to Montreal, of which a
+considerable portion were Guards, and so it devolved on certain
+line battalions to garrison London, and we were ordered to the
+Tower.</p>
+<p>It was the regimental guest-night, and all the plate of which
+the regiment was so proud decked the table in the dark wainscoted
+room of the Mess House.&nbsp; In the middle of the table stood a
+centre-piece displaying the soldiers in the uniforms of the days
+of Marlborough, the Peninsular, and later on, when the hateful
+Albert Shako did duty as the headgear of British infantry;
+extending down each side were scrolls containing the names of
+brave men who had fallen with their faces to the enemy at Quebec,
+Quatre Bras, and the Redan, whilst flanking the massive trophy
+were silver goblets varying in size&mdash;from those that held a
+quart down to others of more modern dimensions, indicative of
+presentations on promotion, marriage, or &ldquo;selling
+out.&rdquo;&nbsp; It had, indeed, once been a custom for the last
+joined ensign to drain the largest tankard on his first
+appearance at mess; but that was in the days when four bottles
+under a man&rsquo;s belt was deemed a reasonable amount, and
+before the Regent&rsquo;s allowance enabled every one to consume
+nightly a half-glass of port or sherry free of expense.</p>
+<p>The Colonel, as may be supposed, was in great form, each of
+his yarns exceeding in improbability <a name="page14"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 14</span>the one preceding it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Yes, gentlemen,&rdquo; he was saying, &ldquo;I remember my
+father saying how at Quatre Bras the regiment found itself
+confronted by the 88th French Infantry Corps, and he overheard
+the right-hand man of his company saying, as he bit off the end
+of his cartridge, &lsquo;Jasus, boys, here&rsquo;s a
+case&mdash;here we are opposite the French Connaught
+Rangers!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was saying, gentlemen,&rdquo; the Colonel&rsquo;s
+voice was here heard declaring, &ldquo;that I shall never
+forget&rdquo;&mdash;and then followed a tissue of fabrications
+every one had frequently heard before, but which nobody but the
+worthy old warrior for one moment believed.</p>
+<p>Coffee and cigars had meanwhile made their welcome appearance,
+and as guests began to think of home, and others settled down to
+muff whist, the ante-room resumed the humdrum appearance so
+familiar to every one who can speak from experience.</p>
+<p>By the irony of fate, also, the regiment was furnishing the
+guards on this special guest-night, a circumstance that claimed
+more than one punter; not satisfied with which, the field
+officer&rsquo;s &ldquo;roster&rdquo; had apparently joined issue
+and requisitioned the old Major who, on these festive occasions
+was always a sure hand at loo, and who at the identical moment
+when he should have been &ldquo;taking the miss,&rdquo; was
+probably bellowing out &ldquo;Grand Rounds,&rdquo; to some
+distant guard in tones that belied his amiable genial
+disposition.</p>
+<p>George, on these occasions, was the recognised organiser, and
+by herculean efforts had secured some half-dozen recruits to
+commence loo as soon as old Hanmer returned.</p>
+<p>Games of chance&mdash;even in the long-ago sixties&mdash;were
+rarely indulged in in the ante-room, which was reserved
+exclusively for solemn whist for nominal stakes, where the
+players bottled up trumps, misdealt, and revoked, regardless of
+all the canons of the game.</p>
+<p><a name="page15"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+15</span>&ldquo;Damn it, sir!&rdquo; once exclaimed an irate
+General at an inspection dinner to his trembling
+partner&mdash;the assistant surgeon&mdash;&ldquo;Are you aware
+that 3,000 shoeless men are tramping the streets of the Continent
+for not leading trumps?&rdquo; to which the medico&mdash;who was
+a Kerry man&mdash;replied respectfully:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oi apalagoise, surr, most humbly; but oi disremembered
+me abligation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Obligation be d&mdash;, sir!&rdquo; replied the genial
+old warrior as he lighted a fresh cheroot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Major&rsquo;s late,&rdquo; remarked George to a
+confirmed loo player; &ldquo;let us go up to my room and get the
+table ready.&nbsp; Come on,&rdquo; he continued to four or five
+others, &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll make a start anyhow; he can&rsquo;t be
+long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The officers&rsquo; quarters in the Tower can hardly be
+described as spacious, and so by the addition of chairs from
+other rooms; with the table lugged into the centre, and brandy
+and sodas piled on the bed it was not long before some half-dozen
+punters were securely wedged together and indulging in unlimited
+loo for stakes that were not always nominal.</p>
+<p>The Major, meanwhile, had joined the party and without
+divesting himself of either cloak, shako, or sword, dashed into
+the fray with considerably greater zeal than he had displayed
+when going the rounds.&nbsp; Not that he was any feather-bed
+soldier; on the contrary, he had borne his full share of the
+trenches, and then often found himself told off to march to
+Balaclava with a fatigue party, and eventually to enjoy a few
+hours&rsquo; sleep in wet clothes on wet ground, whilst blankets
+and boots were rotting within six miles, and all because brave
+men were at the front, and old women were at the back of that
+rickety machine called the War Office.</p>
+<p>Billy Hanmer, amid the ordinary walks of life, was of a chilly
+temperament; the thermometer in his quarters was never permitted
+to register less than <a name="page16"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 16</span>65 degrees; he wore flannels all the
+year round, which in winter were duplicated, even to his socks;
+when he became excited&mdash;which never occurred except at loo,
+or when suddenly called upon to drill the battalion&mdash;the
+three hairs that were usually pasted across his martial skull
+rose like the crest of a cockatoo, and he was apt to give vent to
+expressions seldom or never heard at a bishop&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Swearing in those long-ago days was considered a necessary
+adjunct to military efficiency, as any one who was under
+Pennefather when he commanded at Aldershot can testify, and so it
+was that the Major was now swearing like a trooper.&nbsp; As a
+fact, he had just been &ldquo;loo-ed,&rdquo; and was counting
+some forty sovereigns into the pool, and every sovereign was
+accompanied by an oath as unique as it was unavailing.</p>
+<p>George Hay, sportsman though he was, was also a bad loser, but
+this evening, in his capacity as host the Fates had happily
+protected him.&nbsp; The grilled bones that appeared at 2 a.m.,
+and the inordinate amount of brandy and soda that had been
+consumed, were all put down to him; but the hundred he had won
+left ample margin for the hospitality, and towards five our hero
+fell into a profound and refreshing sleep, periodically enlivened
+by sweet visions of huge pools that he persistently raked in,
+whilst Billy Hanmer, divested of cloak, sword, and shako, was
+swearing till the old rafters rattled.</p>
+<p>In those days the club most affected by subalterns was the
+&ldquo;Raleigh,&rdquo; a charming night-house, approached by a
+tunnel, whose portals opened at dusk and closed reputedly at four
+a.m., or whenever its members vacated it.&nbsp; And the comfort
+of that long, delightful single room!&nbsp; Ranged round its
+entirety were fauteuils, suitable alike for forty winks, or
+brandy and soda, or the only eatables procurable&mdash;bacon on
+toast sandwiches with a dash of biting sauce.&nbsp; Here might be
+seen the best men in London percolating <a
+name="page17"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 17</span>through at
+every moment, and exchanging badinage as brilliant as probably it
+was naughty&mdash;poor old George Lawrence of &ldquo;Sword and
+Gown&rdquo; fame, and Piggy Lawrence, killed not long after in a
+regimental steeplechase; Fred Granville, who assisted at a once
+celebrated elopement by waiting at one door of an Oxford Street
+shop for the beautiful <i>fianc&eacute;e</i> of a wealthy
+landowner whose brougham had deposited her at another; Freddy
+Cooper, the best four-in-hand whip of the day; the wicked Marquis
+who ran through a fortune almost before he was of age; and young
+Wyndham, another Croesus of the duck-and-drake type; Sir Henry de
+Hoghton of the red tie and velvet suit who thought he could play
+ecart&eacute;; and King-Harman, then a sinner, but eventually a
+saint, who died in the sanctity of respectability.&nbsp; These,
+and a hundred others, all, alas gone to the inevitable dustbin,
+and yet the old building exists, <i>externally</i> apparently the
+same&mdash;the haunt of aspiring youths seeking a club with a
+past, respectable and cautious to the highest degree, where
+cheques are not cashed over &pound;5, and the doors close at one
+a.m. to the tick.</p>
+<p>But even in these long-ago days, the membership increased to
+such an extent that elbow-room had to be sought, and so Sally
+Sutherland&rsquo;s, a high-class night-house that abutted on the
+premises, was eventually taken in, and became the card room of
+the old Raleigh.&nbsp; To see this room in its glory it was
+necessary to enter it during the Derby week, where, as far as the
+eye could reach (and farther), one dense mass of human faces
+watched the proceedings at the card table, and fought and hustled
+to pass fivers and tenners and fifties towards building up the
+mountain of bank notes that flanked either side of the table.</p>
+<p>Seated composedly were the two champions with their bankers
+alongside them, then a fringe ten deep of pasty-faced cornets and
+rubicund old sinners with sheaves of bank notes in their hands,
+while beyond <a name="page18"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+18</span>were the &ldquo;fielders&rdquo;&mdash;landsharks who
+never played&mdash;eagerly watching every turn of the cards to
+take advantage of any bet that appeared slightly in their
+favour.&nbsp; &ldquo;Chalky&rdquo; White&mdash;the master of the
+Essex as he was ironically called&mdash;because he affected horsy
+overalls, and was once seen on a screw at the Boat Race; Captain
+Mulroony, an Irish buckeen who joined the &ldquo;North
+Corks&rdquo; to be eligible for &ldquo;the cloob&rdquo;;
+&ldquo;the Rapparee,&rdquo; another warrior with a brogue of a
+pronounced order, all ready to plunge on a reasonable certainty
+and retail their experiences later on, on their return to
+Dublin.&nbsp; Needless to add, we youngsters had put down our
+names <i>en bloc</i> for membership as soon as we had settled
+down at the Tower, and on the memorable night to which we refer
+were in great force in the long room.&nbsp; George Hay, one of
+our lieutenants who was being entertained by a venerable member,
+was wrapped in contemplation as he watched a decrepit old
+gentleman sipping a gin sling.&nbsp; &ldquo;That
+man&rdquo;&mdash;his cicerone was telling him&mdash;&ldquo;fought
+the last duel in England; look at him now, about eighty if
+he&rsquo;s a day, and barely able to crawl down here, and yet
+fifty years ago he had a drunken brawl with his best friend at
+Crockford&rsquo;s, and shot him dead before breakfast at the back
+of Ham House.&nbsp; Wait till the play begins and you&rsquo;ll
+see him &lsquo;fielding&rsquo;; he never plays, but if he sees a
+chance, no matter how slightly in his favour, he still pulls out
+a crumpled fiver and invites you to cover it.&nbsp; He only bets
+&lsquo;ready,&rsquo; and would probably &lsquo;call you
+out&rsquo; if you suggested &lsquo;booking&rsquo; it.&nbsp; That
+man in the blue shirt is the Duke of Hamilton; he only turns up
+in the Derby week, and has probably just arrived by special
+train.&nbsp; We call him &lsquo;the butcher,&rsquo; because of
+his shirt and his punching proclivities.&nbsp; He plunges, too;
+wait a bit till the Leviathans turn up.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ll see
+some sport yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you going to do, George?&rdquo; inquired <a
+name="page19"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 19</span>a youngster;
+&ldquo;why not have a look in at Kate Hamilton&rsquo;s?&nbsp;
+This is all d&mdash; rot, and I&rsquo;ve put my name down for 2
+a.m.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Putting one&rsquo;s name down, it may be explained, was a
+necessary formality indicating at what hour an officer intended
+to return when the wicket at the Tower was opened and closed, and
+punctuality was a necessity of the greatest moment.</p>
+<p>On one occasion, indeed when &ldquo;Payther&rdquo; Madden was
+on sentry, the wife of an officer who gave herself considerable
+airs having arrived five minutes late was challenged from inside
+by &ldquo;Who goes there?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m the
+Major&rsquo;s lady,&rdquo; was the haughty response.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Divil a bit do I care if ye were the Major&rsquo;s
+wife!&rdquo; yelled Payther from inside; &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll not
+get in till the wicket is opened agin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the approaches to the Tower in those days were not the
+broad and well-lighted avenues such as the Eastcheap of to-day;
+tortuous alleys and dingy, narrow streets had to be traversed,
+and the garrotter was very much in evidence.&nbsp; Officers
+returning late carried knuckle-dusters and short blades in their
+right-hand overcoat pockets, ready to job any footpad who
+attempted to seize them from behind.&nbsp; Men seldom returned
+but in parties of twos or threes, and so it was that the
+Major&rsquo;s &ldquo;lady&rdquo; found herself constrained to hug
+the walls of the grim old fortress during the early hours of that
+memorable night in the long-ago sixties.</p>
+<p>It was the night after the big race, when Caractacus was
+responsible for much that followed, that the crowd at the Raleigh
+was phenomenal, and champagne was being consumed in tumblers from
+the entrance hall to the card room.&nbsp; Thousands had changed
+hands within the past dozen hours, and old Jimmy Jopp with his
+chocolate wig over his left eye was scrambling sovereigns from
+the doorstep amongst the fair guests of our country who thronged
+the boulevard.&nbsp; The card room <a name="page20"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 20</span>had not as yet entered on its usual
+function, the window was indeed open in an endeavour to dilute
+the stifling atmosphere, and a corpulent old lady with a Flemish
+accent was half-way in the sacred precincts through the combined
+efforts of a bevy of fair compatriots on the pavement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Curse these races,&rdquo; ejaculated Biscoe,
+&ldquo;where have the plungers got to?&nbsp; Nearly one
+o&rsquo;clock by G&mdash;, and a pile to be got home before
+daylight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Biscoe was not a favourite in the club; of a hectoring
+disposition he added to his unpopularity by the pursuit of sharp
+practices.&nbsp; If he won he invariably found an excuse to
+retire with his gains, and if he lost he became cantankerous and
+offensive in his remarks.&nbsp; Some there were, indeed, who went
+so far as hinting that he was not above unfair dealings.&nbsp; He
+was partial to shuffling the cards with their faces towards him
+and placing a king at the bottom of the pack.&nbsp; This he
+explained was mere force of habit, and when remonstrated
+with&mdash;as he often had been&mdash;added that he was
+superstitious and that one of his superstitions took this
+form.&nbsp; No actual act of foul play had ever been brought home
+to him; he was nevertheless under suspicion, and being otherwise
+unpopular, his eccentricities assumed a graver form when balanced
+by hostile critics.</p>
+<p>Cheating in those long-ago days was happily a rare occurrence;
+a man about town might beggar his parents, or drive his wife into
+the workhouse, and still hold up his head as a man of honour if
+he met his card debts on the nail; but &ldquo;sharping&rdquo; was
+practically unknown till some years later, when a scandal that
+thrilled Europe and involved a deep erasure in the Army List was
+enacted at Nice.</p>
+<p>The Raleigh, meanwhile, was gradually simmering down; choice
+spirits had started for Cremorne or Mott&rsquo;s; the more
+soberly amused had wended their steps towards Evans&rsquo;s, and
+the residue might have <a name="page21"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 21</span>been classed as either punters or
+puntees&mdash;if such base coin will bear alloy.</p>
+<p>Seated in the card room, Biscoe still smoked in his solitude;
+before him was a gilt-bound volume such as betting men affect,
+and its contemplation apparently did not afford unalloyed
+pleasure.&nbsp; &ldquo;Egad,&rdquo; he muttered,
+&ldquo;&pound;4,000, more or less, and not a hundred to meet it
+with; to-night it&rsquo;s neck or nothing, and if nobody bleeds I
+shall be unable to face the music on Monday.&nbsp; Ah, De
+Hoghton,&rdquo; he exclaimed, barely looking up as an apparition
+in velvet and red tie appeared, &ldquo;been at Epsom?&nbsp;
+No?&nbsp; Perhaps you were wise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Paddy was too clever to suggest a game, knowing as he did the
+eccentric baronet&rsquo;s peculiarities.&nbsp; &ldquo;Never
+mind,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;better luck to-morrow,
+perhaps.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m half asleep.&nbsp; Good-night,&rdquo;
+and he rose as if about to depart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the hurry?&rdquo; inquired the new
+arrival.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you want to keep awake I&rsquo;ll play
+you half a dozen games of ecart&eacute;, but only for small
+stakes, mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Want indeed!&nbsp; It was what Biscoe had wanted for hours,
+and as to the stakes, did he not know from delightful experience
+that if they began at &pound;5 it would not be long before the
+game was for hundreds, and that his adversary&rsquo;s rent roll
+might be counted in thousands?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Sir Henry,&rdquo; replied Biscoe, &ldquo;name
+your own stakes.&nbsp; No fear of making them too low.&nbsp; I
+feel in bad form to-night, and your science will be altogether
+too much for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say a pony then,&rdquo; continued the baronet, and they
+cut for deal.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the room began gradually to fill, and as the
+unmistakable flutter of crisp notes&mdash;for which no
+resemblance has ever been discovered&mdash;made itself heard in
+the long room, George Hay and a troop of others sauntered
+negligently into the room.</p>
+<p><a name="page22"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+22</span>&ldquo;Sit beside me, Colonel,&rdquo; De Hoghton
+requested a grizzly, rubicund warrior, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll be
+able to advise me when they make a pool.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, Rapparee, I want you,&rdquo; exclaimed
+Biscoe.&nbsp; &ldquo;We must show these English boys how we play
+at Stephen&rsquo;s Green,&rdquo; and a fire-eating pronounced
+Hibernian took post alongside his compatriot.</p>
+<p>For a considerable time the luck appeared to fluctuate, and if
+hundreds were passed across the table on one game, they returned
+more or less intact at the subsequent encounter.&nbsp; Play was
+now in real earnest, and stakes were hazarded that were simply
+appalling.&nbsp; Biscoe, too, appeared to be in for a run of
+luck, and the excited whisperings between him and the Rapparee
+left little room for doubt that he contemplated a retreat on the
+first defeat.</p>
+<p>His winnings, indeed, were considerable, and a smile pervaded
+his hitherto scowling face as he contemplated the Monday&rsquo;s
+settling with equanimity.&nbsp; Again the bank was declared, and
+a pile of notes larger than any of its predecessors lumbered each
+side of the table; eyes, apparently, had no other vocation than
+to watch their respective champion&rsquo;s hands; the ticking of
+the clock on the mantelpiece became a nuisance, and the
+grasshopper literally became a burden; the silence of the
+Catacombs pervaded the entire assembly, when a voice, shrill and
+excited, was heard: &ldquo;Do that again, Mr. Biscoe, and
+I&rsquo;ll expose you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was the Colonel, who leaning across the table bore down
+Biscoe&rsquo;s hands with a strong right arm as he was in the act
+of shuffling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What am I to understand by this?&rdquo; inquired Biscoe
+looking towards the Rapparee.&nbsp; &ldquo;If it&rsquo;s by way
+of an insult you&rsquo;ve met the right boy to resent it.&nbsp;
+Hands off, sir!&rdquo; he shouted, as shaking off the
+Colonel&rsquo;s hand, he hurled the pack of cards in his
+face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold, hold, gentlemen, for God&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo;
+implored <a name="page23"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+23</span>De Hoghton, as a dozen men interposed between the
+belligerents.&nbsp; &ldquo;Some explanation is surely forthcoming
+that may avoid a scandal.&nbsp; Colonel, tell those gentlemen
+what you saw, and let them decide on the merits before it gets
+into the papers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What I saw I am prepared to prove,&rdquo; replied the
+Colonel, excitedly; &ldquo;but even that sinks into
+insignificance, as far as I am personally concerned, in face of
+the man&rsquo;s assault.&nbsp; Meanwhile, pick up these cards,
+count them carefully, and if you don&rsquo;t find five kings in
+the pack I&rsquo;ll apologise to Mr. Biscoe, and take his assault
+like a coward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then a scramble on the floor began, which was followed by
+breathless silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Count them, please,&rdquo; requested the Colonel, and
+sure enough 33 was the result.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now turn the faces towards you, sir,&rdquo; continued
+the Colonel; &ldquo;and extract the kings.&rdquo;&nbsp; And lo!
+before a dumbfounded crowd, two kings of hearts were
+displayed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This, gentlemen, is my accusation.&nbsp; I charge Mr.
+Biscoe with being a card-sharper and a cheat.&nbsp; To-morrow
+I&rsquo;ll lay my charge before the Committee; meanwhile, I
+retire and will ask you, Hay, to act as my
+representative.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Rapparee meanwhile had been in whispered conversation with
+his friend, and on the Colonel&rsquo;s departure, addressed
+himself to Hay.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oi presume, surr, your principal will meet my man
+unless he&rsquo;s a coward, and we shall be pleased to let him
+fix his own day, either before or afther his complaint to the
+Committee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is hardly the time, sir, to enter into such
+arrangements,&rdquo; replied Hay, courteously; &ldquo;but I vouch
+for Colonel George doing what is right and honourable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But one of the younger members seemed inclined to treat the
+matter as a joke, and turning towards <a name="page24"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 24</span>the Rapparee, remarked, &ldquo;But,
+surely, sir, you must see that if it&rsquo;s a duel you are
+hinting at, it would hardly be fair considering that Colonel
+George is considerably stouter than Mr. Biscoe.&nbsp; May we
+assume, sir, that you won&rsquo;t object to a chalk mark down
+each side of the Colonel&rsquo;s waistcoat, and a hit outside not
+to count?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surr!&rdquo; scowled the Rapparee.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please,&rdquo; pleaded Hay; &ldquo;this is not a joking
+matter, the honour of the Club and of every member who was
+present is at stake till the affair is cleared up.&nbsp; I appeal
+to you, gentlemen, one and all, to retire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Turning to the Rapparee, and raising his hat, he continued:
+&ldquo;My name, sir, is Lieutenant Hay, and I&rsquo;m stationed
+at the Tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page25"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+25</span>CHAPTER III.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">MOTT&rsquo;S AND CREMORNE.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">London</span> in the sixties possessed no
+music-halls as at present except the London Pavilion and a
+transpontine establishment unknown to the West End.&nbsp; This
+former had not long previously been transformed from a swimming
+bath into an undertaker&rsquo;s shed, which in its turn gave
+place to the dingy hall which eventually made the fortune of a
+waiter from Scott&rsquo;s.&nbsp; But such excitement (!) hardly
+met the requirements of progressive civilisation, which found an
+outlet in the Argyll, Cremorne, the Caf&eacute; Riche, Sally
+Sutherland&rsquo;s, Kate Hamilton&rsquo;s, Rose Young&rsquo;s,
+and Mott&rsquo;s.&nbsp; It seems but yesterday that one was
+sipping champagne at Boxall&rsquo;s stall in the Caf&eacute;
+Riche (now a flower shop adjoining the Criterion) waiting for
+young Broome the pugilist, who was to pilot one in safety to
+&ldquo;the big fight between King and Heenan.&rdquo;&nbsp; In
+those halcyon days caf&eacute;s remained open all night, and
+three a.m. was the hour appointed for our start for London
+Bridge.&nbsp; What splendid aid was then given legitimate sport
+by the authorities, as driving through rows of police across
+London Bridge one reached the terminus in comfort by simply
+displaying one&rsquo;s ticket.&nbsp; With a pork pie in one
+pocket, and a handkerchief in another, one&rsquo;s peace of mind
+was delightful, and hands in every pocket&mdash;aye, and knives
+to cut one out if necessary&mdash;were accepted only as a portion
+of a novel and delightful excitement.</p>
+<p><a name="page26"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+26</span>Pitching the ring again in one field and being warned
+off by the Kent constabulary, how invigorating the tramp through
+ploughed fields, till again we found a spot&mdash;this time
+undisturbed&mdash;in the muddy plains of Sussex.&nbsp; Wisps of
+straw provided for the more favoured by the attention of their
+punching cicerones, the biting of King&rsquo;s ear to bring him
+to &ldquo;time,&rdquo; the two giants half blind, swinging their
+arms mechanically, the accidental blow that felled the brave
+Heenan, and the shameful verdict that denied him the victory ten
+minutes previously, the return to the &ldquo;Bricklayers&rsquo;
+Arms&rdquo;&mdash;how vivid it all seems!&nbsp; And yet
+principals, seconds, lookers-on, where are they?</p>
+<p>The Caf&eacute; Riche of the long-ago sixties was perhaps the
+most successful and best regulated of the haunts of vanished
+London.&nbsp; Slack to an extreme till about 11 p.m., the huge
+mass of humanity as it poured out of the Argyll made straight for
+it.&nbsp; As one traversed the almost impassable Windmill Street
+along the narrow path kept by a bevy of police, all thoughts
+turned towards the Caf&eacute; Riche, where the best of suppers,
+oysters, and champagne prepared one for the more arduous
+exertions of Cremorne or Mott&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Cremorne in those
+days was a delightful resort, with an excellent band, and
+frequented by the most exalted of men and the most beautiful of
+women.&nbsp; Here might be seen nightly during his stay in London
+a late ruling monarch (then Crown Prince) whose moustache the
+ladies insisted on twisting; here, too, occasionally big rows
+took place, affairs that originated in some trifle, such as the
+irritation of an excitable blood on seeing a harmless shop-boy
+dancing in the ring.&nbsp; King-Harman probably was the principal
+originator of these encounters.&nbsp; Naturally of an amiable but
+plethoric disposition, a sight such as the above was like a red
+rag to a bull, and in no time the fight became universal and
+furious.&nbsp; Gas was <a name="page27"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 27</span>turned off, the ringleaders bolted,
+pursued by police.&nbsp; A run as far as Chelsea Hospital with a
+&ldquo;bobby&rdquo; in full cry was by no means an uncommon
+occurrence.</p>
+<p>On the occasions when exalted foreigners like Prince Humbert
+were going, the ground in a way had to be salted.&nbsp;
+Intimation was privately conveyed to certain well-known
+roysterers at Long&rsquo;s, the Raleigh, and elsewhere, that an
+exalted personage asked them to abstain from rows; a puncher and
+two or three bloods were told off to accompany, and a special
+envoy was instructed to warn Johnny Baum (the lessee) not to be
+aware of the angel he was harbouring and to resist the temptation
+of any gush and &ldquo;dutiful&rdquo; toadyism; and so on the
+eventful night Humbert lolled unrecognised through the revelling
+crowds, whilst ghastly veterans in harlotry twitted him on his
+huge moustache and thrust cards into his fist as tokens of
+British hospitality.</p>
+<p>Mott&rsquo;s, too, was a unique institution, select it might
+almost be termed, considering the precautions that were taken
+regarding admittance.&nbsp; Every man who entered was known by
+name or sight.&nbsp; A man of good birth or position, no matter
+how great a rou&eacute;, was admitted as it were by right, whilst
+parvenus, however wealthy, were turned empty away.&nbsp; It was
+told indeed that on one occasion, being importuned for admission
+by a wealthy hatter, old Freer, having been requested by the
+indignant shop-boy to take his card, had replied, &ldquo;Not
+necessary, sir.&nbsp; Not necessary.&nbsp; I have your name in my
+hat.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so the line that divided the classes in the
+sixties was religiously respected.&nbsp; In those benighted days
+tradesmen sent in their bills apologetically, and if a tailor
+began to importune, a fresh order met the case.&nbsp; Flats were
+unbuilt, and people did not hear what was going on all day and
+all night at their next door neighbour&rsquo;s; inferiors said
+&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Right you are&rdquo; was a <a
+name="page28"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 28</span>phrase
+uncoined; if you dined at Simpson&rsquo;s or Limmer&rsquo;s you
+were served on silver, and no waiter ventured to ask you who won
+the 3.45 race; club waiters literally stalked one as they
+approached with a dish, and the caravanserais that now dominate
+the entire length of Piccadilly had not pulled down club averages
+nor reduced the prestige that attached to club membership.&nbsp;
+The great gulf was fixed as immovably as between Dives and
+Lazarus when Abraham was the umpire, and things probably found
+their level as well as in these advanced days, when money is
+everything, and &pound;20,000 judiciously applied will ensure a
+baronetcy.</p>
+<p>The ladies who frequented Mott&rsquo;s, moreover, were not the
+tawdry make-believes that haunt the modern &ldquo;Palaces,&rdquo;
+but actresses of note, who, if not Magdalens, sympathised with
+them; girls of education and refinement who had succumbed to the
+blandishments of youthful lordlings; fair women here and there
+who had not yet developed into peeresses and progenitors of
+future legislators.&nbsp; Among them were &ldquo;Skittles,&rdquo;
+celebrated for her ponies, and Sweet Nelly Fowler, the undisputed
+Queen of Beauty in those long-ago days.&nbsp; This beautiful girl
+had a natural perfume, so delicate, so universally admitted, that
+love-sick swains paid large sums for the privilege of having
+their handkerchiefs placed under the Goddess&rsquo;s pillow, and
+sweet Nelly pervaded&mdash;in the spirit, if not in the
+flesh&mdash;half the clubs and drawing-rooms of London.</p>
+<p>This remnant of old-fashioned homage was by no means unusual,
+and at fancy bazaars it was an almost invariable custom to secure
+the services of the belle of the hour to sell strawberries at 2s.
+6d. apiece, which the fair vendor placed to her lip and then
+pushed between the swain&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Years later a matronly
+creature, forgetting that her charms had long since vanished,
+essayed to fill the coffers of a charity bazaar by similar <a
+name="page29"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+29</span>blandishments, and as one looked at the hollow cheeks
+and discoloured tusks one was fain to wonder what the effect of
+the &ldquo;treatment&rdquo; would be on the most robust
+constitution.</p>
+<p>Situated in an unpretentious house in Foley Street, the
+ballroom at Mott&rsquo;s (as it appeared in the sixties) was a
+spacious octagon with a glass dome.&nbsp; At the side, approached
+by a few steps, was the supper room, where between 2 and 3 a.m.
+cold fowl and ham and champagne were discussed, the fiddlers
+descending from their loft, and revelry fast and furious took the
+place of the valse.</p>
+<p>Not many years ago, impelled by an irresistible impulse, I
+visited the hall of dazzling light; a greasy drab opened the
+street door, and conducted me into a dingy apartment, which she
+assured me was the old haunt.&nbsp; Sure enough, there stood the
+dilapidated orchestra perch, and, yet a little way off, the steps
+that led to the supper room; and whilst I was contemplating them
+with something very like a lump in my throat, a squeaky voice
+addressed me, and I beheld a decrepit old man&mdash;all that was
+left of poor old Freer&mdash;whom memory associated with an
+expanse of white waistcoat, essaying hints such as, &ldquo;Now,
+then, lady&rsquo;s chain,&rdquo; or hob-nobbing with some beauty,
+or remonstrating, &ldquo;Really, my lord, these practical jokes
+cannot be permitted.&rdquo;&nbsp; This temple of the past may
+still be seen with all the windows smashed and on the eve of
+demolition.</p>
+<p>Lord Hastings in those far-off days was the chief culprit in
+every devilry.&nbsp; Beloved by police and publican, he occupied
+a privileged position; nothing vicious characterised his jokes,
+and he had but one enemy&mdash;himself.&nbsp; His advent at a
+ratting match or a badger drawing was a signal to every loafer
+that the hour of his thirst was ended, and that henceforth
+&ldquo;the Markis was in the chair.&rdquo;&nbsp; Six cases of
+champagne invariably formed the first order, and as old <a
+name="page30"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 30</span>Jimmy Shaw
+shouted, &ldquo;&rsquo;Ere, more glasses there, and dust a chair
+for &rsquo;is Lordship,&rdquo; the four ale bar closed in, as it
+were, and duke and dustman hobnobbed and clinked glasses with a
+deferential familiarity unknown in these levelling days.</p>
+<p>Lord Hastings selected his companions on facial and other
+merits, and no meeker, more guileless-looking youths existed than
+Bobby Shafto and Freddy Granville.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bobby,&rdquo;
+said the Marquis, on one occasion, when he had arranged a
+surprise at Mott&rsquo;s, &ldquo;we must go round to Jimmy
+Shaw&rsquo;s.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve to pick up a parcel there, and,
+look here, old man, you must smuggle it in somehow; old Freer
+always looks carefully at me, but he&rsquo;ll never suspect you;
+you must carry it under your cape, and when we get inside mind,
+don&rsquo;t go down to the supper room.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll run down
+for a second, and then join you; you know the spot I showed you
+near the meter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Arriving in Windmill Street, no time was lost in
+preliminaries.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it all right, Jimmy?&rdquo; inquired the Marquis,
+and in reply a cadaverous individual dressed like a gamekeeper
+respectfully approached his lordship.&nbsp; This was the
+professional rat-catcher, who traversed the main drains half the
+day, and supplied the various sporting haunts with thousands of
+rats nightly.</p>
+<p>If a dog was backed to kill one thousand rats in a specified
+time the supply never failed to be equal to the demand, despite
+the hundreds that were pitted nightly against ferrets, or
+produced at so much a dozen for young bloods to try their dogs
+on.</p>
+<p>To see this rat-catcher plunge his hand into a sack full of
+huge and ferocious sewer rats and extracting them one by one by
+the tail count the requisite amount into the pit was a sight
+beyond description, as legislators, cabinet ministers, peers, and
+army men threw sovereigns at him in payment of the sport
+supplied.</p>
+<p><a name="page31"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+31</span>Carrying a sack in his hand this individual respectfully
+replied: &ldquo;All right, my lud, two hundred as varmint a lot
+as iver I clapped eyes on.&nbsp; Thanks, your lordship, good luck
+to yer,&rdquo; and he pocketed his fee.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But are they tied all right?&rdquo; inquired Bobby, as
+the parcel was presented to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right, sir?&nbsp; Why, you&rsquo;ve only to slip this
+string like, and there you are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know where I should be,&rdquo; suggested Bobby;
+&ldquo;but I mean now.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll be d&mdash;d if
+I&rsquo;ll put them under my cloak for a thousand till you make a
+regular knot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, there you are, sir,&rdquo; replied the expert
+with a pitying smile, as he performed the requisite function.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now we&rsquo;re all right, Bobby,&rdquo; added the
+Marquis.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come on, we must catch them at
+supper.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve got a knife, come on,&rdquo; and
+directing the hansom to Foley Street, the conspirators proceeded
+on their mission.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very quiet!&rdquo; remarked the Marquis, as Freer
+received them at the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Supper, my lord, supper; and, beg pardon, my lord, no
+larks to-night, please; we&rsquo;ve a rare lot here to-night, my
+lord; Lord Londesboro&rsquo; is here with Miss Fowler and no end
+of toffs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, Freer, what are you talking about?&nbsp; Look at
+me,&rdquo; and he displayed his white waistcoat, &ldquo;and Mr.
+Shafto here, he doesn&rsquo;t know London or your infernal
+place.&nbsp; I&rsquo;m showing him the rounds, Freer; we
+shan&rsquo;t stay long,&rdquo; and, preceded by the unsuspecting
+old sinner, the pair proceeded as arranged.</p>
+<p>Sitting in the deserted room, Bobby scanned the empty
+orchestra loft, whilst shouts intermingled with the popping of
+corks arose from the supper room beyond, so shifting his position
+to nearer proximity to the meter, he awaited the return of his
+companion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, old man, they&rsquo;ll be up in ten minutes,
+but don&rsquo;t budge till the fiddles strike up; here&rsquo;s
+the <a name="page32"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 32</span>knife,
+blade open; don&rsquo;t cut till I say &lsquo;Now,&rsquo; and
+bolt like h&mdash; once the gas is out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The requisite wait was not of long duration.&nbsp; First came
+old Freer, as, casting a sheep&rsquo;s eye at the Marquis, he
+contemplated the orchestra; next, producing a watch, he shouted,
+&ldquo;time, gentlemen,&rdquo; and half a dozen seedy
+instrumentalists ascended the stairs.&nbsp; The pianist, it was
+evident, was in his cups, but no notice was taken of
+this&mdash;it being admitted that he played better when drunk
+than when sober, and had even been known to supply impromptu
+variations and improvements to the &ldquo;Mabel Valse&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Blue Danube&rdquo; when under the exhilarating influence
+of Freer&rsquo;s brut champagne.&nbsp; Then followed a bevy of
+fair women&mdash;Nelly Fowler and her worshipful lord;
+&ldquo;Shoes,&rdquo; who eventually became Lady W&mdash;; Baby
+Jordan, Nelly Clifford, the innocent cause of dynastic ructions
+twelve months later at the Curragh&mdash;closely followed by Fred
+Granville, Lyttleton, Chuckles, John Delapont, of the 11th, and a
+mob of flushed men, and as the fiddles began to twang, and the
+dancers took up positions, the Marquis thought fit to add a word
+in season.&nbsp; &ldquo;Talk away, old man, as if it was
+something private, or some one will be coming up and spoiling the
+game; go on, man; now then, look out, is the knife all
+ready?&nbsp; Shake &rsquo;em well out, old man, they can&rsquo;t
+hurt you; look out, are you ready?&nbsp; Now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To describe what followed is impossible.&nbsp; Two hundred men
+and women, and two hundred sewer rats, compressed within the
+compass of forty feet by thirty, and in a darkness as profound as
+was ever experienced in Egypt.</p>
+<p>Bobby and Hastings meanwhile were driving towards Cremorne
+with the complacency of men who had done their duty.</p>
+<p>Cremorne on a Derby night baffles description; progress round
+the dancing platform was almost <a name="page33"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 33</span>impossible.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;Hermit&rsquo;s Cave&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Fairy
+Bower&rdquo; were filled to repletion, and to pass the private
+boxes was to run the gauntlet of a quartern loaf or a dish of
+cutlets at one&rsquo;s head.&nbsp; Fun fast and furious reigned
+supreme, during which the smaller fry of shop-boys and hired
+dancers pirouetted within the ring with their various
+partners.&nbsp; But as time advanced, and the wine circulated,
+the advent of detachments of roysterers bespoke a not-distant
+row.&nbsp; A Derby night without a row was, in those days, an
+impossibility, and the night that our contingent started from the
+Raleigh was no exception to the rule.</p>
+<p>No man in his senses brought a watch, and if his coat was torn
+and his hat smashed, what matter?&nbsp; And if he lost the few
+shillings provided to meet cab fare and incidental expenses the
+loss was not a serious one, always supposing a cab was to be
+found, and one was not in the clutches of the law.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s King-Harman,&rdquo; remarked Hastings,
+&ldquo;let us stick near him; there&rsquo;s bound to be a row
+before morning, and we may as well be together.&nbsp; Can you
+run, Bobby?&nbsp; Not with that cape, though; you&rsquo;ll have
+to chuck that; but what does it matter, it&rsquo;s done its duty,
+and it&rsquo;s unworthy of a less honourable
+distinction?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Bobby.&nbsp; &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+fancy wearing it after those infernal rats.&nbsp; But why should
+there be a row?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A row, man,&rdquo; replied his mentor, &ldquo;of course
+there&rsquo;ll be a row; what did we come here for but a
+row?&nbsp; What did King-Harman come here for, do you suppose,
+but a row?&nbsp; And look here, when they turn the gas
+out&mdash;as they always do&mdash;run like blazes; you&rsquo;re
+not safe till you get to Chelsea Hospital, and don&rsquo;t run
+into the arms of a policeman; they sometimes stop chaps running,
+on spec.,&rdquo; and with these words of wisdom they mingled with
+the crowd.</p>
+<p>The expected d&eacute;nouement was not long in coming, <a
+name="page34"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 34</span>and in a
+second, and without apparent warning, sticks were crashing down
+on top hats, tumblers flying in every direction, and fists coming
+in contact with anything or anybody whose proximity seemed to
+suggest it.</p>
+<p>The fiddlers had meanwhile made a hasty retreat, the gas was
+put out, and with the exception here and there of an illumination
+(a dip steeped in oil), the free fight continued till a bevy of
+police appeared upon the scene.</p>
+<p><i>Sauve qui peut</i> was then the word, and helter skelter,
+old and young, Jew and Gentile, soiled doves and hereditary
+legislators dashed like the proverbial herd of swine towards the
+gates.&nbsp; Often did this stampede continue for a mile, till
+straggling cabs, on their way to their stables, picked up the
+stragglers, and landed them in less disturbed districts.&nbsp;
+But the night was by no means over, not certainly the Derby night
+for roysterers like Lord Hastings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have a rasher of bacon, Bobby,&rdquo; he
+explained, as they descended in Piccadilly Circus.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why, it&rsquo;s barely five o&rsquo;clock,&rdquo; and they
+entered an unpretentious coffee-house in rear of the colonnade,
+much frequented by roysterers and market gardeners.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Qui hi</i>;&rdquo; shouted a voice as they took
+their seats in an uncomfortable pew, and old Jim Stewart, of the
+93rd, and a companion hailed them from behind a mountain of eggs
+and bacon.</p>
+<p>But their adventures were not to end with this wholesome
+repast, as, coming out, they espied an empty cart, into which
+they all proceeded to climb.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hi, master,&rdquo; shouted the owner, disturbed at his
+meal, &ldquo;that be moine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not it, man,&rdquo; yelled Hastings; &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+mine; jump in,&rdquo; and, without a murmur, the worthy man
+obeyed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where to, master?&rdquo; was the next inquiry.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I be going for a load of gravel to Scotland
+Yard.&rdquo;&nbsp; And <a name="page35"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 35</span>within half an hour four bucks with
+white ties were shovelling in gravel as if their lives depended
+on it.</p>
+<p>Scotland Yard in those days was a public gravel-pit, and its
+name did not convey the painful suggestions of after years.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where now, master?&rdquo; inquired the yokel again, and
+St. John&rsquo;s Wood was the order.</p>
+<p>Here, before a palatial mansion, the cart pulled up, and the
+load was shot on to the steps.&nbsp; Johnny MacNair, the
+handsomest man in the Highland Brigade, who was too
+&ldquo;exhausted&rdquo; to be moved, was then pushed into the
+hall, and the cort&egrave;ge again departed.</p>
+<p>To describe further would be a physical impossibility.&nbsp;
+Exhausted nature, bad wine, possibly the bacon and eggs, all
+combined to make memory a blank.&nbsp; Suffice that the house was
+the private residence of a corpulent ratepayer and respected
+member of St. Stephen&rsquo;s Church, who appeared in the
+&ldquo;Court Directory&rdquo; as Mrs. Hamilton.</p>
+<p>The final episode was the appearance of Johnny MacNair at
+Rawling&rsquo;s Hotel at three in the afternoon very irate, and
+only appeased on being assured that the episode was a blank to
+others beside himself.</p>
+<p>People may say how scandalous all this reads, and how thankful
+we ought to be to be living in these decorous twentieth century
+days!&nbsp; But reflect, virtuous reader.&nbsp; The sixties, if
+apparently bad, were not so bad as the days of the Georges, which
+again compare favourably with the golden days when Charles (of
+blessed memory) was King.&nbsp; Vigilance societies did not then
+exist as now, and fifty institutions with their secretaries and
+staff had not to be supported by seekers after morality.&nbsp;
+London was not even blessed with a County Council, and John Burns
+probably could have robbed a birds&rsquo; nest as deftly as the
+veriest scapegrace in those long-ago roystering days.</p>
+<p><a name="page36"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 36</span>Place a
+file of the Divorce Court proceedings in the scales, add the
+scandals that occasionally get into print, and, having adjusted
+them carefully, decide honestly whether the balance is much
+against the London of the long-ago sixties.</p>
+<h2><a name="page37"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+37</span>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">KATE HAMILTON&mdash;AND LEICESTER
+SQUARE.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> entrance to Kate
+Hamilton&rsquo;s may best be located as the spot on which
+Appenrodt&rsquo;s German sausage shop now stands, although the
+premises extended right through to Leicester Square.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t go yet, dear,&rdquo; appealed a sweet siren
+as Bobby, looking at his watch, swore that when duty called one
+must obey, but eventually succumbed to a voice like a foghorn
+shouting, &ldquo;John, a bottle of champagne,&rdquo; and the
+beautiful Kate bowed approvingly from her throne.&nbsp; Kate
+Hamilton at this period must have weighed at least twenty stone,
+and had as hideous a physiognomy as any weather-beaten Deal
+pilot.&nbsp; Seated on a raised platform, with a bodice cut very
+low, this freak of nature sipped champagne steadily from midnight
+until daylight, and shook like a blanc mange every time she
+laughed.</p>
+<p>Approached by a long tunnel from the street&mdash;where two
+janitors kept watch&mdash;a pressure of the bell gave instant
+admittance to a likely visitor, whilst an alarm gave immediate
+notice of the approach of the police.</p>
+<p>Finding oneself within the &ldquo;salon&rdquo; during one of
+these periodical raids was not without interest.&nbsp; Carpets
+were turned up in the twinkling of an eye, boards were raised,
+and glasses and bottles&mdash;empty or full&mdash;were thrust
+promiscuously in; every one assumed a sweet and virtuous air and
+talked in subdued tones, whilst a bevy of police, headed by an <a
+name="page38"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 38</span>inspector,
+marched solemnly in, and having completed the farce, marched
+solemnly out.</p>
+<p>What the subsidy attached to this duty, and when and how paid,
+it is needless to inquire.&nbsp; Suffice to show that the
+hypocrisy that was to attain such eminence in these latter
+enlightened days was even then in its infancy, and worked as
+adroitly as any twentieth-century policeman could desire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now we&rsquo;re all right,&rdquo; explained the
+foghorn, as the &ldquo;salon&rdquo; resumed its normal
+vivacity.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bobby, my dear, come and sit next
+me,&rdquo; and so, like a tomtit and a round of beef, the
+pasty-faced youth took the post of honour alongside the vibrating
+mass of humanity.&nbsp; The distinction conferred upon our hero
+was a much-coveted one amongst youngsters, and gave a
+&ldquo;hall-marking&rdquo; which henceforth proclaimed him a
+&ldquo;man about town.&rdquo;&nbsp; To dispense champagne <i>ad
+libitum</i> was one of its chief privileges&mdash;for the honour
+was not unaccompanied with responsibilities&mdash;and Florrie or
+Connie (or whoever the friend for the moment of the favoured one
+might be) not only held a <i>carte blanche</i> to order
+champagne, but to dispense it amongst all her acquaintances, by
+way of propitiation amongst the higher grades, and as an implied
+claim for reciprocity on those whose star might be in the
+ascendant later on.</p>
+<p>Bobby, it is needless to say, was a proud man.&nbsp; But six
+months ago he had left school, and it seemed but yesterday that
+loving hands of mother and sisters had vied with one another in
+marking his linen and making brown holland bags with appropriate
+red bindings that were to contain his brushes and other
+requisites of his toilet.&nbsp; But these had long since been
+discarded as &ldquo;bad form,&rdquo; and a dressing case&mdash;on
+credit&mdash;with silver fittings had taken their place.&nbsp; It
+had been a question, indeed, whether the pony chaise would have
+to be put down to enable the worthy rector to provide the
+requisite &pound;100 a year <a name="page39"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 39</span>that was essential over and above the
+pay of a youngster in the service, and here was a young scamp
+swilling champagne like water, whilst the sisters&rsquo;
+allowance had been cut down to enable their brother to meet
+necessary expenses, and the boy that cleaned the knives had to
+look after the pony vice Simmons, the groom, dismissed.&nbsp; Not
+that Bobby was vicious by nature; on the contrary, his follies
+were to be attributed to that short-sighted policy that drives a
+youth on the curb up to a given moment, and then gives him his
+head; a lad who had never tasted anything stronger than an
+aperient suddenly engulfed in a deluge of champagne.&nbsp; In
+appearance he was delicate almost to effeminacy, with a gentle,
+courteous address, fair curly hair waved around his silly head,
+and he was popular alike with men and women.&nbsp; His good looks
+were his misfortune, and his amiability of temper led him into
+numerous scrapes, such as entanglements with designing chorus
+girls and the accompanying folly of too much champagne with too
+little money to pay for it.&nbsp; Not long previous to his
+arrival in London he had fallen desperately in love at Taunton
+with a strolling actress old enough to be his mother, who played
+very minor parts, and whose forte was pirouetting and pointing
+her huge foot at any patron in front whom she desired to signal
+out for honour.&nbsp; It had taken the combined talents of the
+adjutant, the rector, and George Hay to buy the sweet siren off
+with a promise that her son (nearly as old as poor Bobby) should
+get a berth on a sea-going merchantman.&nbsp; As a fact, he had
+promised to marry the charmer, and eventually to find money to
+run a company, and it was only by the accident of the show being
+in pawn in a Somersetshire village (where Julia Jemima was
+playing Juliet to a drunken former admirer&rsquo;s Romeo) that an
+urgent appeal for funds brought the escapade to light.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; Julia had once said by way of
+exciting <a name="page40"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+40</span>his enthusiasm, &ldquo;we can&rsquo;t expect you to
+&lsquo;go on&rsquo; all at once, but in time you could play up to
+me.&nbsp; You just study Romeo and get up Rover while
+you&rsquo;re about it, and Hamlet and some of Charlie
+Matthews&rsquo;s parts&mdash;you can easily knock them off, and
+one part do so &rsquo;elp another, dear.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not that
+Master Bobby had been brought to realise at once the histrionic
+fame in store for him; on the contrary, he had jibbed
+considerably at the contemplation of having to don the spangled
+velvets and tights that constituted the &ldquo;property&rdquo; of
+the strollers, and it was only the herculean exertions of the
+lovely Julia Jemima&mdash;on her benefit night&mdash;smiling more
+bewitchingly, pirouetting if possible more gracefully, and
+gliding on one toe across the stage till the muscles of her
+calves stood out like a Sandow&rsquo;s, that poor Bobby
+succumbed, and vowed that come who, come what, nothing should
+tear him from the divine creature.&nbsp; Happily our hero had not
+anticipated the effects of a combined attack of adjutant and
+father, and so, being rescued from one pitfall, we find him
+sailing steadily towards another amidst the brilliant scenes at
+Kate Hamilton&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been in the profession, dear,&rdquo; Connie
+was explaining as Bobby leaned over the throne to gaze on her,
+&ldquo;and I often have half a mind to go back to
+it.&rdquo;&nbsp; (She had once carried a banner through the run
+of the pantomime at the &ldquo;Vic.&rdquo;) The word
+&ldquo;profession&rdquo; acted like an electric shock; the lad
+blinked as the scales appeared to fall from his eyes; Julia
+Jemima appeared visibly before him; the spangles, the tights, and
+the muscular calf in mid-air floated through his brain in deadly
+proximity, as pulling out his watch with a shudder he bade a
+hurried good-bye, and dashed off in the fleetest four-wheeler to
+join the Major&rsquo;s &ldquo;lady&rdquo; under the inhospitable
+walls of the Tower.</p>
+<p>In the long, long ago the entertainments provided by Leicester
+Square were not of an exciting nature.&nbsp; <a
+name="page41"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 41</span>The
+&ldquo;Sans Souci,&rdquo; Walhalla, and Burford&rsquo;s Panorama
+(where Daly&rsquo;s Theatre now stands) divided the honours till
+&rsquo;51, when Wylde&rsquo;s Globe occupied the entire
+enclosure.&nbsp; This huge erection was sixty feet in diameter,
+and remained in existence till 1861, when it was pulled down to
+make way for entertainments combining instruction with
+pleasure.</p>
+<p>In 1863 the &ldquo;Eldorado&rdquo; Caf&eacute; Chantant, which
+was leading a precarious existence, put up the shutters, when a
+section of the (non-speculative) public made the brilliant,
+loyal, and dutiful suggestion that somebody should erect a
+&ldquo;Denmark&rdquo; Winter Garden as a memento of the Prince of
+Wales&rsquo;s recent marriage, but the loyal, dutiful,
+sycophantic proposal did not commend itself as it no doubt ought
+to have done, and probably would to-day.&nbsp; The requisite
+capital was not forthcoming, and so not till 1873 did the new era
+commence, when &pound;50,000 was offered for the Square by that
+monument of aspiring greatness, &ldquo;Baron&rdquo; Grant, who
+burst upon the horizon and then fizzled into space as meteors are
+wont to do.</p>
+<p>It is impossible to deny the fascination that Leicester Square
+has for a considerable majority of Londoners.&nbsp; Up to the
+days of Charles II. the entire space was composed of rustic
+hedge-rows and lanes.&nbsp; Then Castle Street, Newport Street,
+Cranbourne Alley, and Bear Lane came into existence, the Square
+was railed round, and all the chief duels of the day were fought
+within its historic precincts.</p>
+<p>Lord Warwick, Lord Mountford, the Duke of Hamilton, and Lord
+Mohun (a professional bully and expert shot), and a host of
+smaller fry have avenged their honour within its
+boundaries&mdash;and then adjourned to Locket&rsquo;s Coffee
+House in its immediate vicinity.&nbsp; This ancient institution
+must not be confused with the palatial establishments known as
+Lockhart&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>In the days of which we are writing, Leicester Square was a
+barren waste surrounded by rusty railings, <a
+name="page42"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 42</span>trodden down
+in all directions; refuse of every description was shot into it,
+whilst in the centre stood a dilapidated equestrian statue that
+assumed various adornments as the freaks of drunken roysterers
+suggested.&nbsp; On the north side (where now stands the Empire)
+was The Shades, a low-class eating-house in the basement,
+approached by steps, where every knife, fork and spoon was
+indelibly stamped &ldquo;Stolen from The Shades&rdquo; as a
+delicate hint to its patrons.&nbsp; On the opposite side stood a
+huge wooden pump, of which more anon.&nbsp; At the adjoining
+eastern corner were the &ldquo;tableaux vivants,&rdquo; presided
+over by a judge in &ldquo;wig and gown&rdquo; where more
+blasphemy and filth was to be heard for a shilling than would
+appear possible, all within one hundred yards of such harmless
+(if disreputable) haunts as Kate Hamilton&rsquo;s, which were
+overhauled nightly.&nbsp; It was many years afterwards (July,
+1874) that the barren wilderness was made beautiful for ever by
+the generosity of &ldquo;Baron&rdquo; Grant.&nbsp; One can see
+him now, arrayed in white waistcoat and huge buttonhole,
+accompanied by an unpretentious bevy of councillors and Board of
+Works men, over whom a few bits of bunting fluttered, presenting
+his gift of many thousands in a speech that was quite
+inaudible.&nbsp; But, like medals and decorations, gifts in those
+days were not rewarded in the lavish manner of to-day.&nbsp; Had
+such a public benefit been conferred now, the donor would have
+been dubbed a baronet, or a privy councillor at least, with every
+prospect of a peerage should he again spring &pound;20,000.&nbsp;
+Apropos of this gift, there was a peculiar sequel.&nbsp; When
+asked at the time whether he gave or retained the underground
+rights in addition to the recreation ground, the great man, in
+the zenith of his success, replied, &ldquo;Yes, yes; I give it
+all.&rdquo;&nbsp; Years after, however, when poor and friendless,
+hearing that underground works had made the subsoil more valuable
+than the surface, he enquired whether some remnant could not <a
+name="page43"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 43</span>be claimed by
+him, but was forcibly reminded of the follies of his youth by a
+prompt negative, and left to die in penury without a helping
+hand.</p>
+<p>Perhaps never was the irony of Fate more clearly exemplified
+than when, years after, two yokels who were gazing on
+Shakespeare&rsquo;s monument were heard to say
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s &rsquo;im as give the place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Situated exactly on the site of the Criterion Buffet was the
+&ldquo;Pic,&rdquo; a dancing saloon of a decidedly inferior
+class, where anybody entering (except perhaps the Angel Gabriel)
+was bound to have a row.&nbsp; Hat smashing in this delectable
+spot was the preliminary to a scrimmage, and when it is
+recollected what &ldquo;hats&rdquo; were in the long-ago sixties,
+it will be easily understood that any interference with them was
+an offence to be wiped out only with blood.&nbsp; Hats, it may be
+asserted without fear of contradiction, were the Alpha and Omega
+of dress amongst every section of the community; the postmen wore
+hats with their long scarlet coats; policemen wore hats with
+their swallow-tails; boys the height of fourpence in copper wore
+hats; the entire field at a cricket match wore flannels and hats;
+and the yokels and agricultural classes topped their smocks with
+hats.&nbsp; Not hats, be it understood, of the modern silky
+limited style, but huge extinguishers, with piles varying from
+solid beaver to the substance of a terrier&rsquo;s coat; and to
+enter the &ldquo;Pic&rdquo; was tantamount to the annihilation of
+one of these creations.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Kangaroo,&rdquo; of whom
+mention is made elsewhere, was a standing dish at this
+establishment, and to such an extent was his position recognised
+that many men tipped him on entering to obviate molestation.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Pic,&rdquo; despite its central position, never
+attained popularity, and was the resort of pickpockets, bullies,
+and &ldquo;soiled doves&rdquo; of a very mediocre class.&nbsp; On
+Boat Race nights, however, an organised gang of University
+&ldquo;men&rdquo; invariably raided it, and by <a
+name="page44"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 44</span>smashing
+everything balanced the account to a certain extent.</p>
+<p>No place of amusement has passed through so many convulsions
+as the edifice now known as the Alhambra.&nbsp; Erected in the
+sixties, it began life as a species of polytechnic, where it was
+hoped that the instruction afforded by the contemplation of two
+electric batteries and a diving bell, in conjunction with the
+exhilarating air of the neighbourhood, would attract sufficient
+audiences to meet rent and expenses; but the venture not having
+fulfilled the expectations of its youth, its portals were closed,
+and it next came into prominence during the Franco-German
+war.&nbsp; Here &ldquo;patriotic songs&rdquo; were the
+<i>pi&egrave;ce de r&eacute;sistance</i>, and towards 11
+o&rsquo;clock a dense throng waved flags and cheered and hooted
+indiscriminately the &ldquo;Marseillaise,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Wacht
+am Rhein,&rdquo; and everything and everybody.&nbsp; Jones,
+calmly smoking, would, without the slightest provocation, assault
+Brown, who was similarly innocently occupied, and who in turn
+resented the polite distinction.&nbsp; Stand-up fights took place
+nightly, and, as was anticipated, drew all London to the Alhambra
+towards 11 o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>These indiscriminate nightly riots attracted, as may be
+assumed, all the bullies and sharpers in London, amongst whom
+stands prominently the &ldquo;Kangaroo,&rdquo; a gigantic black,
+who was known to everybody in the sixties.&nbsp; This ruffian,
+who was admittedly an expert pugilist, was the biggest coward
+that hovered round Piccadilly.&nbsp; No place was free from his
+unwelcome visits, and his ubiquity showed itself by his nightly
+appearance at the Pavilion, the Alhambra, the Caf&eacute; Riche,
+Barnes&rsquo;s, the &ldquo;Pic,&rdquo; the Blue Posts, the
+Argyll, and Cremorne.&nbsp; From such places as Evans&rsquo;s and
+Mott&rsquo;s he was absolutely barred, and the moral effect of
+the reception he would have received deterred him&mdash;in his
+wisdom&mdash;from making the attempt.</p>
+<p>His <i>modus operandi</i> was simplicity itself; seating <a
+name="page45"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 45</span>himself at
+some inoffensive man&rsquo;s table, he helped himself to anything
+he might find within reach; if remonstrated with, he knocked the
+remonstrator down, and coolly walked out of the room.</p>
+<p>On other occasions he would demand money, and if refused,
+applied the same remedy; if a party were seated at the Alhambra
+watching the performance, a black arm would suddenly appear over
+one&rsquo;s shoulder, and glass by glass was lifted and coolly
+drained.&nbsp; Occasionally he met his match, when, having
+pocketed his thrashing, he commenced afresh in an adjoining
+night-house.</p>
+<p>A plethora of coloured ex-prizefighters roamed about these
+latitudes in the long-ago sixties.&nbsp; Plantagenet Green, an
+admittedly scientific boxer unaccompanied by any heart, was
+everywhere much in evidence, and Bob Travers, one of the best and
+pluckiest that ever contested the middle-weight championship,
+might have been seen years after selling chutnee in the
+streets.&nbsp; In those unenlightened days prizefighters,
+although made much of, never forgot their place, and the
+illiterate abortions in rabbit-skin collars that intrude into
+every public resort at the present day and dub themselves
+&ldquo;professors&rdquo; were creations happily unknown.</p>
+<p>Needless to add that the Alhambra, with its miscellaneous
+attractions, stood very high in the estimation of our subalterns,
+or a considerable portion who deferred to Bobby on all matters
+relating to &ldquo;form.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Armed with diminutive flags of every nationality in Europe, a
+select team were one evening enjoying the delights that led up to
+the &ldquo;patriotic era,&rdquo; as sitting around a table on the
+balcony they agreed upon the rendezvous should
+circumstances&mdash;and the fights&mdash;separate them.&nbsp;
+Ladies, moreover, graced the board, and sipped from time to time
+the exhilarating fluid that sparkled in various tumblers.&nbsp;
+George <a name="page46"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 46</span>Hay
+meanwhile was explaining to an interested houri how by an
+extraordinary coincidence red, white, and blue predominated in
+most of the National colours of Europe, while Bobby was urging
+some argument on a fair creature in inaudible tones, when an
+apparition a yard long, and as black as ebony, passed over his
+head and deliberately seized a tumbler.&nbsp; Dazed for a moment,
+and ignorant of the notoriety of the &ldquo;Kangaroo,&rdquo; one
+and all sat spellbound as the ruffian deliberately emptied the
+glass and replaced it on the table.</p>
+<p>George was the first to grasp the situation, as, springing
+from his chair, he confronted the bully, and inquired:
+&ldquo;What are we to understand by this?&rdquo;&nbsp; But,
+&ldquo;What you d&mdash; please!&rdquo; was barely out of his
+mouth when a swinging blow on the jaw sent him staggering towards
+the counter.</p>
+<p>Dropping his cane and hat, the &ldquo;Kangaroo&rdquo; now
+advanced in an attitude that meant business, and dashing in his
+long left arm, essayed to fell George with one blow.&nbsp; But
+his adversary was prepared for this, and springing back lightly,
+got beyond danger.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Kangaroo&rsquo;s&rdquo; arms,
+when reposing by his side, reached almost to his knees, and gave
+him an incalculable advantage with any but the most nimble.&nbsp;
+Realising this fact, George decided to change his tactics, and to
+direct all his blows for the neck or body of his opponent; he had
+been taught, indeed, that a negro&rsquo;s head is practically
+invulnerable, but that a swinging slog in the loins would double
+up the most seasoned.&nbsp; A shower of blows now rattled on the
+black&rsquo;s sides, as springing out of danger after every
+onslaught, the &ldquo;Kangaroo&rdquo; began to show signs of
+distress; standing well out of range, he appeared but to wait the
+opportunity, and picking up his hat and cane, he bolted down the
+stairs.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Kangaroo&rdquo; had learnt a lesson, and was
+profoundly ignorant of the fact that his <a
+name="page47"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 47</span>meek-looking
+opponent had a heart as big as a lion&rsquo;s and was a pupil of
+Ben Caunt.</p>
+<p>But patriotism and loyalism of the blatant type are apt to
+cloy even on the most gushing, and the fever pitch having been
+attained, the cooling process set in, and then a series of
+experiments ensued to try and keep up the demand for the disrated
+Alhambra.</p>
+<h2><a name="page48"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+48</span>CHAPTER V.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE NIGHT HOUSES OF THE
+HAYMARKET.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">If</span> any of the Bucks of the sixties
+were suddenly brought to life and placed in the centre of
+Piccadilly Circus, no labyrinth could more completely puzzle them
+than the structural alterations of to-day.&nbsp; Abutting on to
+where Shaftesbury Avenue commences was a dismal row of houses,
+with here and there an outlet into the purlieus of more dismal
+Soho; where the obstruction for the accommodation of
+flower-sellers now raises its useless head, another block of
+houses ran eastwards, dividing the present broad expanse into two
+narrow thoroughfares; the huge monument to the profitable
+industry in intoxicating drinks takes the place of the ancient
+&ldquo;Pic,&rdquo; and the Haymarket, from the exalted position
+of centre of the surging mass of nocturnal corruption, has
+descended to the status of a dimly-lighted thoroughfare, with
+here and there an unlicensed Italian restaurant and a sprinkling
+of second-class pot-houses.</p>
+<p>Instead of the promenade from which strollers are now hustled
+off the pavement by a zealous police, the strip between Windmill
+Street and the Raleigh Club was the favoured lounge, and the
+Haymarket literally blazed with light (till daylight) from such
+temples as the &ldquo;Blue Posts,&rdquo; Barnes&rsquo;s, The
+Burmese, and Barron&rsquo;s Oyster Rooms.&nbsp; This latter
+place, although palpably suffering from old age and the ravages
+of time, and propped up by beams innumerable, <a
+name="page49"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 49</span>was the
+nightly rendezvous of oyster-eaters, where, sandwiched in between
+&ldquo;loose boxes&rdquo; upstairs and down, champagne and other
+drinks were consumed to excess.</p>
+<p>Often amid these sounds of revelry, ominous cracks and groans
+warned the revellers that all was not right, till on one
+never-to-be-forgotten night a sound that vibrated like the crack
+of doom caused a stampede, and leaving wine, oysters, hats,
+unpaid bills, every one rushed helter-skelter into the
+street.&nbsp; Old Barron, staring disconsolately from the
+pavement at his fast-collapsing house, suddenly appeared to
+remember that his cash-box was in the doomed building, and
+rushing frantically in, was seen hurrying out with the prized
+treasure.&nbsp; And then a crash that might have quailed the
+stoutest heart rang through the night, and Barron, cash-box, and
+lights, all disappeared in a cloud of dust that ascended up to
+heaven.&nbsp; Days after the old man was found firmly clutching
+his treasure.&nbsp; Let us hope its possession compensated him in
+his passage across the Styx.</p>
+<p>The decorous Panton Street of to-day was another very sink of
+iniquity.&nbsp; Night houses abounded, and Rose Burton&rsquo;s
+and Jack Percival&rsquo;s were sandwiched between hot baths of
+questionable respectability and abominations of every kind.&nbsp;
+Stone&rsquo;s Coffee House was the only redeeming feature, and,
+as it existed in those days, was a very spring of water in a dry
+land.</p>
+<p>But it must not be assumed that, although Percival&rsquo;s was
+a &ldquo;night house,&rdquo; it was to be classed with its next
+door neighbours.&nbsp; Here the sporting fraternity radiated
+after all important events; here Heenan lodged after his fight
+with Tom King; and one can see him&mdash;as if it were
+yesterday&mdash;receiving his friends and backers on the
+following Sunday with his handsome features incrusted in plaster
+of Paris and smiling as if he had been awarded the victory he was
+undoubtedly choused out of.</p>
+<p><a name="page50"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 50</span>But
+perhaps no spot has undergone more structural and social change
+than Arundel Place, an unpretentious court that leads out of
+Coventry Street.&nbsp; At one corner now stands a
+tobacconist&rsquo;s shop, and at the other an eating bar, where
+hunks of provender are devoured at the counter, and cocoa
+retailed at a penny a bucket; whilst the court itself is
+practically absorbed by the Civil Service Stores, through whose
+windows &ldquo;gentlemen&rdquo; may be seen weighing out coffee,
+and &ldquo;bald-headed noblemen&rdquo; tying up parcels.</p>
+<p>In the sixties, however, the place had considerably more
+vitality&mdash;after nightfall.&nbsp; On the eastern side stood a
+public-house of unenviable repute, owned by an ex-prizefighter,
+to which the fraternity congregated in considerable numbers;
+whilst at the end furthest from Coventry Street was a
+coffee-house, whose open portals discovered nothing more
+dangerous than an oil-clothed floor, chairs and tables over its
+surface, and an unassuming counter for the supply of moderate
+refreshments.&nbsp; During the day a spirit of repose pervaded
+the entire area; the public-house appeared to be doing little or
+no trade, whilst the coffee-house was chiefly remarkable for the
+persistent scrubbing and emptying of buckets that went on, as a
+mechanical charwoman, in the inevitable bonnet, oscillated to and
+fro between the door and the pavement.&nbsp; But for the old
+woman, and an occasional apparition in a startling check costume
+that flashed in and out between the coffee-house and the
+pot-house, one might have imagined the entire place was
+uninhabited, so subdued and reposeful was everything.</p>
+<p>Tall and angular by nature, with skin-tight overalls and a
+coat the colour of a Camden Town &rsquo;bus, Jerry Fry was the
+undisputed landlord of the unpretentious coffee-house, and
+recognised director of a gang of sharpers who made human nature
+their study, and scoured the highways and byways nightly in
+search of profitable quarry.&nbsp; Not that the above costume was
+<a name="page51"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 51</span>the sole
+one in Jerry&rsquo;s extensive wardrobe, which boasted amongst
+others the huge cape and whip associated with rustic drivers, a
+clerical outfit, evening clothes, and a white tie the size of a
+poultice.&nbsp; Jerry as a strategist was without a rival, and it
+requires but little effort of imagination to assume that he has
+turned in his grave times innumerable in the contemplation of the
+sorry sharpers of the present era who have usurped his functions
+in the despoiling of their species.&nbsp; Any promising subject
+that appeared on the horizon immediately became the object of
+Jerry&rsquo;s personal solicitude, and once the victim&rsquo;s
+besetting sin was accurately diagnosed, no time was lost in
+placing a specialist on his unsuspecting track.&nbsp; It was not
+long after the arrival of the &ldquo;Line&rdquo; garrison in
+London that George Hay was focussed as an inveterate gambler, and
+as the &ldquo;Landed Gentry&rdquo; vouched for his being the
+eldest son of a county magnate, no time was lost in laying lines
+in every direction in the hope of catching him.&nbsp; Not that
+play&mdash;in which he was by no means an expert&mdash;was his
+only delight; on the contrary, he excelled in every kind of manly
+sport, and could hold his own with the gloves with many a man who
+had the advantage of him in height and weight.</p>
+<p>When in the country cards never entered his mind; in London,
+however, with the fascination ever before him, the temptation was
+irresistible, and the three fly-blown cards of a racecourse
+manipulator or <i>chemin de fer</i> at the Arlington held him
+like a vice whilst the fever was upon him.</p>
+<p>It was a sultry evening in September when everybody (except
+four millions) was out of town that George and Bobby elected to
+stroll to the West End after an uneventful dinner at mess.&nbsp;
+Threading their way through the slums that abutted on the Tower,
+nothing worthy of record occurred till, casually stopping to
+light a cigar, they were accosted on the <a
+name="page52"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 52</span>threshold of
+Leicester Square by a courteous individual who asked for a
+light.</p>
+<p>George was nothing if he was not a gentleman, and without
+waiting to consider why the person should seek a light from him
+when gas jets were blazing outside every shop, he considerately
+acceded.</p>
+<p>But the stranger apparently was of a sociable disposition, and
+persisted in hanging on to their skirts and essaying remarks on
+objects on their way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have we here?&rdquo; he inquired as, passing
+Arundel Place, a dense crowd outside the pot-house riveted his
+attention.&nbsp; &ldquo;The fight, of course,&rdquo; he
+continued, &ldquo;the seconds and backers are squaring up, I
+expect.&nbsp; Will you step in, gentlemen, it&rsquo;s all right,
+but I&rsquo;d better perhaps go in and inquire, they all know me;
+one minute, gents, by your leave,&rdquo; and he disappeared into
+the crowded court.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall we go in, George,&rdquo; inquired Bobby,
+&ldquo;or have a peep at the &lsquo;Pic&rsquo;?&nbsp; D&mdash;
+it! we must have some sport after twenty-four hours of the
+Tower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go in?&nbsp; Of course we will if there&rsquo;s
+anything to be seen,&rdquo; answered George; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
+half-inclined to shake up my liver by arranging with Ben Caunt to
+resume my &lsquo;studies&rsquo; at the Tower, and there&rsquo;s
+one consolation, Bobby, it&rsquo;s not as expensive as the
+Arlington, and we haven&rsquo;t much to lose if they do pick our
+pockets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So summed up the situation Solon George, as their cicerone
+made his reappearance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right, gents; step this way,&rdquo; intimated the
+stranger; &ldquo;but we had best wait awhile in the coffee-house
+yonder; leave it to me to give you the tip,&rdquo; and without
+further ado they all entered the hostelry.</p>
+<p>George, with all his common sense, was a very tyro in the
+rudiments of the unwritten law of knavery, and certainly no match
+for a shrewd London rascal; to enter into conversation with an
+absolute stranger <a name="page53"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+53</span>appeared nothing extraordinary to him, and when a
+punching match was the basis of the acquaintance, and the chance
+of meeting certain leading&mdash;if illiterate&mdash;lights of
+the fraternity the prospect, conventionalism with him was an
+infinitesimal quantity, and he entered into the sport with the
+enthusiasm of a schoolboy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why here?&rdquo; inquired George, as they found
+themselves the sole occupants of the oilclothed room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a bit, gents, they&rsquo;ll come presently,&rdquo;
+replied their cicerone; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve given them the office,
+but they&rsquo;re a bit busy just now settling up the scores for
+this morning, maybe.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then he proceeded with what
+purported to be a personal description of the fight, looking
+frequently at a huge clock that ticked in the corner, and
+fervently hoping that Jerry would not be long.</p>
+<p>Bobby meanwhile was champing his bit, and bewailing the time
+that might so much more profitably have been passed at the
+&ldquo;Pic,&rdquo; when a man in the immaculate disguise of a
+coachman walked hurriedly through the room.&nbsp; Peering into
+every corner, and examining crevices that a cat would have been
+incommoded in, he hurriedly approached our heroes, and asked
+excitedly whether they had seen a gentleman such as he
+described.&nbsp; Without waiting for a reply, he next dropped his
+whip and rug on to a vacant chair, and whipping out a pack of
+cards, continued: &ldquo;It drives me mad to think I should have
+lost such a stupid game; but I was drunk, gentlemen&mdash;forgive
+the admission&mdash;yes, drunk; but he has promised me my revenge
+here to-night,&rdquo; and pulling out a watch the size of a
+frying-pan, he contemplated it as if wrapt in thought.&nbsp;
+Replacing it with a spasmodic jerk, he continued: &ldquo;Just
+fancy, gentlemen, this was the simple thing; but I was drunk,
+alas!&mdash;happy thought, &rsquo;ware drink,&rdquo; and he gave
+a halloa such as foxhunters <a name="page54"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 54</span>give on the stage, and proceeded to
+rattle three cards.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, gentlemen, just for fun, which is the
+knave?&rdquo;&nbsp; And Bobby, without a check, selected the
+correct cardboard.&nbsp; &ldquo;Again, gentlemen, if you please,
+it will bring my hand into practice; shall we say half a
+crown?&nbsp; Thanks!&rdquo; and again, with the accuracy of a
+truffle dog, Bobby discovered the card.</p>
+<p>Again and again was this farce perpetrated, till Bobby&rsquo;s
+winnings amounted to &pound;4, and in his generosity he seemed
+loth to take advantage of such a greenhorn.</p>
+<p>George meanwhile had caught the infection and bet and won as
+the stakes were made higher.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Five pounds for once, gentlemen?&nbsp; I think
+I&rsquo;ve earned my revenge,&rdquo; pleaded Jerry, and fickle
+Fortune as if of the same opinion, decided in his favour.</p>
+<p>Any one but the veriest tyro would have deemed this a
+favourable opportunity to stop, but George, as we have seen, had
+his own ideas of honour; the fever, moreover, was upon him, and,
+producing the contents of his own pocket, he again backed his
+opinion.</p>
+<p>Gone in a twinkling, he next turned to Bobby, and the lad at
+once proceeded to supply him with his cash.&nbsp; Meanwhile their
+original acquaintance whispered imploringly to George to have
+done with it, but he might as well have spoken to the
+winds.&nbsp; &ldquo;D&mdash; it, man, if I&rsquo;m cleaned out of
+ready money I&rsquo;ve still my ring and sleeve links; go on,
+sir,&rdquo; he continued to Jerry.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet my
+jewellery against a tenner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But fortune was still against our friends, and divested of his
+trinkets, in his turn he appealed to his opponent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, sir, I gave you your revenge, now give me mine,
+and anything I lose I&rsquo;ll give you my cheque for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Jerry was of a practical nature; cheques <a
+name="page55"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 55</span>were
+occasionally stopped, and officious detectives might come to hear
+of it, so he decided to decline the tempting offer, but promised
+revenge on the morrow.&nbsp; The first stranger meanwhile came to
+the rescue.&nbsp; &ldquo;I know you&rsquo;re a gentleman,&rdquo;
+he whispered, &ldquo;and mayn&rsquo;t like to lose those things,
+why not offer the gent to redeem them to-morrow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The idea seemed a happy one, and the party dispersed, on the
+understanding that at twelve the following day they should all
+meet at the Pump in Leicester Square.</p>
+<p>But our heroes were not yet done with casual acquaintances, as
+passing along the Haymarket they were again accosted by a
+man.&nbsp; &ldquo;Excuse me, gentlemen,&rdquo; was the abrupt
+introduction, &ldquo;I saw you parting company just now with two
+well-known sharpers; I&rsquo;m Detective Bulger of the police,
+may I ask if you&rsquo;ve been robbed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then the painful truth began to dawn upon the victims that
+two officers in Her Majesty&rsquo;s Service had been overreached
+at a game that a Blue-coat boy would have jibbed at.</p>
+<p>The sequel is briefly told.&nbsp; The next day the appointment
+was punctually kept by all except Jerry, who, oddly enough,
+deputed another man to explain that he was sending off an urgent
+telegram, and had requested him (if the coast was clear) to
+conduct our friends to him.</p>
+<p>Followed at a respectful distance by the detective, the
+jewellery was duly redeemed; but just as Jerry was pocketing the
+money, a hand was laid upon his shoulder, and he found himself in
+the clutches of Sergeant Bulger.</p>
+<p>George refused to prosecute; his money was however, restored
+to him, and binding Bobby to secrecy, he thus escaped the chaff
+that would have cleaved to him for life.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;Kitchen&rdquo; was situated in St. Martin&rsquo;s
+Court, <a name="page56"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+56</span>abutting on Castle Street, now known as Charing Cross
+Road; adjoining it was a famous <i>&agrave; la mode</i> house
+kept by two brothers, each of whom could turn the scale at thirty
+stone.&nbsp; It was explained by way of accounting for this
+extraordinary freak of nature that, by never leaving the
+establishment and inhaling the greasy fumes from night to
+morning, their pores were constantly imbibing from a thousand
+sources the oleaginous vapours that conduce to obesity; be that
+as it may, the entire front of an upper chamber had to be removed
+to allow of the usual formalities of Christian burial when one of
+the firm died, and it is doubtful if the place was not afterwards
+demolished.</p>
+<p>Here nightly were to be found actors since known to fame;
+journalists such as Horace (Pony) Mayhew and his brother Gus,
+George Augustus Sala&mdash;then writing to measure&mdash;and a
+sprinkling of golden calves with theatrical proclivities.&nbsp;
+The refreshments, of course, left nothing to be desired on the
+score of satisfying, and <i>&agrave; la mode</i> gravy in pewter
+pots stimulated many a jaded reveller during the small hours of
+the morning.</p>
+<p>It was on our way to this refined hostelry that we on one
+occasion met Polly Amherst, and the sequel was so absurd that I
+give the story special prominence.</p>
+<p>Polly was a delightful companion.&nbsp; Just down from Oxford,
+he was destined to take up a fat family living in the
+neighbourhood of Sevenoaks, but being seen one night in a
+bird&rsquo;s eye tie amid the revels of Cremorne, and the birds
+of the air having carried it to his bishop, it was pointed out to
+the worthy fellow that free scope for his undoubted talent was
+impossible in the Church, and so posterity was the loser of much
+pulpit oratory that would doubtless have thrilled the present
+generation.</p>
+<p>As we entered the &ldquo;Kitchen&rdquo; Jack Coney&mdash;a
+promoted scene-shifter lately come into prominence <a
+name="page57"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 57</span>by his
+marriage with Rose Burton&mdash;was retailing to the assembled
+revellers the spot which had been kept secret to the last moment
+where a big fight was to take place in the morning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, I&rsquo;ll go,&rdquo; replied George Hay to
+someone&rsquo;s inquiry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m too seedy,&rdquo; continued Bobby, who had
+not spared the punch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I, too,&rdquo; added Oliver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to, but I daren&rsquo;t,&rdquo; chimed in
+Polly.&nbsp; And so a detachment was added to the contingent that
+were piloted by the irrepressible Coney.</p>
+<p>Bobby during the past night had, alas! not followed the paths
+of sobriety, and so it came to pass that the blind agreed to lead
+the blind, and Polly Amherst and Harry Turner (a genial comedian)
+agreed to escort him to the Hummums.</p>
+<p>Passing Hart&rsquo;s Coffee House we, of course, &ldquo;looked
+in,&rdquo; and, sure enough, there was Hastings and a dozen boon
+companions; but the night air had been too much for many of us;
+we saw a dozen Marquises and only one boon companion, so taking
+the wisest resolve we had taken that night, we bade each other
+farewell on the steps of the Hummums, and proceeded to our
+virtuous couches.</p>
+<p>Arising late on the following afternoon, a circumstance
+occurred that drove everything else out of my head, and to the
+elucidation of this inexplicable coincidence are to be attributed
+the monotonous details I have just described.</p>
+<p>It was towards three on the following afternoon, when, having
+completed a refreshing toilette, my left arm was entering my
+sleeve that I became aware of a foreign substance that bulged to
+an abnormal extent the inner pocket of my coat; proceeding to
+examine the cause with that self-possession for which I was so
+justly conspicuous, my equanimity was considerably tried by
+coming into contact with <a name="page58"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 58</span>a watch; extracting it carefully, I
+discovered that it was attached to a massive chain adorned with
+numerous seals and lockets.&nbsp; Surprised, I continued my
+investigations, my surprise turning to anxiety as a second watch
+(a repeater) made its appearance.&nbsp; By this time thoroughly
+alarmed, I dived again, and out came three or four rings and a
+purse stuffed full of sovereigns.&nbsp; Fairly staggered, my
+<i>sang-froid</i> left me, and reeling towards the bed, I
+endeavoured to solve the mystery.</p>
+<p>Had I in my cups robbed a jeweller&rsquo;s?&nbsp; Had I picked
+somebody&rsquo;s pocket?&nbsp; Had I had a row, and after the
+fray put on my opponent&rsquo;s coat?&nbsp; But every argument
+failed to elucidate the mystery, and my thoughts wandered to such
+an extent that in it all I saw a distinct judgment on my
+back-sliding.</p>
+<p>To make matters worse, I knew not where Amherst or Harry
+Turner resided, and so resolved to have breakfast and await
+developments.</p>
+<p>But breakfast under such circumstances was a sorry farce;
+every gulp of tea appeared to choke me, and in every waiter who
+approached I recognised a constable on the track of the
+burglar.&nbsp; Flesh and blood could not long stand this strain,
+and my pent-up feelings received a still greater shock by the
+waiter thrusting a card into my hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ask him
+in,&rdquo; I replied, and Harry Turner, with a face a yard long,
+hurriedly shuffled towards me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An awful thing has occurred,&rdquo; began the unhappy
+mummer, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ve come to you in the hope that
+you&rsquo;ll be able to explain it.&nbsp; Look at this,&rdquo; he
+continued, as he proceeded to untie a bundle.&nbsp; &ldquo;When I
+was putting on my coat just now I found two watches, a
+cheque-book, a ring, and a packet of papers.&nbsp; Can you
+recollect what we did?&nbsp; By Gad, I&rsquo;m half disposed to
+go and give myself up.&nbsp; One would get off lighter then,
+perhaps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whilst we were discussing ways and means, a second <a
+name="page59"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 59</span>card was
+brought to me, and again the waiter was requested to &ldquo;show
+him in,&rdquo; and then Polly Amherst came upon the scene, the
+ghost of his former self, pale and haggard, but otherwise
+externally irreproachable as regards white tie and High Church
+clerical attire.&nbsp; &ldquo;Billy,&rdquo; he began, &ldquo;a
+terrible thing has occurred, and I&rsquo;ve come here in the
+hopes that you will be able to set my mind at rest.&nbsp;
+Conceive my horror, when opening my eyes this afternoon, to see
+at my bedside a watch, a pile of sovereigns, and a valuable
+ring.&nbsp; What silly jokes did we indulge in last night, old
+man?&nbsp; &rsquo;Pon my word as I came here I shuddered as I
+passed a policeman.&nbsp; The matter can&rsquo;t rest here.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;ve locked the accursed things in my portmanteau, and now
+what&rsquo;s to be done?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the consolation he received from his dismal companions in
+no way tended to allay his anxiety.&nbsp; &ldquo;We have neither
+of us the smallest conception of how we became possessed of these
+things,&rdquo; replied Turner, &ldquo;and it seems to me our only
+course is to walk round to Bow Street and voluntarily give
+ourselves up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Our teeth had now begun to chatter, and, hoping against hope,
+we agreed it would be best to await George Hay&rsquo;s return,
+and act as he should advise.</p>
+<p>Three weary hours later, George Hay, Oliver Montagu, the
+irrepressible Jack Coney, and Harry Ashley (afterwards of <i>Pink
+Dominoes</i> fame), returned from the fight, and it having been
+arranged that the three latter should be permitted to depart
+before the culprits broke the news to George, a magnum was called
+for by way of a stirrup cup.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the way, Polly,&rdquo; remarked Montagu, &ldquo;I
+may as well relieve you of my gimcracks, and, by Gad, it&rsquo;s
+as well we didn&rsquo;t take them.&nbsp; Did you ever see a
+rougher lot?&rdquo; he added, turning to George.</p>
+<p>And then a cloud rose from off the countenances of Polly,
+Harry Turner, and myself; the magnum <a name="page60"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 60</span>that had hitherto tasted like jalap
+appeared as nectar to our lips, and we began to recollect that
+prior to leaving the &ldquo;Kitchen&rdquo; our comrades had
+entrusted their valuables to us.</p>
+<p>We never told our terrible experience.</p>
+<h2><a name="page61"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+61</span>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">EVANS&rsquo;S AND THE DIALS.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> the Embankment came into
+existence, Salisbury Street and Cecil Street&mdash;where the
+hotel now stands&mdash;consisted for the most part of lodging
+houses.&nbsp; Overlooking the river, stairs led to shanties to
+which wherries were moored, whilst a verandah, running the entire
+length of the house in which I once had rooms, enabled shade and
+muddy breezes to be indulged in during the hot summer
+evenings.&nbsp; At the side could be seen the arches known as Fox
+Hill, which, still visible from the (now) Tivoli Music Hall, were
+in those days capable of being traversed for a considerable
+distance.</p>
+<p>In ancient days the haunt of smugglers and desperadoes, it had
+not lost its popularity with the lawless classes even in the more
+modern long-ago sixties, and weird stories of murders that had
+never been discovered, and crimes of every description, were
+currently reported as of almost daily occurrence in the
+impenetrable &ldquo;dark arches of the Adelphi.&rdquo;&nbsp; No
+sane person would have ventured to explore them unless
+accompanied by an armed escort, and even Wych Street, Newcastle
+Street, and Holywell Street were &ldquo;out of bounds&rdquo;
+after nightfall.</p>
+<p>The dead body of a female having one morning been discovered,
+it was currently reported that the assassin was in concealment in
+the &ldquo;dark arches;&rdquo; the police&mdash;from information
+received&mdash;were <a name="page62"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+62</span>convinced of it, and the authorities, having a mind to
+probe the mystery, organised search parties, which scattered
+amongst the labyrinths, and eventually emerged no nearer an
+elucidation than before.</p>
+<p>Passages, it was asserted, led to various exits on the river
+bank, and extended in an easterly direction to Whitefriars, all
+of which in later years have been gradually filled up till now
+nothing more pernicious than a peaceful beer-store a few yards
+from the entrance and an occasional board-man who ought to be
+traversing the street, give signs of vitality to what was once a
+sink of iniquity.</p>
+<p>It is refreshing after this weird retrospect to turn to the
+modern Adelphi Terrace, where years ago I participated in many
+enjoyable reunions.&nbsp; Here each Sunday night such lively
+company as the late Kate Vaughan and her husband, Freddy
+Wellesley, Billy Hill, Marius, Florence St. John, Sweet Nell
+Hazel, and other vestals congregated; whilst the
+&ldquo;Savages&rdquo; have made it their headquarters, and can
+lean over the balcony without risking typhoid, and eventually
+cross the Strand at no greater risk than an invitation to air
+their French.</p>
+<p>And the changes in the Adelphi suggest the changes that have
+taken place in other historical resorts, than which nothing has
+been more marked than in the Burlington Arcade.&nbsp; Here every
+afternoon, between six and seven, throngs composed of all that
+made up the pomp and vanity of this wicked world disported
+themselves.&nbsp; Here Baby Jordan and
+&ldquo;Shoes&rdquo;&mdash;since become the mother of a
+present-day baronet&mdash;Nelly Fowler, and Nelly Clifton held
+court with their attendant squires and lords of every
+degree.&nbsp; Here at seven the entire mass surged towards the
+Blue Posts in Cork street and indulged in champagne and caviare
+toast.&nbsp; Here about the same time Hastings, Fred Granville,
+and roysterers of a more pronounced type looked in for a
+breakfast of &ldquo;fixed bayonets&rdquo; by way of appetite <a
+name="page63"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 63</span>for the
+dinner at Limmer&rsquo;s that most of them would barely
+touch.&nbsp; Here (in Cork Street) a little head might be seen
+cautiously peeping over the blinds at No. 17 in the hope that
+some eligible client might seek pecuniary relief before entering
+on the night&rsquo;s enjoyment.&nbsp; Here in later years the
+same head, but transformed into the appearance of a Fitzroy storm
+signal, might be seen more shiny, more haughtily posed, dictating
+terms to Lairds of Aboyne and owners of Derby favourites.&nbsp;
+After which the rich man died, and the shekels made by usury have
+gone (as was only right) to bolster up impecunious subalterns and
+Christian hospitals.</p>
+<p>In the palmy days of Paddy Green, Evans&rsquo;s provided
+perhaps the only tavern where a weary sojourner might sit in
+peace and realise that he was surrounded by comfort and
+tone.&nbsp; Hovering near the door was the genial old proprietor,
+with white hair and rubicund face, a smile for every one, and
+capable of passing anywhere for a chairman of directors at
+least.&nbsp; Around the walls were the priceless oil paintings
+belonging to the Garrick, deposited temporarily after the fire
+that made havoc with that historical building; whilst covering
+the entire floor were tables where the best (and the best only)
+of chops, steaks, mealy potatoes, and welsh rabbits, with wines
+of heaven knows what age, beer, and spirits were procurable.</p>
+<p>Nor must the old establishment be confounded with the modern
+fungus that continued its name under the pilotage of an
+enterprising Jew, and eventually got closed by the police for
+developing into an ordinary night house.</p>
+<p>To see a genuine old English waiter crumble a huge potato with
+a spotless napkin creates a pang when one thinks of his German
+and Italian prototype asking &ldquo;&rsquo;Ow many breads you
+have?&rdquo; and on being told &ldquo;one,&rdquo; looking as if
+he could swear you had had two.</p>
+<p>And no accounts were discharged at <a name="page64"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 64</span>the time&mdash;sit, as one might,
+from 10 to 2 a.m., and eat and drink variously, and as often as
+one pleased&mdash;all the reckoning was one&rsquo;s own as one
+imparted it on leaving to the most courteous of butlers at the
+door.</p>
+<p>And then the stage, what comparison is possible between the
+healthy singing of glees and solos one then heard and the
+elephantine wit of the modern serio-comic?&nbsp; And poor old Van
+Joel, who, as the programme explained, was retained on account of
+past services, retailing cigars in the hall and obtaining fancy
+prices for &ldquo;Auld Lang Syne&rdquo;&mdash;how a lump comes
+even now into one&rsquo;s knotty, hoary old throat at the
+recollections of these long-agos!</p>
+<p>Monotonous as all this may sound to the modern up-to-date
+sightseer, there was a homeliness and an indescribable delight
+associated with Evans&rsquo;s that surely the recording angel
+will not fail to remember when he sums up the sins of the
+sixties.</p>
+<p>Across the market, again, was a hostelry, long since
+disappeared except in name, &ldquo;The Hummums,&rdquo; and who
+shall find to-day such rare old English fare, served on silver by
+the most typical of English waiters?</p>
+<p>The rooms may have been dingy, the smoking-room a little
+stuffy, but the spirit of Bob Garnham must surely hover over the
+modern imitation that has arisen on its ashes and assumed
+everything but its indescribable comfort.</p>
+<p>The approaches to Evans&rsquo;s after dark were by no means
+free of danger in the long-ago sixties.&nbsp; The market porters,
+who for the most part were cut-purses and pugilists, were apt to
+waylay solitary foot passengers whilst awaiting the arrival of
+the vegetable vans, and I recollect an Uxbridge farmer named
+Hillyard entering the hotel one night with a broken wrist after
+being waylaid and robbed in Russell Street.</p>
+<p>The old Olympic, hard by, was another nasty place <a
+name="page65"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 65</span>to leave
+after the performance, except in a cab.&nbsp; Within fifty yards
+the alleys bristled with footpads, and any foolhardy pedestrian
+traversing the dimly-lighted Drury Lane or Newcastle Street was
+pretty sure not to reach civilisation without a very rough
+experience from the denizens of Vinegar Yard and Betterton
+Street.</p>
+<p>The Forty Thieves were an organised bevy of sirens, whose
+headquarters were the Seven Dials, and whose mission it was to
+entice, decoy, and cajole any fool who had the temerity to listen
+to their cooing.</p>
+<p>The Clock House on the Dials, now an apparently well-conducted
+pot-house, was in those days a hotbed of villainy.&nbsp; The king
+of pickpockets there held his nightly lev&eacute;e, and the
+half-dozen constables within view would no more have thought of
+entering it than they would the cage of a cobra.</p>
+<p>If a man lost a dog the reward was offered there; if
+one&rsquo;s watch disappeared it was there that immediate
+application was desirable; and if the emissary was not
+&ldquo;saucy&rdquo; he might with luck save it from the
+melting-pot that simmered all day and all night within fifty feet
+of Aldridge&rsquo;s horse repository.</p>
+<p>The walk through the Dials after dark was an act none but a
+lunatic would have attempted, and the betting that he ever
+emerged with his shirt was 1,000 to 60.&nbsp; A swaggering ass
+named Corrigan, whose personal bravery was not assessed as highly
+by the public, once undertook for a wager to walk the entire
+length of Great Andrew Street at midnight, and if molested to
+annihilate his assailants.</p>
+<p>The half-dozen doubters who awaited his advent in the Broadway
+were surprised about 1 a.m. to see him running as fast as he
+could put legs to the ground, with only the remnant of a shirt on
+him; after recovering his breath and his courage he proceeded to
+describe the terrific slaughter he had inflicted on an
+innumerable number of assailants.&nbsp; A scurrilous <a
+name="page66"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 66</span>print that
+flourished about this time in its next issue narrated the
+incident in verse by: &ldquo;Oh, pray for the souls that Corrigan
+kilt,&rdquo; etc.&nbsp; Corrigan, it may be added, was an
+Irishman, and not a particularly veracious one.</p>
+<p>Any list of queer fish would be incomplete without introducing
+the name of Bill Holland, who, although he struggled on till the
+eighties, was in his zenith in the sixties.&nbsp; Rosherville
+being too far, and Vauxhall having disappeared, the North
+Woolwich Gardens came into favour with those who sought
+recreation of a less boisterous kind than that at Cremorne.</p>
+<p>Bill Holland had all his life been a showman; amusing and full
+of exaggerated anecdote, he had catered for the public from time
+immemorial; every monstrosity had at some period passed through
+his hands; every woman over seven feet, and every man under four,
+had appeared under his auspices: the tattooed nobleman, the
+dog-faced man, the whiskered lady&mdash;all recognised him as
+master at one period or another.&nbsp; He had
+&ldquo;directed&rdquo; the Alhambra, the Surrey, the Blackpool
+Gardens, and, in later years, the Battersea Palace, and signally
+failed with each; but, sphinx-like, he invariably reappeared
+irreproachably groomed and waxed, with some confiding creature
+ready to finance him.&nbsp; His constant companion was Joe Pope,
+an abnormally fat little man, and a brother of the Q.C. who not
+long ago died.&nbsp; It was the brains of this obese little man,
+in conjunction with Bill Holland&rsquo;s assurance, that kept the
+wheels going for over thirty years.</p>
+<p>Across the river at Greenwich were the historical Trafalgar
+and Ship Taverns, where the famous fish dinners, served in the
+very best style, were procurable.&nbsp; Only fish, but prepared
+and served in irreproachable form; beginning with boiled
+flounder, one progressed by seven stages of salmon in various
+forms, filleted sole, fried eel, each with its special sauce,
+till whitebait <a name="page67"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+67</span>plain and whitebait devilled found the wayfarer
+well-nigh exhausted.</p>
+<p>It was only then that the folly of ordering dinner on a hungry
+stomach became manifest, and when the duckling that the smiling
+waiter had suggested made its appearance it was almost with tears
+that one turned away from its pleading savour and reluctantly
+confessed one&rsquo;s inability to do it justice.&nbsp; And then
+the coffee on the lawn, and the scrambling for coppers amongst
+the water arabs in the surging mud below, were adjuncts that
+never failed in the completing of enjoyable evenings now for ever
+gone.</p>
+<p>Why the resort went out of fashion seems an enigma.&nbsp;
+Forty, thirty, aye, twenty years ago both taverns were the almost
+daily resorts, during the summer and autumn, of the highest in
+the land.&nbsp; In one private room would be heard Her
+Majesty&rsquo;s judges, cracking jokes as if they were incapable
+of judicial sternness; in another legislators by the score, who
+had travelled down by special steamer to eat and drink as if no
+such things as fiscal questions existed; whilst in the public
+room cosy couples dined, and roysterers smoked and joked, and yet
+all has passed like a pleasant dream.&nbsp; The Trafalgar has
+long since been pulled down, the Ship, if not closed, is very
+much changed for the worse, and Londoners swelter annually with
+the patience of Job, and are apparently indifferent to the
+delightful resorts they have lost.</p>
+<p>It was during a May meeting, when rural deans and other
+provincial Church luminaries were staying at Haxell&rsquo;s and
+the Golden Cross Hotels, that Satan prompted certain roysterers
+to raid these establishments when the reverend lodgers might be
+supposed to have retired to their respective closets.&nbsp; It
+was Nassau Clarke&mdash;a subaltern in the Life Guards&mdash;who
+conceived the brilliant idea, and collecting Jacob Burt, Charlie
+Buller, Lennon, and a few other well-known roysterers, we
+proceeded towards the Strand.&nbsp; The <a
+name="page68"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 68</span>joke, if such
+it may be called, was to change every pair of boots reposing
+peacefully outside the various doors, and the
+development&mdash;which none of us was likely to
+witness&mdash;was the scare that would ensue at 8 a.m., when
+sober ecclesiastics might be expected to swear at the prospect of
+being late for their platform prayer at 9.&nbsp; Charlie Buller
+in those days was reputedly the handsomest man in the Household
+Brigade; an excellent bruiser, and not slow of wrath, he was,
+moreover, a desirable companion when altercations were likely to
+occur.</p>
+<p>Lennon, on the other hand, was not a cockney, and only up on
+leave, but willing to assist in anything original or
+exciting.&nbsp; Not many months previously he had been awarded a
+brevet-majority and the Victoria Cross for a conspicuous act of
+bravery at the Taku Forts.&nbsp; I lost sight of him for years,
+and when I again met him he had left the Army and fallen
+apparently on bad times.&nbsp; In consideration of his past
+services, he was nominated years later for a Knight of Windsor;
+but the poor old fellow was &ldquo;not himself&rdquo; when he
+went down to be installed, and the appointment was
+cancelled.&nbsp; He was an excellent actor in comic parts, and
+has a son, I believe, on the London stage.</p>
+<p>The winter of &rsquo;61 was an unusually severe one, and the
+river that washed the walls of the grim old Tower was covered
+with a thick coating of ice, which in its turn afforded a
+convenient asylum for the dead cats and other refuse that drifted
+upon it from the neighbourhood of the adjoining wharves.&nbsp;
+Locomotion in those pre-Embankment and underground railway days
+was not so convenient as now, and as cabs had practically ceased
+running by reason of the mountains of snow intervening between
+the Tower and the Monument, I had, together with a few boon
+companions, decided that the time had come for a migration, and
+went in for &ldquo;first leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page69"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 69</span>And the
+choice we had made was by no means an unhappy one, for the
+weather that had made existence in London well nigh intolerable
+had driven the woodcocks into the coverts, and we all declared
+that a week of such surroundings would compensate for all the
+vicissitudes we had undergone from Kangaroos, Tower, and five
+o&rsquo;clock bacon and eggs in London.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;route,&rdquo; too, had come, and we reasoned, not
+unwisely, that the journey to Ireland was at best an unpleasant
+one, and that if we delayed, 1000 to 60 were by no means
+extravagant odds that we might get no leave at all.</p>
+<p>It was about a fortnight after this that, having returned to
+grimy old Lane&rsquo;s, I received a characteristic letter from
+my old chum, George Hay.&nbsp; &ldquo;Most of my time&rdquo; (he
+wrote) &ldquo;is spent in accompanying the old squire on his
+various peregrinations over the estate, and by pointing out
+various agricultural developments that were absolutely necessary,
+or structural alterations that would improve the holdings.&nbsp;
+He leads me to understand that my place was on the spot I would
+one day inherit, and the fitting moment would arrive after I got
+my company.&nbsp; &lsquo;D&mdash; it, sir,&rsquo; he would
+continue, &lsquo;in my time no eldest son remained longer than a
+year in the army unless he was prepared to pay &pound;10,000 over
+regulation for the regiment as Cardigan did.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;But in the infantry, sir,&rsquo; I suggested,
+&lsquo;things are different.&nbsp; Promotion is slower, and I
+can&rsquo;t help thinking that the bonds that unite officers to
+the regiment are stronger than is usually the case in the
+cavalry.&nbsp; But I see no prospect of my company till we are
+under orders for foreign service, and we shan&rsquo;t be at the
+top of the roster for another two years at least.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I have nothing to say against the line,
+sir,&rsquo; he would reply, &lsquo;except that your officers can
+rarely ride to hounds.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;But surely, sir,&rsquo; I answered, &lsquo;there
+are other <a name="page70"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+70</span>virtues you will not deny to the linesman; in garrison
+towns they at all events appreciate hospitality, and don&rsquo;t
+insult worthy folks by accepting their invitations only to turn
+them into ridicule.&nbsp; You may remember the story of a young
+puppy who replied to a kindly hostess by &ldquo;The King&rsquo;s
+never dance, and the King&rsquo;s never sing,&rdquo; and this in
+a regiment, forsooth, where every man-jack of them was a
+shopkeeper&rsquo;s son, and which was known as the &ldquo;Trades
+Union.&rdquo;&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Great excitement meanwhile prevailed at the Tower; the route
+had come, the mess was closed, and everybody was packing in
+preparation for an early departure for Ireland.&nbsp; Transports
+in those long-ago days were not the floating palaces inaugurated
+years later by the Indian troopers.&nbsp; Cranky
+steamers&mdash;whose principal industry was the transporting of
+pigs and cattle&mdash;were hurriedly chartered by the War Office,
+and with the men packed like herrings, and the junior officers
+billeted amongst the band instruments, regiments proceeded at
+five knots an hour from London to the Irish ports.</p>
+<p>The Colonel, during these preparations, lost no opportunity of
+describing his experiences when last stationed in Dublin; how he
+and certain boon companions were within an ace of being tried for
+their lives for throwing into the Liffey an old watchman
+deposited in a sentry-box; how they started the &ldquo;Pig and
+Whistle&rdquo; in Sackville Street, run on lines that would shock
+you, virtuous reader; their nightly visits to the
+&ldquo;Quane&rsquo;s&rdquo; Theatre, where Mikey Duff performed
+<i>Hamlet</i>, and declined to accede to the demands of the
+gallery for &ldquo;Pat Molloy and the roising step&rdquo; with
+the indignant retort: &ldquo;D&mdash; yer oise, what do you
+expect for toppence;&rdquo; the orgies of &ldquo;Red bank&rdquo;
+oysters at Burten Binden&rsquo;s, and the dinners at the Bank of
+Ireland, when the regiment furnished the guard; how old Bill,
+after a drinking bout, would stamp through every corner of the <a
+name="page71"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 71</span>guard-rooms,
+cursing at everything, and winding up by the consumption of
+half-a-dozen brandies and sodas, and &ldquo;very different to
+what it was in the Peninsula!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Payther&rdquo; Madden, too, was holding forth on what
+he would show them in Cark, if &ldquo;plase the Lard the rigimint
+was quarthered in the ould station,&rdquo; and went on to
+describe how Barny Magee &ldquo;wad come on and sing at the Hole
+in the Wall with a gaythaar in his fist, looking for all the
+world like a hamstrung moke,&rdquo; and how the gallery would
+shout, &ldquo;For the love of dacency, Barny, dhrop yer
+concertina and pull up yer stockin&rsquo;,&rdquo; and how Mrs.
+Rooney, bless her soul, would pass yer the toime of day with that
+grace&mdash;so genteel loike, so obsarvent&mdash;as ye paid toll
+to go in, with: &ldquo;God bless you, Carporal, it&rsquo;s you
+that has the lip,&rdquo; or ilse: &ldquo;Go an wid ye, Carporal,
+for a flirrt that ye are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A sort of bloomin&rsquo; sing-song,&rdquo; suggested a
+cockney comrade, &ldquo;but give me London, with &rsquo;er
+bloomin&rsquo; orange peel and hashfelt, with &rsquo;er boats
+down to North Woolwich, with yer gal on yer knee and a new clay
+in yer face; a pint of shrimps maybe, and a pint of ale down yer
+neck, and no bloomin&rsquo; guards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Amid these conflicting sentiments the regiment quitted the
+Tower.</p>
+<p>And what a delightful station the Dublin of the sixties was;
+here Lord Carlisle as Lord-Lieutenant reigned supreme, and though
+compelled by usage to keep up the mock court, with its mock
+&ldquo;Master of the Horse&rdquo; and &ldquo;Gentlemen at
+Large,&rdquo; diffused hospitality like the fine old English
+gentleman he was.</p>
+<p>Nightly the captain and subaltern of the Castle Guard were
+invited to the Viceregal table, during which the kind old man
+clinked glasses and invited his every guest to take wine with
+him.&nbsp; How His Excellency could retain his head after all
+these <a name="page72"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+72</span>courtesies was once a marvel till it transpired that the
+huge decanter before him was the weakest brandy and water diluted
+to the exact colour of Amontillado.&nbsp; And then the whist that
+followed at sixpenny points, when His Excellency rigorously
+prevented his partner&mdash;and his partner only&mdash;from
+seeing every card in his hand.&nbsp; How refreshing it all
+was!</p>
+<p>No contortions short of dislocating their necks could prevent
+his adversaries from taking advantage of the dishonest
+opportunity, for the old gentleman cracked jokes throughout the
+entire rubber, and claimed and paid his sixpences with the
+scrupulousness of a confirmed gambler.</p>
+<p>Among the Viceregal staff were some inflated specimens of
+vice-flunkeydom.&nbsp; Foster, Master of Horse, whose death
+occurred lately, was reputed as not knowing one end of a horse
+from another, and never ventured on a purchase for the Viceregal
+stables, at Farrell&rsquo;s or Sewell&rsquo;s, unless fortified
+by the close proximity of Andy Ryan or some other
+horse-coper.&nbsp; Burke, a Gentleman at Large and an ex-colonel
+of militia, was another warrior of the offensive type, and I
+shall never forget the scene when a youngster of the 16th Lancers
+at one of the lev&eacute;es gave him a peremptory order when he
+was officially glued to the staircase, under pretence that he
+mistook him for a flunkey.&nbsp; But the matter was not to end
+there, and before the r&eacute;veille had ceased blowing at
+Island Bridge he was waited upon by a fiery buckeen to demand
+satisfaction on behalf of Kornel Burke.</p>
+<p>Captain Stackpool (everybody had a military title) was another
+Dublin curiosity.&nbsp; Member of Parliament for Ennis, he
+affected Dublin and the delights of the Unoited Service from one
+year&rsquo;s end to the other.&nbsp; Dublin, he assured me, was
+the most &ldquo;car-driving, tea-drinking, money-spending city in
+the world,&rdquo; and he was not far wrong.</p>
+<p>Lord Louth, who weighed eighteen stone, and stood <a
+name="page73"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 73</span>five foot
+seven in his stockings, had served some years in a kilted
+regiment; but he, too, has long since been gathered to his
+fathers.</p>
+<p>About this time an amusing incident occurred to Lord
+Louth.&nbsp; The very best of fellows, his vanity was insatiable,
+and only London-built clothes were good enough to set off his
+graceful figure.</p>
+<p>In the 14th Hussars was a diminutive cornet who also
+patronised the same tailor as Louth, and both these
+dandies&mdash;as appeared later&mdash;had telegraphed on the same
+day for a pair of the most bewitching trousers in preparation for
+some social event to which they had both been invited.&nbsp;
+Conceive the consternation of the two recipients when at the last
+moment a pair of diminutive pants revealed themselves to the
+enraged peer, and a garment sufficiently voluminous to engulf
+three Deal boatmen reached the expectant cornet.&nbsp; This
+latter was known as the &ldquo;Shunter&rdquo; from the
+extraordinary talents he developed later as a gentleman rider,
+and still later as a hanger-on of Abingdon Baird.</p>
+<p>One of the most brilliant surgeons that Ireland or any other
+country has ever produced was just coming into prominence in
+those long-ago days.&nbsp; Dr. Butcher, who in appearance
+resembled the portraits of Disraeli in his younger days, was
+known professionally to nearly every man in the garrison; of the
+most enthusiastic type, he thought nothing of producing two or
+three stones from his waistcoat pocket and exultantly explaining
+that he had that morning taken them from certain patients&rsquo;
+interiors, and nothing gave him greater offence than refusing to
+attend one of his private s&eacute;ances.&nbsp; But the most
+marvellous operation he ever performed was on Billy Deane, of the
+4th Dragoon Guards, who, having consulted every specialist in
+Europe, appealed to Butcher to save his arm and enable him to
+remain in the service.</p>
+<p><a name="page74"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 74</span>A fall
+whilst hunting had resulted in the disease of the elbow-bone of
+the left arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing but taking your arm off will save your
+life,&rdquo; was the universal fiat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&mdash; nonsense!&rdquo; was Butcher&rsquo;s retort,
+and he cut a square clean out of the elbow.</p>
+<p>Within six months Billy&rsquo;s bridle arm was stronger than
+the other.</p>
+<h2><a name="page75"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+75</span>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE RATCLIFF HIGHWAY.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Some</span> months had elapsed since the
+regiment landed in Ireland, when one of those inscrutable ways of
+Providence gave another opportunity of renewing one&rsquo;s
+London experiences, and obtaining a month&rsquo;s leave in the
+height of the drill season for the purpose of visiting the
+Exhibition of &rsquo;62.&nbsp; The temptation so gratuitously
+offered was altogether too much for me, and, in conjunction with
+the rest of the Army in Ireland, I gratefully seized the
+opportunity of &ldquo;studying&rdquo; the various exhibits of
+foreign countries, and applied for leave for that specific
+purpose.</p>
+<p>Limmer&rsquo;s, where a select band took up its quarters, was
+at this time one of the chief resorts of young bloods and
+subalterns, for the most part of the cavalry, who revelled in
+sanded floors and eating off the most massive of silver.</p>
+<p>Entering the coffee room on the afternoon of our arrival, I
+was greeted by a cheery voice, and descried Hastings lingering
+over his breakfast.&nbsp; Truth to say, his lordship had not a
+robust appetite.&nbsp; The mackerel bone fried in gin, and the
+caviare on devilled toast remained apparently untouched, whilst a
+<i>hors-d&rsquo;&oelig;uvre</i>, known as &ldquo;Fixed
+Bayonets&rdquo;&mdash;of which the recipe is happily
+lost&mdash;failed to assist his jaded appetite; alongside him
+stood a huge tankard of &ldquo;cup,&rdquo; and pouring out a
+gobletful for his newly-found chum, and gulping down a pint by
+way of introduction, he gasped: <a name="page76"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 76</span>&ldquo;By Gad, old man, I&rsquo;m
+d&mdash; glad to see you!&nbsp; To begin with, you must dine with
+me at 8&mdash;here.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve asked Prince Hohenlohe and
+Baron Spaum, and young Beust and Count Adelberg, and if
+you&rsquo;ll swear on a sack of bibles not to repeat it, I expect
+two live Ambassadors&mdash;it&rsquo;s always as well&rdquo; (he
+continued in a confidential tone) &ldquo;to have a sacred person
+or two handy in case of a row with the police.&nbsp; First we go
+to Endell Street&mdash;to Faultless&rsquo;s pit.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve
+got a match for a monkey with Hamilton to beat his champion bird,
+The Sweep, and after that I&rsquo;ve arranged with a detective to
+take us the rounds in the Ratcliff Highway.&nbsp; No dressing,
+old man; the kit you came over in is the ticket, and a sovereign
+or two in silver distributed amongst your pockets; you&rsquo;re
+bound to have a fist in every wrinkle of your person&mdash;why,
+if you&rsquo;re dancing with a beauty she&rsquo;ll be going over
+you all the time.&nbsp; I often used to laugh and shout out,
+&lsquo;Go it, I&rsquo;m not a bit ticklish!&rsquo;&mdash;still,
+what the h&mdash; does it matter?&rdquo;&nbsp; And his lordship
+sucked down another libation to the gods.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you can speak French or German; if not you
+can try Irish&mdash;not that it matters, for I expect Fred
+Granville and Chuckle Saunders, and Hamilton is sure to bring a
+mob, so I think we may count on having the best of it if it comes
+to a row.&nbsp; How long are you up for?&nbsp; A month, eh?&nbsp;
+Oh, well, then we&rsquo;re right for the Derby, and I&rsquo;ll
+tell you what we&rsquo;ll do.&nbsp; We&rsquo;ll go down the
+evening before&mdash;the night before the big race amongst the
+booths is the nearest approach to hell vouchsafed to unhappy
+mortals.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Punctually to time our party assembled, and it would have been
+difficult for the unenlightened to have realised that the
+gaitered, flannel-shirted, monkey-jacketed assembly embraced
+diplomats, peers, and obscure Army men who have since made their
+mark in history.&nbsp; Here might have been seen Charlie <a
+name="page77"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 77</span>Norton, the
+youngest and handsomest major in the service, who years after
+developed into a Pasha amid the Turkish gendarmerie; Ned
+Cunyinghame, in the zenith of his fortune, dilating (with the
+dessert) on the superior attributes of Nova Scotia baronets, and
+how an ancestor had once told the Regent &ldquo;it was a title he
+could neither give nor take away;&rdquo; Count Kilmanseg, the
+best whist player that ever came out of Hanover; Prince
+Hohenlohe, a charming attach&eacute; just beginning his career;
+Baron Spaum, the best of the best, now Commander-in-Chief of the
+Austrian Navy, and president of the recent Anglo-Russian
+Arbitration in Paris; Count Adelberg, a genial Muscovite, who
+considered <i>menus</i> superfluous, and once shocked a very
+correct hostess by exclaiming &ldquo;<i>Je prends
+tout</i>,&rdquo; and a host of others unnecessary to
+enumerate.&nbsp; Presiding at the head of the table was the
+genial young Hastings&mdash;not yet a married man&mdash;faced, as
+vice-president, by Freddy Granville, whose wavy hair, gentle
+manners, and frank and English appearance were boring their way
+into the hearts of the best women and men in Society, except,
+perhaps, the strict Exeter Hall school.</p>
+<p>To approach a cockpit, even in the long-ago sixties, required
+a certain amount of discretion, and so it came to pass that the
+sporting team broke up into twos and threes, and by a series of
+strategical advances by various routes, arrived within a few
+minutes of each other at the unpretentious portals in Endell
+Street.&nbsp; Descending into the very bowels of the earth, the
+party was considerably augmented by his Grace of Hamilton&rsquo;s
+contingent, and within half an hour, the spurs having been
+adjusted and all preliminaries arranged, the two champions faced
+one another in the arena.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later it was a piteous sight to see the brave old
+champion Sweep attempting to crow, although he seemed aware he
+had received his quietus.</p>
+<p><a name="page78"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 78</span>Suffice
+to say Hastings won the wager, and the party hurried eastward,
+leaving the brave old bird like a warrior taking his rest.</p>
+<p>One of the most popular pastimes of the long-ago sixties was
+going the rounds of the dens of infamy in the East End and the
+rookeries that then abutted upon the Gray&rsquo;s Inn Road.&nbsp;
+In this latter quarter, indeed, there was one narrow, tortuous
+passage that in broad daylight was literally impassable, and to
+escape with one&rsquo;s life or one&rsquo;s shirt was as much as
+the most sanguine could expect.</p>
+<p>The Ratcliff Highway, now St. George&rsquo;s Street East,
+alongside the Docks, was a place where crime stalked unmolested,
+and to thread its deadly length was a foolhardy act that might
+quail the stoutest heart.</p>
+<p>Every square yard was occupied by motley groups; drunken
+sailors of every nationality in long sea-boots, and deadly knives
+at every girdle; drunken women with bloated faces, caressing
+their unsavoury admirers, and here and there constables in pairs
+by way of moral effect, but powerless&mdash;as they well
+knew&mdash;if outrage and free fights commenced in real
+earnest.&nbsp; Behind these outworks of lawlessness were dens of
+infamy beyond the power of description&mdash;sing-song caves and
+dancing-booths, wine bars and opium dens, where all day and all
+night Chinamen might be seen in every degree of insensibility
+from the noxious fumes.</p>
+<p>The detective who was to be our cicerone was known to every
+evil-doer in the metropolis.&nbsp; Entering these dens when not
+in pursuit of quarry was to him a pilgrimage of absolute safety,
+and a friendly nod accompanied by &ldquo;All right, lads, only
+some gents to stand you a drink&rdquo; extended the protection to
+all who accompanied him.&nbsp; A freemasonry, indeed, appeared to
+exist between these conflicting members of society whereby, by
+some unwritten code, it was understood <a name="page79"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 79</span>that when either side passed its word
+every one was on his parole to &ldquo;play the game.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The first place the explorers entered was a singsong in the
+vicinity of Nile Street, but it was evidently an &ldquo;off
+night,&rdquo; for, with the exception of a dozen half-drunken men
+and women, the place was practically empty.&nbsp; As we entered,
+however, a sign of vitality was apparent, and the chairman
+announced that a gent would oblige with a stave; but the cicerone
+with commendable promptitude called out, &ldquo;Not necessary,
+thank you all the same,&rdquo; and prompted his followers to lay
+five shillings on the desk.&nbsp; But the compliment was not to
+be denied, and a drunken refrain soon filled the air, which was
+absolutely inaudible, except:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;She turned up her nose at Bob Simmons and
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The next place was infinitely more interesting&mdash;the
+&ldquo;Jolly Sailors,&rdquo; in Ship Alley.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+dozen,&rdquo; explained our cicerone as he tendered a coin, and
+our party awaited admission.&nbsp; &ldquo;Keep your money,
+sergeant,&rdquo; was the ominous reply.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of course, I
+know you; but we&rsquo;ve got a mangy lot here to-night; they
+won&rsquo;t cotton to the gents.&nbsp; If they ask any of their
+women to dance it will be taken as an affront, and if they
+don&rsquo;t ask them it will be taken as an affront; leave well
+alone, say I.&nbsp; Most nights it might do, but not to-night,
+sergeant; the drink&rsquo;s got hold of most of them, and
+there&rsquo;s a lot of scurvy Greeks about who will whip out
+their knives afore you can say what&rsquo;s what.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nonsense, man,&rdquo; cut in Bobby, &ldquo;we
+don&rsquo;t want to have a row, we&rsquo;ve come for a spree;
+there&rsquo;s the money, we&rsquo;ll take our
+chance.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Baron also, who prided himself on his
+mastery of our vernacular, interposed with: &ldquo;Posh, I snaps
+my finger at eem!&nbsp; Am I afraid of a tirty Greek?&nbsp;
+Posh!&nbsp; All our intent is larks; we want no rows.&nbsp;
+Posh!&rdquo; And regardless <a name="page80"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 80</span>of the friendly monition, our party
+trooped into the room.&nbsp; The scene that presented itself was
+not an encouraging one; perched on a rickety stool was a fiddler
+scraping with an energy only to be attained by incessant
+application to a mug of Hollands that stood at his elbow, and to
+which he appeared to resort frequently.&nbsp; Polkaing in every
+grotesque attitude were some twenty couples, the males attired
+for the most part in sea-boots and jerseys, their partners with
+dishevelled hair and bloated countenances, all more or less under
+the influence of gin or beer; here and there couples, apparently
+too overcome to continue the giddy joy, were propped against the
+wall gurgling out blasphemy and snatches of ribald song, whilst
+in alcoves or leaning over a trestle table were knots of men,
+smoking, cursing, swilling strong drinks, and casting wicked eyes
+at the intruders.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Aven&rsquo;t they a leg of
+mutton and currant dumplin&rsquo;s at &rsquo;ome wi&rsquo;out
+comin&rsquo; &rsquo;ere?&rdquo; inquired a ferocious
+ruffian.&nbsp; &ldquo;What for brings &rsquo;em a-messing about
+&rsquo;ere, I&rsquo;d like to know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blast me if I wudn&rsquo;t knife &rsquo;em; what say
+you, lads?&rdquo; replied a stump-ended figure, stiffening
+himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bide a while, lads; let&rsquo;s make &rsquo;em show
+their colours.&nbsp; What cheer, there?&rdquo; shouted a huge
+Scandinavian, as a contingent detaching itself from the main body
+lurched towards the explorers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What cheer, my hearties?&rdquo; sang back Hastings,
+and, with a diplomacy that might have done credit to a Richelieu,
+the entire party were fraternising within a minute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Jolly Sailors&rdquo; was admittedly the most
+dangerous of all the dens, even amid such hotbeds of iniquity as
+&ldquo;The King of Prussia,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Prince
+Regent,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Old Mahogany Bar,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Old
+Gun,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Blue Anchor,&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Rose
+and Crown,&rdquo; and had decoys in all directions to lure
+drunken sailors or foolish sightseers within its fatal
+portals.&nbsp; Situated <a name="page81"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 81</span>at the extremity of Grace&rsquo;s
+Alley, it led directly into Wellclose Square, a <i>cul de sac</i>
+it was easier to enter than to leave; but sailors of all
+nationalities are admittedly the most impressionable of mortals,
+and happily in the present case the <i>sang-froid</i>, the
+unexpected rejoinder, the devil-may-care bearing, disarmed
+apparently their rugged hostile intentions, and within half an
+hour visitors and regular customers&mdash;Germans, English,
+Scandinavians, and nondescripts&mdash;were shouting:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s old England coming to?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Board of Trade ahoy!&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>What any of us knew of the Board of Trade or the Mercantile
+Marine history does not say.</p>
+<p>The opium dens in this delectable quarter were situated higher
+up at Shadwell, but the charms of the &ldquo;Jolly Sailors&rdquo;
+proving too much for our heroes, they elected to explore no
+further.</p>
+<p>How different is the entire neighbourhood to-day!&nbsp; The
+very name Ratcliff Highway has disappeared, and been replaced by
+that of Saint George&rsquo;s Street East; where constables once
+patrolled on the <i>qui vive</i> in twos and threes a solitary
+embodiment of the law may now be seen, strolling along in a
+manner that once would not have been worth an hour&rsquo;s
+purchase; where drunken sailors in sea-boots and knives at every
+girdle lurched against inoffensive pedestrians, unwashed women
+may now be seen at corners knitting stockings, whilst unsavoury
+tadpoles are constructing mud-pies in the gutter; here and there
+may still be seen an inebriated foreigner and rows of
+loafers&mdash;with a striking resemblance to the
+&ldquo;unemployed&rdquo; hanging about the public-houses, but the
+solitary specimen in blue seems to exercise a salutary
+hypnotising effect, all which (justice demands) shall be placed
+to the credit of these enlightened days.&nbsp; Not that this
+welcome change has been long arrived at; <a
+name="page82"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 82</span>not four
+years ago a respectable tradesman, Abrahams, a naturalist, of
+191, St. George&rsquo;s Street East, was attacked at 2 p.m.,
+within fifty yards of his own door, and succumbed to his injuries
+within twenty-four hours, and even to-day to ostentatiously show
+a watch chain passing certain corners, say Artichoke Lane, would
+not be without danger; but when all is said and done, there is
+much to interest the seeker after novelty by a visit to the
+Ratcliff Highway of to-day.&nbsp; Here at the &ldquo;Brown
+Bear&rdquo; may now be seen the rooms, once devoted to orgies,
+filled to their utmost capacity with canaries sending up songs to
+heaven purer far than those of the long-ago sixties.&nbsp;
+Continuing along St. George&rsquo;s Street will be found
+Jamrach&rsquo;s menagerie, whence filter most of the rarities
+that find their way to the Zoological Gardens; and the place is
+no ordinary bird shop, but a museum of information in more ways
+than one.&nbsp; Here one large room will be found stuffed with
+bronzes and curios from all parts of the world, which every
+American visiting London, who fancies he is a critic, does not
+fail to inspect; for Mr. Jamrach&mdash;like his father&mdash;is
+an authority, and a naturalist in the highest acceptation of the
+term.</p>
+<p>Lovers of animals will not regret a pilgrimage to &ldquo;the
+Highway,&rdquo; a pilgrimage which, by the aid of the District
+Railway and broad, electric-lighted streets, is no longer
+attended with discomfort or danger.</p>
+<h2><a name="page83"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+83</span>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE BOOTHS ON EPSOM DOWNS.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">While</span> racing men have gained by the
+railway&rsquo;s close proximity to the course, others are now
+deprived of many of the sights there used to be seen along the
+road.&nbsp; From Westminster Bridge to the historical heath was
+almost one continuous panorama of life, joviality, cheer, and
+fun; every hedgerow was lined with open-mouthed yokels, gaping at
+the &ldquo;coves from Lunnon&rdquo; of whom they had heard so
+much, but had never before seen; every ditch supported a natural
+artificial cripple; every beerhouse was fronted by holiday crowds
+quaffing ale and inviting one to join; and to cap all this, the
+miles of vehicles with their accompanying dust gave every one the
+complexion of chimney sweeps, despite veil, artificial nose, and
+other guises incidental to a real journey by the road.</p>
+<p>The party Lord Hastings had organised was a thoroughly
+representative one: Fred Granville, Peter Wilkinson, Ginger
+Durant, Fred Ellis&mdash;not yet blossomed into Howard de
+Walden&mdash;Bobby Shafto, The Baron, Young Broome (on duty), and
+a host of smaller fry; all united in one purpose, one
+aim&mdash;to enjoy life to its uttermost limit, and to lose not
+one fleeting moment of the night preceding the first summer
+meeting at Epsom.&nbsp; Booths in those wicked days <i>were</i>
+booths, not devoted as now to penny shots with pea rifles and the
+excitements permitted by our <a name="page84"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 84</span>prudish legislature, but receptacles
+of every conceivable impropriety, to recount many of which would
+shock you, virtuous reader.</p>
+<p>Here were gipsies of the old original form, who, if permitted
+to tell a modest girl her fortune, invariably wound up by
+informing her &ldquo;she&rsquo;d be the mother of six,&rdquo;
+dancing booths, and tableaux vivants booths; booths where
+sparring and booths where drinking might be indulged in freely,
+booths where terrible melodramas were given, gambling booths, and
+thimble rig booths; roulette and three-card establishments, where
+every vice come down from the days of Noah might be indulged in
+without let or hindrance.</p>
+<p>Leaving Limmer&rsquo;s in the afternoon, and proceeding by
+easy stages, we reached the Downs shortly before eight.&nbsp; No
+time was lost in commencing business, and within an hour we were
+assisting at the erection of a theatre booth, whilst a
+&ldquo;fragment&rdquo; here and there was being rehearsed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what does your Lordship think of that?&rdquo;
+inquired a perky little man who had known the Marquis as a patron
+at a dozen other meetings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Splendid, Simmons,&rdquo; replied his patron;
+&ldquo;but why such serious scenes, why not a jolly jig with
+sailors; poor Nelson, surely he&rsquo;s out of place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By no means, my Lord; on the contrary, my audiences
+will &rsquo;ave it, and if only Mr. Fuljome would act up to
+&rsquo;Ardy&rsquo;s part it would bring down the
+&rsquo;ouse.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s this way, my Lord: Nelson says:
+&lsquo;&rsquo;Ardy, I&rsquo;m wounded mortually,&rsquo; and then,
+of course, &lsquo;&rsquo;Ardy must say melancholy like:
+&lsquo;Not mortually, my Lord?&rsquo;&nbsp; But blow me if I can
+get it right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&mdash; the drama,&rdquo; replied the kindly
+Marquis.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have you any one to send for a
+drink?&rdquo;&nbsp; And pulling out two or three sovereigns the
+party proceeded on their quest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, my Lord,&rdquo; was next shouted from a roulette
+booth.&nbsp; &ldquo;We&rsquo;re just ready for the swells.&nbsp;
+Step in, <a name="page85"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+85</span>gentlemen,&rdquo; continued a flash-looking
+rascal.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah! Mr. Broome,&rdquo; he added, as he
+recognised the ex-puncher, &ldquo;no need for you, I
+hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not, Levi,&rdquo; replied the Marquis.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But we&rsquo;ve got some quarrelsome chaps about; best be
+prepared.&rdquo;&nbsp; And again we proceeded on our
+pilgrimage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where are the tableaux vivants, Hastings?&rdquo;
+inquired Fred Ellis.&nbsp; &ldquo;Damn it, we must show the
+Baron.&rdquo;&nbsp; But at this moment an unrehearsed incident
+occurred which stopped the future legislator&rsquo;s
+eloquence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A word with you, Mr. Wilkinson,&rdquo; said one of a
+couple of very shady individuals.&nbsp; &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+&rsquo;ave to come wi&rsquo; us,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;a
+capias at the suit of Beyfus&mdash;&pound;200 with
+costs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hang it,&rdquo; replied Peter, with
+<i>sang-froid</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you let it stand
+over?&nbsp; If you nab me now I can&rsquo;t pay, but if
+you&rsquo;ll let me alone till after the meeting I&rsquo;ll make
+it right, not only with Beyfus, but with you.&nbsp; Now, look
+here, here&rsquo;s how it stands.&nbsp; On Saturday next
+I&rsquo;m going down with Lord Hastings to Castle
+Donington.&nbsp; Send one of your chaps after me, and about eight
+send a letter in to me.&nbsp; We shall be at dinner&mdash;leave
+the rest to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the following Saturday, the programme was carried out in
+its entirety.&nbsp; Peter Wilkinson was staggered by the
+unexpected blow! and the much-abused, kindly Hastings paid the
+claim on the spot.</p>
+<p>And this is how boon companions requited the most generous man
+in England.&nbsp; What wonder, the target of friends and foes,
+the deepest well at length dried up!&nbsp; The party meanwhile
+had moved on, and Peter on rejoining it found the champagne
+flying with a vengeance.&nbsp; The site was a huge marquee, the
+audience the entire company that had journeyed from London,
+blended with the full strength of the tableaux vivants cast.</p>
+<p><a name="page86"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 86</span>Fred
+Ellis was holding forth in an incoherent speech till, offended by
+being told to &ldquo;shut up,&rdquo; he walked out of the
+tent.&nbsp; Within ten minutes, shouts of &ldquo;Help! murder,
+help!&rdquo; were wafted into the marquee, and groping amid tent
+ropes, the cause was not far to seek.</p>
+<p>On his knees, in an attitude of supplication, was the
+honourable Fred; standing within a yard of him was a huge white
+goat.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh, go away; don&rsquo;t take me.&nbsp; Oh, I
+know he&rsquo;s come for me at last.&nbsp; Oh, take the devil
+away, I know it&rsquo;s him, and I swear I&rsquo;ll never touch
+wine again.&nbsp; Help! murder!&rdquo;&nbsp; Lanterns meanwhile
+approaching from various directions, the position appeared simple
+enough.&nbsp; The unhappy man on lurching amid the tent ropes had
+unfortunately caught his leg in a harmless goat&rsquo;s tether;
+in endeavouring to extricate himself he had dragged the
+inoffensive quadruped close to him, and being at the time in a
+state (presumedly) unusual for him, the surroundings, grafted on
+to a strong religious tendency, had distorted a very ordinary
+billy-goat into the devil specially on his track, and standing
+over him waiting to waft him to where&mdash;no matter how
+thirsty&mdash;drink was absolutely unattainable.&nbsp; Fred Ellis
+had once won the Grand Military, but that was before&mdash;</p>
+<p>Luncheon on the Derby and Oaks days in the long-forgotten
+sixties was an institution that dwarfs the most ambitious
+displays of hampers and cold pies consumed on the tops of
+drags.&nbsp; Conceive a huge marquee with tables the entire
+length groaning under every delicacy, from plovers&rsquo; eggs at
+a shilling a-piece to pat&eacute;s and blanc-manges of the Gunter
+school of creation.&nbsp; Imagine vats six feet high around the
+entire walls distilling the best champagne into goblets filled by
+the most expert of footmen.&nbsp; Conceive all this, free,
+gratis, and for nothing by simply presenting your card with the
+name of your regiment inscribed; behold <a
+name="page87"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 87</span>the genial
+host smiling contentedly, as supporting on his arm a live Duchess
+of Manchester&mdash;now her Grace of Devonshire&mdash;he
+administered to the internal wants of one of the most beautiful
+women of the day!</p>
+<p>Cynics, not contented with accepting the gifts the gods
+provided, were prone to remark that assuming the feast cost Tod
+Heatly a thousand, he would gladly have doubled it, if only to
+enable his fellow-creatures to feast their eyes on that supreme
+moment of his life when he piloted his fair charge across the
+crowded course.</p>
+<p>Tod Heatly, it may be explained, possessed almost the entire
+monopoly of supplying champagne to the various messes of the
+Army.&nbsp; Amassing wealth hand over hand by this profitable
+connection, he returned the compliment by giving a general
+invitation to any officer of any regiment who dealt with his
+firm.</p>
+<p>Incredible as it may appear, no instance ever occurred of
+enterprising chevaliers entering without a right, and the
+delightful custom only ceased when the usages of society, the
+abolition of purchase, and our advanced ideas made it absolutely
+necessary.</p>
+<p>A similar experiment in these enlightened days would require
+admission by parole and countersign and a squad of constables
+within measurable distance.</p>
+<p>Perhaps the most unique individual that has ever risen to a
+prominent position on the Turf was Captain Machell, whose death
+occurred not long since.</p>
+<p>Joining the 14th Foot some time in the fifties, he exchanged
+as a captain to the 53rd, and, retiring a few years later,
+invested his entire fortune&mdash;his commission money&mdash;in a
+pitch at Newmarket.&nbsp; It was during his earlier soldiering
+days that he had the good fortune to be stationed with the
+dep&ocirc;t of his regiment at Templemore, a desolate bog in the
+heart of Tipperary, where commanded as clever a judge of a
+horse&mdash;Colonel Irwin, of the Connaught Rangers&mdash;as ever
+came out of &ldquo;ould Oireland.&rdquo;&nbsp; The permanent
+staff <a name="page88"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 88</span>of
+dep&ocirc;t battalions in those remote days retained their
+appointments indefinitely, a regulation that enabled them to
+settle down very cosily, undisturbed by anything more formidable
+than an annual inspection conducted on the most comfortable
+lines.&nbsp; Needless to add that Templemore was no exception to
+the rule.</p>
+<p>The drill field adjoining the barracks was converted into a
+paddock for brood mares and yearlings; the entire stabling and
+any superfluous out-houses became roomy loose boxes; hens
+cackled, cocks crowed, and pigs grunted from every point of the
+compass, and any youngster prepared to purchase a promising
+hunter&mdash;&ldquo;a bit rough, but likely to shape
+well&rdquo;&mdash;from the Colonel need perform no more arduous
+duties than eating his dinner in uniform and chewing a straw all
+day.</p>
+<p>This equine elysium continued till young men began to grizzle
+and two-year-olds became &ldquo;aged&rdquo;; it might, indeed,
+have continued much longer had it not been for the unfortunate
+Fenian scare and the military precautions that attended it.&nbsp;
+Suffice it to say, that in one single day, and without the
+slightest warning, the Commander-in-Chief&mdash;Lord
+Strathnairn&mdash;suddenly appeared in the Square, and within
+twenty-four hours the happy community was for ever broken up, the
+farm produce sent off to various auction rooms, and the battalion
+half-way across the Channel.</p>
+<p>Machell, when he arrived at the dep&ocirc;t, was not long in
+ingratiating himself with the Colonel, and within a year the pair
+were joint owners of Leonidas, a chestnut gelding that beat
+everything at all the surrounding meetings at Thurles, Cashel,
+and Tipperary.</p>
+<p>Machell, after his retirement, disappeared below the horizon
+till summoned to assist at the pulverisation of the unhappy
+Hastings in the spring of &rsquo;67, and it was after that, with
+&pound;80,000 to his credit, that he loomed into sporting
+publicity.</p>
+<p><a name="page89"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 89</span>A
+splendid judge of a horse, possessed of a wiry frame, an
+expressionless face, and a shrewd and calculating temperament,
+little wonder that he was more or less associated from &rsquo;67
+to his death with every wealthy horse-owner aspiring to a career
+and every ass desirous of pilotage by the astutest man of his
+day.</p>
+<p>Machell as a young man had few equals in all feats requiring
+agility; he could hop, apparently without effort, on to the
+mantelpiece in the smoking-room at Mackin&rsquo;s Hotel, Dublin;
+he could out-run most men for any distance between 100 and 1,000
+yards, and as a middle-weight could hold his own amongst the best
+of amateur boxers.&nbsp; It was not until years after, when he
+came to blows with Bob Hope-Johnstone, at the &ldquo;Old
+Ship,&rdquo; Brighton, that the scientific bruiser, hopping round
+his colossal opponent, caught a chance blow that felled him like
+an ox, breaking three ribs.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here, take this carrion
+away,&rdquo; shouted the Major, and the senseless Machell was
+removed to his rooms in a cab.</p>
+<p>But the redoubtable Bob was, not long after, himself the
+victim of a cowardly mauling at the hands of two Bond Street
+Hebrews, who since have developed into the highest authorities on
+knick-knacks and articles of vertu generally.&nbsp; For even the
+rugged major, it would appear, had a weak point near his heart,
+and seeking on one occasion a fair seducer at the Argyll, he
+traced her to Rose Barton&rsquo;s, and, attacking the two mashers
+who were entertaining her, was belaboured with champagne bottles
+by the cowardly Israelites, till, bleeding from a score of
+gashes, he was removed to the &ldquo;John o&rsquo; Groat&rdquo;
+in Rupert Street, a hostelry now known as Challis&rsquo;s, after
+a waiter at Webb&rsquo;s Coffee House who aspired to perpetuate
+his name.</p>
+<p>It is satisfactory to be able to add that in terror of
+possible consequences, the brothers paid &pound;200 to their
+victim before he attained convalescence&mdash;a <a
+name="page90"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 90</span>circumstance
+we have probably to thank for their still being amongst us.</p>
+<p>Machell, from the exigencies of his profession, was
+unquestionably the ruin of numerous aspiring punters whose
+interests clashed with his own.&nbsp; Beaumont Dixie, whose
+inclinations tended towards always backing &ldquo;Archer&rsquo;s
+mounts,&rdquo; was a notable example, and any one who witnessed
+the scene in the paddock after a race where Machell&rsquo;s horse
+<i>did not win</i>, will not be likely to forget the ruined
+Baronet wringing his hands in despair, and the irate owner
+standing over him with &ldquo;Now, Mr. b&mdash; Beaumont Dixie,
+I&rsquo;ll teach you to back Archer&rsquo;s mounts.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+It will be said by many that Machell was a popular man, that he
+was generous, and deserving of every credit for repurchasing an
+ancestral estate that was supposed to have once belonged to the
+family; others, however, will contend that he was of a selfish
+and over-bearing disposition, that his charity was dispensed when
+and where it was likely to become known, and that no better or
+wiser investment than an estate could have been made by a man
+whose capital must have been enormous, and who hoped, by becoming
+a landed proprietor, to gain the position seldom attained by a
+landless man.&nbsp; Probably Machell was never so good a fellow
+as when he was hopping on and off mantelpieces, and when an
+accident would have broken his neck and his fortune&mdash;the
+value of his commission&mdash;at one blow.</p>
+<p>That Machell was born under a lucky star goes without saying,
+and is proven by his career from the day he sold out with nothing
+but his commission money to his death, when he died worth a
+quarter of a million.&nbsp; Popular as a poor man, he every day
+became more morose as his pile increased, and his first success
+through the introduction of his brother-in-law, Prime (or his
+wife), to Lord Calthorpe (for whom he eventually trained), led
+him by easy stages <a name="page91"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+91</span>to Mr. Henry Chaplin, Joe Aylesford, and finally to
+Harry McCalmont, where all his paths were peace.</p>
+<p>His marvellous capacity for &ldquo;out-touting&rdquo; the
+touts with which Newmarket was infested was once exemplified
+during the trials for the Stewards&rsquo; Cup at Goodwood.&nbsp;
+Suddenly dismounting and diving into his pocket he dropped
+(apparently) by accident a paper which purported to contain the
+weights at which the favourite and others were being tried.&nbsp;
+Needless to add, the list had been carefully prepared, and what
+if true would have been fatal to the favourite&rsquo;s
+performance was, in fact, a highly satisfactory trial.</p>
+<p>Within an hour it was reported at the Victoria Club that the
+favourite had gone wrong, and 30 and 40 to 1 against him
+literally went begging.&nbsp; Two hours later a pre-arranged
+telegram reached his agent, and the money that was piled on by
+the stable brought a golden harvest at Goodwood.</p>
+<p>Doncaster stands out through the long vista of years so
+prominently with charms that appealed to every taste that a
+reference to the old Assembly Rooms may be pardonable.</p>
+<p>Every one who has rambled through the quaint old streets of
+Doncaster must have noticed these unpretentious-looking rooms,
+which, for aught I know, may still echo during the Leger week
+with the blatant babble of the cheap excursion sportsman, but
+which in &rsquo;67 were the nightly rendezvous of the various
+house-parties, and where Major Mahan, who did most of James
+Merry&rsquo;s commissions, was the recognised master of
+ceremonies.</p>
+<p>In the smaller room on the left as one entered, hazard, fast
+and furious, raged pretty well through the night under the
+auspices of Atkins, a lank, white-bearded man, who had an
+unofficial monopoly at Goodwood and other meetings which no rival
+dared to dispute.&nbsp; During the Sussex week he rented a large
+house near where the Brighton Aquarium now <a
+name="page92"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 92</span>stands, and
+the best of everything was provided gratis.</p>
+<p>Old Mahan, who in his youth had been a well-known duellist,
+had at this period simmered down to a fiery punter with a shiny
+forehead that extended to the nape of his neck, and a grizzly
+fringe in the vicinity of his ears.&nbsp; Superstitious to a
+degree, if the dice went against him he would seize any youngster
+entering the room whose physiognomy looked &ldquo;lucky,&rdquo;
+and forcing him into a chair would insist on his calling the
+main, and then backing him blindly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Aren&rsquo;t yer
+surproised at me losing so incessantly?&rdquo; he once inquired
+of Sir Robert Peel, who happened to be standing at his elbow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not in the least,&rdquo; was the caustic answer;
+&ldquo;but we all wonder where you get the money to play
+with.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not that sharpers did not occasionally wriggle in, who, after
+the soberer players had left, resorted to reckless measures to
+rook the more adventurous spirits, who in the small hours were
+more or less tipsy.</p>
+<p>An Irish peer (still living) suspecting on one occasion that
+the dice were loaded&mdash;as no doubt they were, having been
+changed&mdash;and just sober enough to pocket them and leave the
+room, was surprised next morning after having them broken, to
+find that they were perfectly genuine, and thereupon paid his
+losses, which were considerable.&nbsp; It transpired later that
+the sharpers, who were staying at the same lodgings (hotels were
+not patronised in those days), had entered his room whilst he was
+sleeping off the night&rsquo;s debauch and changed the guilty
+&ldquo;bones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On another occasion a man with large estates in the Riding who
+had sense enough to know he was too drunk to play, and had been
+heard to refuse, was considerably astonished next day on the
+course at being accosted by a gentlemanly stranger, who,
+producing twenty pounds in bank notes, thanked him for his <a
+name="page93"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 93</span>courtesy in
+allowing his debt of overnight to stand over, and despite his
+protests of having &ldquo;no recollection of the
+transaction,&rdquo; was literally forced to accept the money.</p>
+<p>Two hours later, however, another stranger approached him and
+reminded him of ninety pounds he had won from him overnight, and
+again R. R. protested he had no &ldquo;recollection of the
+transaction,&rdquo; when a friend passing by chance, the matter
+was referred to him.&nbsp; He promptly asserted he was in the
+rooms all the evening, and distinctly remembered R. R. refusing
+to play; whereupon the sharper, threatening to have satisfaction,
+walked away, and neither he nor his twenty-pound colleague was
+seen again.</p>
+<p>It was surprising the number of Scotsmen that came in those
+long-ago days to see the Leger run, and who, night after night
+foregathered in the Assembly Rooms for no object apparently but
+to drink &ldquo;whusky.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come awa, mon, come awa!&rdquo; I once heard an old
+Scot insist as he escorted an inebriated countryman out, and from
+a discussion that ensued after the delinquent had disappeared I
+gleaned that he was an &ldquo;elder,&rdquo; and that
+&ldquo;Brother Dalziel was very powerful in prayer.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page94"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+94</span>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">RACING PAR EXCELLENCE.</span></h2>
+<p>A <span class="smcap">visit</span> I once paid to Castle
+Donington had initiated me into many of the mysteries of racing
+of which I had hitherto been in profound ignorance.&nbsp; I had
+learnt that heavy plungers often deputed minor satellites to bet
+according to instructions, and had witnessed
+&ldquo;private&rdquo; trials&mdash;which it was well known were
+being watched&mdash;where ruses were resorted to that would have
+impressed the most sceptical by their realism.&nbsp; I had seen a
+&ldquo;favourite&rdquo; pulled up, and within half a minute a
+blood-stained pocket-handkerchief hurriedly smuggled into the
+rider&rsquo;s pocket; I had witnessed a horse backed for
+thousands go lame without apparent cause a week before a race,
+and hobble through the village as if on its way to the
+knacker&rsquo;s, and I marvelled&mdash;till I gradually became
+more enlightened&mdash;at the profound acumen of those in
+authority who could bring such invalids to the post in the best
+of health and spirits.</p>
+<p>I also made the acquaintance of numerous shining lights of the
+Turf, some that blazed with universally admitted lustre, and some
+that emitted a shady, indescribable glimmer apt to mislead the
+wayfarer.</p>
+<p>Amongst the former none held a more honourable position, or
+was a greater favourite, than Mr. George Payne.&nbsp; A man of
+likes and dislikes, he had apparently taken a fancy to me and
+often gave me hints that sturdier recipients would have converted
+into thousands.</p>
+<p><a name="page95"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 95</span>Mr.
+George Payne, although at this period close upon sixty, was the
+centre of every fashionable gathering that met for racing or card
+playing; a favourite of the highest in the land, he had come
+direct from Norfolk to Nice in company with the chief actor in a
+notorious drama enacted many years later, and no man had raised
+his voice with greater indignation when, <i>nolens volens</i>, he
+found himself in the very centre of the unsavoury vortex,
+&ldquo;By &mdash;, sir!&nbsp; By &mdash;, sir!&rdquo;&mdash;an
+invariable adjunct&mdash;&ldquo;D&mdash; scoundrel!&rdquo;
+dominating considerably amid the numerous <i>pourparlers</i> that
+ensued.</p>
+<p>As a card player his stakes were simply appalling, and it is a
+well-known fact that on one occasion he won &pound;30,000 from
+the late Lord Londesborough, who immediately afterwards hurried
+off to be married.&nbsp; &pound;100 a game was to him a normal
+stake, and any aspirant attempting to &ldquo;cut in&rdquo; at the
+table who was not prepared to have an extra hundred on the game
+was &ldquo;By &mdash;, sir&rsquo;d!&rdquo; <i>ad infinitum</i>
+for depriving a better man of the seat.</p>
+<p>Opinions on that remarkable meteor&mdash;Henry Plantagenet
+Hastings&mdash;who first came into public notice at the Newmarket
+Spring Meeting of &rsquo;62, will always differ.&nbsp; By those
+who knew him intimately he will be remembered as a weak, amiable,
+and generous youngster, terribly handicapped by a colossal rent
+roll, a splendid pedigree, a generous, impulsive disposition, and
+an entire ignorance of the value of money.&nbsp; To the present
+generation, who have only heard of his escapades, he will appear
+as a reckless, unprincipled reprobate, preferring low company to
+that of his equals, incapable of restraining his passions in
+pursuit of the object of the moment, and sacrificing anything and
+anybody for their attainment.&nbsp; Barely had he left Oxford
+than he became the target of that sporting world that pursued him
+to his grave, and was swindled out of &pound;13,500 for a
+&ldquo;screw&rdquo; that ended <a name="page96"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 96</span>his days in a cab; after which he
+settled down to racing as a serious occupation, and had fifty
+horses in training; thence (1862) to 1867 he won the
+Cambridgeshire, the Grand Prix, the Goodwood Cup, and a host of
+minor races, besides such a colossal sum as close upon
+&pound;80,000 on Lecturer in the Cesarewitch of &rsquo;66.</p>
+<p>But although the fates had apparently condoned his
+infringement of the Tenth Commandment in &rsquo;64, Nemesis was
+even then on his track, and it would seem that the colt foaled
+about the very time he was exploiting the structural merits of
+Vere Street was to be the humble instrument in the hands of
+Providence for the ruin of the wicked Marquis.</p>
+<p>It is needless here to repeat the threadbare story that once
+interested people of how the most beautiful woman of her day
+stepped out of a brougham one fine morning at the Oxford Street
+entrance to a linen-draper&rsquo;s, and emerged from another door
+in the vicinity of Vere Street with the Marquis&rsquo;s boon
+companion, Fred Granville.&nbsp; Suffice for our reminiscences,
+that if all this had not occurred in &rsquo;64, there would
+probably have been no &ldquo;Hermit&rsquo;s year&rdquo; in
+&rsquo;67; that Captain Machell would not have commenced his
+career by netting &pound;80,000 over the event, and that poor
+Hastings would never have lost and paid the 103,000 sovereigns he
+did.&nbsp; One cannot follow the ups and downs of this unhappy
+sport of Fortune without comparing the cheers that everywhere
+greeted him up to &rsquo;67 with the execrations with which he
+was assailed by the same rabble at Epsom the following year, and
+all because one of the most generous of golden calves had been
+tricked and swindled out of a colossal fortune in less than six
+years, and had met every obligation till plucked of his last
+feather.</p>
+<p>Nor can one forget that the yelpings of his indignant judges
+(!) were mingled with the hacking cough that carried him to his
+grave five months later; yet <a name="page97"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 97</span>nobody who saw him drive off the
+course would have imagined that the incident had affected him in
+the least.&nbsp; &ldquo;I did not show it, did I?&rdquo; he
+remarked to an intimate friend almost from his death-bed;
+&ldquo;but it fairly broke my heart,&rdquo; and so Henry
+Plantagenet Hastings was gathered to his fathers at the early age
+of twenty-six, and almost before the howls of the mob had ceased
+to ring in one&rsquo;s ears.</p>
+<p>Whilst on the fascinating but occult science of racing, the
+licence invariably accorded by an indulgent public will not it is
+hoped be here withheld if one jumps for a moment into the early
+seventies, an era, alas! as far removed from the present
+generation as the long-ago sixties.&nbsp; With railway facilities
+very different from those of to-day, it was the custom of
+&ldquo;bloods&rdquo; to make a week of it at Newmarket during the
+great meetings, and so it came to pass that a distinctly
+representative party took up their quarters at the residence of
+Mr. Postans, the courteous postmaster at Mill Hill, for the Two
+Thousand festival of &rsquo;72.</p>
+<p>In those long-ago days class distinctions were religiously
+observed even in such trifles, and whilst the &ldquo;second
+chop&rdquo; resorted to the &ldquo;White Hart&rdquo; and other
+comfortable hostelries, the upper crust engaged houses at
+fabulous prices, to the advantage of owner and tenant.</p>
+<p>The existence was as regular as it was exciting, the racing
+being followed by an excellent dinner and a stroll about nine to
+&ldquo;The Rooms.&rdquo;&nbsp; It was on the night before the big
+race that Forbes-Bentley&mdash;a lucky dog who owned a number of
+horses, and who had recently been left a fortune of
+&pound;140,000 conditional on his adding a second barrel to his
+name&mdash;suggested to a sportsman at dinner that to avoid
+notice he should put some money on for him on Prince Charlie for
+the Two Thousand.</p>
+<p>Beginning his racing career in a pure love of the <a
+name="page98"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 98</span>sport, he
+eventually developed into a colossal punter, and
+discovered&mdash;it is feared too late&mdash;that the game is not
+a paying one.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tommy,&rdquo; he whispered to his
+next-door neighbour over their cigars, &ldquo;I want a monkey on
+Prince Charlie; will you, like a good fellow, put it on for me
+with as little publicity as possible?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Prince Charlie during the past twenty-four hours had been a
+little shaky in the betting, and from being firm at 2 to 1, 5 to
+2 was at the moment being laid, and was to be had to any
+amount.</p>
+<p>Entering the Rooms about midnight the air resounded with
+&ldquo;5 to 2 against,&rdquo; as, cautiously approaching the then
+leviathan of the Turf, Tommy inquired: &ldquo;What price Prince
+Charlie?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll lay you 1000 to 400,
+Captain,&rdquo; was the reply, and the bet being duly booked, he
+continued: &ldquo;And now you can have 3 monkeys to 1 if you
+like.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Put it down,&rdquo; replied Tommy, who
+although exceeding his commission decided that what was good
+enough for Forbes-Bentley was good enough for him.</p>
+<p>But barely had he left the bookie when up came T. V. Morgan,
+who had a score of horses with Joe Dawson, and inquired what he
+had been doing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your horse is not going well in the betting, old
+man.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve just taken 3 monkeys to 1,&rdquo; was the
+reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My &mdash;, there must be something wrong!&rdquo; he
+gasped.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go at once to Joe,&rdquo; and
+without waiting a moment, he disappeared on his midnight
+mission.</p>
+<p>Knocking up Joe Dawson, who had long retired to rest, the two
+proceeded to the stable, where it was found that the first
+favourite&rsquo;s near fore leg was inflamed, with every
+indication of a swelling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By &mdash;, Morgan!&rdquo; exclaimed the trainer,
+&ldquo;this is d&mdash; serious; the horse has been got at, and
+may be again; we mustn&rsquo;t stir from here for the remainder
+of the night.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so the two kept vigil alternately
+till the saddling bell rang next afternoon.&nbsp; The head <a
+name="page99"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 99</span>stable lad
+meanwhile and certain helpers were not admitted into the stable,
+and peremptorily discharged in the morning, and bonnie Prince
+Charlie won the Two Thousand fairly easily.&nbsp; But during the
+race there was a critical moment as the horses entered the Dip
+and his jockey was seen to move in the saddle.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+thousand to a carrot against Prince Charlie!&rdquo; was now
+shouted by a hundred stentorian voices, but the shouts were
+happily short-lived, as the grand old roarer shot out of the
+crowd and won with apparent ease.</p>
+<p>Joe Dawson and his colleague Morgan meanwhile were inundated
+with congratulations, and when Joe recounted the marvellous
+escape the good old horse had had, the congratulations were not
+unaccompanied by fervent hopes that the delinquents might yet be
+discovered and lynched.</p>
+<p>On the authority of the late Joe Dawson it may be accepted
+that what occurred was of the simplest but most effective nature,
+and comes briefly to this: &ldquo;That the fittest horse if
+gently tapped with a piece of wood on the back sinew will become
+dead lame, and leave no trace of the nobbling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But what led to the discovery appears more marvellous.&nbsp;
+If Forbes-Bentley had not commissioned Tommy to get his money on,
+and if Morgan had not casually asked what he was doing, the fact
+of Prince Charlie&rsquo;s unpopularity might never have been
+brought home to the former; Joe Dawson might have continued in
+his undisturbed slumber, and Prince Charlie at daylight would
+have been found to be hopelessly lame.</p>
+<p>It was the year in which Aventuriere ran for the Oaks that
+George Payne told me that he thought she had a chance of winning,
+and a hint of the kind meaning a lot from such a man as Mr.
+Payne, I decided to invest &pound;15 in the hopes of landing
+&pound;500.&nbsp; Meeting my friend after the race, I expressed
+my fear that the mare had not fulfilled his expectations.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Wait <a name="page100"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+100</span>till you&rsquo;ve seen her over a long distance,&rdquo;
+was the encouraging reply.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t repeat what
+I&rsquo;m saying, but when the weights are out for the
+Cesarewitch get your money back if she carries anything less than
+7st.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Laying this monition to heart, I decided to trust her for a
+big stake, but waiting, alas! to see how Alec Taylor&rsquo;s lot
+would be quoted before acting on the hint, I proceeded to
+Newmarket with a sporting team.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come and dine with me to-night,&rdquo; suggested Fred
+Gretton, &ldquo;if you don&rsquo;t mind meeting Swindells; you
+know what he is, but he&rsquo;s d&mdash; amusing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Swindells was the owner of the first favourite, The Truth
+gelding, a patched-up old crock that had been pulled at every
+small meeting for months, and rewarded his enterprising owner by
+being given a nice light weight for the Cesarewitch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;re both on my &rsquo;orse for
+to-morrow,&rdquo; inquired the genial Swindells.&nbsp; And I
+explained I had determined to back Aventuriere.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s she got on?&rdquo; asked Swindells.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What, 6st. 12lb.?&nbsp; D&mdash; me if any &mdash;
+three-year-old has a chance against my &rsquo;orse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was then that I faltered, and, impressed with the
+speaker&rsquo;s cuteness, decided to go against my original
+intention, and backing The Truth gelding, had the mortification
+next day of seeing Aventuriere win by a neck with little Glover
+up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, got home, I hope?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Payne after
+the race, and when I told the truth, he added: &ldquo;Never ask
+me for a tip again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was thus that I lost the biggest chance of my life.</p>
+<p>But it was before the above blow had descended that Mr.
+Swindells was at his best, and during the dinner that we have
+referred to told story after story which, however creditable to
+his resourceful genius, would by many be considered
+&ldquo;fishy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page101"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+101</span>&ldquo;Ah, the Chester Cup was the race for getting
+money on in those days,&rdquo; remarked the genial
+Swindells.&nbsp; &ldquo;I once &rsquo;ad a crock called
+Lymington; ah, a rare useful one, too.&nbsp; At the October
+Meeting I put &rsquo;im in for an over-night race, the stable lad
+up, with orders to pull him up sharp soon after the start, jump
+off and wait.&nbsp; The &rsquo;orse was dead lame, of course, and
+for why?&nbsp; The lad &rsquo;ad slipped a bit of &rsquo;ard
+stuff into his frog.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Bad case; breakdown,&rsquo; everyone said, so we
+took &rsquo;im back to the stables in a van.&nbsp; First the
+local vet. saw him, and then a big pot from London, and we
+humbugged &rsquo;em both.&nbsp; Not long after I entered
+&rsquo;im for the Chester Cup, but told everybody my d&mdash;
+fool of a clerk had made a bloomer of it, as the &rsquo;orse
+could never be trained, and so when the weights came out he was
+chucked in at nix.&nbsp; My eyes! what a cop! and, my Gawd,
+didn&rsquo;t he win!&nbsp; Oh, no; only as far as from &rsquo;ere
+to nowhere!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At Doncaster, too, the hospitalities were even of a more
+lavish style, and all the principal owners gave dinner parties
+nightly to their various friends.</p>
+<p>The name of Sir Robert Peel recalls many episodes in the
+career of that most blustering baronet.</p>
+<p>Beginning as an attach&eacute; at Berne, the first performance
+that brought him into prominence was an outburst of temper at a
+local Kursaal, when, seizing the rake, he belaboured an innocent
+croupier as the cause of his run of bad luck.</p>
+<p>The Foreign Office, deeming change of air desirable, we next
+hear of him following the noble sport of racing, when I had the
+distinction of coming within the sphere of his amiable
+influence.&nbsp; It was in &rsquo;69 that I found myself on one
+occasion travelling to Newmarket in the same compartment as Lord
+Rosslyn and Sir Robert Peel; in the same train was Lord Rosebery,
+making his d&eacute;but as an owner of horses, and still unknown
+to fame as the most brilliant of <a name="page102"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 102</span>orators and one of the best Foreign
+Secretaries England has ever had.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What kind of fellow is young Rosebery?&rdquo; inquired
+Lord Rosslyn; to which the most opinionated of men replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looks a fool, but I&rsquo;m told he&rsquo;s a bigger
+one than he looks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And this was the verdict of a man whose claims to celebrity
+were based on being the son of a brilliant father, on one who, in
+addition to a most successful racing career, is universally
+admired as a sound politician, a genial friend, and the most
+versatile of living public men.</p>
+<p>It was about the same period that the fates again destined me
+to be within measurable distance of the over-bearing baronet,
+when young Webb, the jockey, had lost a race through no fault of
+riding.&nbsp; As he was fuming and abusing the unhappy youth, Mr.
+George Payne, who was present, protested against the unjust
+charge, adding that although he had lost considerably by the
+race, he in no way blamed Webb, who had carried out his
+instructions implicitly.</p>
+<p>It was at this point one of the most amiable of men
+interfered, and laying his hand on George Payne&rsquo;s arm,
+said: &ldquo;My dear George, it will take three or four more
+crosses to get the cotton out of the Peel family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of a commanding presence, and faultlessly attired in heavy
+satin cravat and large-brimmed hat, Sir Robert gave the
+impression of patrician down to the heels; it was only&mdash;as
+Sir Joseph Hawley suggested&mdash;when the crustation was
+tampered with that the plating gave indications of alloy.&nbsp;
+Peel was an inveterate gambler, and an admittedly fine whist
+player, and even so late as the early eighties might be seen
+daily at the Turf Club at the 2 and 10 table, and a pony on the
+rub.&nbsp; It was in this most select of establishments that a
+fracas occurred between this <a name="page103"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 103</span>most irascible of baronets and a
+noble marquis (still living), when the pot called the kettle
+black.&nbsp; It ended in both members being suspended, then
+mutually apologising, and eventually being restored to the
+privileges of the fold.</p>
+<p>A bad loser, he was deficient in one quality that makes a
+successful gambler, and so remained a failure, despite all the
+advantages that political interest gave him.</p>
+<p>Of a different type was Sir Joseph Hawley; succeeding to a
+huge fortune before he was out of his teens, he went through the
+usual finishing school of those days, and served a few months in
+the 9th Lancers, after which he devoted his attention to yachting
+and visiting the various Mediterranean ports in the vain search
+of the pursuit for which nature had intended him.</p>
+<p>It was at Corfu, then occupied by a small British garrison,
+that he had a unique experience.&nbsp; Entering upon one occasion
+the chief bakery of the island, he sought enlightenment on the
+process by which the bread was kneaded.&nbsp; Around a vast room,
+surrounded by a shelf, sat some half-dozen swarthy naked natives,
+whilst here and there lumps of dough were arranged in piles; on
+the floor stood two or three youths, whilst suspended from the
+ceiling dangled various ropes, which the respective squatters
+clutched firmly in their hands.&nbsp; At a given signal, away
+they flew, whilst the urchins deftly turned the dough, and then,
+with a flop, down came the naked natives, with eyes starting out
+of their heads, only again to fly into space, whilst their next
+resting-place was being duly adjusted.</p>
+<p>No fear of indigestion where such perfect kneading was in
+force; indeed, the bread of Corfu bore an excellent reputation,
+and the island was considered one of the most popular of Foreign
+Stations.</p>
+<p>It would be absurd to recount the numerous victories of the
+&ldquo;cherry and black&rdquo; colours, although <a
+name="page104"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 104</span>the unique
+experience of Blue Gown being disqualified at Doncaster for
+carrying &ldquo;over weight&rdquo; in the Champagne Stakes may
+come as a surprise to many.</p>
+<p>Scotland was represented on the Turf in the sixties by two
+shining lights of diametrically different types, the patrician
+Earl of Glasgow and the plebeian James Merry (of Glasgow), and
+whilst the former, during his fifty years, only once won a
+classic race&mdash;the Two Thousand&mdash;the latter swept the
+boards of everything over and over again.</p>
+<p>Lord Glasgow was not a lovable man; bluff to a degree, and
+sensitive as lyddite, the brine that he imbibed in his youth
+never appears to have left him, for his lordship was in the Navy
+when keel hauling was in vogue, and the sixties found him as
+foul-mouthed, irritable, and cross-grained as any British tar
+ought to be.</p>
+<p>Suffice that in those hard-drinking, hard-swearing days, no
+head was harder, no r&eacute;pertoire more complete than that of
+this belted Earl (why belted?), who, with all his faults, was a
+grand landmark of what a patrician of the old days was, as
+surrounded by his boon companions, General Peel, George Payne,
+Lord Derby, and Henry Greville, the magnums of claret flowed in
+the historical bay-window at White&rsquo;s.&nbsp; But this was
+before membership was &ldquo;invited&rdquo; by advertisement.</p>
+<p>James Merry, on the other hand, was a typical semi-educated
+Scot, game to the backbone, but not up to the standard then
+required in a gentleman.&nbsp; He came, indeed, before his time;
+had he lived to-day, a baronetcy, or certainly the Victorian
+Order, would have been his reward.</p>
+<p>It has been the lot of few men to own such horses as
+Thormanby, Dundee, Scottish Chief, MacGregor, Sunshine,
+Doncaster, and Marie Stuart, and despite the fact that no
+suspicion ever rested on James Merry&rsquo;s fair name, it is an
+open secret that when MacGregor <a name="page105"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 105</span>was backed for more money than any
+Derby favourite before or since, the Ring told him, &ldquo;If he
+wins we are broke&rdquo;&mdash;and he did not win.</p>
+<p>Devout Presbyterian though he was, he succumbed, alas, on one
+occasion, to French blandishments, and ran a horse on the
+Sawbath.&nbsp; Summoned by the &ldquo;Elders&rdquo; of Falkirk to
+explain the terrible lapse, he freely admitted his sin, and only
+obtained absolution by presenting the entire siller to the
+Kirk.</p>
+<p>But no reference&mdash;however superficial&mdash;to the Turf
+in the sixties would be complete without one word of homage to
+the great Englishman who did so much for the honour of old
+England both in sport and politics.&nbsp; Not that his greatest
+admirer can place Lord Palmerston in the front rank either as a
+diplomatist or an owner of racehorses, though none can deny him
+the marvellous combination of attributes that endeared him to his
+countrymen, whether in office or opposition, as when crying
+&ldquo;hands off&rdquo; when his prerogative as Prime Minister
+was being tampered with; or when leaving a debate to come out and
+shake hands with his trainer; or when at Tattersall&rsquo;s
+watching the fluctuations in the betting over his hot favourite,
+Mainstone, for the Derby; or when twitting his political opponent
+(Lord Derby), whom he had just replaced as Prime Minister; or,
+again, whilst watching Tom Spring or John Gully punching in the
+ring long before any of us were thought of.&nbsp; Ah, there was a
+man; an Englishman without guile, and of a type well nigh
+extinct!</p>
+<p>Lord Palmerston never attained pre-eminence on the Turf, and
+when Mainstone&mdash;as was suspected&mdash;was tampered with
+before the big race, and when, on a later occasion, Baldwin broke
+down in his training, he decided to abandon the sport; what more
+noble than the letter he wrote to Lord Naas giving him his
+favourite to place at the stud?&nbsp; No auctioneering, no
+huckstering&mdash;but a free gift such as only a great Englishman
+would have conceived.</p>
+<p><a name="page106"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 106</span>And
+who that frequented the Curragh meetings in the long-ago sixties
+has not admired the noble form of this same Lord Naas
+(assassinated in &rsquo;72 in the Andaman Islands), accompanied
+by those stalwart Irishmen, the late Marquises of Conyngham and
+Drogheda?</p>
+<p>England must indeed &ldquo;wake up&rdquo;&mdash;to quote a
+phrase as old as the hills&mdash;if such records are to be
+maintained, and seek&mdash;perhaps in vain&mdash;for other giants
+such as these mighty dead, if we are to be what we were in sport
+and politics amongst the nations of the earth.</p>
+<p>For like the ripples on a placid lake before some great
+convulsion of nature, a Cromwell is succeeded by a Charles, and
+the Palmerstons make way for less sturdy clay, and then the great
+upheaval comes, which ends in chaos, or the prosperity that is
+associated with &ldquo;a great calm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whether these momentous events will occur, simultaneously with
+the establishment of a Duma, and a great penny daily in
+Jerusalem, and the abandonment of historical English and Scottish
+seats for castles on the Rhine, it would require a modern
+Jeremiah to foretell, but the pendulum is oscillating ominously,
+with a throb that is not to be mistaken.</p>
+<p>Lord Falmouth, whom no earwig ever ventured to associate with
+a fishy act, holds the proud distinction of never having backed
+his opinion in his life, if we except the threadbare tale that
+every biographer sets out as if it were not known to everybody,
+of how he once bet sixpence, and paid it in a coin surrounded by
+diamonds.</p>
+<p>With this attribute universally known, it is perhaps not
+difficult to explain the immunity he obtained from innuendo when
+his horse Kingcraft won the Derby in the memorable year that the
+Ring &ldquo;approached&rdquo; James Merry, despite the fact that
+he only ran third to MacGregor in the Two Thousand.</p>
+<p><a name="page107"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 107</span>That
+Lord Falmouth was a successful horse-owner may be accepted by the
+&pound;300,000 he undoubtedly won in stakes during the twenty
+years of his career; that no one begrudged it him is shown by the
+unanimous regret of the racing public when he practically retired
+from the Turf, and that even so &ldquo;close&rdquo; a man as Fred
+Archer, the jockey, should have subscribed towards a presentation
+silver shield speaks volumes for his popularity.</p>
+<p>Lord Falmouth, like his grand old naval ancestor, is now a
+matter of history, and nothing remains but the two guns outside
+the family town house in St. James&rsquo;s Square to remind the
+passer-by of two great men, who in their respective spheres were
+<i>sans peur et sans reproche</i>.</p>
+<p>To Fred Archer, as a phenomenon of a later period, who was
+latterly Lord Falmouth&rsquo;s jockey, it is out of the sphere of
+these annals of the sixties to refer, but seeing him as I often
+have over his usual breakfast of hot castor-oil, black coffee,
+and a slice of toast, it seems incredible that he should have
+lived even to his thirtieth year.</p>
+<p>Constantly &ldquo;wasting&rdquo; to try and attain 8st. 7lb.
+his mind and body soon became a wreck, and then the sad end came
+by his own hand with which we are all familiar.</p>
+<p>Bob Hope-Johnstone and his brother David (&ldquo;Wee
+Davy&rdquo;) were two as fine specimens of the genus man as can
+well be conceived; but like Napoleon&mdash;who, according to
+experts, ought to have died at Waterloo&mdash;Bob outlived the
+glory of his youth, and became a morose, cantankerous wretch, who
+spent half his time at the hostelry now known as Challis&rsquo;s,
+which in the sixties was the resort of every
+jockey&mdash;straight or crooked&mdash;that held a licence from
+the Jockey Club.</p>
+<p>Another shining light about this period was Prince Soltykoff,
+whose wife was one of the handsomest women in England.</p>
+<p><a name="page108"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 108</span>It
+was after her death that he came into prominence as an admirer of
+beautiful women in general, and of little Graham of the Opera
+Comique in particular, and&mdash;later on&mdash;of goodness knows
+how many more.&nbsp; Many a time have I seen him at
+Mutton&rsquo;s at Brighton, loaded with paper bags full of every
+indigestible delight, which the imperious little woman beside him
+continued unmercifully to add to.</p>
+<p>Lord Glasgow, who was distinguished in the sixties as
+possessing the longest string of useless yearlings, was, in
+addition to other peculiarities, the most hot-tempered explosive
+that epoch produced.&nbsp; Kind of heart in the bluffest of ways,
+and throwing money about with a lavish hand, I remember on one
+occasion finding myself on the railway station at Edinburgh as
+his plethoric lordship was purchasing his ticket.&nbsp; Tendering
+a &pound;5 note, the clerk requested him to endorse it, which,
+having been done with a churlish air, his temper rose to fever
+pitch when the clerk, returning it, said, &ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t
+ask you where you were going; I want your name, man!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A volley of abuse, in which he was a past-master, then followed,
+and the abashed official realised that what he had mistaken for a
+grazier was the redoubtable Earl of Glasgow.</p>
+<p>The sporting critic of the <i>Morning Post</i>, who wrote
+under the name of &ldquo;Parvo,&rdquo; once felt the weight of
+his indignation for what, after all, was a fair criticism of the
+great man&rsquo;s stud, and when, in &rsquo;69, an obituary
+article appeared in the <i>Post</i>, the incident and the exact
+wish his lordship had given expression to were conveyed in
+flowery symbolism as a hope &ldquo;that he might live to water
+his grave, but not with tears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Earl of Aylesford in the sixties was the owner of
+Packington Hall, and a princely income, and it was whilst I was
+staying with George Graham (owner of the famous Yardley stud
+where the great Stirling &ldquo;stood&rdquo;) that a jovial party
+drove over from <a name="page109"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+109</span>Packington.&nbsp; Luncheon as served in those days was
+an important item in the programme, and long before the
+Packington party began to think of returning more than one had
+succumbed to the rivers of champagne that flowed.&nbsp; Bob
+Villiers (a brother of the then Earl of Jersey) was one of the
+first to collapse, and as he disappeared under the table the
+kindly host&rsquo;s anxiety was curbed by a shout from Joe
+Aylesford, &ldquo;Never mind, George, he&rsquo;s only tried
+himself a bit too high.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few years later Joe was one of the party, selected in
+company with Beetroot (as Lord Alfred Paget was affectionately
+called) and others, to accompany the Prince of Wales to India,
+and it was during his absence that the troubles that culminated
+in disaster overtook the popular Earl.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+go to India, Joe, if you value your domestic happiness,&rdquo;
+was the advice of an old friend, but go he did, and then began
+the intrigues of a titled libertine, which ended in strong drinks
+and the mortgaging of the ancestral acres.</p>
+<p>Amid this genial phalanx no better host was to be found than
+old Fred Gretton, and it was apropos of the Cambridgeshire that
+the following incident occurred.</p>
+<p>Seated round the festive board were some dozen sportsmen,
+young men from town and old men from the shires; dear old George
+Graham (the breeder of Stirling) and his brother; Duffer Bruce
+(father of the late Marquis of Aylesbury), deafer than usual, but
+shouting the house down; myself, Peter Wilkinson, and three or
+four worthies of the farmer class who had come in the wake of
+Fred Gretton.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like you to win a large stake,&rdquo;
+whispered to me a jolly old squire who had been my neighbour at
+dinner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing would give me greater pleasure,&rdquo; I
+replied; &ldquo;the more so as this is positively the last
+meeting I am ever likely to be at before going to
+Gibraltar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh, lad, and why so?&rdquo; persisted my
+well-wisher.&nbsp; <a name="page110"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+110</span>&ldquo;I should like you to win a large stake,&rdquo;
+and realising that it was now or never, I boldly replied:
+&ldquo;Look here, Mr. Bowden, if you can put me on to a good
+thing I shall be eternally grateful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose you&rsquo;ve never heard of Playfair?&rdquo;
+inquired Mr. Bowden.&nbsp; &ldquo;He&rsquo;s Fred&rsquo;s horse,
+and he&rsquo;s certain to win the Cambridgeshire; he&rsquo;s only
+got 6st. 3lb., the acceptances are just out, but, for God&rsquo;s
+sake, don&rsquo;t let Fred know.&nbsp; Now, lad, do as I tell
+you; I&rsquo;ve taken a liking to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It must be admitted I had never heard of Playfair&mdash;very
+few had&mdash;but acting up to the tenets I had learnt during my
+two years&rsquo; intimacy with the late Hastings, I boldly took
+1,000 to 15 within the hour with the leviathan Steele.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you backing?&rdquo; inquired Mr. Gretton, who
+that moment came hurriedly up, and on being informed by the
+bookie, he turned to me and whispered into my ear,
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one man could have told you, and
+that&rsquo;s that d&mdash; drunken old blackguard Bowden; but not
+a word, mind you, you keep to that 1,000.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so the
+kind old man toddled off.&nbsp; Shortly before the race, at the
+Bath Hotel, Piccadilly, where he always stayed in Town, he
+inquired of the two barmaids if they would like a sovereign each
+on his horse; and whilst the foolish virgin expressed a
+preference for the coin, the wise virgin elected to be
+&ldquo;on,&rdquo; and after the race received from the genial
+punter &pound;35&mdash;a sum considerably in excess of the
+price.</p>
+<p>Suffice to say, Playfair won the Cambridgeshire for Mr.
+Gretton in &rsquo;72, and it is no exaggeration to add that his
+taking to racing to the extent he then did suggested the
+idea&mdash;afterwards elaborated&mdash;of turning Bass and Co.
+into a limited liability company.</p>
+<h2><a name="page111"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+111</span>CHAPTER X.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE EPIDEMIC OF CARDS.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Commander-in-Chief in Ireland,
+at the time of which I am writing, was as crotchety a specimen of
+the old school as the Peninsular had ever turned out.&nbsp; Clean
+shaved, with a Waterloo expression of countenance, Sir George
+Browne was about the last of Wellington&rsquo;s veterans who held
+a high command.&nbsp; Despotic and vindictive if thwarted, he had
+a squabble with the railway companies, and retaliated by vetoing
+henceforth the transit of troops by rail, and a regiment ordered
+from Londonderry to Cork did the entire distance by route
+march.&nbsp; Not that the ordeal was without its advantages, for
+it enabled British regiments to form their own opinions of Irish
+hospitality and the numerous good qualities of that
+much-misunderstood race.&nbsp; Proceeding in detachments of two
+and three companies, every night found them billeted in the towns
+or villages through which they passed, and it was no rare
+occurrence for the landed proprietors to ride out and insist that
+every officer should stay at the Manor House, and to send
+supplies of comforts wherewith to regale the men.</p>
+<p>Mr. Kavanagh, M.P. for Kilkenny, was a brilliant specimen of a
+real old Irish gentleman, and though deformed from his birth,
+could hold his own amongst the best.&nbsp; Without arms, this
+grand sportsman could ride, drive four horses, and shoot to
+perfection, <a name="page112"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+112</span>and his prowess in Corfu and other distant sporting
+haunts is remembered to this day.</p>
+<p>Riding out to welcome the regiment, no refusal was listened
+to, and within an hour every officer was comfortably settled at
+Borris Castle, and the men fared proportionately as well.</p>
+<p>But the monotony of these tedious pilgrimages will not bear
+narration.&nbsp; Suffice it that having landed at Cork we
+received orders, much to our delight, to proceed direct to Dublin
+instead of to dismal Templemore.</p>
+<p>The craze for punting that we had experienced in London
+seemed, indeed, to have crossed the Channel, and when the
+officers had severally been elected honorary members, it was
+found that the Hibernian United Service Club was the hotbed of
+about the highest play they had yet encountered.&nbsp; Nightly,
+with the precision of a chronometer, ten o&rsquo;clock found the
+spacious card room crammed to its uttermost limits, and Irish
+banknotes, varying from one to ten sovereigns in value, were
+literally stacked a foot high on either side of the table.&nbsp;
+All through the night these terrible duels continued, and it was
+no uncommon thing to leave the room and drive like blazes for
+morning parade at ten.&nbsp; The garrison in this memorable year
+was an exceptionally &ldquo;high-play&rdquo; one, consisting,
+amongst others, of the 4th and 11th Hussars, 9th Lancers, the
+Royal Dragoons, Highlanders, and Rifle Brigade, and during that
+winter fabulous sums were lost by men incapable of meeting their
+obligations.</p>
+<p>The Committee, meanwhile, were roused to action, and
+peremptory orders were given that the gas was to be turned off
+punctually at 2 a.m.; but the extinction of the gas was the
+signal for the appearance of substitutes, and out of some two
+hundred pockets wax candles were brought forth, and the game
+proceeded as vigorously as ever.</p>
+<p><a name="page113"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+113</span>Further pressure was now applied, and under pain of
+expulsion members were ordered to quit the card room at the
+prescribed hour; but even this did not meet the case, and the
+punters ascended <i>en bloc</i> to the largest bedroom above.</p>
+<p>It may be explained that this really delightful club possessed
+a dozen bedrooms, and on the particular occasion of which we are
+writing, one was in the occupation of Sir James Jackson, G.C.B.,
+as irritable an old Peninsular veteran as a merciful Providence
+had spared to the sixties.&nbsp; A cavalry man of the old school,
+he invariably wore spurs, and no human eye had ever seen him
+without these useful appendages&mdash;a small blue moustache
+carefully waxed, and a bald head with blue tufts on either side
+completed the picture of this irritable old warrior who ate his
+dinner every day in the club, and never spoke to a soul.</p>
+<p>Play, meanwhile, was proceeding apace, with calls of
+&ldquo;King,&rdquo; &ldquo;Fifty more wanted this side,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;D&mdash; it, blaze away,&rdquo; &ldquo;The pool&rsquo;s
+made,&rdquo; gracefully interspersed, when the door suddenly
+opened, and an apparition in flowing dressing-gown, nightcap,
+slippers, and spurs demanded peremptorily that the game should
+cease.&nbsp; To refuse the colonel-in-chief of the Carabineers
+would, of course, have been impossible, and as the old warrior
+retired to his couch the punters left the club.</p>
+<p>Ruin, meanwhile, had overtaken many an irreproachable man, and
+L&mdash;, of the Royals, K&mdash; of the Rifle Brigade, and a
+score of others, had no alternative but to send in their papers,
+and then the Commander-in-Chief came upon the scene, and swore,
+as only a Waterloo veteran could, that if any officer again
+transgressed he would send the regiment to the worst station
+between Hell and Halifax.</p>
+<p>But the wave of punting that appeared to have engulfed the
+land was by no means confined to the <a name="page114"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 114</span>Arlington, Raleigh, and Hibernian
+Clubs, and the &ldquo;Rag,&rdquo; and later on the Whist
+Club&mdash;known as the &ldquo;Shirt Shop&rdquo;&mdash;caught the
+infection, and fabulous sums were wagered on the turn of a card
+night after night without intermission.</p>
+<p>Two-pound points to &pound;10 on the rubber were the staple
+stakes of even the sober old Whist, and then one was looked upon
+as depriving a better man of the seat unless prepared to bet an
+extra hundred.&nbsp; Old fogies, who had never previously risked
+a shilling, would cautiously creep to the table, and nervously
+tender half-crowns, till frightened out of their lives by Tony
+Fawcett, of the 9th Lancers, shouting, &ldquo;D&mdash; it, sir,
+this isn&rsquo;t a silver hell!&rdquo; and then, not to be
+beaten, they would club together and make up the requisite
+sovereign.</p>
+<p>Gus Anson, V.C., M.P., the most popular man of the day, was so
+impregnated with the epidemic that although at the time piloting
+an important Bill through Parliament, he had given me a standing
+order that as soon as a sufficient number were assembled for loo
+or baccarat, a telegram was to be despatched to him forthwith,
+and numerous were the messages that found their way to the sacred
+precincts of the House between ten and twelve at night, addressed
+to Colonel the Honourable Augustus Anson, V.C., M.P., presumedly
+from constituents.</p>
+<p>Brighton, too, suffered from the epidemic, and during the
+Sussex fortnight the fever spread to an alarming extent.&nbsp;
+The London detachments came down <i>en bloc</i>, and all the best
+houses and leading hotels were filled with roysterers, and high
+play was the rule from night till morning.</p>
+<p>Progress along the King&rsquo;s Road after dusk was a matter
+of difficulty, and at every lamp-post one was importuned by eager
+touters, and invitation cards thrust into one&rsquo;s hand to
+visit this house or that.&nbsp; Every roof sheltered punters of a
+lower strata anxious <a name="page115"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 115</span>to emulate their betters, and the
+family knick-knacks and the family Bible, left exposed by their
+worthy owner in his desire to participate in the golden harvest,
+might have been seen huddled together in a corner, or
+intermingled with cards, whisky bottles, and tumblers.</p>
+<p>In preparation for the nightly orgies that commenced about
+ten, the bloods inaugurated a delightful system whereby the
+maximum of fresh air with the minimum of exertion might be
+obtained prior to the inhaling of the foul currents amid which
+they proposed to revel for the rest of the night.</p>
+<p>To meet the requirements of the case, every wheelchair was
+bespoken or engaged for the entire week at a considerable advance
+in price, and a procession, usually headed by George Chetwynd,
+Billy Milner and Billy Call&mdash;to whom the honour of the
+inception is credited&mdash;might nightly be seen wending its way
+to the end of the pier, selecting the most suitable parts, and
+generally inconveniencing everybody not of the &ldquo;inner
+circle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The costume <i>de rigueur</i> on these progresses was white
+tie, evening trousers and vest, and silk hat, with the oldest
+shooting coat in one&rsquo;s wardrobe.</p>
+<p>Later in the season some Hebrews of imitative dispositions
+aspired to emulate the bloods, but although their get-ups were
+irreproachable, the fraud was detected, and the jackdaws
+ruthlessly suppressed.</p>
+<p>It is painful to remember the numerous edifices that toppled,
+and the many good men that &ldquo;went under&rdquo; in the
+inevitable crash that ensued, and picturing in one&rsquo;s mind
+the huge table and the fifteen or twenty players that congregated
+nightly around the board in the various clubs&mdash;winners and
+losers and lookers-on&mdash;a lump rises in one&rsquo;s throat as
+one remembers how few are left!&nbsp; Carlyon and Augustus
+Webster, Jauncey, Cootie Hutchinson, Sam Bachelor, Lord Milltown,
+Crock Vansittart, La Touche, Hastings, <a
+name="page116"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 116</span>De Hoghton,
+Tom Naghten, Sir George O&rsquo;Donnel, Dick Clayton, Gus Anson,
+Freddy Granville, George Lawrence, Jimmy Jop, Jim Coleman, and a
+host of others, all good men and true, and all long since swept
+away into the inevitable dust-bin.</p>
+<p>Not to have known Jinks was not in itself a reproach, but not
+to have known Jonas Hunt in the long-ago sixties was to have
+admitted that one was without the pale of Society, or certainly
+that section of it which gambled, raced, and drank all day and
+all night, if circumstances permitted.&nbsp; A fine horseman of
+iron nerve and unbounded assurance, he had ridden in the
+Balaclava charge before he was out of his teens, and on retiring
+from the service a few years later, developed into one of the
+best gentleman riders ever seen in England or France.</p>
+<p>In a chronic state of impecuniosity&mdash;as he insisted on
+asserting&mdash;he never omitted to add that a good knife and
+fork was always ready at home.&nbsp; Jonas had certainly run
+through pretty well all he had had, but still he always possessed
+an income.</p>
+<p>Always ready to gamble, and always cheery, Jonas, as may be
+supposed, was popular with a certain set, and if he had a fault
+it was a forgetfulness in regard to the settlement of small
+scores, which by some was attributed to the excitement when he
+rode in the &ldquo;six hundred,&rdquo; and by others to various
+causes not sufficiently interesting to enumerate.&nbsp; Brave as
+a lion, he had actually been recommended for the Victoria
+Cross&mdash;in those days less lavishly awarded than
+now&mdash;and as he was quite ready to &ldquo;go out&rdquo; on
+the slightest provocation, timid natures preferred to put up with
+eccentricities arising out of his forgetfulness rather than risk
+a daylight meeting at twelve yards rise.</p>
+<p>Whilst riding in France his performances were a revelation to
+his foreign critics, and when on one occasion his bridle broke
+and he steered his mount <a name="page117"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 117</span>to victory with his whip, he
+received such an ovation at Chantilly as seldom falls to the lot
+of a perfidious Briton.</p>
+<p>On one occasion, Jonas, who had allowed a comparative stranger
+to leave the table without settling, was met by the indignant
+creditor a few days later and reminded of his obligation; but
+Jonas, in no way disconcerted, let the amazed punter understand
+that such a demand was highly ungentlemanly and insulting,
+offering as an alternative to retire with him forthwith and fight
+it out with either pistols or fists.</p>
+<p>In the duel between Dillon, a gentleman rider, and the Duc de
+Grammont-Caderousse, which created such an unjust scandal in the
+sixties, Jonas, as might have been expected, was the
+former&rsquo;s second.&nbsp; Neither man had ever had a rapier in
+his hand before, and when on the following morning both began
+slashing and thrusting, and Dillon was run through the heart, a
+clamour arose as to the butchery of an Englishman by an expert
+swordsman; all which was bosh.&nbsp; Had de Grammont been
+anything but the veriest tyro, the regrettable incident could not
+have occurred.</p>
+<p>It was subsequent to the various thrilling incidents we have
+narrated that Jonas selected Brighton as his headquarters.</p>
+<p>Jinks&rsquo; Club was not located in a palatial mansion, nor
+did it even present the modest exterior of the local Union Club;
+as a fact, it was limited in its dimensions, and consisted of two
+rooms in an unpretentious house in Ship Street.</p>
+<p>In the front room was a long table and some two dozen chairs,
+an iron safe, and a side table, convenient for the support of
+such light refreshments as sandwiches, hard-boiled eggs, and
+beverages of a popular kind.</p>
+<p>The back room was more or less a sealed subject, and supposed
+to contain club memoranda, Jinks&rsquo; <a
+name="page118"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 118</span>books, and
+to be the spot where the &ldquo;proprietor&rdquo; carried on the
+business.</p>
+<p>Membership of the club was within the reach of all, and a
+&ldquo;quorum&rdquo; of Jinks and Jonas could on emergency elect
+a member without general meeting or ballot; but those specially
+introduced by Jonas were received with marked favour.&nbsp; Nor
+were there apparently any fixed rules as to meetings, which were
+left to circumstances, and an urgent three-lined whip on
+emergency.</p>
+<p>The procedure in the latter case may briefly be described as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>If Jonas met a &ldquo;likely&rdquo; man&mdash;from
+town&mdash;he would tell him that his appearance was the luckiest
+thing in the world, as that very night a rare round game was
+&ldquo;coming off,&rdquo; that baccarat would begin at nine, and
+that the rendezvous was Jinks&rsquo; Club.&nbsp; This point being
+settled, an urgent whip was sent round by the indefatigable
+Jonas, and by 8.45 a representative company awaited the desirable
+plunger from town.</p>
+<p>Prior to the commencement of the game, Jonas, it must be
+conceded, was a mass of energy.&nbsp; Attired in evening clothes
+he would first unlock the mysterious safe, and after the local
+members had come one by one, presumably to deposit money, and
+returned with counters conspicuously displayed, he would turn
+with his most winning smile to the visitor with: &ldquo;Now, old
+man, how much do you want to buy; it saves a lot of bother by
+having counters?&nbsp; You&rsquo;ve only to plank your counters
+after it&rsquo;s over, and get their value; good rule,
+don&rsquo;t you think?&nbsp; It&rsquo;s what they do at &lsquo;le
+Cercle&rsquo; at Nice; saves a lot of bother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Occasionally, during the excitement of the game, strangers had
+been known to put into the pool brand new crisp notes to save the
+bother of buying counters; but these were always exchanged for
+counters by the ever-obliging Jonas.&nbsp; &ldquo;It&rsquo;s much
+better to have one <a name="page119"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+119</span>sort of settlement, don&rsquo;t you think, old
+man?&rdquo; he would add, as stuffing the notes into his pockets
+he eagerly rushed into the fray.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Jove! it&rsquo;s later than I thought,&rdquo; was
+often a familiar exclamation as daylight appeared over the
+pier.&nbsp; &ldquo;How many counters have you got, Jack?&nbsp;
+Count them, old man, or keep them till morning.&nbsp; You and I
+are old pals; you know where to come in the morning.&nbsp; Name
+your own hour; good-night.&rdquo;&nbsp; And the genius was round
+the corner like a hurricane.</p>
+<p>An amusing incident once occurred where Jonas was a big
+winner, and his debtor Master Fred Granville; Jonas on this
+occasion was immeasurably chaffed.&nbsp; &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
+never get a bob,&rdquo; he was told right and left.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes I will, he&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; was the
+half-hearted reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he&rsquo;s going away in the morning,&rdquo; added
+another; &ldquo;you must look sharp, Jonas.&rdquo;&nbsp; And
+Jonas intimated he had been promised that a cheque should be sent
+him in the morning.</p>
+<p>Next morning a cab drove rapidly to the Norfolk, and Jonas,
+jumping out excitedly, said: &ldquo;Look here, you chaps,&rdquo;
+and he waved a cheque excitedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have a look at it,&rdquo; asked Ernest
+Neville.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why, man, it isn&rsquo;t
+signed.&rdquo;&nbsp; And Jonas&rsquo;s face lengthened
+inordinately as he realised the terrible omission.</p>
+<p>Shouting for a cab after a hurried glance at a railway guide,
+he in due time reached the station, and had the satisfaction of
+seeing the last carriage slowly receding from view.</p>
+<p>It was the winter that Garcia&mdash;a Spanish
+miscreant&mdash;who had won colossal sums at every hell in
+Europe, had just been detected in a trick that had long baffled
+the ingenuity of the world.</p>
+<p>The scheme was nothing less than procuring the contract for
+the supply of cards at the principal <a name="page120"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 120</span>gambling resorts of Nice, Monaco,
+St. Petersburg, Homburg, Paris, and Ostend.</p>
+<p>Shiploads of his ware thus found their way into every quarter,
+and wherever he played he was confronted by his own cards.&nbsp;
+Knowing their backs as well as their faces, the result was
+obvious, and it was only after innumerable golden harvests that a
+clumsy accident brought the fraud to light in a salon in the
+Champs-Elys&eacute;es.</p>
+<p>The scare thus created had not been lost upon the Riviera, and
+every precaution that ingenuity could devise was taken to make
+foul play impossible.</p>
+<p>It was during this winter, too, that the culprit, detected
+cheating at the Raleigh, put an end to his career.</p>
+<p>Le Cercle de la M&eacute;diterran&eacute;e is one of those
+majestic buildings that meets the enormous revenue required for
+its support by making the pastime of cards an absolute
+luxury.&nbsp; On the first floor is a spacious saloon, with no
+better light than that afforded by plate-glass panels
+communicating with the card room and other chambers; liberally
+provided with lounges, weary punters resorted to it for repose,
+and waiters, when not otherwise occupied, hovered near it as
+within easy call of everywhere.&nbsp; In the adjoining room cards
+were usually set for possible whist and ecart&eacute;, or until
+every available spot was required for the more exciting claims of
+chemin de fer.</p>
+<p>Biscoe had on more than one occasion rambled through the empty
+room, and oblivious of the proximity of the servants, had been
+seen pocketing a pack of cards.&nbsp; This having been duly
+reported, he was made an especial object of interest to the
+committee; though, until he essayed to play, it was looked upon
+as the act of a kleptomaniac.</p>
+<p>All this, however, was unknown to the culprit, who, with but
+one object, one aim in life, laughed at every reverse, and raked
+in his winnings when Fortune <a name="page121"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 121</span>smiled on him.&nbsp; His luck as a
+whole had been fairly good, and thinking the moment a favourable
+one, he decided to increase his stakes.</p>
+<p>It was now his deal, the &ldquo;chemin de fer&rdquo; was with
+him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come, gentlemen, let us plunge,&rdquo; he
+jokingly remarked, as, producing a pocket-book, he placed it upon
+the pack.&nbsp; &ldquo;I call twenty-five thousand
+francs.&rdquo;&nbsp; (&pound;1,000).</p>
+<p>A keen observer might have detected certain ominous glances
+that passed between the polite Count and the bland Professor, but
+nothing was said, and amid the silence of the Catacombs, the game
+proceeded.</p>
+<p>Five minutes later Biscoe was raking in &pound;1,000 (in
+counters).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Again, gentlemen!&rdquo; he shouted, as flushed and
+excited, he had not observed that two or three players had risen,
+and the remainder, bewildered at so unusual a proceeding, stared
+at one another in blank astonishment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; inquired Biscoe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;D&mdash;d if I know,&rdquo; was the laconic reply, as
+an Englishman left the table.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Committee, sir,&rdquo; replied the Count,
+&ldquo;have decided to count the cards, and on their authority I
+take possession of those before you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile groups discussed the position and ominous
+expressions, such as &ldquo;Il nous faut un agent de
+police,&rdquo; and &ldquo;C&rsquo;est clair que nous avons
+&eacute;t&eacute; vol&eacute;s&rdquo; were bandied about.&nbsp; A
+<i>proc&egrave;s verbal</i> also took place, presided over by the
+Duc de Richelieu, and within an hour it was known to every
+<i>gamin</i> in Nice that an English &ldquo;milor&rdquo; had
+descended to the level of a thimble-rigger, that his spurs had
+been hacked off by the fiat of public opinion, and that
+henceforth his place would know him no more.</p>
+<p>The rest is briefly told.&nbsp; A dozen extra cards were found
+in the packs that had been correct before play commenced; the
+counters in Biscoe&rsquo;s possession were <a
+name="page122"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 122</span><i>not</i>
+redeemed by the club, and the &ldquo;acceptance&rdquo; was as far
+from redemption as ever.</p>
+<p>Next morning, as the gardeners were sweeping the grounds, a
+dead body with a gun-shot wound in the head was found in a
+shrubbery.</p>
+<p>Within a few yards lay the tideless Mediterranean, calm and
+sparkling as the morning sun played upon its waters; whilst here
+lay an upturned face, cold and rigid and ghastly white save for a
+clotted disfigurement on the brow, and the same sun, in all the
+irony of its grandeur, was lighting up all that was left of
+blighted hopes, fallen greatness, and a tragedy never to be
+forgotten.&nbsp; Later on, the mangled remains were buried at the
+expense of the Municipality.</p>
+<p>A week or two later a paragraph appeared in a Dublin paper,
+and there the matter ended.</p>
+<p>This is the usual procedure in these fashionable
+resorts.&nbsp; If you&rsquo;ve lost your last penny you are
+provided with railway fare and seen off the premises; if you blow
+out your brains, you&rsquo;re buried out of sight.&nbsp; Decency
+must be maintained!&nbsp; <i>Faites vos jeux, messieurs</i>!</p>
+<p>A convenient custom obtained at Le Cercle de la
+M&eacute;diterran&eacute;e whereby a player temporarily cleaned
+out was permitted to deposit a pencil on the table to represent a
+stake, it being understood that he immediately proceeded to the
+bureau to purchase counters to redeem his symbolical
+investment.&nbsp; This was known as &ldquo;au crayon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was on one occasion that Bob Villiers, who was usually
+limited as regards capital, was seen to place his pencil on the
+table and address the courteous dealer with, &ldquo;Cent louis au
+crayon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Gad,&rdquo; whispered George Payne, who stood near
+me, &ldquo;Bob Villiers has put up a hundred louis &lsquo;au
+crayon,&rsquo;&rdquo; and it was in breathless anxiety, and with
+an eventual sigh of relief, that we saw him rake up his
+winnings.</p>
+<p><a name="page123"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 123</span>It
+was some years later, whilst once standing on the steps of the
+H&ocirc;tel des Anglais at Nice, at a time when the one topic of
+conversation was the terrible scandal that had lately taken place
+in Le Cercle de la M&eacute;diterran&eacute;e, that George Payne
+expounded the irrefutable axiom that there were only two offences
+that might not be indulged in with impunity, and yet how
+extraordinary it was that men of wealth with every enjoyment
+capable of gratification should yet founder on one or other of
+these two unspeakable rocks, and instanced the recent H&mdash;
+affair, where the brother of a peer and major of a crack regiment
+had resorted to one of the unpardonable offences.&nbsp; And then
+he quoted George Russell, who had married a duke&rsquo;s
+daughter, and Lord de Ros and Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton, another
+ducal branch, all of whom, in a species of insanity, had fallen
+from their high estates.</p>
+<p>Many will recall the weird rumours that floated around the
+Clinton case; how the culprit had died and been duly buried; how
+weeks later an old gun-room companion had recognised his former
+ship-mate in a railway compartment, and how subsequent inquiry
+revealed the fact of a coffin filled with lumber.</p>
+<p>And in the H&mdash; affair the surroundings were, if possible,
+more dramatic; how a youngster of the 7th, at Nice at the time,
+at once wrote the story to a brother officer in order that
+&ldquo;the first intimation to &lsquo;the Regiment&rsquo; might
+not come from the papers;&rdquo; how the recipient intercepted
+the commanding officer (Colonel Hale) in the barrack square, and
+handed him the letter with: &ldquo;This, sir, I have just
+received, and I feel it&rsquo;s my duty to show it to you&rdquo;;
+how within a week the pen was ruthlessly run through the
+culprit&rsquo;s name, and the nine days&rsquo; wonder was
+forgotten.</p>
+<p>That the publicity had been far-reaching, the following from
+the Paris <i>Figaro</i> will show:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One had hoped that chevaliers of industry were <a
+name="page124"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 124</span>things of
+the past, but it is not so; the game goes on as ever, to judge of
+what occurred last Monday at le Cercle de la
+M&eacute;diterran&eacute;e&mdash;a place where one always
+imagined one only met persons with whom one&rsquo;s purse would
+be safe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was last Monday that an amiable
+personage&mdash;whose assumed manners suggested
+imbecility&mdash;carried on a system with cards which has no
+connection with honesty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ever since yesterday Major H&mdash; has been the object
+of a stringent surveillance, called into existence by the
+extraordinary fortune of having &lsquo;passed&rsquo; only
+seventeen times on Sunday last during a game of chemin de
+fer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suspicion was all the stronger from the cards when
+counted being found to exceed the proper number by
+twenty-seven.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was under these circumstances that the Major bought
+the bank at auction last Monday, and lost the first two
+coups.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was evidently sowing to reap, for after the second
+coup, not having sufficient on the table to pay the winners, and
+while still holding the cards in his left hand, he drew with his
+right hand a note case from his pocket under which were a certain
+number of packed cards.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He then placed the case and the packed cards on the
+pack he had already in his left hand, and putting the entire
+packet before him, deliberately opened his note case, whence
+protruded several notes that had evidently been exposed with
+intention.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At this moment a member who had not lost a single
+detail of this scene of &lsquo;prestidigitation,&rsquo; stood up
+and said: &lsquo;Gentlemen, I play no longer, and if you take my
+advice you will do the same!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The warning was not in vain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was accepted by all but one player, who placed on
+the table about sixty Louis.</p>
+<p><a name="page125"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+125</span>&ldquo;The Major H&mdash;, in no way disconcerted,
+again dealt, and turned up nine&mdash;a nine of diamonds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was no further room for doubt, and all the
+players left their seats.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The game was suspended, the cards were counted; there
+were twenty-seven too many; and contained five nines of diamonds
+instead of four.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Immediately the committee was called together, and the
+expulsion of Major H&mdash; was unanimously decided upon.&nbsp;
+It was also decided that the Major should be turned out of the
+room he had occupied in the club for two days.&rdquo;&nbsp; I
+approve entirely the decision of the committee, but regret that
+these Major H&mdash;s get off with expulsion, when the proper
+place would be the <i>correctionnelle</i>.</p>
+<p>No more liberal player ever existed than George Hay.</p>
+<p>On one occasion at a humdrum station in India, where he had
+started an unpretentious club, a sporting tailor who had lost
+considerably begged him to continue.&nbsp; &ldquo;Give me my
+revenge,&rdquo; he implored, and for three days and three nights,
+with periodical adjournments for a tub, this amiable punter
+continued giving the revenge.&nbsp; But Fate, alas! was against
+the little Snipper, and on the third day the score showed a
+colossal sum against him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This can&rsquo;t go on,&rdquo; pleaded George.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why, man, I shall be placed under arrest for absence
+without leave; besides which, I can&rsquo;t keep my eyes
+open.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only one more chance,&rdquo; whined the tailor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; replied George, &ldquo;you owe
+me&rdquo; (and he named a considerable sum).&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll play you one game double or quits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tailor pondered for some moments, and then replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here, Captain Hay, I have a wife and four
+children, and I can&rsquo;t afford to go &lsquo;sudden
+death,&rsquo; but I&rsquo;ll play you the best out of three,
+double or quits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page126"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+126</span>Failing to catch the subtlety of this logic, George
+consented, and the result was again against the tailor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said this noble punter, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+complied with all your requests.&nbsp; Nature won&rsquo;t permit
+me to continue, but I&rsquo;ll tell you what I <i>will</i>
+do,&rdquo; and ringing the bell, he ordered the waiter to bring
+in the list of members.</p>
+<p>Scanning the names and counting the number, he again addressed
+the tailor:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look here.&nbsp; We have, I see, fifty-four members;
+but old Crutchley and the Chaplain needn&rsquo;t count.&nbsp; You
+shall make every member of the club a black velvet knickerbocker
+suit with scarlet hose, and a cap, and henceforth we are
+quits.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Prudes and strict sticklers for propriety may argue that the
+man was a gambler, and consequently heartless and good for
+nothing; but after events proved that although dire calamity
+overtook him, he was of a noble, generous nature.</p>
+<p>Despite the above incident, the Pindee Club played a very
+strict game, and every member before sitting down carefully
+adjusted a pair of green spectacles.</p>
+<h2><a name="page127"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+127</span>CHAPTER XI.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE COUP DE JARNAC.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> importance of the following
+subject&mdash;as many a fool has found to his cost&mdash;entitles
+it to a chapter to itself.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s short, but
+instructive.</p>
+<p>Card-sharping&mdash;pure and simple&mdash;is such a low and
+contemptible subject that we would not presume to present it to
+our readers were it not occasionally reduced to a &ldquo;fine
+art,&rdquo; and, as such, worthy of notice, like the infallible
+formula that was in vogue in Europe some years ago, and, for
+aught we know, may still be practised by the
+&ldquo;past-masters&rdquo; of the fraternity.</p>
+<p>One may dismiss with contempt such fumblers as the scion of a
+ducal house who staked and lost his social position some years
+ago in a high-class Pall Mall club by what has been described as
+one of the two unpardonable offences against society; and were it
+not for the unique way his clumsy attempt was accidentally
+discovered the story would not bear repetition.</p>
+<p>There had been a Court function, and Lord Sydney, the Lord
+Chamberlain, innocently watching a rubber, was considerably
+surprised by a card cannoning against his silk stockings and
+striking him on the calf.&nbsp; Whether the fumbler had selected
+this course of throwing away a card because he had a bad hand,
+and so claiming a mis-deal, or was supplied with a relay like an
+amateur conjurer, suffice that he was detected and henceforth
+disappeared below the horizon.</p>
+<p><a name="page128"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 128</span>Nor
+will we detail how Prince Sapieha, of the 5th Dragoon Guards,
+playing &eacute;cart&eacute; with a subaltern of Lancers, at the
+Raleigh, caught his adversary in the act of passing the king, and
+so cut short a promising military career, for although Sapieha,
+in his generosity, promised not to disclose it, conditionally on
+the culprit never again presuming to play at the club, the story
+leaked out, and the inevitable result followed.</p>
+<p>Nor will we discuss the questionable taste&mdash;considering
+the company&mdash;that permitted publicity to the silly tactics
+of an impecunious Baronet who, by moving a bone counter,
+endeavoured to realise a few ill-gotten sovereigns.</p>
+<p>But what we propose to do is to place before our readers a
+formula so capable of expansion, so incapable of detection, that
+one is staggered at the misplaced ingenuity that discovered the
+combination.</p>
+<p>Nor do we here refer to the public casinos of France and Monte
+Carlo, where at worst one is playing against about 2&frac12; per
+cent. above the odds at roulette, and about 1&frac34; per cent.
+at <i>trente et quarante</i>, but to those accursed private
+parties in Paris, and possibly nearer home, where the following
+was in full blast many years ago.</p>
+<p>Assuming, then, that we have not all experienced a plucking,
+the procedure at (say) baccarat may be given.</p>
+<p>Conceive a long oblong table; in the centre sits the banker,
+whilst before him are two or three packs of new cards from which
+he tears the wrappers, shuffles them, and, placing them on the
+table, invites a player to cut.&nbsp; What fairer than
+this?&nbsp; What possibility of sharp practice when every eye is
+riveted on him, who, dealing one card to the right and one to the
+left, finally deals to himself?</p>
+<p>Now study the following table, and realise that the wrappers
+have been previously steamed and then re-gummed, and that the
+cards have been packed <a name="page129"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 129</span>in rotation (face upwards) reading
+from left to right:&mdash;</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">7 0 5 9 0 2 6 0 4 1 3 6 0</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">8 0 1 2 6 9 0 8 7 0 9 7 0</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">4 9 0 2 5 0 4 8 0 3 2 0 8</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">1 1 3 5 5 3 4 0 0 0 6 0 7</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">(0 represents tens and court
+cards.)</p>
+<p>Cut the cards as often as you please, and the sequence and
+<i>consequence</i> remain unimpaired; before testing this,
+however, it must be understood that we refer to experienced
+players who know when to draw and when to stand, and it will be
+found that the dealer never loses, but for decency occasionally
+ties.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lightning shuffling,&rdquo; whereby the <i>artiste</i>
+(!) appears to dislocate every card whilst really disturbing none
+is added to complete the illusion.</p>
+<p>Here, then, is a problem worthy of such Solons and
+&ldquo;system-mongers&rdquo; as Messrs. Wells, Rosslyn, and
+others, who, having found disciples, are invariably in pawn
+within a week.</p>
+<p>There is, however, one system one should invariably follow:
+avoid play, as a <i>private</i> enterprise, however alluring the
+surroundings, unless you are perfectly confident&mdash;and how
+can one be?&mdash;that the gentleman who takes the bank and his
+familiars have not been educated up to the &ldquo;Coup de
+Jarnac.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2><a name="page130"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+130</span>CHAPTER XII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE PUBLIC HANGING OF THE
+PIRATES.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the sixties
+&ldquo;hangings&rdquo; were done in public, and anything of an
+unusual kind attracted large parties from the West End; this was
+as recognised a custom as the more modern fashion of making up a
+party to go to the Boat Race or to share a <i>coup&eacute;</i> on
+a long railway journey.</p>
+<p>And so it came about that the phenomenal sight of the
+execution of the seven <i>Flowery Land</i> pirates in &rsquo;64
+created, in morbid circles, a stir rarely equalled before or
+since.&nbsp; Members of the Raleigh, as may be supposed, mustered
+in considerable numbers, and days before the fatal morning trusty
+agents had visited the houses that face Newgate Gaol and secured
+every window that gave an unobstructed view of the ghastly
+ceremony.</p>
+<p>The prices paid were enormous, varying from twenty to fifty
+guineas a window, in accordance with the superiority of the
+perspective from &ldquo;find to finish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The rendezvous was fixed for 10 p.m. on Sunday at the Raleigh,
+but as it was raining in torrents it was a question with many
+whether to face the elements, or content themselves with a
+graphic description in the next day&rsquo;s papers.&nbsp; But the
+sight of three or four cabs, a couple of servants, and a
+plentiful supply of provender decided the question, and the
+procession started on its dismal journey.</p>
+<p>Cursing the elements, the sightseers little knew in what good
+stead the downpour served them, and <a name="page131"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 131</span>with nothing worse than being
+drenched to the skin the party arrived safely.</p>
+<p>A cab-load of young Guardsmen, however, preferring to wait
+till the storm abated, never got beyond Newgate Lane&mdash;where
+they were politely invited to descend, and, after being stripped
+to their shirts, were asked where the cabman should drive them
+to.</p>
+<p>The scene on the night preceding a public execution afforded a
+study of the dark side of nature not to be obtained under any
+other circumstances.</p>
+<p>Here was to be seen the lowest scum of London densely packed
+together as far as the eye could reach, and estimated by <i>The
+Times</i> at not less than 200,000.&nbsp; Across the entire front
+of Newgate heavy barricades of stout timber traversed the streets
+in every direction, erected as a precaution against the pressure
+of the crowd, but which answered a purpose not wholly anticipated
+by the authorities.</p>
+<p>As the crowd increased, so wholesale highway robberies were of
+more frequent occurrence; and victims in the hands of some two or
+three desperate ruffians were as far from help as though divided
+by a continent from the battalions of police surrounding the
+scaffold.</p>
+<p>The scene that met one&rsquo;s view on pulling up the windows
+and looking out on the black night and its still blacker
+accompaniments baffles description.&nbsp; A surging mass, with
+here and there a flickering torch, rolled and roared before one;
+above this weird scene arose the voices of men and women
+shouting, singing, blaspheming, and, as the night advanced and
+the liquid gained firmer mastery, it seemed as if hell had
+delivered up its victims.&nbsp; To approach the window was a
+matter of danger; volleys of mud immediately saluted one,
+accompanied by more blaspheming and shouts of defiance.&nbsp; It
+was difficult to believe one was in the centre of a civilised
+capital that vaunted its religion, and yet meted out justice in
+such a form.</p>
+<p><a name="page132"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 132</span>The
+first step towards the morning&rsquo;s work was the appearance of
+workmen about 4 a.m.; this was immediately followed by a rumbling
+sound, and one realised that the scaffold was being dragged
+round.&nbsp; A grim, square, box-like apparatus was now
+distinctly visible, as it slowly backed against the
+&ldquo;debtors&rsquo; door.&rdquo;&nbsp; Lights now flickered
+about the scaffold&mdash;the workmen fixing the cross-beams and
+uprights.&nbsp; Every stroke of the hammer must have vibrated
+through the condemned cells, and warned the wakeful occupants
+that their time was nearly come.&nbsp; These cells were situated
+at the corner nearest Holborn, and passed by thousands daily, who
+little knew how much misery that bleak white wall divided them
+from.&nbsp; Gradually as the day dawned the scene became more
+animated, and battalions of police surrounded the scaffold.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, a little unpretending door was gently opened; this
+was the &ldquo;debtors&rsquo; door,&rdquo; and led direct through
+the kitchen on to the scaffold.&nbsp; The kitchen on these
+occasions was turned into a temporary mausoleum and draped with
+tawdry black hangings, which concealed the pots and pans, and
+produced an effect supposed to be more in keeping with the solemn
+occasion.&nbsp; From the window opposite everything was visible
+inside the kitchen and on the scaffold, but to the surging mass
+in the streets below this bird&rsquo;s-eye view was denied.</p>
+<p>Presently an old and decrepit man made his appearance, and
+cautiously &ldquo;tested&rdquo; the drop; but a foolish impulse
+of curiosity leading him to peep over the drapery, a yell of
+execration saluted him.&nbsp; This was Calcraft, the hangman,
+hoary-headed, tottering, and utterly past his usefulness for the
+work.</p>
+<p>The tolling of St. Sepulchre&rsquo;s bell about 7.30 a.m.
+announced the approach of the hour of execution; meanwhile a
+steady rain was falling, though without diminishing the
+ever-increasing crowd.&nbsp; As far as the <a
+name="page133"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 133</span>eye could
+reach was a sea of human faces.&nbsp; Roofs, windows,
+church-rails, and empty vans&mdash;all were pressed into service,
+and tightly packed with human beings eager to catch a glimpse of
+seven fellow-creatures on the last stage of life&rsquo;s
+journey.&nbsp; The rain by this time had made the drop slippery,
+and necessitated precautions on behalf of the living if not of
+those appointed to die, so sand was thrown over a portion, not of
+the drop (that would have been superfluous), but on the side, the
+only portion that was not to give way.&nbsp; It was suggestive of
+the pitfalls used for trapping wild beasts&mdash;a few twigs and
+a handful of earth, with a gaping chasm below.&nbsp; Here,
+however, all was reversed; there was no need to resort to such a
+subterfuge to deceive the chief actors who were to expiate their
+crime with all the publicity that a humane Government could
+devise.&nbsp; The sand was for the benefit of the
+&ldquo;ordinary,&rdquo; the minister of religion, who was to
+offer dying consolation at 8 a.m., and breakfast at 9.</p>
+<p>The procession now appeared, winding its way through the
+kitchen, and in the centre of the group walked a sickly,
+cadaverous mob securely pinioned, and literally as white as
+marble.&nbsp; As they reached the platform a halt was necessary
+as each was placed one by one immediately under the hanging
+chains.&nbsp; At the end of these chains were hooks which were
+eventually attached to the hemp round the neck of each
+wretch.&nbsp; The concluding ceremonies did not take long,
+considering how feeble the aged hangman was.&nbsp; A white cap
+was first placed over every face, then the ankles were strapped
+together, and finally the fatal noose was put round every neck,
+and the end attached to the hooks.&nbsp; One fancies one can see
+Calcraft now laying the &ldquo;slack&rdquo; of the rope that was
+to give the fall lightly on the doomed men&rsquo;s shoulders so
+as to preclude the possibility of a hitch, and then stepping on
+tiptoe down the steps and disappearing below.&nbsp; At this
+moment a hideous <i>contretemps</i> occurred, <a
+name="page134"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 134</span>and one
+poor wretch fell fainting, almost into the arms of the
+officiating priest.</p>
+<p>The reprieve was, however, momentary, and, placed on a chair,
+the inanimate mass of humanity awaited the supreme moment in
+merciful ignorance.&nbsp; The silence was now awful.&nbsp; One
+felt one&rsquo;s heart literally in one&rsquo;s mouth, and found
+oneself involuntarily saying, &ldquo;They could be saved
+yet&mdash;yet&mdash;yet,&rdquo; and then a thud that vibrated
+through the street announced that the pirates were launched into
+eternity.&nbsp; One&rsquo;s eyes were glued to the spot, and,
+fascinated by the awful sight, not a detail escaped one.&nbsp;
+Calcraft, meanwhile, apparently not satisfied with his handiwork,
+seized hold of one poor wretch&rsquo;s feet, and pressing on them
+for some seconds with all his weight, passed from one to another
+with hideous composure.&nbsp; Meanwhile, the white caps were
+getting tighter and tighter, until they looked ready to burst,
+and a faint blue speck that had almost immediately appeared on
+the carotid artery gradually became more livid, till it assumed
+the appearance of a huge black bruise.&nbsp; Death, I should say,
+must have been instantaneous, for hardly a vibration occurred,
+and the only movement that was visible was that from the
+gradually-stretching ropes as the bodies kept slowly swinging
+round and round.&nbsp; The hanging of the body for an hour
+constituted part of the sentence, an interval that was not lost
+upon the multitude below.&nbsp; The drunken again took up their
+ribald songs, conspicuous amongst which was one that had done
+duty pretty well through the night, and ended with</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Calcraft, Calcraft, he&rsquo;s the
+man,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>but the pickpockets and highwaymen reaped the greatest
+benefit.&nbsp; It can hardly be credited that respectable old
+City men on their way to business&mdash;with watch-chains and
+scarf-pins in clean white shirt-fronts, and with unmistakable
+signs of having spent the <a name="page135"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 135</span>night in bed&mdash;should have had
+the foolhardiness to venture into such a crowd; but they were
+there in dozens.&nbsp; They had not long to wait for the reward
+of their temerity.&nbsp; Gangs of ruffians at once surrounded
+them, and whilst one held them by each arm, another was rifling
+their pockets.&nbsp; Watches, chains and scarf-pins passed from
+hand to hand with the rapidity of an eel; meanwhile their piteous
+shouts of &ldquo;Murder!&rdquo; &ldquo;Help!&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Police!&rdquo; were utterly unavailing.&nbsp; The barriers
+were doing their duty too well, and the hundreds of constables
+within a few yards were perfectly powerless to get through the
+living rampart.</p>
+<p>Whilst these incidents were going on 9 o&rsquo;clock was
+gradually approaching, the hour when the bodies were to be cut
+down.&nbsp; As the dismal clock of St. Sepulchre&rsquo;s chimed
+out the hour Calcraft, rubbing his lips, again appeared, and,
+producing a clasp knife, proceeded to hug the various bodies in
+rotation with one arm whilst with the other he severed the
+several ropes.&nbsp; It required two slashes of the feeble old
+arm to complete this final ceremony, and then the heads fell with
+a flop on the old man&rsquo;s breast, who staggering under the
+weight, proceeded to jam them into shells.</p>
+<p>And then the &ldquo;debtors&rsquo; door&rdquo; closed till
+again required for a similar tragedy, the crowd dispersed, and
+the sightseers sought their beds to dream of the horrors of the
+past twelve hours.</p>
+<p>After the trapeze performance we have just read of, given by
+the venerable Calcraft to a delighted audience in front of
+Newgate Gaol, it appears to have dawned upon the &ldquo;Hanging
+Committee&rdquo; of the Home Office that, although much of the
+solemnity of the &ldquo;painful&rdquo; performance would be lost
+by the removal of the patriarchal beard, counter advantages might
+be attained by the substitution of a younger man to fill the
+Crown appointment so popular amongst the masses.&nbsp; <a
+name="page136"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 136</span>A new era
+was thenceforth inaugurated.&nbsp; Instead of the length of the
+drop being left to the discretion of the <i>artiste</i>, the
+exact measurement was not only fixed, but the rope itself
+supplied by the Hanging Committee, after a careful calculation by
+dynamics of the height and weight of the principal
+performer.&nbsp; But the immediate successor of the venerable
+Calcraft was found wanting in certain material qualifications,
+and although admittedly an expert operator, had a habit of
+talking when under the genial influence of stimulants.</p>
+<p>An unrehearsed incident, when the head rolled off at a private
+execution, thus got into the papers, and it became apparent that
+a combination of expertness and reticence was the desideratum to
+be sought and found.</p>
+<p>It was thus that the hero we are discussing came upon the
+scene some few years later.</p>
+<p>Marwood allowed nothing to interfere with business, and he
+would as soon have hanged his grandmother&mdash;if duly
+instructed&mdash;as the most brutal ruffian that ever passed
+through his hands.&nbsp; To arrive over-night with a modest
+carpet-bag and be up betimes the following morning were to him
+matters of routine; to truss his subject with a kicking strap 6
+in. wide and then drop into the procession with a face like a
+chief mourner&rsquo;s were to him sheer formalities; to give
+evidence later in the day before an enlightened but inquisitive
+coroner&rsquo;s jury was to him a matter of courteous obligation;
+and to step into the street half an hour afterwards with the same
+bag&mdash;but with evidently less hemp in it&mdash;all came to
+him as part of a routine to be henceforth cast from memory till
+the service of his country again demanded his undivided and best
+attention.</p>
+<p>Any one looking at the retiring little man, dressed in the
+most funereal of clothes, clutching a pint pot with his long and
+nervous fingers, would have found <a name="page137"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 137</span>it difficult to associate him with
+anything more formidable than a bagman hawking samples for
+&ldquo;the firm,&rdquo; and it was only when a sort of intimacy
+had been struck up and a certain quantity of swipes had been
+consumed that, yielding to pressure, the great man launched out
+upon his unique experiences.</p>
+<p>Marwood&rsquo;s invariable resort was the Green Dragon in
+Fleet Street, and so certain as a malefactor met his doom at
+eight so certain was the hangman to be found at twelve in the
+&ldquo;select&rdquo; section of the pub.&nbsp; This peculiarity,
+of course, by degrees got to be known, and so it came to pass
+that young bloods with a thirst for knowledge resorted thither,
+and &ldquo;hanging days&rdquo; raised the &ldquo;takings&rdquo;
+of the fortunate house in Fleet Street.</p>
+<p>Incredible as it may appear, this morbid craving is by no
+means confined to a few, and large sums used to be paid by
+reckless young scamps thirty years ago to assist at these ghastly
+functions.&nbsp; It is an undeniable fact, moreover, that a
+baronet still alive posed as the hangman&rsquo;s assistant at
+numerous executions.</p>
+<p>But with the reaction that came as regards public hangings,
+the stringency connected with the private performances made these
+hobbies impossible, and the present era may take credit for
+having advanced considerably in this respect on the usages of the
+long-ago sixties.</p>
+<p>Before quitting this dislocating subject, it may interest the
+student of ancient days to know that where now stands an imposing
+public-house, next St. Giles&rsquo;s Church, Bloomsbury, was once
+the Beer House where every cart freighted with living victims
+from Newgate to Tyburn pulled up for their &ldquo;last
+drink.&rdquo;&nbsp; After which, wending their way along Oxford
+Road (Street), they alighted at Tyburn Tree, now the garden of 1,
+Connaught Place, opposite the Marble Arch.</p>
+<p>Surely no passer-by can walk under the porch of <a
+name="page138"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+138</span>Gilbey&rsquo;s offices in Oxford Street without
+shuddering at the many sad scenes that ancient portico and that
+ancient street have witnessed.</p>
+<p>It was beneath it that De Quincey nightly waited for poor Anne
+when both were on the verge of starvation; and it was there that
+he poured out his lamentations of the stony-hearted
+stepmother&mdash;Oxford Street.</p>
+<p>The same miseries exist in the present day, and every night
+bundles of human rags lie huddled together under its inhospitable
+shelter; whilst within, the old Pantheon&mdash;delight of our
+childhood when it was a huge bazaar&mdash;blazes with electric
+light as the headquarters of a certain whisky which,
+advertisements tell us, may be procured of 3,000 agents.</p>
+<p>The trial and execution of M&uuml;ller in &rsquo;64 for the
+murder of Mr. Briggs in one of the tunnels on the Brighton
+Railway, created more universal excitement than anything before
+or since, except, perhaps, the case of Mrs. Maybrick.&nbsp; On
+the night before his execution, the German Ambassador was
+closeted with the Home Secretary at the urgent request of his
+Government, and petitions innumerable were presented; but the
+Home Secretary was a firm man, and the culprit was duly hanged
+next morning in front of Newgate.&nbsp; Personally, I was
+sceptical of his guilt, and so interested was I that I obtained
+an order to visit Newgate, and by the judicious expenditure of a
+shilling, peeped through the observation hole of the condemned
+cell; later on I saw him hanged, and it was only on his
+confession to the Lutheran minister, just before the bolt was
+drawn, that I admitted the justice of the sentence.&nbsp; But the
+fair-haired Saxon youth of refined and prepossessing appearance
+had got on my nerves, and when, a week later, his effigy was
+advertised as having been added to Tussaud&rsquo;s Wax-works, I
+determined to again see the youth, whom I had last seen being
+jerked into eternity.</p>
+<p><a name="page139"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 139</span>In
+those days the exhibition was in the Baker Street Bazaar, and if
+the premises were not as roomy as the present palatial building,
+they certainly appeared to me &ldquo;snugger.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+Chamber of Horrors was snugness itself.</p>
+<p>It was whilst exploring this dismal chamber that an attendant
+told me that wax figures were the most improvident creatures in
+the world; that they ran their toes through their stockings with
+reckless unconcern, and that two or three people were constantly
+employed darning and mending the belongings of these weird
+beings.</p>
+<p>As I left the building I pondered over what I had seen and
+heard, and soon discovered I had not heard the last of
+M&uuml;ller yet.&nbsp; This is what I saw, or fancied I saw, in
+my dreams:</p>
+<p>As I entered the Chamber of Horrors a few nights after,
+M&uuml;ller&mdash;whose pose is of the meekest and most
+becoming&mdash;suddenly shot out his arm, and, pointing at me,
+exclaimed in a loud and guttural voice: &ldquo;Seize him, seize
+him; the man!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then Rush and Greenacre and a host of
+others yelled and execrated me, and Mrs. Manning (whose crime was
+probably the cruellest on record) shrieked like a curlew:
+&ldquo;Seize him, seize him!&rdquo;&nbsp; On this I dropped my
+umbrella&mdash;a weakness that I trust will be deemed
+pardonable&mdash;under the circumstances&mdash;and immediately
+followed it with a terrific flop on the floor; so terrific,
+indeed, was it that it brought me to my senses, and I awoke in a
+cold perspiration in Jermyn Street.</p>
+<h2><a name="page140"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+140</span>CHAPTER XIII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE HOSTELRIES OF THE SIXTIES.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Long&rsquo;s</span> Hotel, in Bond Street,
+as it appeared in the sixties, was a species of adjunct to half
+the clubs in London.&nbsp; Men playing till three or four in the
+morning in clubs that aspired to being considered
+&ldquo;correct&rdquo; usually adjourned to Long&rsquo;s, and one
+man having engaged a bedroom, the rest trooped in after
+him.&nbsp; To such an extent, indeed, was this recognised, that a
+commodious bedroom on the ground floor was especially set apart
+for these nocturnal emergencies, and within five minutes of
+entering the most methodical of night porters produced cards,
+candles, and the inevitable brandy and sodas.&nbsp; Here play of
+a very high order frequently took place, and here also drunken
+rows and card disputes often ensued, unrestrained by the
+unwritten sanctity of a high-class club.&nbsp; It was here that a
+well-known baronet&mdash;long since dead&mdash;had a barging
+match with a peer still above the horizon, but rarely visible to
+the naked eye, where, after strong language, blows were
+exchanged, and a meeting arranged across the Channel, which
+happily never came off, the belligerents agreeing, after calm
+reflection, that dirty linen was best washed at home, as their
+respective laundry baskets were considerably overfreighted as it
+was and needed no further handicapping in the way of publicity;
+it was here that a young ass&mdash;still living&mdash;paid
+&pound;4,000 <a name="page141"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+141</span>for a broken-down ex-Derby horse that would have been
+dear at &pound;100.</p>
+<p>It was here that poor old Jim Stewart&mdash;seldom sober, and
+long since dead&mdash;gave a baccarat party to some twenty
+plungers, where it was agreed that no deal should commence after
+6 a.m., at which hour he was the winner of &pound;1,500, and
+where, yielding to the earnest request of a heavy loser, he
+consented to extend the time to 6.30, and rose a loser of
+&pound;5,000; it was here that the fastest and best men in London
+lounged in and out of the coffee room from breakfast time till
+well on in the afternoon, and smoked, drank champagne, talked
+horsy, and swore loudly.</p>
+<p>Not that Long&rsquo;s was not a highly-respectable hotel; on
+the contrary, the entire upper part was conducted on strictly
+correct lines, and patronised by the best county people of the
+day, and the latitude granted to the ground floor must be set
+down rather as a desire of the management to please all parties,
+and bow before the inevitable there was no resisting.</p>
+<p>An amusing story may here be introduced of Colonel Oakes, of
+the 12th Lancers, the most irascible of cavalry officers, with a
+command of language that few, if any, could excel, and who
+invariably put up at Long&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Stationed at Aldershot, the Colonel about this time got
+married, and, anxious to avoid publicity, he decided to bring his
+bride up to London and, to make matters still less noticeable, to
+bring his soldier-servant with him.</p>
+<p>Things went happily till the faithful attendant, who was an
+Irishman, knowing the Colonel&rsquo;s impatient nature, and
+considering the luggage was a long time coming up, put his head
+over the banisters and shouted: &ldquo;Will you be plased to
+bring up the Colonel&rsquo;s and Miss Black&rsquo;s
+boxes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tableau half an hour later in the Colonel&rsquo;s
+apartments may reasonably be left to the reader&rsquo;s <a
+name="page142"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+142</span>imagination: the politest of landlords expressing his
+astonishment, the most irritable of Dragoons cursing his
+impudence, and the innocent cause of this comedy of errors
+trembling for the consequences.</p>
+<p>Colonel Oakes was admittedly a good soldier, and second only
+to Valentine Baker as a cavalry leader; popular with both
+officers and men, he was one of the last of the old swaggering
+school, a man of likes and dislikes, who, although free and easy
+and very plain-spoken, was a martinet in other ways.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;R&mdash;,&rdquo; he once said to one of his officers
+(who certainly was not the accepted ideal of a sabreur), after an
+inspection, &ldquo;the General asked me if you had come from the
+infantry,&rdquo; and when the remark failed to elicit the reply
+he desired, he continued: &ldquo;D&mdash; it, sir, you spoil the
+look of my regiment.&nbsp; I wish to &mdash; you&rsquo;d
+exchange!&rdquo; and when the culprit lost his temper and said he
+considered he was insulted, and that he was the son of a baronet,
+the irresponsible Colonel shouted: &ldquo;D&mdash; it, sir,
+I&rsquo;m the son of a shoemaker, and I wish to &mdash;
+you&rsquo;d leave my regiment!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On another occasion, strolling into the stables, he overheard
+two recruits discussing him: &ldquo;I say, Bill,&rdquo; remarked
+one of the warriors, &ldquo;the Colonel&rsquo;s a d&mdash; rum
+old buffer.&rdquo;&nbsp; To which the other acquiescing, the
+Colonel advanced, and standing before the trembling culprits,
+began: &ldquo;Yes, I heard what you said&mdash;that I was a
+d&mdash; rum old buffer&mdash;and I tell you what it is; if you
+had drunk as much as I have in the last thirty years you&rsquo;d
+be a d&mdash; rum old buffer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Despite all these circumstances, no smarter regiment existed
+than the 12th in the long-ago sixties, although it was commanded
+by a &ldquo;d&mdash; rum old buffer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Jack Peyton, who commanded the 7th Dragoon Guards, was another
+patron of Long&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Shortly after his second marriage
+with a wealthy widow, <a name="page143"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 143</span>his boon companion, Tom Phillips, of
+the 18th, asked him, &ldquo;Is she good-looking,
+Jack?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;No, by &mdash;, Tom,&rdquo; was the
+reply, &ldquo;d&mdash; near as ugly as yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The fashion of dining at restaurants had not taken root in
+those days, and the feeding resorts were few and good and very
+far between.</p>
+<p>Their numbers, indeed, were to be counted on one&rsquo;s
+fingers, and were resorted to either for lunch or supper, and
+seldom, as now, for the more serious ceremony of dinner.</p>
+<p>People dined at their hotels, for the plate-glass abominations
+that now cumber the ground at every point of vantage had not
+suggested themselves to undesirable aliens and our own home-grown
+Israelites.</p>
+<p>When the (present) Berkeley Hotel first started the new idea
+under the auspices of the renowned Soyer, the separate-table
+system was a nine days&rsquo; wonder, and people were impressed
+when it was currently reported that Lady Blantyre and her most
+unimaginative of husbands might be seen nightly at the next table
+to Skittle&rsquo;s enjoying the creations of that most marvellous
+of chefs.</p>
+<p>It was here that that distinguished siren once rebuked a
+waiter who had clumsily splashed her with some viand, by:
+&ldquo;You infernal lout, if I wasn&rsquo;t a lady I&rsquo;d
+smack your ugly face!&rdquo; and it was at St. James&rsquo;s (as
+it was then called) she was nightly entertained by her numerous
+worshippers.</p>
+<p>A noble marquis&mdash;eventually a duke, and lately
+deceased&mdash;was for years supposed to be her lawful husband,
+but the devotion of a life-time and subsequent events have since
+given the lie to this evident <i>canard</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Guildhall Tavern,&rdquo; &ldquo;The Albion,&rdquo;
+and Simpson&rsquo;s long reigned supreme as places where saddles
+and sirloins, marrow-bones and welsh rabbits were to be obtained
+in perfection; but all have now disappeared, except in name, nor
+will the expenditure of <a name="page144"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 144</span>fortunes in their resurrection ever
+bring back the indescribable air of solid comfort that
+characterised these hostelries of the Sixties.</p>
+<p>It was in the last-named house, even then on the wane, that my
+solitary (active) interest in the drama afforded me numerous
+occasions of delight.</p>
+<p>Off the entrance hall was an unpretentious room, and here
+every day for weeks a divine being from the Gaiety partook of a
+hurried lunch in the company of my enraptured self.</p>
+<p>Nothing could have been more decorous than the tone that
+pervaded our frugal meal; nothing so incapable of giving offence
+to Exeter Hall opposite; the door of our retreat was
+intentionally kept ajar, yet despite these precautions I was one
+day informed that the manager declined to let the room for two,
+but that three would always be welcome.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The School Board is on the warpath,&rdquo; was my
+inward comment, and I never entered the place again.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;correct&rdquo; old hypocrite is long since dead; the scene
+of these innocent repasts has long since been demolished, and the
+sweet lady who honoured me with her company has long since had a
+prefix to her name and become the proud mother of a subaltern in
+the Guards.</p>
+<p>The inauguration of the Civil Service Stores, and the
+subsequent appearance of the Army and Navy Stores, gave the first
+fillip to that union between the Army and trade which the
+abolition of purchase and the changes in public opinion have
+since developed to such an extent.</p>
+<p>Captain MacRae, late director-general in Victoria Street, who
+in the sixties was a plodding captain of foot, set the fashion by
+turning his sword into a tape-measure, and having taken the
+plunge lost no time in converting a general officer (some say his
+parent) into a laundry-man.&nbsp; Then followed the rush that saw
+bonnet shops and costumiers springing up in every <a
+name="page145"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 145</span>fashionable
+street, and as Kitties and Reillys and Madges looked favourably
+on the military, the crop of Mantalinis increased and multiplied,
+and penniless officers became well-to-do men-milliners and
+accepted authorities on things military amid their new
+client&egrave;le.&nbsp; And so the last nail was driven into that
+class distinction that was one of the chief characteristics of
+the long-ago Sixties.</p>
+<p>Whilst on the subject of hostelries, a reference to
+Lane&rsquo;s will not be amiss.&nbsp; This unique establishment
+was in St. Alban&rsquo;s Place, and was affected by the rowdier
+class of youngsters, with a sprinkling of permanent residents in
+various stages of delirium tremens.&nbsp; Dirty and apparently
+never swept, the rooms might best be described as cosy.&nbsp; The
+beds, however, were scrupulously clean, and as the majority of
+the lodgers spent a considerable portion of their existence
+between the sheets, apple-pie order reigned in this department,
+ready for any emergency by night or day.</p>
+<p>The ruling spirit was old John, an octogenarian in shiny
+snuff-coloured tail suit and slippers, who apparently never
+slumbered nor slept, and whom no human eye had ever seen
+otherwise attired.&nbsp; Assisted by two youngsters of
+fifty&mdash;Charles and Robert&mdash;this extraordinary trio knew
+the habits and tastes of every one; not that eating was
+extensively indulged in; and beyond the best of joints for
+dinner, and bacon and eggs for breakfast, the staple consumption
+for all day and all night might briefly be described as brandy
+and soda, rum and milk, whilst the more sedate confined
+themselves to sherry and bitters before breakfast, and a glass of
+brandy in their tea.&nbsp; How human nature stood such persistent
+floodings of the system seems beyond comprehension, yet nothing
+seemed to occur beyond revellers being periodically chaperoned to
+bed, and now and then an ominous long box being smuggled
+upstairs, and one hearing a day or so after that &ldquo;the
+Captain&rdquo; <a name="page146"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+146</span>had had his last drink, and had been duly gathered to
+his fathers.</p>
+<p>Even in those long-ago days the brevet rank was frequently
+assumed by ex-militia ensigns, but not to the same extent nor by
+such sorry specimens as twirl their moustaches in these more
+enlightened times and stand on the doorstep of the Criterion.</p>
+<p>Whisky at this period was literally an unknown beverage in
+London&mdash;possibly because the supply could never have
+equalled the demand, or more probably because science had not yet
+evolved the diabolical concoctions that now do duty for the wine
+of bonnie Scotland.&nbsp; And so it came to pass that the staple
+drink at Lane&rsquo;s was brandy and soda.&nbsp; Come in when one
+chose, there stood battalions of soda with brandy in reserve, and
+rarely did a wayfarer return at the small hours without calling
+for a libation from old Peter.&nbsp; Occasionally, after an
+unusual run, the supply might become exhausted, but no temptation
+could induce the old janitor to retail what had been reserved on
+&ldquo;special order.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;What, give you that
+one?&nbsp; Why, it&rsquo;s the Captain&rsquo;s; every morning at
+five I takes it to his bedside, and if he&rsquo;s asleep in the
+smoking-room I gives him a sniff of it, and he follows me to his
+room like a dog.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Visiting the &ldquo;Cheshire Cheese&rdquo; not long since, I
+was struck by the marvellous change that the advance of
+civilisation (!!) had effected in that most cosy and
+unconventional of rooms.&nbsp; The steaks and puddings are still
+as good as ever, but the rollicking Bohemians, bristling with
+wit, with churchwardens and brown ale that one met at every
+table, have long since been replaced by their modern prototypes
+who sip their beer out of a glass, call for a <i>serviette</i> in
+evidence of a trip to Boulogne, and bolt after depositing a penny
+on the table.&nbsp; And where are the jolly old waiters in rusty
+tail-coats, shambling along in their carpet slippers, who never
+inquired how many <a name="page147"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+147</span>&ldquo;breads&rdquo; you had had nor what had won the
+3.40 race?&nbsp; And the Americans who now invade the place are
+not an unalloyed blessing, as males and females appear to
+consider it a <i>sine qu&acirc; non</i> to flop on to the seat
+where Doctor Johnson is once supposed to have sat, in order to be
+able to tell poppa and momma in the old Kentucky home how, if
+they could not rub shoulders with the mighty living, they had at
+least rubbed something with the mighty dead.&nbsp; This
+aspiration is indeed almost a disease with these Transatlantic
+trotters, and one rich and pronounced snob, despite his wealth,
+who lives amongst us, is known to pay for reliable information of
+the movements of European heirs-apparent in order to meet them by
+accident (!) and perhaps secure some fragment of
+recognition.&nbsp; The sequel is usually to be found in an
+inspired paragraph (4d. a word) hinting at possible alliance
+between the two families, which in its turn is flatly
+contradicted!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blood,&rdquo; some genius discovered, &ldquo;is thicker
+than water&rdquo;&mdash;and the most unobservant must admit that
+some of it is very thick indeed.</p>
+<p>And apropos of Doctor Johnson, what evidence is there that the
+great lexicographer&rsquo;s rhinoceros laugh ever vibrated
+through the &ldquo;Cheshire Cheese&rdquo;?&nbsp; Boswell makes no
+reference to it, and surely such an omission would be impossible
+in the chronicles of that irrepressible toady&mdash;but when
+all&rsquo;s said and done, what importance attaches to it so long
+as the fare maintains its pristine excellence and the American
+bumpings are restrained within reasonable limits?</p>
+<p>When Piccadilly did not consist almost entirely of clubs,
+public billiard-rooms were patronised by many who would not enter
+a modern one.&nbsp; Many of these were run on the very best
+lines, and a regular clientele met every afternoon for sixpenny
+and half-crown pools.</p>
+<p>The best was Phillips&rsquo;s, at 99, Regent Street, where <a
+name="page148"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 148</span>Edmund
+Tattersall, Lord St. Vincent, Colonel Dawes, Attenborough, the
+king of pawnbrokers, and a few members of 14, St. James&rsquo;s
+Square Club never missed resorting&mdash;wind and weather
+permitting&mdash;from three to seven of an afternoon.</p>
+<p>No goat from an alien flock dared hope to browse on that
+jealously-guarded pasture, and if, as occasionally, one wandered
+in, he speedily wandered out under the withering glances of old
+Phillips and his son.</p>
+<p>Almost opposite were Smith&rsquo;s rooms, where pool of a high
+class (in execution) was indulged in, and any amateur with a
+local reputation who took a ball soon disabused his mind of any
+exalted idea of his play.</p>
+<p>Dolby&rsquo;s, near the Marble Arch, had also its regular
+patrons, and even in the select region of Portman Square such
+correct old gentlemen as Sir James Hamilton, Mr. Burgoyne, and
+other residents in the neighbourhood met daily at an
+unpretentious tobacconist&rsquo;s in King Street and played pool
+in a dingy room behind the shop.</p>
+<p>But in the clubs of those long-ago days the most cold-blooded
+inhospitality obtained.&nbsp; If you called upon a friend you had
+to wait on the door-mat, and the offering of a glass of sherry
+was attended by the risk of expulsion.&nbsp;
+Smoking-rooms&mdash;if tolerated&mdash;were placed in the attics,
+and a &ldquo;strangers&rsquo; room&rdquo; was an innovation that
+only came into existence years after.</p>
+<p>For long many clubs held out against the recognition of
+&ldquo;strangers,&rdquo; and only within the last few years have
+the &ldquo;Senior&rdquo; and the more exclusive establishments
+over-ruled the snarling objections of the few old fossils who use
+a club from morning to night without adding one cent to its
+revenue.</p>
+<p>It was the privilege of the Army and Navy Club to make the
+first drastic move in the right direction, and to Louis
+Napoleon&rsquo;s frequent visits for luncheon <a
+name="page149"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 149</span>and its
+attendant cigarette and coffee may be traced the present accepted
+theory that &ldquo;clubs were made for man, and not man for
+clubs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The best tobacconists also supplied the need now provided by
+the ubiquitous club, and Harris&rsquo;s, Hoare&rsquo;s,
+Benson&rsquo;s, Hudson&rsquo;s, Carlin&rsquo;s in Oxford Street
+and Regent Street, each had their following, where every
+afternoon such men as Lord William Lennox, Lord Huntingtower, Mr.
+George Payne, the Marquis of Drogheda, Lord Henry Loftus, and
+Colonel Fitzgerald might be seen seated on tobacco tubs and cigar
+chests, smoking big cigars and drinking sherry which flowed from
+casks around the shop.</p>
+<p>This last-named individual was a morose, fire-eating Irishman,
+whose life had been soured by the seduction of his wife by his
+own colonel, and later by the ravages of small-pox that had
+seared his once-handsome face.</p>
+<p>The son of a famous duellist of the days of the Regency, it
+was told how on one occasion on entering the Cocoa Tree a
+comparative stranger exclaimed: &ldquo;I smell an
+Irishman!&rdquo;&nbsp; To which &ldquo;Fighting Fitz&rdquo;
+replied: &ldquo;You shall never smell another!&rdquo; and sliced
+off his nose on the spot.</p>
+<h2><a name="page150"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+150</span>CHAPTER XIV.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE DRAMA&mdash;LEGITIMATE AND
+OTHERWISE.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> tercentenary of Shakespeare in
+&rsquo;64 suggested an experience that many of us were anxious to
+participate in.&nbsp; That we were likely to be successful was by
+no means certain, for numerous meetings, held at the Caf&eacute;
+de l&rsquo;Europe, Haymarket&mdash;where motions innumerable and
+brandy <i>ad libitum</i> were proposed and carried&mdash;had
+decided that an event so strictly dramatic should not be diluted
+by outside association, but rather that scene shifters, stage
+carpenters, actors, everything and everybody strictly
+&ldquo;legit.&rdquo; should have the preference of guzzling and
+swilling to the memory of the immortal poet.&nbsp; But if our
+claims were weak, our advocates were strong, and so it came to
+pass that on the eventful evening we found ourselves awaiting the
+feast in the banqueting room of the Freemason&rsquo;s Tavern.</p>
+<p>That the thing was to be unique we were not long in
+discovering, as Ben Webster began grace by &ldquo;For what we are
+about to receive may the spirit of Shakespeare hover over
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whether it was Shakespeare&rsquo;s spirit or the more powerful
+libations included in the dinner ticket must be left to greater
+dramatic authorities; suffice that long before the speeches
+began, practical jokes were in full blast, and eventually
+developed into a free fight.</p>
+<p>It appears that some scene shifters with voracious appetites
+were sending again and again for a slice <a
+name="page151"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 151</span>more
+&rsquo;am, till wags of a higher grade, who acted as croupiers,
+worn out and disgusted, piled plates with meats, custards,
+oranges, and mustard till the blood of every carpenter rose as
+one man, and dishes began to fly right, centre, and left.&nbsp;
+Even the waiters joined in the tournament, and one, in the act of
+placing a plate before me, yelled out, &ldquo;Wait till I give
+this &mdash; his grub, and then I&rsquo;ll let you
+know.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Damn it,&rdquo; whispered one of our
+party, &ldquo;this isn&rsquo;t Shakespearian, surely!&nbsp; For
+God&rsquo;s sake let us clear out.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+&ldquo;clearing out&rdquo; was by no means so easy, for at that
+moment two or three repulsive ruffians in leather coats and
+rabbit-skin caps came upon the scene, whilst one, scowling in
+strictly melodramatic style, confronted us with &ldquo;Well,
+what&rsquo;s the matter with <i>you</i>?&rdquo;&nbsp; But we
+managed to slip out without giving the desired explanation, and
+so ended the tercentenary and the spirit Ben Webster had
+invoked.</p>
+<p>People nowadays would hardly realise that theatregoers in
+those long-ago days could wade through alleys and side streets by
+no means safe after dark to visit the (then) Prince of
+Wales&rsquo;s in a slum off the Tottenham Court Road.&nbsp; With
+an excellent company, however, and with houris since translated
+to the peerage and knightage, the little house was nightly
+crammed, and white ties by the score blocked the thoroughfare in
+the vicinity of the modest stage door as resolutely as in later
+years they besieged the Philharmonic and the Gaiety.</p>
+<p>Valentine Baker at the time was running the show, or a
+material portion of it, and much of the profits of his
+wife&rsquo;s soap-boiling industry, it was said, found their way
+into the coffers of the unpretentious little temple in the
+slum.&nbsp; A wealthy cabinet maker, also in the vicinity, whose
+profits permitted the luxury of a four-in-hand, might usually be
+seen worshipping at the shrine, and a tag-rag and bobtail of less
+wealthy but aspiring young bloods fought and hustled for <a
+name="page152"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 152</span>one glance,
+one sign of recognition, from the bevy beyond the footlights.</p>
+<p>When Valentine Baker began casting sheep&rsquo;s eyes at the
+demure maiden reading the <i>Family Herald</i> in a South-Western
+compartment, he little realised that the price he was paying
+might have been commuted elsewhere by the judicious expenditure
+of a five-pound note.&nbsp; Twenty thousand in hard cash, the
+command of a great regiment, and social annihilation&mdash;for
+what?&nbsp; And when Mr. Justice Brett began his charge to the
+jury by &ldquo;a man we looked to to protect our women and
+children,&rdquo; there was not an Army man present (and the
+Croydon Court House was crammed with them) that did not
+internally vow that henceforth, be it in a first-class or a
+third-class compartment, be it Piccadilly Circus or the British
+Museum, woman should be his constant care, and, if necessary, any
+tadpole that lawfully pertained to her.</p>
+<p>The rumour came like a thunderbolt, and in every Army club the
+whispered communication ran: &ldquo;Valentine Baker is arrested,
+by Gad!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No man at this time had such a universal personality&mdash;the
+colonel of the crackest of all crack regiments; the admittedly
+best cavalry leader of the day; the patron of the drama, and in
+intimate touch with the Prince of Wales&rsquo;s Theatre, then
+under the management of Marie Wilton, since developed into a
+pillar of Holy Church&mdash;the thing seemed incredible, and
+curiosity ran high to gaze upon the houri that had been so
+fatally misread by this experienced veteran.</p>
+<p>The crowds that surrounded the Court House made access
+impossible; to hope for admission was the aspiration of a
+lunatic, when &ldquo;Come this way, my lord&rdquo;&mdash;as my
+companion was recognised&mdash;reached our ears, and we found
+ourselves under an open window, ten feet from the ground, at the
+back of the court.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll stand next the wall,&rdquo; continued our
+guide, <a name="page153"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+153</span>&ldquo;and you get on my shoulders,&rdquo; and then an
+acrobatic performance took place that would have insured an
+engagement at any music-hall.</p>
+<p>The sequel is matter of history.</p>
+<p>Years after&mdash;in &rsquo;94&mdash;I met him in Cairo, an
+altered, broken man, in daily expectation of being appointed
+Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Army.&nbsp; But Nemesis had
+not done with him yet&mdash;prudery, hypocrisy, blue-stockingism
+were still rampant, and a telegram from London vetoed the
+intended appointment.</p>
+<p>The official explanation was that a &ldquo;cashiered
+man&rdquo; could not command full-pay British officers with which
+the Egyptian Army swarmed, whilst the universal opinion was that
+a brave man was being hounded to his death under the cloak of
+that charity that flourished in its prime during the days of the
+Inquisition.</p>
+<p>Next year he died in Egypt&mdash;broken in health and broken
+in heart&mdash;and those that knew his brilliant attainments, and
+the heights they would assuredly have led to, agreed
+that&mdash;like Napoleon&mdash;he should have died years before
+at the head of his men.</p>
+<p>The Strand Theatre also was a highly popular resort, run
+exclusively by the Swanborough family and their numerous sisters,
+cousins, and aunts.</p>
+<p>To &ldquo;The Old Lady,&rdquo; rightly or wrongly, was
+attributed every <i>malaprop</i> that ingenious wits invented,
+and in later years, when the Dor&eacute; Gallery and the
+Criterion Restaurant simultaneously came into existence, she was
+reputed to have expressed intense admiration of the Dor&eacute;
+masterpiece, &ldquo;Christ leaving the Criterium.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A pothouse&mdash;pure and simple&mdash;across the Strand was a
+favourite after-theatre resort of this (then) brightest of
+companies, and in a specially reserved room might nightly be seen
+sweet Nelly Bromley, young as ever, despite her youthful brood of
+dukes <a name="page154"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+154</span>and duchesses and his Grace of Beaufort; Eleanor
+Bufton, Fanny Josephs, Fanny Hughes, and a host of others, all
+charming, clever, and young, and, alas! all passed away.</p>
+<p>The proprietor of this unpretentious hostelry was a pimply,
+fly-blown individual, who before you had been five minutes in his
+company told you that <i>he</i> was the rightful Duke of Norfolk,
+who by some legal jugglery had been choused out of his
+birthright; he, too, has long been swept away, and so the present
+peer remains unmolested in his title.</p>
+<p>Passing through the Strand not long since, I was attracted by
+the new Tube station, and entering its portals for &ldquo;auld
+lang syne&rdquo; I was distressed, but not surprised, to find
+nothing of the happy hum that once characterised the transformed
+spot.&nbsp; For here stood the little Strand Theatre of the
+sixties in all the glory of its original popularity before it was
+improved (?) and modernised, only to find it had become out of
+the perspective, and so to be handed over to eternal
+obliteration.</p>
+<p>The old Strand may surely claim to be the root of the
+theatrical genealogical tree, for from its original stock
+(company) sprang every sprig that struck root elsewhere to became
+famous either through theatrical enterprise, matrimonial
+enterprise, or any of the lucrative channels that commend
+themselves to commercial talent.</p>
+<p>For the phalanx that once worked as a whole, would according
+to present custom, be split into a dozen &ldquo;one-part&rdquo;
+companies, with the necessary embroidery of Bodega men,
+motor-cum-masher women, and a sprinkling of earnest artistes by
+way of cohesion.</p>
+<p>A few years later the family grouping that originally
+characterised the Strand was intruded upon by one H. B. Farnie,
+whose forte was the adaptation of opera-bouffe.&nbsp;
+Unquestionably an adept in this particular <a
+name="page155"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 155</span>line, the
+man was a libertine of a pronounced character, with the result
+that the chorus at the Strand and the Opera Comique was the very
+daintiest conceivable.&nbsp; If a houri yielded to this Blue
+Beard&rsquo;s blandishments, her advancement was assured, and she
+was fitted to minor parts; if his overtures fell on deaf ears,
+nothing was too bad for her, and her lot was not a successful
+one.&nbsp; Occasionally, as a consequence, the hum-drum routine
+of a rehearsal was enlivened by such unrehearsed incidents as the
+appearance of an irate brother, and, on one occasion, an
+exasperated fishmonger from the Theobald&rsquo;s Road (the
+combination sounds boisterous), burst in at a critical period of
+a comic duet and belaboured the unhappy impresario to within an
+inch of his life.</p>
+<p>These cases are, happily, rare at the present day, although,
+if rumour is correct, a Hebrew of dramatic tastes, who, a few
+years ago, developed into theatre owner, and staged his own
+pieces, could tell of a similar experience which practically led
+to his abandonment of the active pursuit of the drama.</p>
+<p>When the fair Lardy Wilson, whom we last heard of at the
+Surrey, had risen into prominence by reason of her exalted
+connection, she joined the old Philharmonic, at Islington, in the
+zenith of its glory; so privileged indeed had this darling of
+Alfred become that, appearing in the &ldquo;green room&rdquo; on
+one occasion with an infant swaddled in purple and fine linen,
+the manager, band conductor, principals&mdash;male and
+female&mdash;and the chorus <i>en bloc</i>, are said to have
+bowed down and worshipped, as was only meet and proper and to be
+expected of a &ldquo;loyal and dutiful&rdquo; people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wiry Sal&rdquo; was also a delightful member of the
+company, and soon obtained European fame by being able to kick
+higher, in a graceful, abandoned way, than any exponent of the
+art before or since.</p>
+<p>Pretty little Camille Dubois, who eventually developed into a
+Stanhope, was also at this delightful <a name="page156"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 156</span>house.&nbsp; Her father at the time
+was conductor at the Opera Comique, and on one occasion having
+congratulated him on the execution of an excruciating
+<i>morceau</i> that I was aware had emanated from his inspired
+brain, I expressed a desire to procure a copy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ach, mein Gott!&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;it is a
+gavotte in F.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Gavottes in F are, happily, rare inspirations!</p>
+<p>For although burlesque lent itself to the display of a bevy of
+beautiful choristers, mashing had not then attained its present
+barefaced dimensions, and the cab outside and the calf (just)
+inside were the exception, not the rule, in those jovial
+days.</p>
+<p>But when Ada and Lizzie&mdash;as sometimes occurred&mdash;were
+sisters, it often happened that some system was necessary to
+insure a properly balanced larder, for from a conversation once
+overheard, two hams had come from the guardsman and the lordling,
+whereas the smallest forethought would have insured
+otherwise.</p>
+<p>But the belle of the show was one Laura, who, discovered in
+the purlieus of Islington, developed into the rage of London, and
+her beautiful face was to be seen on Easter eggs, Egyptian
+cigarettes, and at the picture shops, as Connie Gilchrist, the
+Countess of Lonsdale, and other beauties figured at a later
+day.</p>
+<p>Her personality attracted&mdash;as may be assumed&mdash;all
+the front rank mashers, and Harry Tyrwhitt, Douglas Gordon, and
+Jimmy Douglas were nightly imploring D&rsquo;Albertson and
+Hitchins to present them to the goddess.</p>
+<p>But this fatal beauty led to a row, and the jealous swain who
+was responsible for the fair Laura&rsquo;s well-being was not
+long in bringing matters to an issue.</p>
+<p>It was on Ash Wednesday, when our national
+hypocrisy&mdash;since taken other shapes&mdash;closed the
+theatres, with the exception of the Alhambra, that the fair
+chorister decided to &ldquo;visit her parents.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Nothing <a name="page157"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+157</span>loth to encourage such filial piety, her inamorato put
+her into a cab, and then&mdash;with an eye to
+business&mdash;judiciously followed.</p>
+<p>The sequel was a sad disillusionment, for getting out at the
+stage door, she proceeded towards the Embankment, and there by
+easy stages&mdash;accompanied by an admirer&mdash;the pair
+proceeded to a private box at the Alhambra.</p>
+<p>The rest is briefly told; a thundering knock at the box door,
+shouts of &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; from all parts of the house, the
+orchestra stopped, old Jacobi standing in his stirrups, and an
+ignominious exit for all concerned.</p>
+<p>Later the sweet girl went on tour with one of Alec
+Henderson&rsquo;s companies, and met a bagman she eventually
+married.</p>
+<p>The bagman has since developed into one of the largest
+shopkeepers in Knightsbridge, and so good came out of evil, and
+the course &ldquo;true love&rdquo; usually runs in marrying an
+Italian waiter and living on macaroni was diverted, and
+everything a real &ldquo;loidy&rdquo; should have became hers for
+life.</p>
+<p>And the development of the fair creature&rsquo;s life was
+frequently under my observation.&nbsp; Beginning with a
+preference for a &ldquo;steak and a glass of stout,&rdquo; she
+soon developed into an authority on champagne; instead of worsted
+gloves&mdash;or no gloves&mdash;nothing but Dumont&rsquo;s mauve
+mousquetaires would satisfy her, and so blas&eacute;e did she
+become during her nightly visits to Romano&rsquo;s that she could
+not sum up sufficient energy to remove her sixteen-franc gloves
+when picking an artichoke.&nbsp; One marvels at the true origin
+of these phenomena when under observation during the transition
+state from gutter to Debrett, for although all of us have seen
+the mothers, no human eye has ever seen the male progenitor of
+any of these extraordinary beings, who toil not neither do they
+spin, yet rise to the highest positions, have their babies <a
+name="page158"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 158</span>kissed by
+the Kaiser, and all by sheer superficial excellence.</p>
+<p>Yet another face arises before me, and sweet Grace O&mdash;,
+resisting every blandishment of Jew and Gentile, stands
+prominently out in the simple attire of a modest maiden, amid the
+sables and baubles by which she was surrounded.&nbsp; No adorers
+waited for her, although the bombardment by letter and overture
+was incessant; smirky acting-managers enlisted against her,
+reminded her that no stalls were booked by her
+<i>client&egrave;le</i>, parcels at the stage door remained as
+they were left, and nightly the sweet girl trudged across
+Waterloo Bridge to her humble abode at Kennington, whilst half a
+dozen broughams only awaited the chance of flicking her to a
+<i>cabinet particulier</i> at the Caf&eacute; Riche or
+Kettner&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Often, as she told me at a later period,
+she entered her hovel tired and hungry with nothing better than a
+herring and a crust with which to fortify herself for the
+monotonous routine of next day and every day, the lot then, and
+now, of many a tender plant in uncongenial soil.</p>
+<p>But every created thing has its breaking point&mdash;the
+balloon overflated will eventually burst, and the egg pressed too
+hard will assuredly break; and sweet Grace, no exception to the
+unalterable law of Nature, like a lily before the hurricane, bent
+before the assault that assailed her on every side.</p>
+<p>It was like an ironclad charging an outrigger, when men of the
+Farnie type entered the lists against an honest and attractive
+chorister, and the sequel of short duration in Ashley Place was
+told me by the unhappy girl.&nbsp; Gold at this stage was
+lavished upon her, and a miniature brougham and
+tiger&mdash;intended as a surprise&mdash;was scornfully ignored
+as it waited for her at the Royalty, and was eventually on
+sale&mdash;as unused as on the day it left its builders&mdash;in
+Long Acre.&nbsp; &ldquo;I can endure this gilded cage so long as
+no one knows it, but the shame of the brougham!&nbsp; I <a
+name="page159"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 159</span>would
+rather have dropped than enter it.&rdquo;&nbsp; So spoke the
+woman, and within a month she walked out of the palatial
+establishment to revert to her humble life.</p>
+<p>It was a perky Jew, enormously rich, with great back-door
+theatrical influence, that sought to shape this phenomenal
+disposition into a regard for his uncongenial charms.&nbsp; But
+manly beauty of such matured and pronounced types, with its
+Malacca canes and vulgar jewellery&mdash;like olives and a love
+for babies&mdash;are acquired tastes, and not the baits to allure
+the &ldquo;Graces&rdquo; of this sordid world, and years after,
+when chance again threw me across her path, our heroine was the
+happy wife of a worthy City clerk, and Ashley Place and the Jew
+and the brougham had long since been forgotten like the incidents
+of a hideous nightmare.</p>
+<p>This is no overdrawn fairy tale, and what existed then exists
+now, at least in one popular resort, and two sisters with youth,
+good looks, and stage experience now &ldquo;resting,&rdquo; could
+tell how the only accomplishment of which they were deficient was
+their inability to fill a few stalls&mdash;on terms.</p>
+<p>In later years the infant phenomenon became the craze, and
+Topsey, of the Royalty, and Connie, of the music-halls, and a
+cloud of imitators all bid for recognition.&nbsp; Some&mdash;like
+Esther&mdash;had the golden sceptre held out, and &ldquo;came and
+sat beside the king,&rdquo; whilst others less fortunate
+fulfilled their natural destiny and became the wives of the local
+tobacconist or greengrocer, and many of them would now be shocked
+if asked the number of yards between the pond and the Hampstead
+Fever Hospital, or the sensations of dancing to a hurdy-gurdy on
+the boulevards of Camden Town.</p>
+<p>And so history is made, and pedigrees traced to
+&ldquo;de&rdquo; something&mdash;who came over with the
+Conqueror&mdash;with here and there a stiffening from a Chicago
+pork butchery, and it only remains for you and me, my brother
+snobs, to pray that whatever trials the Fates <a
+name="page160"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 160</span>may have in
+store for us, we may not be bereft of our old nobility.</p>
+<p>The recent death of the once-popular Chief of the Fire
+Brigade, Eyre Shaw, recalls many stirring scenes that lit up the
+West End in the long-ago sixties, when theatres bore a
+considerable share of the conflagrations that partially or
+entirely destroyed some of our most notable playhouses.</p>
+<p>It was in &rsquo;65 that the old Surrey was in flames, to be
+replaced later on by the present structure, more familiar to the
+present generation as associated with the d&eacute;but of such
+popular artistes as Lardy Wilson, Nelly Moon, Val Reece (Lady
+Meux of the 20th century), Rose Mandeville, and others under the
+management of Bill Holland, and the distinguished patronage of
+names too sacred to mention save with bated breath and in
+reverential tones.</p>
+<p>Three years later the Oxford Music Hall was burned down, but
+those caves of harmony were less pretentious in those days, and
+so the conflagration, except as a sight, did not provoke much
+interest.&nbsp; But a blaze that occurred in December, &rsquo;67,
+roused all London, and as a &ldquo;spectacle&rdquo; surpassed
+anything that had ever been depicted on its stage, and put in the
+shade the Guy Fawkes celebrations of the previous month.</p>
+<p>In that memorable year Her Majesty&rsquo;s Theatre, without
+any apparent rhyme or reason, burst into flame, and despite
+herculean efforts was soon a heap of cinders.&nbsp; For the
+construction, as may be supposed, was wood and old, and those
+chiefly interested were probably gainers by the drastic accident,
+except perhaps Mapleson, who was said to have lost &pound;12,000,
+and Madame Tietjens, &pound;2,000.&nbsp; But Tod Heatly, the
+ground landlord, could hardly have regretted it, for it opened up
+possibilities of improving the site which, after many years,
+culminated in the present establishment, with its profitable
+addenda of an hotel with its &ldquo;lardy-da&rdquo; luncheon and
+supper rooms.</p>
+<p><a name="page161"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 161</span>In
+those remote days the Metropolitan Board of Works was the
+controlling authority, and bone counters which emanated from them
+passed the holders within the cordon on any of these interesting
+occasions.</p>
+<p>Eyre Shaw, too, about this time was appointed chief officer,
+and being an enthusiastic patron of the Gaiety (then only a
+precocious infant with every promise of its present development)
+little wonder that the bone counters were in considerable
+evidence amongst the present-day old ladies who then represented
+the Connies and Dollies and Lizzies of burlesque.</p>
+<p>Contemplating the still-smouldering ruins, how complete
+appeared the obliteration of many notable incidents.&nbsp; Here
+Mario&mdash;approaching seventy&mdash;was acclaimed to the echo
+by a gushing house, after having been hissed off the stage in
+Paris for mumbling what he once used to sing; here Giulini
+thrilled the world with the purest tenor ever heard, and died in
+the madhouse in the zenith of his fame; here later, Moody and
+Sankey bellowed in solo and in duet, and stopped the traffic by
+the eager crowds that sought admission (free) to bellow in the
+chorus; here, too, sweet little Chiomi essayed to make her
+d&eacute;but in <i>Lucia</i> and failed; and here Lord Dudley,
+Carpenter, Vandeleur-Lee, Goodenough, and a host long since swept
+into the universal dust-bin, beamed nightly on Tietjens and
+Fanchelli with expressions supposed to denote familiarity with
+the text; here under its dismal porticoes sights of distress and
+starvation&mdash;forgotten in slumber&mdash;were nightly to be
+met with, as painful as anything that ever appealed to De Quincey
+outside the Oxford Street Pantheon, and here old Leader, prince
+of Bohemians and managing director of the Alhambra in the zenith
+of its pranky days, had a box office till he dropped from old
+age; here on one occasion on the son of one of the celebrated
+Irish Army agents being presented to him, the Royal George
+patronisingly greeted him with, &ldquo;Oh, indeed, a son of
+&lsquo;Borough and <a name="page162"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+162</span>Armit,&rsquo;&rdquo; and received the explanatory
+reply: &ldquo;No, sir, only of Armit;&rdquo; and on the ghosts of
+all these departed memories not one stone now stands upon another
+to bridge, as it were, the present with the glorious past.</p>
+<p>In these latter days, a conflagration such as this would, of
+course, be impossible, as witness the blaze not long since in
+Holborn.&nbsp; But then that was a <i>fire proof</i>
+construction.</p>
+<h2><a name="page163"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+163</span>CHAPTER XV.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">MOSTLY &ldquo;OTHERWISE&rdquo;</span>
+(continued).</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the long-ago sixties the
+Artillery Ball at Woolwich was the most select and the most
+sought after function that the dancing community yearned for, and
+about the same time Major Goodenough, a popular officer of this
+distinguished regiment&mdash;although close upon eighteen
+stone&mdash;fell desperately in love with Tietjens, herself of
+large pattern.&nbsp; Rumour, indeed, asserted that the ponderous
+couple were engaged, and so it came to pass that poor old Goody
+was nonplussed almost to distraction when his application for a
+ticket for his fianc&eacute;e was politely but firmly
+refused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But she&rsquo;s engaged to me,&rdquo; the poor old chap
+pleaded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when she&rsquo;s Mrs. Goodenough we shall always he
+delighted to see her,&rdquo; was the stern, uncompromising
+reply.</p>
+<p>Such exclusiveness&mdash;which shows that snobbery was even
+then approaching with gigantic strides&mdash;contrasts amusingly
+with what was then the composition of many of our
+&ldquo;crack&rdquo; regiments.</p>
+<p>Otway Toler&mdash;a brother of the Earl of Norbury&mdash;was
+one of the best amateur musicians, and it was through his kindly
+offices that I became acquainted with Giulini and other leading
+opera singers in London.</p>
+<p>No such voice as that gifted being&rsquo;s has ever been <a
+name="page164"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 164</span>heard
+before or since, and it is sad to recollect that whilst yet in
+the zenith of his fame he was ruthlessly struck down by insanity,
+and eventually died in a madhouse.</p>
+<p>It was during this painful period that his voice is said to
+have reached a pitch of pathos that far exceeded anything it
+attained when he thrilled London nightly.</p>
+<p>To compare it with any tenor that may suggest itself to the
+reader would be as absurd as comparing an English concertina to
+the most glorious notes of the most fluty instrument, and yet
+this divine voice was silenced without apparent cause, and the
+world&mdash;the operatic world&mdash;will never hear its like
+again.</p>
+<p>As an old lady in tears was once overheard to say to her
+unmusical spouse at the opera: &ldquo;It is the voice of a god,
+and not of a man,&rdquo; to which her phlegmatic better-half
+replied: &ldquo;Bosh, you should hear Sims Reeves; he can go an
+octave higher.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sims Reeves, indeed!&nbsp; But no matter&mdash;may they both
+rest in peace.</p>
+<p>To go to an unpretentious Italian eating-house in Old Compton
+Street, Soho, that has long disappeared, was as good as attending
+the opera&mdash;if one was in the magic circle.&nbsp; Here all
+day, and every day, congregated the leading exponents, male and
+female, of Italian opera.&nbsp; At a piano on the first floor
+finishing touches were given to morceaux, duets were tried over,
+and, in addition to the vocalists, soloists of the highest order
+&ldquo;ran through&rdquo; special passages of their scores, while
+below, viands of the strictest Italian type were being consumed
+from morning to night.</p>
+<p>Here osso-buco, and minestrone, and spaghetti were to be found
+as undiluted as at Savini&rsquo;s in Milan, and washed down with
+such productions of the vine as Chianti, Lacrima Christi, and
+Capri.</p>
+<p>No abominations in imitation of French cookery were to be
+found here.&nbsp; No half-crown dinners of <a
+name="page165"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+165</span>half-a-dozen courses, with their deadly accompaniments
+of artichokes fried in tallow (<i>au Cardinal</i>) would have
+been permitted here; no New Zealand mutton garnished with
+turnip-tops (<i>ris d&eacute; veau garni aux truffes</i>) could
+have showed its unhallowed head in those sacred precincts and
+lived, for no mashers of the present-day type existed, and shop
+boys and shop girls knew their places too well to venture into
+such reserved pastures, even with the prospect of eating a
+veritable dinner as served on the Continong.</p>
+<p>One cannot leave the subject of music without a reference to
+the promenade concerts that came into being about this period at
+the Queen&rsquo;s in Long Acre.</p>
+<p>It was here that the first public exhibition of the telephone
+was given, and when a series of grunts had vibrated through the
+hall and a bald-headed old patriarch had told us that the sound
+actually came from Westminster, the surprise and delight of the
+enraptured audience was intense, and we marvelled where such
+discoveries would end.</p>
+<p>And the fun and the frolic at these gatherings was beyond
+description, often more delectable than correct, but nevertheless
+delightful and invigorating.&nbsp; The orchestra, moreover, was
+superb, and the vocalists the best that money could provide, and
+all these delights were presided over by one Rivi&egrave;re, a
+pushing musical instrument-maker in Leicester Square, who by
+sheer impudence had forced himself into prominence before an
+ignorant public whilst all the time incapable of reading the most
+ordinary score at sight.</p>
+<p>So far as execution and diabolical contortions were concerned
+he was immense, and as big an impostor as Jullien himself.</p>
+<p>When Offenbach was all the rage, and Schneider (under Lord
+C.&rsquo;s wing) was his principal exponent, I had the honour of
+being one of a privileged half-dozen who did homage to the Diva
+at a dinner party <a name="page166"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+166</span>in a private room at Limmer&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Although in
+the zenith of her fame, her personal charms at the time were
+unquestionably on the wane, and I can recollect her comments on
+popularity and what it was worth as she told us how ten years
+previously, when young and beautiful, she had appeared in London
+only to be ignored, and that now everybody was at her feet.&nbsp;
+And then she shrugged her shoulders with an indescribable
+fascination peculiarly her own, and complacently puffed away at
+her cigarette.</p>
+<p>It may have been a few years later that Major Carpenter, a
+wealthy amateur musician, introduced to the operatic world a
+charming English girl, who, under cover of the Italian name of
+Chiomi, was to electrify London with her singing.</p>
+<p>The opera the fair d&eacute;butante selected was probably the
+most formidable a nervous subject could have chosen; and so one
+night every one attended at Her Majesty&rsquo;s to hear
+<i>Lucia</i> expounded.&nbsp; Everything went well up to the mad
+scene, when, unaccompanied by orchestra, the unhappy heroine has
+to sing and toss straws about amid a series of impossible runs
+and shakes.&nbsp; With the straw tossing no fault could be found,
+but the voice that should have been moving us all to tears was a
+series of gurgles that eventually subsided into silence.</p>
+<p>Sir Michael Costa meanwhile sat grim and immovable, when a few
+bars would probably have nerved up the fluttering victim, but
+<i>that</i> to that orthodox Italian would have been
+&ldquo;trifling with the text,&rdquo; and so no aid was
+forthcoming, and the trumpet blasts that had emanated from Ashley
+Place ended in a fiasco, and sweet little Chiomi was heard of no
+more.</p>
+<p>That the drama is occasionally unjustly disparaged is nothing
+new; that it occasionally produces indirect beneficial effects
+and even prolongs life may be gleaned from the example of a
+deceased colonel of <a name="page167"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 167</span>the Bays, who, returning from India
+in the sixties with a life not worth six months&rsquo; purchase,
+married a lady connected with the Canterbury Music Hall, and,
+after increasing the music-hall population, literally died of
+senile decay within the last year or two.</p>
+<p>It was my privilege, on one occasion, in the company of Otway
+Toler, who knew all the stars, to visit the great tenor Mario and
+his wife, the equally celebrated Grisi, who had a house during
+the opera season in the vicinity of Cavendish Square.&nbsp;
+Grisi, it may be explained, at the time of her marriage, was the
+proud mother of two children who, by one of those extraordinary
+freaks of nature one occasionally meets with, resembled in a
+remarkable degree the family that followed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These,&rdquo; pointing to one group, was Grisi&rsquo;s
+usual introduction, &ldquo;are the <i>Marionettes</i>, and
+these&rdquo;&mdash;indicating the others&mdash;&ldquo;are the
+<i>Grisettes</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Incredible as it may appear, one of the purest tenors the
+world has ever produced did not know one note of music, and
+everything had to be drummed into him by a fiddle.&nbsp; It was
+at the house at Eaton Place of one of the leading ladies of
+society that one often met the great tenor, where music
+alternated with the cotillon and other delights of one&rsquo;s
+youth.</p>
+<p>About this time the Alhambra, which for some years had been
+waning in public estimation, obtained a new lease of popularity
+under the broad-minded direction of one Leader.</p>
+<p>This worthy man, to use the familiar expression,
+&ldquo;grasped the situation,&rdquo; and with the able
+co-operation of his co-directors&mdash;Nagle, head of a
+celebrated firm of bill-stickers; Willing, an enlightened
+philanthropist and patron of the drama; Captain Fryer (who was
+accorded that title because he had a second cousin in the
+Dragoons)&mdash;inaugurated an enlightened policy that seemed to
+provide &ldquo;a want long felt,&rdquo; and met <a
+name="page168"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 168</span>the
+requirements of their numerous patrons (<i>vide</i> daily papers,
+etc.).</p>
+<p>The directors&rsquo; box was a huge omnibus capable of holding
+goodness knows how many, and consisted of partitions innumerable
+that had been dealt with by the carpenters; a convenient door led
+to the stage, and to the managing-director&rsquo;s room&mdash;the
+objective of all visitors&mdash;as was only to be expected in a
+well-conducted theatre.&nbsp; Here were to be met nightly Alfred
+Paget, a septuagenarian lord, who, when not in attendance at
+Court, as was supposed, seemed to spend his declining years in
+wandering from one green room to another.&nbsp; Harmless to a
+degree, it was pitiable to see the dyed old sinner, chewing a
+cigar, and indulging in such antics as an occasional
+double-shuffle with any chorus girl he had selected for his
+attention.</p>
+<p>The Maharajah Dhuleep Singh, too, was in nightly attendance,
+and never failed to bring some gimcrack which he displayed in the
+green room with the inquiry: &ldquo;What nice little girl going
+to have this?&rdquo;&nbsp; This, however, was before he had
+concentrated his affections on pretty Polly Ash, who appearing
+nightly in white kids up to her elbows gave mortal offence to her
+fellow-choristers by showing up the cotton &ldquo;sevens&rdquo;
+supplied by the management.&nbsp; Polly, however, was not devoid
+of common sense, and retired shortly after into a sumptuous flat
+in Covent Garden and an annuity that survived the donor.</p>
+<p>The green room of the old Alhambra was of extensive
+dimensions, and contained more deal tables than probably any
+green room before or since.&nbsp; By a magnanimous minute of the
+directors, ladies of the chorus and ballet had the entr&eacute;e,
+and, although none of the plainer members of the company appeared
+to take advantage of the privilege, every table was fully
+furnished with champagne (brand doubtful), and giggling artistes
+and their adorers.&nbsp; Every one smoked like a donkey-engine,
+and the genial managing <a name="page169"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 169</span>director percolated amongst his
+guests with a kindly inquiry as to how you were getting on.&nbsp;
+History does not make it quite clear whether any of the fair
+members were eventually translated to the Upper House; but
+whether as fortunate in this respect as Mott&rsquo;s and in later
+years the Gaiety, it was undeniable that no more beautiful bevy
+of women were to be found than the representatives of the drama
+at the Alhambra in those long-ago days.</p>
+<p>Captain (!!) Fryer as a director was in considerable demand
+during the orgies, and a youthful ensign on one occasion (when
+under the fraternising influence of the stock champagne) having
+invited the &ldquo;Captain&rdquo; to mess, was considerably put
+about on being informed by the colonel that he was at once to
+cancel the invitation.&nbsp; With the ingenuity of youth,
+however, he wriggled out of the difficulty by changing the venu
+to Limmer&rsquo;s, and taking him and a select party to
+Mott&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>In appearance the Captain gave the idea of having just missed
+being a gentleman; with a waist abnormally small, and a waistcoat
+abnormally tight, his shoulders stood out by the aid of whalebone
+in a manner intended to convey herculean proportions.&nbsp; When
+he walked it was with the swinging motion attributed by
+&ldquo;Ouida&rdquo; to heroes who crumple pint pots without
+knowing it, and kick garden rollers about as one would a pebble;
+he stamped also occasionally with one foot as heavy dragoons once
+did when they desired to clink their spurs, but which, after all,
+may only have been a habit contracted by the contemplation of his
+second cousin who had been in the cavalry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do come here, you provoking Captain,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Did you hear what that absurd Captain just said?&rdquo;
+and Captain this, and Captain that vibrated through the room to
+the no small annoyance of the &ldquo;civilians&rdquo;
+present.&nbsp; From all which it will be seen that he was <a
+name="page170"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 170</span>a very fine
+fellow indeed, and the idol of the ladies of the ballet.&nbsp;
+But Bobby and some of the youngsters also swore by him to a man;
+to have the run of the entire back premises, and to be introduced
+to any siren their fickle fancies desired, was not a privilege to
+be lightly appraised, and they vowed, till forbidden by the
+adjutant, that he would be the life and soul of the mess on the
+next guest night, and that the very rafters would tingle as he
+recounted his multifarious experiences.</p>
+<p>Another theatre that afforded amusement of a different type
+was the Grecian, and night after night parties of from ten to
+twenty were made up during the pantomime season to witness the
+best of pantomimists in his incomparable part.&nbsp; Not that
+such a privilege was lightly undertaken, for, to begin with,
+Conquest had to be warned to knock two or three boxes into one,
+then dinner in the (private) Octagon Room of the &ldquo;Ship and
+Turtle&rdquo; in Leadenhall Street had to be ordered, and
+then&mdash;and then only&mdash;the organised party proceeded
+eastwards in a private omnibus about 5 p.m.</p>
+<p>It may seem silly and suggestive of senile decay to descant on
+such frivolities, but who of the present generation can realise
+the homely, sumptuous repast that awaited one at the famous old
+hostelry of the sixties?&nbsp; The milk-punch specially served by
+Painter himself, the incomparable turtle soup and turtle steaks,
+the saddle of mutton one felt it a sin to mutilate, and the
+honest English pancakes washed down with port&mdash;fifty years
+old&mdash;and champagne in magnums were one and all incomparable;
+and then the start as the omnibus pulled up at the door, and the
+smoking of cigars of brands now unknown, till one alighted at the
+portals of the Grecian in the City Road, adjoining the celebrated
+&ldquo;Eagle,&rdquo; made famous by the antics of the eccentric
+weasel that we are assured went &ldquo;pop&rdquo; every time it
+entered its hospitable <a name="page171"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 171</span>doors.&nbsp; Can anything of to-day
+compare with it?&nbsp; But the days of regret for these honest
+old enjoyments are sadly out of place in these enlightened times,
+where comic opera has superseded the transformation scene with
+its adjuncts of clown, pantaloons, and harlequin.&nbsp; The
+performance and the historian are alike out of perspective.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Mabel, shall we go to the Covent Garden
+ball?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Let us extend our ramble to merry Islington and peep in at the
+Philharmonic, where now stands the Grand; and although we take a
+leap into the seventies for the nonce, the &ldquo;long ago&rdquo;
+is sufficiently distant to be beyond the ken of many of our
+readers.</p>
+<p>The rage for Offenbach was at this time at its height, and
+Soldene and Dolaro drew all the golden calves from the West to
+gaze on the things of beauty that were provided for their
+delectation.</p>
+<p>A sporting bookmaker&mdash;Charley Head&mdash;who ran the
+show, realising that the majority of his patrons were incapable
+of distinguishing &ldquo;Hunkey Dorum&rdquo; from the National
+Anthem (&ldquo;The Honeysuckle and the Bee&rdquo; was, happily,
+unknown in those days), decided that if the principals were of
+the highest class, the chorus might fairly be selected for
+perfection of form rather than perfection of voice, and some
+seventy of the most beautiful girls in London were engaged to add
+<i>&eacute;clat</i> to the performance.</p>
+<p>It was currently reported that half their weekly salary of
+three shillings was paid in counters, to be expended in the salon
+after the performance; and the roaring trade in champagne that
+ensued amply repaid the astute manager&rsquo;s calculations.</p>
+<p>The drama, run on these lines, naturally produced impresarios
+of a questionable class, and Leo Egremont, in an expanse of white
+waistcoat and a stripe down his trousers, was nightly ubiquitous
+and effusively gushing in his attendance on the golden <a
+name="page172"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+172</span>calves.&nbsp; A ballad singer (at the Cave of Harmony)
+before he lost his voice&mdash;a basso of the deepest
+dye&mdash;he had lately opened a &ldquo;bureau&rdquo; and
+advertised for novelties which he &ldquo;placed&rdquo;&mdash;as
+he termed it&mdash;as the demand and circumstances suggested.</p>
+<p>The streaky nobleman and the toothless lady who could sing
+three octaves had been presented through his enterprise to an
+East-end audience, and when the &ldquo;Phil&rdquo; opened under
+such unique auspices, Egremont lost no time in securing a
+footing.</p>
+<p>He also belonged to the &ldquo;Howlers,&rdquo; a half club,
+half pot-house, in the vicinity of the Strand.</p>
+<p>But the poor old &ldquo;Phil&rdquo; has long since been burnt
+to the ground, Egremont has disappeared below the horizon, and
+the memories of the seventies are gone to join the mountain of
+reminiscences of the long-ago Sixties.</p>
+<p>Across the river, the Surrey&mdash;run on broader
+lines&mdash;was also responsible for the hatching of numerous
+future hereditary legislators, and during the pantomime season
+might be found such goddesses as Val Reece, Lardy Wilson, and a
+score of others, many of whom have since swelled the pages of
+Debrett and similar works of our religion.</p>
+<p>It is no more than the truth to assert that this latter
+lady&mdash;for she had a way with her not strictly
+histrionic&mdash;very nearly upset by her personality a certain
+Anglo-Russian marriage at a critical period of the
+negotiations.</p>
+<p>The Lamp of Burlesque had not yet been lighted, nor even
+trimmed, in the future Gaiety&mdash;which at the time was a
+&ldquo;rub-a-dub&rdquo; of the lowest class&mdash;and so the
+rumours of duels that filled the air years later between a
+military attach&eacute; and an <i>off-shoot</i> of the noble
+House of Clanricarde still slumbered in the womb of futurity,
+only to be roused to vitality by the nimble graces of Kate
+Vaughan and sweet little Nell Farren.</p>
+<p><a name="page173"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+173</span>Passing the Charing Cross Hotel one day, an old
+semi-theatrical warrior returned visibly to my mind, and I could
+again see Alfred Paget descending the stairs after one of those
+informal meetings of directors that occasionally took place in
+Edward Watkins&rsquo;s rooms.&nbsp; For the would-be juvenile on
+the high road to senile decay that the present generation may
+remember was a very different man to the Lord Alfred of the
+Sixties, or, looking further back, to the handsome young equerry
+who pranced beside the late Queen&rsquo;s carriage in all the
+glory of manhood.&nbsp; And then incidents long forgotten were
+re-enacted in my muddled brain; how as a director of the
+South-Eastern he claimed, or obtained, or arranged, that all
+repairs on his steam yacht should be done by the artificers and
+engineers of the company.&nbsp; And then, by no great effort, the
+<i>Santa Maria</i> appeared lying off Margate Pier, and Old
+Alfred&mdash;as he was gradually becoming&mdash;faultlessly
+attired on &ldquo;post captain&rdquo; lines, waiting for his boon
+companion, Alec Henderson, or possibly a &ldquo;Poppit,&rdquo; as
+all his &ldquo;frivolities&rdquo; were christened.&nbsp; And then
+the launch lying at the steps, and the revels on board, and the
+grateful &ldquo;poppits&rdquo; going over the side after being
+presented with a straw hat or some article of female attire found
+in the state cabin, belonging to heaven knows who, during the
+more respectable cruises.&nbsp; And then the trips to Boulogne
+and the stocking the store-room with cheap wines, which the
+genial old sinner chuckled would thus evade duty and come in
+handy at second-chop gatherings.&nbsp; For with all his display
+his lordship was undoubtedly thrifty, and could have stated
+blindfolded the exact number of cigars or cigarettes that were
+lying about, no matter how apparently negligently.</p>
+<p>Lord Alfred had been a yachtsman all his life, and he would
+tell how our late Queen&mdash;with that characteristic
+woman&rsquo;s tact that never left her&mdash;wrote <a
+name="page174"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 174</span>to him on
+the occasion of a former yacht being run down by a Channel mail
+packet, &ldquo;You must not be ashamed to accept the enclosed
+&pound;500 as a gift from the Sovereign to a subject.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mighty different woman now,&rdquo; he would add,
+pouting his lips, and then toddling off with a six-foot telescope
+to take the harmless bearings of any &ldquo;poppits&rdquo; within
+hail.</p>
+<p>His chum &ldquo;Alec&rdquo; was a charming man, and when he
+and Lionel Brough&mdash;as on one occasion&mdash;began capping
+one reminiscence by another on the deck of the <i>Santa Maria</i>
+the show was as good as anything to be seen at the Opera Comique
+or Strand, or any of the various theatres of which he was
+lessee.&nbsp; Years before he had married Lydia Thompson, a name
+that conveys nothing to the present generation, but who in the
+sixties was the cleverest and prettiest of burlesque actresses,
+and there was not a youngster worth his salt that was not
+desperately in love with her.&nbsp; Lydia Thompson was aunt to
+Violet Cameron, who attained a certain position in the later
+seventies at the Strand, but was overshadowed by Florence St.
+John, one of the very few who, in addition to being the most chic
+of actresses, possessed a pure and cultivated voice.</p>
+<h2><a name="page175"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+175</span>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">USURERS AND MILLIONAIRES.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">When</span> &ldquo;Purchase&rdquo; was in
+full blast the chosen race had some data to go upon as regards
+the &ldquo;possibilities&rdquo; of their clients, who for the
+most part were Army men, and when the mystic P appeared after a
+name in the Army List, they felt fairly safe that their
+investments were recoverable; many, however, found to their cost
+that &ldquo;charging&rdquo; one&rsquo;s commission was not
+recognised by the Horse Guards, and that despite the production
+of a sackful of mortgages, Cox dared not part with a cent of the
+commission money to any one but the actual reprobate.&nbsp;
+Barely had a name appeared in the <i>Gazette</i> when a squad of
+these harpies hustled each other before the modest portals in
+Craig&rsquo;s Court, and &ldquo;the widows of Asher were loud in
+their wail&rdquo; when they heard that their co-religionists had
+been turned empty away.&nbsp; In the citadel itself they, of
+course, had numerous paid spies, who &ldquo;posted&rdquo; them as
+to any imminent appearance in the <i>Gazette</i>, and no one
+earned more shekels by this illicit traffic than a clerk, who
+eventually had to leave, but who may still be seen shambling
+about Leicester Square in the futile endeavour to raise small
+loans for his shoddy client&egrave;le.&nbsp; In pot-houses that
+he &ldquo;uses&rdquo; he is known as &ldquo;the Captain,&rdquo;
+and affects the old dragoon limp.&nbsp; For the human species, as
+everybody is aware, is composed but of two distinct races: the
+men who borrow, and the men who lend; <a name="page176"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 176</span>under which two original diversities
+may be reduced all those impertinent classifications we are
+familiar with, such as Celtic and Gothic origin, white men, black
+men, red men, and such like.&nbsp; It is of the latter class
+during the sixties we propose to speak.</p>
+<p>At the head of the list was Callisher&mdash;known in the
+family as Julius&mdash;then followed Bob Morris
+(&ldquo;Jellybelly&rdquo;) and a bad third was Sam Lewis, only
+then emerging from the status of a traveller in cheap jewellery,
+who addressed one as &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; and ready at a
+moment&rsquo;s notice to produce a ten-pound note and draw out a
+bill for &pound;15, with which his pockets were invariably
+lined.</p>
+<p>An undoubtedly leading usurer of the sixties was Bob Morris,
+who&mdash;it was no secret&mdash;was originally financed by Sir
+Henry De Hoghton, an eccentric baronet referred to
+elsewhere.&nbsp; &ldquo;Jellybelly,&rdquo; as he was familiarly
+known, transacted business in the vicinity of the Raleigh.&nbsp;
+A noiseless bell in a blaze of brass, and a door that opened
+without any visible agency, were the first objects that struck
+one on the threshold of the outer world.&nbsp; Introduced first
+into an ante-room, a client&mdash;subject to satisfactory
+scrutiny&mdash;was filtered into the presence of the great
+man.</p>
+<p>No indecent hurry was permitted during these important
+preliminaries, and one might as reasonably have hoped to enter
+the library of a bishop as to approach Bob Morris without a
+scrupulous regard to decorum.</p>
+<p>Numerous applicants were to be found at all hours in meek and
+becoming attitudes waiting for the moving of the waters, some to
+be rebuffed by deputy, and others only to be admitted and
+immediately bowed out.</p>
+<p>A second waiting-room above relieved the congestion of the one
+below when unusual circumstances taxed its resources; it was
+heavily curtained, dark, on Turkish bath lines, and it was
+considered a bad <a name="page177"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+177</span>sign&mdash;as the precursor to a snub&mdash;when one
+was promoted to this retreat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jellybelly&rdquo; was strictly honourable according to
+his lights; if he could get 100 per cent. he preferred it to 80,
+and if 80 was not forthcoming he would accept 60 on the security
+of the Consols.&nbsp; The variety of his transactions would have
+embarrassed a less brilliant mind, and at one time or another he
+had found himself owner (by mortgage) of the three first
+favourites for the Derby, the foundations and a partially
+completed wing of a skating-rink, and two miles of a submarine
+tunnel on which work had been stopped.&nbsp; That such
+multifarious responsibilities might reasonably be supposed to tax
+the patience of an ordinary mortal would have been matter of no
+surprise, but nothing appeared to give him the least concern.</p>
+<p>It was Sam Lewis&rsquo;s pluck that obtained him the colossal
+fortune he eventually died possessed of, and, ever ready to run
+the most infernal risks, it was seldom he did not come out
+top.&nbsp; During Goodwood week he did business in his bedroom at
+the &ldquo;Grand,&rdquo; and a telegram from the other end of the
+kingdom, followed by an acceptance, invariably produced banknotes
+by return post.</p>
+<p>It was only after he began to feel his legs and to dabble in
+title deeds, that he abandoned the genial habits of his youth,
+became <i>Mr.</i> Lewis, could be seen only by appointment, and
+assumed an expression between that of a bank director and an
+Egyptian sphinx.</p>
+<p>When I &ldquo;met&rdquo; him first he was not above a swap,
+and a bill for, say, &pound;50, paid in &pound;20 cash and the
+balance in tawdry gimcracks, was the usual style of
+transaction.&nbsp; At the time I refer to he lived in an
+unpretentious house in Gower Street; later on, as a younger
+generation are aware, he possessed a mansion in Grosvenor Square;
+rode in the Park at daylight during the <a
+name="page178"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 178</span>Season, and
+gave dinner parties where any one from a member of the Victorian
+Order upwards was always assured of a hearty welcome.&nbsp; So
+keen, indeed, was the little man (or his wife) to be considered
+members of the fringe of Society that an enterprising young
+man&mdash;related to the noble House of Somerset&mdash;was
+unquestionably on a fixed scale of remuneration, and given
+<i>carte blanche</i> to bring any sprig of nobility at prices
+ranging from a guinea upwards.&nbsp; In addition, a few minor
+under-strappers, such as the late lamented Patty Coleman and
+others, had a free hand to produce &ldquo;desirables.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The little man&mdash;as we all know&mdash;is now a matter of
+history, his widow not long after again married and then followed
+him, though her memory is still cherished in the Synagogue as
+&ldquo;Lewis of the Guards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of the smaller fry, Fitch of Southwark; Sol Beyfus; Finney
+Davis of Mount Street; Lazarus of Dublin; Cook of Warwick Street,
+all assisted in spoiling the Egyptians; whilst their sons, almost
+without exception, have risen in the minor social scale as
+attorneys or chartered accountants, and their sons will assuredly
+figure in &ldquo;Debrett&rsquo;s&rdquo; or the &ldquo;Landed
+Gentry,&rdquo; as instanced in a glaring case, where a railway
+navvy&mdash;who left his three sons a million sterling each in
+the Sixties&mdash;we are now informed in the peerage was
+undoubtedly descended from de&mdash;, who came over with the
+Conqueror, and that his genealogy is lost in antiquity&mdash;not
+always an unmixed evil.</p>
+<p>In the old days the usurer used his own name, now they cull
+the peerage for the most historical they can find.&nbsp; But</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Brown, Jones, or Moses<br />
+Can change their names but not their noses.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Perhaps no more marvellous example of Nature&rsquo;s constant
+care for the wants of her needy creations is to be found than in
+the periodical appearance above the horizon of some nobody who,
+having amassed <a name="page179"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+179</span>a colossal fortune, is henceforth ordained by a
+merciful Providence to rescue impecunious lords from the slough
+of despair, level-up princes who have exceeded their income, and
+to put upon their legs livery stablemen; authorities on
+horseflesh and their superiors generally by birth and
+education.</p>
+<p>In the long-ago Sixties these providential phenomena were not
+appreciated as much as in these more enlightened days, and, even
+in such sinks of iniquity as Mott&rsquo;s, an impecunious
+gentleman was assessed as a considerably more desirable quantity
+than knighted shop-boys, &ldquo;H&rdquo;-less capitalists, or
+promoted horse copers.</p>
+<p>That even then they existed goes without saying; that they did
+not assist in making history is equally undeniable.</p>
+<p>Amongst these one of the most remarkable was one
+Hirsch&mdash;Baron of somewhere&mdash;but whose untimely death
+before he attained to Debrett makes his genealogy difficult to
+trace with any degree of accuracy.&nbsp; Suddenly springing into
+prominence, he at once broke out into horseflesh; and although
+probably not knowing one end of a horse from another, soon
+collected a magnificent stud, and being surrounded by
+disinterested! councillors of the highest attainments, soon swept
+the board in most of the classic races.&nbsp; But the subject
+that brought him chiefly into prominence was his solicitude for
+his co-religionists: first, he proposed to buy Jerusalem, but
+meeting with obstacles that even money could not overcome, he
+contemplated a &ldquo;personally-conducted tour,&rdquo; whereby
+the Holy City should again become the habitation of the chosen
+race.&nbsp; But his premature death, alas! nipped all these
+aspirations in the bud, and the gimcrack shops in Bond Street
+still flourish, and the successors of Callisher, Bob Morris, and
+Sam Lewis continue to batten on Christian flesh.&nbsp; The sums
+that he expended and bequeathed on this desirable <a
+name="page180"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 180</span>object were
+not without significance, and the leaves of the Talmud were
+ransacked to show that he was the undoubted 666, or some equally
+unintelligible hieroglyphic that had been predicted by the
+Prophets; and then death entered Bath House and snapped the
+various theories&mdash;<i>Quod erat demonstrandum</i>.</p>
+<p>Baron de Forest, whom we occasionally hear of as one of the
+shining lights of modern Society, inherited a considerable
+portion of the deceased &ldquo;nobleman&rsquo;s&rdquo; fortune,
+and is said to be related to him.</p>
+<p>A phenomenon of another type was Colonel North.&nbsp; Soldier,
+philanthropist, and nitrate expert, it matters not what regiment
+had the privilege of being commanded by him; it was in the latter
+industry that he endeared himself to his species.&nbsp; Liberal,
+bluff, and accessible to all, his daily free lunches at the
+&ldquo;Woolpack&rdquo; were partaken of by all the halt and the
+maim&mdash;and occasionally the blind&mdash;within the four-mile
+radius.</p>
+<p>Impecunious Irish lords, with ancestral bogs sadly in need of
+re-digging, now saw their opportunity, and a huge industry sprang
+into existence, where, for a consideration&mdash;in
+shares&mdash;the meteor was introduced to certain higher lords
+who, holding broad theories on &ldquo;meum and tuum,&rdquo; in
+their turn arranged dinner parties where the most exalted were to
+be met with.&nbsp; Often did the rafters of Connaught Place
+rattle during these festive gatherings, and sheaves of shares
+changed hands till no one was sent empty away, and so by the aid
+of nitrate, &ldquo;the Colonel&rdquo; was wafted amid the highest
+pinnacles of Society.&nbsp; Occasionally a false note was struck
+when some over-eager recipient put his shares on the
+market&mdash;but even these <i>faux pas</i> were soon forgotten,
+for &ldquo;the Colonel,&rdquo; if not &ldquo;Plantagenet
+blood,&rdquo; had the instincts of a gentleman.&nbsp; That the
+owner of such vast wealth must needs own racehorses goes without
+saying, upon which &rsquo;bus drivers and unsuccessful
+authorities on horseflesh <a name="page181"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 181</span>came upon the scene, and thus the
+sphere of Nature&rsquo;s bountiful providence became more
+extended.&nbsp; North, however, never attained prominence in a
+pursuit he was probably utterly indifferent to, though his
+colours were frequently to be seen (last) at the various race
+meetings.</p>
+<p>It was a sad day in Bohemia Minor when &ldquo;the
+Colonel&rdquo; was gathered to his fathers; and the diminution in
+white waistcoats and immaculate attire in Gracechurch Street and
+Northumberland Avenue was lamentably apparent; the rockets that
+had temporarily fizzled gradually expended themselves, their very
+sticks were soon untraceable; straw hats and macintoshes (during
+the dog days) gradually resumed their ascendency, and Society
+recovered from the topsy-turveydom with which it was once
+temporarily threatened.</p>
+<h2><a name="page182"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+182</span>CHAPTER XVII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">SOME CURIOUS FISH OF THE
+SIXTIES.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span> Henry De Hoghton, a wealthy
+baronet who was above the horizon in the Sixties, though
+possessed of a fine estate and a palatial residence, preferred
+the hand-to-mouth existence of an hotel, and lived at
+Meurigy&rsquo;s, now the supper-house yclept the Chatham.&nbsp;
+Never visible to the naked eye by day, he wandered into the
+Raleigh about midnight, and casting furtive glances in various
+directions, would settle down without a word.&nbsp; To punters he
+was a very oasis in a dry land, for, although the very worst
+&eacute;cart&eacute; player in Christendom, no stakes were too
+high for him, and after losing a game or two his proposals were
+literally appalling.</p>
+<p>To ask him to play was the signal for his abrupt departure; to
+ignore his presence was tantamount to &pound;100 a game within
+twenty minutes.</p>
+<p>Fred Granville, who about this period was considerably out of
+his depth, had a peculiar experience with him.&nbsp; On one
+occasion, having lost to the eccentric baronet some &pound;3,000,
+De Hoghton, who evidently knew that a settlement was precarious,
+said, &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go to
+&lsquo;Jellybelly&rsquo;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What occurred at the suggested interview it is difficult to
+arrive at, but within the week it was generally known that De
+Hoghton financed the Hebrew money-lender, and by such
+disinterested advice as <a name="page183"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 183</span>above was invariably paid, leaving
+the onus of recovery to the astute Bob Morris.</p>
+<p>Another drunken baronet who lived in Eaton Square, and had
+married an houri of a very inferior type, had for his chief hobby
+the surrounding himself with pugilists and comic singers.</p>
+<p>Living entirely on the ground floor, the drawing-room, which
+was carpetless, was got up like a cockpit.&nbsp; Here nightly
+orgies were held, to the annoyance of every one within hearing,
+and when too much port&mdash;with which the cellars were
+filled&mdash;had done its duty, rows were not infrequent between
+this disreputable couple.&nbsp; On one occasion I can recollect
+her drunken ladyship&mdash;very lightly clad&mdash;ordering a
+powdered six-foot flunkey to put out the lights instantly, and
+her drunken spouse&rsquo;s rejoinder, &ldquo;If you dare to touch
+a candle, you leave my house this moment.&rdquo;&nbsp; After
+which a domestic scrimmage and a stampede ensued, and, seizing
+hats and coats, the guests hurriedly departed.</p>
+<p>An eccentric old lady who died about this time left her large
+fortune to a distant relative on the condition that she was never
+to be put below earth.</p>
+<p>To obviate the slightest risk of losing the legacy, the astute
+recipient immediately purchased a house in London, and with all
+the pomp worthy of the occasion, placed the mass of corruption,
+securely boxed, on the roof, after which it was soldered on to
+the leads and encased in a glass shade.</p>
+<p>The eyesore has long disappeared, but twenty years ago it was
+an object of interest to strollers in Kensington Gardens.</p>
+<p>Ned Deering was a well-known figure in Pall Mall in the
+long-ago Sixties.&nbsp; The heir to one of the oldest baronetcies
+in the kingdom, he distorted his handsome features by wearing his
+hair down to his shoulders in imitation of Charles I. (of blessed
+memory), whom he imagined he resembled.</p>
+<p><a name="page184"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+184</span>Eccentric to a degree, he married a few years later the
+lady known to posterity as Mrs. Bernard Beere, and great was the
+consternation in Kent lest a &ldquo;small Beer&rdquo; might
+eventually be enrolled in their local patrician ranks; but the
+scare was short-lived, and Ned, who meanwhile had turned
+Papist&mdash;as he would have turned Mohammedan had he lived in
+Morocco&mdash;died in a picturesque cottage with garden in front
+in Jermyn Street, imbibing buckets of champagne to the last, and
+with the encouraging assurance of a sure and joyful
+resurrection.&nbsp; The spot is now represented by the back
+entrance of the Criterion Theatre.&nbsp; No more amusing
+companion existed than Ned Deering, when the spirit moved
+him.</p>
+<p>Amongst military characters, Lord Mark Kerr must assuredly be
+given the palm.&nbsp; Of overwhelming family interest, he ruled
+the 13th Somersetshire Light Infantry as a veritable
+despot.&nbsp; Mad as any March hare, he frequently appeared on
+parade with his shako reverse-ways on his head, and if his
+eagle-eye spotted some awkward-looking recruit, he would paralyse
+him by, &ldquo;Ha! you come from Bath, eh?&nbsp; I suppose you
+consider yourself a Bath brick?&nbsp; But I consider you a
+Bath&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp; In the mess, too, he was equally
+harmlessly autocratic, and no officer was expected to take his
+seat till Lord Mark had said, &ldquo;Be seated,
+gentlemen.&rdquo;&nbsp; But there was no vice in this eccentric
+branch of the house of Lothian.&nbsp; Whether he would have been
+tolerated in these later days is another affair.</p>
+<p>Major Francis, who was on the Smoking Room Committee of the
+Turf Club, was an admitted authority on cigars.&nbsp; Small in
+stature, the little man carried a cigar-case in every pocket of
+his numerous coats; not a cigar entered the docks but was sampled
+as a labour of love for the large importers by this
+unquestionable expert.&nbsp; And often have I accompanied him to
+St. Mary Axe, where box after box has been <a
+name="page185"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 185</span>opened, and
+cigar after cigar lighted for our delectation, only to be laid
+aside after one whiff as we passed on to other brands.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But what becomes of all these wasted samples?&rdquo; I
+inquired of Mr. Dodswell.&nbsp; &ldquo;They&rsquo;re not
+wasted,&rdquo; he replied; &ldquo;they become &lsquo;Regalia
+Britannicas,&rsquo; such as these,&rdquo; and he handed me a
+gilt-edged box of the most approved pattern that might well
+deceive any but an expert.</p>
+<p>Major Francis created a revolution in the cigars that were
+supplied at the Turf, and instead of the &ldquo;Golden
+Eagles&rdquo; such as Dicky Boulton considered cheap at three
+shillings apiece, and others assessed as dear at any price, the
+finest exports of the Havanas were to be had for less than half
+the money.</p>
+<p>Every youngster aspiring to importance in those days affected
+the possession of countless thousands of two-shilling cigars, and
+the walls of a large establishment in Bond Street were covered
+with boxes bearing in conspicuous type the various names and
+designations.</p>
+<p>It may be stated, however, that the venture was a
+&ldquo;credit&rdquo; one, which, whilst pandering to the vanity
+of the owner, in no way injured the tradesman, who delicately
+withdrew any surplus stock where settlement appeared
+doubtful.</p>
+<p>Lord Alexander Russell&mdash;a brother of the Duke of
+Bedford&mdash;when in command of the Rifle Brigade invariably
+smoked a short clay when at the head of his regiment, and Colonel
+Warden, another eccentric, who commanded the 19th Foot, seldom
+rose till one or two in the afternoon, and would keep the whole
+regiment dangling about the orderly room for hours, to the
+amusement of the rest of the camp.</p>
+<p>But this was in the days when every regiment was a
+principality ruled by a despot, who, twice a year at most,
+underwent formal inspection by some amiable old gentleman, who
+received &pound;600 a year for wearing a cocked hat as commander
+of such and such a regiment.</p>
+<p><a name="page186"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 186</span>That
+the state of preparedness that often then existed would hardly
+meet the requirements of the present-day alertness may best be
+exemplified by what I once assisted at.</p>
+<p>The Inspecting General was Sir Percy Douglas, who had
+expressed the desire of seeing and hearing that instructive
+man&oelig;uvre, a <i>feu de joie</i>.&nbsp; Proudly did the
+commanding officer give the requisite command, and with one
+accord 800 muzzle-loading barrels pointed defiantly heavenwards;
+then pop here, pop there a hundred yards down the line, a charge
+here and there exploded.</p>
+<p>Every barrel was choked with mutton fat&mdash;a favourite
+recipe against rust amongst the old warriors of England.</p>
+<p>Some startling stories of the mad Marquis of Waterford might
+be introduced, if their production were possible.&nbsp; One or
+two incidents, however, of the Sixties may not be amiss.&nbsp;
+Constantly was this privileged lunatic to be seen walking the
+Haymarket at breakneck speed, and being known to every cabman,
+waterman, and policeman, his antics attracted little
+attention.&nbsp; On one occasion he appeared in an exceptionally
+dishevelled condition, and a constable remonstrating with him in
+a friendly tone, he produced a large knife, and, hacking off what
+purported to be a finger, threw it into the street.</p>
+<p>His lordship had apparently been exploiting the shambles, and
+brought away a blade-bone for possible emergency.</p>
+<p>On another occasion he had been annoyed by being overcrowded
+in a railway carriage, and retaliated a few days after by
+appearing at the station with a chimney-sweep in full canonicals,
+for whom he purchased a first-class ticket, and whom he took with
+him into the carriage.&nbsp; His lordship and his companion were
+on this occasion in no way incommoded.</p>
+<p>Sir Charles Ross, a wealthy Highland baronet, <a
+name="page187"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 187</span>visited
+London every season for exactly fourteen days, accompanied by a
+gillie.&nbsp; At the old &ldquo;Tavistock,&rdquo; where he
+invariably stayed, his daily meals consisted of mutton chops and
+steaks; his gillie, by express order, was to be given
+&ldquo;anything&rdquo;&mdash;salmon and grouse were good enough
+for him.</p>
+<p>On one occasion he imagined he had dropped a sixpence in the
+entrance-hall, and half the staff of the hotel were employed for
+two hours at half-a-crown an hour, with express orders to
+<i>find</i> it.</p>
+<p>A substitute was eventually found, and the routine of the
+establishment resumed its normal condition.</p>
+<p>Some years later his eccentricities assumed a more serious
+form, and having nearly frightened an old woman out of her life
+by suddenly rising in his birthday suit with his ribs painted
+black from among furze bushes, he was placed under restraint,
+and, I believe, died in a madhouse.</p>
+<p>Lord Ernest Bruce, who eventually blossomed into Marquis of
+Ailesbury, had a chronic deafness that apparently descended to
+his sons&mdash;&ldquo;The Duffer,&rdquo; long since dead, and the
+present holder of the title (Henry)&mdash;and it was better than
+any play to see the father and two sons narrating anecdotes to
+one another, with their hands to their respective ears, and
+bellowing like fog-horns, and then roaring like rhinoceroses as
+their jokes permeated their skulls over the family gatherings
+that periodically took place at Boodle&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>At this time an excellent foreign restaurant had made its
+appearance in a side street of Soho, and many of the foreign
+attach&eacute;s gave it their (private) patronage.</p>
+<p>A joke that obtained was the scrambling for coppers from the
+window of a private room, and it was on one occasion when Baron
+Spaum was revelling in the excitement that the crowds became so
+dense that an appeal from the landlord necessitated a resort to a
+ruse.</p>
+<p><a name="page188"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 188</span>A
+suitable (!) person who was dining in the public room kindly
+consented to don the Baron&rsquo;s light overcoat and to scramble
+coppers that had been provided as he leisurely left the
+premises.&nbsp; The deception succeeded admirably, as the crowd
+followed the supposed benefactor.&nbsp; The assumption of the
+Baron&rsquo;s coat was also a profound success, at least so all
+but the Baron agreed.&nbsp; He never saw his paletot again.</p>
+<p>An old member of the Conservative, who was well known during
+the Sixties and Seventies, made it an invariable practice to sip
+brown sherry for two or three hours every afternoon.&nbsp; So
+monotonous were the constant applications to his pocket that he
+directed the total should be paid in one instalment before he
+left.</p>
+<p>Fifteen and twenty glasses were the old toper&rsquo;s average,
+but on one occasion when his consumption amounted to twenty-five,
+he fixed a glazed eye on the footman, and gurgled out: &ldquo;Ten
+probable, eighteen possible, but twenty-five,
+<i>never</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; After which he paid up, and toddled
+into the attendant four-wheeler.</p>
+<p>It was during the sixties that Mr. Justice Maule was in the
+zenith of his fame.&nbsp; Devoted to his profession, and to the
+old port of his Inn, no dinner of his brother benchers would have
+appeared complete without the adjunct of his beaming countenance,
+when, having stowed away three bottles under his belt, he would
+&ldquo;tack&rdquo; the few yards to his chambers in Paper
+Buildings, and hang a man in the morning with the decorum only to
+be attained by experience.</p>
+<p>It was after one of these festive gatherings that Paper
+Buildings was burnt to the ground.&nbsp; The Judge, it appears,
+was a great reader; whether he always understood what he read (or
+did) under given circumstances is not quite clear, suffice that,
+having popped into bed and adjusted a vase conveniently on a
+chair, he proceeded to place a moderator lamp under his couch,
+after which the only reliable evidence <a
+name="page189"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 189</span>obtainable
+was that the old gentleman woke with a start to find himself
+enveloped in flames.</p>
+<p>As he himself described it, he thought he was dead and that he
+had <i>not</i> been carried to Abraham&rsquo;s bosom.&nbsp; He
+never, indeed, got over the shock, and, moderating his partiality
+for old port, he exhibited more serious tendencies, and so good
+came out of evil, and the occupiers of the present palatial
+chambers are indebted to Mr. Justice Maule for having gone to bed
+tipsy and burnt down the crazy old buildings.</p>
+<p>Mr. Justice Maule had a grim humour of his own, and Serjeant
+Ballantine used to tell of how on one occasion during the
+Guildford Assizes a murder case hinged on the evidence of a child
+to which the Crown attached importance, but to which the prisoner
+vehemently objected.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come here, my little girl,&rdquo; said his
+lordship.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, if you were to tell a story do you
+know where you would go to?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; was the candid reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Neither do I,&rdquo; was the judicial endorsement;
+&ldquo;an excellent answer; swear the witness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But that was before the &ldquo;shock&rdquo; that brought him
+to his senses.</p>
+<p>Every Army man in the sixties will remember George
+Goddard.&nbsp; A cheery Irishman, full of anecdotage, universally
+popular, but, alas! with the proverbial lack of the one thing
+needful.&nbsp; Appointed by Tod Heatly as one of his touts, he
+combined business with pleasure by radiating between the various
+regiments and billeting himself on any one he knew at the Raleigh
+or Army Clubs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Major,&rdquo; he once said to Gussy Brown after a
+hilarious mess dinner, &ldquo;you see that stain on the
+floor?&nbsp; I bet you I&rsquo;ll remove it without touching
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Impossible,&rdquo; replied the little man.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet a fiver you don&rsquo;t,&rdquo; and before
+the astonished audience <a name="page190"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 190</span>could say &ldquo;Jack
+Robinson&rdquo; the gallant Gussy had been seized by his spurs
+and smeared across the floor.</p>
+<p>But all this was in the days of practical joking.</p>
+<p>Gussy Brown, although the most diminutive of cavalry field
+officers, was also the most pompous, and on one occasion when the
+4th were invited to a humdrum dance at Brighton the little man,
+to show his displeasure, walked slowly round the room with his
+&ldquo;Gibus&rdquo; under his arm, and making three stately bows
+to the astonished hostess slowly left the room.</p>
+<p>On the occasion of the Goddard joke, his only remark was,
+&ldquo;D&mdash; stupid!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this period touting for brewers and wine merchants was the
+curse of the Army.&nbsp; Every club contained retired colonels
+and others who buttonholed one on every occasion.&nbsp; Before a
+troopship entered the harbour a tout came on board with the
+pilot; dining at an Army club, the man at the next table inquired
+if your regimental canteen was well served; indeed, they
+penetrated the most sacred precincts with the pertinacity of a
+sandstorm.</p>
+<p>As a cranky old general once exclaimed &ldquo;D&mdash; it, I
+thought we were safe when militia men were not eligible; but
+these touts and store-keepers and bonnet-shop keepers will make
+the Rag a den of thieves, by Gad!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The association of these respective vocations in the old
+warrior&rsquo;s mind was evidently based on the legend that then
+obtained that when the captain was inspecting the front rank of
+the Tower Hamlets the rear rank was faced about by way of
+precaution.</p>
+<p>Every one who knew Jonas Hunt must have been astonished to
+read that he left over &pound;35,000 at his death a few months
+ago.&nbsp; As brave as a lion, he would assuredly&mdash;had he
+not been such a rip&mdash;have received the Victoria Cross for
+his share in the Balaclava charge, and when he sold out two years
+later, he was literally without a shilling, and continued in <a
+name="page191"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 191</span>the same
+happy condition for twenty years after&mdash;not that Jonas
+stinted himself in anything, on the contrary, he would plunge to
+any extent, dunning you if chance made him your creditor, and
+forgetting any debt almost as soon as contracted.&nbsp; A bruiser
+of no mean class, he invariably suggested a round if any one had
+the temerity to remind him.</p>
+<p>A highly objectionable individual, whose father was a buggy
+master in Calcutta, and actually got a commission in the
+&ldquo;Blues&rdquo; till ordered to sell out for writing
+anonymous letters to a celebrated beauty of the Sixties not long
+since dead, once had the impudence to remind Jonas of a debt, and
+was replied to as follows: &ldquo;I should have thought it more
+in your line to have written anonymously to my wife, but if you
+prefer to settle the matter with your fists I am entirely at your
+disposal.&rdquo;&nbsp; The man who procured the retirement of the
+anonymous letter-writer was at the time an officer in the Guards,
+and though still to be seen radiating between minor restaurants
+and 100 per cent. bureaus, has nothing left of his former self
+but a fly-blown prefix to his name, and even that has lost its
+commercial value amongst Hebrew financiers of shady
+enterprises.</p>
+<h2><a name="page192"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+192</span>CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">SPIRITUALISM AND REALISM.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> craze for
+&ldquo;table-turning,&rdquo; &ldquo;spirit-rapping,&rdquo; and
+every conceivable trash connected with the occult sciences, was
+in full blast in the long-ago Sixties, and old ladies would form
+tea parties and sit all day and half through the night at round
+tables with their knotty old mittened thumbs pressed convulsively
+against those of their neighbours waiting for the moving of the
+waters.&nbsp; Lord Ashburton, who lived near Portman Square, was
+the arch-priest and arch-culprit that disseminated this
+fashionable twaddle, and there was not a spinster in that (then)
+highly-fashionable district that did not devour the leaflets that
+were periodically issued broadcast by the inspired old
+humbug.&nbsp; Occasionally invitations were issued for
+s&eacute;ances, when refreshments (more or less light) were
+provided to fortify poor human nature against possible unearthly
+attacks after the lights had been judiciously lowered.</p>
+<p>It was at one of these functions that I on one occasion found
+myself, and, possessing in those days an appetite like a
+cormorant, was terribly disillusioned after two hours&rsquo;
+waiting for the &ldquo;spirits&rdquo; to hear his lordship order
+the butler to &ldquo;bring in the urn.&rdquo;&nbsp; (In those
+long-ago days tea without an urn the dimensions of a safe was an
+absolute impossibility.)&nbsp; Nor did spiritualism end here, for
+numerous haunted houses were in the market where apparitions and
+unearthly <a name="page193"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+193</span>sounds could be seen and heard and which no one would
+rent.</p>
+<p>It is the experience of a man I knew intimately that I will
+now&mdash;without expressing an opinion&mdash;relate, as far as I
+can recollect, in his own words:</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Looking for a house with plenty of elbow
+room and of reasonable rent, my attention was attracted by a
+dilapidated building&mdash;with garden in front and noseless
+statues liberally besprinkling it&mdash;situated in the
+Marylebone Road.&nbsp; Proceeding to the agent&rsquo;s, I was
+considerably surprised by his terms.&nbsp; &lsquo;The
+house,&rsquo; he began, &lsquo;has a bad name; no caretaker will
+live on the premises.&nbsp; In a word, sir, here&rsquo;s the key,
+and if you are willing to occupy it you shall have it rent free
+for six months.&rsquo;&nbsp; I at once closed with his offer, and
+seeking out a chum&mdash;lately ordained&mdash;we spent the next
+night in the haunted house.&nbsp; It was in the dining-room we
+proposed to make a first night of it, and barely had we settled
+down for a chat when footsteps were distinctly heard in the
+hall.&nbsp; &lsquo;Our lantern!&rsquo; I whispered as we
+excitedly opened the door.&nbsp; Nothing was to be seen, nothing
+to be heard.&nbsp; &lsquo;Hush!&rsquo; whispered my friend,
+&lsquo;I hear something behind me.&rsquo;&nbsp; I heard the sound
+also.&nbsp; &lsquo;Who&rsquo;s there?&rsquo; I called out.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Who&rsquo;s there?&rsquo; I repeated; but still the
+silence of the Catacombs.&nbsp; Then the sound of footsteps
+ascending the uncarpeted stairs was unmistakable till they
+gradually died away in the attics.&nbsp; A moment of
+indescribable stillness followed; a cold blast chilled the very
+marrow of our bones, and our lantern went out like the crack of a
+pistol.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We returned to our armchairs after carefully locking
+the door, but we heard no more.&nbsp; And so we sat till welcome
+daylight made its appearance, and as the kettle simmered on the
+hob and the sound of awakening life made itself manifest in the
+Marylebone Road, it seemed impossible to realise the weird
+manifestations we had witnessed.</p>
+<p><a name="page194"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+194</span>&ldquo;&lsquo;&mdash;,&rsquo; said my friend, &lsquo;we
+have learnt a terrible experience; Satan has been unloosed
+amongst us.&nbsp; Let us pray.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The house has long since been pulled down; majestic flats now
+occupy the site, and instead of the sepulchral moans of
+disembodied souls the untrained, throaty voice of lovely woman
+may be heard shrieking to the accompaniment of a hired piano, and
+producing a discord as damnable, if more up-to-date, than ever
+was heard in a haunted house.</p>
+<p>In Surrey Street there was a house that rumour asserted had
+been hermetically sealed, and was not to be re-opened till a
+hundred years had passed, where, in the eighteenth century, a
+terrible tragedy had occurred during the progress of a bridal
+feast, and the distracted bridegroom, rushing out, had commanded
+that God&rsquo;s sun should not again settle on the accursed
+board till the generation yet unborn was in being.&nbsp; And I
+have a vague recollection of having read, years later, a
+description of what was seen as the portals were thrown back
+after their century of peace, and light and air had percolated
+through the room.&nbsp; One can picture the table decked with its
+moth-eaten cloth, the piles of dust that represented the viands,
+the chairs pushed back in weird array, and the odour of the tomb
+that pervaded everything!</p>
+<p>To all which, my enlightened twentieth-century reader, there
+is probably another side.&nbsp; The whole thing may be an
+absolute fable.</p>
+<p>In the days before Trade had made those gigantic strides which
+have since dumped its votaries amid the once sacred pages of
+Debrett, when knights were not as common as blackberries, and the
+Victorian Order had not become a terror in the land, when
+buttermen sold butter, and furniture-men sold furniture, and
+before huge emporiums for the sale of everything had come into
+existence, it was &ldquo;bazaars&rdquo; that supplied the maximum
+of selection with the <a name="page195"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 195</span>minimum of locomotion, such as
+to-day is to be found in the huge caravanserai yclept
+&ldquo;Stores&rdquo; and in Tottenham Court Road and Westbourne
+Grove in particular.</p>
+<p>In Soho Square, on the western side, where to-day&mdash;and
+all day&mdash;men with pronounced features, forbidding
+countenances, and of usurious tendencies may be seen in a first
+floor window exchanging views on the iniquitous restrictions
+associated with stamped paper, a bazaar existed in the long-ago
+sixties where dogs that squeaked and elephants that wagged their
+tails might have been bought by children of tender years who, for
+aught we know, may have since been plucked of their last feather
+by the vultures that now hover over those happy hunting
+grounds.</p>
+<p>Turning into Oxford Street there was the Queen&rsquo;s Bazaar,
+afterward converted into the Princess&rsquo;s Theatre, still with
+us, with its dismal, dingy frontage and limited shelter for
+ladies with guttural voices; whilst almost opposite was the
+Pantheon, with perhaps the most chequered career of all, having
+been, in turn, the National Opera House, the accepted Masquerade
+house, a theatre, and a bazaar till 1867, when it attained its
+present proud position as the main tap for the supply of
+Gilbey&rsquo;s multifarious vintages.</p>
+<p>Still further west was the St. James&rsquo;s Bazaar, built by
+Crockford, and soon converted into a hell, where more monies
+changed hands and more properties were sold than in all the other
+bazaars in the universe.</p>
+<p>But perhaps the most tenacious of life was the Baker Street
+Bazaar.&nbsp; In its spacious area was situated an unpretentious
+shop (since spread half up the street) with two or three windows
+in Baker Street, while on the hinterland was the bazaar, and over
+it Tussaud&rsquo;s Waxworks.&nbsp; Entering from King Street was
+the area occupied annually by the Cattle Show, whilst still
+further space was available&mdash;as we were lately informed by
+the police reports&mdash;for empty coffins, <a
+name="page196"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 196</span>false
+beards, volatile dukes, lead and bricks in bulk, sleeping and
+reception rooms, scores of flunkeys, and addenda too multifarious
+to mention.&nbsp; Never having seen the subterranean Duke nor the
+bewhiskered Druce, one may be permitted to marvel where all this
+ghastly conglomeration found shelter, and whether the confusion
+that must have occurred amongst the Dutch dukes, the English
+shopmen, the cattle, and the Waxworks can in any way be held
+responsible for the startling contradictions with which we have
+lately been regaled.</p>
+<p>But does any one who traverses the historic area between Soho
+Square and Charing Cross give a thought to the interest that once
+clustered round where Crosse and Blackwell&rsquo;s factory now
+stands?&nbsp; Does any one realise whilst &ldquo;held up&rdquo;
+in a broken-down &ldquo;Vanguard&rdquo; in Shaftesbury Avenue
+that the neighbourhood once echoed with the Royalist battle-cry
+&ldquo;So-ho&rdquo; in the days of that greatest of
+Englishmen&mdash;Cromwell?&nbsp; Does any one ever give it a
+thought that Charing Cross was not so very long ago a resort of
+footpads, and that even so late as the Sixties the sweet waters
+of the somewhat putrid Thames oozed and bubbled where the
+District railway station now stands?&nbsp; And how few are aware
+that, when Drummond&rsquo;s Bank was in course of construction,
+fossils of mammoth, cave lions, rhinoceros, and Irish deer were
+found; and that in future ages, excavations will probably unearth
+skeletons of hybrids we all try to dodge and whom naturalists
+will describe as voracious, living on suction, apt to beg,
+borrow, or steal, migratory to a limited extent, and usually to
+be met with between Charing Cross and St. Paul&rsquo;s or on the
+plateaus that abut on the Criterion?</p>
+<p>As an observant judge once remarked to one of these pariahs
+who filled up his cup of iniquities by snatching a fowl from a
+confiding poulterer&rsquo;s, &ldquo;God has given you
+intelligence; your parents have given <a name="page197"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 197</span>you a good education; your country
+has provided you with excellent prospects both for the present
+and future, instead of which you go about stealing
+ducks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Passing still further west along the Strand, the changes of
+time and idea become more apparent as one contemplates that
+stronghold of Christianity&mdash;Exeter Hall&mdash;plastered with
+bills and lately passed into alien hands; and the period, the
+surging crowd, all lend themselves to the illusion, and one might
+almost fancy one heard the echo of 1,000 years ago, &ldquo;Not
+this man, but Barabbas.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Oh, the irony of Fate! methought; truly does Time turn the old
+days to derision; and one knows not whither one&rsquo;s
+vapourings might have landed one as a zealous constable fixed his
+official eye upon the stoic who, deeming it advisable to
+&ldquo;move on,&rdquo; sought consolation, but found none, in an
+adjoining tobacconist&rsquo;s by indulging in one of Salmon and
+Gluckstein&rsquo;s real Havanas (five for a shilling).</p>
+<p>Skimming (not wading through) the report of the Court of
+Inquiry lately dragging its monotonous length in the vicinity of
+the Chelsea embankment, one was struck by the change that has
+come over these senseless preliminaries, which occasionally end
+in smoke and sometimes in legalised military or civil
+tribunals.&nbsp; For such courts are as old as the hills, and are
+convened on every possible excuse.&nbsp; If a soldier loses a
+shoebrush it is (or was) a Court of Inquiry that established the
+interesting fact; if an officer was accused of a more heinous
+offence, it was a Court of Inquiry that heard what was to be
+said.</p>
+<p>The only difference is that, whereas the old style cost no
+more than a few sheets of foolscap and the unnecessary lumbering
+of regimental records, the identical luxury cannot now be
+indulged in without an array of Old Bailey lawyers, who harangue
+the old warriors that constitute the court for hours, utterly
+oblivious of the fact that they are better judges of <a
+name="page198"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 198</span>things
+military, and not likely to be carried away by those bursts of
+eloquence that so impress the twelve jack-puddings of which our
+bulwarks and liberties are said to be composed.</p>
+<p>The earliest of these Courts of Inquiry was in &rsquo;41, when
+Lord Cardigan killed Captain Tucket in a duel&mdash;and ended in
+his trial and acquittal by his brother peers.</p>
+<p>Later on, in &rsquo;44, Lord William Paget and the same
+bellicose Earl had a domestic squabble in which the former said
+&ldquo;he had,&rdquo; and the latter said &ldquo;he
+hadn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; and this began by a Court of Inquiry and
+culminated in the High Court.</p>
+<p>Again, in &rsquo;54 Lieutenants Perry and Greer were hailed
+before a Court of Inquiry for practical jokes of a pronounced
+character, but the inquiry ended in smoke, as it was
+&ldquo;revised&rdquo; by the Minister of War.</p>
+<p>In &rsquo;61 was the Court of Inquiry in the 4th Dragoon
+Guards which, disclosing undoubted bullying on the part of
+Colonel Bentinck (the present Duke of Portland&rsquo;s father),
+ended in a court martial, when nothing but interest saved the old
+gentleman&rsquo;s bacon.</p>
+<p>Later on, there was the Mansfield affair, when a disagreement
+arose between Sir William Mansfield (afterwards Lord Sandhurst),
+or his wife, and an aide-de-camp that elicited much that was
+amusing in regard to purloined jams and other preserves, for
+which her ladyship was supposed to be celebrated; all which
+instances ended in the usual way after an infinity of positive
+assertion met by flat contradiction.</p>
+<p>Whether the farce lately enacted, with its lawyers and their
+speeches, affected the result, or benefited anybody except the
+lawyers, is a point upon which most people will agree; all which,
+however, sinks into insignificance in comparison with the
+question as to when and how did this interference with <a
+name="page199"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 199</span>military
+tribunals first become tolerated, and how can our Military
+Council or our Military anything, or the officers constituting
+the Court, submit to be harangued by &ldquo;only a
+civilian,&rdquo; as one of Robertson&rsquo;s plays describes
+outsiders?</p>
+<p>In all the military tribunals of the past such an innovation
+was unheard of.&nbsp; Colonel Crawley, on his trial, had words
+put into his mouth by Sir William Harcourt (whose reputation as
+an orator it made), but he was not permitted to address the
+Court.&nbsp; In the Robertson Court Martial it was the same, and
+in the Navy to-day a prisoner is defended by &ldquo;a
+friend,&rdquo; but no civilian would be permitted to
+&ldquo;quarter deck it&rdquo; in that conservative service.</p>
+<p>Even Colonel Dawkins&mdash;who, by the way, was a Household
+Brigade man&mdash;amongst all his eccentric experiences, never
+got so far as suggesting that a civilian should bridge the chasm
+that has hitherto existed between the Law Courts and the Horse
+Guards by all this special pleading, and one wonders what old Sir
+George Browne or General Pennefather would have said (or sworn)
+if such a suggestion had been proposed to them!&nbsp; It may be
+too much to say there would have been an earthquake, but the
+foundations of the house would certainly have vibrated.</p>
+<p>And it is the ignorance of what the present privileges of the
+Guards are that makes it difficult to form any opinion on the
+merits of the case.&nbsp; The friction that these
+&ldquo;privileges&rdquo; used to cause when a Household regiment
+was occasionally brigaded at Aldershot or Dublin or the Curragh
+with regiments of the line was, however, undeniable.</p>
+<p>It pained old captains with Crimean and Indian medals to be
+&ldquo;turned out&rdquo; by a field officer with a fluffy upper
+lip and a youthful voice that had not long before sounded at
+Eton; it was irritating (at least) for colonels commanding
+distinguished regiments to see a Guard&rsquo;s sentry fumbling
+with his rifle <a name="page200"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+200</span>and deliberately coming to the &ldquo;carry,&rdquo; and
+five minutes after &ldquo;presenting&rdquo; to a brevet major of
+the Guards, who was trundling a hoop when the old warrior was in
+the trenches before Sebastopol; it was annoying to read in
+general orders special reminders as to the prohibition regarding
+imperials and capricious shaving, and to see half-a-dozen Guards
+officers with beards like pioneers; it was amusing to hear (as
+one did) the son of old Sir Percy Douglas (who was for a little
+season in the Guards) inform a distinguished field officer that
+the &ldquo;executive&rdquo; command could only be given by a
+Guardsman to a Guardsman; and still more amusing to hear the
+retort which made mincemeat of the privilege, at least, on that
+occasion&mdash;all which nonsense has, however, been considerably
+modified.&nbsp; By all means let the Guards retain their
+privileges and licences&mdash;but let them in mercy be
+&ldquo;consumed on the premises.&rdquo;&nbsp; And if the physique
+of these favoured regiments is not as fine as of yore, no one
+will deny that their &ldquo;marching past&rdquo; and their
+&ldquo;dressing&rdquo; are far superior to that of the line and
+&ldquo;pretty&rdquo; enough to please even Admiral Scott
+himself.</p>
+<p>It may further be conceded without fear of contradiction that
+the Queen&rsquo;s Company of the Grenadiers in 1862 was a
+magnificent specimen of physique and drilled to perfection under
+Lord Henry Percy and Micky Bruce.</p>
+<p>Beards, indeed, have always been a cause of offence.&nbsp; In
+the tropics (except in India) a man is compelled to shave; with
+the thermometer below zero, the same regulation is rigidly
+enforced.</p>
+<p>It was Colonel Crealock&rsquo;s beard at Gibraltar that was
+the indirect cause of an officer being tried by Court Martial; it
+was Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar&rsquo;s and Colonel
+Phillip&rsquo;s beards that led to invidious remarks in the
+Dublin Division; and, until the razor is abolished beyond the
+precincts of the four-mile <a name="page201"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 201</span>radius, so long will a link remain
+between the grand old days of the muzzle loader and cold steel
+and the modern requirements for potting an enemy at a thousand
+yards rise.</p>
+<p>When the Metropolitan Board of Works was at the zenith of its
+power, and thoroughfares were being projected, and whole streets
+were disappearing and ancient rookeries being demolished, it was
+incredible the leakage that appeared to exist, and how the
+friends of indiscreet or dishonest employ&eacute;s reaped a
+harvest by acquiring dilapidated buildings for a song, and
+standing out for huge compensation when the day for demolition
+drew nigh.</p>
+<p>An astute former hanger-on at Faultless&rsquo;s cock-pit in
+Endell Street surprised me considerably on one occasion as he
+stood at the door of a dilapidated beer-house in Covent Garden by
+informing me that he had bought it for a trifle, and six months
+later I was literally staggered by again meeting the rascal
+shovelling out potatoes at a little greengrocery shop where now
+stands the London and Westminster Bank opposite the Law
+Courts.</p>
+<p>He explained that he had a brother in a humble but trusted
+position at Spring Gardens, and that his old beer-house had
+ceased to exist, and he expected his &ldquo;present
+property&rdquo; would &ldquo;come down&rdquo; before long.</p>
+<p>Green Street, leading from Leicester Square, was another
+channel for the acquisition of large profits, and when every
+house was a bug-walk, and demolition a matter of a few months,
+the news was actually &ldquo;offered&rdquo; to a man I knew well
+able to find the requisite purchase money, but rejected from
+misplaced prudential motives.</p>
+<p>The present London Pavilion was another glaring instance of
+jobbery, and years before it was necessary to hustle the
+ex-Scott&rsquo;s waiter from the cosy nest-egg he so diligently
+nursed, the Board of Works descended <a name="page202"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 202</span>on him like an avalanche with a
+peremptory notice to quit.</p>
+<p>At this stage one Villiers comes upon the scene, but whether
+he was a scion of the noble house of Jersey or Clarendon is not
+clear.&nbsp; Suffice that tradition credited him with having once
+been a considerable actor who had made a great hit in a minor
+part in the <i>Overland Route</i> at the Haymarket during the
+fifties.&nbsp; Later, he appears to have become lessee of the
+transpontine Canterbury Hall, where he was a dismal failure, and
+spent the latter portion of his tenancy in bed&mdash;a victim of
+gout and the importunities of irrepressible bill-stickers.</p>
+<p>It was in these darkest hours that the Board of Works entered
+into his life, and in an incredibly short space of time he had
+enlisted the co-operation of a sporting furrier, had hustled the
+unhappy Loibel out, and was in undisputed possession of the
+London Pavilion.&nbsp; How the &pound;103,000 was found to pay
+the out-going man is of no particular importance, suffice that so
+indecent was the haste that an auction was deemed superfluous;
+the entire contents were turned over at a valuation, and as
+Loibel toddled out Villiers toddled in, and&mdash;undisturbed by
+parochial or other demands&mdash;he gradually rose to affluence,
+periodically visited Continental watering-places, was a person to
+be reckoned with in a mushroom political club, and died recently
+worth a considerable personalty.</p>
+<p>The juggle over the Pavilion never attracted much interest,
+and the gladiators being respectively a German and a Jew the
+transaction was forgotten almost at its inception.</p>
+<p>Passing through the Opera Colonnade I tried not long ago to
+locate the exact shop&mdash;once a cigar
+merchant&rsquo;s&mdash;in which the Raleigh, originally known as
+the &ldquo;Old Havana Cigar Club,&rdquo; may be said to have had
+its being, for it was whilst sitting on tubs one afternoon in the
+fifties that three or four Mohawks <a name="page203"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 203</span>of the first order persuaded Tod
+Heatly&mdash;the ground landlord&mdash;to provide some sort of
+superior night-house which, by opening its doors at 10 p.m. and
+not closing them till the last roysterer had reeled home, would
+&ldquo;meet a want long felt,&rdquo; as modern advertisements
+occasionally describe their worthless wares.</p>
+<p>It was later&mdash;in the early seventies&mdash;that the
+proprietorship changed hands, and was worked on more commercial
+lines by the Brothers Ewen (triplets), who, believing in quantity
+rather than quality, periodically sat as a committee under the
+chairmanship of an amiable old gentleman (Lord Monson) and
+elected everything and everybody capable of producing the
+increased subscription.</p>
+<p>It was in the solitary long room of the Tod Heatly era that
+details were arranged for the duel (which never came off) in
+regard to an accusation of foul play that was made in a Pall Mall
+club, when an old gentleman, who was in Court dress, was
+considerably astonished at receiving a flip on his calf from an
+erratic trump.&nbsp; And in this room, too, enough
+Justerini&rsquo;s brandy was consumed of a night to float the
+motors which now lumber that once-sacred chamber.&nbsp; For
+whisky and other emanations of the potato were then practically
+unknown and only heard of by the privileged few who had seen an
+illicit Boucicault still on the stage.</p>
+<p>Proceeding yet further west I passed the College of
+Surgeons&mdash;presented by George IV. in a fit of after-dinner
+generosity to that distinguished body to be held for all time on
+a pepper-corn rent.&nbsp; One can almost picture the burst of
+humble gratitude that gushed forth at the gracious act, and the
+bland smile that illumined the anointed features at the
+consciousness of having done a generous deed without being one
+penny the worse for it.&nbsp; It was condescensions such as this
+that endeared &ldquo;the first gentleman&rdquo; to a loyal and
+dutiful people.&nbsp; And then across the <a
+name="page204"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 204</span>square,
+where Northumberland House once stood, I wondered if one human
+being could locate the spot within fifty yards, and whether the
+old lion that topped it pointed his tail to the east or west, a
+subject on which more bets have been made than ever fell to the
+lot of man or beast.</p>
+<h2><a name="page205"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+205</span>CHAPTER XIX.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE ROCK AND THE CAPE.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> providential success of
+Playfair in the Cambridgeshire of &rsquo;72 had released more
+than one of our clique from the jaws of the usurer, and Bill
+Stourton, by the judicious investment of a fiver, was in
+expectation of being the proud owner of &pound;300 on the
+following Monday.</p>
+<p>Dashing down to Somersetshire overflowing with filial duty and
+in anticipation of our early embarkation for Gibraltar, a
+considerable scare was created one morning by a groom running up
+to the house and reporting that the sheriff&rsquo;s carriage and
+two grimy beaks from Taunton had pulled up at the
+&ldquo;George&rdquo; and were making tender inquiries as to Mr.
+William&rsquo;s whereabouts.</p>
+<p>All this occurred on Monday, when, as it happened, Billy was
+speeding towards London to realise at Tattersall&rsquo;s the
+result of his sagacity at Newmarket.&nbsp; And so, when the
+oleaginous visitors inquired at the ancestral porch, the reply
+they received was discouraging in the extreme.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is Mr. William&rsquo;s bedroom,&rdquo; pointing to
+a window, was the ingenuous servitor&rsquo;s reply; &ldquo;you
+can go and examine it if you wish; but I give you my word he left
+for London this morning.&rdquo;&nbsp; And so it came to pass that
+the astute &ldquo;Fitch and Son,&rdquo; of Southwark, failed to
+serve the capias, and the rascally Israelite who had made
+&ldquo;affidavit&rdquo; as to his intention of &ldquo;leaving the
+kingdom&rdquo; (as embarking with <a name="page206"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 206</span>the regiment might certainly be
+construed by a quibble) had to pay the cost of the imposing coach
+that had been provided for his conveyance to Taunton.</p>
+<p>The faithful butler had omitted to add that the young
+reprobate was returning the same evening, and that the dog-cart
+was to meet him at nine.</p>
+<p>But the reprieve was not of long duration, and within a year
+Bill had sold his commission and become a full private in the
+Blues.</p>
+<p>Passing into the Horse Guards one day a former brother officer
+chanced to inquire of the sentry the way to the military
+secretary&rsquo;s, and was considerably startled by the reply,
+&ldquo;First door to the left, Polly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sentry was ex-Lieutenant Stourton.</p>
+<p>Gibraltar then&mdash;as now&mdash;was a favourite winter
+resort, and the &ldquo;Club House Hotel&rdquo; opposite the main
+guard did a roaring trade.</p>
+<p>Here Lady Herbert of Lea and her youthful son, the present
+Lord Pembroke, sojourned for some weeks in the Sixties, and it
+was to the inquiring turn of mind of the young nobleman&rsquo;s
+tutor that Gibraltar was almost indebted for a very promising
+row.</p>
+<p>In one room, it appears, a cantankerous Irishman and his wife
+were staying, in the next the tutor, and whilst the Irishman
+positively swore he had one morning seen the prying tutor&rsquo;s
+face glued to the fanlight as vehemently did the pedagogue swear
+on a sack of bibles that he had never glued his nose to a
+fanlight in his life.</p>
+<p>What there was to peep at was not quite clear, for the
+supposed &ldquo;object&rdquo; in any costume was not fair to look
+upon, and so after mutual recriminations and mutual apologies the
+affair was hushed up, and expectant Gibraltar was robbed of a
+lawful excitement.</p>
+<p>A fly-leaf that appeared weekly&mdash;why, no one could
+explain&mdash;although less original than one might have <a
+name="page207"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 207</span>wished, yet
+possessing a symbolism that was unquestionable, on one occasion
+appeared with a verbatim extract from a Spanish paper of the
+escapades of an adventurer who was exploiting the neighbourhood
+of Madrid.</p>
+<p>Weeks apparently had elapsed before it had caught the eye of
+our lynx-eyed editor, and one day when Ansaldo invited certain of
+us to compare a recent resident at his hotel with the description
+in the very latest &ldquo;local intelligence&rdquo; it became
+apparent to all that a lately departed wayfarer was the
+redoubtable personage referred to.&nbsp; &ldquo;By Jove! I lost
+fifty to him last week at loo, and then gave him a
+shakedown,&rdquo; remarked one; and, &ldquo;D&mdash;d if I
+didn&rsquo;t lend him my horse to go as far as Cadiz, and
+it&rsquo;s not to be back till to-morrow,&rdquo; added another;
+and then the local tailor came running down to the Club House,
+and Ansaldo remembered he had paid his hotel bill by a cheque,
+and within a week a dozen victims realised that they had assisted
+in one way or another to make the gentleman&rsquo;s Mediterranean
+trip a pleasant one.</p>
+<p>But money at the Rock was literally a drug, thanks to the
+existence of Sacconi, a Genoese grocer.&nbsp; This extraordinary
+man was everybody&rsquo;s banker; if one lost at the races it was
+Sacconi who settled the account; mess bills were paid by Sacconi;
+fifty&mdash;one hundred Isabels&mdash;were only to be asked for
+to be obtained by initialling the amount at the shop.</p>
+<p>Apparently indifferent to risk, the astute Italian was,
+however, working on a certainty.&nbsp; Immediately a regiment was
+under orders for the Rock, a list of every officer&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;length of tether&rdquo; was transmitted by Perkins, his
+London agent, a city knight; whilst, in addition to the value of
+one&rsquo;s commission, the impossibility of leaving the Rock
+without his knowledge, and the &ldquo;Moorish Castle&rdquo;
+frowning on the heights, enabled Sacconi to amass a huge fortune,
+<a name="page208"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 208</span>to marry
+his daughters to officers of the garrison, and be an honoured
+guest in after years at the &ldquo;Convent,&rdquo; the
+Governor&rsquo;s official residence.</p>
+<p>But all this was in the days of purchase.</p>
+<p>Meeting the ex-Governor, Sir William Codrington, one day in
+Bond Street on the point of being run over, he jocosely remarked,
+as I went to his assistance, &ldquo;Different from Gibraltar,
+eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To any but enthusiasts of riding, Gibraltar was (and probably
+is) a most overrated station, with nothing to recommend it but
+its proximity to London.&nbsp; Every afternoon was devoted to
+couples riding to the Cork woods, and returning from its shaded
+glades just before gun-fire.</p>
+<p>No one ever dreamt of riding with his own wife; indeed, so
+accepted was this custom that on one occasion a couple having
+been seen riding together, an excited newsmonger rushed about
+inquiring, &ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&nbsp; Holroyd has been seen
+riding with his own wife!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the advent of Fitzroy Somerset gave an immense fillip to
+sport, and when, later, six couples of cast hounds came direct
+from Badminton every jack-pudding purchased a screw and became an
+ardent fox-hunter.</p>
+<p>A German apothecary, who had not straddled a quadruped since
+he left the Vaterland, became an enthusiastic rider, and thrilled
+the less daring horsemen by descriptions of runs, and how
+&ldquo;der &rsquo;orse svearved to him right, and I &rsquo;it
+&rsquo;im on the &rsquo;ead to his left, and den he svearved to
+the left, and I &rsquo;it &rsquo;im on the &rsquo;ead to his
+right,&rdquo; till everybody became more or less horsy, and not
+to keep a crock with four legs, or three, was tantamount to an
+admission that one was literally past praying for.</p>
+<p>Every youngster purchased a quadruped&mdash;some vicious and
+young, others blind and in the last stage of senile
+decay&mdash;and Staines, an assistant surgeon, <a
+name="page209"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 209</span>was so
+frequently sent whirling into space that his animal was
+christened &ldquo;Benzine-Collas,&rdquo; because it was
+&ldquo;warranted to remove Staines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here, too, was a fox-hunting chaplain known as &ldquo;Tally-ho
+Jonah,&rdquo; who ended his days as shepherd of a peculiarly
+desirable flock amidst the rich pastures of the Midlands.</p>
+<p>On his death-bed some years ago, his valet consoled him with
+the assurance that he was going to a better land, to which the
+worthy divine replied: &ldquo;John, there&rsquo;s no place like
+old England.&rdquo;&nbsp; R.I.P.</p>
+<p>But the mania by no means ended here, and Grant, the Principal
+Medical Officer&mdash;a bony Scot with the largest feet ever
+inflicted on man&mdash;literally paralysed a group who one day
+saw him in the distance leisurely approaching on horseback.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great heavens!&rdquo; was the universal exclamation as
+he came nearer, &ldquo;why, it&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;Benzine-Collas&rsquo; going as quiet as a lamb,&rdquo; and
+it was agreed that the fiery little Mogador stallion was being
+imposed upon by old Grant, under the impression that he was
+between the shafts.</p>
+<p>Across the bay was Tangier, and many found an inexhaustible
+store of delight in visiting that most Oriental of towns.</p>
+<p>Within four days of Paris, it seemed incredible that here was
+a spot that civilisation had apparently overlooked, and which
+still retained all the barbaric pomp of a thousand years
+ago.&nbsp; Fowls with their throats cut lay about the streets
+awaiting preparation for pilau; malefactors for the most trifling
+offences had their hands hacked off in the leading thoroughfares;
+whilst under the windows of the Sherif of Wazan&rsquo;s palace
+half a dozen naked musicians blew their insides out from morning
+to night, and discoursed a series of diabolical sounds that made
+the contemplation of anything but their music impossible.</p>
+<p>Here Martin&mdash;late messman of the <i>Racoon</i>&mdash;had
+<a name="page210"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 210</span>started
+the &ldquo;Royal Hotel,&rdquo; and after providing his visitors
+with an excellent dinner, favoured them with morceaux on a flute,
+of which he prided himself on being a virtuoso.</p>
+<p>Martin was as black as the blackest hat, and from the
+suspicious slits in his ears justified the assumption that he was
+a liberated West Indian slave.&nbsp; The music he emitted with
+eyes closed, possibly the most soulful, was certainly the most
+doleful, and had evidently been picked up when watching the
+anchor being weighed on H.M.S. <i>Racoon</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where do you come from, Martin?&rdquo; on one occasion
+inquired an inquisitive officer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Devonshire,&rdquo; was the unexpected reply; &ldquo;but
+I left home in my infancy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had made this assertion so often that there is no doubt he
+believed it.</p>
+<p>Returning from Tangier on one occasion, I brought with me a
+quantity of Kuss-Kuss cloth, which catching the eye of a
+voracious brother subaltern he inquired where I had got it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;the Sherif of Wazan sent it
+over for distribution in return for the guard of honour we
+supplied last month when he was here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;m entitled to some?&rdquo; he
+remarked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid it&rsquo;s all been claimed,&rdquo; I
+replied, and to keep up the illusion I got half a dozen
+youngsters to cross and re-cross the square with a piece under
+their arms and deposit it somewhere, for another to fetch it and
+leave it elsewhere.&nbsp; It seemed, indeed, that the traffic was
+never to end, and next morning an official complaint was made by
+the aggrieved one, and he discovered he had been the victim of a
+practical joke.</p>
+<p>Apropos of this class of grumbler, an amusing story was once
+told me by the captain of a P. and O.&nbsp; It was in the days
+that the skipper &ldquo;messed&rdquo; the passengers, and it was
+this officer&rsquo;s habit to have a <a name="page211"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 211</span>saucerful of porridge every morning
+about seven on the bridge.</p>
+<p>The feeding on a P. and O. is proverbially liberal, yet not
+content with the enormous breakfast provided, certain grumblers
+complained that considering the price they paid they surely were
+entitled to porridge.&nbsp; Inwardly chuckling, the skipper
+reluctantly consented, with the result (as he told me) that
+instead of devouring two mutton chops, eggs, and marmalade <i>ad
+libitum</i> at eight, he was a considerable gainer by the
+satisfying effect of two-pennyworth of porridge at seven.</p>
+<p>During my two years at Gibraltar cholera appeared, and
+anything more terrible than such a visitation in such a
+circumscribed spot can hardly be conceived.&nbsp; With a strict
+&ldquo;cordon&rdquo; established, there was no getting away from
+it, and men who the night before were in rude health were often
+buried at gun-fire.</p>
+<p>To be afraid of it was tantamount (so doctors asserted) to
+courting it, and so regimental bands were ordered to play daily
+on the Alameda by way of diverting the public mind, and not a
+drum was heard at the numerous military funerals that wended
+their way towards the north front.</p>
+<p>By night the &ldquo;corpse-lights&rdquo; over the burial
+ground emitted a weird glow, and many a subaltern visiting the
+sentries before daylight would shiver and his teeth rattle as he
+skirted the unearthly illumination.</p>
+<p>To such an extent did downright funk seize upon some that an
+officer now living in London&mdash;a C.B. of overwhelming
+interest&mdash;asked everybody the best preventive, and jokes
+were indulged in at his expense, and he swallowed tablespoonfuls
+of salt and raw porpoise liver, as this or the other
+prescribed.</p>
+<p>Distracted, one afternoon he sought consolation by proceeding
+to the house of a fair scorpion (persons born on the Rock) he had
+known in happier days, <a name="page212"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 212</span>and literally collapsed as he met
+her coffin emerging from her door.</p>
+<p>Apropos of this terrible scourge, an instance that many can
+vouch for occurred some years previously in India.</p>
+<p>My regiment was being decimated by cholera, and corpses were
+hurriedly placed in an outhouse that was infested with rats.</p>
+<p>The sentries had orders to periodically tap with their rifles
+on the door, and on one occasion tapping too hard, the door
+opened, and the Armourer Sergeant, who had been brought in a few
+hours previously, was seen sitting up on the trestle.</p>
+<p>Years after I saw the man daily, and he completed his
+twenty-one years&rsquo; service instead of being buried alive, as
+many a poor wretch has been.</p>
+<p>Colonel Zebulon Pike was by way of being a consul representing
+the United States in South Africa and the most amusing liar I
+have ever had the good fortune to meet.</p>
+<p>The embodiment of generosity, no yarn he ever spun could have
+injured a fly; that there never was a word of truth in them was
+an accepted axiom.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir,&rdquo; as he invariably prefixed his remarks,
+&ldquo;it was when I was commanding my regiment during the
+rebellion that Captain Crusoe reported to me he had captured a
+spy.&nbsp; &lsquo;Bring him before me,&rsquo; I said sternly, and
+when the rascal appeared I pointed to the sun, saying:
+&lsquo;Before yon luminary disappears behind yon hills you
+die&rsquo;; and turning to Crusoe, I added: &lsquo;Remove him,
+Colonel Crusoe.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Colonel, sir?&rsquo; inquired
+he.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes, sir,&rsquo; said I, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re
+colonel from this very moment.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Colonel once expressed a desire to attend the
+Governor&rsquo;s lev&eacute;e; but bewailing the fact that he had
+not brought his uniform, he proceeded to describe it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The pants, sir, are a rich blue, with a broad lace <a
+name="page213"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 213</span>stripe down
+their sides; my tunic is also blue, and my breast is covered with
+medals&mdash;I have a drawerful of them.&nbsp; Around my waist,
+sir, is a crimson sash, and in my hat a long ostrich feather
+sweeps down to my shoulder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that&rsquo;s all easily arranged, Colonel,&rdquo;
+we explained, and on the eventful day we proceeded to truss
+him.</p>
+<p>Never was a more imposing sight, and as the guard of honour
+marched down to Government House the Colonel stood on the
+pavement, immovable as a rock, with hand to his feathered
+billycock.&nbsp; And the men (as had been arranged) came to the
+&ldquo;carry,&rdquo; and passed him with all the &ldquo;honours
+of war.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My God, sir, it brought tears to my eyes,&rdquo; he
+afterwards told us in his pride, &ldquo;to see yon fine fellows
+swinging past; it reminded me of my own regiment.&nbsp; I thank
+you, gentlemen, for the compliment you paid a comrade.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These colonial lev&eacute;es of the past were often held of an
+evening to enable the introduction of refreshments, without which
+the attendance would certainly have been meagre.</p>
+<p>The local grandees liberally prepared for the coming feast,
+and having eaten to repletion proceeded to fill their
+pockets.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You may as well have the sauce,&rdquo; once interposed
+an irate A.D.C. as he saw a native pocketing a fowl, and he
+deliberately poured the contents of a tureen into his lap.</p>
+<p>At these &ldquo;go-as-you-please&rdquo; functions, speeches
+more or less impromptu invariably took place, and it was then
+that the &ldquo;Colonel&rdquo; was literally in his element.</p>
+<p>Panting for his opportunity, it was only after some wag had
+proposed his health, and described how we had &ldquo;one amongst
+us who had seen the mighty buffalo on its native prairie&rdquo;
+(which he assuredly never had), <a name="page214"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 214</span>etc., that the Colonel rose and
+delighted his hearers with a string of most amusing lies.</p>
+<p>Lady Shand, the wife of the Chief Justice, once sitting near
+him, after one of his flowery orations, began to tell him of her
+own native home in Scotland, and of the loch that stretched for
+miles before the ancestral hall, and was considerably surprised
+by the Colonel&rsquo;s rejoinder: &ldquo;Aye, and the swans; I
+can see them now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But there were no swans, Colonel,&rdquo; she gently
+corrected; but henceforth held her peace when the staggering
+retort was given: &ldquo;Oh, yes there were; at least, in my
+time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No function was considered complete without &ldquo;the
+Colonel,&rdquo; and he was a frequent guest at one place or
+another.&nbsp; Apparently capable of dispensing with sleep, no
+matter how late the night&rsquo;s orgy daylight found him on the
+verandah with a green cigar, after which he proceeded towards the
+Grand river ostensibly to bathe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t do without my morning swim,&rdquo; he once
+told a man who met him with a bath-towel over his arm; but the
+towel showed no signs of having been used, and it was recognised
+that the Colonel never stripped, and that his ablutions were
+primitive to a degree.</p>
+<p>But the Cape Town of to-day has undergone quite as much change
+as our modern Babylon, and where a railway station as big as St.
+Pancras now exists, a wooden shanty with a single line fifty
+miles long was all that represented railway enterprise in the
+long-ago sixties.</p>
+<p>It was by the courtesy of Captain Mills, the Assistant
+Colonial Secretary&mdash;afterwards Sir Charles Mills, agent
+general in London&mdash;that a delightful party was organised for
+the shooting of the &ldquo;Sicker Vlei,&rdquo; a vast expanse of
+water in the vicinity of Wellington.</p>
+<p>This magnificent lake is the resort of every kind of <a
+name="page215"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 215</span>wild beast
+and bird.&nbsp; Strings of flamingoes wade leisurely about it,
+whilst wild geese and swans of enormous proportions float lazily
+over one&rsquo;s head; antelopes and buck of every description
+come down to water, and the Cape leopard&mdash;the most
+treacherous and cowardly of four-footed creatures&mdash;is to be
+met with in considerable numbers as day begins to break.&nbsp;
+The procedure that obtains is similar to that in all ordinary
+mountain loch shooting, with the solitary exception that it
+necessitates a start about 3 a.m., so that every one is posted
+amongst the rushes at two hundred yards&rsquo; intervals an hour
+before daybreak.&nbsp; The excitement, the delight, the profound
+silence of that hour when Nature seems to rouse itself for its
+daily routine of activity, requires an abler pen than mine to
+describe.</p>
+<p>With a rifle in hand and a shot gun at one&rsquo;s side, there
+is, however, nothing for it but to wait for daybreak, wondering
+whether buck or antelope, cheetah or wild fowl will be the first
+to come within range.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trekking&rdquo; with our span of oxen to a farmhouse,
+where only two cots were available, it was our nightly custom to
+play &ldquo;nap&rdquo; as to who should occupy the beds and who
+the kitchen table and dresser, and the excitement ran just as
+high as it did in the days when fifties and hundreds were at
+stake in the card room of the old Raleigh.</p>
+<p>But the losers did not lose much, for almost before one was
+asleep it was time to be up for our usual 3 a.m. start.</p>
+<p>With me was placed dear old Arthur Barkly, the worst shot and
+most passionate of good fellows, last Governor of Heligoland, and
+long since gone over to the majority, and it evokes a smile when
+even now I think of how, having missed with both barrels two huge
+wild geese that leisurely floated twenty yards over his head, he
+threw a cartridge box and then a ramrod in his passion at the
+unoffending birds.</p>
+<p><a name="page216"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 216</span>But
+the shot had scared other denizens of the plain, and bang, bang
+in every direction indicated that all our guns were in action as
+cheetahs and antelopes might be seen scuttling on all
+sides.&nbsp; Nothing further being left for us, we proceeded to
+count our bag and return to the farmstead.</p>
+<p>After a few days devoted to &ldquo;braying&rdquo; the skins
+and &ldquo;curing&rdquo; the antelope meat for future
+consumption, we resumed our dreary bumping &ldquo;trek&rdquo;
+into the interior in the hope of meeting with big game.</p>
+<p>Lions are occasionally, but rarely, met with in these parts,
+and it is with reference to a dramatic incident that might have
+ended fatally that I will confine my present remarks.&nbsp;
+Returning one evening to our location, with literally only three
+ball cartridges amongst us, one of the Kaffir boys descried in
+the distance a lion and lioness and three cubs.&nbsp; With bated
+breath and excitement running high, a council of war was hastily
+convened, and the pros and cons., the direction of the wind, and
+the dearth of ammunition having been variously discussed, it was
+decided that to attack them would be unwise, if not absolutely
+foolhardy.&nbsp; A wounded lion or lioness with its cubs is
+probably as dangerous as a man-eating tiger; yet, despite all our
+entreaties to the contrary, one daring spirit determined to
+attempt to stalk them.</p>
+<p>Loading both barrels of his rifle with ball, with the other
+solitary cartridge placed handily in his pocket, and divested of
+all other impediments, he hastily retired to make a circuit and
+so get within shot against the wind.</p>
+<p>Suddenly we heard the sharp report of his rifle, and then,
+after a second, we saw the lion make for the spot whence the
+smoke had come, whilst the lioness and the cubs scampered off in
+the opposite direction.</p>
+<p>Again there was a report, and next we saw Fellowes running
+with all his might, followed by the lion.</p>
+<p><a name="page217"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 217</span>What
+ensued may best be given in his own words, as narrated to us that
+night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had evidently missed my first shot, and whilst
+putting in my other cartridge, I saw the brute making for me;
+again I fired, and I saw it staggered him, but still he came on,
+and seeing a small pond a few yards off I decided to make for
+that.&nbsp; Barely had I risen to my feet when, with a roar, the
+brute was close behind me, and at the very moment I dashed into
+the pond he aimed a blow at me which grazed my forehead, and I
+fell prostrate into it.&nbsp; On recovering I cautiously peeped,
+and there the brute stood on the edge within three yards of
+me.&nbsp; Again I submerged, but every time I moved for air he
+roared, although afraid to enter the water.&nbsp; This went on
+for an hour, when conceive my delight at seeing him roll over
+from loss of blood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cautiously approaching, I found he was stone
+dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fellowes had literally escaped death by a hair&rsquo;s
+breadth; but the scar he carried with him to his grave affected
+his brain, and he was never the same man again.&nbsp; Had the
+lion been one inch nearer his skull would have been smashed like
+an egg shell.&nbsp; Years after I saw the lion&rsquo;s head and
+shoulders at a well-known naturalist&rsquo;s in Piccadilly,
+depicted life-like dashing out of the rushes that encircled the
+African pond.</p>
+<p>Our excitement for big game being temporarily satiated after
+our comrade&rsquo;s narrow escape, we decided to direct our steps
+towards more peaceful pastures in the neighbourhood of
+Stellenbosch.&nbsp; Here large ostrich farms exist, and it was a
+unique experience to watch drafts of these huge birds being
+transferred from one farm to another.&nbsp; The procedure is
+original.&nbsp; Two or three mounted Kaffirs with long driving
+whips circle round and round the twenty or thirty birds, lashing
+them unmercifully on their bare legs till they <a
+name="page218"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 218</span>start into
+a trot, which eventually ends in a pace that the riders at full
+gallop have difficulty in keeping up with.&nbsp; In my search for
+information I was assured that the feathers so much in demand for
+&ldquo;matinee hats&rdquo; were moulted from the birds; but this
+I found to be not strictly accurate, and much cruel
+&ldquo;plucking&rdquo; passed under my own observation.&nbsp;
+Ostrich egg omelette is delicious; six of us breakfasted off
+<i>one</i> egg, and my sensations were as if I had swallowed an
+omnibus.</p>
+<p>But perhaps the most ridiculous experience to be obtained in
+South Africa is associated with the (apparently) inoffensive
+penguin.&nbsp; Any one looking at these sedate creatures at the
+Zoological Gardens would hardly believe that they can bite and
+take a piece out of one&rsquo;s calf with the dexterity of a
+bull-terrier.&nbsp; It was shortly after the experience above
+related that we turned our steps towards Penguin Island, which
+lies to the south of Table Bay.&nbsp; We had been offered a
+&ldquo;cast over&rdquo; in one of the fishing boats that proceed
+there periodically in the interests of the lessee who, renting
+this valuable island for a few pounds a year, makes an enormous
+income by the sale of the guano.</p>
+<p>We had landed cheerily, and were roaring at the absurd
+attitudes taken up under every ledge and stone by these pompous
+old birds, when poor Bobby, going a little too close, was seized
+by the leg with the grip of a rat-trap.</p>
+<p>When the guano parties visit the island they combine another
+industry, and collect some thousands of eggs, which are
+considered a delicacy by the Africander gourmets.</p>
+<p>Personally, I found them too strong, although I plead guilty
+to having massacred some fifty penguins by knocking them on the
+head for the sake of their breasts.&nbsp; The oil that exhales
+from them for months, despite the alum and sifted ashes, is
+incredible; but <a name="page219"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+219</span>they will repay the trouble, and after scientific
+manipulation by a London furrier are highly appreciated for muffs
+and boas.</p>
+<p>The albatross that swarm in the vicinity of Table Bay, and
+which are caught in large numbers by the Malay fishermen, enabled
+me to create a new industry.&nbsp; Finding that the flesh only
+was used by the Malays, I offered the handsome price of one penny
+for every pair of pinion bones duly delivered at the barracks;
+these I forthwith filed off at each end, and tying them into
+bundles, stuffed them into ants&rsquo; nests.&nbsp; Within a week
+they were as clear as whistles, and within a month I possessed a
+fagot of some hundreds.&nbsp; The recital of an absurd sequel may
+not be amiss.&nbsp; Albatross quills of twelve and fifteen inches
+are a popular species of pipe stem, which, when encircled with a
+threepenny silver band attached to a shilling amber mouthpiece,
+may be seen in leading tobacconists&rsquo; labelled twenty
+shillings.&nbsp; Entering a palatial establishment in Regent
+Street on my return home, I got the proprietor into conversation,
+and was assured that they were very difficult things to procure,
+and that he would gladly &ldquo;pay anything&rdquo; if only he
+could get some more.&nbsp; Having thoroughly compromised him, I
+returned next day with a cab full, and although exceptionally
+long and perfect, I was surprised to hear they were by no means
+up to the mark, and in my desperation accepted a box of cigars in
+exchange for what he probably cleared &pound;50 on.</p>
+<p>Yet another experience&mdash;not strictly of a sporting
+character&mdash;was connected with sticks.&nbsp; On my return
+home I brought with me some hundreds of the rarest specimens from
+Ceylon, Mauritius, and the Cape.&nbsp; Conceive my
+disappointment, after an animated barter with Briggs, of St.
+James&rsquo;s Street, to be grateful to accept any three of my
+own sticks mounted to order in exchange for what must have
+supplied half the <a name="page220"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+220</span>golden calves of the West End with sticks varying from
+two to three guineas a-piece.</p>
+<p>The above two incidents exemplify what is described as the
+encouragement of British industries.</p>
+<p>At the risk of wearying the reader I will give an absurd
+incident that once occurred in India.&nbsp; We had organised a
+party to hunt up a tiger that had been seen near the village of
+Dharwar, not far from Belgaum.&nbsp; On our way to the
+rendezvous&mdash;where the serious search was to
+commence&mdash;one of our party who had wandered a little out of
+his course rushed frantically up to us, exclaiming: &ldquo;I came
+suddenly within thirty yards of the brute fast asleep at the foot
+of the nullah.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; we all asked, &ldquo;why didn&rsquo;t you
+shoot him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Pon my word, I had half a mind to,&rdquo; was
+the heartfelt reply&mdash;&ldquo;but, so help me bob, I funked
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Touching the fringe of these vast hunting grounds will, I
+hope, be forgiven me, for although six thousand miles from
+London, they nevertheless bring up very happy memories of the
+long-ago sixties.</p>
+<p>Sir John Bissett, afterwards commanding the Infantry Brigade
+at Gibraltar, but at the time a resident at Grahamstown, was the
+Great Nimrod of the Cape.</p>
+<p>It was he that organised the elephant hunts for the Duke of
+Edinburgh, at one of which the Prince shot the immense beast
+whose head confronted one on entering Clarence House.&nbsp;
+Although I did not actually see it shot, I was not far distant at
+the time.</p>
+<p>It was weeks after our party&rsquo;s return to Cape Town that
+Colonel Zebulon Pike brought me two splendid stuffed specimens of
+the boatswain bird, the rarest of the gull tribe.</p>
+<p>As I admired their mauve and white plumage and the two long
+scarlet feathers that constitute their tail, I could not resist
+remarking: &ldquo;Why, Colonel, where did you get
+these?&rdquo;&nbsp; To which he replied: <a
+name="page221"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 221</span>&ldquo;I
+shot them one morning after bathing, before you fellows were
+up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was not a boatswain bird within fifty miles of where we
+had been, and the specimens had evidently been cured for
+years.</p>
+<p>It was only a righteous lie, such as the generous
+&ldquo;Colonel&rdquo; could never resist.</p>
+<h2><a name="page222"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+222</span>CHAPTER XX.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">EASTWARD HO!</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Perhaps</span> no ingredients are more
+certain to produce an explosion in a limited space than a Post
+Captain proceeding as a passenger on the ship of an officer some
+months his junior.&nbsp; It was my privilege once to watch one of
+these preliminary simmerings during the latter sixties and the
+subsequent inevitable d&eacute;nouement.</p>
+<p>George Malcolm, who in his younger days had had a
+distinguished career as flag-lieutenant at Portsmouth, but for a
+decade had lived the indolent life of a German at Frankfort,
+being compelled by the regulations to put in sea time as a Post
+Captain, was proceeding with a new crew to recommission the
+<i>Danae</i> on the West Indian station.&nbsp; It was not long
+before he developed his Teutonic acquirements.&nbsp; Smoking half
+the night in his cabin, he intimated to his crew that they might
+smoke when they pleased.&nbsp; Keeping his lights burning after
+hours, he next came into collision with the master-at-arms, who
+reported the irregularity to the captain, a peremptory order
+being issued that Malcolm was not to be made an exception, and
+that the regulations were to be enforced.&nbsp; The little
+man&mdash;Captain Grant, of the <i>Himalaya</i>&mdash;who thus
+entered the lists at the first challenge was well-known
+throughout the Navy as a veritable tartar.&nbsp; Standing little
+over five feet high, <a name="page223"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 223</span>he had the body of a giant; his
+lower proportions were short and far from comely.&nbsp; These
+were the combatants for whom the arena was now cleared.&nbsp;
+Malcolm opened the attack by repeating the light-burning after
+hours.&nbsp; Grant retorted by ordering the master-at-arms to
+enter if necessary and carry out his orders.&nbsp; Next morning
+the two captains met in presence of their respective first
+lieutenants, and abused and accused each other of insubordination
+and mutiny.</p>
+<p>The crews meanwhile took up the quarrel, and some of the
+<i>Danae</i> men had the temerity to cheek the
+master-at-arms.&nbsp; To this little Grant replied by tying up
+six of them to the shrouds, and giving them four dozen apiece
+with the cat.&nbsp; This checked the effervescence, and a few
+days later the ship entered Port Royal.</p>
+<p>Then followed reports.&nbsp; But the admiral was one of the
+psalm-singing school, and not possessing sufficient character to
+adjudicate upon it himself, referred the matter home.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile the <i>Danae</i> was recommissioned and sailed away,
+the <i>Himalaya</i> returned to Portsmouth, and so the matter
+ended.</p>
+<p>A flogging in the old days was a very &ldquo;thorough&rdquo;
+affair, and lost nothing in the matter of detail.&nbsp; Four
+stalwart boatswains stripped to their shirts stood like statues,
+on the deck reposed four green baize bags, each containing a
+cat.</p>
+<p>When all was ready the captain&rsquo;s warrant was
+read&mdash;for it may or may not be generally known that every
+skipper, from battleship to pigboat, is a justice of the peace,
+and has the power of life and death on the high seas&mdash;and
+then the operation began.&nbsp; Occasionally some genius, having
+prearranged to outwit the authorities, would feign collapse by
+suddenly tucking up his legs; but a feel of the pulse and a nod
+soon adjusted matters, and the culprit was in &ldquo;full
+song.&rdquo;&nbsp; And then the little man made a speech, not too
+long, but very much to the point: &ldquo;Now, my lads, <a
+name="page224"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 224</span>when you
+want any more, you know where to come for it.&rdquo;&nbsp; After
+which he cocked his cap, and descended to his cabin with his
+sword clanking behind.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s a way they had in the
+Navy.</p>
+<p>All this, of course, was before the central authority was
+transferred from Whitehall to Whitechapel, and without expressing
+an opinion on the merits or demerits of corporal punishment, one
+may be permitted to ask: Are the bluejackets of to-day any better
+than Peel&rsquo;s Naval Brigade in the Crimea, or the tough old
+tars that helped to quell the Mutiny?&nbsp; Are the specimens one
+occasionally meets smoking cigarettes and Orange Blossom tobacco
+superior to the old sea dogs that chewed what would have killed a
+rhinoceros and rolled quids of &rsquo;baccy saturated in
+rum?&nbsp; Perhaps yes, perhaps no.&nbsp; Be that as it may,
+flogging has ever been found the only deterrent for a certain
+class of scum which occasionally rises to the surface even in the
+Navy.</p>
+<p>On another occasion, when I was embarking at Portsmouth,
+barely had the <i>Himalaya</i> left the side of the quay when the
+Honourable Mrs. Montmorency (afterwards Lady Frankfort),
+accompanied by her father, Sir John Michel, and a crowd of
+sisters, cousins, and aunts, might have been seen rushing
+frantically towards the slowly-moving trooper; but the cries fell
+on deaf ears, and the good ship continued her course.</p>
+<p>Next night in Queenstown Harbour a bumboat might have been
+seen struggling against wind and tide to reach the trooper lying
+a mile out at sea, which, on getting alongside, was found to
+contain the lady, who, since we last saw her, had undertaken a
+journey of four hundred miles, attended by every discomfort that
+travelling flesh is heir to, and all because she did not know
+little Grant, and expected to impress him by arriving five
+minutes late.&nbsp; The same lady very nearly had a similar
+experience a <a name="page225"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+225</span>month later at St. Helena, and only just reached the
+deck as the &ldquo;blue Peter&rdquo; was being hauled down.</p>
+<p>It was on this same voyage that a subaltern, whose duties
+compelled him to be on deck at daylight, remarked to the
+navigating-lieutenant later in the day: &ldquo;How splendid the
+sun looked this morning rising over the hills.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh! yes,&rdquo; was the snubbing reply, &ldquo;we call
+that Cape Flyaway.&nbsp; Why, man, we are five hundred miles from
+the West coast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That night, when hammocks were being issued, a cry of
+&ldquo;Land on the port bow&rdquo; brought all hands on deck, and
+lo! we were steaming full speed for land with 1,400 souls on
+board.&nbsp; Almost in front of us was an angry surf, a little
+beyond it tropical foliage was distinctly visible, and then
+followed the silence as when engines are stopped, and with extra
+hands at both wheels, the shout of &ldquo;Hard
+a-starboard!&rdquo; pierced the darkness, and we were going full
+speed in the opposite direction.</p>
+<p>Cape Flyaway cost poor little Piper a reprimand and half-pay
+for life, and an innocent wife and family&mdash;God help
+them&mdash;may still be suffering for that disregarded
+sunrise.</p>
+<p>When dear old Admiral Commerell succeeded Purvis as
+Commander-in-Chief at the Cape, things at Government House hummed
+as they had never done before, and the energy that the little man
+put into his hospitality was as conspicuous as when fighting on
+sea or on land.&nbsp; With more than the lives attributed to a
+cat, it is incredible that he should have survived a blunderbuss
+full of slugs on the Prah a few years later, which, fired point
+blank, drove half a monkey-jacket into his lungs.&nbsp; Though
+brought to Cape Town on the <i>Rattlesnake</i>, more as a
+formality than with any hopes of recovery, and for months after
+spitting up pieces of blue serge, he rallied as he had often done
+before, and the last time I saw him was in a Maxim gun show-room
+in Victoria Street, where, <a name="page226"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 226</span>as &ldquo;Managing Director,&rdquo;
+he explained the intricacies of the weapon to every &rsquo;Arry
+that chose to look in, and so trade laid hands in his declining
+years on as brave a recipient of the Victoria Cross as ever trod
+a quarter-deck.</p>
+<p>When the flying squadron under Beauchamp Seymour was expected
+at Ascension on its return from the Cape, great excitement
+prevailed from the possibility of a visit, and a trooper that was
+&ldquo;laying off&rdquo; was in such deadly fear of any want of
+smartness being observable that the washing by the
+soldiers&rsquo; wives that had been permitted was made short work
+of, and petticoats, shirts, and socks that were fluttering in the
+breeze were ruthlessly ordered down, for fear some signalman
+should detect a strange signal and note it in the log-book.&nbsp;
+For this lynx-eyed race is incapable of being hoodwinked; indeed,
+so dexterous did they become in the Channel Squadron some years
+ago (and doubtless are so still) that they read the signals for
+fleet man&oelig;uvres before the flags were broken, necessitating
+the entire bunch being rolled into one, and so giving every ship
+an equal chance of displaying their smartness.&nbsp; Of the
+turtle we discussed recently, the &ldquo;last phase&rdquo; is to
+be seen in the smoking-room of a well-known hostelry in
+Leadenhall Street, where, peeping through the tanks, numerous
+specimens may be seen blinking and winking as if in reproach at
+the unfair advantage taken of them by perfidious Albion in
+leading them into captivity when guests of the nation and in an
+interesting condition.</p>
+<p>Ascension, as most of us are aware, is on the direct road to
+the Cape and within easy distance of St. Helena&mdash;a by no
+means unpleasant place, despite an unjust prejudice that attaches
+to it.</p>
+<p>It was on board a Union steamer that the absurd incident I
+witnessed took place, when the diamond fields were coming into
+notice and attracting <a name="page227"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 227</span>speculators in every kind of ware
+likely to find favour amongst the natives, who had not then been
+educated in Houndsditch ways to the extent they have since
+arrived at.&nbsp; The genius who contemplated a rich harvest not
+discounted by any such absurd formalities as paying
+&ldquo;duty,&rdquo; declaring contraband, or propitiating
+officials apt to be too inquisitive, was a Hebrew jeweller of a
+pronounced type with the unusual adornment of carroty hair, who
+afterwards developed into a Bond Street shopkeeper, and may still
+be seen shorn of his sunny locks, which nevertheless still retain
+a pleasing suspicion of the blaze they once emitted.&nbsp; The
+chief officer was a shrewd individual, who long before we arrived
+at Table Bay had taken his passenger&rsquo;s measure, and what
+added insult to injury was a presentation to him of a wretched
+ring the wholesale price of which could not have exceeded ten
+shillings.&nbsp; Had he pressed a five-pound note into his hand
+it would have proved a less expensive procedure.&nbsp; The sequel
+was disastrous, as, passing through the dock gates, &rsquo;Enery
+was requested to turn out his pockets, and the percentage to the
+informant amounted to a very handsome sum.&nbsp; Who the
+informant was&mdash;actuated by duty!&mdash;it is needless to
+discuss, but our friend got to the Fields at last and turned a
+considerable profit on his &ldquo;Brummagem&rdquo; wares.</p>
+<p>Years later his enterprise again brought him into notice by
+providing a young ass (whom many will recollect), who had come
+into &pound;70,000 on attaining his majority, not only with a
+flat, but completely furnishing it, and then smothering him with
+bracelets and bangles for personal wear, and trinkets and
+gimcracks that made him rattle to a greater extent than the
+historical lady of Banbury Cross.</p>
+<p>The sequel was more melodramatic.&nbsp; Within a year the
+entire &pound;70,000 was gone, within another year the prodigal
+was in his grave, and, despite the strenuous <a
+name="page228"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 228</span>efforts of
+an elder brother to recover a trifle from the clutches of a
+philanthropist, a feather merchant, and dramatic author&mdash;all
+since gathered into Abraham&rsquo;s bosom&mdash;the shekels never
+changed hands&mdash;s&rsquo;help me&mdash;and &rsquo;Enery is
+still one of the most respected Elders in Israel.</p>
+<p>It was in &rsquo;65 on the island of Ascension, where I
+happened temporarily to be, that an awful tragedy was on the
+verge of being investigated by a Court of Inquiry, but it was
+realised that the terrible Atlantic rollers that perpetrated the
+cruel deed and the innocent children that were the victims had
+left no data for the groundwork of the conventional farce.</p>
+<p>It was on that dismal rock whose only merits are its
+strategical coaling position and its inexhaustible supply of
+turtle that during the season when those insidious rollers of
+unbroken water, without sound, without warning, suddenly spread
+over the sandy beach, two or three children of an officer of
+Marines were suddenly swept off their legs and carried by the
+back-wash with the velocity of a millstream towards the coral
+reefs a hundred yards out at sea, where death awaited them.</p>
+<p>On the one side an expanse of sand that forthwith resumed its
+placid, shining surface, on the other a ripple literally
+bristling with fins of the most voracious species of shark known
+to naturalists.</p>
+<p>In a second it was all over, and the crimson pall that covered
+the face of the blue Atlantic told all there was to tell of the
+terrible catastrophe.</p>
+<p>The few observation boxes containing niggers on the look-out
+for turtle had seen nothing, heard nothing; the only eye-witness
+was the helpless nursemaid, and only because there was nothing to
+tell was the farce of a &ldquo;Court of Inquiry&rdquo;
+abandoned.</p>
+<p>The turtle industry is simplicity itself: so soon as one
+advances sufficiently inland a couple of niggers rush out and
+turn her over and lug her into the tank, <a
+name="page229"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 229</span>when her
+laying days are over, for it is the female only that is captured
+as she comes to deposit her eggs, and no human eye has ever seen
+nor any alderman ever guzzled amid the green fat of the male
+animal.</p>
+<p>Ascension is best described as the most God-forsaken spot in
+creation, except perhaps Aden, to which must be given the
+palm.&nbsp; Here the naval garrison seem to have grown into a
+mechanical routine, and only change their monotonous wading
+through sand by an occasional day&rsquo;s leave to Green
+Mountain, on whose summit the only three blades of grass on the
+island struggle for existence.&nbsp; How these gallant men are
+chosen for this dreary duty it is difficult to say; no alien
+princeling attached to the British Navy ever appears to have his
+turn; and one must assume that &ldquo;merit tempered with
+non-interest&rdquo; is the qualification that controls the
+roster.&nbsp; Of the turtle there can be no two opinions; in
+unlimited supplies, two huge tanks, through which the tide ebbs
+and flows, contain some hundreds of these delectable creatures,
+delectable only with the aid of the highest embellishments, but
+the most nauseous sickening of &ldquo;<i>plats</i>&rdquo; in the
+shape of rations.&nbsp; Every man-of-war calling at Ascension is
+compelled to ship a dozen, which lie for weeks on deck, their
+heads resting on a swab, and the hose playing on them of a
+morning, while a stench more insidious than the vapours of a
+fried-fish shop attaches itself to everything; one&rsquo;s
+hair-brush reeks like a turtle fin, and whether one eats, drinks,
+or smokes, it&rsquo;s <i>toujours tortue</i>.</p>
+<p>During the Ashanti war, Ascension appeared at its best; in its
+comfortable hospital the wounded from spear and slug, and the
+dying from West Coast fever, obtained the best of
+attendance.&nbsp; In it I saw Thompson, of the Inniskilling
+Dragoons, just brought down from the Prah&mdash;one of the most
+popular men in the <a name="page230"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+230</span>Army&mdash;die; whilst from it many a brave man has
+been carried to his last home, and many a sufferer who has
+entered its portals in apparently the last stage of fever and
+ague has been pulled round, and put on board with renewed life to
+return to England to bless the surgeons and curse Ascension.</p>
+<p>It was on my return home in &rsquo;69 that I met old Toogood
+(whom everybody knew) at Aden&mdash;who, rushing up to me,
+whispered, &ldquo;Come along, I&rsquo;ve secured a
+carriage,&rdquo; and following with that glee that all who have
+crossed the Desert will appreciate, I was horrified to find he
+had all his bundles in the quarantine carriage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great heavens,&rdquo; I exclaimed, &ldquo;do you know
+what this means?&rdquo; and he hardly gave me time to explain the
+pains and penalties before he was in full cry after the rascally
+Egyptian guard, who, realising he was dealing with a novice, had
+accepted a sovereign for placing him in a carriage by
+himself.</p>
+<p>In those long-ago days&mdash;and possibly still&mdash;every
+train had a quarantine carriage, entering which meant vigorous
+isolation till fumigation had taken place, and &ldquo;even
+betting&rdquo; that one&rsquo;s cabin in the trooper at Cairo
+would have remained vacant homeward bound.</p>
+<p>When the Japanese were airing their aspirations at becoming
+the great naval power they now are, I witnessed one of their
+virgin attempts at navigating a warship under the control of
+British officers.&nbsp; Confident of their ability, and fretting
+to show what they could do, they one day insisted on landing
+their instructors and assuming temporary control of the
+ship.&nbsp; The development was not long in coming.&nbsp; Away
+flew the ship, in graceful circles round and round the bay, when
+suddenly a dashing man&oelig;uvre beyond the comprehension of the
+most enlightened observer, and, lo! she was steaming full speed
+for the shore.&nbsp; Within the hour she was well wedged on <a
+name="page231"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 231</span>a sandy
+bottom, and a tidal wave not long after having considerately
+lifted her a few hundred yards higher up, the hull was converted
+into an hotel, and for years gave ocular proof of Japan&rsquo;s
+first triumph in navigation.&nbsp; That was in the later sixties,
+when Togo was still in the womb of futurity.</p>
+<p>In those long-ago days, Yokohama had not attained its present
+respectable civilisation; top hats were sought after as the
+daintiest of fashionable attainments; every battered specimen on
+board fetched its weight in gold; open baths for mixed bathing
+were to be met with in the public thoroughfares; British
+regimental guards disarmed fanatics before allowing them to enter
+the town; inlaid bronzes, miniature trees, and genuine curios
+were procurable; massive Birmingham products had not become an
+industry wherewith to catch the unwary; public crucifixions by
+transfixing with bamboo stakes (such as I witnessed in the case
+of the murder of a British officer) were still in full blast, and
+the sweetest little girls were to be bought for domestic service,
+and sent to be dealt with by the nearest magistrate on the breath
+of a suspicion of breach of fidelity.&nbsp; To go a mile beyond
+the Treaty Port was to court certain death, whilst to remain
+peacefully within the town and visit the various day and night
+entertainments was as delightful an existence as the most
+blas&eacute; reprobate could desire.</p>
+<h2><a name="page232"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+232</span>CHAPTER XXI.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE GUILLOTINE AND MADAME
+RACHEL.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> one of my numerous visits to
+Paris a notorious poisoner&mdash;Le-Pommerais&mdash;was awaiting
+execution by the guillotine.</p>
+<p>I am not of a cruel disposition, but I confess that certain
+sights afford me a morbid gratification, the more so as I know
+that one witness more or less can in no way affect the victim,
+who, in nine cases out of ten, is dazed, despite the bravado that
+is sometimes assumed.</p>
+<p>I had seen M&uuml;ller and the pirates hanged in London, and a
+man &ldquo;garrotted&rdquo; at Barcelona; I had seen two soldiers
+shot at Bregenz on the Lake Constance, and now for the first time
+in my life I was within measurable distance of the Place de la
+Gr&egrave;ve, where the most hideous drama, accompanied by all
+the pomp that a dramatic nation can introduce, was to be enacted
+one morning.&nbsp; But what morning?&nbsp; There was the rub, for
+the French are nothing if not original, and whilst permitting the
+unhappy victim to drink and smoke and play cards till 2 a.m.
+ruthlessly rouse him a couple of hours later, and roughly proceed
+to prepare his toilette.</p>
+<p>Inquire as I did, nobody could give me the day, and although
+on more than one occasion I had driven to the accursed spot and
+waylaid officials likely to know, their replies were invariably
+the same; nobody knew, nobody cared, it would be time enough when
+<a name="page233"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 233</span>the
+fateful morning arrived, and then <i>voil&agrave;</i>; a rush of
+two powerful men on a defenceless, trussed fellow-creature; a
+shove with unnecessary violence on to a plank, a strap or two
+unnecessarily tight to secure the unresisting wretch; a jerk and
+a flash of burnished steel; a quivering trunk, and a head
+squirting blood yards high, and the handful of sawdust, and the
+roar of a delighted multitude as &ldquo;Monsieur de Paris&rdquo;
+leisurely proceeds to light a cigarette, and within five minutes
+the whole ghastly paraphernalia has disappeared within the gloomy
+parallelograms of La Roquette.</p>
+<p>Terrible as all this sounds, is it not less terrible than the
+secret executions indulged in by our own merciful laws?&nbsp;
+There at least excitement must for the time hold the victim till
+the supreme moment arrives, whilst here the granite walls, the
+grim officials, the parson mumbling prayers, divest the function
+of everything but strict officialism, which to the culprit must
+indeed be the very bitterness of death.</p>
+<p>When the name of Count La Grange was more familiar to English
+ears than it is in these forty years later days, it was my
+delightful privilege to know&mdash;if not the redoubtable Count
+himself&mdash;a fair and important member of the distinguished
+sportsman&rsquo;s family circle.&nbsp; I had, indeed, seen
+&ldquo;Waterloo avenged&rdquo; at Epsom in the June of 1864, when
+Gladiateur left the field miles behind; but it was only in the
+following autumn that I made the personal acquaintance of the
+goddess who professed a kind of allegiance to the sporting
+Frenchman, and re-avenged, as it were, the vengeance that had
+been meted out to my country the previous summer.</p>
+<p>I was in Paris under the wing of Bob Hope-Johnstone, the
+terrible major, whose dislike was a thing to be avoided, and
+whose blow, as a certain bric-&agrave;-brac pair of Israelite
+brothers once discovered to their cost, was like the kick of a
+horse.&nbsp; We had dipped <a name="page234"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 234</span>pretty freely into the delights of
+that most delightful of cities, when, sipping our coffee one
+evening on the terrace of the Caf&eacute; de la Paix, we were
+transfixed&mdash;at least, I was&mdash;by what appeared a
+heavenly being stepping out of a brougham.&nbsp; In those
+benighted days a brisk trade was done in the &ldquo;Cabinets
+particulier&rdquo; that extended over the upper floors of the
+historical caf&eacute;, and night after night the best men and
+the loveliest women of the Third Empire resorted thither by
+battalions and indulged in every delight that the best of cookery
+and the best of wines never failed to stimulate.</p>
+<p>An obliging <i>ma&icirc;tre d&rsquo;h&ocirc;tel</i> had
+informed me who the lady was, and possessing a reserve of
+assurance, since happily simmered down into a reserved and
+retiring disposition, I sent up my name without further ado and
+craved permission to pay my homage.&nbsp; It would be absurd and
+nauseous to repeat the beautiful phrases one poured into the ear
+of a being who, if alive now&mdash;which is doubtful&mdash;has
+probably not a tooth in her head; suffice to say she was a superb
+&eacute;cart&eacute; player, and initiated me into the rudiments
+of the game.&nbsp; It seemed marvellous to me that such a goddess
+should strive so laboriously to overcome in me the violation of
+every canon of the game, but in those long-ago days I was fair of
+hair and of a ruddy countenance, and the coincidence may not have
+been so extraordinary after all.&nbsp; Often of an afternoon I
+visited her hotel in the Bois de Boulogne, and it was only when
+La Grange was known to be in Paris that my going in and coming
+out was in the least circumscribed.</p>
+<p>Sitting at a table, with his blubber lips lingering over a
+glass of absinthe, was our old acquaintance,
+&ldquo;Jellybelly,&rdquo; who, noticing the late Duke of Hamilton
+and Claud de Crespigny within hail, bellowed out, &ldquo;Will
+your Grace tell me the French for crab, I feel itching for one at
+dinner?&rdquo; and on being told a <a name="page235"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 235</span>species&mdash;not of the
+sea&mdash;shouted in his purest Franco-Houndsditch,
+&ldquo;<i>Garsong</i>, <i>apporty moir un morphion
+r&ocirc;ti</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the police have lately been somewhat in evidence over the
+commission as to whether they are as corrupt as some people
+consider them, an instance of over-zeal that occurred long ago
+will, I trust, be laid to heart in future criticisms.</p>
+<p>Lord Chief Justice Cockburn and his boon companion, Serjeant
+Ballantine, once witnessed an act of unnecessary brutality
+towards a female in the Haymarket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why this unnecessary violence, my man?&rdquo; inquired
+the amiable Sir Alexander.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mind your own business, or I&rsquo;ll show you,&rdquo;
+was the reply of the zealous constable, and within a trice the
+female was forgotten and her two champions found themselves in
+Vine Street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Name,&rdquo; inquired a priggish inspector of the Lord
+Chief Justice, and on being informed, he added: &ldquo;No
+doubt&mdash;we&rsquo;ve heard this kind of thing
+before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yours,&rdquo; he continued, addressing the great
+serjeant.&nbsp; &ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; he added, on being told,
+and nothing but the entry of an official who recognised them
+prevented the two great legal luminaries from spending a night in
+the cells.</p>
+<p>As every one is aware, neither of these distinguished men were
+saints, but they respected the ordinary laws of humanity, and did
+not admit that every poor wretch who had stooped to folly was the
+legitimate target for kicks and cuffs and lying testimony.</p>
+<p>Although a leap into the seventies is necessary, the sensation
+that the so-called &ldquo;Great Turf Fraud&rdquo; caused must
+excuse a brief reference to it.&nbsp; It was in 1877 that an old
+lady with ample means conceived the brilliant idea of adding to
+her income by speculating on the Turf.&nbsp; Her choice of
+colleagues, however, was not a happy one, and before long she was
+<a name="page236"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 236</span>led
+blindly by a genius known to posterity as Benson.&nbsp; Amongst
+his staff was a brilliant phalanx, the two brothers Carr, Murray,
+Bates, and the inevitable solicitor, one Froggatt.</p>
+<p>A house in Northumberland Street, since pulled down, was where
+these worthies matured their plans, and by the irony of fate, in
+the very next house lived Superintendent Thompson, of Bow Street,
+who, astute as he was reputed to be, was oblivious of the
+cauldron that was simmering for months under his very nose.</p>
+<p>It was in the suitable month of April&mdash;possibly the
+first&mdash;that the old lady (Madame Goncourt) opened the ball
+by paying out in driblets &pound;13,000.&nbsp; When the sum rose
+to &pound;40,000 she became sceptical, and took her first
+sensible step and consulted a lawyer.</p>
+<p>At this point the police came on the scene, and again the
+genius of Benson appears, for he, grasping the situation, bought
+up certain Scotland Yard inspectors who, for a
+consideration&mdash;and a large one&mdash;undertook to warn the
+chief culprits how and when danger was to be avoided.</p>
+<p>Consultations in Northumberland Street were now deemed risky,
+so the venue was changed to the &ldquo;Rainbow Tavern&rdquo; (now
+known as the &ldquo;Argyll&rdquo;), a pot-house abutting on
+Oxford Street, and there the original conspirators and their
+solicitor, augmented by Inspectors Druscovitch, Meiklejohn, and
+Palmer, arranged for telegrams and other details to defeat the
+ends of justice.</p>
+<p>The commonplace sequel will suggest itself to most
+people.&nbsp; Benson, the two Carrs, Bates, and Froggatt were
+sent to penal servitude for fifteen and ten years
+respectively.&nbsp; Later on Benson &ldquo;peached&rdquo; on his
+police allies, who in November were tried, Druscovitch and
+Meiklejohn receiving two years each, and Palmer being
+acquitted.</p>
+<p><a name="page237"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+237</span>Madame Goncourt, it may be added, was still without her
+profits.</p>
+<p>After his fifteen years, Benson was currently supposed to have
+burst out as the director of numerous shops in the metropolis,
+where electric appliances for the instant cure of gout and
+inhalers warranted to contain &ldquo;compressed Italian
+air&rdquo; and to make everybody a Patti or a Mario were to be
+had for a guinea; whilst a further guinea entitled the purchaser
+to a consultation with the specialist.</p>
+<p>This, however, did not last long, and Benson ended his career
+shortly after by throwing himself over the balustrade of an
+American gaol.</p>
+<p>Surely never was a commonplace affair dignified with such a
+high-sounding title!&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas the novelty that did
+it.</p>
+<p>Where one voracious old woman existed in the seventies, the
+twentieth century could produce a dozen, and where two policemen
+were caught accepting blackmail, a battalion exists to-day, only
+their tactics have marched with the times, and instead of
+receiving their levies in pot-houses, they secrete themselves in
+cupboards and receive &ldquo;hush money&rdquo; from alien
+brothel-keepers.&nbsp; At the same time, they affect the sorry
+appearance associated with badly cut frock-coats and brimless
+tall hats.&nbsp; The boots, however, beat them.</p>
+<p>Very few of the <i>dramatis person&aelig;</i> appear to be
+left.</p>
+<p>Druscovitch for some years was employed as a Strand hotel
+detective.&nbsp; Meiklejohn may occasionally be seen, unkempt and
+down-at-heel, in the vicinity of mediocre saloon bars (glasses
+only), and Madame Goncourt has long since explained to the
+Recording Angel that though she was the first, she certainly
+won&rsquo;t be the last, who has missed the certainties that go
+begging on the Turf.</p>
+<p>But the sixties were celebrated for a much more <a
+name="page238"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 238</span>amusing and
+widespread example of human credulity and vanity than the humdrum
+so-called &ldquo;Turf frauds,&rdquo; with their unsavoury,
+commonplace ingredients of a voracious old woman, a bevy of
+sharpers, and a file of flat-footed police-inspectors.</p>
+<p>It was in 1868 that London heard that a divine being was
+amongst them, coming no one knew whence, and whose age no one
+could guess, gifted with the power of arresting Time, restoring
+youth and beauty, and ready&mdash;for a consideration&mdash;to
+impart these blessings to all who sought her aid.</p>
+<p>It was in the narrowest part of Bond Street that the goddess
+pitched her tent, and to say that the traffic was impeded would
+convey but a poor idea of the congestion that retarded locomotion
+in that worst-built of thoroughfares.&nbsp; Old men desirous of
+enamelling their bald old pates, ponderous females with scratch
+wigs and asthma, and girls, pretty and ugly, with defects capable
+of improvement, hustled and tussled to pay the fee of the
+wonderful enchantress who guaranteed to restore youth to old age
+and make one and all &ldquo;beautiful for ever.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame Rachel was a bony and forbidding looking female, with
+the voice of a Deal boatman and the physique of a
+grenadier.&nbsp; The robes she affected when receiving her
+clients, and the crystals and gimcracks that clattered at her
+girdle, might well inspire awe, as, emerging from behind massive
+curtains, she approached her victim with some phrase suggestive
+of &ldquo;knowing all about it,&rdquo; which, indeed, was part of
+the system when time and opportunity permitted, or the status of
+the client justified it.</p>
+<p>Rachel rarely smiled; when she laughed&mdash;which was rarer
+still&mdash;it was the laugh of a rhinoceros.&nbsp; Assisting her
+was a beautiful girl, of the <i>beaut&eacute; du diable</i> type,
+with the suspicion of a cast in one of her heavy-lashed eyes,
+which made her more bewitching than ever.</p>
+<p><a name="page239"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+239</span>&ldquo;How old do you think my daughter?&rdquo; once
+inquired the arch-impostor of a man from whom I had it
+direct.&nbsp; He having replied &ldquo;Seventeen,&rdquo; she
+turned to the siren with, &ldquo;Tell this gentleman, my child,
+what you saw during the French Revolution, and how I took you to
+see the execution of Marie Antoinette.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then &ldquo;Alma,&rdquo; coached to perfection, turned her
+bewitching eyes as if peering into eternity, and began a string
+of twaddle that ought not to have deceived a Bluecoat boy.</p>
+<p>Everybody consulted Madame Rachel.&nbsp; If a youth got a
+black eye at young Reed&rsquo;s sparring rooms (at the
+&ldquo;Rising Sun&rdquo; in Whitehall) it was in Bond Street he
+was made presentable for any fashionable function in the evening,
+and in every conceivable walk of life one met evidence of the
+universal sway of enamel; whilst nightly at the Opera, Rachel and
+her daughter occupied a box on the grand tier and surveyed the
+battalions of old men and old women, youths and maidens, who had
+passed through their hands.</p>
+<p>But despite Alma&rsquo;s charms, she had a narrow squeak of
+being implicated with her mother in the prosecution that followed
+later on&mdash;instead, however, she was taken in hand by Lady
+Cardigan, and made a success in Grand Opera.&nbsp; But her
+troubles were not yet over, and aspirants to her heart and hand
+(enamelled and otherwise) were in considerable evidence nightly
+at the Opera house in Paris.</p>
+<p>It was at the hands of one of these she met her fate.&nbsp;
+Carried away by jealousy or scorn, he shot her from the stalls,
+though, happily, not fatally.&nbsp; After this she disappeared,
+but not before displaying a magnanimity that was refreshing in
+the reputed daughter of the flint-hearted Rachel, for she refused
+to prosecute her assailant, who escaped with a nominal
+imprisonment.</p>
+<p><a name="page240"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 240</span>A
+controversy afterwards ensued in the daily Press as to the
+becoming height of female dress; some advocated up to the
+shoulder, others below, some a tape, some nothing; but the
+important question has not yet been set at rest, and never will
+be, despite County Council edicts in the name of propriety, or
+the hypocrisy and flunkeydom that stalk over the land.</p>
+<p>Alma in all her glory had her own ideas, and appeared
+invariably and literally in &ldquo;semi-nude.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Years after she was recognised by a former adorer at the
+Concordia Music Hall in Constantinople, but all the
+<i>beaut&eacute; du diable</i> had vanished; the cast still
+remained, but failed to ravish&mdash;Nature had worked through
+the enamel with which her skin had been saturated, and Alma pure
+and simple remained&mdash;a living example of how &ldquo;Time
+turns the old days to derision.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame Rachel&rsquo;s experiences were of a more prosy
+description, and, prosecuted a few years later by a Mrs.
+Pearce&mdash;said to have been a daughter of
+Mario&rsquo;s&mdash;whose jewels she had annexed in addition to a
+considerable sum, she was relegated to five years&rsquo; penal
+servitude.</p>
+<p>But the most amusing incident has yet to be told, although it
+seems incredible that even so foolish a woman should court
+publicity by joining in the prosecution.&nbsp; The report of the
+trial in any old paper of the period will convince the most
+sceptical of the absence of exaggeration in this ungarnished
+recital.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Borrodale was a frivolous old lady of some forty years,
+whose wealth, vanity, and frequent visits to Bond Street marked
+her out as a desirable client to the astute Rachel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve won the heart of a great lord,&rdquo; was
+her greeting one day, &ldquo;who desires to see you in your
+natural beauty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="page241"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 241</span>Mrs.
+Borrodale, having first blushed through her enamel, was not long
+in consenting, and having stipulated for a subdued light, and
+that the &ldquo;view&rdquo; should be through a curtain,
+proceeded to be enamelled from head to foot.&nbsp; On a given day
+she posed in all the beauty of her birthday suit, and Lord
+Ranelagh, who was the reputed admirer, peeped through a slit in
+the tapestry&mdash;and, let us hope, then fled.</p>
+<p>His lordship, it may be added, eventually died a
+bachelor.&nbsp; The very title is extinct, and the enamelled old
+Venus never assumed a coronet.&nbsp; After this, the old sinner
+was known as &ldquo;Peeping Tom,&rdquo; and the foal by a
+thoroughbred stallion of repute, Peeping Tom (which, however,
+never attained any position on the Turf), was christened
+Ranelagh.</p>
+<p>Incredible as it may appear, this silly old woman capped her
+indiscretion by joining in the prosecution instituted by the
+stockbroker&rsquo;s wife, and so published to a gaping world what
+might have better been left to the imagination.</p>
+<p>Rachel has, it is currently reported, two sons at the present
+moment practising as solicitors under high-sounding names, who
+not long ago wriggled out of a nasty case by the skin of their
+teeth, whilst their less acute Christian colleagues suffered the
+penalty attendant on blackmailing.</p>
+<p>But the Rachel establishment was by no means the only type
+that flourished in the long-ago sixties by pandering to human
+frailty, and the premises occupied by Madame Osch, situated at
+the corner of Piccadilly and St. James&rsquo;s Street&mdash;and
+now, like Babylon, with not one stone standing upon
+another&mdash;could have told some curious tales of wards in
+Chancery and Hebrew jewellers, and of Tommy and John, and of how
+Tommy was arrested as he started for Monte Carlo, and how John,
+smelling a rat, evaded ill effects; but the recitation would only
+bore a twentieth-century reader, for human <a
+name="page242"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 242</span>nature then
+is the same nature as now, and what flourished then in one shape
+still flourishes in another, and the only reflection worthy of
+consideration is that, if these things were done in the green
+tree, what is being done in the dry?</p>
+<h2><a name="page243"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+243</span>CHAPTER XXII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">REMINISCENCES OF THE PURPLE.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> death of the Duke of Cambridge
+recalled many instances of the kindly nature of the old
+warrior.&nbsp; Abused and ridiculed by the ignorant and unwashed
+for actions&mdash;more or less imaginary&mdash;that he was
+supposed to have been guilty of in the Crimea, it is established
+on the testimony of eye-witnesses that no man showed more
+personal bravery at Inkerman than the late illustrious
+Duke.&nbsp; Oblivious to danger, and literally wandering in and
+out amongst the dense masses of Russians, he seemed to bear a
+charmed life, and if on any occasion he selected an
+umbrella&mdash;which is by no means admitted&mdash;what greater
+proof of absolute indifference to danger?&nbsp; As well might one
+accuse Fred Burnaby of cowardice for confronting the Dervishes in
+the Soudan with a simple blackthorn.&nbsp; But royalty has its
+penalties as well as its advantages, and if the grandson of
+George III. was subject to intense excitement verging on delirium
+under exceptionally trying circumstances, let us be fair,
+gentlemen, and give the bluff old warrior his dues.</p>
+<p>In the zenith of his career, so unable was his Highness to
+refuse almost any personal request, that it was found necessary
+to chain a bulldog of the most pronounced Peninsular type on the
+very threshold of the Commander-in-Chief&rsquo;s office.</p>
+<p>For this service General MacDonald was selected <a
+name="page244"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 244</span>as military
+secretary, and any one who had the capacity of passing his meshes
+was enabled to present himself at his Royal Highness&rsquo;s next
+lev&eacute;e.</p>
+<p>These functions were divested of all formality; an extension
+of leave, a request to go to the dep&ocirc;t, an application to
+join the service companies, was invariably more successful if
+preferred personally, and &ldquo;Well, sir, what is it?&rdquo;
+with a kindly shake of the hand saved many a heart-burning and
+protracted filtration through a dozen departments, usually ending
+in a snub.</p>
+<p>Seated in the room was his aide-de-camp&mdash;the solitary
+specimen in uniform.&nbsp; Colonel Fraser, V.C., had commanded
+for years the celebrated &ldquo;Cherry-bobs&rdquo; (11th
+Hussars), and if a little unsociable whilst in actual command,
+the mannerism had entirely disappeared in the courteous
+mouthpiece of the Duke.</p>
+<p>Gazing one afternoon on the placid features of the
+&ldquo;Royal George&rdquo; before the new War Office, the
+occasion on which he once visited a station not 100 miles from
+London and told the colonel and officers generally that he
+didn&rsquo;t believe a word they said, and stamped and fumed and
+swore and threatened, came vividly to my mind.&nbsp; There had
+been a fracas in the canteen during the officers&rsquo; mess
+hour, which eventually developed into a riot, and then was
+quelled.&nbsp; No one in the mess-house appears to have heard it,
+and it was only next morning that the matter, after
+investigation, was reported to the Horse Guards.&nbsp; The
+&ldquo;Royal George,&rdquo; who was distinctly apoplectic, ran
+many such chances of combustion in his younger days, for the old
+warrior was by no means mealy-mouthed and was not above playing
+to the gallery, as represented by the Press, and although he
+could never aspire to rank with General Pennefather, he could,
+when circumstances demanded, swear like any trooper.</p>
+<p>It was the 11th that Lord Cardigan brought to <a
+name="page245"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 245</span>such a
+wonderful state of perfection and for the command of which he had
+paid upwards of &pound;20,000 over regulation.&nbsp; It was in
+the 11th that the fire-eating Colonel shot a captain of his
+regiment dead in a duel, and only saved his commission by his
+overwhelming interest.&nbsp; It was a regiment in which every
+private was dressed and redressed at his Captain&rsquo;s expense
+as if his uniform had been made by Poole, and where the overalls
+and sleeves were so tight that one marvelled how officers or men
+ever got in or out of them.</p>
+<p>What a beautiful regiment it was in the old sixties.&nbsp; And
+one felt it was a national crime to send such troops to
+India.&nbsp; But all that, alas! is long since changed; the
+Pimlico Clothing Works, economy, and paternal letters to <i>The
+Times</i> have done the rest; and the abolition of purchase, the
+breech-loader, and the new type of British officer have completed
+the inauguration of the &ldquo;slops&rdquo; period, and abolished
+once and for ever well-dressed regiments and <i>esprit de
+corps</i>.</p>
+<p>Whilst on this delicate subject memory suggests many
+presumptuous reminiscences.</p>
+<p>When Prince Alfred was a supernumerary Lieutenant of the
+<i>Racoon</i>, what an ideal brick he was!&nbsp; Scraping on a
+fiddle, myself at the piano, and Arthur Hood (lately become
+Viscount Bridport) with a brass instrument of deafening
+intensity, what harmonious discord has not shaken the rafters of
+the old Casemates at Gibraltar; and when the Prince seated
+himself at the piano and sang &ldquo;In ancient days there lived
+a squire,&rdquo; one forgets the retiring potentate that
+eventually ruled over Gotha.</p>
+<p>It was on one of these occasions that during a lull in the
+festivities a steady tramp outside was wafted to our musical
+ears, and going out to discover the cause, I was horrified to see
+an elderly gentleman, ablaze with decorations, in evening attire,
+who, with numerous apologies, was conducted into the room.</p>
+<p><a name="page246"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 246</span>He
+was in fact the Duc d&rsquo;Alen&ccedil;on&rsquo;s equerry, who
+had honoured the private concert with his presence, and for the
+past hour had sat a transfixed witness of our marvellous
+harmony.&nbsp; At this time the <i>Racoon</i> was commanded by
+Count Gleichen&mdash;a nephew of the late Queen&rsquo;s&mdash;who
+once happened to be on the P. and O. at the same time as myself,
+both returning from leave to Gibraltar.</p>
+<p>In those days life on a P. and O. was a mass of enjoyment:
+youngsters joining their regiments, old officers&mdash;naval and
+military&mdash;returning from leave, the ship&rsquo;s officers,
+all joined nightly in harmless jokes, and as lights were put out
+and the steward&rsquo;s room closed, each roysterer ascended to
+the upper deck and songs and what-not ensued.&nbsp; No one
+entered into the revelry more than Count Gleichen, as, with a
+tumbler of contraband grog, he quaffed and laughed as only a
+British sailor can.</p>
+<p>Years later, when the Duke of Edinburgh commanded the
+<i>Galatea</i>, he still remembered his musical colleague, and a
+pretty snake ring with a turquoise in the head that he presented
+to me was lost in an accident that nearly cost me my life.</p>
+<p>Boating has never been my forte, and in endeavouring on one
+occasion to enter a boat, it drifted with the impact, and, with
+one leg on the jetty and another in the boat, I soused into six
+feet of the muddiest &ldquo;old Mole&rdquo; water.&nbsp;
+Eventually I was hooked out, more &ldquo;mud than alive,&rdquo;
+but the ring was gone, and still reposes in the turgid waters of
+the Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>Amongst the ship&rsquo;s officers was Lord Charles Beresford,
+at the time the most inveterate Fourth Lieutenant of practical
+jokers.&nbsp; After a function at which the Duke and the
+ship&rsquo;s company were on one occasion present, the local
+Inspector-General of Police, who had deemed his presence
+necessary, was staggered next morning by shouts of laughter as he
+peacefully slumbered in his bungalow.</p>
+<p><a name="page247"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+247</span>Rushing to the window, conceive his horror on seeing
+Charlie Beresford, in his full uniform, strutting about and
+giving words of command in imitation of the original.&nbsp; But
+he was a bumptious buckeen, and no one sympathised with his
+discomfiture.</p>
+<p>When the King was doing his goose-step at the Curragh, it was
+my high reflexed privilege to be doing mine in the next
+lines.</p>
+<p>It was during this season that a march for the whole division
+was ordered to Maryborough, twenty-two miles distant.</p>
+<p>The Prince, who was attached to the Grenadiers, accompanied us
+to and fro, and even after the fatiguing march might later on
+have been seen in the streets of Maryborough, accompanied by
+&ldquo;his governor,&rdquo; General Bruce, as if nothing unusual
+had occurred.&nbsp; It was lamentable the effect it had on those
+splendid types of humanity, the 1st Grenadiers, and their superb
+&ldquo;Queen&rsquo;s Company,&rdquo; every man six feet and
+upwards.&nbsp; But the misfortune can hardly be laid to their
+charge; suddenly transferred from their sweet pastures in London,
+what wonder that the good things they had revelled in should seek
+an outlet on the dusty plains of Kildare!&nbsp; And so it came to
+pass that every ditch contained a guardsman, and long before the
+twenty-two miles had been covered every ambulance in the division
+was filled by the warriors.</p>
+<p>The Vansittart family in those long-ago days were represented
+by some interesting scions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Croc,&rdquo; in many ways perhaps the most unique,
+was a remnant of a past generation who adapted surroundings to
+modern requirements, and was the terror of gouty old members who
+dined before four when &ldquo;table money&rdquo; came into force,
+consumed a loaf in a sixpenny bowl of soup, and drank their beer
+for nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pop,&rdquo; on the other hand, was of the <a
+name="page248"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+248</span>highly-refined class, had a flat in Paris, and only
+occasionally flashed upon London immaculately clothed in
+ultra-fashionable attire.&nbsp; But the gem of the family was the
+dear old Admiral, who combined apparently the better points of
+&ldquo;The Croc&rdquo; and &ldquo;Pop&rdquo; in his own
+weather-beaten person.&nbsp; At the time I knew him he was in
+command of the <i>Sultan</i>, and had the reputation&mdash;in
+conjunction with Admiral Hornby&mdash;of being the highest
+authority on ironclads.&nbsp; But what brought him into notice
+was a combination of fearless seamanship and bluff loyalty whilst
+in command of the <i>Hector</i> that convoyed the Prince of Wales
+from Canada.&nbsp; For days the weather had been rough till,
+coming up Channel, Vansittart hailed a fishing smack, and
+possessing himself of the pick of the last haul, bore down upon
+the <i>Serapis</i>.&nbsp; Attached to her yard-arm was a basket,
+and as the spars of the two frigates literally rattled against
+one another, down dropped the offering at the feet of the
+heir-apparent.</p>
+<p>No greater exhibition of nerve and seamanship can well be
+conceived; had the manoeuvre resulted in accident no explanation
+would have satisfied &ldquo;my lords,&rdquo; for a nasty sea was
+running and sea room was advisable, however commendable the
+motive.&nbsp; It was an action worthy of association with Sir
+Harry Keppel sailing out of Portsmouth Harbour in sheer devilry
+with every stitch of canvas set, and showed Admiral Vansittart as
+in every way worthy of being bracketed with that grand old
+bluejacket of the past.</p>
+<p>The man who commanded the <i>Galatea</i> and afterwards the
+<i>Sultan</i>, was a very different person to the lieutenant of
+the <i>Racoon</i>, and genial and adventurous as he once was, the
+captain soon developed into a morose and unpopular commander.</p>
+<p>On board the <i>Galatea</i> was the pick of the Navy, whilst
+the social addenda associated with the supposed requirements of
+Royalty were represented by the <a name="page249"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 249</span>present Lord Kilmorey, Eliot Yorke,
+Arthur Haig, and sprigs of nobility, &ldquo;interest,&rdquo; and
+nonentity.&nbsp; Of the two equerries Eliot Yorke&rsquo;s forte
+may best be described as of the delicate type; so delicate,
+indeed, that it may be left to the imagination.&nbsp; Arthur
+Haig, on the other hand, was of the firm and reliable
+sort&mdash;a reasonable proportion of &ldquo;suaviter&rdquo; with
+a superabundance of the other thing.&nbsp; It was he whose daily
+duties included an epitome of the events of the day, intended for
+no eyes but those of the Queen, and carefully included in every
+&ldquo;bag&rdquo; that left the ship.&nbsp; Haig, in short, had
+been nominated by the Queen, and was the only man on board of
+whom the Prince had a wholesome dread.&nbsp; Eliot Yorke, on the
+other hand, was the selection of the Royal Alfred.&nbsp; Not that
+the Prince was without his appreciation of a practical joke, and
+when a fat old gentleman that had been specially invited to a
+farewell lunch at one of the foreign stations suddenly discovered
+that the ship was under way and a jump into the bumboat
+imperative, no laugh was heartier nor louder than that of the
+Royal joker.</p>
+<p>The Duke, it was said, was one of the best commanders of an
+ironclad; he had the technique at his fingers&rsquo; ends, and
+knew every bolt and screw from the keel to the upper deck; some
+toadies even asserted he was superior to Hornby or Vansittart,
+and was a typical British tar in the truest acceptation of the
+term.&nbsp; His sympathies, as I have heard him assert, however,
+were German to the backbone, and his eyes would fill with tears
+when singing some guttural sonnet of the Vaterland.&nbsp; His
+marriage brought things to a head, and the curtain was rung down
+on Lardy Wilson and all other workers of iniquity after the
+garden party at Clarence House in honour of his wedding.</p>
+<p>With an excellent piper like Farquharson, engaged to combine
+grooming and boot cleaning with <a name="page250"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 250</span>occasional pibrochs and reels, it
+may be accepted that H. R. H. was a thorough believer in the
+precept that &ldquo;it is more blessed to receive than to
+give.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His proficiency as a musician was another fable, and though he
+&ldquo;graciously condescended&rdquo; to be first violin at the
+Albert Hall Orchestral Society (founded by himself), uncharitable
+people are known to have asserted that the royal bow was
+soaped.&nbsp; But a point on which no two opinions can exist was
+the questionable taste he displayed on one occasion when entering
+Simon&rsquo;s Bay.&nbsp; Every commander, as is well known, is
+bound to salute the commodore&rsquo;s flag after taking up
+moorings; but the Prince had run up the Royal Standard&mdash;and
+so the commodore had to salute first.&nbsp; Etiquette demanded
+that this should be done&mdash;after, and not before&mdash;and
+the &ldquo;reports&rdquo; that followed ended as might be
+expected, and the good old sailor was shelved, and a scandal
+hushed up that some attributed to von-K&uuml;mmel and others to
+less potent causes.</p>
+<p>It was the most beautiful woman of the day in the long-ago
+fifties&mdash;the Empress of the French&mdash;that introduced the
+diabolical &ldquo;appanage&rdquo; known as the crinoline to
+conceal her &ldquo;interesting condition,&rdquo; and the peg-top
+heels that followed as a consequence, to give height to the
+unpleasant beam the crinoline involved on the wearer, were
+answerable for more accidents, <i>faux pas</i>, and
+unpleasantries than any combination of female adornments before
+or since.</p>
+<p>Once at St. Peter&rsquo;s, Eaton Square, whose incumbent was
+known as Saint Barnabas, a fair worshipper was noticed still in a
+devotional attitude when the rest of the congregation had settled
+down to the fashionable discourse their souls thirsted for, but
+the posture continuing, the verger delicately approached, and
+found that nothing more serious had occurred than that her heels
+had caught in the hoops and that she was unable to move a
+peg.&nbsp; The hopes of an <a name="page251"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 251</span>advertisement over a fashionable
+proselyte were thus shattered, and his reverence resumed his
+theme.</p>
+<p>On another occasion, returning from Cremorne at 2 a.m., when
+every cab had been taken, my attention was attracted by a
+handsome young cavalier tenderly supporting a fair sinner, who
+was leaning trustfully on his shoulder.&nbsp; It appears he had
+found her motionless and in tears on an area grating, her heel
+through her hoop, and the heel itself wedged as in a vice.&nbsp;
+Nothing but prompt action could save the situation, and the last
+I saw of the interesting couple was progressing by easy stages
+and heading towards Oakley Square.</p>
+<p>The same young cavalier might have been recognised not long
+since as a grim old warrior, munching a sandwich in the vestibule
+of Stafford House after the lev&eacute;e in honour of the Mutiny
+heroes!</p>
+<p>And the charming lad who was responsible for the introduction
+of the diabolical appendage.&nbsp; We all remember the shock that
+literally smote every heart when the news of the Prince
+Imperial&rsquo;s untimely death reached England.</p>
+<p>A youth divested of every suspicion of affectation, possessing
+to an inordinate degree that fascination of manner rarely to be
+found except amongst the old nobility of France, discarding every
+comfort to fight in the ranks of an alien army, to be assegaied
+by a handful of Zulus!&nbsp; Was ever such irony of fate for the
+great-nephew of Bonaparte, who, had he lived, would assuredly by
+his charm have eventually won back his throne.</p>
+<p>One voice only struck a discordant note, the overrated Quaker
+Solon of Rochdale.&nbsp; &ldquo;Perish India,&rdquo; he once said
+in his wisdom.&nbsp; &ldquo;He went out to kill the Zulus, and
+the Zulus killed him&rdquo; was this time his funeral
+oration.</p>
+<p>It was in the early seventies&mdash;if I remember
+rightly&mdash;that I had many acquaintances amongst the various
+<a name="page252"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+252</span>embassies and legations, which frequently brought me to
+the St. James&rsquo;s, the club of the foreign attach&eacute;s
+generally.&nbsp; My most intimate friend was Baron Spaum&mdash;at
+the time naval attach&eacute; at the Austrian Embassy&mdash;and
+at the present moment Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Austrian
+Navy.&nbsp; I was also familiar with Prince Hohenlohe and Count
+Mongela, of the same embassy, and, in a lesser degree, with Count
+Beust, son of the Austrian Ambassador.&nbsp; Amongst the Russians
+I knew Count Adelberg well, and it was through his
+representations that I eventually came into contact with that
+wonderful man Count Schouvaloff.&nbsp; Count Paul Schouvaloff at
+the time was Russian Ambassador in London.&nbsp; An intimate and
+trusted friend of the Czar, his Excellency had filled every
+office in his country that called for administrative and
+diplomatic talents of the first order.&nbsp; As Chief of the
+Secret Police his power was literally absolute and irresponsible;
+as governor of a vast province he had ruled almost as an
+independent sovereign; and in later years was the ruling
+spirit&mdash;and certainly the most difficult nut to
+crack&mdash;at the Congress of Berlin, when Lord Beaconsfield was
+accredited with having returned with &ldquo;Peace with
+Honour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was as the guest of this historical personage that I one
+day found myself at Chesham House, eating the most delightful
+lunch, drinking the rarest Crimean wines, and marvelling at the
+courteous, retiring-mannered man who plied me with the most
+delicate attentions.</p>
+<p>His English, as may be supposed, was faultless, and so it was
+that my admiration was turned to astonishment when a personage to
+whom I assumed there could be nothing new under the sun asked me
+if I would do for him the great favour of piloting him amongst
+the sights of London.</p>
+<p>Not many nights later a muster of some dozen <a
+name="page253"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 253</span>souls
+paraded at my rooms in Charles Street, and as all were
+scrupulously attired in pot hats and shooting coats it would have
+been difficult for the most observant to have sorted ambassadors
+or attach&eacute;s from the less diplomatic clay made in
+England.</p>
+<p>The muster roll contained the Russian Ambassador, Count
+Adelberg, Count Beust, Count Mongela, Baron Spaum, Prince
+Hohenlohe, Colonel (Charlie) Norton, Sir Edward Cunynghame (Ned),
+the Duke of Hamilton, and my humble self.</p>
+<p>The programme had been settled prior to all this with the
+assistance of an ex-detective, who made a princely addition to
+his slender pension by piloting exploration parties to latitudes
+where much depended on diplomacy.</p>
+<p>Our first visit was to Turnham&rsquo;s, a pot-house in Newman
+Street, where extensive arrangements had been made for some
+badger drawing under the personal auspices of Bill George.&nbsp;
+In later years this canine authority developed into a trusted
+dog-provider to the nobility, and resided in the vicinity of
+Kensal Green; at the time of which I write his transactions in
+dog-flesh were of a more miscellaneous character, and, as he once
+told me with pride, a letter addressed &ldquo;Bill George, Dog
+Stealer, London,&rdquo; would reach him without delay.</p>
+<p>Our next move was to Jimmy Shaw&rsquo;s, but whether it was to
+Windmill Street or to a new house he took when his old place was
+demolished (next to the stage door of the Lyric Theatre) I cannot
+recollect.</p>
+<p>Here rats in sackfuls were awaiting us, amongst others a
+rough-haired mongrel terrier, which not long previously had
+performed the astounding feat of killing 1,000 rats in an
+incredibly short space of time.</p>
+<p>To see 1,000 sewer rats not long in captivity together in a
+pit, after having seen each one counted out by an expert
+rat-catcher diving into a sack, is something <a
+name="page254"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 254</span>my
+enlightened twentieth-century reader will never again see in
+London.</p>
+<p>For, although not absolutely prohibited, the shadow of Exeter
+Hall was already spreading over the land, and the
+police&mdash;already tainted&mdash;were not to be trusted, even
+when a live ambassador was present.</p>
+<p>Tom King&mdash;ex-champion&mdash;had also consented, for a
+consideration, to again put on the gloves, and brought with him a
+burly opponent; the slogging that ensued was really splendid, and
+Count Schouvaloff was literally in ecstasies.</p>
+<p>Our next move was to Endell Street, and here greater
+precautions were necessary, for cock-fighting was the
+unpardonable sin, and the pains and penalties terrible.&nbsp; So
+we split into twos and threes, and going by different ways
+eventually found ourselves in the cock-pit below ground.</p>
+<p>Tom Faultless was the last of the old type of British bulldog
+sportsman.&nbsp; Over seventy years old, he had in his youth
+assisted at bull-baiting, dog-fights, cock-fighting, and every
+sport that once gave unalloyed delight to high and low.</p>
+<p>To his able hands the conduct of this particular department
+was entrusted; nor were we long in realising that the supply was
+more than enough to meet the most extravagant demands, as,
+banging the door to, we were assailed by the defiant crows of a
+dozen gladiators, and this not far from midnight, when the
+denizens of that virtuous quarter were courting gentle sleep, and
+sounds carried like steam whistles.</p>
+<p>It was close upon 2 a.m. before we again resumed our
+pilgrimage, and with the aid of half a dozen four-wheelers wended
+our way towards the Mint.</p>
+<p>It is unnecessary here to repeat what is fully set out in a
+previous chapter, suffice to say our experiences on this occasion
+were equally as interesting of those <a name="page255"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 255</span>of &rsquo;62, and that his
+Excellency vowed that amid all his miscellaneous experiences
+nothing so unique had ever equally delighted him.</p>
+<p>Five o&rsquo;clock was striking as we drove past Covent
+Garden, and having suggested that excellent eggs and bacon were
+to be obtained at Hart&rsquo;s Coffee House, all alighted and all
+ate as only diplomatists and night birds can.</p>
+<p>As we drove still further West the strings of market carts
+wafted the odours of country life and green things into our
+debauched nostrils, and we slunk away to our respective homes
+more or less delighted with our adventures.</p>
+<p>Whilst on the subject of Russian diplomatists a deafening
+experience I had a few years later may not be without
+interest.</p>
+<p>It was on the Grand Duke Alexis&rsquo;s flagship that I had
+the honour of finding myself one of some sixty guests.&nbsp; In
+addition to the Russian battleship there were men-of-war of
+England, France, and Sweden in the harbour, and the Grand Duke
+was presiding at the table.</p>
+<p>Needless to describe the excellent cookery&mdash;for Russian
+cookery is very difficult to beat&mdash;nor the choice Crimean
+wines, many of which are unobtainable except at the Imperial
+table, but when the dinner was over the row <i>literally</i>
+began.</p>
+<p>First the Grand Duke proposed the Czar&rsquo;s health,
+smashing the glass so that no less worthy toast should again
+defile it, and 101 guns began a salute on the deck immediately
+over our heads.</p>
+<p>Barely had it ceased when the battleships of England, France,
+and Sweden followed&mdash;not simultaneously, but one after
+another&mdash;and again the Grand Duke arose and proposed the
+Queen of England to a repetition of the same diabolical
+accompaniment.&nbsp; And then followed the toast to the rulers of
+France and Sweden till the viands we had consumed seemed to <a
+name="page256"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 256</span>rattle in
+their astonishment, and our heads to whirl with after-dinner
+loyalty.</p>
+<p>And when the adjournment to the main deck for coffee and
+cigarettes took place, it is no exaggeration to assert that we
+waded ankle deep through broken glass.</p>
+<p>The impetus given to that industry must have been
+enormous!</p>
+<h2><a name="page257"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+257</span>CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">DHULEEP SINGH&mdash;AND FIFTY YEARS
+AFTER.</span></h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> must pass back to the fifties to
+introduce a personage who figures conspicuously in the sixties
+and seventies, both in comedy and tragedy, and then shuffled off
+this mortal coil and has long since been forgotten.</p>
+<p>It was in &rsquo;56 when England had annexed Oude, that the
+ex-Queen and a considerable retinue arrived in London to
+&ldquo;protest&rdquo;&mdash;a process that must have enlightened,
+if it did not benefit, them in the ways of Imperial Policy.</p>
+<p>Half-a-dozen houses in Marylebone Road were secured as a
+temporary palace, and it was thither, as a lad, that I
+accompanied my father, who had once held high office in the
+Punjaub.</p>
+<p>The exact spot was where the Baker Street station now stands,
+and as one is nothing unless one is accurate, conceive entering
+the present dismal premises and finding in the &ldquo;reception
+room&rdquo; two or three beds, in one of which was the Queen;
+about the floor various courtiers were littered, whilst the
+atmosphere was so sour that one felt thankful the old
+woman&rsquo;s reign had been cut short, and that henceforth
+sanitary arrangements, a tub, and other adjuncts of Christianity
+would prevail in Oude after the family had realised that
+&ldquo;No mistakes were rectified after leaving the
+counter,&rdquo; and that &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you wish you may get
+it?&rdquo; embodied our beneficent policy in the abstract.</p>
+<p><a name="page258"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 258</span>Baker
+Street at the time swarmed with Mohammedans, for, by a
+coincidence, Lord Panmure, the Earl of Dalhousie, and Sir John
+Lawrence&mdash;all more or less associated with India&mdash;had
+houses in that then fashionable neighbourhood, and so enabled the
+&ldquo;protesters&rdquo; to combine business with pleasure at
+comparatively slight physical inconvenience.</p>
+<p>Dhuleep Singh, another reputed Punjaubee, had also at this
+time been brought to England, and, although then pursuing the
+ordinary course of a schoolboy under General Oliphant, it was
+only later, as a Norfolk landlord, a masher, a burlesque
+conspirator, and the owner of the finest emeralds in the world,
+that he came into prominence.</p>
+<p>It is in these latter roles that we purpose to interest our
+readers.</p>
+<p>During the minority of this most fortunate Asiatic the savings
+out of his annuity of &pound;40,000 a year had amounted to a
+colossal sum, and so Dhuleep Singh first comes into prominence,
+on attaining his majority, as a Norfolk squire and the owner of
+Elvedon Hall.</p>
+<p>An excellent shot, it was some few years later that he made
+the sportsmanlike wager with Lord Sefton to slaughter a thousand
+head of game within a day.&nbsp; Rabbits were included in the
+bet, and impossible as such a feat may appear, the tameness of
+the pheasants in the over-stocked home preserves made it quite
+feasible.&nbsp; For some reason, however, it never came off.</p>
+<p>At this period the Maharajah was in high favour at Court; his
+children, after his marriage with the unpretentious little lady
+he wooed and won at Singapore, were permitted to play with
+British Royal sprigs, and the Heir-apparent invariably had a
+week&rsquo;s shooting with his dusky neighbour and a suitably
+selected party in the autumn.</p>
+<p>But despite the glamour these reunions may be supposed to have
+spread over him Dhuleep Singh had ever an eye to business, and a
+contract was made <a name="page259"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+259</span>with Baily, the poulterer in Mount Street, for a
+shilling a head all round for all surplus hares, rabbits,
+pheasants, and what-not slaughtered at Elvedon Hall.</p>
+<p>The Maharajah&rsquo;s behaviour meanwhile was all that was
+desirable.&nbsp; At Court functions he was resplendent in
+emeralds and diamonds, and the slab, six inches by four, on his
+swordbelt was said to be the finest emerald in the world.</p>
+<p>The jewellers to whom was deputed the task of cutting,
+setting, and otherwise improving the barbaric gems of the
+youthful prince are said to trace their present Bond Street
+position to this fortunate selection.</p>
+<p>It was only when his Highness assumed evening dress that
+visions of Mooltan, Chilianwallah, and Goojerat faded from
+one&rsquo;s brain, and a podgy little Hindoo seemed to stand
+before one, divested of that physique and martial bearing one
+associates with either warriors or Sikhs, and only requiring, as
+it were, a chutnee-pot peeping out of his pocket to complete the
+illusion.</p>
+<p>During the sixties and seventies Dhuleep Singh was in evidence
+everywhere.&nbsp; An excellent whist player amongst such admitted
+champions as Goldingham, Dupplin, &ldquo;Cavendish&rdquo; (on
+whist), and others, he was to be found every afternoon at the
+Marlborough, or East India, or Whist Club backing his opinion,
+and damning his partner if he ignored his &ldquo;call for
+trumps;&rdquo; whilst every evening found him at the Alhambra
+graciously accepting the homage of the houris in the green-room,
+and distributing 9-carat gimcracks with Oriental lavishness.</p>
+<p>During this period apparently the Punjaub occupied only a
+secondary position in his mind, and we next find him occupying a
+spacious flat in King Street, Covent Garden, and it was there,
+doubtless, that visions of charging at the head of the splendid
+horsemen of the Punjaub and the wresting of India from British <a
+name="page260"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 260</span>rule first
+entered his romantic brain; for the Maharajah was a poet, though
+happily none of his effusions appear to have been
+preserved.&nbsp; He may also have recollected that the Koh-i-noor
+was once a crown jewel of Runjeet Singh, and his Highness was
+passionately found of baubles.</p>
+<p>Often have I seen him of an evening pacing to and fro outside
+the &ldquo;Shirt Shop&rdquo; (as the Whist Club was
+affectionately called) maturing those foolish plans that deprived
+him of his income for a while and led him into straits that it is
+painful to realise.&nbsp; Occasionally, indeed, he would rave at
+the injustice of the beggarly income the Government of India
+accorded him, and then it was he conceived the brilliant idea of
+coquetting with Russia for the simultaneous rising of the Punjaub
+and a Russian invasion of India.</p>
+<p>Not that one Sikh would have stirred at his call, and his
+proclamation fizzed and went out like any squib at a Brock
+benefit.&nbsp; Added to this, Russia rucked on him and his
+Highness fell into disgrace.</p>
+<p>But still his vanity led him on, and he essayed to start for
+India, and shipped as Pat Casey, though why Pat, and what part of
+Ireland Casey hailed from will ever remain an unfathomable
+mystery.</p>
+<p>The hero, however, never got beyond Aden, where he was
+politely invited to retrace his steps.&nbsp; The &ldquo;last
+phase&rdquo; was as brief as it was lamentable.&nbsp; Settling in
+Paris he again married.&nbsp; Then poverty necessitated the sale
+of his jewels, sickness overtook him, and, broken in body and
+mind, he asked and received pardon for his many foolish acts.</p>
+<p>After his escapades in Paris he is said to have written to the
+British Government, &ldquo;<i>Capivi</i>,&rdquo; evidently
+intending to reiterate the cypher telegram attributed to Sir
+Charles Napier, the conqueror of Scinde,
+&ldquo;<i>Peccavi</i>&rdquo; (a mot that will appeal to all
+classical readers).&nbsp; Thereupon he was forgiven, and <a
+name="page261"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 261</span>shortly
+after he died, and so the race of the &ldquo;Lion of the
+Punjaub&rdquo; went out like a lamb.</p>
+<p>What became of the second wife I never heard, what became of
+the Alhambra lass and the dusky tadpoles that drove about the
+King&rsquo;s Road at Brighton history does not tell, for
+&ldquo;Love is a queer thing, it comes and it goes,&rdquo; and
+all that remains to the present generation is the nebulous tale
+of a misguided man who kicked down wealth, position, and a happy
+old age in the reckless pursuit of a silly ambition.</p>
+<h3>FIFTY YEARS AFTER.</h3>
+<p>I cannot permit this opportunity to pass without reminding
+every reader of the momentous issues that were for ever set at
+rest by the incredible heroism of our army during the Mutiny in
+September fifty years ago, and without encroaching on the
+beautiful story by W. H. Fitchett, within the reach of everybody
+for 4&frac12;d., one may legitimately ask why many incidents that
+then occurred have never been explained.</p>
+<p>What is the <i>true</i> version of the &ldquo;<i>Stone</i>
+Bridge&rdquo; being left <i>open</i> at Lucknow?</p>
+<p>Why is it invariably confused with the &ldquo;<i>Iron</i>
+Bridge?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What was the <i>true</i> reason of the Cawnpore reverse?</p>
+<p>No history yet written has ever explained these points, which,
+however justifiable at the time, may surely, after fifty years,
+have light thrown upon them, and if Lord Roberts would give his
+version, many&mdash;including the old brigade&mdash;would have
+their curiosity set at rest.</p>
+<p>And touching those glorious days, what return has a grateful
+(!) country made to the remnant that remains?&nbsp; An invitation
+to a lev&eacute;e and a sandwich and a photographed group
+afterwards!&nbsp; A 5th Class Victorian Order would have left
+nothing to be desired.&nbsp; <a name="page262"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 262</span>For my part if I pass a drummer boy
+of the brave 93rd I feel an irresistible inclination to raise my
+hat in homage to a successor of those invincible
+Highlanders.&nbsp; And then the irony of it!&nbsp; MacBean, the
+adjutant who passed through those continuous hurricanes of shot
+and shell without a scratch, died of lock-jaw, when in command of
+the regiment some twenty years after, from cutting a corn.</p>
+<p>Every patriot will forgive a digression on the day (December
+6th) these lines are being written, for it is a landmark in the
+annals of the Army as recording the <i>last</i> occasion (fifty
+years ago) that British infantry advanced in line in old
+Peninsular formation&mdash;in slow time&mdash;halting
+periodically and dressing on their coverers as we see on a Hyde
+Park parade, under a terrific fire of shot and shrapnel, and
+then, breaking into the old-fashioned charge, the irresistible
+cheer, and cold steel as a climax.</p>
+<p>For on that decisive day the Gwalior contingent, 80,000
+strong, splendidly drilled, the flower of the Sepoy Army, was
+shattered by Colin Campbell and his handful of 3,400 men, and the
+neck of the great Mutiny was broken.</p>
+<p>No man living to-day who heard that crumpling sound and that
+avenging cheer can ever&mdash;will ever&mdash;forget it, and it
+behoves you, my masters, to remember, when you see the red and
+white-striped ribbon on the mendicant selling matches, or his
+more fortunate comrade patrolling outside a shop door, that in
+the words of Colin Campbell: &ldquo;Every man of them that day
+was worth his weight in gold to England.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And here one is reminded of a German prejudice of the Dowager
+Queen Adelaide (whom we all prayed for in our youth), who at
+lev&eacute;es and Court functions insisted on kilted officers
+appearing in &ldquo;trews&rdquo;&mdash;the absence of the
+&ldquo;breeks&rdquo; being too shockingly shocking.</p>
+<p><a name="page263"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 263</span>And
+whilst on this subject I am reminded, by the recent death of
+George FitzGeorge at Lucerne, of many incidents more or less
+military.</p>
+<p>At Gibraltar as late as &rsquo;65 was a sentry posted on a
+promontory that originally commanded a view of the
+Straits&mdash;but which a high wall had subsequently
+obliterated&mdash;whose orders were &ldquo;To keep a sharp look
+out and immediately to report if the Spanish fleet was in
+sight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Governor at the time was Sir Richard Airey, the most
+courteous of the old English school of gentlemen, but probably
+the worst Quartermaster-General that ever permitted boots and
+blankets to accumulate at Balaclava and brave men to freeze and
+starve at the front.&nbsp; It was an inspiration of his to
+utilise the stores with which Gibraltar is permanently
+provisioned by a periodical issue of salt pork rations that had
+accumulated since the Crimean War.&nbsp; Needless to add, much
+was mouldy, and many the complaints, and on one occasion when a
+vehement report reached him, he replied: &ldquo;Leave it here, it
+shall be seen to.&rdquo;&nbsp; Not long after invitations were
+issued for a dinner at the Convent, to which the
+&ldquo;Board&rdquo; on the rotten pork were invited.</p>
+<p>The banquet was the finest a French cook could produce, and
+one dish with &ldquo;<i>Sauce Robert</i>&rdquo; especially
+appreciated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That, gentlemen, is your rotten pork, and shows you how
+some men are never satisfied,&rdquo; was his Excellency&rsquo;s
+appropriate (!) comment.&nbsp; But there is not a <i>cordon
+bleu</i> in every regimental cook-house.</p>
+<h2><a name="page264"></a><span class="pagenum">p.
+264</span>CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">THE LAST OF THE OLD BRIGADE.</span></h2>
+<p>I <span class="smcap">will</span> now relate as a fitting end
+to these long reminiscences what I witnessed forty years ago in
+the island of Mauritius, when death was having a fine harvest by
+the ravages of a plague, and how a hurricane&mdash;terrific in
+even that so-called focus of hurricanes, and compared with which
+the storms we occasionally encounter in Merrie England are but
+gentle zephyrs&mdash;obliterated all the germs of infection.</p>
+<p>It was in &rsquo;67 that a terrible epidemic&mdash;new to
+science&mdash;burst without warning on the beautiful island of
+Mauritius.&nbsp; Its very symptoms were unfamiliar to the
+faculty, and so, for a better name, it was called jungle
+fever.&nbsp; Fever and ague were its chief characteristics,
+followed by absolute prostration, and death with alarming
+rapidity.</p>
+<p>Like its dread ally cholera, its first appearance was
+irresistible; then the attack became less formidable, and as the
+atmosphere became saturated with its poisonous germs, every
+living thing suffered from exhaustion, and man and beast
+literally dragged one leg after another, and almost prayed for
+release.</p>
+<p>The scourge, it was supposed, had been introduced by the
+100,000 Madras coolies who worked on the sugar plantations under
+conditions as nearly approaching slavery as our beneficent
+Government would admit.</p>
+<p>It was under these depressing circumstances that a British
+regiment, 800 strong, and in the best of health, was landed, and
+within a month not 100 <a name="page265"></a><span
+class="pagenum">p. 265</span>would have been available for
+duty.&nbsp; Not daring to keep them in Port Louis, where the
+deaths were some 400 a day, the regiment was split into fragments
+and billeted wherever an empty outhouse or a few obsolete tents
+could afford temporary shelter.&nbsp; But the ingenuity of the
+inefficient staff in no way averted the danger, and within a
+month a dozen minor centres were created, where British soldiers
+succumbed and died who ought never to have been disembarked.</p>
+<p>Not an officer who was sufficiently well but had to read the
+burial service almost daily over Protestant and Catholic
+comrades, and not a drum was heard whilst the scant ceremony was
+being repeated and repeated in its terrible monotony.</p>
+<p>To make matters worse quinine, which ordinarily costs a few
+pence, was selling at auction at &pound;30 per ounce.&nbsp; Then
+the supply ran out, and so valuable did the drug become that the
+dose a dying man&rsquo;s stomach could not retain was carefully
+bottled up for the next urgent case.</p>
+<p>Soon the very wood for coffins ran short, and the carpenters
+who made the ghastly necessaries were themselves dead or dying,
+so long trenches were improvised in which the dead were laid in
+rows.</p>
+<p>Every house bewailed a departed relative, for there was no
+pitying angel to sprinkle the door-posts in that remote isle of
+the sea, and the sound of wailing went up from Indian compound
+and European cantonment alike as, smiting their breasts, the cry
+ascended to Brahmah and the God of the Christians to stay the
+hand of the destroying angel.</p>
+<p>Truly the grasshopper had become a burden and desire failed,
+when a change as sudden as the arrival of the terrible scourge
+ensued, and a hurricane, unprecedented in its violence, swept
+over the island for days.</p>
+<p>Fields of sugar cane, ripe for the sickle, were laid low in a
+twinkling; houses were unroofed, and tents <a
+name="page266"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 266</span>blown into
+space; huge bridges were twisted like corkscrews, and bolts
+weighing a ton were hurled about like cricket balls.&nbsp; A
+heavily-laden goods train, standing outside the station (as
+instanced by the Governor in his official report), was turned on
+its side, and, joy of joy, the terrible plague and its insidious
+germs were wafted into eternity.&nbsp; And when the death roll
+was called a few months later, what a cloud of victims did it
+show!&nbsp; Bishop Hatchard, not long arrived, whose funeral I
+attended; the General, who came home to die; the wives and
+daughters of many it is needless to recapitulate, and brave
+soldiers innumerable discharged as medically unfit or still
+sleeping in that distant oasis of the Indian Ocean.</p>
+<p>But even this awful drama has associations that lend
+themselves to comedy.&nbsp; A representative of a Deep Sea Cable
+Company, who was conspicuous for his flowing mane and
+superabundant hair, emerged from his illness as smooth as a
+billiard ball, and the local snuff-coloured wig he donned to hide
+his nakedness was as bewildering as it was irresistible.</p>
+<p>The coolies, too, desirous of apprising their friends in
+Madras of their safety, and thinking it a favourable opportunity
+to defraud the Revenue, would slip unstamped letters into the
+post, oblivious of the columns of names that appeared weekly in
+the local paper as not having been forwarded in consequence of
+insufficient postage.&nbsp; And then the Creoles&mdash;a
+snuff-and-butter combination of English, French, and
+Indian&mdash;desirous of airing their European pretensions, would
+hail one with: &ldquo;Ah, the plague&mdash;we are now far from
+IT,&rdquo; or, anxious to be polite, would add: &ldquo;I have
+heard your name with great advantage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sitting round a blazing fire some few years ago at Christmas,
+in the comfortable chambers (since demolished) at the corner of
+Hanover Square and George Street, three friends were discussing
+the various changes they had witnessed together in the <a
+name="page267"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 267</span>past forty
+years.&nbsp; Not that the conversation was unattended with
+drawbacks, for a gang of &ldquo;waits&rdquo; were disseminating
+discord through the still hours of the night.&nbsp; An asthmatic
+harmonium was the chief culprit, and bore on its back the
+blasphemous inscription, &ldquo;Let everything that hath breath
+praise the Lord,&rdquo; the remainder of the orchestra being a
+clarionet and a fiddle; all the operators had red noses, and the
+instruments suffered accordingly.&nbsp; A public-house within
+measurable distance may explain the welcome silence that
+occasionally intervened and justify the assumption that it was
+responsible for the discord.</p>
+<p>Be that as it may, &ldquo;The voice that breathed o&rsquo;er
+Eden&rdquo;&mdash;with whisky variations&mdash;does not lend
+itself to concentration of thought or deed, save of an irreverent
+kind, so I will conclude by describing my companions whom
+we&rsquo;ve frequently met in our various rambles.</p>
+<p>Of these, one was a country-looking squire with grey hair and
+cropped beard, who, on closer inspection, was recognisable as the
+wiry bruiser who had thrashed the &ldquo;Kangaroo&rdquo; thirty
+years previously at the Alhambra; the other was Bobby Shafto,
+still erect and soldier-like, but divested of the curly locks
+that had won their way into everybody&rsquo;s favour a decade
+previously.</p>
+<p>For Bobby had only just left the Service, after holding a
+series of personal staff appointments through the influence of
+powerful friends of the days of his youth.</p>
+<p>So great, indeed, had been his interest at the Horse Guards
+that&mdash;admittedly, the worst of company officers&mdash;he was
+discovered to possess military talents of the highest
+order.&nbsp; He was &ldquo;a born leader of men&rdquo; it was
+asserted; he had a &ldquo;capacity for organisation&rdquo; and
+for &ldquo;licking a hopeless rabble into a military
+force.&rdquo;&nbsp; Had he continued soldiering he would <a
+name="page268"></a><span class="pagenum">p. 268</span>doubtless
+have been covered with &ldquo;orders,&rdquo; appointed Governor
+of one of our important fortresses, given the command of an Army
+Corps, or created a peer&mdash;as many an amiable donkey with
+interest has been before and since.</p>
+<p>But both these good fellows have since passed away, and
+I&mdash;only I&mdash;remain&mdash;like a modern Elijah&mdash;to
+commune within myself of the various incidents with which we were
+associated in the long-ago sixties.</p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">THE
+END.</span></p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<div class="gapline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Printed at The Chapel River
+Press</i>, <i>Kingston</i>, <i>Surrey</i></p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LONDON IN THE SIXTIES***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
+***** This file should be named 44163-h.htm or 44163-h.zip******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/4/1/6/44163
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
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