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+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ Philistia, by Grant Allen
+ </title>
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Philistia, by Grant Allen
+
+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: Philistia
+
+Author: Grant Allen
+
+Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6060]
+First Posted: October 30, 2002
+Last Updated: September 10, 2018
+
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PHILISTIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Etext produced by Charles Aldarondo, Charles Franks and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ PHILISTIA
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Grant Allen
+ </h2>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. &mdash; CHILDREN OF LIGHT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. &mdash; THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. &mdash; MAGDALEN QUAD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. &mdash; A LITTLE MUSIC. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. &mdash; ASKELON VILLA, GATH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. &mdash; DOWN THE RIVER. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. &mdash; GHOSTLY COUNSEL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; IN THE CAMP OF THE
+ PHILISTINES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. &mdash; THE WOMEN OF THE LAND. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. &mdash; THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. &mdash; CULTURE AND CULTURE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. &mdash; THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA!
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; &lsquo;WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS
+ HERE?&rsquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. &mdash; EVIL TIDINGS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; FLAT REBELLION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; &lsquo;COME YE OUT AND BE
+ YE SEPARATE.&rsquo; </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; A QUIET WEDDING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; INTO THE FIRE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. &mdash; LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE
+ DRAMA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. &mdash; THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII. &mdash; THE STREETS OF ASKELON.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV. &mdash; THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV. &mdash; HARD PRESSED. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI. &mdash; IRRECLAIMABLE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVII. &mdash; RONALD COMES OF AGE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVIII. &mdash; TELL IT NOT IN OATH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXIX. &mdash; A MAN AND A MAID. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXX. &mdash; THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY
+ TRIUMPHS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXXI. &mdash; DE PROFUNDIS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXII. &mdash; PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXIII. &mdash; A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIV. &mdash; HOPE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXV. &mdash; THE TIDE TURNS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXVI. &mdash; OUT OF THE HAND OP THE
+ PHILISTINES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVII. &mdash; LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT
+ LAND? </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. &mdash; CHILDREN OF LIGHT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was Sunday evening, and on Sundays Max Schurz, the chief of the London
+ Socialists, always held his weekly receptions. That night his cosmopolitan
+ refugee friends were all at liberty; his French disciples could pour in
+ from the little lanes and courts in Soho, where, since the Commune, they
+ had plied their peaceful trades as engravers, picture-framers, artists&rsquo;-colourmen,
+ models, pointers, and so forth&mdash;for most of them were hangers-on in
+ one way or another of the artistic world; his German adherents could
+ stroll round, pipe in mouth, from their printing-houses, their
+ ham-and-beef shops, or their naturalists&rsquo; chambers, where they
+ stuffed birds or set up exotic butterflies in little cabinets&mdash;for
+ most of them were more or less literary or scientific in their pursuits;
+ and his few English sympathisers, chiefly dissatisfied philosophical
+ Radicals of the upper classes, could drop in casually for a chat and a
+ smoke, on their way home from the churches to which they had been
+ dutifully escorting their un-emancipated wives and sisters. Max Schurz
+ kept open house for all on Sunday evenings, and there was not a
+ drawing-room in London better filled than his with the very advanced and
+ not undistinguished set who alone had the much-prized entrée of his
+ exclusive salon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The salon itself did not form any component part of Max Schurz&rsquo;s own
+ private residence in any way. The great Socialist, the man whose mandates
+ shook the thrones of Russia and Austria, whose movements spread terror in
+ Paris and Berlin, whose dictates were even obeyed in Kerry and in Chicago,
+ occupied for his own use two small rooms at the top of a shabby composite
+ tenement in a doubtful district of Marylebone. The little parlour where he
+ carried on his trade of a microscope-lens grinder would not have sufficed
+ to hold one-tenth of the eager half-washed crowd that pressed itself
+ enthusiastically upon him every Sunday. But a large room on the ground
+ floor of the tenement, opening towards the main street, was used during
+ the week by one of his French refugee friends as a dancing-saloon; and in
+ this room on every Sunday evening the uncrowned king of the proletariate
+ Socialists was permitted to hold his royal levees. Thither all that was
+ best and truest in the socially rebellions classes domiciled in London
+ used to make its way; and there men calmly talked over the ultimate
+ chances of social revolutions which would have made the hair of
+ respectable Philistine Marylebone stand stiffly on end, had it only known
+ the rank political heresies that were quietly hatching in its unconscious
+ midst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Max Schurz&rsquo;s hall was rapidly filling with the polyglot crowd
+ of democratic solidarists, Ernest Le Breton and his brother were waiting
+ in the chilly little drawing-room at Epsilon Terrace, Bayswater, for the
+ expected arrival of Harry Oswald. Ernest had promised to introduce Oswald
+ to Max Schurz&rsquo;s reception; and it was now past eight o&rsquo;clock,
+ getting rather a late hour for those simple-minded, early-rising
+ Communists. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid, Herbert,&rsquo; said Ernest to his
+ brother, &lsquo;he forgets that Max is a working-man who has to be at his
+ trade again punctually by seven o&rsquo;clock to-morrow. He thinks he&rsquo;s
+ going out to a regular society At Home, where ten o&rsquo;clock&rsquo;s
+ considered just the beginning of the evening. Max won&rsquo;t at all like
+ his turning up so late; it smells of non-productivity.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If Herr Schurz wants to convert the world,&rsquo; Herbert answered
+ chillily, rolling himself a tiny cigarette, &lsquo;he must convince the
+ unproductive as well as the proletariate before he can set things fairly
+ on the roll for better arrangement. The proletariate&rsquo;s all very well
+ in its way, no doubt, but the unproductive happen to hold the key of the
+ situation. One convert like you or me is worth a thousand ignorant
+ East-end labourers, with nothing but their hands and their votes to count
+ upon.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But you are not a convert, Herbert.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I didn&rsquo;t say I was. I&rsquo;m a critic. There&rsquo;s no necessity
+ to throw oneself open-armed into the embrace of either party. The wise man
+ can wait and watch the progress of the game, backing the winner for the
+ time being at all the critical moments, and hedging if necessary when the
+ chances turn momentarily against the favourite. There&rsquo;s a ring at
+ the bell: that&rsquo;s Oswald; let&rsquo;s go down to the door to meet
+ him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest ran down the stairs rapidly, as was his wont; Herbert followed in a
+ more leisurely fashion, still rolling the cigarette between his delicate
+ finger and thumb. &lsquo;Goodness gracious, Oswald!&rsquo; Ernest
+ exclaimed as his friend stepped in, &lsquo;why, you&rsquo;ve actually come
+ in evening dress! A white tie and all! What on earth will Max say? He&rsquo;ll
+ be perfectly scandalised at such a shocking and unprecedented outrage.
+ This will never do; you must dissemble somehow or other.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oswald laughed. &lsquo;I had no idea,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;Herr Schurz
+ was such a truculent sans-culotte as that comes to. As it was an evening
+ reception I thought, of course, one ought to turn up in evening clothes.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Evening clothes! My dear fellow, how on earth do you suppose a set of
+ poor Leicester Square outlaws are going to get themselves correctly set up
+ in black broadcloth coats and trousers? They might wash their white ties
+ themselves, to be sure; they mostly do their own washing, I believe, in
+ their own basins.&rsquo; (&lsquo;And not much at that either,&rsquo; put
+ in Herbert, parenthetically.) &lsquo;But as to evening clothes, why, they&rsquo;d
+ as soon think of arraying themselves for dinner in full court dress as of
+ putting on an obscurantist swallow-tail. It&rsquo;s the badge of a class,
+ a distinct aristocratic outrage; we must alter it at once, I assure you,
+ Oswald.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘At any rate,&rsquo; said Oswald laughing, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve had the
+ pleasure of finding myself accused for the first time in the course of my
+ existence of being aristocratic. It&rsquo;s quite worth while going to Max
+ Schurz&rsquo;s once in one&rsquo;s life, if it were only for the sake of
+ that single new sensation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, my dear fellow, we must rectify you, anyhow, before you go. Let me
+ see; luckily you&rsquo;ve got your dust-coat on, and you needn&rsquo;t
+ take that off; it&rsquo;ll do splendidly to hide your coat and waistcoat.
+ I&rsquo;ll lend you a blue tie, which will at once transform your upper
+ man entirely. But you show the cloven hoof below; the trousers will surely
+ betray you. They&rsquo;re absolutely inadmissible under any circumstances
+ whatsoever, as the Court Circular says, and you must positively wear a
+ coloured pair of Herbert&rsquo;s instead of them. Run upstairs quickly,
+ there&rsquo;s a good fellow, and get rid of the mark of the Beast as fast
+ as you can.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oswald did as he was told without demur, and in about a minute more
+ presented himself again, with the mark of the Beast certainly most
+ effectually obliterated, at least so far as outer appearance went. His
+ blue tie, light dust-coat, and borrowed grey trousers, made up an ensemble
+ much more like an omnibus conductor out for a holiday than a gentleman of
+ the period in correct evening dress. &lsquo;Now mind,&rsquo; Ernest said
+ seriously, as he opened the door, &lsquo;whatever you do, Oswald, if you
+ stew to death for it&mdash;and Schurz&rsquo;s rooms are often very close
+ and hot, I can assure you&mdash;don&rsquo;t for heaven&rsquo;s sake go and
+ unbutton your dust-coat. If you do they&rsquo;ll see at once you&rsquo;re
+ a wolf in sheep&rsquo;s clothing, and I shouldn&rsquo;t be at all
+ surprised if they were to turn and rend you. At least, I&rsquo;m sure Max
+ would be very much annoyed with me for unsocially introducing a
+ plutocratic traitor into the bosom of the fold.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked along briskly in the direction of Marylebone, and stopped at
+ last at a dull, yellow-washed house, which bore on its door a very dingy
+ brass plate, inscribed in red letters, &lsquo;M. et Mdlle. Tirard. Salon
+ de Danse.&rsquo; Ernest opened the door without ringing, and turned down
+ the passage towards the salon. &lsquo;Remember,&rsquo; he said, turning to
+ Harry Oswald by way of a last warning, with his hand on the inner
+ door-handle, &lsquo;coûte que coûte, my dear fellow, don&rsquo;t on any
+ account open your dust-coat. No anti-social opinions; and please bear in
+ mind that Max is, in his own way, a potentate.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The big hall, badly lighted by a few contribution candles (for the whole
+ colony subscribed to the best of its ability for the support of the weekly
+ entertainment), was all alive with eager figures and the mingled busy hum
+ of earnest conversation. A few chairs ranged round the wall were mostly
+ occupied by Mdlle. Tirard and the other ladies of the Socialist party; but
+ the mass of the guests were men, and they were almost all smoking, in
+ utter indifference to the scanty presence of the fair sex. Not that they
+ were intentionally rude or boorish; that they never were; except where an
+ emperor or an aristocrat is concerned, there is no being on earth more
+ courteous, kindly, and considerate for the feelings of others than your
+ exiled Socialist. He has suffered much himself in his own time, and so
+ miseris succurrere discit. Emperors he mentally classes with cobras,
+ tarantulas, and scorpions, as outside the pale of humanitarian sympathies
+ altogether; but, with this slight political exception, he is the broadest
+ and tenderest and most catholic in his feelings of all living breathing
+ creatures. However, the ladies of his party have all been brought up from
+ their childhood onward in a mingled atmosphere of smoke and democracy; so
+ that he no more thinks of abstaining from tobacco in their presence than
+ he thinks of commiserating the poor fish for being so dreadfully wet, or
+ the unfortunate mole for his unpleasantly slimy diet of live earthworms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Herr Schurz,&rsquo; said Ernest, singling out the great leader in the
+ gloom immediately, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve brought my brother Herbert here, whom
+ you know already, to see you, as well as another Oxford friend of mind,
+ Mr. Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel. He&rsquo;s almost one of
+ us at heart, I&rsquo;m happy to say, and at any rate I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;ll
+ be glad to make his acquaintance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little spare wizened-up grey man, in the threadbare brown velveteen
+ jacket, who stood in the middle of the hall, caught Ernest&rsquo;s hand
+ warmly, and held it for a moment fettered in his iron grip. There was an
+ honesty in that grip and in those hazy blue-spectacled eyes that nobody
+ could for a second misunderstand. If an emperor had been introduced to Max
+ Schurz he might have felt a little abashed one minute at the old Socialist&rsquo;s
+ royal disdain, but he could not have failed to say to himself as he looked
+ at him from head to foot, &lsquo;Here, at least, is a true man.&rsquo; So
+ Harry Oswald felt, as the spare grey thinker took his hand in his, and
+ grasped it firmly with a kindly pressure, but less friendly than that with
+ which he had greeted his known admirer, Ernest Le Breton. As for Herbert,
+ he merely bowed to him politely from a little distance; and Herbert, who
+ had picked up at once with a Polish exile in a corner, returned the bow
+ frigidly without coming up to the host himself at all for a moment&rsquo;s
+ welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m always pleased to meet friends of the cause from Oxford,&rsquo;
+ Herr Schurz said, in almost perfect English. &lsquo;We want recruits most
+ of all among the thinking classes. If we are ever to make headway against
+ the banded monopolies&mdash;against the place-holders, the land-grabbers,
+ the labour-taxers, the robbers of the poor&mdash;we must first secure the
+ perfect undivided confidence of the brain-workers, the thinkers, and the
+ writers. At present everything is against us; we are but a little leaven,
+ trying vainly in our helpless fashion to leaven the whole lump. The
+ capitalist journals carry off all the writing talent in the world; they
+ are timid, as capital must always be; they tremble for their tens of
+ thousands a year, and their vast circulations among the propertied
+ classes. We cannot get at the heart of the people, save by the Archimedean
+ lever of the thinking world. For that reason, my dear Le Breton, I am
+ always glad to muster here your Oxford neophytes.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And yet, Herr Schurz,&rsquo; said Ernest gently, &lsquo;you know we must
+ not after all despair. Look at the history of your own people! When the
+ cause of Jehovah seemed most hopeless, there were still seven thousand
+ left in Israel who had not bowed the knee to Baal. We are gaining strength
+ every day, while they are losing it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah yes, my friend. I know that too,&rsquo; the old man answered, with a
+ solemn shake of the head; &lsquo;but the wheels move slowly, they move
+ slowly&mdash;very surely, but oh, so slowly. You are young, friend Ernest,
+ and I am growing old. You look forward to the future with hope; I look
+ back to the past with regret: so many years gone, so little, so very
+ little done. It will come, it will come as surely as the next glacial
+ period, but I shall not live to see it. I stand like Moses on Pisgah; I
+ see the promised land before me; I look down upon the equally allotted
+ vineyards, and the glebe flowing with milk and honey in the distance; but
+ I shall not lead you into it; I shall not even lead you against the
+ Canaanites; another than I must lead you in. But I am an old man, Mr.
+ Oswald, an old man now, and I am talking all about myself&mdash;an
+ anti-social trick we have inherited from our fathers. What is your friend&rsquo;s
+ special line at Oxford, did you say, Ernest?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oswald is a mathematician, sir,&rsquo; said Ernest, &lsquo;perhaps the
+ greatest mathematician among the younger men in the whole University.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah! that is well. We want exact science. We want clear and definite
+ thinking. Biologists and physicists and mathematicians, those are our best
+ recruits, you may depend upon it. We need logic, not mere gas. Our French
+ friends and our Irish friends&mdash;I have nothing in the world to say
+ against them; they are useful men, ardent men, full of fire, full of
+ enthusiasm, ready to do and dare anything&mdash;but they lack ballast. You
+ can&rsquo;t take the kingdom of heaven by storm. The social revolution is
+ not to be accomplished by violence, it is not even to be carried by the
+ most vivid eloquence; the victory will be in the end to the clearest brain
+ and the subtlest intellect. The orthodox political economists are clever
+ sophists; they mask and confuse the truth very speciously; we must have
+ keen eyes and sharp noses to spy out and scent out their tortuous
+ fallacies. I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re a mathematician, Mr. Oswald. And so
+ you have thought on social problems?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I have read &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate,&rdquo;&rsquo; Oswald
+ answered modestly, ‘and I learned much from it, and thought more. I won&rsquo;t
+ say you have quite converted me, Herr Schurz, but you have given me plenty
+ of food for future reflection.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That is well, said the old man, passing one skinny brown hand gently up
+ and down over the other. &lsquo;That is well. There&rsquo;s no hurry. Don&rsquo;t
+ make up your mind too fast. Don&rsquo;t jump at conclusions. It&rsquo;s
+ intellectual dishonesty to do that. Wait till you have convinced yourself.
+ Spell out your problems slowly; they are not easy ones; try to see how the
+ present complex system works; try to probe its inequalities and
+ injustices; try to compare it with the ideal commonwealth: and you&rsquo;ll
+ find the light in the end, you&rsquo;ll find the light.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, Herbert Le Breton lounged up quietly from his farther corner
+ towards the little group. &lsquo;Ah, your brother, Ernest!&rsquo; said Max
+ Schurz, drawing himself up a little more stiffly; &lsquo;he has found the
+ light already, I believe, but he neglects it; still he is not with us, and
+ he that is not with us is against us. You hold aloof always, Mr. Herbert,
+ is it not so?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, not quite aloof, Herr Schurz, I&rsquo;m certain, but not on your
+ side exactly either. I like to look on and hold the balance evenly, not to
+ throw my own weight too lightly into either stale. The objective attitude
+ of the mere spectator is after all the right one for an impartial
+ philosopher to take up.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, Mr. Herbert, this philosophy of your Oxford contemplative Radicals is
+ only another name for a kind of social selfishness, I fancy,&rsquo; said
+ the old man solemnly. &lsquo;It seems to me your head is with us, but your
+ heart, your heart is elsewhere.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert Le Breton played a moment quietly with the Roman aureus of
+ Domitian on his watch-chain; then he said slowly in his clear cold voice,
+ &lsquo;There may be something in that, no doubt, Herr Schurz, for each of
+ us has his own game to play, and while the world remains unreformed, he
+ must play it on his own gambit to a great extent, without reference to the
+ independent game of others. We all agree that the board is too full of
+ counters, and as each counter is not responsible for its own presence and
+ position on the board, having been put there without previous consultation
+ by the players, we must each do the best we can for ourselves in our own
+ fashion. My sympathies, as you say, are on your side, but perhaps my
+ interests lie the other way, and after all, till you start your
+ millennium, we must all rattle along as well as we can in the box
+ together, jarring against one another in our old ugly round of
+ competition, and supply and demand, and survival of the fittest, and
+ mutual accommodation, and all the rest of it, to the end of the chapter.
+ Every man for himself and God for us all, you know. You have the logic, to
+ be sure, Herr Schurz, but the monopolists have the law and the money.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes,&rsquo; said the old Socialist grimly; &lsquo;Demas, Demas; he
+ and his silver mine; you remember your Bunyan, don&rsquo;t you? Well, all
+ faiths and systems have their Demases. The cares of this world and the
+ deceitfulness of riches. He&rsquo;s bursar of his college, isn&rsquo;t he,
+ Ernest? I thought so. &ldquo;He had the bag, and bare what was put
+ therein.&rdquo; A dangerous office, isn&rsquo;t it, Mr. Oswald? A very
+ dangerous office. You can&rsquo;t touch pitch or property without being
+ defiled.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You at least, sir, said Ernest, reverentially, &lsquo;have kept yourself
+ unspotted from the world.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man sighed, and turned for a moment to speak in French to a tall,
+ big-bearded new-comer who advanced to meet him. &lsquo;Impossible!&rsquo;
+ he said quickly; &lsquo;I am truly distressed to hear it. It is very
+ imprudent, very unnecessary.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What is the news?&rsquo; asked Ernest, also in French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new-comer answered him with a marked South Russian accent. ‘There has
+ been another attempt on the life of Alexander Nicolaiovitch.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You don&rsquo;t mean to say so!&rsquo; cried Ernest in surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I do,&rsquo; replied the Russian, &lsquo;and it has nearly succeeded
+ too.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘An attempt on whom?&rsquo; asked Oswald, who was new to the peculiar
+ vocabulary of the Socialists, and not particularly accustomed to following
+ spoken French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘On Alexander Nicolaiovitch,&rsquo; answered the red-bearded stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not the Czar?&rsquo; Oswald inquired of Ernest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, the one whom you call Czar,&rsquo; said the stranger, quickly, in
+ tolerable English. The confusion of tongues seemed to be treated as a
+ small matter at Max Schurz&rsquo;s receptions, for everybody appeared to
+ speak all languages at once, in the true spirit of solidarity, as though
+ Babel had never been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oswald did not attempt to conceal a slight gesture of horror. The tall
+ Russian looked down upon him commiseratingly. &lsquo;He is of the Few?&rsquo;
+ he asked of Ernest, that being the slang of the initiated for a member of
+ the aristocratic and capitalist oligarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not exactly,&rsquo; Ernest answered with a smile; &lsquo;but he has not
+ entirely learned the way we here regard these penal measures. His
+ sympathies are one-sided as to Alexander, no doubt. He thinks merely of
+ the hunted, wretched life the man bears about with him, and he forgets
+ poor bleeding, groaning, down-trodden, long-suffering Russia. It is the
+ common way of Englishmen. They do not realise Siberia and Poland and the
+ Third Section, and all the rest of it; they think only of Alexander as of
+ the benevolent despot who freed the serf and befriended the Bulgarian.
+ They never remember that they have all the freedom and privileges
+ themselves which you poor Russians ask for in vain; they do not bear in
+ mind that he has only to sign his name to a constitution, a very little
+ constitution, and he might walk abroad as light-hearted in St. Petersburg
+ to-morrow as you and I walk in Regent Street to-day. We are mostly
+ lopsided, we English, but you must bear with us in our obliquity; we have
+ had freedom ourselves so long that we hardly know how to make due
+ allowance for those unfortunate folks who are still in search of it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If you had an Alexander yourselves for half a day,&rsquo; the Russian
+ said fiercely, turning to Oswald, &lsquo;you would soon see the
+ difference. You would forget your virtuous indignation against Nihilist
+ assassins in the white heat of your anger against unendurable tyranny. You
+ had a King Charles in England once&mdash;the mere shadow of a Russian Czar&mdash;and
+ you were not so very ceremonious with him, you order-loving English, after
+ all.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It is a foolish thing, Borodinsky,&rsquo; said Max Schurz, looking up
+ from the long telegram the other had handed him, &lsquo;and I told
+ Toroloff as much a fortnight ago, when he spoke to me about the matter.
+ You can do no good by these constant attacks, and you only rouse the minds
+ of the oligarchy against you by your importunity. Bloodshed will avail us
+ nothing; the world cannot be regenerated by a baptism like that. Every
+ peasant won over, every student enrolled, every mother engaged to feed her
+ little ones on the gospel of Socialism together with her own milk, is
+ worth a thousand times more to us and to the people than a dead Czar. If
+ your friends had really blown him up, what then? You would have had
+ another Czar, and another Third Section, and another reign of terror, and
+ another raid and massacre; and we should have lost twenty good men from
+ our poor little side for ever. We must not waste the salt of the earth in
+ that reckless fashion. Besides, I don&rsquo;t like this dynamite. It&rsquo;s
+ a bad argument, it smacks too much of the old royal and repressive method.
+ You know the motto Louis Quatorze used to cast on his bronze cannon&mdash;&ldquo;Ultima
+ ratio regum.&rdquo; Well, we Socialists ought to be able to find better
+ logic for our opponents than that, oughtn&rsquo;t we?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But in Russia,&rsquo; cried the bearded man hotly, &lsquo;in poor
+ stricken-down groaning Russia, what other argument have they left us? Are
+ we to be hunted to death without real law or trial, tortured into sham
+ confessions, deluded with mock pardons, arraigned before hypocritical
+ tribunals, ensnared by all the chicanery, and lying, and treachery, and
+ ferreting of the false bureaucracy, with its spies, and its bloodhounds,
+ and its knout-bearing police-agents; and then are we not to make war the
+ only way we can&mdash;open war, mind you, with fair declaration, and due
+ formalities, and proper warning beforehand&mdash;against the irresponsible
+ autocrat and his wire-pulled office-puppets who kill us off mercilessly?
+ You are too hard upon us, Herr Schurz; even you yourself have no sympathy
+ at all for unhappy Russia.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man looked up at him tenderly and regretfully. &lsquo;My poor
+ Borodinsky,&rsquo; he said in a gentle tremulous voice, &lsquo;I have
+ indeed sympathy and pity in abundance for you. I do not blame you; you
+ will have enough and to spare to do that, even here in free England; I
+ would not say a harsh word against you or your terrible methods for all
+ the world. You have been hard-driven, and you stand at bay like tigers.
+ But I think you are going to work the wrong way, not using your energies
+ to the best possible advantage for the proletariate. What we have really
+ got to do is to gain over every man, woman, and child of the
+ working-classes individually, and to array on our side all the learning
+ and intellect and economical science of the thinking classes individually;
+ and then we can present such a grand united front to the banded
+ monopolists that for very shame they will not dare to gainsay us. Indeed,
+ if it comes to that, we can leave them quietly alone, till for pure hunger
+ they will come and beg our assistance. When we have enticed away all the
+ workmen from their masters to our co-operative factories, the masters may
+ keep their rusty empty mills and looms and engines to themselves as long
+ as they like, but they must come to us in the end, and ask us to give them
+ the bread they used to refuse us. For my part, I would kill no man and rob
+ no man; but I would let no man kill or rob another either.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And how about Alexander Nicolaiovitch, then?&rsquo; persisted the
+ Russian, eagerly. &lsquo;Has he killed none in his loathsome prisons and
+ in his Siberian quicksilver mines? Has he robbed none of their own hardly
+ got earnings by his poisoned vodki and his autocratically imposed taxes
+ and imposts? Who gave him an absolute hereditary right to put us to death,
+ to throw us in prison, to take our money from us against our will and
+ without our leave, to treat us as if we existed, body and soul, and wives
+ and children, only as chattels for the greater glory of his own orthodox
+ imperial majesty? If we may justly slay the highway robber who meets us,
+ arms in hand, in the outskirts of the city, and demands of us our money or
+ our life, may we not justly slay Alexander Nicolaiovitch, who comes to our
+ homes in the person of his tax-gatherers to take the bread out of our
+ children&rsquo;s mouths and to help himself to whatever he chooses by the
+ divine right of his Romanoff heirship? I tell you, Herr Max, we may
+ blamelessly lie in wait for him wherever we find him, and whoso says us
+ nay is siding with the wolf against the lambs, with the robber and the
+ slayer against the honest representative of right and justice.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I never met a Nihilist before,&rsquo; said Oswald to Ernest, in a
+ half-undertone,&rsquo; and it never struck me to think what they might
+ have to say for themselves from their own side of the question.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s one of the uses of coming here to Herr Schurz&rsquo;s,&rsquo;
+ Ernest answered quickly. &lsquo;You may not agree with all you hear, but
+ at least you learn to see others as they see themselves; whereas if you
+ mix always in English society, and read only English papers, you will see
+ them only as we English see them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But just fancy,&rsquo; Oswald went on, as they both stood back a little
+ to make way for others who wished for interviews with the great man,
+ &lsquo;just fancy that this Borodinsky, or whatever his name may be, has
+ himself very likely helped in dynamite plots, or manufactured
+ nitro-glycerine cartridges to blow up the Czar; and yet we stand here
+ talking with him as coolly as if he were an ordinary respectable innocent
+ Englishman.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What of that?&rsquo; Ernest answered, smiling. &lsquo;Didn&rsquo;t we
+ meet Prince Strelinoffsky at Oriel last term, and didn&rsquo;t we talk
+ with him too, as if he was an honest, hard-working, bread-earning
+ Christian? and yet we knew he was a member of the St. Petersburg office
+ clique, and at the bottom of half the trouble in Poland for the last ten
+ years or so. Grant even that Borodinsky is quite wrong in his way of
+ dealing with noxious autocrats, and yet which do you think is the worst
+ criminal of the two&mdash;he with his little honest glazier&rsquo;s shop
+ in a back slum of Paddington, or Strelinoffsky with his jewelled fingers
+ calmly signing accursed warrants to send childing Polish women to die of
+ cold and hunger and ill-treatment on the way to Siberia?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, really, Le Breton, you know I&rsquo;m a passably good Radical, but
+ you&rsquo;re positively just one stage too Radical even for me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Come here oftener,&rsquo; answered Ernest; &lsquo;and perhaps you&rsquo;ll
+ begin to think a little differently about some things.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later in the evening Max Schurz found Ernest alone in a quiet
+ corner. &lsquo;One moment, my dear Le Breton,&rsquo; he said; &lsquo;you
+ know I always like to find out all about people&rsquo;s political
+ antecedents; it helps one to fathom the potentialities of their
+ characters. From what social stratum, now, do we get your clever friend,
+ Mr. Oswald?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘His father&rsquo;s a petty tradesman in a country town in Devonshire, I
+ believe,&rsquo; Ernest answered; &lsquo;and he himself is a good general
+ democrat, without any very pronounced socialistic colouring.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A petty tradesman! Hum, I thought so. He has rather the mental bearing
+ and equipment of a man from the petite bourgeoisie. I have been talking to
+ him, and drawing him out. Clever, very, and with good instincts, but not
+ wholly and entirely sound. A fibre wrong somewhere, socially speaking, a
+ false note suspected in his ideas of life; too much acquiescence in the
+ thing that is, and too little faith or enthusiasm for the thing that ought
+ to be. But we shall make something of him yet. He has read &ldquo;Gold&rdquo;
+ and understands it. That is already a beginning. Bring him again. I shall
+ always be glad to see him here.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I will,&rsquo; said Ernest, &lsquo;and I believe the more you know him,
+ Herr Max, the better you will like him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And what did you think of the sons of the prophets?&rsquo; asked Herbert
+ Le Breton of Oswald as they left the salon at the close of the reception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Frankly speaking,&rsquo; answered Oswald, looking half aside at Ernest,
+ ‘I didn&rsquo;t quite care for all of them&mdash;the Nihilists and
+ Communards took my breath away at first; but as to Max Schurz himself I
+ think there can be only one opinion possible about him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And that is&mdash;&mdash;?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That he&rsquo;s a magnificent old man, with a genuine apostolic
+ inspiration. I don&rsquo;t care twopence whether he is right or wrong, but
+ he&rsquo;s a perfectly splendid old fellow, as honest and transparent as
+ the day&rsquo;s long. He believes in it all, and would give his life for
+ it freely, if he thought he could forward the cause a single inch by doing
+ it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re quite right,&rsquo; said Herbert calmly. &lsquo;He&rsquo;s
+ an Elijah thrown blankly upon these prosaic latter days; and what&rsquo;s
+ more, his gospel&rsquo;s all true; but it doesn&rsquo;t matter a sou to
+ you or me, for it will never come about in our time, no nor for a century
+ after. &ldquo;Post nos millennium.&rdquo; So what on earth&rsquo;s the
+ good of our troubling our poor overworked heads about it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He&rsquo;s the only really great man I ever knew,&rsquo; said Ernest
+ enthusiastically, &lsquo;and I consider that his friendship&rsquo;s the
+ one thing in my life that has been really and truly worth living for. If a
+ pessimist were to ask me what was the use of human existence, I should
+ give him a card of introduction to go to Max Schurz&rsquo;s.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Excuse my interrupting your rhapsody, Ernest,&rsquo; Herbert put in
+ blandly, &lsquo;but will you have your own trousers tonight, Oswald, or
+ will you wear mine back to your lodgings now, and I&rsquo;ll send one of
+ the servants round with yours for them in the morning?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Thanks,&rsquo; said Harry Oswald, slapping the sides of the unopened
+ dust-coat; &lsquo;I think I&rsquo;ll go home as I am at present, and I&rsquo;ll
+ recover the marks of the Beast again to-morrow. You see, I didn&rsquo;t
+ betray my evening waistcoat after all, now did I?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they parted at the corner, each of them going his own way in his own
+ mood and manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The decayed and disfranchised borough of Calcombe Pomeroy, or
+ Calcombe-on-the-Sea, is one of the prettiest and quietest little
+ out-of-the-way watering-places in the whole smiling southern slope of the
+ county of Devon. Thank heaven, the Great Western Railway, when planning
+ its organised devastations along the beautiful rural region of the South
+ Hams, left poor little Calcombe out in the cold; and the consequence is
+ that those few people who still love to linger in the uncontaminated
+ rustic England of our wiser forefathers can here find a beach unspoiled by
+ goat-carriages or black-faced minstrels, a tiny parade uninvaded by stucco
+ terraces or German brass bands, and an ancient stone pier off which
+ swimmers may take a header direct, in the early morning, before the
+ sumptuary edicts of his worship the Mayor compel them to resort to the use
+ of bathing-machines and the decent covering of an approved costume,
+ between the hours of eight and eight. A board beside the mouth of the
+ harbour, signed by a Secretary of State to his late Majesty King William
+ the Fourth, still announces to a heedless world the tolls to be paid for
+ entry by the ships that never arrive; and a superannuated official in a
+ wooden leg and a gold cap-band retains the honourable sinecure of a
+ harbour-mastership, with a hypothetical salary nominally payable from the
+ non-existent fees and port dues. The little river Cale, at the bottom of
+ whose combe the wee town nestles snugly, has cut itself a deep valley in
+ the soft sandstone hills; and the gap in the cliffs formed by its mouth
+ gives room for the few hundred yards of level on which the antiquated
+ little parade is warmly ensconced. On either hand tall bluffs of brilliant
+ red marl raise their honeycombed faces fronting the sea; and in the
+ distance the sheeny grey rocks of the harder Devonian promontories gleam
+ like watered satin in the slant rays of the afternoon sun. Altogether a
+ very sleepy little old-world place is Calcombe Pomeroy, specially reserved
+ by the overruling chance of the universe to be a summer retreat for quiet,
+ peace-loving, old-world people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Londoner who escapes for a while from the great teeming human
+ ant-hill, with its dark foggy lanes and solid firmament of hanging smoke,
+ to draw in a little unadulterated atmosphere at Calcombe Pomeroy, finds
+ himself landed by the Plymouth slow train at Calcombe Road Station, twelve
+ miles by cross-country highway from his final destination. The little grey
+ box, described in the time-tables as a commodious omnibus, which takes him
+ on for the rest of his journey, crawls slowly up the first six miles to
+ the summit of the intervening range at the Cross Foxes Inn, and jolts
+ swiftly down the other six miles, with red hot drag creaking and groaning
+ lugubriously, till it seems to topple over sheer into the sea at the
+ clambering High Street of the old borough. As you turn to descend the
+ seaward slope at the Cross Foxes, you appear to leave modern industrial
+ England and the nineteenth century well behind you on the north, and you
+ go down into a little isolated primaeval dale, cut off from all the outer
+ world by the high ridge that girds it round on every side, and turned only
+ on the southern front towards the open Channel and the backing sun.
+ Half-way down the steep cobble-paved High Street, just after you pass the
+ big dull russet church, a small shop on the left-hand side bears a
+ signboard with the painted legend, &lsquo;Oswald, Family Grocer and
+ Provision Dealer.&rsquo; In the front bay window of that red-brick house,
+ built out just over the shop, Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel
+ College, Oxford, kept his big oak writing-desk; and at that desk he might
+ be seen reading or writing on most mornings during the long vacation,
+ after the end of his three weeks&rsquo; stay at a London West-end
+ lodging-house, from which he had paid his first visit to Max Schurz&rsquo;s
+ Sunday evening receptions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Two pounds of best black tea, good quality&mdash;yours is generally
+ atrocious, Mrs. Oswald&mdash;that&rsquo;s the next thing on the list,&rsquo;
+ said poor trembling, shaky Miss Luttrell, the Squire&rsquo;s sister, a
+ palsied old lady with a quavering, querulous, rasping voice. &lsquo;Two
+ pounds of best black tea, and mind you don&rsquo;t send it all dust, as
+ you usually do. No good tea to be got nowadays, since they took the duties
+ off and ruined the country. And I see a tall young man lounging about the
+ place sometimes, and never touching his hat to me as he ought to do. Young
+ people have no manners in these times, Mrs. Oswald, as they used to have
+ when you and I were young. Your son, I suppose, come home from sea or
+ something? He&rsquo;s in the fish-curing line, isn&rsquo;t he, I think I&rsquo;ve
+ heard you say?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t rightly know who &lsquo;ee may mean, Miss Luttrell,&rsquo;
+ replied the mother proudly, &lsquo;by a young man lounging about the
+ place; but my son&rsquo;s at home from Oxford at present for his
+ vacations, and he isn&rsquo;t in the fish-curing line at all, ma&rsquo;am,
+ but he&rsquo;s a Fellow of his college, as I&rsquo;ve told &lsquo;ee more
+ than once already; but you&rsquo;re getting old, I see, Miss Luttrell, and
+ your memory isn&rsquo;t just what it had used to be, dost know.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, at Oxford, is he?&rsquo; Miss Luttrell chimed on vacantly, wagging
+ her wrinkled old head in solemn deprecation of the evil omen. She knew it
+ as well as Mrs. Oswald herself did, having heard the fact at least a
+ thousand times before; but she made it a matter of principle never to
+ encourage these upstart pretensions on the part of the lower orders, and
+ just to keep them rigorously at their proper level she always made a feint
+ of forgetting any steps in advance which they might have been bold enough
+ to take, without humbly obtaining her previous permission, out of their
+ original and natural obscurity. &lsquo;Fellow of his college is he,
+ really? Fellow of a college! Dear me, how completely Oxford is going to
+ the dogs. Admitting all kinds of odd people into the University, I
+ understand. Why, my second brother&mdash;the Archdeacon, you know&mdash;was
+ a Fellow of Magdalen for some time in his younger days. You surprise me,
+ quite. Fellow of a college! You&rsquo;re perfectly sure he isn&rsquo;t a
+ National schoolmaster at Oxford instead, and that you and his father haven&rsquo;t
+ got the two things mixed up together in your heads, Mrs. Oswald?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, ma&rsquo;am, we&rsquo;in perfectly sure of it, and we haven&rsquo;t
+ got the things mixed up in our heads at all, no more nor you have, Miss
+ Luttrell. He was a scholar of Trinity first, and now he&rsquo;s got a
+ Fellowship at Oriel. You must mind hearing all about it at the time, only
+ you&rsquo;re getting so forgetful like now, with years and such like.&rsquo;
+ Mrs. Oswald knew there was nothing that annoyed the old lady so much as
+ any allusion to her increasing age or infirmities, and she took her
+ revenge out of her in that simple retributive fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A scholar of Trinity, was he? Ah, yes, patronage will do a great deal in
+ these days, for certain. The Rector took a wonderful interest in your boy,
+ I think, Mrs. Oswald. He went to Plymouth Grammar School, I remember now,
+ with a nomination no doubt; and there, I dare say, he attracted some
+ attention, being a decent, hard-working lad, and got sent to Oxford with a
+ sizarship, or something of the sort; there are all kinds of arrangements
+ like that at the Universities, I believe, to encourage poor young men of
+ respectable character. They become missionaries or ushers in the end, and
+ often get very good salaries, considering everything, I&rsquo;m told.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There you&rsquo;re wrong, again, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; put in Mrs. Oswald,
+ stoutly. ‘My husband, he sent Harry to Plymouth School at our own expense;
+ and after that he got an exhibition from the school, and an open
+ scholarship, I think they call it, at the college; and he&rsquo;s been no
+ more beholden to patronage, ma&rsquo;am, than your brother the Archdeacon
+ was, nor for the matter o&rsquo; that not so much neither; for I&rsquo;ve
+ a&rsquo;ways understood the old Squire sent him first to the Charterhouse,
+ and afterwards he got a living through Lord Modbury&rsquo;s influence, as
+ the Squire voted regular with the Modbury people for the borough and
+ county. But George was always independent, Miss Luttrell, and beholden to
+ neither Luttrells nor Modburies, and that I tell &lsquo;ee to your face,
+ ma&rsquo;am, and no shame of it either.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, well, Mrs. Oswald,&rsquo; said the old lady, shaking her head more
+ violently than ever at this direct discomfiture, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t want
+ to argue with you about the matter. I dare say your son&rsquo;s a very
+ worthy young man, and has worked his way up into a position he wasn&rsquo;t
+ intended for by Providence. But it&rsquo;s no business of mine, thank
+ heaven, it&rsquo;s no business of mine, for I&rsquo;m not responsible for
+ all the vagaries of all the tradespeople on my brother&rsquo;s estate, nor
+ don&rsquo;t want to be. There&rsquo;s Mrs. Figgins, now, the baker&rsquo;s
+ wife; her daughter has just chosen to get married to a bank clerk in
+ London; and I said to her this morning, &ldquo;Well, Mrs. Figgins, so you&rsquo;ve
+ let your Polly go and pick up with some young fellow from town that you&rsquo;ve
+ never seen before, haven&rsquo;t you? And that&rsquo;s the way of all you
+ people. You marry your girls to bank clerks without a reference, for the
+ sake of getting &lsquo;em off your hands, and what&rsquo;s the
+ consequence? They rob their employers to keep up a pretty household for
+ their wives, as if they were fine ladies; and then at last the thing&rsquo;s
+ discovered, there comes a smash, they run away to America, and you have
+ your daughters and their children thrown back again penniless upon your
+ hands.&rdquo; That&rsquo;s what I said to her, Mrs. Oswald. And how&rsquo;s
+ YOUR daughter, by the way&mdash;Jemima I think you call her; how&rsquo;s
+ she, eh, tell me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I beg your pardon, Miss Luttrell, but her name&rsquo;s not Jemima; it&rsquo;s
+ Edith.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Edith, is it? Well to be sure! The grand names girls have dangling
+ about with them nowadays! My name&rsquo;s plain Catherine, and it&rsquo;s
+ good enough for me, thank goodness. But these young ladies of the new
+ style must be Ediths and Eleanors and Ophelias, and all that heathenish
+ kind of thing, as if they were princesses of the blood or play-actresses,
+ instead of being good Christian Susans and Janes and Betties, like their
+ grandmothers were before them. And Miss Edith, now, what is SHE doing?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She&rsquo;s doing nothing in particular at this moment, Miss Luttrell,
+ leastways not so far as I know of; but she&rsquo;s going up to Oxford part
+ of this term on a visit to her brother.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Going up to Oxford, my good woman! Why, heaven bless the girl, she&rsquo;d
+ much better stop at home and learn her catechism. She should try to do her
+ duty in that station of life to which it has pleased Providence to call
+ her, instead of running after young gentlemen above her own rank and place
+ in society at Oxford. Tell her so from me, Mrs. Oswald, and mind you don&rsquo;t
+ send the tea dusty. Two pounds of your best, if you please, as soon as you
+ can send it. Good-morning.&rsquo; And Miss Luttrell, having discovered the
+ absolute truth of the shocking rumour which had reached her about Edith&rsquo;s
+ projected visit, the confirmation of which was the sole object of her
+ colloquy, wagged her way out of the shop again successfully, and was duly
+ assisted by the page-boy into her shambling little palsied donkey-chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That was all the old cat came about, you warr&rsquo;nt you,&rsquo;
+ muttered Mr. Oswald himself from behind his biscuit-boxes. &lsquo;Must
+ have heard it from the Rector&rsquo;s wife, and wanted to find out if it
+ was true, to go and tell Mrs. Walters o&rsquo; such a bit o&rsquo; turble
+ presumptiousness.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, in the little study with the bow-window over the shop, Harry
+ and Edie Oswald were busily discussing the necessary preparations for Edie&rsquo;s
+ long-promised visit to the University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I hope you&rsquo;ve got everything nice in the way of dress, you know,
+ Edie,&rsquo; said Harry. &lsquo;You&rsquo;ll want a decent dinner dress,
+ of course, for you&rsquo;ll be asked out to dine at least once or twice;
+ and I want you to have everything exceedingly proper and pretty.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I think I&rsquo;ve got all I need in that way, Harry; I&rsquo;ve my dark
+ poplin, cut square in the bodice, for one dinner dress, and my high black
+ silk to fall back upon for another. Worn open in front, with a lace
+ handkerchief and a locket, it does really very nicely. Then I&rsquo;ve got
+ three afternoon dresses, the grey you gave me, the sage-greeny aesthetic
+ one, and the peacock-blue with the satin box-pleats. It&rsquo;s a charming
+ dress, the peacock-blue; it looks as if it might have stepped straight out
+ of a genuine Titian. It came home from Miss Wells&rsquo;s this morning.
+ Wait five minutes, like a dear boy, and I&rsquo;ll run and put it on and
+ let you see me in it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s a good girl, do. I&rsquo;m so anxious you should have all
+ your clothes the exact pink of perfection, Popsy. Though I&rsquo;m afraid
+ I&rsquo;m a very poor critic in that matter&mdash;if you were only a
+ problem in space of four dimensions, now! Yet, after all, every man or
+ woman is more of a problem than anything in x square plus y square you can
+ possibly set yourself.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie ran lightly up into her own room, and soon reappeared clad
+ resplendent in the new peacock-blue dress, with hat and parasol to match,
+ and a little creamy lamb&rsquo;s-wool scarf thrown with artful
+ carelessness around her pretty neck and shoulders. Harry looked at her
+ with unfeigned admiration. Indeed, you would not easily find many lighter
+ or more fairly-like little girls than Edie Oswald, even in the beautiful
+ half-Celtic South Hams of Devon. In figure she was rather small than
+ short, for though she was but a wee thing, her form was so exactly and
+ delicately modelled that she might have looked tall if she stood alone at
+ a little distance. She never walked, but seemed to dance about from place
+ to place, so buoyant and light, that Harry doubted whether in her case
+ gravitation could really vary as the square of the distance&mdash;it
+ seemed, in fact, to be almost diminished in the proportions of the cube.
+ Her hair and eyes&mdash;such big bright eyes!&mdash;were dark; but her
+ complexion was scarcely brunette, and the colour in her cheeks was rich
+ and peach-like, after the true Devonian type. She was dimpled whenever she
+ smiled, and she smiled often; her full lips giving a peculiar ripe look to
+ her laughing mouth that suited admirably with her light and delicate style
+ of beauty. Perhaps some people might have thought them too full; certainly
+ they irresistibly suggested to a critical eye the distinct notion of
+ kissability. As she stood there, faintly blushing, waiting to be admired
+ by her brother, in her neatly fitting dainty blue dress, her lips half
+ parted, and her arms held carelessly at her side, she looked about as much
+ like a fairy picture as it is given to mere human flesh and blood to look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s delicious, Edie,&rsquo; said Harry, surveying her from, head
+ to foot with a smile of satisfaction which made her blush deepen; ‘it&rsquo;s
+ simply delicious. Where on earth did you get the idea of it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, it&rsquo;s partly the present style,&rsquo; said Edie; &lsquo;but I
+ took the notion of the bodice partly too from that Vandyck, you know, in
+ the Palazzo Bossi at Genoa.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I remember, I remember,&rsquo; Harry answered, contemplating her with an
+ admiring eye. &lsquo;Now just turn round and show me how it sits behind,
+ Edie. You recollect Théophile Gautier says the one great advantage which a
+ beautiful woman possesses over a beautiful statue is this, that while a
+ man has to walk round the beautiful statue in order to see it from every
+ side, he can ask the beautiful woman to turn herself round and let him see
+ her, without requiring to take that trouble.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Théophile Gautier was a horrid man, and if anybody but my brother quoted
+ such a thing as that to me I should be very angry with him indeed.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Théophile Gautier was quite as horrid as you consider him to be, and if
+ you were anybody but my sister it isn&rsquo;t probable I should have
+ quoted him to you. But if there is any statue on earth prettier or more
+ graceful than you are in that dress at this moment, Edie, then the Venus
+ of Milo ought immediately to be pulverised to ultimate atoms for a rank
+ artistic impostor.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Thank you, Harry, for the compliment. What pretty things you must be
+ capable of saying to somebody else&rsquo;s sister, when you&rsquo;re so
+ polite and courtly to your own.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘On the contrary, Popsy, when it comes to somebody else&rsquo;s sister I&rsquo;m
+ much too nervous and funky to say anything of the kind. But you must at
+ least do Gautier the justice to observe that if I had described a circle
+ round you, instead of allowing you to revolve once on your own axis, I
+ shouldn&rsquo;t have been able to get the gloss on the satin in the
+ sunlight as I do now that you turn the panniers toward the window. That,
+ you must admit, is a very important aesthetic consideration.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, of course it&rsquo;s essentially a sunshiny dress,&rsquo; said Edie,
+ smiling. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s meant to be worn out of doors, on a fine
+ afternoon, when the light is falling slantwise, you know, just as it does
+ now through the low window. That&rsquo;s the light painters always choose
+ for doing satin in.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s certainly very pretty,&rsquo; Harry went on, musing; &lsquo;but
+ I&rsquo;m afraid Le Breton would say it was a serious piece of economic
+ hubris.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Piece of what?&rsquo; asked Edie quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Piece of hubris&mdash;an economical outrage, don&rsquo;t you see; a gross
+ anti-social and individualist demonstration. Hubris, you know, is Greek
+ for insolence; at least, not quite insolence, but a sort of pride and
+ overweening rebelliousness against the gods, the kind of arrogance that
+ brings Nemesis after it, you understand. It was hubris in Agamemnon and
+ Xerxes to go swelling about and ruffling themselves like turkey-cocks,
+ because they were great conquerors and all that sort of thing; and it was
+ their Nemesis to get murdered by Clytemnestra, or jolly well beaten by the
+ Athenians at Salamis. Well, Le Breton always uses the word for anything
+ that he thinks socially wrong&mdash;and he thinks a good many things
+ socially wrong, I can tell you&mdash;anything that partakes of the nature
+ of a class distinction, or a mere vulgar ostentation of wealth, or a
+ useless waste of good, serviceable, labour-gotten material. He would call
+ it hubris to have silver spoons when electroplate would do just as well;
+ or to keep a valet for your own personal attendant, making one man into
+ the mere bodily appanage of another; or to buy anything you didn&rsquo;t
+ really need, causing somebody else to do work for you which might
+ otherwise have been avoided.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Which Mr. Le Breton&mdash;the elder or the younger one?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, the younger&mdash;Ernest. As for Herbert, the Fellow of St. Aldate&rsquo;s,
+ he&rsquo;s not troubled with any such scruples; he takes the world as he
+ finds it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They&rsquo;ve both gone in for their degrees, haven&rsquo;t they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, Herbert has got a fellowship; Ernest&rsquo;s up in residence still
+ looking about for one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s Ernest that would think my dress a piece of
+ what-you-may-call-it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, Ernest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then I&rsquo;m sure I shan&rsquo;t like him. I should insist upon every
+ woman&rsquo;s natural right to wear the dress or hat or bonnet that suits
+ her complexion best.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You can&rsquo;t tell, Edie, till you&rsquo;ve met him. He&rsquo;s a very
+ good fellow; and of one thing I&rsquo;m certain, whatever he thinks right
+ he does, and sticks to it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But do YOU think, Harry, I oughtn&rsquo;t to wear a new peacock-blue
+ camel-hair dress on my first visit up to Oxford?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Edie dear, I don&rsquo;t quite know what my own opinions are
+ exactly upon that matter. I&rsquo;m not an economist, you see, I&rsquo;m a
+ man of science. When I look at you, standing there so pretty in that
+ pretty dress, I feel inclined to say to myself, &ldquo;Every woman ought
+ to do her best to make herself look as beautiful as she can for the common
+ delectation of all humanity.&rdquo; Your beauty, a Greek would have said,
+ is a gift from the gods to us all, and we ought all gratefully to make the
+ most of it. I&rsquo;m sure <i>I</i> do.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Thank you, Harry, again. You&rsquo;re in your politest humour this
+ afternoon.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But then, on the other hand, I know if Le Breton were here he&rsquo;d
+ soon argue me over to the other side. He has the enthusiasm of humanity so
+ strong upon him that you can&rsquo;t help agreeing with him as long as he&rsquo;s
+ talking to you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then if he were here you&rsquo;d probably make me put away the
+ peacock-blue, for fear of hubris and Nemesis and so forth, and go up to
+ Oxford a perfect fright in my shabby old Indian tussore!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t know that I should do that, even then, Edie. In the first
+ place, nothing on earth could make you look a perfect fright, or anything
+ like one, Popsy dear; and in the second place, I don&rsquo;t know that I&rsquo;m
+ Socialist enough myself ever to have the courage of my opinions as Le
+ Breton has. Certainly, I should never attempt to force them unwillingly
+ upon others. You must remember, Edie, it&rsquo;s one thing for Le Breton
+ to be so communistic as all that comes to, and quite another thing for you
+ and me. Le Breton&rsquo;s father was a general and a knight, you see; and
+ people will never forget that his mother&rsquo;s Lady Le Breton still,
+ whatever he does. He may do what he likes in the way of social
+ eccentricities, and the world will only say he&rsquo;s such a very strange
+ advanced young fellow. But if I were to take you up to Oxford badly
+ dressed, or out of the fashion, or looking peculiar in any way, the world
+ wouldn&rsquo;t put it down to our political beliefs, but would say we were
+ mere country tradespeople by birth, and didn&rsquo;t know any better. That
+ makes a lot of difference, you know.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re quite right, Harry; and yet, do you know, I think there must
+ be something, too, in sticking to one&rsquo;s own opinions, like Mr. Le
+ Breton. I should stick to mine, I&rsquo;m sure, and wear whatever dress I
+ liked, in spite of anybody. It&rsquo;s a sweet thing, really, isn&rsquo;t
+ it?&rsquo; And she turned herself round, craning over her shoulder to look
+ at the effect, in a vain attempt to assume an objective attitude towards
+ her own back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;m going to Oxford at last, Harry,&rsquo; she said,
+ after a short pause. &lsquo;I HAVE so longed to go all these years while
+ you were an undergraduate; and I&rsquo;m dying to have got there, now the
+ chance has really come at last, after all. I shall glory in the place, I&rsquo;m
+ certain; and it&rsquo;ll be so nice to make the acquaintance of all your
+ clever friends.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Edie,&rsquo; said her brother, smiling gently at the light, joyous,
+ tremulous little figure, &lsquo;I think I&rsquo;ve done right in putting
+ it off till now. It&rsquo;s just as well you haven&rsquo;t gone up to
+ Oxford till after your trip on the Continent with me. That three months in
+ Paris, and Switzerland, and Venice, and Florence, did you a lot of good,
+ you see; improved you, and gave you tone, and supplied you with things to
+ talk about.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, you oughtn&rsquo;t to think I needed any improvement at all, sir,&rsquo;
+ Edie answered, pouting; &lsquo;and as to talking, I&rsquo;m not aware I
+ had ever any dearth of subjects for conversation even before I went on the
+ Continent. There are things enough to be said about heaven and earth in
+ England, surely, without one having to hurry through France and Italy,
+ like Cook&rsquo;s excursionists, just to hunt up something fresh to
+ chatter about. It&rsquo;s my belief that a person who can&rsquo;t find
+ anything new to say about the every-day world around her won&rsquo;t
+ discover much suggestive matter for conversation in a Continental
+ Bradshaw. It&rsquo;s like that feeble watery lady I met at the table d&rsquo;hote
+ at Geneva. From something she said I gathered she&rsquo;d been in India,
+ and I asked her how she liked it. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+ very hot.&rdquo; I told her I had heard so before. Presently she said
+ something casually about having been in Brazil. I asked her what sort of
+ place Brazil was. &ldquo;Oh.&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s dreadfully
+ hot.&rdquo; I told her I&rsquo;d heard that too. By-and-by she began to
+ talk again about Barbadoes. &ldquo;What did you think of the West Indies?&rdquo;
+ I said. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;they&rsquo;re terribly hot,
+ really.&rdquo; I told her I had gathered as much from previous travellers.
+ And that was positively all in the end I ever got out of her, for all her
+ travels.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Edie, I&rsquo;ve always admitted that you were simply perfect,&rsquo;
+ Harry said, glancing at her with visible admiration, &lsquo;and I don&rsquo;t
+ think anything on earth could possibly improve you&mdash;except perhaps a
+ judicious course of differential and integral calculus, which might
+ possibly serve to tone down slightly your exuberant and excessive
+ vitality. Still, you know, from the point of view of society, which is a
+ force we have always to reckon with&mdash;a constant, in fact, that we may
+ call Pi&mdash;there can be no doubt in the world that to have been on the
+ Continent is a differentiating factor in one&rsquo;s social position. It
+ doesn&rsquo;t matter in the least what your own private evaluation of Pi
+ may be; if you don&rsquo;t happen to know the particular things and places
+ that Pi knows, Pi&rsquo;s evaluation of you will be approximately a
+ minimum, of that you may be certain.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, for my part, I don&rsquo;t care twopence about Pi as you call it,&rsquo;
+ said Edie, tossing her pretty little head contemptuously; &lsquo;but I&rsquo;m
+ very glad indeed to have been on the Continent for my own sake, because of
+ the pictures, and palaces, and mountains, and waterfalls we&rsquo;ve seen,
+ and not because of Pi&rsquo;s opinion of me for having seen them. I would
+ have been the same person really whether I&rsquo;d seen them or not; but I&rsquo;m
+ so much the richer myself for that view from the top of the Col de Balme,
+ and for that Murillo&mdash;oh, do you remember the flood of light on that
+ Murillo?&mdash;in the far corner of that delicious gallery at Bologna.
+ Why, mother darling, what on earth has been vexing you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nothing at all, Edie dear; leastways, that is, nothing to speak of,&rsquo;
+ said her mother, coming up from the shop hot and flurried from her
+ desperate encounter with the redoubtable Miss Luttrell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, I know just what it is, darling,&rsquo; cried the girl, putting her
+ arm around her mother&rsquo;s waist caressingly, and drawing her down to
+ kiss her face half a dozen times over in her outburst of sympathy. ‘That
+ horrid old Miss Catherine has been here again, I&rsquo;m sure, for I saw
+ her going out of the shop just now, and she&rsquo;s been saying something
+ or other spiteful, as she always does, to vex my dearie. What did she say
+ to you to-day, now do tell us, duckie mother?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, there,&rsquo; said Mrs. Oswald, half laughing and half crying,
+ &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t tell &lsquo;ee exactly what she did say, but it was
+ just the kind of thing that she mostly does, impudent like, just to hurt a
+ body&rsquo;s feelings. She said you&rsquo;d better not go to Oxford, Edie,
+ but stop at home and learn your catechism.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You might have pointed out to her, mother dear,&rsquo; said the young
+ man, smoothing her hair softly with his hand, and kissing her forehead,
+ &lsquo;that in the most advanced intellectual centres the Church catechism
+ is perhaps no longer regarded as the absolute ultimatum of the highest and
+ deepest economical wisdom.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Bless your heart, Harry, what&rsquo;d be the good of talking that way to
+ the likes of she? She wouldn&rsquo;t understand a single word of what you
+ were driving at. It must be all plain sailing with her, without it&rsquo;s
+ in the way of spite, and then she sees her chance to tack round the
+ hardest corner with half a wind in her sails only, as soon as look at it.
+ Her sharpness goes all off toward ill-nature, that it do. Why, she said
+ you&rsquo;d got on at Oxford by good patronage!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There, you see, Edie,&rsquo; cried Harry demonstratively, &lsquo;that&rsquo;s
+ an infinitesimal fraction of Pi; that&rsquo;s a minute decimal of this
+ great, sneering, ugly aggregate &ldquo;society&rdquo; that we have to deal
+ with whether we will or no, and that rends us and grinds us to powder if
+ only it can once get in the thin end of a chance. Take shaky bitter old
+ Miss Catherine for your unit, multiply her to the nth, and there you see
+ the irreducible power we have to fight against. All one&rsquo;s political
+ economy is very well in its way; but the practical master of the situation
+ is Pi, sitting autocratically in many-headed judgment on our poor solitary
+ little individualities, and crushing us irretrievably with the dead weight
+ of its inexorable cumulative nothingness. And to think that that quivering
+ old mass of perambulating jealousy&mdash;that living incarnation of envy,
+ hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness&mdash;should be able to make you
+ uncomfortable for a single moment, mother darling, with her petty,
+ dribbling, doddering venom, why, it&rsquo;s simply unendurable.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There now, Harry,&rsquo; said Mrs. Oswald, relenting, &lsquo;you mustn&rsquo;t
+ be too hard, neither, on poor old Miss Catherine. She&rsquo;s a bit
+ soured, you see, by disappointments and one thing and another. She doesn&rsquo;t
+ mean it, really, but it&rsquo;s just her nature. Folks can&rsquo;t be
+ blamed for their nature, now, can they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It occurs to me,&rsquo; said Harry quietly, &lsquo;that vipers only sting
+ because it&rsquo;s their nature; and Dr. Watts has made a similar
+ observation with regard to the growling and fighting of bears and lions.
+ But I&rsquo;m not aware that anybody has yet proposed to get up a Society
+ for the protection of those much-misunderstood creatures, on the ground
+ that they are not really responsible for their own inherited dispositions.
+ Mr. William Sikes had a nature (no doubt congenital) which impelled him to
+ beat his wife&mdash;I&rsquo;m not sure that she was even his wife at all,
+ now I come to think of it, but that&rsquo;s a mere detail&mdash;and to
+ kick his familiar acquaintances casually about the head. We, on the other
+ hand, have natures which impel us, when we catch Mr. William Sikes
+ indulging in these innate idiosyncrasies by way of recreation, to clap him
+ promptly into prison, and even, under certain aggravating conditions, to
+ cause him to be hanged by the neck till he be dead. This may be a
+ regrettable incident of our own peculiar dispositions, mother dear, but it
+ has at least the same justification as Mr. Sikes&rsquo;s or the bears&rsquo;
+ and lions&rsquo;, that &lsquo;tis our nature to. And I feel pretty much
+ the same way about old Miss Luttrell.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, there,&rsquo; said his mother, kissing him gently, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re
+ a bad rebellious boy to be calling names, like a chatter-mag, and I won&rsquo;t
+ listen to you any longer. How pretty Edie do look in her new dress, to be
+ sure, Harry. I&rsquo;ll warr&rsquo;nt there won&rsquo;t be a prettier girl
+ in Oxford next week than what she is; no, nor a better one and a sweeter
+ one neither.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harry put his arms round both their waists at once, with an affectionate
+ pressure; and they went down to their old-fashioned tea together in the
+ little parlour behind the shop, looking out over the garden, and the
+ beach, and the great cliffs beyond on either hand, to the very farthest
+ edge of the distant clear-cut blue horizon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; MAGDALEN QUAD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Reverend Arthur Collingham Berkeley, curate of St. Fredegond&rsquo;s,
+ lounged lazily in his own neatly padded wickerwork easy-chair, opposite
+ the large lattice-paned windows of his pretty little first-floor rooms in
+ the front quad of Magdalen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There&rsquo;s a great deal to be said, Le Breton, in favour of October
+ term,&rsquo; he observed, in his soft, musical voice, as he gazed
+ pensively across the central grass-plot to the crimson drapery of the
+ Founder&rsquo;s Tower. &lsquo;Just look at that magnificent Virginia
+ creeper over there, now; just look at the way the red on it melts
+ imperceptibly into Tyrian purple and cloth of gold! Isn&rsquo;t that in
+ itself argument enough to fling at Hartmann&rsquo;s head, if he ventured
+ to come here sprinkling about his heresies, with his affected little
+ spray-shooter, in the midst of a drowsy Oxford autumn? The Cardinal never
+ saw Virginia creeper, I suppose; a man of his taste wouldn&rsquo;t have
+ been guilty of committing such a gross practical anachronism as that, any
+ more than he would have smoked a cigarette before tobacco was invented;
+ but if only he could have seen the October effect on that tower yonder, he&rsquo;d
+ have acknowledged that his own hat and robe were positively nowhere in the
+ running, for colour, wouldn&rsquo;t he?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well,&rsquo; answered Herbert, putting down the Venetian glass goblet he
+ had been examining closely with due care into its niche in the
+ over-mantel, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve no doubt Wolsey had too much historical
+ sense ever to step entirely out of his own century, like my brother
+ Ernest, for instance; but I&rsquo;ve never heard his opinion on the
+ subject of colour-harmonies, and I should suspect it of having been
+ distinctly tinged with nascent symptoms of renaissance vulgarity. This is
+ a lovely bit of Venetian, really, Berkeley. How the dickens do you manage
+ to pick up all these pretty things, I wonder? Why can&rsquo;t I afford
+ them, now?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What a question for the endowed and established to put to a poor starving
+ devil of a curate like me!&rsquo; said Berkeley lightly. &lsquo;You, an
+ incarnate sinecure and vested interest, a creature revelling in an
+ unearned income of fabulous Oriental magnificence&mdash;I dare say,
+ putting one thing with another, fully as much as five hundred a year&mdash;to
+ ask me, the unbeneficed and insignificant, with my wretched pittance of
+ eighty pounds per annum and my three pass-men a term for classical mods,
+ how I scrape together the few miserable, hoarded ha&rsquo;pence which I
+ grudgingly invest in my pots and pipkins! I save them from my dinner, Mr.
+ Bursar&mdash;I save them. If the Church only recognised modest merit as it
+ ought to do!&mdash;if the bishops only listened with due attention to the
+ sound and scholarly exegesis of my Sunday evening discourses at St.
+ Fredegond&rsquo;s!&mdash;then, indeed, I might be disposed to regard
+ things through a more satisfied medium&mdash;the medium of a nice, fat,
+ juicy country living. But for you, Le Breton&mdash;you, sir, a pluralist
+ and a sanguisorb of the deepest dye&mdash;to reproach me with my
+ Franciscan poverty&mdash;oh, it&rsquo;s too cruel!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m an abuse, I know,&rsquo; Herbert answered, smiling and waving
+ his hand gracefully. &lsquo;I at once admit it. Abuses exist, unhappily;
+ and while they continue do so, isn&rsquo;t it better they should envisage
+ themselves as me than as some other and probably less deserving fellow?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, it&rsquo;s not, decidedly. I should much prefer that one of them
+ envisaged itself as me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, of course. From your own strictly subjective point of view that&rsquo;s
+ very natural. I also look at the question abstractly from the side of the
+ empirical ego, and correctly deduce a corresponding conclusion. Only then,
+ you see, the terms of the minor premiss are luckily reversed.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, my dear fellow,&rsquo; said the curate, &lsquo;the fact about the
+ tea-things is this. You eat up your income, devour your substance in
+ riotous living; I prefer to feast my eyes and ears to my grosser senses.
+ You dine at high table, and fare sumptuously every day; I take a commons
+ of cold beef for lunch, and have tea off an egg and roll in my own rooms
+ at seven. You drink St. Emilion or still hock; I drink water from the well
+ or the cup that cheers but not obfuscates. The difference goes to pay for
+ the crockery. Do likewise, and with your untold wealth you might play Aunt
+ Sally at Oriental blue, and take cock-shots with a boot-jack at
+ hawthorn-pattern vases.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘At any rate, Berkeley, you always manage to get your money&rsquo;s worth
+ of amusement out of your money.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Of course, because I lay myself out to do it. Buy a bottle of champagne,
+ drink it off, and there you have to show for your total permanent
+ investment on the transaction the memory of a noisy evening and a headache
+ the next morning. Buy a flute, or a book of poems, or a little picture, or
+ a Palissy platter, and you have something to turn to with delight and
+ admiration for half a lifetime.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, but it isn&rsquo;t everybody who can isolate himself so utterly from
+ the workaday world and live so completely in his own little paradise of
+ art as you can, my dear fellow. Non omnia possumus omnes. You seem to be
+ always up in the aesthetic clouds, with your own music automatically laid
+ on, and no need of cherubim or seraphim to chant continually for your
+ gratification. Play me something of your own on your flute now, like a
+ good fellow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, I won&rsquo;t; because the spirit doesn&rsquo;t move me. It&rsquo;s
+ treachery to the divine gift to play when you don&rsquo;t want to.
+ Besides, what&rsquo;s the use of playing before YOU when you&rsquo;re not
+ the dean of a musical cathedral? David was wiser; he played only before
+ Saul, who had of course all the livings in his own gift, no doubt. I&rsquo;ve
+ got a new thing running in my head this very minute that you shall hear
+ though, all the same, as soon as I&rsquo;ve hammered it into shape&mdash;a
+ sort of villanette in music, a little whiff of country freshness,
+ suggested by the new ethereal acquisition, little Miss Butterfly. Have you
+ seen Miss Butterfly yet?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not by that name, at any rate. Who is she?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, the name&rsquo;s my own invention. Mademoiselle Volauvent, I mean&mdash;the
+ little bit of whirligig thistledown from Devonshire, Oswald&rsquo;s
+ sister, you know, of Oriel.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, that one! Yes; just caught a glimpse of her in the High on Thursday.
+ Very pretty, certainly, and as airy as a humming-bird.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s her! She&rsquo;s coming here to lunch this morning. If you&rsquo;re
+ a good boy, and will promise not to say anything naughty, you may stop and
+ meet her. She&rsquo;s a nice little thing, but rather timid at seeing so
+ many fresh faces. You mustn&rsquo;t frighten her by discussing the
+ Absolute and the Unconditioned, or bore her by talking about Aristotle&rsquo;s
+ Politics, or the revolutions in Corcyra. For you know, my dear Le Breton,
+ if you HAVE a fault, it is that you&rsquo;re such a consummate and
+ irrepressible prig; now aren&rsquo;t you really?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m hardly a fair judge on that subject, I suppose, Berkeley; but
+ if YOU have a rudimentary glimmering of a virtue, it is that you&rsquo;re
+ such a deliciously frank and yet considerate critic. I&rsquo;ll pocket
+ your rudeness though, and eat your lunch, in spite of it. Is Miss
+ Butterfly, as you call her, as stand-off as her brother?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not at all. She&rsquo;s accueillante to the last degree.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very restricted, I suppose&mdash;a country girl of the first water?
+ Horizon absolutely bounded by the high hedges of her native parish?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh dear no! Anything but that. She&rsquo;s like her brother, naturally
+ quick and adaptive.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oswald&rsquo;s an excellent fellow in his way,&rsquo; said Herbert,
+ button-holing his own waistcoat; &lsquo;but he&rsquo;s spoilt by two bad
+ traits. In the first place, he&rsquo;s so dreadfully conscious of the fact
+ that he has risen from a lower position; and then, again, he&rsquo;s so
+ engrossingly and pervadingly mathematical. X square seems to have seized
+ upon him bodily, and to have wormed its fatal way into his very marrow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, you must remember, he&rsquo;s true to his first love. Culture came to
+ him first, while yet he abode in Philistia, under the playful disguise of
+ a conic section. He scaled his way out of Gath by means of a treatise on
+ elementary trigonometry, and evaded Askelon on the wings of an undulatory
+ theory of light. It is different with us, you know, who have emerged from
+ the land of darkness by the regular classical and literary highway. We
+ feed upon Rabelais and Burton; he flits carelessly from flower to flower
+ of the theory of Quantics. If he were an idealist painter, like Rossetti,
+ he would paint great allegorical pictures for us, representing an
+ asymptotic curve appearing to him in a dream, and introducing that
+ blushing maiden, Hyperbola, to his affectionate consideration.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Berkeley spoke, a rap sounded on the oak, and Ernest Le Breton entered
+ the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What, you here, Herbert?&rsquo; he said with a shade of displeasure in
+ his tone. &lsquo;Are you, too, of the bidden?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Berkeley has asked me to stop and lunch with him, if that&rsquo;s what
+ you mean.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘We shall be quite a party,&rsquo; said Ernest, seating himself, and
+ looking abstractedly round the room. &lsquo;Why, Berkeley,&rsquo; as his
+ eye fell upon the Venetian vase, &lsquo;you&rsquo;ve positively got some
+ more gew-gaws here. This one&rsquo;s new, isn&rsquo;t it? Eh!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes. I picked it up for a song, this long, at a stranded village in the
+ Apennines. Literally for a song, for it cost me just what I got from
+ Fradelli for that last little piece of mine. It&rsquo;s very pretty, isn&rsquo;t
+ it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very; exquisite, really; the blending of the tones is so perfect. I wish
+ I knew what to think about these things. I can&rsquo;t make up my mind
+ about them. Sometimes I think it&rsquo;s all right to make them and buy
+ them; sometimes I think it&rsquo;s all wrong.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, if that&rsquo;s your difficulty,&rsquo; said Berkeley, pulling his
+ white tie straight at the tiny round looking-glass, &lsquo;I can easily
+ reassure you. Do you think a hundred and eighty pounds a year an excessive
+ sum for one person to spend upon his own entire living?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It doesn&rsquo;t seem so, as expenses go amongst US,&rsquo; said Ernest,
+ seriously, ‘though I dare say it would look like shocking extravagance to
+ a working man with a wife and family.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very well, that&rsquo;s the very outside I ever spend upon myself in any
+ one year, for the excellent reason that it&rsquo;s all I ever get to spend
+ in any way. Now, why shouldn&rsquo;t I spend it on the things that please
+ me best and are joys for ever, instead of on the things that disappear at
+ once and perish in the using?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, but that&rsquo;s not the whole question,&rsquo; Ernest answered,
+ looking at the curate fixedly. &lsquo;What right have you and I to spend
+ so much when others are wanting for bread? And what right have you or I to
+ make other people work at producing these useless trinkets for our sole
+ selfish gratification?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well now, Le Breton,&rsquo; said the parson, assuming a more serious
+ tone, ‘you know you&rsquo;re a reasonable creature, so I don&rsquo;t mind
+ discussing this question with you. You&rsquo;ve got an ethical foundation
+ to your nature, and you want to see things done on decent grounds of
+ distributive justice. There I am one with you. But you&rsquo;ve also got
+ an aesthetic side to your nature, which makes you worth arguing with upon
+ the matter. I won&rsquo;t argue with your vulgar materialised socialist,
+ who would break up the frieze of the Parthenon for road metal, or pull
+ down Giotto&rsquo;s frescoes because they represent scenes in the fabulous
+ lives of saints and martyrs. You know what a work of art is when you see
+ it; and therefore you&rsquo;re worth arguing with, which your vulgar
+ Continental socialist really isn&rsquo;t. The one cogent argument for him
+ is the whiff of grape-shot.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I recognise,&rsquo; said Ernest, &lsquo;that the works of art, of poetry,
+ or of music, which we possess are a grand inheritance from the past; and I
+ would do all I could to preserve them intact for those that come after us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sure you would. No restoration or tinkering in you, I&rsquo;m
+ certain. Well, then, would you give anything for a world which hadn&rsquo;t
+ got this aesthetic side to its corporate existence? Would you give
+ anything for a world which didn&rsquo;t care at all for painting,
+ sculpture, music, poetry? I wouldn&rsquo;t. I don&rsquo;t want such a
+ world. I won&rsquo;t countenance such a world. I&rsquo;ll do nothing to
+ further or advance such a world. It&rsquo;s utterly repugnant to me, and I
+ banish it, as Themistocles banished the Athenians.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But consider,&rsquo; said Ernest, &lsquo;we live in a world where men and
+ women are actually starving. How can we reconcile to our consciences the
+ spending of one penny on one useless thing when others are dying of sheer
+ want, and cold, and nakedness? That&rsquo;s the great question that&rsquo;s
+ always oppressing my poor dissatisfied conscience.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘So it does everybody&rsquo;s&mdash;except Herbert&rsquo;s: he explains it
+ all on biological grounds as the beautiful discriminative action of
+ natural selection. Simple, but not consolatory. Still, look at the other
+ side of the question. Suppose you and everybody else were to give up all
+ superfluities, and confine all your energies to the unlimited production
+ of bare necessaries. Suppose you occupy every acre of land with your
+ corn-fields, or your piggeries; and sweep away all the parks, and woods,
+ and heaths, and moorlands in England. Suppose you keep on letting your
+ population multiply as fast as it chooses&mdash;and it WILL multiply, you
+ know, in that ugly, reckless, anti-Malthusian fashion of its own&mdash;till
+ every rood of ground maintains its man, and only just maintains him; and
+ what will you have got then?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A dead level of abject pauperism,&rsquo; put in Herbert blandly; &lsquo;a
+ reductio ad absurdum of all your visionary Schurzian philosophy, my dear
+ Ernest. Look at it another way, now, and just consider. Which really and
+ truly matters most to you and me, a great work of art or a highly
+ respectable horny-handed son of toil, whose acquaintance we have never had
+ the pleasure of personally making? Suppose you read in the Times that the
+ respectable horny-handed one has fallen off a scaffolding and broken his
+ neck; and that the Dresden Madonna has been burnt by an unexpected
+ accident; which of the two items of intelligence affects you the most
+ acutely? My dear fellow, you may push your humanitarian enthusiasm as far
+ as ever you like; but in your heart of hearts you know as well as I do
+ that you&rsquo;ll deeply regret the loss of the Madonna, and you&rsquo;ll
+ never think again about the fate of the respectable horny-handed, his wife
+ or children.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest&rsquo;s answer, if he had any to make, was effectually nipped in
+ the bud by the entrance of the scout, who came in to announce Mr. and Miss
+ Oswald and Mrs. Martindale. Edie wore the grey dress, her brother&rsquo;s
+ present, and flitted into the room after her joyous fashion, full of her
+ first fresh delight at the cloistered quad of Magdalen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What a delicious college, Mr. Berkeley!&rsquo; she said, holding out her
+ hand to him brightly. &lsquo;Good-morning, Mr. Le Breton; this is your
+ brother, I know by the likeness. I thought New College very beautiful, but
+ nothing I&rsquo;ve seen is quite as beautiful as Magdalen. What a
+ privilege to live always in such a place! And what an exquisite view from
+ your window here!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes,&rsquo; said Berkeley, moving a few music-books from the seat in the
+ window-sill; &lsquo;come and sit by it, Miss Oswald. Mrs. Martindale, won&rsquo;t
+ you put your shawl down? How&rsquo;s the Professor to-day? So sorry he
+ couldn&rsquo;t come.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, he had to go to sit on one of his Boards,&rsquo; said the old lady,
+ seating herself. &lsquo;But you know I&rsquo;m quite accustomed to going
+ out without him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley knew as much; indeed, being a person of minute strategical
+ intellect, he had purposely looked out a day on which the Professor had to
+ attend a meeting of the delegates of something or other, so as to secure
+ Mrs. Martindale&rsquo;s services without the supplementary drawback of
+ that prodigious bore. Not that he was particularly anxious for Mrs.
+ Martindale&rsquo;s own society, which was of the most strictly negative
+ character; but he didn&rsquo;t wish Edie to be the one lady in a party of
+ four men, and he invited the Professor&rsquo;s wife as an excellent
+ neutral figure-head, to keep her in countenance. Ladies were scarcer then
+ in Oxford than they are nowadays. The married fellow was still a tentative
+ problematical experiment in those years, and the invasion of the Parks by
+ young couples had hardly yet begun in earnest. So female society was still
+ at a considerable local premium, and Berkeley was glad enough to secure
+ even colourless old Mrs. Martindale to square his party at any price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And how do you like Oxford, Miss Oswald?&rsquo; asked Ernest, making his
+ way towards the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Le Breton, what a question to put to her!&rsquo; said Berkeley,
+ smiling. &lsquo;As if Oxford were a place to be appraised offhand, on
+ three days&rsquo; acquaintance. You remind me of the American who went to
+ look at Niagara, and made an approving note in his memorandum book to say
+ that he found it really a very elegant cataract.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, but you MUST form some opinion of it at least, at first sight,&rsquo;
+ cried Edie; &lsquo;you can&rsquo;t help having an impression of a place
+ from the first moment, even if you haven&rsquo;t a judgment on it, can you
+ now? I think it really surpasses my expectations, Mr. Le Breton, which is
+ always a pleasant surprise. Venice fell below them; Florence just came up
+ to them; but Oxford, I think, really surpasses them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘We have three beautiful towns in Britain,&rsquo; Berkeley said. (&lsquo;As
+ if he were a Welsh Triad,&rsquo; suggested Herbert Le Breton,
+ parenthetically.) ‘Torquay, Oxford, Edinburgh. Torquay is all nature,
+ spoilt by what I won&rsquo;t call art; Oxford is all art, superimposed on
+ a swamp that I won&rsquo;t call nature; Edinburgh is both nature and art,
+ working pretty harmoniously together, to make up a unique and exquisite
+ picture.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Just like Naples, Venice, and Heidelberg,&rsquo; said Edie, half to
+ herself; but Berkeley caught at the words quickly as she said them. ‘Yes,&rsquo;
+ he answered; &lsquo;a very good parallel, only Oxford has a trifle more
+ nature about it than Venice. The lagoon, without the palaces, would be
+ simply hideous; the Oseney flats, without the colleges, would be nothing
+ worse than merely dull.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘We owe a great deal,&rsquo; said Ernest, gazing out towards the
+ quadrangle, ‘to the forgotten mass of labouring humanity who piled all
+ those blocks of shapeless stone into beautiful forms for us who come after
+ to admire and worship. I often wonder, when I sit here in Berkeley&rsquo;s
+ window-seat, and look across the quad to the carved pinnacles on the
+ Founder&rsquo;s Tower there, whether any of us can ever hope to leave
+ behind to our successors any legacy at all comparable to the one left us
+ by those nameless old mediaeval masons. It&rsquo;s a very saddening
+ thought that we for whom all these beautiful things have been put together&mdash;we
+ whom labouring humanity has pampered and petted from our cradles upward,
+ feeding us on its whitest bread, and toiling for us with all its weary
+ sinews&mdash;that we probably will never do anything at all for it and for
+ the world in return, but will simply eat our way through life aimlessly,
+ and die forgotten in the end like the beasts that perish. It ought to make
+ us, as a class, terribly ashamed of our own utter and abject inutility.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked at him with a sort of hushed surprise; she was accustomed to
+ hear Harry talk radical talk enough after his own fashion, but radicalism
+ of this particular pensive tinge she was not accustomed to. It interested
+ her, and made her wonder what sort of man Mr. Le Breton might really be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, you know, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; said old Mrs. Martindale,
+ complacently, &lsquo;we must remember that Providence has wisely ordained
+ that we shouldn&rsquo;t all of us be masons or carpenters. Some of us are
+ clergymen, now, and look what a useful, valuable life a clergyman&rsquo;s
+ is, after all, isn&rsquo;t it, Mr. Berkeley?&rsquo; Berkeley smiled a
+ faint smile of amusement, but said nothing. &lsquo;Others are squires and
+ landed gentry; and I&rsquo;m sure the landed gentry are very desirable in
+ keeping up the tone of the country districts, and setting a pattern of
+ virtue and refinement to their poorer neighbours. What would the country
+ villages be, for example, if it weren&rsquo;t for the centres of culture
+ afforded by the rectory and the hall, eh, Miss Oswald.&rsquo; Edith
+ thought of quavering old Miss Catherine Luttrell gossiping with the rector&rsquo;s
+ wife, and held her peace. &lsquo;You may depend upon it Providence has
+ ordained these distinctions of classes for its own wise purposes, and we
+ needn&rsquo;t trouble our heads at all about trying to alter them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ve always observed,&rsquo; said Harry Oswald, &lsquo;that
+ Providence is supposed to have ordained the existing order for the time
+ being, whatever it may be, but not the order that is at that exact moment
+ endeavouring to supplant it. If I were to visit Central Africa, I should
+ confidently expect to be told by the rain-doctors that Providence had
+ ordained the absolute power of the chief, and the custom of massacring his
+ wives and slaves at his open grave side. I believe in Russia it&rsquo;s
+ usually allowed that Providence has placed the orthodox Czar at the head
+ of the nation, and that any attempt to obtain a constitution from him is
+ simply flat rebellion and flying in the face of Providence. In England we
+ had a King John once, and we extracted a constitution out of him and
+ sundry other kings by main force; and here, it&rsquo;s acquiescence in the
+ present limited aristocratic government that makes up obedience to the
+ Providential arrangement of things apparently. But how about America? eh,
+ Mrs. Martindale? Did Providence ordain that George Washington was to rebel
+ against his most sacred majesty King George III., or did it not? And did
+ it ordain that George Washington was to knock his most sacred majesty&rsquo;s
+ troops into a cocked hat, or did it not? And did it ordain that Abraham
+ Lincoln was to free the slaves, or did it not? What I want to know is
+ this: can it be said that Providence has ordained every class distinction
+ in the whole world, from Dahomey to San Francisco? And has it ordained
+ every Government, past and present, from the Chinese Empire to the French
+ Convention? Did it ordain, for example, the revolution of &lsquo;89? That&rsquo;s
+ the question I should like to have answered.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dear me, Mr. Oswald,&rsquo; said the old lady meekly, taken aback by
+ Harry&rsquo;s voluble vehemence: &lsquo;I suppose Providence permits some
+ things and ordains others.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And does it permit American democracy or ordain it?&rsquo; asked the
+ merciless Harry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Don&rsquo;t you see, Mrs. Martindale,&rsquo; put in Berkeley, coming
+ gently to her rescue, &lsquo;your principle amounts in effect to saying
+ that whatever is, is right.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Exactly,&rsquo; said the old lady, forgetting at once all about Dahomey
+ or the Convention, and coming back mentally to her squires and rectors.
+ &lsquo;The existing order is wisely arranged by Providence, and we mustn&rsquo;t
+ try to set ourselves up against it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But if whatever is, is right,&rsquo; Edie said, laughing, &lsquo;then Mr.
+ Le Breton&rsquo;s socialism must be right too, you see, because it exists
+ in him no doubt for some wise purpose of Providence; and if he and those
+ who think with him can succeed in changing things generally according to
+ their own pattern, then the new system that they introduce will be the one
+ that Providence has shown by the result to be the favoured one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘In short,&rsquo; said Ernest, musingly, &lsquo;Mrs. Martindale&rsquo;s
+ principle sanctifies success. It&rsquo;s the old theory of &ldquo;treason
+ never prospers&mdash;what&rsquo;s the reason? Because whene&rsquo;er it
+ prospers &lsquo;tis not treason.&rdquo; If we could only introduce a
+ socialist republic, then it would be the reactionaries who would be
+ setting themselves up against constituted authority, and so flying in the
+ face of Providence.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Fancy lecturing a recalcitrant archbishop and a remonstrant ci-devant
+ duchess,&rsquo; cried Berkeley, lightly, &lsquo;upon the moral guilt and
+ religious sinfulness of rebellion against the constituted authority of a
+ communist phalanstery. It would be simply charming. I can imagine myself
+ composing a dignified exhortation to deliver to his grace, entirely
+ compiled out of his own printed pastorals, on the duty of submission and
+ the danger of harbouring an insubordinate spirit. Do make me
+ chaplain-in-ordinary to your house of correction for irreclaimable
+ aristocrats, Le Breton, as soon as you once get your coming socialist
+ republic fairly under way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Luncheon is on the table, sir,&rsquo; said the scout, breaking in
+ unceremoniously upon their discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Arthur Berkeley lunched by himself upon a solitary commons of cold
+ beef, he certainly did not treat his friends and guests in corresponding
+ fashion. His little entertainment was of the daintiest and airiest
+ character, so airy that, as Edie herself observed afterwards to Harry, it
+ took away all the sense of meat and drink altogether, and left one only a
+ pleased consciousness of full artistic gratification. Even Ernest, though
+ he had his scruples about the aspic jelly, might eat the famous Magdalen
+ chicken cutlets, his brother said, &lsquo;with a distinct feeling of
+ exalted gratitude to the arduous culinary evolution of collective
+ humanity.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Consider,&rsquo; said Herbert, balancing neatly a little pyramid of whip
+ cream and apricot jam upon his fork, &lsquo;consider what ages of slow
+ endeavour must have gone to the development of such a complex mixture as
+ this, Ernest, and thank your stars that you were born in this nineteenth
+ century of Soyer and Francatelli, instead of being condemned to devour a
+ Homeric feast with the unsophisticated aid of your own five fingers.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But do tell me, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; asked Edie, with one of her pretty
+ smiles, &lsquo;what will this socialist republic of yours be like when it
+ actually comes about? I&rsquo;m dying to know all about it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Really, Miss Oswald,&rsquo; Ernest answered, in a half-embarrassed tone,
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t quite know how to reply to such a very wide and indefinite
+ question. I haven&rsquo;t got any cut-and-dried constitutional scheme of
+ my own for reorganising the whole system of society, any distinct panacea
+ to cure all the ills that collective flesh is heir to. I leave the details
+ of the future order to your brother Harry. The thing that troubles me is
+ not so much how to reform the world at large as how to shape one&rsquo;s
+ own individual course aright in the actual midst of it. As a single unit
+ of the whole, I want rather guidance for my private conduct than a scheme
+ for redressing the universal dislocation of things in general. It seems to
+ me, every man&rsquo;s first duty is to see that he himself is in the right
+ attitude towards society, and afterwards he may proceed to enquire whether
+ society is in the right attitude towards him and all its other members.
+ But if we were all to begin by redressing ourselves, there would be
+ nothing left to redress, I imagine, when we turned to attack the second
+ half of our problem. The great difficulty I myself experience is this,
+ that <i>I</i> can&rsquo;t discover any adequate social justification for
+ my own personal existence. But I really oughtn&rsquo;t to bore other
+ people with my private embarrassments upon that head.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You see,&rsquo; said Herbert Le Breton, carelessly, &lsquo;my brother
+ represents the ethical element in the socialist movement, Miss Oswald,
+ while Harry represents the political element. Each is valuable in its way;
+ but Oswald&rsquo;s is the more practical. You can move great masses into
+ demanding their rights; you can&rsquo;t so easily move them into cordially
+ recognising their duties. Hammer, hammer, hammer at the most obvious
+ abuses; that&rsquo;s the way all the political victories are finally won.
+ If I were a radical at all, I should go with you, Oswald. But happily I&rsquo;m
+ not one; I prefer the calm philosophic attitude of perfectly objective
+ neutrality.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And if I were a radical,&rsquo; said Berkeley, with a tinge of sadness in
+ his voice as he poured himself out a glass of hock, &lsquo;I should go
+ with Le Breton. But unfortunately I&rsquo;m not one, Miss Oswald, I&rsquo;m
+ only a parson.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; A LITTLE MUSIC.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After lunch, Herbert Le Breton went off for his afternoon ride&mdash;a
+ grave social misdemeanour, Ernest thought it&mdash;and Arthur Berkeley
+ took Edie round to show her about the college and the shady gardens.
+ Ernest would have liked to walk with her himself, for there was something
+ in her that began to interest him somewhat; and besides, she was so
+ pretty, and so graceful, and so sympathetic: but he felt he must not take
+ her away from her host for the time being, who had a sort of proprietary
+ right in the pleasing duty of acting as showman to her over his own
+ college. So he dropped behind with Harry Oswald and old Mrs. Martindale,
+ and endeavoured to simulate a polite interest in the old lady&rsquo;s
+ scraps of conversation upon the heads of houses, their wives and families.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘This is Addison&rsquo;s Walk, Miss Oswald,&rsquo; said Berkeley, taking
+ her through the gate into the wooded path beside the Cherwell; &lsquo;so
+ called because the ingenious Mr. Addison is said to have specially
+ patronised it. As he was an undergraduate of this college, and a
+ singularly lazy person, it&rsquo;s very probable that he really did so;
+ every other undergraduate certainly does, for it&rsquo;s the nearest walk
+ an idle man can get without ever taking the trouble to go outside the
+ grounds of Magdalen.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The ingenious Mr. Addison was quite right then,&rsquo; Edie answered,
+ smiling; &lsquo;for he couldn&rsquo;t have chosen a lovelier place on
+ earth to stroll in. How exquisite it looks just now, with the mellow light
+ falling down upon the path through this beautiful autumnal foliage! It&rsquo;s
+ just a natural cathedral aisle, with a lot of pale straw-coloured glass in
+ the painted windows, like that splendid one we went to see the other day
+ at Merton Chapel.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, there are certainly tones in that window I never saw in any other,&rsquo;
+ Berkeley said, &lsquo;and the walk to-day is very much the same in its
+ delicate colouring. You&rsquo;re fond of colour, I should think, Miss
+ Oswald, from what you say.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, nobody could help being struck by the autumn colouring of the Thames
+ valley, I should fancy,&rsquo; said Edie, blushing. &lsquo;We noticed it
+ all the way up as we came in the train from Reading, a perfect glow of
+ crimson and orange at Pangbourne, Goring, Mapledurham, and Nuneham. I
+ always thought the Dart in October the loveliest blaze of warm reds and
+ yellows I had ever seen anywhere in nature, but the Thames valley beats it
+ hollow, as Harry says. This walk to-day is just one&rsquo;s ideal picture
+ of Milton&rsquo;s Vallombrosa.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes, I always look forward to the first days of October term,&rsquo;
+ said Berkeley, slowly, &lsquo;as one of the greatest and purest treats in
+ the whole round workaday twelvemonth. When the creeper on the Founder&rsquo;s
+ Tower first begins to redden and crimson in the autumn, I could sit all
+ day long by my open window, and just look at that glorious sight alone
+ instead of having my dinner. But I&rsquo;m very fond of these walks in
+ full summer time too. I often stop up alone all through the long (being
+ tied to my curacy here permanently, you know), and then I have the run of
+ the place entirely to myself. Sometimes I take my flute out, and sit under
+ the shade here and compose some of my little pieces.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I can easily understand that they were composed here,&rsquo; said Edie
+ quickly. &lsquo;They&rsquo;ve caught exactly the flavour of the place&mdash;especially
+ your exquisite little Penseroso.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, you know my music, then, Miss Oswald?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh yes, Harry always brings me home all your pieces whenever he comes
+ back at the end of term. I can play every one of them without the notes.
+ But the Penseroso is my special favourite.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s mine, too. I&rsquo;m so glad you like it. But I&rsquo;m
+ working away at a little thing now which you shall hear as soon as I&rsquo;ve
+ finished it; something lighter and daintier than anything else I&rsquo;ve
+ ever attempted. I shall call it the Butterfly Canzonet.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why don&rsquo;t you publish your music under your own name, Mr. Berkeley?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, because it would never do. I&rsquo;m a parson now, and I must keep up
+ the dignity of the cloth by fighting shy of any aesthetic heterodoxies. It
+ would be professional suicide for me to be suspected of artistic leanings.
+ All very well in an archdeacon, you know, to cultivate his tastes for
+ chants and anthems, but for a simple curate!&mdash;and secular songs too!&mdash;why,
+ it would be sheer contumacy. His chances of a living would shrink at once
+ to what your brother would call a vanishing quantity.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, you can&rsquo;t imagine how much I admire your songs and airs, Mr.
+ Berkeley. I was so pleased when you invited us, to think I was going to
+ lunch with a real composer. There&rsquo;s no music I love so much as
+ yours.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m very glad to hear it, Miss Oswald, I assure you. But I&rsquo;m
+ only a beginner and a trifler yet. Some day I mean to produce something
+ that will be worth listening to. Only, do you remember what some French
+ novelist once said?&mdash;&ldquo;A poet&rsquo;s sweetest poem is always
+ the one he has never been able to compose.&rdquo; I often think that&rsquo;s
+ true of music, too. Away up in the higher stories of one&rsquo;s brain
+ somewhere, there&rsquo;s a tune floating about, or rather a whole oratorio
+ full of them, that one can never catch and fix upon ruled paper. The idea&rsquo;s
+ there, such a beautiful and vague idea, so familiar to one, but so utterly
+ unrealisable on any known instrument&mdash;a sort of musical Ariel,
+ flitting before one and tantalising one for ever, but never allowing one
+ to come up with it and see its real features. I&rsquo;m always
+ dissatisfied with what I&rsquo;ve actually written, and longing to
+ crystallise into a score the imaginary airs I can never catch. Except in
+ this last piece of mine; that&rsquo;s the only thing I&rsquo;ve ever done
+ that thoroughly and completely pleases me. Come and see me next week, and
+ I&rsquo;ll play it over to you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked all round the meadows, and back again beside the arches of the
+ beautiful bridge, and then returned to Berkeley&rsquo;s rooms once more
+ for a cup of afternoon tea, and an air or two of Berkeley&rsquo;s own
+ composing. Edie enjoyed the walk and the talk immensely; she enjoyed the
+ music even more. In a way, it was all so new to her. For though she had
+ always seen much of Harry, and though Harry, who was the kindest and
+ proudest of brothers, had always instinctively kept her up to his own
+ level of thought and conversation, still, she wasn&rsquo;t used to seeing
+ so many intelligent and educated young men together, and the novelty of
+ their society was delightfully exhilarating to her eager little mind. To a
+ bright girl of nineteen, wherever she may come from, the atmosphere of
+ Oxford has a wonderfully cheering and stimulating effect; to a country
+ tradesman&rsquo;s daughter from a tiny west-country village it is like a
+ little paradise on earth with a ceaseless round of intensely enjoyable
+ breakfasts, luncheons, dinners, and water-parties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest, for his part, was not so well pleased. He wanted to have a little
+ conversation with Oswald&rsquo;s sister; and he was compelled by
+ politeness to give her up in favour of Arthur Berkeley. However, he made
+ up for it when he returned, and monopolised the pretty little visitor
+ himself for almost the entire tea-hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they had gone, Arthur Berkeley sported his oak, and sat down by
+ himself in his comfortable crimson-covered basket chair. ‘I won&rsquo;t
+ let anybody come and disturb me this evening,&rsquo; he said to himself
+ moodily. &lsquo;I won&rsquo;t let any of these noisy Magdalen men come
+ with their racket and riot to cut off the memory of that bright little
+ dream. No desecration after she has gone. Little Miss Butterfly! What a
+ pretty, airy, dainty, delicate little morsel it is! How she flits, and
+ sips, and natters about every possible subject, just touching the tip of
+ it so gracefully with her tiny white fingers, and blushing so unfeignedly
+ when she thinks she&rsquo;s paid you a compliment, or you&rsquo;ve paid
+ her one. How she blushed when she said she liked my music! How she blushed
+ when I said she had a splendid ear for minute discrimination! Somehow, if
+ I were a falling-in-love sort of fellow, I half fancy I could manage to
+ fall in love with her on the spot. Or rather, if I were a good analytical
+ psychologist, perhaps I ought more correctly to say I AM in love with her
+ already.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down idly at the piano and played a few bars softly to himself&mdash;a
+ beautiful, airy sort of melody, as it shaped itself vaguely in his head at
+ the moment, with a little of the new wine of first love running like a
+ trill through the midst of its fast-flowing quavers and dainty
+ undulations. &lsquo;That will do,&rsquo; he said to himself approvingly.
+ &lsquo;That will do very well; that&rsquo;s little Miss Butterfly. Here
+ she flits, flits, flits, flickers, sip, sip, sip, at her honeyed flowers;
+ twirl away, whirl away, off in the sunshine&mdash;there you go, Miss
+ Butterfly, eddying and circling with your painted mate. Flirt, flirt,
+ flirt, coquetting and curvetting, in your pretty rhythmical aërial
+ quadrille. Down again, down to the hare-bell on the hill side; sip at it,
+ sip at it, sip at it, sweet little honey-drops, clear little honey-drops,
+ bright little honey-drops; oh, for a song to be set to the melody!
+ Tra-la-la, tro-lo-lo, up again, Butterfly. Little silk handkerchief,
+ little lace neckerchief, fluttering, fluttering! Feathery wings of her,
+ bright little eyes of her, flit, flit, flicker! Now, she blushes, blushes,
+ blushes; deep crimson; oh, what a colour! Paint it, painter! Now she
+ speaks. Oh, what laughter! Silvery, silvery, treble, treble, treble; trill
+ away, trill away, silvery treble. Musical, beautiful; beautiful, musical;
+ little Miss Butterfly&mdash;fly&mdash;fly&mdash;fly away!&rsquo; And he
+ brought his fingers down upon the gamut at last, with a hasty, flickering
+ touch that seemed really as delicate as Edie&rsquo;s own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I can never get words for it in English,&rsquo; he said again, half
+ speaking with his parted lips; &lsquo;it&rsquo;s too dactylic in rhythm
+ for English verse to go to it. Béranger might have written a lilt for it,
+ as far as mere syllables go, but Béranger to write about Miss Butterfly!&mdash;pho,
+ no Frenchman could possibly catch it. Swinburne could fit the metres, I
+ dare say, but he couldn&rsquo;t fit the feeling. It shall be a song
+ without words, unless I write some Italian lines for it myself. Animula,
+ blandula vagula&mdash;that&rsquo;s the sort of ring for it, but Latin&rsquo;s
+ mostly too heavy. Io, Hymen, Hymenae, Io; Io, Hymen, Hymenae! What&rsquo;s
+ that? A wedding song of Catullus&mdash;absit omen. I must be in love with
+ her indeed.&rsquo; He got up from the piano, and paced quickly and
+ feverishly up and down the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And yet,&rsquo; he went on, &lsquo;if only I weren&rsquo;t bound down so
+ by this unprofitable trade of parson! A curate on eighty pounds a year,
+ and a few pupils! The presumptuousness of the man in venturing to think of
+ falling in love, as if he were actually one of the beneficed clergy! What
+ are deacons coming to, I wonder! And yet, hath not a deacon eyes; hath not
+ a deacon hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? If you
+ prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? And if you
+ show us a little Miss Butterfly, beautiful to the finger-ends, do we not
+ fall in love with her at least as unaffectedly as if we were canons
+ residentiary or rural deans? Fancy little Miss Butterfly a rural deaness!
+ the notion&rsquo;s too ridiculous. Fly away, little Miss Butterfly; fly
+ away, sweet little frolicsome, laughsome creature. I won&rsquo;t try to
+ tie you down to a man in a black clerical coat with a very distant
+ hypothetical reversionary prospect of a dull and dingy country parsonage.
+ Flit elsewhere, little Miss Butterfly, flit elsewhere, and find yourself a
+ gayer, gaudier-coloured mate!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down again, and strummed a few more bars of his half-composed,
+ half-extemporised melody. Then he leant back on the music-stool, and said
+ gently to himself once more: &lsquo;Still, if it were possible, how happy
+ I should try to make her! Bright little Miss Butterfly, I would try never
+ to let a cold cloud pass chillily over your sunshiny head! I would live
+ for you, and work for you, and write songs for your sake, all full of you,
+ you, you, and so all full of life and grace and thrilling music. What&rsquo;s
+ my life good for, to me or to the world? &ldquo;A clergyman&rsquo;s life
+ is such a useful one,&rdquo; that amiable old conventionality gurgled out
+ this morning; what&rsquo;s the good of mine, as it stands now, to its
+ owner or to anybody else, I should like to know, except the dear old
+ Progenitor? A mere bit of cracked blue china, a fanciful air from a comic
+ opera, masquerading in black and white as a piece of sacred music! What
+ good am I to anyone on earth but the Progenitor (God bless him!), and when
+ he&rsquo;s gone, dear old fellow, what on earth shall I have left to live
+ for. A selfish blank, that&rsquo;s all. But with HER, ah, how different!
+ With her to live for and to cherish, with an object to set before oneself
+ as worth one&rsquo;s consideration, what mightn&rsquo;t I do at last? Make
+ her happy&mdash;after all, that&rsquo;s the great thing. Make her fond of
+ my music, that music that floats and evades me now, but would harden into
+ scores as if by magic with her to help one to spell it out&mdash;I know it
+ would, at last, I know it would. Ah, well, perhaps some day I may be able;
+ perhaps some day the dream will realise itself; till then, work, work,
+ work; let me try to work towards making it possible, a living or a
+ livelihood, no matter which. But not a breath of it to you meanwhile, Miss
+ Butterfly; flit about freely and joyously while you may; I would not spoil
+ your untrammelled flight for worlds by trying to tether it too soon around
+ the fixed centre of my own poor doubtful diaconal destinies.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same moment while Arthur Berkeley was thus garrulously conversing
+ with his heated fancy, Harry and Edie Oswald were strolling lazily down
+ the High, to Edie&rsquo;s lodgings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, what do you think now of Berkeley and Le Breton, Edie?&rsquo; asked
+ her brother. &lsquo;Which of them do you like the best?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I like them both immensely, Harry; I really can&rsquo;t choose between
+ them. When Mr. Berkeley plays, he almost makes me fall in love with him;
+ and when Mr. Le Breton talks, he almost makes me transfer my affections to
+ him instead... But Mr. Berkeley plays divinely... And Mr. Le Breton talks
+ beautifully... You know, I&rsquo;ve never seen such clever men before&mdash;except
+ you, of course, Harry dear, for you&rsquo;re cleverer and nicer than
+ anybody. Oh, do let me look at those lovely silks over there?&rsquo; And
+ she danced across the road before he could answer her, like a tripping
+ sylph in a painter&rsquo;s dreamland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s very nice,&rsquo; she went on, after she had duly
+ examined and classified the silks, &lsquo;but I don&rsquo;t exactly
+ understand what it is he&rsquo;s got on his conscience.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nothing whatsoever, except the fact of his own existence,&rsquo; Harry
+ answered with a laugh. &lsquo;He has conscientious scruples against the
+ existence of idle people in the community&mdash;do-nothings and eat-alls&mdash;and
+ therefore he has conscientious scruples against himself for not
+ immediately committing suicide. I believe, if he did exactly what he
+ thought was abstractly right, he&rsquo;d go away and cut his own throat
+ incontinently for an unprofitable, unproductive, useless citizen.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, dear, I hope he&rsquo;ll do nothing of the sort,&rsquo; cried Edie
+ hastily. ‘I think I shall really ask him not to for my sake, if not for
+ anybody else&rsquo;s.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He&rsquo;d be very much flattered indeed by your interposition on his
+ behalf, no doubt, Popsy; but I&rsquo;m afraid it wouldn&rsquo;t produce
+ much effect upon his ultimate decision.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Tell me, Harry, is Mr. Berkeley High Church?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh dear no, I shouldn&rsquo;t say so. I don&rsquo;t suppose he ever gave
+ the subject a single moment&rsquo;s consideration.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But St. Fredegond&rsquo;s is very High Church, I&rsquo;m told.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes; but Berkeley&rsquo;s curate of St. Fredegond&rsquo;s, not in
+ virtue of his theology&mdash;I never heard he&rsquo;d got any to speak of&mdash;but
+ in virtue of his musical talents. He went into the Church, I suppose, on
+ purely aesthetic grounds. He liked a musical service, and it seemed
+ natural to him to take part in one, just as it seemed natural to a
+ mediaeval Italian with artistic tendencies to paint Madonnas and St.
+ Sebastians. There&rsquo;s nothing more in his clerical coat than that, I
+ fancy, Edie. He probably never thought twice about it on theological
+ grounds.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, but that&rsquo;s very wrong of him, Harry. I don&rsquo;t mean having
+ no particular theological beliefs, of course; one expects that nowadays;
+ but going into the Church without them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, you see, Edie, you mustn&rsquo;t judge Berkeley in quite the same
+ way as you&rsquo;d judge other people. In his mind, the aesthetic side is
+ always uppermost; the logical side is comparatively in abeyance. Questions
+ of creed, questions of philosophical belief, questions of science don&rsquo;t
+ interest him at all; he looks at all of them from the point of view of the
+ impression alone. What he sees in the Church is not a body of dogmas, like
+ the High Churchmen, nor a set of opinions, like the Low Churchmen, but a
+ close corporation of educated and cultivated gentlemen, charged with the
+ duty of caring for a number of beautiful mediaeval architectural
+ monuments, and of carrying on a set of grand and impressive musical or
+ oral services. To him, a cathedral is a magnificent historical heritage; a
+ sermon is a sort of ingenious literary exercise; and a hymn is a capital
+ vehicle for very solemn emotional music. That&rsquo;s all; and we can
+ hardly blame him for not seeing these things as we should see them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Harry, I don&rsquo;t know. I like them both immensely. Mr. Berkeley&rsquo;s
+ very nice, but perhaps I like Mr. Le Breton the best of the two.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; ASKELON VILLA, GATH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Number, 28, Epsilon Terrace, Bayswater, was one of the very smallest
+ houses that a person with any pretensions to move in that Society which
+ habitually spells itself with a capital initial could ever possibly have
+ dreamt of condescending to inhabit. Indeed, if Dame Eleanor, relict of the
+ late Sir Owen Le Breton, Knight, had consulted merely the length of her
+ purse and the interests of her personal comfort, she would doubtless have
+ found for the same rental a far more convenient and roomy cottage in Upper
+ Clapton or Stoke Newington. But Lady Le Breton was a thoroughly and
+ conscientiously religious woman, who in all things consulted first and
+ foremost the esoteric interests of her ingrained creed. It was a prime
+ article of this cherished social faith that nobody with any shadow of
+ personal self-respect could endure to live under any other postal letter
+ than W. or S.W. Better not to be at all than to drag out a miserable
+ existence in the painful obscurity of N. or S.E. Happily for people
+ situated like Lady Le Breton, the metropolitan house-contractor (it would
+ be gross flattery to describe him as a builder) has divined, with his
+ usual practical sagacity, the necessity for supplying this felt want for
+ eligible family residences at once comparatively cheap and relatively
+ fashionable. By driving little culs-de-sac and re-entrant alleys at the
+ back of his larger rows of shoddy mansions, he is enabled to run up a
+ smaller terrace, or crescent, or place, as the case may be, composed of
+ tiny shallow cottages with the narrowest possible frontage, and the
+ tallest possible elevation, which will yet entitle their occupiers to feel
+ themselves within the sacred pale of social salvation, in the blest
+ security of the mystic W. Narrowest, shallowest, and tallest of these
+ marginal Society residences is the little block of blank-faced,
+ stucco-fronted, porticoed rabbit-hutches, which blazons itself forth in
+ the Court Guide under the imposing designation of Epsilon Terrace,
+ Bayswater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interior of No. 28 in this eminently respectable back alley was quite
+ of a piece, it must be confessed, with the vacant Philistinism of its
+ naked exterior. &lsquo;Mother has really an immense amount of taste,&rsquo;
+ Herbert Le Breton used to say, blandly, &lsquo;and all of it of the most
+ atrocious description; she picked it up, I believe, when my poor father
+ was quartered at Lahore, a station absolutely fatal to the aesthetic
+ faculties; and she will never get rid of it again as long as she lives.&rsquo;
+ Indeed, when once Lady Le Breton got anything whatsoever into her head, it
+ was not easy for anybody else to get it out again; you might much more
+ readily expect to draw one of her double teeth than to eliminate one of
+ her pet opinions. Not that she was a stupid or a near-sighted woman&mdash;the
+ mother of clever sons never is&mdash;but she was a perfectly immovable
+ rock of social and political orthodoxy. The three Le Breton boys&mdash;for
+ there was a third at home&mdash;would gladly have reformed the terrors of
+ that awful drawing-room if they had dared; but they knew it was as much as
+ their places were worth, Herbert said, to attempt a remonstrance, and they
+ wisely left it alone, and said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the house was not vulgarly furnished, at least in the
+ conventional sense of the word; Lady Le Breton was far too rigid in her
+ social orthodoxy to have admitted into her rooms anything that savoured of
+ what she considered bad form, according to her lights. It was only vulgar
+ with the underlying vulgarity of mere tasteless fashionable uniformity.
+ There was nothing in it that any well-bred footman could object to;
+ nothing that anybody with one grain of genuine originality could possibly
+ tolerate. The little occasional chairs and tables set casually about the
+ room were of the strictest négligé Belgravian type, a sort of studied
+ protest against the formal stiffness of the ordinary unused middle-class
+ drawing-room. The portrait of the late Sir Owen in the wee library,
+ presented by his brother-officers, was painted by that distinguished R.
+ A., Sir Francis Thomson, a light of the middle of this century; and an
+ excellent work of art it was too, in its own solemn academic kind. The
+ dining-room, tiny as it was, possessed that inevitable Canaletti without
+ which no gentleman&rsquo;s dining-room in England is ever considered to be
+ complete. Everything spoke at once the stereotyped Society style of a
+ dozen years ago (before Mr. Morris had reformed the outer aspect of the
+ West End), entirely free from anything so startling or indecorous as a
+ gleam of spontaneity in the possessor&rsquo;s mind. To be sure, it was
+ very far indeed from the centre round-table and
+ brilliant-flowered-table-cover style of the utter unregenerate Philistine
+ household; but it was further still from the simple natural taste and
+ graceful fancy of Edie Oswald&rsquo;s cosy little back parlour behind the
+ village grocer&rsquo;s shop at Calcombe-Pomeroy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The portrait and the Canaletti were relics of Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s best
+ days, when Sir Owen was alive, and the boys were still in their first
+ babyhood. Sir Owen was an Indian officer of the old school, a
+ simple-minded, gentle, brave man, very religious after his own fashion,
+ and an excellent soldier, with the true Anglo-Indian faculty for
+ administration and organisation. It was partly from him, no doubt, that
+ the boys inherited their marked intelligence; and it was wholly from him,
+ beyond any doubt at all, that Ernest and his younger brother Ronald
+ inherited their moral or religious sincerity&mdash;for that was an element
+ in which poor formally orthodox Lady Le Breton was wholly deficient. The
+ good General had been brought up in the strictest doctrines of the Clapham
+ sect; he had gone to India young, as a cadet from Haileybury; and he had
+ applied his intellect all his life long rather to the arduous task of
+ extending &lsquo;the blessings of British rule&rsquo; to Sikhs and
+ Ghoorkas, than to those abstract ethical or theological questions which
+ agitated the souls of a later generation. If a new district had to be
+ assimilated in settlement to the established model of the British raj, if
+ a tribe of hill-savages had to be conciliated by gentler means than rifles
+ or bayonets, if a difficult bit of diplomatic duty had to be performed on
+ the debateable frontiers, Sir Owen Le Breton was always the person chosen
+ to undertake it. An earnest, honest, God-fearing man he remained to the
+ end, impressed by a profound sense of duty as he understood it, and a firm
+ conviction that his true business in life consisted in serving his Queen
+ and country, and in bringing more and more of the native populations
+ within the pale of the Company&rsquo;s empire, and the future
+ evangelisation that was ultimately to follow. But during the great
+ upheaval of the Mutiny, he fell at the head of his own unrevolted regiment
+ in one of the hottest battles of that terrible time, and my Lady Le Breton
+ found herself left alone with three young children, on little more than
+ the scanty pension of a general officer&rsquo;s widow on the late Company&rsquo;s
+ establishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Happily, enough remained to bring up the boys, with the aid of their
+ terminable annuities (which fell in on their attaining their majority), in
+ decent respect for the feelings and demands of exacting Society; and as
+ the two elder were decidedly clever boys, they managed to get scholarships
+ at Oxford, which enabled them to tide over the dangerous intermediate
+ period as far as their degree. Herbert then stepped at once into a
+ fellowship and sundry other good things of like sort; and Ernest was even
+ now trying to follow in his brother&rsquo;s steps, in this particular.
+ Only the youngest boy, Ronald, still remained quite unprovided for. Ronald
+ was a tall, pale, gentle, weakly, enthusiastic young fellow of nineteen,
+ with so marked a predisposition to lung disease that it had not been
+ thought well to let him run the chance of over-reading himself; and so he
+ had to be content with remaining at home in the uncongenial atmosphere of
+ Epsilon Terrace, instead of joining his two elder brothers at the
+ university. Uncongenial, because Ronald alone followed Sir Owen in the
+ religious half of his nature, and found the &lsquo;worldliness&rsquo; and
+ conventionality of his unflinching mother a serious bar to his enjoyment
+ of home society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ronald,&rsquo; said my lady, at the breakfast-table on the very morning
+ of Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s little luncheon party, &lsquo;here&rsquo;s a
+ letter for you from Mackenzie and Anderson. No doubt your Aunt Sarah&rsquo;s
+ will has been recovered and proved at last, and I hope it&rsquo;ll turn
+ out satisfactory, as we wish it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘For my part, I really almost hope it won&rsquo;t, mother,&rsquo; said
+ Ronald, turning it over; &lsquo;for I don&rsquo;t want to be compelled to
+ profit by Ernest&rsquo;s excessive generosity. He&rsquo;s too good to me,
+ just because he thinks me the weaker vessel; but though we must bear one
+ another&rsquo;s burdens, you know, we should each bear his own cross as
+ well, shouldn&rsquo;t we, mother?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, it can&rsquo;t be much in any case,&rsquo; said his mother, a
+ little testily, &lsquo;whoever gets it. Open the envelope at once, my boy,
+ and don&rsquo;t stand looking at it like a goose in that abstracted way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, mother, she was my father&rsquo;s only sister, and I&rsquo;m not in
+ such a hurry to find out how she has disposed of her mere perishing
+ worldly goods,&rsquo; answered Ronald, gravely. &lsquo;It seems to me a
+ terrible thing that before poor dear good Aunt Sarah is cold in her grave
+ almost, we should be speculating and conjecturing as to what she has done
+ with her poor little trifle of earthly riches.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s always usual to read the will immediately after the funeral,&rsquo;
+ said Lady Le Breton, firmly, to whom the ordinary usage of society formed
+ an absolutely unanswerable argument; &lsquo;and how you, Ronald, who haven&rsquo;t
+ even the common decency to wear a bit of crape around your arm for her&mdash;a
+ thing that Ernest himself, with all his nonsensical theories, consents to
+ do&mdash;can talk in that absurd way about what&rsquo;s quite right and
+ proper to be done, I for my part, really can&rsquo;t imagine.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, but you know, mother, I object to wearing crape on the ground that it
+ isn&rsquo;t allowable for us to sorrow as them that have no hope: and I&rsquo;m
+ sure I&rsquo;m paying no disrespect to dear Aunt Sarah&rsquo;s memory in
+ this matter, for she was always the first herself, you remember, to wish
+ that I should follow the dictates of my own conscience.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I remember she always upheld you in acts of opposition to your own
+ mother, Ronald,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton said coldly, &lsquo;and I suppose
+ you&rsquo;re going to do honour to her religious precepts now by not
+ opening that letter when your mother tells you to do so. In MY Bible, sir,
+ I find a place for the Fourth Commandment.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald looked at her gently and unreprovingly; but though a quiet smile
+ played involuntarily around the corners of his mouth, he resisted the
+ natural inclination to correct her mistake, and to suggest blandly that
+ she probably alluded to the fifth. He knew he must turn his left cheek
+ also&mdash;a Christian virtue which he had abundant opportunities of
+ practising in that household; and he felt that to score off his mother for
+ such a verbal mistake as the one she had just made would not be in keeping
+ with the spirit of the commandment to which, no doubt, she meant to refer
+ him. So without another word he opened the envelope and glanced rapidly at
+ the contents of the letter it enclosed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They&rsquo;ve found the second will,&rsquo; he said, after a moment, with
+ a rather husky voice, &lsquo;and they&rsquo;re taking steps to get it
+ confirmed, whatever that may be.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Broad Scotch for getting probate, I believe,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton,
+ in a slight tone of irony; for to her mind any departure from the laws or
+ language she was herself accustomed to use, assumed at once the guise of a
+ rank and offensive provincialism. &lsquo;Your poor Aunt WOULD go and marry
+ a Scotchman, and he a Scotch business man too; so of course we must expect
+ to put up with all kinds of ridiculous technicalities and Edinburgh jargon
+ accordingly. All law&rsquo;s bad enough in the way of odd words, but
+ commend me to Scotch law for utter and meaningless incomprehensibility.
+ Well, and what does the second will say, Ronald?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There, mother,&rsquo; cried Ronald, flinging the letter down hurriedly
+ with a burst of tears. &lsquo;Read it yourself, if you will, for I can&rsquo;t.
+ Poor dear Aunt Sarah, and dear, good unselfish Ernest! It makes me cry
+ even to think of them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Le Breton took the paper up from the table without a word and read it
+ carefully through. &lsquo;I am very glad to hear it,&rsquo; she said,
+ ‘very glad indeed to hear it. &ldquo;And in order to guard against any
+ misinterpretation of my reasons for making this disposition of my
+ property,&rdquo; your Aunt says, &ldquo;I wish to put it on record that I
+ had previously drawn up another will, bequeathing my effects to be divided
+ between my two nephews Ernest and Ronald Le Breton equally; that I
+ communicated the contents of that will&rdquo;&mdash;a horrid Scotticism&mdash;&ldquo;to
+ my nephew Ernest; and that at his express desire I have now revoked it,
+ and drawn up this present testament, leaving the share intended for him to
+ his brother Ronald.&rdquo; Why, she never even mentions dear Herbert!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She knew that Herbert had provided for himself,&rsquo; Ronald answered,
+ raising his head from his hands, &lsquo;while Ernest and I were unprovided
+ for. But Ernest said he could fight the world for himself, while I couldn&rsquo;t;
+ and that unearned wealth ought only to be accepted in trust for those who
+ were incapacitated by nature or misfortune from earning their own bread. I
+ don&rsquo;t always quite agree with all Ernest&rsquo;s theories any more
+ than you do, but we must both admit that at least he always
+ conscientiously acts up to them himself, mother, mustn&rsquo;t we?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s a very extraordinary thing,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton went on,
+ &lsquo;that Aunt Sarah invariably encouraged both you boys in all your
+ absurdities and Quixotisms. She was Quixotic herself at heart, that&rsquo;s
+ the truth of it, just like your poor dear father. I remember once, when we
+ were quartered at Meean Meer in the Punjaub, poor dear Sir Owen nearly got
+ into disgrace with the colonel&mdash;he was only a sub. in those days&mdash;because
+ he wanted to go trying to convert his syces, which was a most imprudent
+ thing to do, and directly opposed to the Company&rsquo;s orders. Aunt
+ Sarah was just the same. Herbert&rsquo;s the only one of you three who has
+ never given me one moment&rsquo;s anxiety, and of course poor Herbert must
+ be passed over in absolute silence. However, I&rsquo;m very glad she&rsquo;s
+ left the money to you, Ronald, as you need it the most, and Mackenzie and
+ Anderson say it&rsquo;ll come to about a hundred and sixty a year.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘One can do a great deal of good with that much money,&rsquo; said Ronald
+ meditatively. &lsquo;I mean, after arranging with you, mother, for the
+ expenses of my maintenance at home, which of course I shall do, as soon as
+ the pension ceases, and after meeting one&rsquo;s own necessary
+ expenditure in the way of clothing and so forth. It&rsquo;s more than any
+ one Christian man ought to spend upon himself, I&rsquo;m sure.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s not at all too much for a young man in your position in
+ society, Ronald; but there&mdash;I know you&rsquo;ll want to spend half of
+ it on indiscriminate charity. However, there&rsquo;ll be time enough to
+ talk about that when you&rsquo;ve actually got it, thank goodness.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald murmured a few words softly to himself, of which Lady Le Breton
+ only caught the last echo&mdash;&lsquo;laid them down at the apostles&rsquo;
+ feet; and distribution was made unto every man according as he had need.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Just like Ernest&rsquo;s communistic notions,&rsquo; she murmured in
+ return, half audibly. &lsquo;I do declare, between them both, a plain
+ woman hardly knows whether she&rsquo;s standing on her head or on her
+ heels. I live in daily fear that one or other of them will be taken up by
+ the police, for being implicated in some dynamite plot or other, to blow
+ up the Queen or destroy the Houses of Parliament.&rsquo; Ronald smiled
+ again, gently, but answered nothing. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s another letter
+ for you there, though, with the Exmoor coronet upon it. Why don&rsquo;t
+ you open it? I hope it&rsquo;s an invitation for you to go down and stop
+ at Dunbude for a week or two. Nothing on earth would do you so much good
+ as to get away for a while from your ranters and canters, and mix
+ occasionally in a little decent and rational society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald took up the second letter with a sigh. He feared as much himself,
+ and had doleful visions of a painful fortnight to be spent in a big
+ country house, where the conversation would be all concerning the
+ slaughter of pheasants and the torture of foxes, which his soul loathed to
+ listen to. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s from Lady Hilda,&rsquo; he said, glancing
+ through it, &lsquo;and it ISN&rsquo;T an invitation after all.&rsquo; He
+ could hardly keep down a faint tone of gratification as he discovered this
+ reprieve. &lsquo;Here&rsquo;s what she says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘"DEAR MR. LE BRETON,&mdash;Mamma wishes me to write and tell you that
+ Lynmouth&rsquo;s tutor, Mr. Walsh, is going to leave us at Christmas, and
+ she thinks it just possible that one of your two brothers at Oxford might
+ like to come down to Dunbude and give us their kind aid in taking charge
+ of Lynmouth. He&rsquo;s a dreadful pickle, as you know; but we are very
+ anxious to get somebody to look after him in whom mamma can have perfect
+ confidence. We don&rsquo;t know your brothers&rsquo; addresses or we would
+ have written to them direct about it. Perhaps you will kindly let them
+ hear this suggestion; and if they think the matter worth while, we might
+ afterwards arrange details as to business and so forth. With kind regards
+ to Lady Le Breton, believe me,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘"Yours very sincerely,
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ‘"HILDA TREGELLIS.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Ronald,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton, much more warmly than before,
+ ‘this is really quite providential. Are they at Dunbude now?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, mother. She writes from Wilton Place. They&rsquo;re up in town for
+ Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s gout, I know. I heard they were on Sunday.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then I shall go and see Lady Exmoor this very morning about it. It&rsquo;s
+ exactly the right place for Ernest. A little good society will get rid of
+ all his nonsensical notions in a month or two. He&rsquo;s lived too
+ exclusively among his radical set at Oxford. And then it&rsquo;ll be such
+ a capital thing for him to be in the house continually with Hilda; she&rsquo;s
+ a girl of such excellent tone. I fancy&mdash;I&rsquo;m not quite sure, but
+ I fancy&mdash;that Ernest has a decided taste for the company of people,
+ and even of young girls, who are not in Society. He&rsquo;s so fond of
+ that young man Oswald, who Herbert tells me is positively the son of a
+ grocer&mdash;yes, I&rsquo;m sure he said a grocer!&mdash;and it seems,
+ from what Herbert writes me, that this Oswald has brought a sister of his
+ up this term from behind the counter, on purpose to set her cap at Ernest.
+ Now you boys have, unfortunately, no sisters, and therefore you haven&rsquo;t
+ seen as much of girls of a good stamp&mdash;not daily and domestically I
+ mean&mdash;as is desirable for you, from the point of view of Society. But
+ if Ernest can only be induced to take this tutorship at the Exmoors&rsquo;,
+ he&rsquo;ll have an opportunity of meeting daily with a really nice girl,
+ like Hilda; and though of course it isn&rsquo;t likely that Hilda would
+ take a fancy to her brother&rsquo;s tutor&mdash;the Exmoors are such VERY
+ conservative people in matters of rank and wealth and family and so forth&mdash;quite
+ un-Christianly so, I consider&mdash;yet it can&rsquo;t fail to improve
+ Ernest&rsquo;s tone a great deal, and raise his standard of female society
+ generally. It&rsquo;s really a very distressing thought to me, Ronald,
+ that all my boys, except dear Herbert, should show such a marked
+ preference for low and vulgar companionship. It seems to me, you both
+ positively prefer as far as possible the society of your natural
+ inferiors. There&rsquo;s Ernest must go and take up with the friendship of
+ that snuffy old German Socialist glass-cutter; while you are always
+ running after your Plymouth Brethren and your Bible Christians, and your
+ other ignorant fanatical people, instead of going with me respectably to
+ St. Alphege&rsquo;s to hear the dear Archdeacon! It&rsquo;s very
+ discouraging to a mother, really, very discouraging.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. &mdash; DOWN THE RIVER.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘Berkeley couldn&rsquo;t come to-day, Le Breton: it&rsquo;s Thursday, of
+ course: I forgot about it altogether,&rsquo; Oswald said, on the barge at
+ Salter&rsquo;s. &lsquo;You know he pays a mysterious flying visit to town
+ every Thursday afternoon&mdash;to see an imprisoned lady-love, I always
+ tell him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s very late in the season for taking ladies on the water, Miss
+ Oswald,&rsquo; said Ernest, putting his oar into the rowlock, and secretly
+ congratulating himself on the deliverance; &lsquo;but better go now than
+ not see Iffley church and Nuneham woods at all. You ought to have come up
+ in summer term, and let us have the pleasure of showing you over the place
+ when it was in its full leafy glory. May&rsquo;s decidedly the time to see
+ Oxford to the greatest advantage.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘So Harry tells me, and he wanted me to come up then, but it wasn&rsquo;t
+ convenient for them at home to spare me just at that moment, so I was
+ obliged to put it off till late in the autumn. I have to help my mother a
+ good deal in the house, you know, and I can&rsquo;t always go dancing
+ about the world whenever I should like to. Which string must I pull,
+ Harry, to make her turn into the middle of the river? She always seems to
+ twist round the exact way I don&rsquo;t want her to.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Right, right, hard right,&rsquo; cried Harry from the bow&mdash;they were
+ in a tub pair bound down the river for Iffley. &lsquo;Keep to the
+ Oxfordshire shore as far as the willows; then cross over to the Berkshire.
+ Le Breton&rsquo;ll tell you when and where to change sides; he knows the
+ river as well as I do.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;ll do splendidly for the present,&rsquo; Ernest said, looking
+ ahead over his shoulder. &lsquo;Mind the flags there; don&rsquo;t go too
+ near the corner. You certainly ought to see these meadows in early spring,
+ when the fritillaries are all out over the spongy places, Miss Oswald. Has
+ your brother ever sent you any of the fritillaries?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What? snake-heads? Oh, boxes full of them. They&rsquo;re lovely flowers,
+ but not lovelier than our own Devonshire daffodils. You should see a
+ Devonshire water-meadow in April! Why don&rsquo;t you come down some time
+ to Calcombe Pomeroy? It&rsquo;s the dearest little peaceful seaside corner
+ in all England.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harry bit his lip, for he was not over-fond of bringing people down to spy
+ out his domestic sanctities; but Ernest answered cordially, ‘I should like
+ it above everything in the world, Miss Oswald. If you will let me, I
+ certainly shall as soon as possible. Mind, quick, get out of the way of
+ that practising eight, or we shall foul her! Left, as hard as you can!
+ That&rsquo;ll do. The cox was getting as red as a salamander, till he saw
+ it was a lady steering. When coxes catch a man fouling them, their
+ language is apt to be highly unparliamentary.&mdash;Yes, I shall try to
+ get away to Calcombe as soon as ever I can manage to leave Oxford. It
+ wouldn&rsquo;t surprise me if I were to run down and spend Christmas
+ there.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;d find it as dull as ditch-water at Christmas, Le Breton,&rsquo;
+ said Harry. &lsquo;Much better wait till next summer.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t think so, Harry dear,&rsquo; Edie
+ interrupted, with that tell-tale blush of hers. &lsquo;If Mr. Le Breton
+ wants to come then, I believe he&rsquo;d really find it quite delightful.
+ Of course he wouldn&rsquo;t expect theatres, or dances, or anything like
+ that, in a country village; and we&rsquo;re dreadfully busy just about
+ Christmas day itself, sending out orders, and all that sort of thing,&rsquo;&mdash;Harry
+ bit his lip again:&mdash;&lsquo;but if you don&rsquo;t mind a very quiet
+ place and a very quiet time, Mr. Le Breton, I don&rsquo;t think myself our
+ cliffs ever look grander, or our sea more impressive, than in stormy
+ winter weather.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wish to goodness she wasn&rsquo;t so transparently candid and
+ guileless,&rsquo; thought Harry to himself. &lsquo;I never CAN teach her
+ duly to respect the prejudices of Pi. Not that it matters twopence to Le
+ Breton, of course: but if she talks that way to any of the other men here,
+ they&rsquo;ll be laughing in every common-room in Oxford over my Christmas
+ raisins and pounds of sugar&mdash;commonplace cynics that they are. I must
+ tell her about it the moment we get home again, and adjure her by all that&rsquo;s
+ holy not to repeat the indiscretion.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A penny for your thoughts, Harry,&rsquo; cried Edie, seeing by his look
+ that she had somehow vexed him. &lsquo;What are you thinking of?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Thinking that all Oxford men are horrid cynics,&rsquo; said Harry, boldly
+ shaming the devil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why are they?&rsquo; Edie asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I suppose because it&rsquo;s an inexpensive substitute for wit or
+ intellect,&rsquo; Harry answered. &lsquo;Indeed, I&rsquo;m a bit of a
+ cynic myself, I believe, for the same reason and on strictly economical
+ principles. It saves one the trouble of having any intelligible or
+ original opinion of one&rsquo;s own upon any subject.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Below Iffley Lock they landed for half an hour, in order to give Edie time
+ for a pencil sketch of the famous old Norman church-tower, with its quaint
+ variations on the dog-tooth ornament, and its ancient cross and mouldering
+ yew-tree behind. Harry sat below in the boat, propped on the cushions,
+ reading the last number of the ‘Nineteenth Century;&rsquo; Ernest and Edie
+ took their seat upon the bank above, and had a first chance of an unbroken
+ tête-à-tête.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How delicious to live in Oxford always!&rsquo; said Edie, sketching in
+ the first outline of the great round arches. &lsquo;I would give anything
+ to have the opportunity of settling here for life. Some day I shall make
+ Harry set up house, and bring me up here as his housekeeper:&mdash;I mean,&rsquo;
+ she added with a blush, thinking of Harry&rsquo;s warning look just
+ before, &lsquo;as soon as they can spare me from home.&rsquo; She
+ purposely avoided saying &lsquo;when they retire from business,&rsquo; the
+ first phrase that sprang naturally to her simple little lips. &lsquo;Let
+ me see, Mr. Le Breton; you haven&rsquo;t got any permanent appointment
+ here yourself, have you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh no,&rsquo; Ernest answered: &lsquo;no appointment of any sort at all,
+ Miss Oswald. I&rsquo;m loitering up casually on the look-out for a
+ fellowship. I&rsquo;ve been in for two or three already, but haven&rsquo;t
+ got them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why didn&rsquo;t you?&rsquo; asked Edie, with a look of candid surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I suppose I wasn&rsquo;t clever enough,&rsquo; Ernest answered simply.
+ &lsquo;Not so clever, I mean, as the men who actually got them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, but you MUST be,&rsquo; Edie replied confidently; &lsquo;and a great
+ deal cleverer, too, I&rsquo;m sure. I know you must, because Harry told me
+ you were one of the very cleverest men in the whole &lsquo;Varsity. And
+ besides, I see you are, myself. And Harry says most of the men who get
+ fellowships are really great donkeys.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Harry must have been talking in one of those cynical moods he told us
+ about,&rsquo; said Ernest, laughing. &lsquo;At any rate, the examiners
+ didn&rsquo;t feel satisfied with my papers, and I&rsquo;ve never got a
+ fellowship yet. Perhaps they thought my political economy just a trifle
+ too advanced for them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You may depend upon it, that&rsquo;s it,&rsquo; said Edie, jumping at the
+ conclusion with the easy omniscience of a girl of nineteen. &lsquo;Next
+ time, make your political economy a little more moderate, you know,
+ without any sacrifice of principle, just to suit them. What fellowship are
+ you going in for now?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Pembroke, in November.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, I do hope you&rsquo;ll get it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Thank you very much. So do I. It would be very nice to have one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But of course it won&rsquo;t matter so much to you as it did to Harry.
+ Your family are such very great people, aren&rsquo;t they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest smiled a broad smile at her delicious simplicity. &lsquo;If by very
+ great people you mean rich,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;we couldn&rsquo;t very
+ well be poorer&mdash;for people of our sort, I mean. My mother lives
+ almost entirely on her pension; and we boys have only been able to come up
+ to Oxford, just as Harry was, by the aid of our scholarships. If we hadn&rsquo;t
+ saved in our first two years, while we had our government allowances, we
+ shouldn&rsquo;t have been able to stop up for our degrees at all. So if I
+ don&rsquo;t get a fellowship I shall have to take to school-mastering or
+ something of the sort, for a livelihood. Indeed, this at Pembroke will be
+ my very last chance, for I can&rsquo;t hold on much longer.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And if you got a fellowship you could never marry, could you?&rsquo;
+ asked Edie, going on with her work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not, while I held it, certainly. But I wouldn&rsquo;t hold it long. I
+ regard it only as a makeshift for a time. Unhappily, I don&rsquo;t know
+ how to earn my own bread by the labour of my hands, as I think we ought
+ all to do in a well-constituted society; so unless I choose to starve
+ (about the rightfulness of which I don&rsquo;t feel quite certain), I MUST
+ manage somehow to get over the interval. But as soon as I could I would
+ try to find some useful work to do, in which I could repay society the
+ debt I owe it for my bringing up. You see, I&rsquo;ve been fed and
+ educated by a Government grant, which of course came out of the taxes&mdash;your
+ people have had to help, whether they would or not, in paying for my board
+ and lodging&mdash;and I feel that I owe it as a duty to the world to look
+ out some employment in which I could really repay it for the cost of my
+ maintenance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How funnily you do look at everything, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; said Edie.
+ ‘It would never have struck me to think of a pension from the army in that
+ light. And yet of course it&rsquo;s the right light; only we don&rsquo;t
+ most of us take the trouble to go to the bottom of things, as you do. But
+ what will you do if you don&rsquo;t get the fellowship?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘In that case, I&rsquo;ve just heard from my mother that she would like me
+ to take a tutorship at Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s,&rsquo; Ernest answered.
+ &lsquo;Lynmouth, their eldest son, was my junior at school by six or seven
+ years, and now he&rsquo;s going to prepare for Christ Church. I don&rsquo;t
+ quite know whether it&rsquo;s a right place for me to accept or not; but I
+ shall ask Max Schurz about it, if I don&rsquo;t get Pembroke. I always
+ take Herr Max&rsquo;s advice in all questions of conscience, for I&rsquo;m
+ quite sure whatever he approves of is the thing one ought to do for the
+ greatest good of humanity.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Harry told me about Herr Schurz,&rsquo; Edie said, filling in the details
+ of the doorway. &lsquo;He thinks him a very earnest, self-convinced, good
+ old man, but a terrible revolutionist. For my part, I believe I rather
+ like revolutionists, provided, of course, they don&rsquo;t cut off people&rsquo;s
+ heads. Harry made me read Carlyle, and I positively fell in love with
+ Camille Desmoulins; only I don&rsquo;t really think he ought to have
+ approved of QUITE so much guillotining, do you? But why shouldn&rsquo;t
+ you take the tutorship at the Exmoors&rsquo;?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, because it isn&rsquo;t a very useful work in the world to prepare a
+ young hereditary loafer like Lynmouth for going to Christ Church. Lynmouth
+ will be just like his father when he grows up&mdash;an amiable wholesale
+ partridge-slayer; and I don&rsquo;t see that the world at large will be
+ any the better or the worse off for his being able to grope his way
+ somehow through two plays of Sophocles and the first six books of Euclid.
+ If only one were a shoemaker now! What a delightful thing to sit down at
+ the end of a day and say to oneself, &ldquo;I have made two pairs of good,
+ honest boots for a fellow-mortal this week, and now I deserve to have my
+ supper!&rdquo; Still, it&rsquo;ll be better, anyway, than doing nothing at
+ all, and living off my mother.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If you went to Dunbude, when would you go?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘After the Christmas vacation, I suppose, from what Lady Hilda says.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Lady Hilda? Oh, so there&rsquo;s a sister, is there?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes. A very pretty girl, about twenty, I should say, and rather clever
+ too, I believe. My mother knows them a little.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor little Edie! What made her heart jump so at the mere mention of Lady
+ Hilda? and what made the last few strokes at the top of the broken
+ yew-tree look so very weak and shaky? How absurd of herself, she thought,
+ to feel so much moved at hearing that there was another girl in the world
+ whom Ernest might possibly fall in love with! And yet she had never even
+ seen Ernest only ten days ago! Lady Hilda! What a grand name, to be sure,
+ and what a grand person she must be. And then Ernest himself belonged by
+ birth to the same class! For in poor little Edie&rsquo;s mind, innocent as
+ she was of the nice distinctions of the peerage, Lady So-and-So was Lady
+ So-and-So still, whoever she might be, from the wife of a premier marquis
+ to the wife of the latest created knight bachelor. To her, Lady Hilda
+ Tregellis and Lady Le Breton were both &lsquo;ladies of title&rsquo;; and
+ the difference between their positions, which seemed so immense to Ernest,
+ seemed nothing at all to the merry little country girl who sat sketching
+ beside him. After all, how could she ever have even vaguely fancied that
+ such a young man as Ernest, in spite of all his socialistic whims, would
+ ever dream of caring for a girl of the people like her? No doubt he would
+ go to the Exmoors&rsquo;, fall naturally in love with Lady Hilda, and
+ marry decorously in what Edie considered his own proper sphere of life!
+ She went on with the finishing touches of her little picture in silence,
+ and folded it up into the tiny portfolio at last with a half-uttered sigh.
+ So her poor wee castle in the air was knocked down before she had begun to
+ build it up in any real seriousness, and she turned to join Harry in the
+ boat almost without speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I hope you&rsquo;ll get the Pembroke fellowship,&rsquo; she said again, a
+ little later, as they rowed onward down the river to Nuneham. &lsquo;But
+ in any case, Mr. Le Breton, you mustn&rsquo;t forget you&rsquo;ve half
+ promised to come and look us up at Calcombe Pomeroy in the Christmas
+ vacation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest smiled, and nodded acquiescence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, on that same Thursday afternoon, Arthur Berkeley had gone up
+ from Oxford by the fast train to Paddington, as was his weekly wont, and
+ had dived quickly down one of the small lanes that open out from the
+ left-hand side of Praed Street. He walked along it for a little way,
+ humming an air to himself as he went, and then stopped at last in front of
+ a small, decent brick house, with a clean muslin blind across the window
+ (clean muslin forms a notable object in most London back streets), and a
+ printed card hanging from the central pane, bearing the inscription,
+ &lsquo;G. Berkeley, Working Shoemaker.&mdash;The Trade supplied with
+ Ready-closed Uppers.&rsquo; At the window a beaming face was watching for
+ his appearance, and Arthur said to himself as he saw it through the
+ curtain, &lsquo;The dear old Progenitor&rsquo;s looking better again this
+ week, God bless him!&rsquo; In a moment he had opened the door, and
+ greeted his father in the old boyish fashion, with an honest kiss on
+ either cheek. They had kissed one another so whenever they met from Arthur&rsquo;s
+ childhood upward; and the Oxford curate had never felt himself grown too
+ much of a man to keep up a habit which seemed to him by far the most
+ sacred thing in his whole existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, father dear, I needn&rsquo;t ask you how you are to-day,&rsquo;
+ said Arthur, seating himself comfortably in the second easy-chair of the
+ trim little workshop parlour. &lsquo;I can see at once you&rsquo;re a good
+ deal better. Any more pain in the head and eyes, eh, or any trouble about
+ the forehead?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker passed his hand over his big, bulging brow, bent outward
+ as it is so often in men of his trade by the constant habit of stooping
+ over their work, and said briskly, &lsquo;No, Artie, my boy, not a sign of
+ it this week&mdash;not a single sign of it. I&rsquo;ve been taking a bit
+ of holiday, you see, and it&rsquo;s done me a lot of good, I can tell you;&mdash;made
+ me feel another man entirely. I&rsquo;ve been playing my violin till the
+ neighbours began to complain of it; and if I hadn&rsquo;t asked them to
+ come and hear me tune up a bit, I really believe they&rsquo;d have been
+ having me up before the magistrate for a public nuisance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s right, Daddy dear; I&rsquo;m always glad when you&rsquo;ve
+ been having a little music. It does you more good than anything. And the
+ jelly&mdash;I hope you&rsquo;ve eaten the jelly?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, I&rsquo;ve eaten it right enough, Artie, thank your dear heart; and
+ the soup too, dearie. Came by a boy from Walters&rsquo;s every day,
+ addressed to &ldquo;Berkeley, Esquire, 42 Whalley Street;&rdquo; and the
+ boy wouldn&rsquo;t leave it the first day, because he thought there must
+ have been a mistake about the address. His contention was that a
+ journeyman shoemaker wasn&rsquo;t an esquire; and my contention was that
+ the &ldquo;Berkeley&rdquo; was essential, and the &ldquo;Esquire&rdquo;
+ accidental, which was beyond his logic, bless you, Artie; for I&rsquo;ve
+ often noticed, my son, that your errand-boy is a naturally illogical and
+ contradictory creature. Now, shoemakers aren&rsquo;t, you know. I&rsquo;ve
+ always taken a just pride in the profession, and I&rsquo;ve always
+ asserted that it develops logic; it develops logic, Artie, or else why are
+ all cobblers good Liberals, I should like to know? Eh, can you tell me
+ that; with all your Oxford training, sir, can you tell me that?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It develops logic beyond the possibility of a doubt. Daddy; and it
+ develops a good kind heart as well,&rsquo; said Arthur, smiling. ‘And it
+ develops musical taste, and literary talent, and a marked predilection for
+ the beautiful in art and nature. In fact, whenever I meet a good man of
+ any sort, anywhere, I always begin now by inquiring which of his immediate
+ ancestors can have been a journeyman shoemaker. Depend upon it, Daddy,
+ there&rsquo;s nothing like leather.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There you are, poking fun at your poor old Progenitor again,&rsquo; said
+ the old cobbler, with a merry twinkle in the corner of his eye. ‘If it
+ weren&rsquo;t for the jelly, and the natural affections always engendered
+ by shoemaking, I think I should almost feel inclined to cut you off with a
+ shilling, Artie, my boy&mdash;to cut you off with a shilling. Well, Artie,
+ I&rsquo;m quite convalescent now (don&rsquo;t you call it? I&rsquo;m
+ afraid of my long shoemaker&rsquo;s words before you, nowadays, you&rsquo;ve
+ grown so literary; for I suppose parsons are more literary than even
+ shoemakers). I&rsquo;m quite convalescent now, and I think, my boy, I must
+ get to work again this week, and have no more of your expensive soups and
+ jellies. If I didn&rsquo;t keep a sharp look-out upon you, Artie, lad, I
+ believe you&rsquo;d starve yourself outright up there at Oxford to pamper
+ your poor old useless father here with luxuries he&rsquo;s never been
+ accustomed to in his whole life.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear simple old Progenitor, you don&rsquo;t know how utterly you&rsquo;re
+ mistaken,&rsquo; cried Arthur, eagerly. &lsquo;I believe I&rsquo;m really
+ the most selfish and unnatural son in all Christendom. I&rsquo;m
+ positively rolling in wealth up there at Magdalen; I&rsquo;ve had my room
+ papered again since you saw it last long vacation; and I live like a
+ prince, absolutely like a Russian prince, upon my present income. I assure
+ you on my solemn word of honour, Father, that I eat meat for lunch&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+ my dinner&mdash;every day; and an egg for tea as regular as clockwork. I
+ often think when I look around my palatial rooms in college, what a shame
+ it is that I should let you, who are worth ten of me, any day, live any
+ longer in a back street up here in London; and I won&rsquo;t allow it,
+ Daddy, I really won&rsquo;t allow it from this day forth, I&rsquo;m
+ determined. I&rsquo;ve come up especially to speak to you about it this
+ afternoon, for I&rsquo;ve made up my mind that this abnormal state of
+ things can&rsquo;t continue.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Very good word, abnormal,&rsquo;
+ murmured his father.&mdash;&lsquo;And I&rsquo;ve also made up my mind,&rsquo;
+ Arthur said, almost firmly, for him, &lsquo;that you shall come up and
+ live at Oxford. I can&rsquo;t bear having you so far away from me, now
+ that you&rsquo;re weaker than you used to be, Father dear, and so often
+ ailing.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker laughed aloud. &lsquo;Oh no, Artie, my boy,&rsquo; he
+ said cheerily, shaking his head with a continuous series of merry
+ chuckles. &lsquo;It won&rsquo;t do at all, it won&rsquo;t do, I assure
+ you. I may be a terrible free-thinker and all that kind of thing, as the
+ neighbours say I am&mdash;poor bodies, they never read a word of modern
+ criticism in their lives, heaven bless &lsquo;em&mdash;stragglers from the
+ march of intellect, mere stragglers&mdash;but I&rsquo;ve too much respect
+ for the cloth to bring a curate of St. Fredegond&rsquo;s into such
+ disgrace as that would mean for you, Artie. You shan&rsquo;t have your
+ career at Oxford spoiled by its being said of you that your father was a
+ working shoemaker. What with the ready-closed uppers, and what with your
+ ten shillings a week, and what with all the presents you give me, and what
+ with the hire of the piano, I&rsquo;m as comfortable as ever I want to be,
+ growing into a gentleman in my old age, Artie, and I even begin to have my
+ doubts as to whether it&rsquo;s quite consistent in me as a good Radical
+ to continue my own acquaintance with myself&mdash;I&rsquo;m getting to be
+ such a regular idle do-nothing aristocrat! Go to Oxford and mend shoes,
+ indeed, with you living there as a full-fledged parson in your own rooms
+ at Magdalen! No, no, I won&rsquo;t hear of it. I&rsquo;ll come up for a
+ day or two in long vacation, my boy, as I&rsquo;ve always done hitherto,
+ and take a room in Holywell, and look in upon you a bit, accidentally, so
+ as not to shame you before the scouts (who are a servile set of flunkeys,
+ incapable of understanding the elevated feelings of a journeyman
+ shoemaker); but I wouldn&rsquo;t dream of going to live in the place, any
+ more than I&rsquo;d dream of asking to be presented at court on the
+ occasion of my receiving a commission for a pair of evening shoes for the
+ Queen&rsquo;s head footman.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Father,&rsquo; said Arthur, smiling, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re absolutely
+ incorrigible. Such a dreadful old rebel against all constituted authority,
+ human and divine, I never did meet in the course of my existence, I
+ believe you&rsquo;re really capable of arguing a point of theology against
+ an archbishop. But I don&rsquo;t want you to come up to Oxford as a
+ shoemaker; I mean you to come up and live with me in rooms of our own, out
+ of college. Whenever I think of you, dear Father&mdash;you, who are so
+ infinitely nobler, and better, and truer, and more really a gentleman than
+ any other than I ever knew in my life&mdash;whenever I think of you,
+ coming secretly up to Oxford as if you were ashamed of yourself, and
+ visiting your own son by stealth in his rooms in college as if you were a
+ dun coming to ask him for money, instead of the person whom he delights to
+ honour&mdash;whenever I think of it, Father, it makes my cheeks burn with
+ shame, and I loathe myself for ever allowing you so to bemean your own
+ frank, true, noble nature. I oughtn&rsquo;t to permit it, Father, I oughtn&rsquo;t
+ to permit it; and I won&rsquo;t permit it any longer.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, you never would have permitted it, Artie, if I hadn&rsquo;t
+ compelled you; for I&rsquo;ve got all the prudence and common sense of the
+ family bottled up here in my own forehead,&rsquo; said the old man,
+ tapping his bulging brow significantly. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t deny that
+ Oxford may be an excellent school for Greek and Latin, and philosophy, and
+ so forth; but if you want prudence and sagacity and common-sense it&rsquo;s
+ a well-known fact that there&rsquo;s nothing like the practice of making
+ ready-closed uppers, sir, to develop &lsquo;em. If I&rsquo;d taken your
+ advice, my boy, I&rsquo;d have come up to visit you when you were an
+ undergraduate, and ruined your prospects at the very outset. No, no,
+ Artie, I shall stop here, and stick to my last, my dear boy, stick to my
+ last, to the end of all things.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You shall do nothing of the sort, Daddy; that I&rsquo;m determined upon,&rsquo;
+ Arthur cried vehemently. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m not going to let you do any more
+ shoemaking. The time has come when you must retire, and devote all your
+ undivided energies to the constant study of modern criticism. Whether you
+ come to Oxford or stop in London, I&rsquo;ve made up my mind that you shan&rsquo;t
+ do another stroke of work as long as you live. Look here, dear old Daddy,
+ I&rsquo;m getting to be a perfect millionaire, I assure you. Do you see
+ this fiver? well, I got that for knocking out that last trashy little song
+ for Fradelli; and it cost me no more trouble to compose it than to sit
+ down and write the score out on a sheet of ruled paper. I&rsquo;m as rich
+ as Croesus&mdash;made a hundred and eighty pounds last year, and expect to
+ make over two hundred this one. Now, if a man with that perfectly
+ prodigious fortune can&rsquo;t afford to keep his own father in comfort
+ and affluence, what an absolute Sybarite and gourmand of a fellow he must
+ be himself.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s a lot of money, certainly, Artie,&rsquo; said the old
+ shoemaker, turning it over thoughtfully: &lsquo;two hundred pounds is a
+ lot of money; but I doubt very much whether it&rsquo;s more than enough to
+ keep you up to the standard of your own society, up there at Oxford. As
+ John Stuart Mill says, these things are all comparative to the standard of
+ comfort of your class. Now, Artie, I believe you have to stint yourself of
+ things that everybody else about you has at Oxford, to keep me in luxuries
+ I was never used to.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Dad, it&rsquo;s only of the nature of a repayment,&rsquo; cried
+ Arthur, earnestly. &lsquo;You slaved and sacrificed and denied yourself
+ when I was a boy to send me to school, without which I would never have
+ got to Oxford at all; and you taught me music in your spare hours (when
+ you had any); and I owe everything I have or am or ever will be to your
+ unceasing and indefatigable kindness. So now you&rsquo;ve got to take
+ repayment whether you will or not, for I insist upon it. And if you won&rsquo;t
+ come up to Oxford, which perhaps would be an uncongenial place for you in
+ many ways, I&rsquo;ll tell you what I&rsquo;ll do, Daddy; I&rsquo;ll look
+ out for a curacy somewhere in London, and we&rsquo;ll take a little house
+ together, and I&rsquo;ll furnish it nicely, and there we shall live, sir,
+ whatever you say, so not another word about it. And now I want you to
+ listen to the very best thing I&rsquo;ve ever composed, and tell me what
+ you think of it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down to the little hired cottage piano that occupied the corner of
+ the neat small room, and began to run his deft fingers lightly over the
+ keys. It was the Butterfly fantasia. The father sat back in his red
+ easy-chair, listening with all his ears, first critically, then
+ admiringly, at last enthusiastically. As Arthur&rsquo;s closing notes died
+ away softly towards the end, the old shoemaker&rsquo;s delight could be
+ restrained no longer. &lsquo;Artie,&rsquo; he cried, gloating over it,
+ &lsquo;that&rsquo;s music! That&rsquo;s real music! You&rsquo;re quite
+ right, my boy; that&rsquo;s far and away the best thing you&rsquo;ve ever
+ written. It&rsquo;s exquisite&mdash;so light, so airy, so unearthlike.
+ But, Artie, there&rsquo;s more than that in it. There&rsquo;s soul in it;
+ and I know what it means. You don&rsquo;t deceive your poor old Progenitor
+ in a matter of musical inspiration, I can tell you. I know where you got
+ that fantasia from as well as if I&rsquo;d seen you getting it. You got it
+ out of your own heart, my boy, out of your own heart. And the thing it
+ says to me as plain as language is just this&mdash;you&rsquo;re in love!
+ You&rsquo;re in love, Artie, and there&rsquo;s no good denying it. If any
+ man ever wrote that fantasia without being in love at the time&mdash;first
+ love&mdash;ecstasy&mdash;tremor&mdash;tiptoe of expectation&mdash;why,
+ then, I tell you, music hasn&rsquo;t got such a thing as a tongue or a
+ meaning in it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur looked at him gently and smiled, but said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Will you tell me about her, Artie?&rsquo; asked the old man, caressingly,
+ laying his hand upon his son&rsquo;s arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not now, Father; not just now, please. Some other time, perhaps, but not
+ now. I hardly know about it myself, yet. It may be something&mdash;it may
+ be nothing; but, at any rate, it was peg enough to hang a fantasia upon.
+ You&rsquo;ve surprised my little secret, Father, and I dare say it&rsquo;s
+ no real secret at all, but just a passing whiff of fancy. If it ever comes
+ to anything, you shall know first of all the world about it. Now take out
+ your violin, there&rsquo;s a dear old Dad, and give me a tune upon it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father took the precious instrument from its carefully covered case
+ with a sort of loving reverence, and began to play a piece of Arthur&rsquo;s
+ own composition. From the moment the bow touched the chords it was easy
+ enough to see whence the son got his musical instincts. Old George
+ Berkeley was a born musician, and he could make his violin discourse to
+ him with rare power of execution. There they sat, playing and talking at
+ intervals, till nearly eight, when Arthur went out hurriedly to catch the
+ last train to Oxford, and left the old shoemaker once more to his week&rsquo;s
+ solitude. &lsquo;Not for much longer,&rsquo; the curate whispered to
+ himself, as he got into his third-class carriage quickly; &lsquo;not for
+ much longer, if I can help it. A curacy in or near London&rsquo;s the only
+ right thing for me to look out for!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. &mdash; GHOSTLY COUNSEL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ November came, and with it came the Pembroke fellowship examination.
+ Ernest went in manfully, and tried hard to do his best; for somehow, in
+ spite of the immorality of fellowships, he had a sort of floating notion
+ in his head that he would like to get one, because he was beginning to
+ paint himself a little fancy picture of a home that was to be, with a
+ little fairy Edie flitting through it, and brightening it all delightfully
+ with her dainty airy presence. So he even went so far as to mitigate
+ considerably the native truculence of his political economy paper, after
+ Edie&rsquo;s advice&mdash;not, of course, by making any suggestion of
+ opinions he did not hold, but by suppressing the too-prominent expression
+ of those he actually believed in. Max Schurz&rsquo;s name was not once
+ mentioned throughout the whole ten or twelve pages of closely written
+ foolscap; ‘Gold and the Proletariate&rsquo; was utterly ignored; and in
+ place of the strong meat served out for men by the apostles of socialism
+ in the Marylebone dancing-saloon, Ernest dished up for his examiner&rsquo;s
+ edification merely such watery milk for babes as he had extracted from the
+ eminently orthodox economical pages of Fawcett, Mill, and Thorold Rogers.
+ He went back to his rooms, satisfied that he had done himself full
+ justice, and anxiously waited for the result to be duly announced on the
+ Saturday morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it that piece of Latin prose, too obviously modelled upon the Annals
+ of Tacitus, while the senior tutor was a confirmed Ciceronian, with the
+ Second Philippic constitutionally on the brain? Was it the Greek verse,
+ containing one senarius with a long syllable before the caesura in the
+ fifth foot, as Herbert pointed out to his brother on the very evening when
+ that hideous oversight&mdash;say rather crime&mdash;had been openly
+ perpetrated in plain black and white on a virgin sheet of innocent paper?
+ Was it some faint ineffaceable savour of the Schurzian economics, peeping
+ through in spite of all disguises, like the garlic in an Italian ragout,
+ from under the sedulous cloak of Ricardo&rsquo;s theory of rent? Was it
+ some flying rumour, extra-official, and unconnected with the examination
+ in any way, to the effect that young Le Breton was a person of very
+ dubious religious, political, and social orthodoxy? Or was it merely that
+ fortunate dispensation of Providence whereby Oxford almost invariably
+ manages to let her best men slip unobserved through her fingers, and so
+ insures a decent crop of them to fill up her share of the passing
+ vacancies in politics, literature, science, and art? Heaven or the
+ Pembroke examiners alone can answer these abstruse and difficult
+ questions; but this much at least is certain, that when Ernest Le Breton
+ went into the Pembroke porter&rsquo;s lodge on the predestined Saturday,
+ he found another name than his placarded upon the notice board, and turned
+ back, sick at heart and disappointed, to his lonely lodgings. There he
+ spent an unhappy hour or two, hewing down what remained of his little
+ aerial castle off-hand; and then he went out for a solitary row upon the
+ upper river, endeavouring to work off his disappointment like a man, with
+ a good hard spell of muscular labour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie had already returned to Calcombe-Pomeroy, so in the evening he went
+ to tell his misfortune to Harry Oswald. Harry was really sorry to hear it,
+ for Ernest was his best friend in Oxford, and he had hoped to have him
+ settled close by. &lsquo;You&rsquo;ll stop up and try again for Christ
+ Church in February, won&rsquo;t you, Le Breton?&rsquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No,&rsquo; said Ernest, shaking his head a little gloomily; &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ think I will. It&rsquo;s clear I&rsquo;m not up to the Oxford standard for
+ a fellowship, and I couldn&rsquo;t spend another term in residence without
+ coming down upon my mother to pay my expenses&mdash;a thing she can&rsquo;t
+ easily afford to do. So I suppose I must fall back for the present upon
+ the Exmoor tutorship. That&rsquo;ll give me time to look about me, till I
+ can get something else to do; and after all, it isn&rsquo;t a bit more
+ immoral than a fellowship, when one comes to look it fairly in the face.
+ However, I shall go first and ask Herr Max&rsquo;s opinion upon the
+ matter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m going to spend a fortnight in town in the Christmas vac,&rsquo;
+ said Oswald, &lsquo;and I should like to go with you to Max&rsquo;s again,
+ if I may.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest coloured up a little, for he would have liked to invite Oswald to
+ his mother&rsquo;s house; and yet he felt there were two reasons why he
+ should not do so; he must himself be dependent this time upon his mother&rsquo;s
+ hospitality, and he didn&rsquo;t think Lady Le Breton would be perfectly
+ cordial in her welcome to Harry Oswald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the end, however, it was arranged that Harry should engage rooms at his
+ former lodgings in London, and that Ernest should take him once more to
+ call upon the old socialist when he went to consult him on the question of
+ conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘For my part, Ernest,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton to her son, the morning
+ after his return from Oxford, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m not altogether sorry you
+ didn&rsquo;t get this Pembroke fellowship. It would have kept you among
+ the same set you are at present mixing in for an indefinite period. Of
+ course now you&rsquo;ll accept Lady Exmoor&rsquo;s kind proposal. I saw
+ her about it the same morning we got Hilda&rsquo;s letter; and she offers
+ 200L. a year, which, of course, is mere pocket money, as your board and
+ lodging are all found for you, so to speak, and you&rsquo;ll have nothing
+ to do but to dress and amuse yourself.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, mother, I shall see about it. I&rsquo;m going to consult Herr
+ Schurz upon the subject this morning.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Herr Schurz!&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton, in her bitterest tone of irony.
+ ‘It appears to me you make that snuffy old German microscope man your
+ father confessor. It&rsquo;s very disagreeable to a mother to find that
+ her sons, instead of taking her advice about what is most material to
+ their own interests, should invariably go to confer with communist
+ refugees and ignorant ranters. Ronald, what is your programme, if you
+ please, for this morning&rsquo;s annoyance?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald, with the fear of the fifth commandment steadily before his eyes,
+ took no notice of the last word, and answered calmly, ‘You know, mother,
+ this is the regular day for the mission-house prayer-meeting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The mission-house prayer-meeting! I know nothing of the sort, I assure
+ you. I don&rsquo;t keep a perfect calendar in my mind of all your meetings
+ and your religious engagements. Then I suppose I must go alone to the
+ Waltons&rsquo; to see Mr. Walton&rsquo;s water-colours?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ll give up the prayer-meeting, if you wish it,&rsquo; Ronald
+ answered, with his unvarying meekness. &lsquo;Only, I&rsquo;m afraid I
+ must walk very slowly. My cough&rsquo;s rather bad this morning.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, no,&rsquo; Ernest put in, &lsquo;you mustn&rsquo;t dream of going,
+ Ronald; I couldn&rsquo;t allow you to walk so far on any account. I&rsquo;ll
+ put off my engagement with Oswald, who was going with me to Herr Schurz&rsquo;s,
+ and I&rsquo;ll take you round to the Waltons&rsquo;, mother, whenever you
+ like.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dear me, dear me,&rsquo; moaned Lady Le Breton, piteously, pretending to
+ wring her hands in lady-like and mitigated despair; &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t
+ do anything without its being made the opportunity for a scene, it seems.
+ I shall NOT go to the Waltons&rsquo;; and I shall leave you both to follow
+ your own particular devices to your heart&rsquo;s content. I&rsquo;m sorry
+ I proposed anything whatsoever, I&rsquo;m sure, and I shall take care
+ never to do such an imprudent thing again.&rsquo; And her ladyship walked
+ in her stateliest and most chilly manner out of the freezing little
+ dining-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s a great cross, living always with poor mother, Ernest,&rsquo;
+ said Ronald, his eyes filling with tears as he spoke; &lsquo;but we must
+ try to bear with her, you know, for after all she leads a very lonely life
+ herself, because she&rsquo;s so very unsympathetic.&rsquo; Ernest took the
+ spare white hand in his and smoothed it compassionately. &lsquo;My dear,
+ dear Ronald,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;I know it&rsquo;s hard for you. I must
+ try the best I can to make it a little easier!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked together as far as the mission-house, arm in arm, for though
+ in some things the two young Le Bretons were wide apart as the poles, in
+ others they were fundamentally at one in inmost spirit; and even Ronald,
+ in spite of his occasional little narrow sectarianisms, felt the
+ underlying unity of purpose no less than Ernest. He was one of those
+ enthusiastic ethereal natures which care little for outer forms or
+ ceremonies, and nothing at all for churches and organisations, but love to
+ commune as pure spirit with pure spirit, living every day a life of
+ ecstatic spirituality, and never troubling themselves one whit about
+ theological controversy or established religious constitutions. As long as
+ Ronald Le Breton could read his Greek Testament every morning, and talk
+ face to face in their own tongue with the Paul of First Corinthians or the
+ John of the Epistles, in the solitude of his own bedroom, he was supremely
+ indifferent about the serious question, of free-will and fore-knowledge,
+ or about the important question of apostolical succession, or even about
+ that other burning question of eternal punishment, which was just then
+ setting his own little sect of Apostolic Christian Missioners roundly by
+ the ears. These things seemed to his enthusiastic mind mere fading echoes
+ of an alien language; all that he himself really cared for in religion was
+ the constant sense of essential personal communion with that higher Power
+ which spoke directly to his soul all day long and always; or the equally
+ constant sense of moral exaltation which he drew from the reading of the
+ written Word in its own original language. He had never BECOME an
+ Apostolic Christian; he had grown up to be one, unconsciously to himself.
+ &lsquo;Your son Ronald&rsquo;s religion, my dear Lady Le Breton,&rsquo;
+ Archdeacon Luttrell used often to say, &lsquo;is, I fear, too purely
+ emotional. He cannot be made to feel sufficiently the necessity for a
+ sound practical grasp of doctrinal Christianity.&rsquo; To Ronald himself,
+ he might as well have talked about the necessity for a sound practical
+ grasp of doctrinal Buddhism. And if Ronald had really met a devout
+ Buddhist, he would doubtless have found, after half an hour&rsquo;s
+ conversation, that they were at one in everything save the petty matter of
+ dialect and vocabulary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Oswald&rsquo;s lodging, Ernest found his friend ready and waiting for
+ him. They went on together to the same street in Marylebone as before, and
+ mounted the stair till they reached Herr Schurz&rsquo;s gloomy little
+ work-room on the third floor. The old apostle was seated at his small
+ table by the half-open window, grinding the edges of a lens to fit the
+ brass mounting at his side; while his daughter Uta, a still good-looking,
+ quiet, broad-faced South German woman, about forty or a little more, sat
+ close by, busily translating a scientific book into English by alternate
+ reading and consultation with her father. Harry saw the title on her page
+ was &lsquo;Researches into the Embryology of the Isopodal Crustaceans,&rsquo;
+ and conceived at once an immense respect for the learning and wisdom of
+ the communist exile&rsquo;s daughter. Herr Schurz hardly stopped a moment
+ from his work&mdash;he never allowed his numerous visitors to interfere in
+ any way with his daily duties&mdash;but motioned them both to seats on the
+ bare bench beside him, and waited to bear the nature of their particular
+ business. It was an understood thing that no one came to see the Socialist
+ leader on week days except for a good and sufficient reason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The talk at first was general and desultory; but after a little time
+ Ernest brought conversation round to its proper focus, and placed his case
+ of conscience fairly before his father confessor. Was it allowable for a
+ consistent socialist to accept the place of tutor to the son of a peer and
+ a landowner?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘For my part, Herr Schurz,&rsquo; Oswald said confidently, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ see any reason on earth, from the point of view of any political economy
+ whatsoever, why Ernest shouldn&rsquo;t take the position. The question isn&rsquo;t
+ how the Exmoors have come by their money, even allowing that private
+ property in land is in itself utterly indefensible; which is a proposition
+ I don&rsquo;t myself feel inclined unreservedly to admit, though I know
+ you and Le Breton do: the real question&rsquo;s this,&mdash;since they&rsquo;ve
+ got this money into their hands to distribute, and since in any case they
+ will have the distribution of it, isn&rsquo;t it better that some of it
+ should go into Le Breton&rsquo;s pocket than that it should go into any
+ other person&rsquo;s? That&rsquo;s the way I for my part look at the
+ matter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What do you say to that, friend Ernest?&rsquo; asked the old German,
+ smiling and waiting to see whether Ernest would detect what from their own
+ standpoint he regarded as the ethical fallacy of Harry Oswald&rsquo;s
+ argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, to tell you the truth, Herr Schurz,&rsquo; answered Ernest, in his
+ deliberate, quiet way, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;ve envisaged the
+ subject to myself from quite the same point of view as Oswald has done. I
+ have rather asked myself whether it was right of a man to accept a
+ function in which he would really be doing nothing worthy for humanity in
+ return for his daily board and lodging. It isn&rsquo;t so much a question
+ who exactly is to get certain sums out of the Exmoors&rsquo; pockets,
+ which ought no doubt never to have been in them; it&rsquo;s more a
+ question whether a man has any right to live off the collective labour of
+ the world, and do nothing of any good to the world on his own part by way
+ of repayment.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s it, friend Ernest,&rsquo; cried the old man, with a pleased
+ nod of his big grey head; &lsquo;the socialistic Iliad in a nutshell! That&rsquo;s
+ the very root of the question. Don&rsquo;t be deceived by capitalist
+ sophisms. So long as we go on each of us trying to get as much as we can
+ individually out of the world, instead of asking what the world is getting
+ out of us, in return, there will be no revolution and no millennium. We
+ must make sure that we&rsquo;re doing some good ourselves, instead of
+ sponging upon the people perpetually to feed us for nothing. What&rsquo;s
+ the first gospel given to man at the creation in your popular cosmogonies?
+ Why, that in the sweat of his face shall he eat bread, and till the ground
+ from which he was taken. That&rsquo;s the native gospel of the toiling
+ many, always; your doctrines of fair exchange, and honest livelihoods, and
+ free contract, and all the rest of it, are only the artificial gospel of
+ the political economists, and of the bourgeoisie and the aristocrats into
+ whose hands they play&mdash;the rascals!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you think I oughtn&rsquo;t to take the post?&rsquo; asked Ernest, a
+ little ruefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t say that, Le Breton&mdash;I don&rsquo;t say that,&rsquo;
+ said Herr Schurz, more quietly than before, still grinding away at his
+ lens. &lsquo;The question&rsquo;s a broad one, and it has many aspects.
+ The best work a man can do is undoubtedly the most useful work&mdash;the
+ work that conduces most to the general happiness. But we of the
+ proletariate can&rsquo;t take our choice always: as your English proverb
+ plainly puts it, with your true English bluntness, &ldquo;beggars mustn&rsquo;t
+ be choosers.&rdquo; We must, each in his place, do the work that&rsquo;s
+ set before us by the privileged classes. It&rsquo;s impossible for us to
+ go nicely discriminating between work that&rsquo;s useful for the
+ community, work that&rsquo;s merely harmless, and work that&rsquo;s
+ positively detrimental. How can we insure it? A man&rsquo;s a printer,
+ say. There&rsquo;s a generally useful trade, in which, on the whole, he
+ labours for the good and enlightenment of the world&mdash;for he may print
+ scientific books, good books, useful books; and most printing, on the
+ average, is useful. But how&rsquo;s he to know what sort of thing he&rsquo;s
+ printing? He may be printing &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate,&rdquo; or
+ he may be printing obscurantist and retrogressive treatises by the enemies
+ of humanity. Look at my own trade, again. You&rsquo;d say at first sight,
+ Mr. Oswald, that to make microscopes must be a good thing in the end for
+ the world at large: and so it is, no doubt; but half of them&mdash;ay,
+ more than half of them&mdash;are thrown away: mere wasted labour, a good
+ workman&rsquo;s time and skill lavished needlessly on some foolish rich
+ man&rsquo;s caprices and amusement. Often enough, now, I make a good
+ instrument&mdash;an instrument, with all its fittings, worth fifty or a
+ hundred pounds. That takes a long time to make, and I&rsquo;m a skilled
+ workman; and the instrument may fall into the hands of a scientific man
+ who&rsquo;ll use it in discovery, in verification, in promoting knowledge,
+ in lessening disease and mitigating human suffering. That&rsquo;s the good
+ side of my trade. But, mark you, now,&rsquo; and the old man wiped his
+ forehead rapidly with his sleeve, &lsquo;it has its bad side too. As often
+ as not, I know, some rich man will buy that machine, that cost me so much
+ time and trouble to make, and will buy a few dozen stock slides with it,
+ and will bring it out once in a moon to show his children or a few idle
+ visitors the scales on a butterfly&rsquo;s wing, or the hairs on the leg
+ of a common flea. Uta sets those things up by the thousand for the dealers
+ to sell to indolent dilettanti. The appetite of the world at large for the
+ common flea is simply insatiable. And it&rsquo;s for that, perhaps, that I&rsquo;m
+ spoiling my eyesight now, grinding and grinding and grinding at this very
+ lens, and fitting the thing to an accurate fraction of a millimetre, as we
+ always fit these things&mdash;we who are careful and honest workmen&mdash;to
+ show an idle man&rsquo;s friends the hairs on a flea&rsquo;s fore-leg. If
+ that isn&rsquo;t enough to make a man ashamed of our present wasteful and
+ chaotic organisation, I should think he must be a survival from the
+ preglacial epoch&mdash;as, indeed, most of us actually are!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, after all, Herr Schurz,&rsquo; said Harry, expostulating, &lsquo;you
+ get paid for your labour, and the rich man is doing better by encouraging
+ your skill than by encouraging the less useful skill of other workmen.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes,&rsquo; cried Herr Schurz, warmly, &lsquo;that&rsquo;s the
+ doctrine of the one-eyed economists; that&rsquo;s the capitalist way of
+ looking at it; but it isn&rsquo;t our way&mdash;it isn&rsquo;t ours. Is it
+ nothing, think you, that all that toil of mine&mdash;of a sensible man&rsquo;s&mdash;goes
+ to waste, to gratify the senseless passing whim of a wealthy nobody? Is it
+ nothing that he uselessly monopolises the valuable product of my labour,
+ which in other and abler hands might be bringing forth good fruit for the
+ bettering and furthering of universal humanity? I tell you, Mr. Oswald,
+ half the best books, half the best apparatus, half the best appliances in
+ all Europe, are locked up idle in rich men&rsquo;s cabinets, effecting no
+ good, begetting no discoveries, bringing forth no interest, doing nothing
+ but foster the anti-social pride of their wealthy possessors. But that isn&rsquo;t
+ what friend Ernest wants to ask me about to-day. He wants to know about
+ his own course in a difficult case; and instead of answering him, here am
+ I, maundering away, like an old man that I am, into the generalised
+ platitudes of &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate.&rdquo; Well, Le Breton,
+ what I should say in your particular instance is this. A man with the fear
+ of right before his eyes may, under existing circumstances, lawfully
+ accept any work that will keep him alive, provided he sees no better and
+ more useful work equally open to him. He may take the job the capitalists
+ impose, if he can get nothing worthier to do elsewhere. Now, if you don&rsquo;t
+ teach this young Tregellis, what alternative have you? Why, to become a
+ master in a school&mdash;Eton, perhaps, or Rugby, or Marlborough&mdash;and
+ teach other equally useless members of prospective aristocratic society.
+ That being so, I think you ought to do what&rsquo;s best for yourself and
+ your family for the present&mdash;for the present&mdash;till the time of
+ deliverance comes. You see, there is one member of your family to whom the
+ matter is of immediate importance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ronald,&rsquo; said Ernest, interrupting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, Ronald. A good boy; a socialist, too, though he doesn&rsquo;t know
+ it&mdash;one of us, born of us, and only apart from us in bare externals.
+ Well, would it be most comfortable for poor Ronald that you should go to
+ these Exmoor people, or that you should take a mastership, get rooms
+ somewhere, and let him live with you? He&rsquo;s not very happy with your
+ mother, you say. Wouldn&rsquo;t he be happier with you? What think you?
+ Charity begins at home, you know: a good proverb&mdash;a good, sound,
+ sensible, narrow-minded, practical English proverb!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ve thought of that,&rsquo; Ernest said, &lsquo;and I&rsquo;ll ask
+ him about it. Whichever he prefers, then, I&rsquo;d better decide upon,
+ had I?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Do so,&rsquo; Herr Max answered, with a nod. &lsquo;Other things equal,
+ our first duty is to those nearest to us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What Herr Max said was law to his disciples, and Ernest went his way
+ contented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Oswald seems a very nice young man,&rsquo; Uta Schurz said, looking
+ up from the microscope slides she had begun to mount at the moment her
+ regular translating work was interrupted by their sudden entry. She had
+ been taking quiet glances at Harry all the while, in her unobtrusive
+ fashion; for Uta had learned always to be personally unobtrusive&mdash;&lsquo;the
+ prophet&rsquo;s donkey,&rsquo; those irreverent French exiles used to call
+ her&mdash;and she had come to the conclusion that he was a decidedly
+ handsome and manly fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Which do you like best, Uta&mdash;Oswald or Le Breton?&rsquo; asked her
+ father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Personally,&rsquo; Uta answered, &lsquo;I should prefer Mr. Oswald. To
+ live always with Mr. Le Breton would be like living with an abstraction.
+ No woman would ever care for him; she might just as well marry Spinoza&rsquo;s
+ Ethics or the Ten Commandments. He&rsquo;s a perfect model of a socialist,
+ and nothing else. Mr. Oswald has some human nature in him as well.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There are two kinds of socialists,&rsquo; said Herr Max, bending once
+ more over his glasses; &lsquo;the one kind is always thinking most of its
+ rights; the other kind is always thinking most of its duties. Oswald
+ belongs to the first, Le Breton to the second. I&rsquo;ve often observed
+ it so among men of their two sorts. The best socialists never come from
+ the bourgeoisie, nor even from the proletariate; they come from among the
+ voluntarily déclassés aristocrats. Your workman or your bourgeois who has
+ risen, and who interests himself in social or political questions, is
+ always thinking, &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t I have as many rights and
+ privileges as these other people have?&rdquo; The aristocrat who descends
+ is always thinking, &ldquo;Why shouldn&rsquo;t these other people have as
+ many rights and privileges as I have?&rdquo; The one type begets
+ aggressive self-assertion, the other type begets a certain gentle spirit
+ of self-effacement. You don&rsquo;t often find men of the aristocratic
+ class with any ethical element in them&mdash;their hereditary antecedents,
+ their breeding, their environment, are all hostile to it; but when you do
+ find them, mark my words, Uta, they make the truest and most earnest
+ friends of the popular cause of any. Their sympathy and interest in it is
+ all unselfish.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And yet,&rsquo; Uta answered firmly, &lsquo;I still prefer Mr. Oswald.
+ And if you care for my opinion, I should say that the aristocrat does all
+ the dreaming, but the bourgeois does all the fighting; and that&rsquo;s
+ the most important thing practically, after all.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later, Ernest was talking his future plans over with his brother
+ Ronald. Would it be best for Ronald that he should take a mastership, and
+ both should live together, or that he should go for the present to the
+ Exmoors&rsquo;, and leave the question of Ronald&rsquo;s home arrangements
+ still unsettled?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s so good of you to think of me in the matter, Ernest,&rsquo;
+ Ronald said, pressing his hand gently; &lsquo;but I don&rsquo;t think I
+ ought to go away from mother before I&rsquo;m twenty-one. To tell you the
+ truth, Ernest, I hardly flatter myself she&rsquo;d be really sorry to get
+ rid of me; I&rsquo;m afraid I&rsquo;m a dreadful thorn in her side at
+ present; she doesn&rsquo;t understand my ways, and perhaps I don&rsquo;t
+ sympathise enough with hers; but still, if I were to propose to go, I feel
+ sure she&rsquo;d be very much annoyed, and treat it as a serious act of
+ insubordination on my part. While I&rsquo;m a minor, at least, I ought to
+ remain with her; the Apostle tells us to obey our parents, in the Lord;
+ and as long as she requires nothing from me that doesn&rsquo;t involve a
+ dereliction of principle I think I must bear with it, though I acknowledge
+ it&rsquo;s a cross, a heavy cross. Thank you so much for thinking of it,
+ dearest Ernest.&rsquo; And his eyes filled once more with tears as he
+ spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was finally arranged that for the present at least Ernest should
+ accept Lady Exmoor&rsquo;s offer, and that as soon as Ronald was
+ twenty-one he should look about for a suitable mastership, in order for
+ the two brothers to go immediately into rooms together. Lady Le Breton was
+ surprised at the decision; but as it was in her favour, she wisely
+ abstained from gratifying her natural desire to make some more
+ uncomplimentary references to the snuffy old German socialist. Sufficient
+ unto the day was the triumph thereof; and she had no doubt in her own mind
+ that if once Ernest could be induced to live for a while in really good
+ society the well-known charms and graces of that society must finally tame
+ his rugged breast, and wean him away from his unaccountable devotion to
+ those horrid continental communists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; IN THE CAMP OF THE PHILISTINES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Dunbude Castle, Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s family seat, stands on the last spurs
+ of the great North Devon uplands, overlooking the steep glen of a little
+ boulder-encumbered stream, and commanding a distant view of the Severn Sea
+ and the dim outlines of the blue Welsh hills beyond it. Behind the house,
+ a castle only by courtesy (on the same principle as that by which every
+ bishop lives in a palace), rises the jagged summit of the Cleave, a great
+ weather-worn granite hill, sculptured on top by wind and rain into those
+ fantastic lichen-covered pillars and tora and logans in which antiquarian
+ fancy used so long to find the visible monuments of Druidical worship. All
+ around, a wide brown waste of heather undulates and tosses wildly to the
+ sky; and on the summit of the rolling moor where it rises and swells in
+ one of its many rounded bosses, the antlered heads and shoulders of the
+ red deer may often be seen etched in bold relief against the clear
+ sky-line to the west, on sunny autumn evenings. But the castle itself and
+ the surrounding grounds are not planned to harmonise with the rough
+ moorland English scenery into whose midst they were unceremoniously
+ pitchforked by the second earl. That distinguished man of taste, a light
+ of the artistic world in his own day, had brought back from his Grand Tour
+ his own ideal of a strictly classical domestic building, formed by
+ impartially compounding a Palladian palace, a Doric temple, and a square
+ redbrick English manor-house. After pulling down the original
+ fourteenth-century castle, he had induced an eminent architect of the time
+ to conspire with him in giving solid and permanent reality to this his
+ awful imagining; and when he had completed it all, from portico to attic,
+ he had extorted even the critical praise of Horace Walpole, who described
+ it in one of his letters as a &lsquo;singular triumph of classical taste
+ and architectural ingenuity.&rsquo; It still remains unrivalled in its
+ kind, the ugliest great country-seat in the county of Devon&mdash;some
+ respectable authorities even say in the whole of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the house an Italian garden, with balustrades of very doubtful
+ marble, leads down by successive terraces and broad flights of steps to an
+ artificial octagonal pool, formed by carefully destroying the whole
+ natural beauty of the wild and rocky little English glen beneath. To feed
+ it by fitting a conduit, the moss-grown boulders that strew the bed of the
+ torrent above and below have been carefully removed, and the unwilling
+ stream, as it runs into the pool, has been coerced into a long straight
+ channel, bordered on either side by bedded turf, and planed off at
+ measured intervals so as to produce a series of eminently regular and
+ classical cascades. Even Lord Exmoor himself, who was a hunting man,
+ without any pretence to that stupid rubbish about taste, did not care for
+ the hopeless exterior of Dunbude Castle: he frankly admitted that the
+ place was altogether too doosid artificial for the line of country. If
+ they&rsquo;d only left it alone, he said, in its own native condition, it
+ would have been really pretty; but as they&rsquo;d doctored it and spoilt
+ it, why, there was nothing on earth to be done but just put up with it and
+ whistle over it. What with the hounds, and the mortgages, and the
+ settlements, and the red deer, and Goodwood, the estate couldn&rsquo;t
+ possibly afford any money for making alterations down in the gardens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dog-cart was in waiting at the station to carry Ernest up to the
+ castle; and as he reached the front door, Lady Hilda Tregellis strolled up
+ the broad flight of steps from the garden to meet him. Lady Hilda was tall
+ and decidedly handsome, as Ernest had rightly told Edie, but not pretty,
+ and she was also just twenty. There was a free, careless, bold look in her
+ face, that showed her at once a girl of spirit; indeed, if she had not
+ been born a Tregellis, it was quite clear that she would have been
+ predestined to turn out a strong-minded woman. There was nothing
+ particularly delicate in Lady Hilda&rsquo;s features; they were
+ well-modelled, but neither regular nor cold, nor with that peculiar stamp
+ of artificial breeding which is so often found in the faces of English
+ ladies. On the contrary, she looked like a perfectly self-confident
+ handsome actress, too self-confident to be self-conscious, and accustomed
+ to admiration wherever she turned. As Ernest jumped down from the dog-cart
+ she advanced quickly to shake hands with him, and look him over critically
+ from head to foot like a schoolboy taking stock of a new fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m so glad you&rsquo;ve come, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she said, with
+ an open smile upon her frank face. &lsquo;I was dreadfully afraid you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t care for our proposition. Dunbude&rsquo;s the dullest hole
+ in England, and we want somebody here to brighten it up, sadly. Did you
+ ever see such an ugly monstrosity before, anywhere?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The country about&rsquo;s lovely,&rsquo; Ernest answered, &lsquo;but the
+ house itself is certainly rather ugly.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ugly! It&rsquo;s hideous. And it&rsquo;s as dull as it&rsquo;s big,&rsquo;
+ said Hilda vehemently. &lsquo;You can&rsquo;t think what a time we have of
+ it here half the year! I&rsquo;m always longing for the season to come.
+ Papa fills the house here with hunting men and shooting men&mdash;people
+ without two ideas in their heads, you know, just like himself; and even
+ THEY go out all day, and leave us women from morning till night to the
+ society of their wives and daughters, who are exactly like them. Mr. Walsh&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+ Lynmouth&rsquo;s last tutor&mdash;he was a perfect stick, a Cambridge man;
+ Cambridge men always ARE sticks, I believe; you&rsquo;re Oxford, of
+ course, aren&rsquo;t you? I thought so. Still, even Mr. Walsh was a little
+ society, for I assure you, if it hadn&rsquo;t been for him, I should never
+ have seen anybody, to talk to, from year&rsquo;s end to year&rsquo;s end.
+ So when Mr. Walsh was going to leave us, I said to mamma, &ldquo;Why not
+ ask one of the Mr. Le Bretons?&rdquo; I wanted to have somebody sensible
+ here, and so I got her to let me write to your brother Ronald about the
+ tutorship. Did he send you the letter? I hope you didn&rsquo;t think it
+ was mine. Mamma dictated it, for I don&rsquo;t write such formal letters
+ as that on my own account, I can tell you. I hate conventionality of any
+ sort. At Dunbude we&rsquo;re all conventional, except me; but I won&rsquo;t
+ be. Come up into the billiard-room, here, and sit down awhile; William
+ will see about your portmanteau and things. Papa&rsquo;s out, of course,
+ and so&rsquo;s Lynmouth; and mamma&rsquo;s somewhere or other, I don&rsquo;t
+ know where; and so there&rsquo;s nobody in particular at home for you to
+ report yourself to. You may as well come in here while I ring for them to
+ get you some lunch ready. Nobody ever gets anything ready beforehand in
+ this house. We lunched ourselves an hour ago.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest smiled at her volubility, and followed her quickly into the big
+ bare billiard-room. He walked over to the fire and began to warm himself,
+ while Hilda took down a cue and made stray shots in extraordinary angles
+ at impossible cannons, all the time, as she went on talking to him.
+ &lsquo;Was it very cold on the way down?&rsquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, fairly. I&rsquo;m not sorry to see the fire again. Why, you&rsquo;re
+ quite an accomplished player.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There&rsquo;s nothing else to do at Dunbude, that&rsquo;s why. I practise
+ about half my lifetime. So I wrote to your brother Ronald, as I was
+ telling you, from mamma&rsquo;s dictation; and when I heard you were
+ really coming, I was quite delighted about it. Do you remember, I met you
+ twice last year, once at the Dolburys&rsquo;, and once somewhere else; and
+ I thought you&rsquo;d be a very good sort of person for Dunbude, you know,
+ and about as much use to Lynmouth as anybody could be, which isn&rsquo;t
+ saying much, of course, for he&rsquo;s a dreadful pickle. I insisted on
+ putting in my letter that he was a dreadful pickle (that&rsquo;s a good
+ stroke off the red; just enough side on), though mamma didn&rsquo;t want
+ me to; because I thought you ought to know about it beforehand. But you
+ remember him at Marlborough, of course; he was only a little fellow then,
+ but still a pickle. He always was and he always will be. He&rsquo;s out
+ shooting, now, with papa; and you&rsquo;ll never get him to settle down to
+ anything, as long as there&rsquo;s a snipe or a plover banging about on
+ the moor anywhere. He&rsquo;s quite incorrigible. Do you play at all? Won&rsquo;t
+ you take a cue till your lunch&rsquo;s ready?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, I don&rsquo;t play,&rsquo; Ernest answered, half hesitating, &lsquo;or
+ at least very little.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, then you&rsquo;ll learn here, because you&rsquo;ll find nothing else
+ to do. Do you shoot?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh no, never. I don&rsquo;t think it right.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes, I remember. How delightful! Lady Le Breton told me all about it.
+ You&rsquo;ve got notions, haven&rsquo;t you? You&rsquo;re a Nihilist or a
+ Fenian or something of that sort, and you don&rsquo;t shoot anything but
+ czars and grand dukes, do you? I believe you want to cut all our heads off
+ and have a red republic. Well, I&rsquo;m sure that&rsquo;s very
+ refreshing; for down here we&rsquo;re all as dull as sticks together;
+ Tories, every one of us to a man; perfect unanimity; no differences of
+ opinion; all as conventional and proper as the vicar&rsquo;s sermons. Now,
+ to have somebody who wants to cut your head off, in the house, is really
+ delightful. I love originality. Not that I&rsquo;ve ever seen anybody
+ original in all my life, for I haven&rsquo;t, but I&rsquo;m sure it would
+ be delightful if I did. One reads about original people in novels, you
+ know, Dickens and that sort of thing; and I often think I should like to
+ meet some of them (good stroke again; legs, legs, legs, if you please&mdash;no,
+ it hasn&rsquo;t legs enough); but here, or for the matter of that, in town
+ either, we never see anybody but the same eternal round of Algies, and
+ Monties, and Berties, and Hughs&mdash;all very nice young men, no doubt;
+ exceedingly proper, nothing against them; good shots, capital partners,
+ excellent families, everything on earth that anybody could desire, except
+ a single atom of personal originality. I assure you, if they were all
+ shaken up in a bag together and well mixed, in evening clothes (so as not
+ to tell them apart by the tweeds, you know), their own mothers wouldn&rsquo;t
+ be able to separate them afterwards. But if you don&rsquo;t shoot and don&rsquo;t
+ play billiards, I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t know what you&rsquo;ll ever
+ find to do with yourself here at Dunbude.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Don&rsquo;t you think,&rsquo; Ernest said quietly, taking down a cue,
+ &lsquo;one ought to have something better to do with one&rsquo;s time than
+ shooting and playing billiards? In a world where so many labouring people
+ are toiling and slaving in poverty and misery on our behalf, don&rsquo;t
+ you think we should be trying to do something or other in return for
+ universal humanity, to whom we owe so much for our board and lodging and
+ clothing and amusement?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, now, that&rsquo;s just what I mean,&rsquo; said Hilda ecstatically,
+ with a neat shot off the cushion against the red and into the middle
+ pocket; &lsquo;that&rsquo;s such a delightfully original way of looking at
+ things, you see. We all of us here talk always about the partridges, and
+ the red deer, and the turnips, and the Church, and dear Lady This, and
+ that odious Lady That, and the growing insolence of the farmers, and the
+ shocking insubordination of the lower classes, and the difficulty of
+ getting really good servants, and the dreadful way those horrid Irish are
+ shooting their kind-hearted indulgent landlords; or else we talk&mdash;the
+ women especially&mdash;about how awfully bored we are. Lawn-tennis, you
+ know, and dinners, and what a bad match Ethel Thingumbob has made. But you
+ talk another kind of slang; I dare say it doesn&rsquo;t mean much; you
+ know you&rsquo;re not working at anything very much more serious than we
+ are; still it&rsquo;s a novelty. When we go to a coursing meeting, we&rsquo;re
+ all on the hounds; but you&rsquo;re on the hare, and that&rsquo;s so
+ delightfully original. I haven&rsquo;t the least doubt that if we were to
+ talk about the Irish, you&rsquo;d say you thought they ought to shoot
+ their landlords. I remember you shocked mamma by saying something like it
+ at the Dolburys&rsquo;. Now, of course, it doesn&rsquo;t matter to me a
+ bit which is right; you say the poor tenants are starving, and papa says
+ the poor landlords can&rsquo;t get in their rents, and actually have to
+ give up their hounds, poor fellows; and I don&rsquo;t know which of you is
+ the most to be believed; only, what papa says is just the same thing that
+ everybody says, and what you say has a certain charming freshness and
+ variety about it. It&rsquo;s so funny to be told that one ought really to
+ take the tenants into consideration. Exactly like your brother Ronald&rsquo;s
+ notions about servants!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Your lunch is ready in the dining-room, sir,&rsquo; said a voice at the
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Come back here when you&rsquo;ve finished, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Hilda
+ called after him. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll teach you how to make that cannon you
+ missed just now. If you mean to exist at Dunbude at all, it&rsquo;s
+ absolutely necessary for you to learn billiards.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest turned in to lunch with an uncomfortable misgiving on his mind
+ already that Dunbude was not exactly the right place for such a man as he
+ to live in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the afternoon he saw nothing more of the family, save Lady Hilda;
+ and it was not till the party assembled in the drawing-room before dinner
+ that he met Lord and Lady Exmoor and his future pupil. Lynmouth had grown
+ into a tall, handsome, manly-looking boy since Ernest last saw him; but he
+ certainly looked exactly what Hilda had called him&mdash;a pickle. A few
+ minutes&rsquo; introductory conversation sufficed to show Ernest that
+ whatever mind he possessed was wholly given over to horses, dogs, and
+ partridges, and that the post of tutor at Dunbude Castle was not likely to
+ prove a bed of roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Seen the paper, Connemara?&rsquo; Lord Exmoor asked of one of his guests,
+ as they sat down to dinner. &lsquo;I haven&rsquo;t had a moment myself to
+ snatch a look at the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; yet this evening; I&rsquo;m
+ really too busy almost even to read the daily papers. Anything fresh from
+ Ireland?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Haven&rsquo;t seen it either,&rsquo; Lord Connemara answered, glancing
+ towards Lady Hilda. &lsquo;Perhaps somebody else has looked at the papers&rsquo;?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody answered, so Ernest ventured to remark that the Irish news was
+ rather worse again. Two bailiffs had been murdered near Castlebar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That&rsquo;s bad,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor said, turning towards Ernest.
+ &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid there&rsquo;s a deal of distress in the West.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A great deal,&rsquo; Ernest answered; &lsquo;positive starvation, I
+ believe, in some parts of County Galway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, not quite so bad as that,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor replied, a little
+ startled. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t think any of the landlords are actually
+ starving yet, though I&rsquo;ve no doubt many of them are put to very
+ great straits indeed by their inability to get in their rents.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest couldn&rsquo;t forbear gently smiling to himself at the
+ misapprehension. ‘Oh, I didn&rsquo;t mean the landlords,&rsquo; he said
+ quickly: &lsquo;I meant among the poor people.&rsquo; As he spoke he was
+ aware that Lady Hilda&rsquo;s eyes were fixed keenly upon him, and that
+ she was immensely delighted at the temerity and originality displayed in
+ the notion of his publicly taking Irish tenants into consideration at her
+ father&rsquo;s table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, the poor people,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor answered with a slight sigh of
+ relief, as who should say that THEIR condition didn&rsquo;t much matter to
+ a philosophic mind. &lsquo;Yes, to be sure; I&rsquo;ve no doubt some of
+ them are very badly off, poor souls. But then they&rsquo;re such an idle
+ improvident lot. Why don&rsquo;t they emigrate now, I should like to know?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest reflected silently that the inmates of Dunbude Castle did not
+ exactly set them a model of patient industry; and that Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ numerous allusions during the afternoon to the fact that the Dunbude
+ estates were &lsquo;mortgaged up to the eyelids&rsquo; (a condition of
+ affairs to which she always alluded as though it were rather a subject of
+ pride and congratulation than otherwise) did not speak very highly for
+ their provident economy either. But even Ernest Le Breton had a solitary
+ grain of worldly wisdom laid up somewhere in a corner of his brain, and he
+ didn&rsquo;t think it advisable to give them the benefit of his own views
+ upon the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There&rsquo;s a great deal of rubbish talked in England about Irish
+ affairs, you know, Exmoor,&rsquo; said Lord Connemara confidently. &lsquo;People
+ never understand Ireland, I&rsquo;m sure, until they&rsquo;ve actually
+ lived there. Would you believe it now, the correspondent of one of the
+ London papers was quite indignant the other day because my agent had to
+ evict a man for three years&rsquo; rent at Ballynamara, and the man
+ unfortunately went and died a week later on the public roadside. We
+ produced medical evidence to show that he had suffered for years from
+ heart disease, and would have died in any case, wherever he had been; but
+ the editor fellow wanted to make political capital out of it, and kicked
+ up quite a fuss about my agent&rsquo;s shocking inhumanity. As if we could
+ possibly help ourselves in the matter! People must get their rents in
+ somehow, mustn&rsquo;t they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘People must get their rents in somehow, of course,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor
+ assented, sympathetically; &lsquo;and I know all you men who are unlucky
+ enough to own property in Ireland have a lot of trouble about it nowadays.
+ Upon my word, what with Fenians, and what with Nihilists, and what with
+ Communards, I really don&rsquo;t know what the world is coming to.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Most unchristian conduct, I call it,&rsquo; said Lady Exmoor, who went in
+ for being mildly and decorously religious. &lsquo;I really can&rsquo;t
+ understand how people can believe such wicked doctrines as these
+ communistic notions that are coming over people in these latter days.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No better than downright robbery,&rsquo; Lord Connemara answered.
+ ‘Shaking the very foundations of society, I think it. All done so
+ recklessly, too, without any care or any consideration.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest thought of old Max Schurz, with his lifelong economical studies,
+ and wondered when Lord Connemara had found time to turn his own attention
+ from foxes and fishing to economical problems; but, by a perfect miracle,
+ he said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You wouldn&rsquo;t believe the straits we&rsquo;re put to, Lady Exmoor,&rsquo;
+ the Irish Earl went on, &lsquo;through this horrid no-rent business.
+ Absolute poverty, I assure you&mdash;absolute downright poverty. I&rsquo;ve
+ had to sell the Maid of Garunda this week, you know, and three others of
+ the best horses in my stable, just to raise money for immediate
+ necessities. Wanted to buy a most interesting missal, quite unique in its
+ way, offered me by Menotti and Cicolari, dirt cheap, for three thousand
+ guineas. It&rsquo;s quite a gem of late miniaturist art&mdash;vellum
+ folio, with borders and head-pieces by Giulio Clovio. A marvellous
+ bargain!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Giulio Clovio,&rsquo; said Lord Exmoor, doubtfully. &lsquo;Who was he?
+ Never heard of him in my life before.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Never heard of Giulio Clovio!&rsquo; cried Lord Connemara, seizing the
+ opportunity with well-affected surprise. &lsquo;You really astonish me. He
+ was a Croatian, I believe, or an Illyrian&mdash;I forget which&mdash;and
+ he studied at Rome under Giulio Romano. Wonderful draughtsman in the nude,
+ and fine colourist; took hints from Raphael and Michael Angelo.&rsquo; So
+ much he had picked up from Menotti and Cicolari, and, being a
+ distinguished connoisseur, had made a mental note of the facts at once,
+ for future reproduction upon a fitting occasion. ‘Well, this missal was
+ executed for Cardinal Farnese, as a companion volume to the famous Vita
+ Christi in the Towneley collection. You know it, of course, Lady Exmoor?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Of course,&rsquo; Lady Exmoor answered faintly, with a devout hope that
+ Lord Connemara wouldn&rsquo;t question her any further upon the subject;
+ in which case she thought it would probably be the safest guess to say
+ that she had seen it at the British Museum or in the Hamilton Library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lord Connemara luckily didn&rsquo;t care to press his advantage. ‘The
+ Towneley volume, you see,&rsquo; he went on fluently&mdash;he was primed
+ to the muzzle with information on that subject&mdash;&lsquo;was given by
+ the Cardinal to the Pope of that time&mdash;Paul the Third, wasn&rsquo;t
+ it, Mr. Le Breton?&mdash;and so got into the possession of old Christopher
+ Towneley, the antiquary. But this companion folio, it seems, the Cardinal
+ wouldn&rsquo;t let go out of his own possession; and so it&rsquo;s been
+ handed down in his own family (with a bar sinister, of course, Exmoor&mdash;you
+ remember the story of Beatrice Malatesta?) to the present time. It&rsquo;s
+ very existence wasn&rsquo;t suspected till Cicolari&mdash;wonderfully
+ smart fellow, Cicolari&mdash;unearthed it the other day from a descendant
+ of the Malatestas, in a little village in the Campagna. He offered it to
+ me, quite as an act of friendship, for three thousand guineas; indeed, he
+ begged me not to let Menotti know how cheap he was selling it, for fear he
+ might interfere and ask a higher price for it. Well, I naturally couldn&rsquo;t
+ let such a chance slip me&mdash;for the credit of the family, it ought to
+ be in the collection&mdash;and the consequence was, though I was awfully
+ sorry to part with her, I was absolutely obliged to sell the Maid for
+ pocket-money, Lady Hilda&mdash;I assure you, for pocket-money. My tenants
+ won&rsquo;t pay up, and nothing will make them. They&rsquo;ve got the cash
+ actually in the bank; but they keep it there, waiting for a set of
+ sentimentalists in the House of Commons to interfere between us, and make
+ them a present of my property. Rolling in money, some of them are, I can
+ tell you. One man, I know as a positive fact, sold a pig last week, and
+ yet pretends he can&rsquo;t pay me. All the fault of these horrid
+ communists that you were speaking of, Lady Exmoor&mdash;all the fault of
+ these horrid communists.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re rather a communist yourself, aren&rsquo;t you, Mr. Le
+ Breton?&rsquo; asked Lady Hilda boldly from across the table. &lsquo;I
+ remember you told me something once about cutting the throats of all the
+ landlords.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Exmoor looked as though a bomb-shell had dropped into the
+ drawing-room. &lsquo;My dear Hilda,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sure
+ you must have misunderstood Mr. Le Breton. You can&rsquo;t have meant
+ anything so dreadful as that, Mr. Le Breton, can you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Certainly not,&rsquo; Ernest answered, with a clear conscience. &lsquo;Lady
+ Hilda has put her own interpretation upon my casual words. I haven&rsquo;t
+ the least desire to cut anybody&rsquo;s throat, even metaphorically.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda looked a little disappointed; she had hoped for a good rattling
+ discussion, in which Ernest was to shock the whole table&mdash;it does
+ people such a lot of good, you know, to have a nice round shocking; but
+ Ernest was evidently not inclined to show fight for her sole
+ gratification, and so she proceeded to her alternative amusement of
+ getting Lord Connemara to display the full force of his own inanity. This
+ was an easy and unending source of innocent enjoyment to Lady Hilda,
+ enhanced by the fact that she knew her father and mother were anxious to
+ see her Countess of Connemara, and that they would be annoyed by her
+ public exposition of that eligible young man&rsquo;s intense selfishness
+ and empty-headedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, Ernest did not enjoy his first week at the Exmoors&rsquo;. Nor
+ did he enjoy the second, or the third, or the fourth week much better. The
+ society was profoundly distasteful to him: the world was not his world,
+ nor the talk his talk; and he grew so sick of the perpetual discussion of
+ horses, dogs, pheasants, dances, and lawn tennis, with occasional
+ digressions on Giulio Clovio and the Connemara gallery, that he found even
+ a chat with Lady Hilda (who knew and cared for nothing, but liked to chat
+ with him because he was &lsquo;so original&rsquo;) a pleasant relief, by
+ comparison, from the eternal round of Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s anecdotes about
+ famous racers or celebrated actresses. But worst of all he did not like
+ his work; he felt that, useless as he considered it, he was not
+ successfully performing even the useless function he was paid to fulfil.
+ Lynmouth couldn&rsquo;t learn, wouldn&rsquo;t learn, and wasn&rsquo;t
+ going to learn. Ernest might as well have tried to din the necessary three
+ plays of Euripides into the nearest lamp-post. Nobody encouraged him to
+ learn in any way, indeed Lord Exmoor remembered that he himself had
+ scraped through somehow at Christ Church, with the aid of a private tutor
+ and the magic of his title, and he hadn&rsquo;t the least doubt that
+ Lynmouth would scrape through in his turn in like manner. And so, though
+ most young men would have found the Dunbude tutorship the very acme of
+ their wishes&mdash;plenty of amusements and nothing to do for them&mdash;Ernest
+ Le Breton found it to the last degree irksome and unsatisfactory. Not that
+ he had ever to complain of any unkindliness on the part of the Exmoor
+ family; they were really in their own way very kind-hearted, friendly sort
+ of people&mdash;that is to say, towards all members of their own circle;
+ and as they considered Ernest one of themselves, in virtue of their
+ acquaintance with his mother, they really did their best to make him as
+ happy and comfortable as was in their power. But then he was such a very
+ strange young man! &lsquo;For what on earth can you do,&rsquo; as Lord
+ Exmoor justly asked, &lsquo;with a young fellow who won&rsquo;t shoot, and
+ who won&rsquo;t fish, and who won&rsquo;t hunt, and who won&rsquo;t even
+ play lansquenet?&rsquo; Such a case was clearly hopeless. He would have
+ liked to see more of Miss Merivale, little Lady Sybil&rsquo;s governess
+ (for there were three children in the family); but Miss Merivale was a
+ timid, sensitive girl, and she did not often encourage his advances, lest
+ my lady should say she was setting her cap at the tutor. The consequence
+ was that he was necessarily thrown much upon Lady Hilda&rsquo;s society;
+ and as Lady Hilda was laudably eager to instruct him in billiards, lawn
+ tennis, and sketching, he rapidly grew to be quite an adept at those
+ relatively moral and innocuous amusements, under her constant instruction
+ and supervision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It seems to me,&rsquo; said that acute observer, Lord Lynmouth, to his
+ special friend and confidante, the lady&rsquo;s-maid, &lsquo;that Hilda
+ makes a doocid sight too free with that fellow Le Breton. Don&rsquo;t you
+ think so, Euphemia?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I should hope, my lord,&rsquo; Euphemia answered demurely, &lsquo;that
+ Lady Hilda would know her own place too well to demean herself with such
+ as your lordship&rsquo;s tutor. If I didn&rsquo;t feel sure of that, I
+ should have to mention the matter seriously to my lady.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, the lady&rsquo;s-maid immediately stored up a mental note on
+ the subject in the lasting tablets of her memory, and did not fail gently
+ to insinuate her views upon the question to Lady Exmoor, as she arranged
+ the pearls in the false plaits for dinner that very evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. &mdash; THE WOMEN OF THE LAND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Le Breton! Mr. Le Breton! Papa says Lynmouth may go out trout-fishing
+ with him this afternoon. Come up with me to the Clatter. I&rsquo;m going
+ to sketch there.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very well, Lady Hilda; if you want my criticism, I don&rsquo;t mind if I
+ do. Let me carry your things; it&rsquo;s rather a pull up, even for you,
+ with your box and easel!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda gave him her sketch-book and colours, and they turned together up
+ the Cleave behind the Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Clatter is a peculiar Devonshire feature, composed of long loose tumbled
+ granite blocks piled in wild disorder along the narrow summit of a
+ saddle-backed hill. It differs from a tor in being less high and
+ castellated, as well as in its longer and narrower contour. Ernest and
+ Hilda followed the rough path up through the gorse and heather to the top
+ of the ridge, and then scrambled over the grey lichen-covered rooks
+ together to the big logan-stone whose evenly-poised and tilted mass
+ crowned the actual summit. The granite blocks were very high and rather
+ slippery in places, for it was rainy April weather, so that Ernest had to
+ take his companion&rsquo;s hand more than once in his to help her over the
+ tallest boulders. It was a small delicate hand, though Hilda was a tall
+ well-grown woman; ungloved, too, for the sake of the sketching; and Hilda
+ didn&rsquo;t seem by any means unwilling to accept Ernest&rsquo;s
+ proffered help, though if it had been Lord Connemara who was with her
+ instead, she would have scorned assistance, and scaled the great mossy
+ masses by herself like a mountain antelope. Light-footed and lithe of limb
+ was Lady Hilda, as befitted a Devonshire lass accustomed to following the
+ Exmoor stag-hounds across their wild country on her own hunter. Yet she
+ seemed to find a great deal of difficulty in clambering up the Clatter on
+ that particular April morning, and move than once Ernest half fancied to
+ himself that she leaned on his arm longer than was absolutely necessary
+ for support or assistance over the stiffest places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Here, by the logan, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she said, motioning him where
+ to put her camp-stool and papers. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s a good point of view
+ for the rocks yonder. You can lie down on the rug and give me the benefit
+ of your advice and assistance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My advice is not worth taking,&rsquo; said Ernest. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m a
+ regular duffer at painting and sketching. You should ask Lord Connemara.
+ He knows all about art and that sort of thing.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Lord Connemara!&rsquo; echoed Hilda contemptuously. &lsquo;He has a lot
+ of pictures in his gallery at home, and he&rsquo;s been told by sensible
+ men what&rsquo;s the right thing for him to say about them; but he knows
+ no more about art, really, than he knows about fiddlesticks.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Doesn&rsquo;t he, indeed?&rsquo; Ernest answered languidly, not feeling
+ any burning desire to discuss Lord Connemara&rsquo;s artistic attainments
+ or deficiencies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, he doesn&rsquo;t,&rsquo; Hilda went on, rather defiantly, as though
+ Ernest had been Lady Exmoor; &lsquo;and most of these people that come
+ here don&rsquo;t either. They have galleries, and they get artists and
+ people who understand about pictures to talk with them, and so they learn
+ what&rsquo;s considered the proper thing to say of each of them. But as to
+ saying anything spontaneous or original of their own about a picture or
+ any other earthly thing&mdash;why, you know, Mr. Le Breton, they couldn&rsquo;t
+ possibly do it to save their lives.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, there I should think you do them, as a class, a great injustice,&rsquo;
+ said Ernest, quietly; &lsquo;you&rsquo;re evidently prejudiced against
+ your own people. I should think that if there&rsquo;s any subject on which
+ our old families really do know anything, it&rsquo;s art. Look at their
+ great advantages.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nonsense,&rsquo; Hilda answered, decisively. &lsquo;Fiddlesticks for
+ their advantages. What&rsquo;s the good of advantages without a head on
+ your shoulders, I should like to know. And they haven&rsquo;t got heads on
+ their shoulders, Mr. Le Breton; you know they haven&rsquo;t.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, surely,&rsquo; said Ernest, in his simple fashion, looking the
+ question straight in the face as a matter of abstract truth, &lsquo;there
+ must be a great deal of ability among peers and peers&rsquo; sons. All
+ history shows it; and it would be absurd if it weren&rsquo;t so; for the
+ mass of peers have got their peerages by conspicuous abilities of one sort
+ or another, as barristers, or soldiers, or politicians, or diplomatists,
+ and they would naturally hand on their powers to their different
+ descendants.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, yes, there are some of them with brains, I suppose,&rsquo; Hilda
+ answered, as one who makes a great concession. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s
+ Herbert Alderney, who&rsquo;s member for somewhere or other&mdash;Church
+ Stretton, I think&mdash;and makes speeches in the House; he&rsquo;s
+ clever, they say, but such a conceited fellow to talk to. And there&rsquo;s
+ Wilfrid Faunthorp, who writes poems, and gets them printed in the
+ magazines, too, because he knows the editors. And there&rsquo;s Randolph
+ Hastings, who goes in for painting, and has little red and blue daubs at
+ the Grosvenor by special invitation of the director. But somehow they none
+ of them strike me as being really original. Whenever I meet anybody worth
+ talking to anywhere&mdash;in a railway train or so on&mdash;I feel sure at
+ once he&rsquo;s an ordinary commoner, not even Honourable; and he is
+ invariably, you may depend upon it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That would naturally happen on the average of instances,&rsquo; Ernest
+ put in, smiling, &lsquo;considering the relative frequency of peers and
+ commoners in this realm of England. Peers, you know, or even Honourables
+ are not common objects of the country, numerically speaking.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They are to me, unfortunately,&rsquo; Hilda replied, looking at him
+ inquiringly. &lsquo;I hardly ever meet anybody else, you know, and I&rsquo;m
+ positively bored to death by them, and that&rsquo;s the truth, really. It&rsquo;s
+ most unlucky, under the circumstances, that I should happen to be the
+ daughter of one peer, and be offered promiscuously as wife to the highest
+ bidder among half a dozen others, if only I would have them. But I won&rsquo;t,
+ Mr. Le Breton, I really won&rsquo;t. I&rsquo;m not going to marry a fool,
+ just to please my mother. Nothing on earth would induce me to marry Lord
+ Connemara, for example.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked at her and smiled, but said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda put in a stroke or two more to her pencil outline, and then
+ continued her unsolicited confidences. &lsquo;Do you know, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo;
+ she went on, &lsquo;there&rsquo;s a conspiracy&mdash;the usual conspiracy,
+ but still a regular conspiracy I call it&mdash;between Papa and Mamma to
+ make me marry that stick of a Connemara. What is there in him, I should
+ like to know, to make any girl admire or love him? And yet half the girls
+ in London would be glad to get him, for all his absurdity. It&rsquo;s
+ monstrous, it&rsquo;s incomprehensible, it&rsquo;s abominable; but it&rsquo;s
+ the fact. For my part, I must say I do like a little originality. And
+ whenever I hear Papa, and Uncle Sussex, and Lord Connemara talking at
+ dinner, it does seem to me too ridiculously absurd that they should each
+ have a separate voice in Parliament, and that you shouldn&rsquo;t even
+ have a fraction of a vote for a county member. What sort of superiority
+ has Lord Connemara over you, I wonder?&rsquo; And she looked at Ernest
+ again with a searching glance, to see whether he was to be moved by such a
+ personal and emphatic way of putting the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked back at her curiously in his serious simplicity, and only
+ answered, &lsquo;There are a great many queer inequalities and absurdities
+ in all our existing political systems, Lady Hilda.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda smiled to herself&mdash;a quiet smile, half of disappointment, half
+ of complacent feminine superiority. What a stupid fellow he was in some
+ ways, after all! Even that silly Lord Connemara would have guessed what
+ she was driving at, with only a quarter as much encouragement. But Ernest
+ must be too much afraid of the social barrier clearly; so she began again,
+ this time upon a slightly different but equally obvious tack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, there are; absurd inequalities really, Mr. Le Breton; very absurd
+ inequalities. You&rsquo;d get rid of them all, I know. You told me that
+ about cutting all the landlords&rsquo; heads off, I&rsquo;m sure, though
+ you said when I spoke about it before Mamma, the night you first came
+ here, that you didn&rsquo;t mean it. I remember it perfectly well, because
+ I recollect thinking at the time the idea was so charmingly and
+ deliciously original.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You must be quite mistaken, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; Ernest answered calmly.
+ &lsquo;You misunderstood my meaning. I said I would get rid of landlords&mdash;by
+ which I meant to say, get rid of them as landlords, not as individuals. I
+ don&rsquo;t even know that I&rsquo;d take away the land from them all at
+ once, you know (though I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s justly theirs); I&rsquo;d
+ deprive them of it tentatively and gradually.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, I can&rsquo;t see the justice of that, I&rsquo;m sure,&rsquo; Hilda
+ answered carelessly. &lsquo;Either the land&rsquo;s ours by right, or it
+ isn&rsquo;t ours. If it&rsquo;s ours, you ought to leave it to us for
+ ever; and if it isn&rsquo;t ours, you ought to take it away from us at
+ once, and make it over to the people to whom it properly belongs. Why on
+ earth should you keep them a day longer out of their own?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest laughed heartily at this vehement and uncompromising
+ sans-culottism. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re a vigorous convert, anyhow,&rsquo; he
+ said, with some amusement; &lsquo;I see you&rsquo;ve profited by my
+ instruction. You&rsquo;ve put the question very plump and straightforward.
+ But in practice it would be better, no doubt, gradually to educate out the
+ landlords, rather than to dispossess them at one blow of what they
+ honestly, though wrongly, imagine to be their own. Let all existing
+ holders keep the land during their own lifetime and their heirs&rsquo;,
+ and resume it for the nation after their lives, allowing for the rights of
+ all children born of marriages between people now living.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not at all,&rsquo; Hilda answered in a tone of supreme conviction.
+ &lsquo;I&rsquo;m in favour of simply cutting our heads off once for all,
+ and making our families pay all arrears of rent from the very beginning.
+ That or nothing. Put the case another way. Suppose, Mr. Le Breton, there
+ was somebody who had got a grant from a king a long time ago, allowing him
+ to hang any three persons he chose annually. Well, suppose this person and
+ his descendants went on for a great many generations extorting money out
+ of other people by threatening to kill them and letting them off on
+ payment of a ransom. Suppose, too, they always killed three a year, some
+ time or other, pour encourager les autres&mdash;just to show that they
+ really meant it. Well, then, if one day the people grew wise enough to
+ inquire into the right of these licensed extortioners to their black mail,
+ would you say, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t deprive them of it too unexpectedly. Let
+ them keep it during their own lifetime. Let their children hang three of
+ us annually after them. But let us get rid of this fine old national
+ custom in the third generation.&rdquo; Would that be fair to the people
+ who would be hanged for the sake of old prescription in the interval, do
+ you think?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest laughed again at the serious sincerity with which she was ready to
+ acquiesce in his economical heresies. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re quite right,&rsquo;
+ he said: &lsquo;the land is the people&rsquo;s, and there&rsquo;s no
+ reason on earth why they should starve a minute longer in order to let
+ Lord Connemara pay three thousand guineas for spurious copies of early
+ Italian manuscripts. And yet it would be difficult to get most people to
+ see it. I fancy, Lady Hilda, you must really be rather cleverer than most
+ people.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I score one,&rsquo; thought Hilda to herself, &lsquo;and whatever
+ happens, whether I marry a peer or a revolutionist, I certainly won&rsquo;t
+ marry a fool.&rsquo; &lsquo;I&rsquo;m glad you think so,&rsquo; she went
+ on aloud, &lsquo;because I know your opinion&rsquo;s worth having. I
+ should like to be clever, Mr. Le Breton, and I should like to know all
+ about everything, but what chance has one at Dunbude? Do you know, till
+ you came here, I never got any sensible conversation with anybody.&rsquo;
+ And she sighed gently as she put her head on one side to take a good view
+ of her sketchy little picture. Lady Hilda&rsquo;s profile was certainly
+ very handsome, and she showed it to excellent advantage when she put her
+ head on one side. Ernest looked at her and thought so to himself; and Lady
+ Hilda&rsquo;s quick eye, glancing sideways for a second from the paper,
+ noted immediately that he thought so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she began again, more confidentially than ever,
+ ‘one thing I&rsquo;ve quite made up my mind to; I won&rsquo;t be tied for
+ life to a stick like Lord Connemara. In fact, I won&rsquo;t marry a man in
+ that position at all. I shall choose for myself, and marry a man for the
+ worth that&rsquo;s in him, I assure you it&rsquo;s a positive fact, I&rsquo;ve
+ been proposed to by no fewer than six assorted Algies and Berties and
+ Monties in a single season; besides which some of them follow me even down
+ here to Dunbude. Papa and mamma are dreadfully angry because I won&rsquo;t
+ have any of them: but I won&rsquo;t. I mean to wait, and marry whoever I
+ choose, as soon as I find a man I can really love and honour.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She paused and looked hard at Ernest. &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t speak much
+ plainer than that,&rsquo; she thought to herself, &lsquo;and really he
+ must be stupider than the Algies and the Monties themselves if he doesn&rsquo;t
+ see I want him to propose to me. I suppose all women would say it&rsquo;s
+ awfully unwomanly of me to lead up to his cards in this way&mdash;throwing
+ myself at his head they&rsquo;d call it; but what does that matter? I WON&rsquo;T
+ marry a fool, and I WILL marry a man of some originality. That&rsquo;s the
+ only thing in the world worth troubling one&rsquo;s head about. Why on
+ earth doesn&rsquo;t he take my hand, I wonder? What further can he be
+ waiting for?&rsquo; Lady Hilda was perfectly accustomed to the usual
+ preliminaries of a declaration, and only awaited Ernest&rsquo;s first step
+ to proceed in due order to the second. Strange to say, her heart was
+ actually beating a little by anticipation. It never even occurred to her&mdash;the
+ belle of three seasons&mdash;that possibly Ernest mightn&rsquo;t wish to
+ marry her. So she sat looking pensively at her picture, and sighed again
+ quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Ernest, wholly unsuspicious, only answered, &lsquo;You will do quite
+ right, Lady Hilda, to marry the man of your own choice, irrespective of
+ wealth or station.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda glanced up at him curiously, with a half-disdainful smile, and was
+ just on the point of saying, &lsquo;But suppose the man of my own choice
+ won&rsquo;t propose to me?&rsquo; However, as the words rose to her lips,
+ she felt there was a point at which even she should yield to convention:
+ and there were plenty of opportunities still before her, without
+ displaying her whole hand too boldly and immediately. So she merely turned
+ with another sigh, this time a genuine one, to her half-sketched outline.
+ &lsquo;I shall bring him round in time,&rsquo; she said to herself,
+ blushing a little at her unexpected discomfiture. ‘I shall bring him round
+ in time; I shall make him propose to me! I don&rsquo;t care if I have to
+ live in a lodging with him, and wash up my own tea-things; I shall marry
+ him; that I&rsquo;m resolved upon. He&rsquo;s as mad as a March hare about
+ his Communism and his theories and things; but I don&rsquo;t care for
+ that; I could live with him in comfort, and I couldn&rsquo;t live in
+ comfort with the Algies and Monties. In fact, I believe&mdash;in a sort of
+ way&mdash;I believe I&rsquo;m almost in love with him. I have a kind of
+ jumpy feeling in my heart when I&rsquo;m talking with him that I never
+ feel when I&rsquo;m talking with other young men, even the nicest of them.
+ He&rsquo;s not nice; he&rsquo;s a bear; and yet, somehow, I should like to
+ marry him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she said aloud, &lsquo;the sun&rsquo;s all wrong
+ for sketching to-day, and besides it&rsquo;s too chilly. I must run about
+ a bit among the rocks.&rsquo; (&lsquo;At least I shall take his hand to
+ help me,&rsquo; she thought, blushing.) &lsquo;Come and walk with me? It&rsquo;s
+ no use trying to draw with one&rsquo;s hands freezing.&rsquo; And she
+ crumpled up the unfinished sketch hastily between her fingers. Ernest
+ jumped up to follow her; and they spent the next hour scrambling up and
+ down the Clatter, and talking on less dangerous subjects than Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ matrimonial aspirations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Still I shall make him ask me yet,&rsquo; Lady Hilda thought to herself,
+ as she parted from him to go up and dress for dinner. &lsquo;I shall
+ manage to marry him, somehow; or if I don&rsquo;t marry him, at any rate I&rsquo;ll
+ marry somebody like him.&rsquo; For it was really the principle, not the
+ person, that Lady Hilda specially insisted upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. &mdash; THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ May, beautiful May, had brought the golden flowers, and the trees in the
+ valley behind the sleepy old town of Calcombe Pomeroy were decking
+ themselves in the first wan green of their early spring foliage. The
+ ragged robins were hanging out, pinky red, from the hedgerows; the cuckoo
+ was calling from the copse beside the mill stream; and the merry wee
+ hedge-warblers were singing lustily from the topmost sprays of hawthorn,
+ with their full throats bursting tremulously in the broad sunshine. And
+ Ernest Le Breton, too, filled with the season, had come down from Dunbude
+ for a fortnight&rsquo;s holiday, on his premised visit to his friend
+ Oswald, or, to say the truth more plainly, to Oswald&rsquo;s pretty little
+ sister Edie. For Ernest had fully made up his mind by this time what it
+ was he had come for, and he took the earliest possible opportunity of
+ taking a walk with Edie alone, through the tiny glen behind the town,
+ where the wee stream tumbles lazily upon the big slow-turning vanes of the
+ overshot mill-wheel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Let us sit down a bit on the bank here, Miss Oswald,&rsquo; he said to
+ his airy little companion, as they reached the old stone bridge that
+ crosses the stream just below the mill-house; &lsquo;it&rsquo;s such a
+ lovely day one feels loath to miss any of it, and the scenery here looks
+ so bright and cheerful after the endless brown heather and russet bracken
+ about Dunbude. Not that Exmoor isn&rsquo;t beautiful in its way, too&mdash;all
+ Devonshire is beautiful alike for that matter; but then it&rsquo;s more
+ sombre and woody in the north, and much less spring-like than this lovely
+ quiet South Devon country.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m so glad you like Calcombe,&rsquo; Edie said, with one of her
+ unfailing blushes at the indirect flattery to herself implied in praise of
+ her native county; &lsquo;and you think it prettier than Dunbude, then, do
+ you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Prettier in its own way, yes, though not so grand of course; everything
+ here is on a smaller scale. Dunbude, you know, is almost mountainous.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And the Castle?&rsquo; Edie asked, bringing round the conversation to her
+ own quarter, &lsquo;is that very fine? At all like Warwick, or our dear
+ old Arlingford?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, it isn&rsquo;t a castle at all, really,&rsquo; Ernest answered;
+ &lsquo;only a very big and ugly house. As architecture it&rsquo;s
+ atrocious, though it&rsquo;s comfortable enough inside for a place of the
+ sort.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And the Exmoors, are they nice people? What kind of girl is Lady Hilda,
+ now?&rsquo; Poor little Edie? she asked the question shyly, but with a
+ certain deep beating in her heart, for she had often canvassed with
+ herself the vague possibility that Ernest might actually fall in love with
+ Lady Hilda. Had he fallen in love with her already, or had he not? She
+ knew she would be able to guess the truth by his voice and manner the
+ moment he answered her. No man can hide that secret from a woman who loves
+ him. Yet it was not without a thrill and a flutter that she asked him, for
+ she thought to herself, what must she seem to him after all the grand
+ people he had been mixing with so lately at Dunbude? Was it possible he
+ could see anything in her, a little country village girl, coming to her
+ fresh from the great ladies of that unknown and vaguely terrible society?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Lady Hilda!&rsquo; Ernest answered, laughing&mdash;and as he said the
+ words Edie knew in her heart that her question was answered, and blushed
+ once more in her bewitching fashion. &lsquo;Lady Hilda! Oh, she&rsquo;s a
+ very queer girl, indeed; she&rsquo;s not at all clever, really, but she
+ has the one virtue of girls of her class&mdash;their perfect frankness.
+ She&rsquo;s frank all over&mdash;no reserve or reticence at all about her.
+ Whatever she thinks she says, without the slightest idea that you&rsquo;ll
+ see anything to laugh at or to find fault with in it. In matters of
+ knowledge, she&rsquo;s frankly ignorant. In matters of taste, she&rsquo;s
+ frankly barbaric. In matters of religion, she&rsquo;s frankly heathen. And
+ in matters of ethics, she&rsquo;s frankly immoral&mdash;or rather
+ extra-moral,&rsquo; he added, quickly correcting himself for the
+ misleading expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I shouldn&rsquo;t think from your description she can be a very nice
+ person,&rsquo; Edie said, greatly relieved, and pulling a few tall grasses
+ at her side by way of hiding her interest in the subject. ‘She can&rsquo;t
+ be a really nice girl if she&rsquo;s extra-moral, as you call it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, I don&rsquo;t mean she&rsquo;d cut one&rsquo;s throat or pick one&rsquo;s
+ pocket, you know,&rsquo; Ernest went on quickly, with a gentle smile.
+ &lsquo;She&rsquo;s got a due respect for the ordinary conventional
+ moralities like other people, no doubt; but in her case they&rsquo;re only
+ social prejudices, not genuine ethical principles. I don&rsquo;t suppose
+ she ever seriously asked herself whether anything was right or wrong or
+ not in her whole lifetime. In fact, I&rsquo;m sure she never did; and if
+ anybody else were to do so, she&rsquo;d be immensely surprised and
+ delighted at the startling originality and novelty of thought displayed in
+ such a view of the question.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But she&rsquo;s very handsome, isn&rsquo;t she?&rsquo; Edie asked,
+ following up her inquiry with due diligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Handsome? oh, yes, in a bold sort of actress fashion. Very handsome, but
+ not, to me at least, pleasing. I believe most men admire her a great deal;
+ but she lacks a feminine touch dreadfully. She dashes away through
+ everything as if she was hunting; and she DOES hunt too, which I think bad
+ enough in anybody, and horrible in a woman.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you haven&rsquo;t fallen in love with her, Mr. Le Breton? I half
+ imagined you would, you know, as I&rsquo;m told she&rsquo;s so very
+ attractive.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Fallen in love with HER, Miss Oswald! Fallen in love with Hilda
+ Tregellis! What an absurd notion! Heaven forbid it!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why so, please?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, in the first place, what would be the use of it? Fancy Lady Exmoor&rsquo;s
+ horror at the bare idea of her son&rsquo;s tutor falling in love with Lady
+ Hilda! I assure you, Miss Oswald, she would evaporate at the very mention
+ of such an unheard-of enormity. A man must be, if not an earl, at least a
+ baronet with five thousand a year, before he dare face the inexpressible
+ indignation of Lady Exmoor with an offer of marriage for Lady Hilda.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But people don&rsquo;t always fall in love by tables of precedence,&rsquo;
+ Edie put in simply. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s quite possible, I suppose, for a man
+ who isn&rsquo;t a duke himself to fall in love with a duke&rsquo;s
+ daughter, even though the duke her papa mayn&rsquo;t personally happen to
+ approve of the match. However, you don&rsquo;t seem to think Lady Hilda
+ herself a pleasant girl, even apart from the question of Lady Exmoor&rsquo;s
+ requirements?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Miss Oswald,&rsquo; Ernest said, looking at her suddenly, as she sat half
+ hiding her face with her parasol, and twitching more violently than ever
+ at the tall grasses; &lsquo;Miss Oswald, to tell you the truth, I haven&rsquo;t
+ been thinking much about Hilda Tregellis or any of the other girls I&rsquo;ve
+ met at Dunbude, and for a very sufficient reason, because I&rsquo;ve had
+ my mind too much preoccupied by somebody else elsewhere.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie blushed even more prettily than before, and held her peace, half
+ raising her eyes for a second in an enquiring glance at his, and then
+ dropping them hastily as they met, in modest trepidation. At that moment
+ Ernest had never seen anything so beautiful or so engaging as Edie Oswald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Edie,&rsquo; he said, beginning again more boldly, and taking her little
+ gloved hand almost unresistingly in his; &lsquo;Edie, you know my secret.
+ I love you. Can you love me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked up at him shyly, the tears glistening and trembling a little
+ in the corner of her big bright eyes, and for a moment she answered
+ nothing. Then she drew away her hand hastily and said with a sigh, &lsquo;Mr.
+ Le Breton, we oughtn&rsquo;t to be talking so. We mustn&rsquo;t. Don&rsquo;t
+ let us. Take me home, please, at once, and don&rsquo;t say anything more
+ about it.&rsquo; But her heart beat within her bosom with a violence that
+ was not all unpleasing, and her looks half belied her words to Ernest&rsquo;s
+ keen glance even as she spoke them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why not, Edie?&rsquo; he said, drawing her down again gently by her
+ little hand as she tried to rise hesitatingly. &lsquo;Why not? tell me. I&rsquo;ve
+ looked into your face, and though I can hardly dare to hope it or believe
+ it, I do believe I read in it that you really might love me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Edie answered, a tear now quivering visibly on
+ either eyelash, &lsquo;don&rsquo;t ask me, please don&rsquo;t ask me. I
+ wish you wouldn&rsquo;t. Take me home, won&rsquo;t you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest dropped her hand quietly, with a little show of despondency that
+ was hardly quite genuine, for his eyes had already told him better.
+ &lsquo;Then you can&rsquo;t love me, Miss Oswald,&rsquo; he said, looking
+ at her closely. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sorry for it, very sorry for it; but I&rsquo;m
+ grieved if I have seemed presumptuous in asking you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time the two tears trickled slowly down Edie&rsquo;s cheek&mdash;not
+ very sad tears either&mdash;and she answered hurriedly, &lsquo;Oh, I don&rsquo;t
+ mean that, Mr. Le Breton, I don&rsquo;t mean that. You misunderstand me, I&rsquo;m
+ sure you misunderstand me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest caught up the trembling little hand again. &lsquo;Then you CAN love
+ me, Edie?&rsquo; he said eagerly, &lsquo;you can love me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie answered never a word, but bowed her head and cried a little,
+ silently. Ernest took the dainty wee gloved hand between his own two hands
+ and pressed it tenderly. He felt in return a faint pressure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then why won&rsquo;t you let me love you, Edie?&rsquo; he asked, looking
+ at the blushing girl once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Edie said, rising and moving away from the path
+ a little under the shade of the big elm-tree, &lsquo;it&rsquo;s very wrong
+ of me to let you talk so. I mustn&rsquo;t think of marrying you, and you
+ mustn&rsquo;t think of marrying me. Consider the difference in our
+ positions.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Is that all?&rsquo; Ernest answered gaily. &lsquo;Oh, Edie, if that&rsquo;s
+ all, it isn&rsquo;t a very difficult matter to settle. My position&rsquo;s
+ exactly nothing, for I&rsquo;ve got no money and no prospects; and if I
+ ask you to marry me, it must be in the most strictly speculative fashion,
+ with no date and no certainty. The only question is, will you consent to
+ wait for me till I&rsquo;m able to offer you a home to live in? It&rsquo;s
+ asking you a great deal, I know; and you&rsquo;ve made me only too happy
+ and too grateful already; but if you&rsquo;ll wait for me till we can
+ marry, I shall live all my life through to repay you for your sacrifice.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Edie said, turning towards the path and drying
+ her eyes quickly, &lsquo;I really don&rsquo;t think you ought to marry me.
+ The difference in station is so great&mdash;even Harry would allow the
+ difference in station. Your father was a great man, and a general and a
+ knight, you know; and though my dear father is the best and kindest of
+ men, he isn&rsquo;t anything of that sort, of course.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A slight shade of pain passed across Ernest&rsquo;s face. &lsquo;Edie,&rsquo;
+ he said, ‘please don&rsquo;t talk about that&mdash;please don&rsquo;t. My
+ father was a just and good man, whom I loved and honoured deeply; if there&rsquo;s
+ anything good in any of us boys, it comes to us from my dear father. But
+ please don&rsquo;t speak to me about his profession. It&rsquo;s one of the
+ griefs and troubles of my life. He was a soldier, and an Indian soldier
+ too; and if there&rsquo;s anything more certain to me than the principle
+ that all fighting is very wrong and indefensible, it&rsquo;s the principle
+ that our rule in India is utterly unjust and wicked. So instead of being
+ proud of my father&rsquo;s profession, much as I respected him, I&rsquo;m
+ profoundly ashamed of it; and it has been a great question to me always
+ how far I was justified at all in living upon the pension given me for his
+ Indian services.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked at him half surprised and half puzzled. It was to her such an
+ odd and unexpected point of view. But she felt instinctively that Ernest
+ really and deeply meant what he said, and she knew she must not allude to
+ the subject again. &lsquo;I beg your pardon,&rsquo; she said simply,
+ &lsquo;if I&rsquo;ve put it wrong; yet you know I can&rsquo;t help feeling
+ the great disparity in our two situations.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Edie,&rsquo; said Ernest, looking at her again with all his eyes&mdash;&lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ going to call you &ldquo;Edie&rdquo; always now, so that&rsquo;s
+ understood between us. Well, I shall tell you exactly how I feel about
+ this matter. From the first moment I saw you I felt drawn towards you, I
+ felt that I couldn&rsquo;t help admiring you and sympathising with you and
+ loving you. If I dared I would have spoken to you that day at Iffley; but
+ I said to myself &ldquo;She will not care for me; and besides, it would be
+ wrong of me to ask her just yet.&rdquo; I had nothing to live upon, and I
+ oughtn&rsquo;t to ask you to wait for me&mdash;you who are so pretty, and
+ sweet and good, and clever&mdash;I ought to leave you free to your natural
+ prospect of marrying some better man, who would make you happier than I
+ can ever hope to do. So I tried to put the impulse aside; I waited, saying
+ to myself that if you really cared for me a little bit, you would still
+ care for me when I came to Calcombe Pomeroy. But then my natural
+ selfishness overcame me&mdash;you can forgive me for it, Edie; how could I
+ help it when I had once seen you? I began to be afraid some other man
+ would be beforehand with you; and I liked you so much I couldn&rsquo;t
+ bear to think of the chance that you might be taken away from me before I
+ asked you. All day long, as I&rsquo;ve been walking alone on those high
+ grey moors at Dunbude, I&rsquo;ve been thinking of you; and at last I made
+ up my mind that I MUST come and ask you to be my wife&mdash;some time&mdash;whenever
+ we could afford to marry. I know I&rsquo;m asking you to make a great
+ sacrifice for me; it&rsquo;s more than I have any right to ask you; I&rsquo;m
+ ashamed of myself for asking it; I can only make you a poor man&rsquo;s
+ wife, and how long I may have to wait even for that I can&rsquo;t say; but
+ if you&rsquo;ll only consent to wait for me, Edie, I&rsquo;ll do the best
+ that lies in me to make you as happy and to love you as well as any man on
+ earth could ever do.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie turned her face towards his, and said softly, &lsquo;Mr. Le Breton, I
+ will wait for you as long as ever you wish; and I&rsquo;m so happy, oh so
+ happy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause for a few moments, and then, as they walked homeward
+ down the green glen, Edie said, with something more of her usual archness,
+ &lsquo;So after all you haven&rsquo;t fallen in love with Lady Hilda! Do
+ you know, Mr. Le Breton, I rather fancied at Oxford you liked me just a
+ little tiny bit; but when I heard you were going to Dunbude I said to
+ myself, &ldquo;Ah, now he&rsquo;ll never care for a quiet country girl
+ like me!&rdquo; And when I knew you were coming down here to Calcombe,
+ straight from all those grand ladies at Dunbude, I felt sure you&rsquo;d
+ be disenchanted as soon as you saw me, and never think anything more about
+ me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you liked me, Edie?&rsquo; Ernest asked eagerly. &lsquo;You wanted
+ me really to come to Calcombe to see you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Of course I did, Mr. Le Breton. I&rsquo;ve liked you from the first
+ moment I saw you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m so glad,&rsquo; Ernest went on quickly. &lsquo;I believe all
+ real love is love at first sight. I wouldn&rsquo;t care myself to be loved
+ in any other way. And you thought I might fall in love with Lady Hilda?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, you know, she is sure to be so handsome, and so accomplished, and
+ to have had so many advantages that I have never had. I was afraid I
+ should seem so very simple to you after Lady Hilda.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Edie!&rsquo; cried Ernest, stopping a moment, and gazing at the
+ little light airy figure. &lsquo;I only wish you could know the
+ difference. Coming from Dunbude to Calcombe is like coming from darkness
+ into light. Up there one meets with nobody but essentially vulgar-minded
+ selfish people&mdash;people whose whole life is passed in thinking and
+ talking about nothing but dogs, and horses, and partridges, and salmon;
+ racing, and hunting, and billiards, and wines; amusements, amusements,
+ amusements, all of them coarse and most of them cruel, all day long. Their
+ talk is just like the talk of grooms and gamekeepers in a public-house
+ parlour, only a little improved by better English and more money. Will
+ So-and-so win the Derby? What a splendid run we had with the West Somerset
+ on Wednesday! Were you in at the death of that big fox at Coulson&rsquo;s
+ Corner? Ought the new vintages of Madeira to be bottled direct or sent
+ round the Cape like the old ones? Capital burlesque at the Gaiety, but
+ very slow at the Lyceum. Who will go to the Duchess of Dorsetshire&rsquo;s
+ dance on the twentieth:&mdash;and so forth for ever. Their own petty round
+ of selfish pleasures from week&rsquo;s end to week&rsquo;s end&mdash;no
+ thought of anybody else, no thought of the world at large, no thought even
+ of any higher interest in their own personalities. Their politics are just
+ a selfish calculation of their own prospects&mdash;land, Church, capital,
+ privilege. Their religion (when they have any) is just a selfish regard
+ for their own personal future welfare. From the time I went to Dunbude to
+ this day, I&rsquo;ve never heard a single word about any higher thought of
+ any sort&mdash;I don&rsquo;t mean only about the troubles or the
+ aspirations of other people, but even about books, about science, about
+ art, about natural beauty. They live in a world of amusing oneself and of
+ amusing oneself in vulgar fashions&mdash;as a born clown would do if he
+ came suddenly into a large fortune. The women are just as bad as the men,
+ only in a different way&mdash;not always even that; for most of them think
+ only of the Four-in-hand Club and the pigeon-shooting at Hurlingham&mdash;things
+ to sicken one. Now, I&rsquo;ve known selfish people before, but not
+ selfish people utterly without any tincture of culture. I come away from
+ Dunbude, and come down here to Calcombe: and the difference in the
+ atmosphere makes one&rsquo;s very breath come and go freer. And I look at
+ you, Edie, and think of you beside Lady Hilda Tregellis, and I laugh in my
+ heart at the difference that artificial rules have made between you. I
+ wish you knew how immeasurably her superior you are in every way. The fact
+ is, it&rsquo;s a comfort to escape from Dunbude for a while and get down
+ here to feel oneself once more, in the only true sense of the word, in a
+ little good society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these things were happening in the Bourne Close, palsied old Miss
+ Luttrell, mumbling and grumbling inarticulately to herself, was slowly
+ tottering down the steep High Street of Calcombe Pomeroy, on her way to
+ the village grocer&rsquo;s. She shambled in tremulously to Mrs. Oswald&rsquo;s
+ counter, and seating herself on a high stool, as was her wont, laid
+ herself out distinctly for a list of purchases and a good deliberate
+ ill-natured gossip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Two pounds of coffee, if you please, Mrs. Oswald,&rsquo; she began with a
+ quaver; &lsquo;coffee, mind, I say, not chicory; your stuff always has the
+ smallest possible amount of flavour in it, it seems to me, for the largest
+ possible amount of quantity; all chicory, all chicory&mdash;no decent
+ coffee to be had now in Calcombe Pomeroy. So your son&rsquo;s at home this
+ week, is he? Out of work, I suppose? I saw him lounging about on the
+ beach, idling away his time, yesterday; pity he wasn&rsquo;t at some
+ decent trade, instead of hanging about and doing nothing, as if he was a
+ gentleman. Five pounds of lump sugar, too; good lump sugar, though I
+ expect I shall get nothing but beetroot; it&rsquo;s all beetroot now, my
+ brother tells me; they&rsquo;ve ruined the West Indies with their
+ emancipation fads and their differential duties and the Lord knows what&mdash;we
+ had estates in the West Indies ourselves, all given up to our negroes
+ nowadays&mdash;and now I believe they have to pay the French a bounty or
+ something of the sort to induce them to make sugar out of beetroot,
+ because the negroes won&rsquo;t work without whipping, so I understand;
+ that&rsquo;s what comes in the end of your Radical fal-lal notions. Well,
+ five pounds of lump, and five pounds of moist, though the one&rsquo;s as
+ bad as the other, really. A great pity about your son. I hope he&rsquo;ll
+ get a place again soon. It must be a trial to you to have him so idle!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, no, ma&rsquo;am, it&rsquo;s not,&rsquo; Mrs. Oswald answered, with
+ such self-restraint as she could command. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s not much of a
+ trial to his father and me, for we&rsquo;re glad to let him have a little
+ rest after working so hard at Oxford. He works too hard, ma&rsquo;am, but
+ he gets compensation for it, don&rsquo;t &lsquo;ee see, Miss Luttrell, for
+ he&rsquo;s just been made a Fellow of the Royal Society&mdash;&ldquo;for
+ his mathematical eminence,&rdquo; the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; says&mdash;a
+ Fellow of the Royal Society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even this staggering blow did not completely crush old Miss Luttrell.
+ ‘Fellow of the Royal Society,&rsquo; she muttered feebly through her
+ remaining teeth. &lsquo;Must be some mistake somewhere, Mrs. Oswald&mdash;quite
+ impossible. A very meritorious young man, your son, doubtless; but a
+ National schoolmaster&rsquo;s hardly likely to be made a Fellow of the
+ Royal Society. Oh, I remember you told me he&rsquo;s not a National
+ schoolmaster, but has something to do at one of the Oxford colleges. Yes,
+ yes; I see what it is&mdash;Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. You
+ subscribe a guinea, and get made a Fellow by subscription, just for the
+ sake of writing F.R.G.S. after your name; it gives a young man a look of
+ importance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, Miss Luttrell, it isn&rsquo;t that; it&rsquo;s THE Royal Society; and
+ if you&rsquo;ll wait a moment, ma&rsquo;am, I&rsquo;ll fetch you the
+ president&rsquo;s letter, and the diploma, to let you see it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, no occasion to trouble yourself, Mrs. Oswald!&rsquo; the old lady put
+ in, almost with alacrity, for she had herself seen the announcement of
+ Harry Oswald&rsquo;s election in the &lsquo;Times&rsquo; a few days
+ before. &lsquo;No occasion to trouble yourself, I&rsquo;m sure; I daresay
+ you may be right, and at any rate it&rsquo;s no business of mine, thank
+ heaven. I never want to poke my nose into anybody else&rsquo;s business.
+ Well, talking of Oxford, Mrs. Oswald, there&rsquo;s a very nice young man
+ down here at present; I wonder if you know where he&rsquo;s lodging? I
+ want to ask him to dinner. He&rsquo;s a young Mr. Le Breton&mdash;one of
+ the Cheshire Le Bretons, you know. His father was Sir Owen Le Breton, a
+ general in the Indian army&mdash;brother officer of Major Standish
+ Luttrell&rsquo;s and very nice people in every way. Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ a great friend of the Archdeacon&rsquo;s, so I should like to show her son
+ some little attention. He&rsquo;s had a very distinguished career at
+ Oxford&mdash;your boy may have heard his name, perhaps&mdash;and now he&rsquo;s
+ acting as tutor to Lord Lynmouth, the eldest son of Lord Exmoor, you know;
+ Lady Exmoor was a second cousin of my brother&rsquo;s wife; very nice
+ people, all of them. The Le Bretons are a really good family, you see; and
+ the Archdeacon&rsquo;s exceedingly fond of them. So I thought if you could
+ tell me where this young man is lodging&mdash;you shop-people pick up all
+ the gossip in the place, always&mdash;I&rsquo;d ask him to dinner to meet
+ the Rector and Colonel Turnbull and my nephew, who would probably be able
+ to offer him a little shooting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There&rsquo;s no partridges about in May, Miss Luttrell,&rsquo; said Mrs.
+ Oswald, quietly smiling to herself at the fancy picture of Ernest seated
+ in congenial converse with the Rector, Colonel Turnbull, and young
+ Luttrell; &lsquo;but as to Mr. Le Breton, I DO happen to know where he&rsquo;s
+ stopping, though it&rsquo;s not often that I know any Calcombe gossip,
+ save and except what you&rsquo;re good enough to tell me when you drop in,
+ ma&rsquo;am; for Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s stopping here, in this house, with
+ us, ma&rsquo;am, this very minute.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘In this house, Mrs. Oswald!&rsquo; the old lady cried with a start,
+ wagging her unsteady old head this time in genuine surprise; &lsquo;why, I
+ didn&rsquo;t know you let lodgings. I thought you and your daughter were
+ too much of fine ladies for THAT, really. I&rsquo;m glad to hear it. I&rsquo;ll
+ leave a note for him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, Miss Luttrell, we don&rsquo;t let lodgings, ma&rsquo;am, and we don&rsquo;t
+ need to,&rsquo; Mrs. Oswald answered, proudly. &lsquo;Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ stopping here as my son&rsquo;s guest. They were friends at Oxford
+ together: and now that Mr. Le Breton has got his holiday, like, Harry&rsquo;s
+ asked him down to spend a fortnight at Calcombe Pomeroy. And if you&rsquo;ll
+ leave a note I&rsquo;ll be very happy to give it to him as soon as he
+ comes in, for he&rsquo;s out walking now with Harry and Edith.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Miss Luttrell sat for half a minute in unwonted silence, revolving in
+ her poor puzzled head what line of tactics she ought to adopt under such a
+ very singular and annoying combination of circumstances. Stopping at the
+ village grocer&rsquo;s!&mdash;this was really too atrocious! The Le
+ Bretons were all as mad as hatters, that she knew well; all except the
+ mother, who was a sensible person, and quite rational. But old Sir Owen
+ was a man with the most absurd religious fancies&mdash;took an interest in
+ the souls of the soldiers; quite right and proper, of course, in a
+ chaplain, but really too ridiculous in a regular field officer. No doubt
+ Ernest Le Breton had taken up some equally extraordinary notions&mdash;liberty,
+ equality, fraternity, and a general massacre, probably; and he had picked
+ up Harry Oswald as a suitable companion in his revolutionary schemes and
+ fancies. There was no knowing what stone wall one of those mad Le Bretons
+ might choose to run his head against. Still, the practical difficulty
+ remained&mdash;how could she extricate herself from this awkward dilemma
+ in such a way as to cover herself with glory, and inflict another bitter
+ humiliation on poor Mrs. Oswald? If only she had known sooner that Ernest
+ was stopping at the Oswalds, she wouldn&rsquo;t have been so loud in
+ praise of the Le Breton family; she would in that case have dexterously
+ insinuated that Lady Le Breton was only a half-pay officer&rsquo;s widow,
+ living on her pension; and that her boys had got promotion at Oxford as
+ poor scholars, through the Archdeacon&rsquo;s benevolent influence. It was
+ too late now, however, to adopt that line of defence; and she fell back
+ accordingly upon the secondary position afforded her by the chance of
+ taking down Mrs. Oswald&rsquo;s intolerable insolence in another fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, he&rsquo;s out walking with your daughter, is he?&rsquo; she said,
+ maliciously. ‘Out walking with your daughter, Mrs. Oswald, NOT with your
+ son. I saw her passing down the meadows half an hour ago with a strange
+ young man; and her brother stopped behind near the millpond. A strange
+ young man; yes, I noticed particularly that he looked like a gentleman,
+ and I was quite surprised that you should let her walk out with him in
+ that extraordinary manner. Depend upon it, Mrs. Oswald, when young
+ gentlemen in Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s position go out walking with young
+ women in your daughter&rsquo;s position, they mean no good by it&mdash;they
+ mean no good by it. Take my advice, Mrs. Oswald, and don&rsquo;t permit
+ it. Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s a very nice young man, and well brought up no
+ doubt&mdash;I know his mother&rsquo;s a woman of principle&mdash;still,
+ young men will be young men; and if your son goes bringing down his fine
+ Oxford acquaintances to Calcombe Pomeroy, and you and your husband go
+ flinging Miss Jemima&mdash;her name&rsquo;s Jemima, I think&mdash;at the
+ young men&rsquo;s heads, why, then, of course, you must take the
+ consequences&mdash;you must take the consequences!&rsquo; And with this
+ telling Parthian shot discharged carefully from the shadow of the doorway,
+ accompanied by a running comment of shrugs, nods, and facial distortions,
+ old Miss Luttrell successfully shuffled herself out of the shop, her list
+ unfinished, leaving poor Mrs. Oswald alone and absolutely speechless with
+ indignation. Ernest Le Breton never got a note of invitation from the
+ Squire&rsquo;s sister: but before nightfall all that was visitable in
+ Calcombe Pomeroy had heard at full length of the horrid conspiracy by
+ which those pushing upstart Oswalds had inveigled a son of poor Lady Le
+ Breton&rsquo;s down to stop with them, and were now trying to ruin his
+ prospects by getting him to marry their brazen-faced hussey, Jemima Edith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Edie returned from her walk that afternoon, Mrs. Oswald went up into
+ her bedroom to see her daughter. She knew at once from Edie&rsquo;s
+ radiant blushing face and moist eyes what had taken place, and she kissed
+ the pretty shrinking girl tenderly on her forehead. ‘Edie darling, I hope
+ you will be happy,&rsquo; she whispered significantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you guess it all, mother dear?&rsquo; asked Edie, relieved that she
+ need not tell her story in set words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, darling,&rsquo; said the mother, kissing her again. &lsquo;And you
+ said &ldquo;yes.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie coloured once more. &lsquo;I said &ldquo;yes,&rdquo; mother, for I
+ love him dearly.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He&rsquo;s a dear fellow,&rsquo; the mother answered gently; &lsquo;and I&rsquo;m
+ sure he&rsquo;ll do his best to make you happy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later on in the day, Harry came up and knocked at Edie&rsquo;s door. His
+ mother had told him all about it, and so had Ernest. &lsquo;Popsy,&rsquo;
+ he said, kissing her also, &lsquo;I congratulate you. I&rsquo;m so glad
+ about it. Le Breton&rsquo;s the best fellow I know, and I couldn&rsquo;t
+ wish you a better or a kinder husband. You&rsquo;ll have to wait for him,
+ but he&rsquo;s worth waiting for. He&rsquo;s a good fellow and a clever
+ fellow, and an affectionate fellow; and his family are everything that
+ could be desired. It&rsquo;ll be a splendid thing for you to be able to
+ talk in future about &ldquo;my mother-in law, Lady Le Breton.&rdquo;
+ Depend upon it, Edie dear, that always counts for something in society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie blushed again, but this time with a certain tinge of shame and
+ disappointment. She had never thought of that herself, and she was hurt
+ that Harry should think and speak of it at such a moment. She felt with a
+ sigh it was unworthy of him and unworthy of the occasion. Truly the iron
+ of Pi and its evaluations had entered deeply into his soul!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. &mdash; CULTURE AND CULTURE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wonder, Berkeley,&rsquo; said Herbert Le Breton, examining a coin
+ curiously, &lsquo;what on earth can ever have induced you, with your ideas
+ and feelings, to become a parson!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Le Breton, your taste, like good wine, improves with age,&rsquo;
+ answered Berkeley, coldly. &lsquo;There are many reasons, any one of which
+ may easily induce a sensible man to go into the Church. For example, he
+ may feel a disinterested desire to minister to the souls of his poorer
+ neighbours; or he may be first cousin to a bishop; or he may be attracted
+ by an ancient and honourable national institution; or he may possess a
+ marked inclination for albs and chasubles; or he may reflect upon the
+ distinct social advantages of a good living; or he may have nothing else
+ in particular to do; or he may simply desire to rouse the impertinent
+ curiosity of all the indolent quidnuncs of his acquaintance, without the
+ remotest intention of ever gratifying their underbred Paul Pry
+ proclivities.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert Le Breton winced a little&mdash;he felt he had fairly laid himself
+ open to this unmitigated rebuff&mdash;but he did not retire immediately
+ from his untenable position. &lsquo;I suppose,&rsquo; he said quietly,
+ &lsquo;there are still people who really do take a practical interest in
+ other people&rsquo;s souls&mdash;my brother Ronald does for one&mdash;but
+ the idea is positively too ridiculous. Whenever I read any argument upon
+ immortality it always seems to me remarkably cogent, if the souls in
+ question were your soul and my soul; but just consider the transparent
+ absurdity of supposing that every Hodge Chawbacon, and every rheumatic old
+ Betty Martin, has got a soul, too, that must go on enduring for all
+ eternity! The notion&rsquo;s absolutely ludicrous. What an infinite
+ monotony of existence for the poor old creatures to endure for ever&mdash;being
+ bored by their own inane personalities for a million aeons! It&rsquo;s
+ simply appalling to think of!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Berkeley wasn&rsquo;t going to be drawn into a theological discussion&mdash;that
+ was a field which he always sedulously and successfully avoided. ‘The
+ immortality of the soul,&rsquo; he said quietly, &lsquo;is a Platonic
+ dogma too frequently confounded, even by moderately instructed persons
+ like yourself, Le Breton, with the Church&rsquo;s very different doctrine
+ of the resurrection of the body. Upon this latter subject, my dear fellow,
+ about which you don&rsquo;t seem to be quite clear or perfectly sound in
+ your views, you&rsquo;ll find some excellent remarks in Bishop Pearson on
+ the Creed&mdash;a valuable work which I had the pleasure of studying
+ intimately for my ordination examination.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Really, Berkeley, you&rsquo;re the most incomprehensible and mysterious
+ person I ever met in my whole lifetime!&rsquo; said Herbert, dryly.
+ &lsquo;I believe you take a positive delight in deceiving and mystifying
+ one. Do you seriously mean to tell me you feel any interest at the present
+ time of day in books written by bishops?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A modern bishop,&rsquo; Berkeley answered calmly, &lsquo;is an
+ unpicturesque but otherwise estimable member of a very distinguished
+ ecclesiastical order, who ought not lightly to be brought into ridicule by
+ lewd or lay persons. On that ground, I have always been in favour myself
+ of gradually reforming his hat, his apron, and even his gaiters, which
+ doubtless serve to render him at least conspicuous if not positively
+ absurd in the irreverent eyes of a ribald generation. But as to
+ criticising his literary or theological productions, my dear fellow, that
+ would be conduct eminently unbecoming in a simple curate, and savouring of
+ insubordination even in the person of an elderly archdeacon. I decline,
+ therefore, to discuss the subject, especially with a layman on whose
+ orthodoxy I have painful doubts.&mdash;Where&rsquo;s Oswald? Is he up yet?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No; he&rsquo;s down in Devonshire, my brother Ernest writes me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What, at Dunbude? What&rsquo;s Oswald doing there?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh dear no; not at Dunbude: the peerage hasn&rsquo;t yet adopted him&mdash;at
+ a place called Calcombe Pomeroy, where it seems he lives. Ernest has gone
+ down there from Exmoor for a fortnight&rsquo;s holiday. You remember,
+ Oswald has a pretty sister&mdash;I met her here in your rooms last
+ October, in fact&mdash;and I apprehend she may possibly form a measurable
+ portion of the local attractions. A pretty face goes a long way with some
+ people.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berkeley drew a deep breath, and looked uneasily out of the window. This
+ was dangerous news, indeed! What, little Miss Butterfly, has the boy with
+ the gauze net caught sight of you already? Will he trap you and imprison
+ you so soon in his little gilded matrimonial cage, enticing you thereinto
+ with soft words and, sugared compliments to suit your dainty, delicate
+ palate? and must I, who have meant to chase you for the chief ornament of
+ my own small cabinet, be only in time to see you pinioned and cabined in
+ your white lace veils and other pretty disguised entanglements, for his
+ special and particular delectation? This must be looked into, Miss
+ Butterfly; this must be prevented. Off to Calcombe Pomeroy, then, or other
+ parts unknown, this very next to-morrow; and let us fight out the
+ possession of little Miss Butterfly with our two gauze nets in opposition&mdash;mine
+ tricked as prettily as I can trick it with tags and ends of
+ art-allurements and hummed to in a delicate tune&mdash;before this
+ interloping anticipating Le Breton has had time to secure you absolutely
+ for himself. Too austere for you, little Miss Butterfly; good in his way,
+ and kindly meaning, but too austere. Better come and sun yourself in the
+ modest wee palace of art that I mean to build myself some day in some
+ green, sunny, sloping valley, where your flittings will not be rudely
+ disturbed by breath of poverty, nor your pretty feathery wings ruthlessly
+ clipped with a pair of doctrinaire, ethico-socialistic scissors. To
+ Calcombe, then, to Calcombe&mdash;and not a day&rsquo;s delay before I get
+ there. So much of thought, in his own quaint indefinite fashion, flitted
+ like lightning through Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s perturbed mind, as he stood
+ gazing wistfully for one second out of his pretty latticed creeper-clad
+ window. Then he remembered himself quickly with a short little sigh, and
+ turned to answer Herbert Le Breton&rsquo;s last half-sneering innuendo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Something more than a pretty face merely,&rsquo; he said, surveying
+ Herbert coldly from head to foot; &lsquo;a heart too, and a mind, for all
+ her flitting, not wholly unfurnished with good, sensible, solid mahogany
+ English furniture. You may be sure Harry Oswald&rsquo;s sister isn&rsquo;t
+ likely to be wanting in wits, at any rate.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oswald&rsquo;s a curious fellow,&rsquo; Herbert went on, changing the
+ venue, as he always did when he saw Berkeley was really in earnest;
+ &lsquo;he&rsquo;s very clever, certainly, but he can never outlive his
+ bourgeois origin. The smell of tea sticks about him somehow to the end of
+ the chapter. Don&rsquo;t you know, Berkeley, there are some fellows whose
+ clothes seem to have been born with them, they fit so perfectly and impede
+ their movement so little; while there are other fellows whose clothes look
+ at once as if they&rsquo;d been made for them by a highly respectable but
+ imperfectly successful tailor. That&rsquo;s just what I always think about
+ Harry Oswald in the matter of culture. He&rsquo;s got a great deal of
+ culture, the very best culture, from the very best shop&mdash;Oxford, in
+ fact&mdash;dressed himself up in the finest suit of clothes from the most
+ fashionable mental tailor; but it doesn&rsquo;t seem to fit him naturally.
+ He moves about in it uneasily, like a man unaccustomed to be clothed by a
+ good workman. He looks in his mental upholstery like a greengrocer in
+ evening dress. Now there&rsquo;s all the difference in the world between
+ that sort of put-on culture and culture in the grain, isn&rsquo;t there?
+ You may train up a grocer&rsquo;s son to read Dante, and to play
+ Mendelssohn&rsquo;s Lieder, and to admire Fra Angelico; but you can&rsquo;t
+ train him up to wear these things lightly and gracefully upon him as you
+ and I do, who come by them naturally. WE are born to the sphere; HE rises
+ to it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You think so, Le Breton?&rsquo; asked the curate with a quiet and
+ suppressed smile, as he thought silently of the placid old shoemaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Think so! my dear fellow, I&rsquo;m sure of it. I can spot a man of birth
+ from a man of mere exterior polish any day, anywhere. Talk as much
+ nonsense as you like about all men being born free and equal&mdash;they&rsquo;re
+ not. They&rsquo;re born with natural inequalities in their very nerve and
+ muscle. When I was an undergraduate, I startled one of the tutors of that
+ time by beginning my English essay once, &ldquo;All men are by nature born
+ free and unequal.&rdquo; I stick to it still; it&rsquo;s the truth. They
+ say it takes three generations to make a gentleman; nonsense utterly; it
+ takes at least a dozen. You can&rsquo;t work out the common fibre in such
+ a ridiculous hurry. That results as a simple piece of deductive reasoning
+ from all modern theories of heredity and variation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I agree with you in part, Le Breton,&rsquo; the parson said, eyeing him
+ closely; &lsquo;in part but not altogether. What you say about Oswald&rsquo;s
+ very largely true. His culture sits upon him like a suit made to order,
+ not like a skin in which he was born. But don&rsquo;t you think that&rsquo;s
+ due more to the individual man than to the class he happens to belong to?
+ It seems to me there are other men who come from the same class as Oswald,
+ or even from lower classes, but whose culture is just as much ingrained
+ as, say, my dear fellow, yours is. They were born, no doubt, of naturally
+ cultivated parents. And that&rsquo;s how your rule about the dozen
+ generations that go to make a gentleman comes really true. I believe
+ myself it takes a good many generations; but then none of them need have
+ been gentlemen, in the ordinary sense of the word, before him. A
+ gentleman, if I&rsquo;m to use the expression as implying the good
+ qualities conventionally supposed to be associated with it, a gentleman
+ may be the final outcome and efflorescence of many past generations of
+ quiet, unobtrusive, working-man culture&mdash;don&rsquo;t you think so?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert Le Breton smiled incredulously. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t know that I
+ do, quite,&rsquo; he answered languidly. &lsquo;I confess I attach more
+ importance than you do to the mere question of race and family. A
+ thoroughbred differs from a cart-horse, and a greyhound from a vulgar
+ mongrel, in mind and character as well as in body. Oswald seems to me in
+ all essentials a bourgeois at heart even now.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But remember,&rsquo; Berkeley said, rather warmly for him, &lsquo;the
+ bourgeois class in England is just the class which must necessarily find
+ it hardest to throw off the ingrained traces of its early origin. It has
+ intermarried for a long time&mdash;long enough to have produced a distinct
+ racial type like those you speak of among dogs and horses&mdash;the
+ Philistine type, in fact&mdash;and when it tries to emerge, it must
+ necessarily fight hard against the innate Philistinism of which it is
+ conscious in its own constitution. No class has had its inequality with
+ others, its natural inferiority, so constantly and cruelly thrust in its
+ face; certainly the working-man has not. The working-man who makes efforts
+ to improve himself is encouraged; the working-man who rises is taken by
+ the hand; the working-man, whatever he does, is never sneered at. But it&rsquo;s
+ very different with the shopkeeper. Naturally a little prone to servility&mdash;that
+ comes from the very necessities of the situation&mdash;and laudably
+ anxious to attain the level of those he considers his superiors, he gets
+ laughed at on every hand. Being the next class below society, society is
+ always engaged in trying to keep him out and keep him down. On the other
+ hand, he naturally forms his ideal of what is fine and worth imitating
+ from the example of the class above him; and therefore, considering what
+ that class is, he has unworthy aims and snobbish desires. Either in his
+ own person, or in the persons of his near relations, the wholesale
+ merchant and the manufacturer&mdash;all bourgeois alike&mdash;he supplies
+ the mass of nouveaux riches who are the pet laughing-stock of all our
+ playwrights, and novelists, and comic papers. So the bourgeois who really
+ knows he has something in him, like Harry Oswald, feels from the beginning
+ painfully conscious of the instability of his position, and of the fact
+ that men like you are cutting jokes behind his back about the smell of tea
+ that still clings to him. That&rsquo;s a horrible drag to hold a man back&mdash;the
+ sense that he must always be criticised as one of his own class&mdash;and
+ that a class with many recognised failings. It makes him self-conscious,
+ and I believe self-consciousness is really at the root of that slight
+ social awkwardness you think you notice in Harry Oswald. A working-man&rsquo;s
+ son need never feel that. I feel sure there are working-men&rsquo;s sons
+ who go through the world as gentlemen mixing with gentlemen, and never
+ give the matter of their birth one moment&rsquo;s serious consideration.
+ Their position never troubles them, and it never need trouble them. Put it
+ to yourself, now, Le Breton. Suppose I were to tell you my father was a
+ working shoemaker, for example, or a working carpenter, you&rsquo;d never
+ think anything more about it; but if I were to tell you he was a grocer,
+ or a baker, or a confectioner, or an ironmonger, you&rsquo;d feel a
+ certain indefinable class barrier set up between us two immediately and
+ ever after. Isn&rsquo;t it so, now?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Perhaps it is,&rsquo; Herbert answered dubitatively. &lsquo;But as he&rsquo;s
+ probably neither the one nor the other, the hypothesis isn&rsquo;t worth
+ seriously discussing. I must go off now; I&rsquo;ve got a lecture at
+ twelve. Good-bye. Don&rsquo;t forget the tickets for Thursday&rsquo;s
+ concert.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley looked after him with a contemptuous smile. &lsquo;The
+ outcome of a race himself,&rsquo; he thought, &lsquo;and not the best side
+ of that race either. I was half tempted, in the heat of argument, to blurt
+ out to him the whole truth about the dear gentle old Progenitor; but I&rsquo;m
+ glad I didn&rsquo;t now. After all, it&rsquo;s no use to cast your pearls
+ before swine. For Herbert&rsquo;s essentially a pig&mdash;a selfish
+ self-centred pig; no doubt a very refined and cultivated specimen of
+ pigdom&mdash;the best breed; but still a most emphatic and consummate pig
+ for all that. Not the same stuff in him that there is in Ernest&mdash;a
+ fibre or two wanting somewhere. But I mustn&rsquo;t praise Ernest&mdash;a
+ rival! a rival! It&rsquo;s war to the death between us two now, and no
+ quarter. He&rsquo;s a good fellow, and I like him dearly; but all&rsquo;s
+ fair in love and war; and I must go down to Calcombe to-morrow morning and
+ forestall him immediately. Dear little Miss Butterfly, &lsquo;tis for your
+ sake; you shall not be pinched and cramped to suit the Procrustean measure
+ of Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s communistic fancies. You shall fly free in the
+ open air, and flash your bright silken wings, decked out bravely in scales
+ of many hues, not toned down to too sober and quaker-like a suit of drab
+ and dove-colour. You were meant by nature for the sunshine and the summer;
+ you shall not be worried and chilled and killed with doses of heterodox
+ political economy and controversial ethics. Better even a country rectory
+ (though with a bad Late Perpendicular church), and flowers, and picnics,
+ and lawn-tennis, and village small-talk, and the squire&rsquo;s
+ dinner-parties, than bread and cheese and virtuous poverty in a London
+ lodging with Ernest Le Breton. Romance lives again. The beautiful maiden
+ is about to be devoured by a goggle-eyed monster, labelled on the back
+ &ldquo;Experimental Socialism&rdquo;; the red cross knight flies to her
+ aid, and drives away the monster by his magic music. Lance in rest! lyre
+ at side! third class railway ticket in pocket! A Berkeley to the rescue!
+ and there you have it.&rsquo; And as he spoke, he tilted with his pen at
+ an imaginary dragon supposed to be seated in the crimson rocking-chair by
+ the wainscotted fireplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I must certainly go down to Calcombe. No use putting it off any
+ longer. I&rsquo;ve arranged to go next summer to London, to keep house for
+ the dear old Progenitor; the music is getting asked for, two requests for
+ more this very morning; trade is looking up. I shall throw the curacy
+ business overboard (what chance for modest merit that ISN&rsquo;T first
+ cousin to a Bishop in the Church as at present constituted?) and take to
+ composing entirely for a livelihood. I wouldn&rsquo;t ask Miss Butterfly
+ before, because I didn&rsquo;t wish to tie her pretty wings prematurely;
+ but a rival! that&rsquo;s quite a different matter. What right has he to
+ go poaching on my preserves, I should like to know, and trying to catch
+ the little gold fish I want to entice for my own private and particular
+ fish-pond! An interloper, to be turned out unmercifully. So off to
+ Calcombe, and that quickly.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down to his desk, and taking out some sheets of blank music-paper,
+ began writing down the score of a little song at which he had been
+ working. So he continued till lunch-time, and then, turning to the table
+ when the scout called him, took his solitary lunch of bread and butter,
+ with a volume of Petrarch set open before him as he eat. He was lazily
+ Englishing the soft lines of the original into such verse as suited his
+ fastidious ear, when the scout came in suddenly once more, bringing in his
+ hand the mid-day letters. One of them bore the Calcombe postmark. &lsquo;Strange,&rsquo;
+ Berkeley said to himself; &lsquo;at the very moment when I was thinking of
+ going there. An invitation perhaps; the age of miracles is not yet past&mdash;don&rsquo;t
+ they see spirits in a conjuror&rsquo;s room in Regent Street?&mdash;from
+ Oswald, too; by Jove, it must be an invitation.&rsquo; And he ran his eye
+ down the page rapidly, to see if there was any mention of little Miss
+ Butterfly. Yes; there was her name on the second sheet; what could her
+ brother have to say to him about her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘We have Ernest Le Breton down here now,&rsquo; Oswald wrote, &lsquo;on a
+ holiday from the Exmoors&rsquo;, and you may be surprised to hear that I
+ shall probably have him sooner or later for a brother-in-law. He has
+ proposed to and been accepted by my sister Edith; and though it is likely,
+ as things stand at present, to be a rather long engagement (for Le Breton
+ has nothing to marry upon), we are all very much pleased about it here at
+ Calcombe. He is just the exact man I should wish my sister to marry; so
+ pleasant and good and clever, and so very well connected. Felicitate us,
+ my dear Berkeley!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley laid the letter down with a quiet sigh, and folded his
+ hands despondently before him. He hadn&rsquo;t seen very much of Edie, yet
+ the disappointment was to him a very bitter one. It had been a pleasant
+ day-dream, truly, and he was both to part with it so unexpectedly. &lsquo;Poor
+ little Miss Butterfly,&rsquo; he said to himself, tenderly and
+ compassionately; &lsquo;poor, airy, flitting, bright-eyed little Miss
+ Butterfly. I must give you up, must I, and Ernest Le Breton must take you
+ for better, for worse, must he? La reyne le veult, it seems, and her word
+ is law. I&rsquo;m afraid he&rsquo;s hardly the man to make you happy,
+ little lady; kind-hearted, well-meaning, but too much in earnest, too much
+ absorbed in his ideas of right for a world where right&rsquo;s impossible,
+ and every man for himself is the wretched sordid rule of existence. He
+ will overshadow and darken your bright little life, I fear me; not
+ intentionally&mdash;he couldn&rsquo;t do that&mdash;but by his Quixotic
+ fads and fancies; good fads, honest fads, but fads wholly impracticable in
+ this jarring universe of clashing interests, where he who would swim must
+ keep his own head steadily above water, and he who minds his neighbour
+ must sink like lead to the unfathomable bottom. He will sink, I doubt not,
+ poor little Miss Butterfly; he will sink inevitably, and drag you down
+ with him, down, down, down to immeasurable depths of poverty and despair.
+ Oh, my poor little butterfly, I&rsquo;m sorry for you, and sorry for
+ myself. It was a pretty dream, and I loved it dearly. I had made you a
+ queen in my fancy, and throned you in my heart, and now I have to dethrone
+ you again, me miserable, and have my poor lonely heart bare and queenless!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The piano was open, and he went over to it instinctively, strumming a few
+ wild bars out of his own head, made up hastily on the spur of the moment.
+ &lsquo;No, not dethrone you,&rsquo; he went on, leaning back on the
+ music-stool, and letting his hand wander aimlessly over the keys; &lsquo;not
+ dethrone you; I shall never, never be able to do that. Little Miss
+ Butterfly, your image is stamped there too deep for dethronement, stamped
+ there for ever, indelibly, ineffaceably, not to be washed out by tears or
+ laughter. Ernest Le Breton may take you and keep you; you are his; you
+ have chosen him, and you have chosen in most things not unwisely, for he&rsquo;s
+ a good fellow and true (let me be generous in the hour of disappointment
+ even to the rival, the goggle-eyed impracticable dragon monstrosity), but
+ you are mine, too, for I won&rsquo;t give you up; I can&rsquo;t give you
+ up; I must live for you still, even if you know it not. Little woman, I
+ will work for you and I will watch over you; I will be your earthly
+ Providence; I will try to extricate you from the quagmires into which the
+ well-meaning, short-sighted dragon will infallibly lead you. Dear little
+ bright soul, my heart aches for you; I know the trouble you are bringing
+ upon yourself; but la reyne le veult, and it is not your humble servitor&rsquo;s
+ business to interfere with your royal pleasure. Still, you are mine, for I
+ am yours; yours, body and soul; what else have I to live for? The dear old
+ Progenitor can&rsquo;t be with us many years longer; and when he is gone
+ there will be nothing left me but to watch over little Miss Butterfly and
+ her Don Quixote of a future husband. A man can&rsquo;t work and slave and
+ compose sonatas for himself alone&mdash;the idea&rsquo;s disgusting,
+ piggish, worthy only of Herbert Le Breton; I must do what I can for the
+ little queen, and for her balloon-navigating Utopian Ernest. Thank heaven,
+ no law prevents you from loving in your own heart the one woman whom you
+ have once loved, no matter who may chance to marry her. Go, day-dream,
+ fly, vanish, evaporate; the solid core remains still&mdash;my heart, and
+ little Miss Butterfly. I have loved her once, and I shall love her, I
+ shall love her for ever!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He crumpled the letter up in his fingers, and flung it half angrily into
+ the waste-paper basket, as though it were the embodied day-dream he was
+ mentally apostrophising. It was sermon-day, and he had to write his
+ discourse that very afternoon. A quaint idea seized him. ‘Aha,&rsquo; he
+ said, almost gaily, in his volatile irresponsible fashion, ‘I have my text
+ ready; the hour brings it to me unsought; a quip, a quip! I shall preach
+ on the Pool of Bethesda: &ldquo;While I am coming, another steppeth down
+ before me.&rdquo; The verse seems as if it were made on purpose for me;
+ what a pity nobody else will understand it!&rsquo; And he smiled quietly
+ at the conceit, as he got the scented sheets of sermon-paper out of his
+ little sandalwood davenport. For Arthur Berkeley was one of those
+ curiously compounded natures which can hardly ever be perfectly serious,
+ and which can enjoy a quaintness or a neat literary allusion even at a
+ moment of the bitterest personal disappointment. He could solace himself
+ for a minute for the loss of Edie by choosing a text for his Sunday&rsquo;s
+ sermon with a prettily-turned epigram on his own position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. &mdash; THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At the very top of the winding footpath cut deeply into the sandstone side
+ of the East Cliff Hill at Hastings, a wooden seat, set a little back from
+ the road, invites the panting climber to rest for five minutes after his
+ steep ascent from the primitive fisher village of Old Hastings, which
+ nestles warmly in the narrow sun-smitten gulley at his feet. On this seat,
+ one bright July morning, Herbert Le Breton lay at half length, basking in
+ the brilliant open sunshine and evidently waiting for somebody whom he
+ expected to arrive by the side path from the All Saints&rsquo; Valley.
+ Even the old coastguardsman, plodding his daily round over to
+ Ecclesbourne, noticed the obvious expectation implied in his attentive
+ attitude, and ventured to remark, in his cheery familiar fashion, &lsquo;She
+ won&rsquo;t be long a-comin&rsquo; now, sir, you may depend upon it: the
+ gals is sure to be out early of a fine mornin&rsquo; like this &lsquo;ere.&rsquo;
+ Herbert stuck his double eye-glass gingerly upon the tip of his nose, and
+ surveyed the bluff old sailor through it with a stony British stare of
+ mingled surprise and indignation, which drove the poor man hastily off,
+ with a few muttered observations about some people being so confounded
+ stuck up that they didn&rsquo;t even understand the point of a little
+ good-natured seafarin&rsquo; banter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the coastguardsman disappeared round the corner of the flagstaff, a
+ young girl came suddenly into sight by the jutting edge of sandstone bluff
+ near the High Wickham; and Herbert, jumping up at once from his reclining
+ posture, raised his bat to her with stately politeness, and moved forward
+ in his courtly graceful manner to meet her as she approached. &lsquo;Well,
+ Selah,&rsquo; he said, taking her hand a little warmly (judged at least by
+ Herbert Le Breton&rsquo;s usual standard), &lsquo;so you&rsquo;ve come at
+ last! I&rsquo;ve been waiting here for you for fully half an hour. You
+ see, I&rsquo;ve come down to Hastings again as I promised, the very first
+ moment I could possibly get away from my pressing duties at Oxford.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl withdrew her hand from his, blushing deeply, but looking into his
+ face with evident pleasure and admiration. She was tall and handsome, with
+ a certain dashing air of queenliness about her, too; and she was dressed
+ in a brave, outspoken sort of finery, which, though cheap enough in its
+ way, was neither common nor wholly wanting in a touch of native good taste
+ and even bold refinement of contrast and harmony. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s very
+ kind of you to come, Mr. Walters,&rsquo; she answered in a firm but
+ delicate voice. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m so sorry I&rsquo;ve kept you waiting. I
+ got your letter, and tried to come in time; but father he&rsquo;s been
+ more aggravating than usual, almost, this morning, and kept saying he&rsquo;d
+ like to know what on earth a young woman could want to go out walking for,
+ instead of stopping at home at her work and minding her Bible like a
+ proper Christian. In HIS time young women usen&rsquo;t to be allowed to go
+ walking except on Sundays, and then only to chapel or Bible class. So I&rsquo;ve
+ not been able to get away till this very minute, with all this bundle of
+ tracts, too, to give to the excursionists on the way. Father feels a most
+ incomprehensible interest, somehow, in the future happiness of the Sunday
+ excursionists.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wish he&rsquo;d feel a little more interest in the present happiness of
+ his own daughter,&rsquo; Herbert said smiling. &lsquo;But it hasn&rsquo;t
+ mattered your keeping me waiting here, Selah. Of course I&rsquo;d have
+ enjoyed it all far better in your society&mdash;I don&rsquo;t think I need
+ tell you that now, dear&mdash;but the sunshine, and the sea breeze, and
+ the song of the larks, and the plash of the waves below, and the shouts of
+ the fishermen down there on the beach mending their nets and putting out
+ their smacks, have all been so delightful after our humdrum round of daily
+ life at Oxford, that I only wanted your presence here to make it all into
+ a perfect paradise.&mdash;Why, Selah, how pretty you look in that sweet
+ print! It suits your complexion admirably. I never saw you wear anything
+ before so perfectly becoming.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah drew herself up with the conscious pride of an unaffected pretty
+ girl. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m so glad you think so, Mr. Walters,&rsquo; she said,
+ playing nervously with the handle of her dark-blue parasol. &lsquo;You
+ always say such very flattering things.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, not flattering,&rsquo; Herbert answered, smiling; &lsquo;not
+ flattering, Selah, simply truthful. You always extort the truth from me
+ with your sweet face, Selah. Nobody can look at it and not forget the
+ stupid conventions of ordinary society. But please, dear, don&rsquo;t call
+ me Mr. Walters. Call me Herbert. You always do, you know, when you write
+ to me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But it&rsquo;s so much harder to do it to your face, Mr. Walters,&rsquo;
+ Selah said, again blushing. &lsquo;Every time you go away I say to myself,
+ &ldquo;I shall call him Herbert as soon as ever he comes back again;&rdquo;
+ and every time you come back, I feel too much afraid of you, the moment I
+ see you, ever to do it. And yet of course I ought to, you know, for when
+ we&rsquo;re married, why, naturally, then I shall have to learn to call
+ you Herbert, shan&rsquo;t I?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You will, I suppose,&rsquo; Herbert answered, rather chillily: &lsquo;but
+ that subject is one upon which we shall be able to form a better opinion
+ when the time comes for actually deciding it. Meanwhile, I want you to
+ call me Herbert, if you please, as a personal favour and a mark of
+ confidence. Suppose I were to go on calling you Miss Briggs all the time!
+ a pretty sort of thing that would be! what inference would you draw as to
+ the depth of my affection? Well, now, Selah, how have these dreadful home
+ authorities of yours been treating you, my dear girl, all the time since I
+ last saw you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Much the same as usual, Mr. Walters&mdash;Herbert, I mean,&rsquo; Selah
+ answered, hastily correcting herself. &lsquo;The regular round. Prayers;
+ clean the shop; breakfast, with a chapter; serve in the shop all morning;
+ dinner, with a chapter; serve in the shop all afternoon; tea, with a
+ chapter; prayer meeting in the evening; supper, with a chapter;
+ exhortation; and go to bed, sick of it all, to get up next morning and
+ repeat the entire performance da capo, as they always say in the music to
+ the hymn-books. Occasional relaxations,&mdash;Sunday at chapel three
+ times, and Wednesday evening Bible class; mothers&rsquo; assembly, Dorcas
+ society, missionary meeting, lecture on the Holy Land, dissolving views of
+ Jerusalem, and Primitive Methodist district conference in the Mahanaim
+ Jubilee meeting hall. Salvation privileges every day and all the year
+ round, till I&rsquo;m ready to drop with it, and begin to wish I&rsquo;d
+ only been lucky enough to have been born one of those happy benighted
+ little pagans in a heathen land where they don&rsquo;t know the value of
+ the precious Sabbath, and haven&rsquo;t yet been taught to build Primitive
+ Methodist district chapels for crushing the lives out of their sons and
+ daughters!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert smiled a gentle smile of calm superiority at this vehement
+ outburst of natural irreligion. &lsquo;You must certainly be bored to
+ death with it all, Selah,&rsquo; he said, laughingly. &lsquo;What a funny
+ sort of creed it really is, after all, for rational beings! Who on earth
+ could believe that the religion these people use to render your life so
+ absolutely miserable is meant for the same thing as the one that makes my
+ poor dear brother Ronald so perfectly and inexpressibly serene and happy?
+ The formalism of lower natures, like your father&rsquo;s, has turned it
+ into a machine for crushing all the spontaneity out of your existence.
+ What a régime for a high-spirited girl like you to be compelled to live
+ under, Selah!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It is, it is!&rsquo; Selah answered, vehemently. &lsquo;I wish you could
+ only see the way father goes on at me all the time about chapel, and so
+ on, Mr. Wal&mdash;Herbert, I mean. You wouldn&rsquo;t wonder, if you were
+ to hear him, at my being anxious for the time to come when you can leave
+ Oxford and we can get comfortably married. What between the drudgery of
+ the shop and the drudgery of the chapel my life&rsquo;s positively getting
+ almost worn out of me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert took her hand in his, quietly. It was not a very small hand, but
+ it was prettily, though cheaply, gloved, and the plain silver bracelet
+ that encircled the wrist, though simple and inexpensive, was not wanting
+ in rough tastefulness. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re a bad philosopher, Selah,&rsquo;
+ he said, turning with her along the path towards Ecclesbourne; ‘you&rsquo;re
+ always anxious to hurry on too fast the lagging wheels of an unknown
+ future. After all, how do you know whether we should be any the happier if
+ we were really and truly married? Don&rsquo;t you know what Swinburne
+ says, in &ldquo;Dolores&rdquo;&mdash;you&rsquo;ve read it in the Poems and
+ Ballads I gave you&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Time turns the old days to derision,
+ Our loves into corpses or wives,
+ And marriage and death and division
+ Make barren our lives?&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ve read it,&rsquo; Selah answered, carelessly, &lsquo;and I
+ thought it all very pretty. Of course Swinburne always is very pretty: but
+ I&rsquo;m sure I never try to discover what on earth he means by it. I
+ suppose father would say I don&rsquo;t read him tearfully and prayerfully&mdash;at
+ any rate, I&rsquo;m quite sure I never understand what he&rsquo;s driving
+ at.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And yet he&rsquo;s worth understanding,&rsquo; Herbert answered in his
+ clear musical voice&mdash;&lsquo;well worth understanding, Selah,
+ especially for you, dearest. If, in imitation of obsolete fashions, you
+ wished to read a few verses of some improving volume every night and
+ morning, as a sort of becoming religious exercise in the elements of
+ self-culture, I don&rsquo;t know that I could recommend you a better book
+ to begin upon than the Poems and Ballads. Don&rsquo;t you see the moral of
+ those four lines I&rsquo;ve just quoted to you? Why should we wish to
+ change from anything so free and delightful and poetical as lovers into
+ anything so fettered, and commonplace, and prosaic, and BANAL, as wives
+ and husbands? Why should we wish to give up the fanciful paradise of
+ fluttering hope and expectation for the dreary reality of housekeeping and
+ cold mutton on Mondays? Why should we not be satisfied with the real
+ pleasure of the passing moment, without for ever torturing our souls about
+ the imaginary but delusive pleasure of the unrealisable, impossible
+ future?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But we MUST get married some time or other, Herbert,&rsquo; Selah said,
+ turning her big eyes full upon him with a doubtful look of interrogation.
+ &lsquo;We can&rsquo;t go on courting in this way for ever and ever,
+ without coming to any definite conclusion. We MUST get married by-and-by,
+ now mustn&rsquo;t we?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Je n&rsquo;en vois pas la nécessité, moi,&rsquo; Herbert answered with
+ just a trace of cynicism in his curling lip. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t see any
+ MUST about it, that is to say, in English, Selah. The fact is, you see, I&rsquo;m
+ above all things a philosopher; you&rsquo;re a philosopher, too, but only
+ an instinctive one, and I want to make your instinctive philosophy assume
+ a rather more rational and extrinsic shape. Why should we really be in any
+ hurry to go and get married? Do the actual married people of our
+ acquaintance, as a matter of fact, seem so very much more ethereally happy&mdash;with
+ their eight children to be washed and dressed and schooled daily, for
+ example&mdash;than the lovers, like you and me, who walk arm-in-arm out
+ here in the sunshine, and haven&rsquo;t yet got over their delicious first
+ illusions? Depend upon it, the longer you can keep your illusions the
+ better. You haven&rsquo;t read Aristotle in all probability; but as
+ Aristotle would put it, it isn&rsquo;t the end that is anything in
+ love-making, it&rsquo;s the energy, the active pursuit, the momentary
+ enjoyment of it. I suppose we shall have to get married some day, Selah,
+ though I don&rsquo;t know when; but I confess to you I don&rsquo;t look
+ forward to the day quite so rapturously as you do. Shall we feel more the
+ thrill of possession, do you think, than I feel it now when I hold your
+ hand in mine, so, and catch the beating of your pulse in your veins, even
+ through the fingers of your pretty little glove? Shall we look deeper into
+ one another&rsquo;s eyes and hearts than I look now into the very inmost
+ depths of yours? Shall we drink in more fully the essence of love than
+ when I touch your lips here&mdash;one moment, Selah, the gorse is very
+ deep here&mdash;now don&rsquo;t be foolish&mdash;ah, there, what&rsquo;s
+ the use of philosophising, tell me, by the side of that? Come over here to
+ the bench, Selah, by the edge of the cliff; look down yonder into
+ Ecclesbourne glen; hear the waves dashing on the shore below, and your own
+ heart beating against your bosom within&mdash;and then ask yourself what&rsquo;s
+ the good of living in any moment, in any moment but the present.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah turned her great eyes admiringly upon him once more. &lsquo;Oh,
+ Herbert,&rsquo; she said, looking at him with a clever uneducated girl&rsquo;s
+ unfeigned and undisguised admiration for any cultivated gentleman who
+ takes the trouble to draw out her higher self. &lsquo;Oh, Herbert, how can
+ you talk so beautifully to me, and then ask me why it is I&rsquo;m longing
+ for the day to come when I can be really and truly married to you? Do you
+ think I don&rsquo;t feel the difference between spending my life with such
+ a man as you, and spending it for years and years together with a ranting,
+ canting Primitive Methodist?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert smiled to himself a quiet, unobtrusive, self-satisfied smile.
+ &lsquo;She appreciates me,&rsquo; he thought silently in his own heart,
+ ‘she appreciates me at my true worth; and, after all, that&rsquo;s a great
+ thing. Well, Selah,&rsquo; he went on aloud, toying unreproved with her
+ pretty little silver bracelet, &lsquo;let us be practical. You belong to a
+ business family and you know the necessity for being practical. There&rsquo;s
+ a great deal to be said in favour of my hanging on at Oxford a little
+ longer. I must get a situation somewhere else as soon as possible, in
+ which I can get married; but I can&rsquo;t give up my fellowship without
+ having found something else to do which would enable me to put my wife in
+ the position I should like her to occupy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A very small income would do for me, with you, Herbert,&rsquo; Selah put
+ in eagerly. &lsquo;You see, I&rsquo;ve been brought up economically
+ enough, heaven knows, and I could live extremely well on very little.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But <i>I</i> could not, Selah,&rsquo; Herbert answered, in his colder
+ tone. ‘Pardon me, but I could not. I&rsquo;ve been accustomed to a certain
+ amount of comfort, not to say luxury, which I couldn&rsquo;t readily do
+ without. And then, you know, dear,&rsquo; he added, seeing a certain cloud
+ gathering dimly on Selah&rsquo;s forehead, &lsquo;I want to make my wife a
+ real lady.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah looked at him tenderly, and gave the hand she hold in hers a faint
+ pressure. And then Herbert began to talk about the waves, and the cliffs,
+ and the sun, and the great red sails, and to quote Shelley and Swinburne;
+ and the conversation glided off into more ordinary everyday topics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They sat for a couple of hours together on the edge of the cliff, talking
+ to one another about such and other subjects, till, at last, Selah asked
+ the time, hurriedly, and declared she must go off at once, or father&rsquo;d
+ be in a tearing passion. Herbert walked back with her through the green
+ lanes in the golden mass of gorse, till he reached the brow of the hill by
+ the fisher village. Then Selah said lightly, &lsquo;Not any nearer,
+ Herbert&mdash;you see I can say Herbert quite naturally now&mdash;the
+ neighbours will go talking about it if they see me standing here with a
+ strange gentleman. Good-bye, good-bye, till Friday.&rsquo; Herbert held
+ her face up to his in his hands, and kissed her twice over in spite of a
+ faint resistance. Then they each went their own way, Selah to the little
+ green-grocer&rsquo;s shop in a back street of the red-brick fisher
+ village, and Herbert to his big fashionable hotel on the Marine Parade in
+ the noisy stuccoed modern watering place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s an awkward sort of muddle to have got oneself into.&rsquo; he
+ thought to himself as he walked along the asphalte pavement in front of
+ the sea-wall: &lsquo;a most confoundedly awkward fix to have got oneself
+ into with a pretty girl of the lower classes. She&rsquo;s beautiful
+ certainly; that there&rsquo;s no denying; the handsomest woman on the
+ whole I ever remember to have seen at any time anywhere; and when I&rsquo;m
+ actually by her side&mdash;though it&rsquo;s a weakness to confess it&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+ really not quite sure that I&rsquo;m not positively quite in love with
+ her! She&rsquo;d make a grand sort of Messalina, without a doubt, a model
+ for a painter, with her frank imperious face, and her splendid voluptuous
+ figure; a Faustina, a Catherine of Russia, an Ann Boleyn&mdash;to be fitly
+ painted only by a Rubens or a Gustave Courbet. Yet how I can ever have
+ been such a particular fool as to go and get myself entangled with her I
+ can&rsquo;t imagine. Heredity, heredity; it must run in the family, for
+ certain. There&rsquo;s Ernest has gone and handed himself over bodily to
+ this grocer person somewhere down in Devonshire; and I myself, who
+ perfectly see the folly of his absurd proceeding, have independently put
+ myself into this very similar awkward fix with Selah Briggs here. Selah
+ Briggs, indeed! The very name reeks with commingled dissent, vulgarity,
+ and greengrocery. Her father&rsquo;s deacon of his chapel, and goes out at
+ night when there&rsquo;s no missionary meeting on, to wait at serious
+ dinner parties! Or rather, I suppose he&rsquo;d desert the most enticing
+ missionary to earn a casual half-crown at even an ungodly
+ champagne-drinking dinner! Then that&rsquo;s the difference between me and
+ Ernest. Ernest&rsquo;s selfish, incurably and radically selfish. Because
+ this Oswald girl happens to take his passing fancy, and to fit in with his
+ impossible Schurzian notions, he&rsquo;ll actually go and marry her. Not
+ only will he have no consideration for mother&mdash;who really is a very
+ decent sort of body in her own fashion, if you don&rsquo;t rub her up the
+ wrong way or expect too much from her&mdash;but he&rsquo;ll also
+ interfere, without a thought, with MY prospects and my advancement. Now,
+ THAT I call really selfish; and selfishness is a vulgar piggish vice that
+ I thoroughly abominate. I don&rsquo;t deny that I&rsquo;m a trifle selfish
+ myself, of course, in a refined and cultivated manner&mdash;I flatter
+ myself, in fact, that introspective analysis is one of my strong points;
+ and I don&rsquo;t conceal my own failings from my own consciousness with
+ any weak girlish prevarications. But after all, as Hobbes very well showed
+ (though our shallow modern philosophers pretend to laugh at him),
+ selfishness in one form or another is at the very base of all human
+ motives; the difference really is between sympathetic and unsympathetic
+ selfishness&mdash;between piggishness and cultivated feelings. Now <i>I</i>
+ will NOT give way to the foolish and selfish impulses which would lead me
+ to marry Selah Briggs. I will put a curb upon my inclinations, and do what
+ is really best in the end for all the persons concerned&mdash;and for
+ myself especially.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He strolled down on to the beach, and began throwing pebbles carelessly
+ into the plashing water. &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; he went on in his internal
+ colloquy, &lsquo;I can only account for my incredible stupidity in this
+ matter by supposing that it depends somehow upon some incomprehensible
+ hereditary leaning in the Le Breton family idiosyncrasy. It&rsquo;s
+ awfully unlike me, I will do myself the justice to say, to have got myself
+ into such a silly dilemma all for nothing. It was all very well a few
+ years ago, when I first met Selah. I was an undergraduate in those days,
+ and even if somebody had caught me walking with a young lady of unknown
+ antecedents and doubtful aspirates on the East Cliff at Hastings, it
+ really wouldn&rsquo;t have much mattered. She was beautiful even then&mdash;though
+ not so beautiful as now, for she grows handsomer every day; and it was
+ natural enough I should have taken to going harmless walks about the place
+ with her. She attracted me by her social rebelliousness&mdash;another
+ family trait, in me passive not active, contemplative not personal; but
+ she certainly attracted me. She attracts me still. A man must have some
+ outlet for the natural and instinctive emotions of our common humanity;
+ and if a monastic Oxford community imposes celibacy upon one with
+ mediaeval absurdity&mdash;why, Selah Briggs is, for the time being, the
+ only possible sort of outlet. One needn&rsquo;t marry her in the end; but
+ for the moment it is certainly very excellent fooling. Not unsentimental
+ either&mdash;for my part I could never care for mere coarse, commonplace,
+ venal wretches. Indeed, when I spoke to her just now about my wishing to
+ make my wife a lady, upon my word, at the time, I almost think I was just
+ then quite in earnest. The idea flitted across my mind vaguely&mdash;&ldquo;Why
+ not send her for a year or two to be polished up at Paris or somewhere,
+ and really marry her afterwards for good and always?&rdquo; But on second
+ thoughts, it won&rsquo;t hold water. She&rsquo;s magnificent, she&rsquo;s
+ undeniable, she&rsquo;s admirable, but she isn&rsquo;t possible. The name
+ alone&rsquo;s enough to condemn her. Fancy marrying somebody with a
+ Christian name out of the hundred and somethingth psalm! It&rsquo;s too
+ atrocious! I really couldn&rsquo;t inflict her for a moment on poor
+ suffering innocent society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused awhile, watching the great russet sails of the fishing vessels
+ flapping idly in the breeze as the men raised them to catch the faint
+ breath of wind, and then he thought once more, &lsquo;But how to get rid
+ of her, that&rsquo;s the question. Every time I come here now she goes on
+ more and more about the necessity of our getting soon married&mdash;and I
+ don&rsquo;t wonder at it either, for she has a perfect purgatory of a life
+ with that snivelling Methodistical father of hers, one may be sure of it.
+ It would be awfully awkward if any Oxford people were to catch me here
+ walking with her on the cliff over yonder&mdash;some sniggering fellow of
+ Jesus or Worcester, for example, or, worse than all, some prying young
+ Pecksniff of a third-year undergraduate! Somehow, she seems to fascinate
+ me, and I can&rsquo;t get away from her; but I must really do it and be
+ done with it. It&rsquo;s no use going on this way much longer. I must stop
+ here for a few days more only, and then tell her that I&rsquo;m called
+ away on important college business, say to Yorkshire or Worcestershire, or
+ somewhere. I needn&rsquo;t tell her in person, face to face: I can write
+ hastily at the last moment to the usual name at the Post Office&mdash;to
+ be left till called for. And as a matter of fact I won&rsquo;t go to
+ Yorkshire either&mdash;very awkward and undignified, though, these petty
+ prevarications; when a man once begins lowering himself by making love to
+ a girl in an inferior position, he lets himself in for all kinds of
+ disagreeable necessities afterwards;&mdash;I shall go to Switzerland. Yes,
+ no place better after the bother of running away like a coward from Selah:
+ in the Alps, one would forget all petty human degradations; I shall go to
+ Switzerland. Of course I won&rsquo;t break off with her altogether&mdash;that
+ would be cruel; and I really like her; upon my word, even when she isn&rsquo;t
+ by, up to her own level, I really like her; but I&rsquo;ll let the thing
+ die a natural death of inanition. As they always put it in the newspapers,
+ with their stereotyped phraseology, a gradual coldness shall intervene
+ between us. That&rsquo;ll be the best and only way out of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And if I go to Switzerland, why not ask Oswald of Oriel to go with me?
+ That, I fancy, wouldn&rsquo;t be a bad stroke of social policy. Ernest
+ WILL marry this Oswald girl; unfortunately he&rsquo;s as headstrong as an
+ allegory on the banks of the Nile; and as he&rsquo;s going to drag her
+ inevitably into the family, I may as well put the best possible face upon
+ the disagreeable matter. Let&rsquo;s make a virtue of necessity. The
+ father and mother are old: they&rsquo;ll die soon, and be gathered to
+ their fathers (if they had any), and the world will straightway forget all
+ about them. But Oswald will always be there en évidence, and the safest
+ thing to do will be to take him as much as possible into the world, and
+ let the sister rest upon HIS reputation for her place in society. It&rsquo;s
+ quite one thing to say that Ernest has married the daughter of a country
+ grocer down in Devonshire, and quite another thing to say that he has
+ married the sister of Oswald of Oriel, the distinguished mathematician and
+ fellow of the Royal Society. How beautifully that warm brown sail stands
+ out in a curve against the cold grey line of the horizon&mdash;a bulging
+ curve just like the swell of Selah&rsquo;s neck, when she throws her head
+ back, so, and lets you see the contour of her throat, her beautiful
+ rounded throat&mdash;ah, that&rsquo;s not giving her up now, is it?&mdash;What
+ a confounded fool I am, to be sure! Anybody would say, if they could only
+ have read my thoughts that moment, that I was really in love with this
+ girl Selah!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA!
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The old Englischer Hof at Pontresina looked decidedly sleepy and misty at
+ five o&rsquo;clock on an August morning, when two sturdy British
+ holiday-seekers, in knickerbockers and regular Alpine climbing rig, sat
+ drinking their parting cup of coffee in the salle-à-manger, before
+ starting to make the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, one of the tallest and
+ by far the most difficult among the peaks of the Bernina range. There are
+ few prettier villages in the Engadine than Pontresina, and few better
+ hotels in all Switzerland than the old ivy-covered Englischer Hof. Yet on
+ this particular morning, and at that particular hour, it certainly did
+ look just a trifle cold and cheerless. &lsquo;He never makes very warm in
+ the Engadine,&rsquo; Carlo the waiter observed with a shudder, in his best
+ English, to one of the two early risers: &lsquo;and he makes colder on an
+ August morning here than he makes at Nice in full December.&rsquo; For
+ poor Carlo was one of those cosmopolitan waiters who follow the
+ cosmopolitan tourist clientèle round all the spas, health resorts, kurs
+ and winter quarters of fashionable Europe. In January he and his brother,
+ as Charles and Henri, handed round absinthes and cigarettes at the Cercle
+ Nautique at Nice; in April, as Carlo and Enrico, they turned up again with
+ water ices and wafer cakes in the Caffè Manzoni at Milan; and in August,
+ the observant traveller might recognise them once more under the disguise
+ of Karl and Heinrich, laying the table d&rsquo;hôte in the long and narrow
+ old-fashioned dining-room of the Englischer Hof at Pontresina. Though
+ their native tongue was the patois of the Canton Ticino, they spoke all
+ the civilised languages of the world, &lsquo;and also German,&rsquo; with
+ perfect fluency, and without the slightest attempt at either grammar or
+ idiomatic accuracy. And they both profoundly believed in their hearts that
+ the rank, wealth, youth, beauty and fashion of all other nations were
+ wisely ordained by the inscrutable designs of Providence for a single
+ purpose, to enrich and reward the active, intelligent, and industrious
+ natives of the Canton Ticino.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Are the guides come yet?&rsquo; asked Harry Oswald of the waiter in
+ somewhat feeble and hesitating German. He made it a point to speak German
+ to the waiters, because he regarded it as the only proper and national
+ language of the universal Teutonic Swiss people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They await the gentlemans in the corridor,&rsquo; answered Carlo, in his
+ own peculiar and racy English; for he on his side resented the imputation
+ that any traveller need ever converse with him in any but that traveller&rsquo;s
+ own tongue, provided only it was one of the recognised and civilised
+ languages of the world, or even German. They are a barbarous and
+ disgusting race, those Tedeschi, look you well, Signor; they address you
+ as though you were the dust in the piazza; yet even from them a polite and
+ attentive person may confidently look for a modest, a very modest, but
+ still a welcome trink-geld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then we&rsquo;d better hurry up, Oswald,&rsquo; said Herbert Le Breton,
+ &lsquo;for guides are the most tyrannical set of people on the entire face
+ of this planet. I shall have another cup of coffee before I go, though, if
+ the guides swear at me roundly in the best Roumansch for it, anyhow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Your acquaintance with the Roumansch dialect being probably limited,&rsquo;
+ Harry Oswald answered, &lsquo;the difference between their swearing and
+ their blessing would doubtless be reduced to a vanishing point. Though I&rsquo;ve
+ noticed that swearing is really a form of human speech everywhere readily
+ understanded of the people in spite of all differences of race or
+ language. One touch of nature, you see; and swearing, after all, is
+ extremely natural.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Are you ready?&rsquo; asked Herbert, having tossed off his coffee. ‘Yes?
+ Then come along at once. I can feel the guides frowning at us through the
+ partition.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned out into the street, with its green-shuttered windows all
+ still closed in the pale grey of early morning, and walked along with the
+ three guides by the high road which leads through rocks and fir-trees up
+ to the beginning of the steep path to the Piz Margatsch. Passing the clear
+ emerald-green waterfall that rushes from under the lower melting end of
+ the Morteratsch glacier, they took at once to the narrow track by the
+ moraine along the edge of the ice, and then to the glacier itself, which
+ is easy enough climbing, as glaciers go, for a good pedestrian. Herbert Le
+ Breton, the older mountaineer of the two, got over the big blocks readily
+ enough; but Harry, less accustomed to Swiss expeditions, lagged and
+ loitered behind a little, and required more assistance from the guides
+ every now and again than his sturdy companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m getting rather blown at starting,&rsquo; Harry called out at
+ last to Herbert, some yards in front of him. &lsquo;Do you think the
+ despotic guide would let us sit down and rest a bit if we asked him very
+ prettily?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Offer him a cigar first,&rsquo; Herbert shouted back, &lsquo;and then
+ after a short and decent interval, prefer your request humbly in your
+ politest French. The savage potentate always expects to be propitiated by
+ gifts, as a preliminary to answering the petitions of his humble subjects.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I see,&rsquo; Harry said, laughing. &lsquo;Supply before grievances, not
+ grievances before supply.&rsquo; And he halted a moment to light a cigar,
+ and to offer one to each of the two guides who were helping him along on
+ either side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus mollified, the senior guide grudgingly allowed ten minutes&rsquo;
+ halt and a drink of water at the bend by the corner of the glacier. They
+ sat down upon the great translucent sea-green blocks and began talking
+ with the taciturn chief guide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Is this glacier dangerous?&rsquo; Harry asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dangerous, monsieur? Oh no, not as one counts glaciers. It is very safe.
+ There are seldom accidents.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But there have been some?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Some, naturally. You don&rsquo;t climb mountains always without
+ accidents. There was one the first time anyone ever made the ascent of the
+ Piz Margatsch. That was fifty years ago. My uncle was killed in it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Killed in it?&rsquo; Harry echoed. &lsquo;How did it all happen, and
+ where?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yonder, monsieur, in a crevasse that was then situated near the bend at
+ the corner, just where the great crevasse you see before you now stands.
+ That was fifty years ago; since then the glacier has moved much. Its
+ substance, in effect, has changed entirely.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Tell us all about it,&rsquo; Herbert put in carelessly. He knew the guide
+ wouldn&rsquo;t go on again till he had finished his whole story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s a strange tale,&rsquo; the guide answered, taking a puff or
+ two at his cigar pensively and then removing it altogether for his set
+ narrative&mdash;he had told the tale before a hundred times, and he had
+ the very words of it now regularly by heart. &lsquo;It was the first time
+ anyone ever tried to climb the Piz Margatsch. At that time, nobody in the
+ valley knew the best path; it is my father who afterwards discovered it.
+ Two English gentlemen came to Pontresina one morning; one might say you
+ two gentlemen; but in those days there were not many tourists in the
+ Engadine; the exploitation of the tourist had not yet begun to be
+ developed. My father and my uncle were then the only two guides at
+ Pontresina. The English gentlemen asked them to try with them the scaling
+ of the Piz Margatsch. My uncle was afraid of it, but my father laughed
+ down his fears. So they started. My uncle was dressed in a blue coat with
+ brass buttons, and a pair of brown velvet breeches. Ah, heaven, I can see
+ him yet, his white corpse in the blue coat and the brown velvet breeches!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But you can&rsquo;t be fifty yourself,&rsquo; Harry said, looking at the
+ tall long-limbed man attentively; &lsquo;no, nor forty, nor thirty either.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, monsieur, I am twenty-seven,&rsquo; the chief guide answered, taking
+ another puff at his cigar very deliberately; &lsquo;and this was fifty
+ years ago: yet I have seen his corpse just as the accident happened. You
+ shall hear all about it. It is a tale from the dead; it is worth hearing.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘This begins to grow mysterious,&rsquo; said Herbert in English, hammering
+ impatiently at the ice with the shod end of his alpenstock. &lsquo;Sounds
+ for all the world just like the introduction to a Christmas number.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A young girl in the village loved my uncle,&rsquo; the guide went on
+ imperturbably; &lsquo;and she begged him not to go on this expedition. She
+ was betrothed to him. But he wouldn&rsquo;t listen: and they all started
+ together for the top of the Piz Margatsch. After many trials, my father
+ and my uncle and the two tourists reached the summit. &ldquo;So you see,
+ Andreas,&rdquo; said my father, &ldquo;your fears were all folly.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Half-way through the forest,&rdquo; said my uncle, &ldquo;one is
+ not yet safe from the wolf.&rdquo; Then they began to descend again. They
+ got down past all the dangerous places, and on to this glacier, so well
+ known, so familiar. And then my uncle began indeed to get careless. He
+ laughed at his own fears; &ldquo;Cathrein was all wrong,&rdquo; he said to
+ my father, &ldquo;we shall get down again safely, with Our Lady&rsquo;s
+ assistance.&rdquo; So they reached at last the great crevasse. My father
+ and one of the Englishmen got over without difficulty; but the other
+ Englishman slipped; his footing failed him; and he was sinking, sinking,
+ down, down, down, slipping quickly into the deep dark green abyss below.
+ My uncle stretched out his hand over the edge: the Englishman caught it;
+ and then my uncle missed his foothold, they both fell together and were
+ lost to sight at once completely, in the invisible depths of the great
+ glacier!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well,&rsquo; Herbert Le Breton said, as the man paused a moment. &lsquo;Is
+ that all?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No,&rsquo; the guide answered, with a tone of deep solemnity. &lsquo;That
+ is not all. The glacier went on moving, moving, slowly, slowly, but always
+ downward, for years and years. Yet no one ever heard anything more of the
+ two lost bodies. At last one day, when I was seven years old, I went out
+ playing with my brother, among the pine-woods, near the waterfall that
+ rushes below there, from under the glacier. We saw something lying in the
+ ice-cold water, just beneath the bottom of the ice-sheet. We climbed over
+ the moraine; and there, oh heaven! we could see two dead bodies. They were
+ drowned, just drowned, we thought: it might have been yesterday. One of
+ them was short and thick-set, with the face of an Englishman: he was
+ close-shaven, and, what seemed odd to us, he had on clothes which, though
+ we were but children, we knew at once for the clothes of a long past
+ fashion&mdash;in fact, a suit of the Louis dix-huit style. Tha other was a
+ tall and handsome man, dressed in the unchangeable blue coat and brown
+ velvet breeches of our own canton, of the Graubunden. We were very
+ frightened about it, and so we ran away trembling and told an old woman
+ who lived close by; her name was Cathrein, and her grandchildren used to
+ play with us, though she herself was about the age of my father, for my
+ father married very late. Old Cathrein came out with us to look; and the
+ moment she saw the bodies, she cried out with a great cry, &ldquo;It is
+ he! It is Andreas! It is my betrothed, who was lost on the very day week
+ when I was to be married. I should know him at once among ten thousand. It
+ is many, many years now, but I have not forgotten his face&mdash;ah, my
+ God, that face; I know it well!&rdquo; And she took his hand in hers, that
+ fair white young hand in her own old brown withered one, and kissed it
+ gently. &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he is five years older
+ than me, this fair young man here; five years older than me!&rdquo; We
+ were frightened to hear her talk so, for we said to ourselves, &ldquo;She
+ must be mad;&rdquo; so we ran home and brought our father. He looked at
+ the dead bodies and at old Cathrein, and he said, &ldquo;It is indeed
+ true. He is my brother.&rdquo; Ah, monsieur, you would not have forgotten
+ it if you had seen those two old people standing there beside the fresh
+ corpses they had not seen for all those winters! They themselves had
+ meanwhile grown old and grey and wrinkled; but the ice of the glacier had
+ kept those others young, and fresh, and fair, and beautiful as on the day
+ they were first engulfed in it. It was terrible to look at!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A most ghastly story, indeed,&rsquo; Herbert Le Breton said, yawning;
+ ‘and now I think we&rsquo;d better be getting under way again, hadn&rsquo;t
+ we, Oswald?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harry Oswald rose from his seat on the block of ice unwillingly, and
+ proceeded on his road up the mountain with a distinct and decided feeling
+ of nervousness. Was it the guide&rsquo;s story that made his knees tremble
+ slightly? was it his own inexperience in climbing? or was it the cold and
+ the fatigue of the first ascent of the season to a man not yet in full
+ pedestrian Alpine training? He did not feel at all sure about it in his
+ own mind: but this much he knew with perfect certainty, that his footing
+ was not nearly so secure under him as it had been during the earlier part
+ of the climb over the lower end of the glacier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By-and-by they reached the long sheer snowy slope near the Three Brothers.
+ This slope is liable to slip, and requires careful walking, so the guides
+ began roping them together. &lsquo;The stout monsieur in front, next after
+ me,&rsquo; said the chief guide, knotting the rope soundly round Herbert
+ Le Breton: &lsquo;then Kaspar; then you, monsieur,&rsquo; to Harry Oswald,
+ &lsquo;and finally Paolo, to bring up the rear. The thin monsieur is
+ nervous, I think; it&rsquo;s best to place him most in the middle.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If you really ARE nervous, Oswald,&rsquo; Herbert said, not unkindly,
+ ‘you&rsquo;d better stop behind, I think, and let me go on with two of the
+ guides. The really hard work, you know, has scarcely begun yet.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh dear, no,&rsquo; Harry answered lightly (he didn&rsquo;t care to
+ confess his timidity before Herbert Le Breton of all men in the world):
+ &lsquo;I do feel just a little groggy about the knees, I admit; but it&rsquo;s
+ not nervousness, it&rsquo;s only want of training. I haven&rsquo;t got
+ accustomed to glacier-work yet, and the best way to overcome it is by
+ constant practice. &ldquo;Solvitur ambulando,&rdquo; you know, as Aldrich
+ says about Achilles and the tortoise.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very good,&rsquo; Herbert answered drily; &lsquo;only mind, whatever you
+ do, for Heaven&rsquo;s sake don&rsquo;t go and stumble and pull ME down on
+ the top of you. It&rsquo;s the clear duty of a good citizen to respect the
+ lives of the other men who are roped together with him on the side of a
+ mountain.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They set to work again, in single file, with cautious steps planted firmly
+ on the treacherous snow, to scale the great white slope that stretched so
+ temptingly before them. Harry felt his knees becoming at every step more
+ and more ungovernable, while Herbert didn&rsquo;t improve matters by
+ calling out to him from time to time, &lsquo;Now, then, look out for a
+ hard bit here,&rsquo; or &lsquo;Mind that loose piece of ice there,&rsquo;
+ or &lsquo;Be very careful how you put your foot down by the yielding edge
+ yonder,&rsquo; and so forth. At last, they had almost reached the top of
+ the slope, and were just above the bare gulley on the side, when Harry&rsquo;s
+ insecure footing on a stray scrap of ice gave way suddenly, and he began
+ to slip rapidly down the sheer slope of the mountain. In a second he had
+ knocked against Paolo, and Paolo had begun to slip too, so that both were
+ pulling with all their weight against Kaspar and the others in front.
+ &lsquo;For Heaven&rsquo;s sake, man,&rsquo; Herbert cried hastily, &lsquo;dig
+ your alpenstock deep into the snow.&rsquo; At the same instant, the chief
+ guide shouted in Roumansch to the same effect to Kaspar. But even as they
+ spoke, Kaspar, pushing his feet hard against the snow, began to give way
+ too; and the whole party seemed about to slip together down over the sheer
+ rocky precipice of the great gulley on the right. It was a moment of
+ supreme anxiety; but Herbert Le Breton, looking back with blood almost
+ unstirred and calmly observant eye, saw at once the full scope of the
+ threatening danger. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s only one chance,&rsquo; he said
+ to himself quietly. &lsquo;Oswald is lost already! Unless the rope breaks,
+ we are all lost together!&rsquo; At that very second, Harry Oswald,
+ throwing his arms up wildly, had reached the edge of the terrible
+ precipice; he went over with a piercing cry into the abyss, with the last
+ guide beside him, and Kaspar following him close in mute terror. Then
+ Herbert Le Breton felt the rope straining, straining, straining, upon the
+ sharp frozen edge of the rock; for an inappreciable point of time it
+ strained and crackled: one loud snap, and it was gone for ever. Herbert
+ and the chief guide, almost upset by the sudden release from the heavy
+ pull that was steadily dragging them over, threw themselves flat on their
+ faces in the drifted snow, and checked their fall by a powerful muscular
+ effort. The rope was broken and their lives were saved, but what had
+ become of the three others?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They crept cautiously on hands and knees to the most practicable spot at
+ the edge of the precipice, and the guide peered over into the great white
+ blank below with eager eyes of horrid premonition. As he did so, he
+ recoiled with awe, and made a rapid gesture with his hands, half prayer,
+ half speechless terror. &lsquo;What do you see?&rsquo; asked Herbert, not
+ daring himself to look down upon the blank beneath him, lest he should be
+ tempted to throw himself over in a giddy moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Jesu, Maria,&rsquo; cried the guide, crossing himself instinctively over
+ and over again, &lsquo;they have all fallen to the very foot of the second
+ precipice! They are lying, all three, huddled together on the ledge there
+ just above the great glacier. They are dead, quite dead, dead before they
+ reached the ground even. Great God, it is too terrible!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert Le Breton looked at the white-faced guide with just the faintest
+ suspicion of a sneering curl upon his handsome features. The excitement of
+ the danger was over now, and he had at once recovered his usual
+ philosophic equanimity. &lsquo;Quite dead,&rsquo; he said, in French,
+ &lsquo;quite dead, are they? Then we can&rsquo;t be of any further use to
+ them. But I suppose we must go down again at once to help recover the dead
+ bodies!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guide gazed at him blankly with simple open-mouthed undisguised
+ amazement. &lsquo;Naturally,&rsquo; he said, in a very quiet voice of
+ utter disgust and loathing. &lsquo;You wouldn&rsquo;t leave them lying
+ there alone on the cold snow, would you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘This is really most annoying,&rsquo; thought Herbert Le Breton to
+ himself, in his rational philosophic fashion: &lsquo;here we are, almost
+ at the summit, and now we shall have to turn back again from the very
+ threshold of our goal, without having seen the view for which we&rsquo;ve
+ climbed up, and risked our lives too&mdash;all for a purely sentimental
+ reason, because we won&rsquo;t leave those three dead men alone on the
+ snow for an hour or two longer! it&rsquo;s a very short climb to the top
+ now, and I could manage it by myself in twenty minutes. If only the chief
+ guide had slid over with the others, I should have gone on alone, and had
+ the view at least for my trouble. I could have pretended the accident
+ happened on the way down again. As it is, I shall have to turn back
+ ingloriously, re infecta. The guide will tell everybody at Pontresina that
+ I went on, in spite of the accident; and then it would get into the
+ English papers, and all the world would say that I was so dreadfully cruel
+ and heartless. People are always so irrational in their ethical judgments.
+ Oswald&rsquo;s quite dead, that&rsquo;s certain; nobody could fall over
+ such a precipice as that without being killed a dozen times over before he
+ even reached the bottom. A very painless and easy death too; I couldn&rsquo;t
+ myself wish for a better one. We can&rsquo;t do them the slightest good by
+ picking up their lifeless bodies, and yet a foolishly sentimental public
+ opinion positively compels one to do it. Poor Oswald! Upon my soul I&rsquo;m
+ sorry for him, and for that pretty little sister of his too; but what&rsquo;s
+ the use of bothering about it? The thing&rsquo;s done, and nothing that I
+ can do or say will ever make it any better.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they turned once more in single file down by the great glacier, and
+ retraced their way to Pontresina without exchanging another word. To say
+ the truth, the chief guide felt appalled and frightened by the presence of
+ this impassive, unemotional British traveller, and did not even care to
+ conceal his feelings. But then he wasn&rsquo;t an educated philosopher and
+ man of culture like Herbert Le Breton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late that evening a party of twelve villagers brought back three stiff and
+ mangled corpses on loose cattle hurdles into the village of Pontresina.
+ Two of them were the bodies of two local Swiss guides, and the third, with
+ its delicate face unscathed by the fall, and turned calmly upwards to the
+ clear moonlight, was the body of Harry Oswald. Alas, alas, Gilboa! The
+ beauty of Israel is slain upon thy high places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; &lsquo;WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS HERE?&rsquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From Calcombe Pomeroy Ernest had returned, not to Dunbude, but to meet the
+ Exmoor party in London. There he had managed somehow&mdash;he hardly knew
+ how himself&mdash;to live through a whole season without an explosion in
+ his employer&rsquo;s family. That an explosion must come, sooner or later,
+ he felt pretty sure in his own mind for several reasons: his whole
+ existence there was a mistake and an anomaly, and he could no more mix in
+ the end with the Exmoor family than oil can mix with vinegar, or vice
+ versâ. The round of dances and dinners to which he had to accompany his
+ pupil was utterly distasteful to him. Lynmouth never learnt anything; so
+ Ernest felt his own function in the household a perfectly useless one; and
+ he was always on the eve of a declaration that he couldn&rsquo;t any
+ longer put up with this, that, or the other &lsquo;gross immorality&rsquo;
+ in which Lynmouth was actively or passively encouraged by his father and
+ mother. Still, there were two things which indefinitely postponed the
+ smouldering outbreak. In the first place, Ernest wrote to, and heard from,
+ Edie every day; and he believed he ought for Edie&rsquo;s sake to give the
+ situation a fair trial, as long as he was able, or at least till he saw
+ some other opening, which might make it possible within some reasonable
+ period to marry her. In the second place, Lady Hilda had perceived with
+ her intuitive quickness the probability that a cause of dispute might
+ arise between her father and Ernest, and had made up her mind as far as in
+ her lay to prevent its ever coming to a head. She didn&rsquo;t wish Ernest
+ to leave his post in the household&mdash;so much originality was hardly
+ again to be secured in a hurry&mdash;and therefore she laid herself out
+ with all her ingenuity to smooth over all the possible openings for a
+ difference of opinion whenever they occurred. If Ernest&rsquo;s scruples
+ were getting the upper hand of his calmer judgment, Lady Hilda read the
+ change in his face at once, and managed dexterously to draw off Lynmouth,
+ or to talk over her mother quietly to acquiesce in Ernest&rsquo;s view of
+ the question. If Lord Exmoor was beginning to think that this young man&rsquo;s
+ confounded fads were really getting quite unbearable, Lady Hilda
+ interposed some casual remark about how much better Lynmouth was kept out
+ of the way now than he used to be in Mr. Walsh&rsquo;s time. Ernest
+ himself never even suspected this unobtrusive diplomatist and peacemaker;
+ but as a matter of fact it was mainly owing to Lady Hilda&rsquo;s constant
+ interposition that he contrived to stop in Wilton Place through all that
+ dreary and penitential London season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, to Ernest&rsquo;s intense joy, the season began to show
+ premonitory symptoms of collapsing from inanition. The twelfth of August
+ was drawing nigh, and the coming-of-age of grouse, that most important of
+ annual events in the orthodox British social calendar, would soon set free
+ Lord Exmoor and his brother hereditary legislators from their arduous duty
+ of acting as constitutional drag on the general advance of a great,
+ tolerant, and easy-going nation. Soon the family would be off again to
+ Dunbude, or away to its other moors in Scotland; and among the rocks and
+ the heather Ernest felt he could endure Lord Exmoor and Lord Lynmouth a
+ little more resignedly than among the reiterated polite platitudes and
+ monotonous gaieties of the vacuous London drawing-rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda, too, was longing in her own way for the season to be over. She
+ had gone through another of them, thank goodness, she said to herself at
+ times with a rare tinge of pensiveness, only to discover that the Hughs,
+ and the Guys, and the Algies, and the Montys were just as fatuously inane
+ as ever; and were just as anxious as before to make her share their
+ fatuous inanity for a whole lifetime. Only fancy living with an
+ unadulterated Monty from the time you were twenty to the time you were
+ seventy-five&mdash;at which latter date he, being doubtless some five
+ years older than one-self to begin with, would probably drop off quietly
+ with suppressed gout, and leave you a mourning widow to deplore his
+ untimely and lamented extinction for the rest of your existence! Why, long
+ before that time you would have got to know his very thoughts by heart (if
+ he had any, poor fellow!) and would be able to finish all his sentences
+ and eke out all his stories for him, the moment he began them. Much better
+ marry a respectable pork-butcher outright, and have at least the healthful
+ exercise of chopping sausage-meat to fill up the stray gaps in the
+ conversation. In that condition of life, they say, people are at any rate
+ perfectly safe from the terrors of ennui. However, the season was over at
+ last, thank Heaven; and in a week or so more they would be at dear old
+ ugly Dunbude again for the whole winter. There Hilda would go sketching
+ once more on the moorland, and if this time she didn&rsquo;t make that
+ stupid fellow Ernest see what she was driving at, why, then her name
+ certainly wasn&rsquo;t Hilda Tregellis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A day or two before the legal period fixed for the beginning of the
+ general grouse-slaughter, Ernest was sitting reading in the breakfast room
+ at Wilton Place, when Lynmouth burst unexpectedly into the room in his
+ usual boisterous fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, I say, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; he began, holding the door in his hand
+ like one in a hurry, &lsquo;I want leave to miss work this morning. Gerald
+ Talfourd has called for me in his dog-cart, and wants me to go out with
+ him now immediately.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not to-day, Lynmouth,&rsquo; Ernest answered quietly. &lsquo;You were out
+ twice last week, you know, and you hardly ever get your full hours for
+ work at all since we came to London.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, but look here, you know, Mr. Le Breton; I really MUST go to-day,
+ because Talfourd has made an appointment for me. It&rsquo;s awful fun&mdash;he&rsquo;s
+ going to have some pigeon-shooting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest&rsquo;s countenance fell a little, and he answered in a graver
+ voice than before, &lsquo;If that&rsquo;s what you want to go for,
+ Lynmouth, I certainly can&rsquo;t let you go. You shall never have leave
+ from me to go pigeon-shooting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why not?&rsquo; Lynmouth asked, still holding the door-handle at the most
+ significant angle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Because it&rsquo;s a cruel and brutal sport,&rsquo; Ernest replied,
+ looking him in the face steadily; &lsquo;and as long as you&rsquo;re under
+ my charge I can&rsquo;t allow you to take part in it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, you can&rsquo;t,&rsquo; said Lynmouth mischievously, with a gentle
+ touch of satire in his tone. &lsquo;You can&rsquo;t, can&rsquo;t you! Very
+ well, then, never mind about it.&rsquo; And he shut the door after him
+ with a bang, and ran off upstairs without further remonstrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s time for study, Lynmouth,&rsquo; Ernest called out, opening
+ the door and speaking to him as he retreated. &lsquo;Come down again at
+ once, please, will you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lynmouth made no answer, and went straight off upstairs to the
+ drawing-room. In a few minutes more he came back, and said in a tone of
+ suppressed triumph, &lsquo;Well, Mr. Le Breton, I&rsquo;m going with
+ Talfourd. I&rsquo;ve been up to papa, and he says I may &ldquo;if I like
+ to.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest bit his lip in a moment&rsquo;s hesitation. If it had been any
+ ordinary question, he would have pocketed the contradiction of his
+ authority&mdash;after all, if it didn&rsquo;t matter to them, it didn&rsquo;t
+ matter to him&mdash;and let Lynmouth go wherever they allowed him. But the
+ pigeon-shooting was a question of principle. As long as the boy was still
+ nominally his pupil, he couldn&rsquo;t allow him to take any part in any
+ such wicked and brutal amusement, as he thought it. So he answered back
+ quietly, &lsquo;No, Lynmouth, you are not to go. I don&rsquo;t think your
+ father can have understood that I had forbidden you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh!&rsquo; Lynmouth said again, without a word of remonstrance, and went
+ up a second time to the drawing-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few minutes a servant came down and spoke to Ernest. &lsquo;My lord
+ would like to see you upstairs for a few minutes, if you please, sir.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest followed the man up with a vague foreboding that the deferred
+ explosion was at last about to take place. Lord Exmoor was sitting on the
+ sofa. &lsquo;Oh, I say, Le Breton,&rsquo; he began in his good-humoured
+ way, &lsquo;what&rsquo;s this that Lynmouth&rsquo;s been telling me about
+ the pigeon-shooting? He says you won&rsquo;t let him go out with Gerald
+ Talfourd.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes,&rsquo; Ernest answered; &lsquo;he wanted to miss his morning&rsquo;s
+ work, and I told him I couldn&rsquo;t allow him to do so.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But I said he might if he liked, Le Breton. Young Talfourd has called for
+ him to go pigeon-shooting. And now Lynmouth tells me you refuse to let him
+ go, after I&rsquo;ve given him leave. Is that so?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Certainly,&rsquo; said Ernest. &lsquo;I said he couldn&rsquo;t go,
+ because before he asked you I had refused him permission, and I supposed
+ you didn&rsquo;t know he was asking you to reverse my decision.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, of course,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor answered, for he was not an
+ unreasonable man after his lights. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re quite right, Le
+ Breton, quite right, certainly. Discipline&rsquo;s discipline, we all
+ know, and must be kept up under any circumstances. You should have told
+ me, Lynmouth, that Mr. Le Breton had forbidden you to go. However, as
+ young Talfourd has made the engagement, I suppose you don&rsquo;t mind
+ letting him have a holiday now, at my request, Le Breton, do you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a dilemma indeed for Ernest. He hardly knew what to answer. He
+ looked by chance at Lady Hilda, seated on the ottoman in the corner; and
+ Lady Hilda, catching his eye, pursed up her lips visibly into the one
+ word, &lsquo;Do.&rsquo; But Ernest was inexorable. If he could possibly
+ prevent it, he would not let those innocent pigeons be mangled and
+ slaughtered for a lazy boy&rsquo;s cruel gratification. That was the one
+ clear duty before him; and whether he offended Lord Exmoor or not, he had
+ no choice save to pursue it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, Lord Exmoor,&rsquo; he said resolutely, after a long pause. &lsquo;I
+ should have no objection to giving him a holiday, but I can&rsquo;t allow
+ him to go pigeon-shooting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why not?&rsquo; asked Lord Exmoor warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest did not answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He says it&rsquo;s a cruel, brutal sport, papa,&rsquo; Lynmouth put in
+ parenthetically, in spite of an angry glance from Hilda; &lsquo;and he won&rsquo;t
+ let me go while I&rsquo;m his pupil.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s face grew very red indeed, and he rose from the sofa
+ angrily. &lsquo;So that&rsquo;s it, Mr. Le Breton!&rsquo; he said, in a
+ short sharp fashion. &lsquo;You think pigeon-shooting cruel and brutal, do
+ you? Will you have the goodness to tell me, sir, do you know that I myself
+ am in the habit of shooting pigeons at matches?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes,&rsquo; Ernest answered, without flinching a muscle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes!&rsquo; cried Lord Exmoor, growing redder and redder. &lsquo;You knew
+ that, Mr. Le Breton, and yet you told my son you considered the practice
+ brutal and cruel! Is that the way you teach him to honour his parents? Who
+ are you, sir, that you dare set yourself up as a judge of me and my
+ conduct? How dare you speak to him of his father in that manner? How dare
+ you stir him up to disobedience and insubordination against his elders?
+ How dare you, sir; how dare you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest&rsquo;s face began to get red in return, and he answered with
+ unwonted heat, &lsquo;How dare you address me so, yourself, Lord Exmoor?
+ How dare you speak to me in that imperious manner? You&rsquo;re forgetting
+ yourself, I think, and I had better leave you for the present, till you
+ remember how to be more careful in your language. But Lynmouth is not to
+ go pigeon-shooting. I object to his going, because the sport is a cruel
+ and a brutal one, whoever may practise it. If I have any authority over
+ him, I insist upon it that he shall not go. If he goes, I shall not stop
+ here any longer. You can do as you like about it, of course, but you have
+ my final word upon the matter. Lynmouth, go down to the study.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Stop, Lynmouth,&rsquo; cried his father, boiling over visibly with
+ indignation: &lsquo;Stop. Never mind what Mr. Le Breton says to you; do
+ you hear me? Go out if you choose with Gerald Talfourd.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lynmouth didn&rsquo;t wait a moment for any further permission. He ran
+ downstairs at once and banged the front door soundly after him with a
+ resounding clatter. Lady Hilda looked imploringly at Ernest, and whispered
+ half audibly, &lsquo;Now you&rsquo;ve done it.&rsquo; Ernest stood a
+ second irresolute, while the Earl tramped angrily up and down the
+ drawing-room, and then he said in a calmer voice, &lsquo;When would it be
+ convenient, Lord Exmoor, that I should leave you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Whenever you like,&rsquo; Lord Exmoor answered violently. &lsquo;To-day
+ if you can manage to get your things together. This is intolerable,
+ absolutely intolerable! Gross and palpable impertinence; in my own house,
+ too! &ldquo;Cruel and brutal,&rdquo; indeed! &ldquo;Cruel and brutal.&rdquo;
+ Fiddlesticks! Why, it&rsquo;s not a bit different from partridge-shooting!&rsquo;
+ And he went out, closely followed by Ernest, leaving Lady Hilda alone and
+ frightened in the drawing-room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest ran lightly upstairs to his own little study sitting-room. ‘I&rsquo;ve
+ done it this time, certainly, as Lady Hilda said,&rsquo; he thought to
+ himself; &lsquo;but I don&rsquo;t see how I could possibly have avoided
+ it. Even now, when all&rsquo;s done, I haven&rsquo;t succeeded in saving
+ the lives of the poor innocent tortured pigeons. They&rsquo;ll be mangled
+ and hunted for their poor frightened lives, anyhow. Well, now I must look
+ out for that imaginary schoolmastership, and see what I can do for dear
+ Edie. I shan&rsquo;t be sorry to get out of this after all, for the place
+ was an impossible one for me from the very beginning. I shall sit down
+ this moment and write to Edie, and after that I shall take out my
+ portmanteau and get the man to help me put my luggage up to go away this
+ very evening. Another day in the house after this would be obviously
+ impossible.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment there came a knock at the door&mdash;a timid, tentative
+ sort of knock, and somebody put her head inquiringly halfway through the
+ doorway. Ernest looked up in sudden surprise. It was Lady Hilda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she said, coming over towards the table where
+ Ernest had just laid out his blotting-book and writing-paper: &lsquo;I
+ couldn&rsquo;t prevent myself from coming up to tell you how much I admire
+ your conduct in standing up so against papa for what you thought was right
+ and proper. I can&rsquo;t say how greatly I admire it. I&rsquo;m so glad
+ you did as you did do. You have acted nobly.&rsquo; And Hilda looked
+ straight into his eyes with the most speaking and most melting of glances.
+ &lsquo;Now,&rsquo; she said to herself, &lsquo;according to all correct
+ precedents, he ought to seize my hand fervently with a gentle pressure,
+ and thank me with tears in his eyes for my kind sympathy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Ernest, only looking puzzled and astonished, answered in the quietest
+ of voices, &lsquo;Thank you very much, Lady Hilda: but I assure you there
+ was really nothing at all noble, nothing at all to admire, in what I said
+ or did in any way. In fact, I&rsquo;m rather afraid, now I come to think
+ of it, that I lost my temper with your father dreadfully.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you won&rsquo;t go away?&rsquo; Hilda put in quickly. &lsquo;You
+ think better of it now, do you? You&rsquo;ll apologise to papa, and go
+ with us to Dunbude for the autumn? Do say you will, please, Mr. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh dear, no,&rsquo; Ernest answered, smiling quietly at the bare idea of
+ his apologising to Lord Exmoor. &lsquo;I certainly won&rsquo;t do that,
+ whatever I do. To tell you the truth, Lady Hilda, I have not been very
+ anxious to stop with Lynmouth all along: I&rsquo;ve found it a most
+ unprofitable tutorship&mdash;no sense of any duty performed, or any work
+ done for society: and I&rsquo;m not at all sorry that this accident should
+ have broken up the engagement unexpectedly. At the same time, it&rsquo;s
+ very kind of you to come up and speak to me about it, though I&rsquo;m
+ really quite ashamed you should have thought there was anything
+ particularly praiseworthy or commendable in my standing out against such
+ an obviously cruel sport as pigeon-shooting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, but I do think so, whatever you may say, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Hilda
+ went on eagerly. &lsquo;I do think so, and I think it was very good of you
+ to fight it out so against papa for what you believe is right and proper.
+ For my own part, you know, I don&rsquo;t see any particular harm in
+ pigeon-shooting. Of course it&rsquo;s very dreadful that the poor dear
+ little things should be shot and wounded and winged and so forth; but then
+ everything, almost, gets shot, you see&mdash;rabbits, and grouse, and
+ partridges, and everything; so that really it&rsquo;s hardly worth while,
+ it seems to me, making a fuss about it. Still, that&rsquo;s not the real
+ question. You think it&rsquo;s wrong; which is very original and nice and
+ proper of you; and as you think it&rsquo;s wrong, you won&rsquo;t
+ countenance it in any way. I don&rsquo;t care, myself, whether it&rsquo;s
+ wrong or not&mdash;I&rsquo;m not called upon, thank goodness, to decide
+ the question; but I do care very much that you should suffer for what you
+ think the right course of action.&rsquo; And Lady Hilda in her earnestness
+ almost laid her hand upon his arm, and looked up to him in the most
+ unmistakable and appealing fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re very good, I&rsquo;m sure, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; Ernest
+ replied, half hesitatingly, wondering much in his own mind what on earth
+ she could be driving at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a moment&rsquo;s pause, and then Hilda said pensively, &lsquo;And
+ so we shall never walk together at Dunbude on the Clatter any more, Mr. Le
+ Breton! We shall never climb again among the big boulders on those
+ Devonshire hillsides! We shall never watch the red deer from the big pool
+ on top of the sheep-walk! I&rsquo;m sorry for it, Mr. Le Breton, very
+ sorry for it. Oh, I do wish you weren&rsquo;t going to leave us!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest began to feel that this was really growing embarrassing. &lsquo;I
+ dare say we shall often see one another,&rsquo; he said evasively; for
+ simple-minded as he was, a vague suspicion of what Lady Hilda wanted him
+ to say had somehow forced itself timidly upon him. &lsquo;London&rsquo;s a
+ very big place, no doubt; but still, people are always running together
+ unexpectedly in it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda sighed and looked at him again intently without speaking. She stood
+ so, face to face with him across the table for fully two minutes; and
+ then, seeming suddenly to awake from a reverie, she started and sighed
+ once more, and turned at last reluctantly to leave the little study.
+ &lsquo;I must go,&rsquo; she said hastily; &lsquo;mamma would be very
+ angry indeed with me if she knew I&rsquo;d come here; but I couldn&rsquo;t
+ let you leave the house without coming up to tell you how greatly I admire
+ your spirit, and how very, very much I shall always miss you, Mr. Le
+ Breton. Will you take this, and keep it as a memento?&rsquo; As she spoke,
+ she laid an envelope upon the table, and glided quietly out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest took the envelope up with a smile, and opened it with some
+ curiosity. It contained a photograph, with a brief inscription on the
+ back, &lsquo;E. L. B., from Hilda Tregellis.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he did so, Hilda Tregellis, red and pale by turns, had rushed into her
+ own room, locked the door wildly, and flung herself in a perfect tempest
+ of tears on her own bed, where she lay and tossed about in a burning agony
+ of shame and self-pity for twenty minutes. ‘He doesn&rsquo;t love me,&rsquo;
+ she said to herself bitterly; &lsquo;he doesn&rsquo;t love me, and he
+ doesn&rsquo;t care to love me, or want to marry me either! I&rsquo;m sure
+ he understood what I meant, this time; and there was no response in his
+ eyes, no answer, no sympathy. He&rsquo;s like a block of wood&mdash;a
+ cold, impassive, immovable, lifeless creature! And yet I could love him&mdash;oh,
+ if only he would say a word to me in answer, how I could love him! I loved
+ him when he stood up there and bearded papa in his own drawing-room, and
+ asked him how dare he speak so, how dare he address him in such a manner;
+ I KNEW then that I really loved him. If only he would let me! But he won&rsquo;t!
+ To think that I could have half the Algies and Berties in London at my
+ feet for the faintest encouragement, and I can&rsquo;t have this one poor
+ penniless Ernest Le Breton, though I go down on my knees before him and
+ absolutely ask him to marry me! That&rsquo;s the worst of it! I&rsquo;ve
+ humiliated myself before him by letting him see, oh, ever so much too
+ plainly, that I wanted him to ask me; and I&rsquo;ve been repulsed,
+ rejected, positively refused and slighted by him! And yet I love him! I
+ shall never love any other man as I love Ernest Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Lady Hilda Tregellis! Even she too had, at times, her sentimental
+ moments! And there she lay till her eyes were red and swollen with crying,
+ and till it was quite hopeless to expect she could ever manage to make
+ herself presentable for the Cecil Faunthorpes&rsquo; garden-party that
+ afternoon at Twickenham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. &mdash; EVIL TIDINGS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ernest had packed his portmanteau, and ordered a hansom, meaning to take
+ temporary refuge at Number 28 Epsilon Terrace; and he went down again for
+ a few minutes to wait in the breakfast-room, where he saw the &lsquo;Times&rsquo;
+ lying casually on the little table by the front window. He took it up,
+ half dreamily, by way of having something to do, and was skimming the
+ telegrams in an unconcerned manner, when his attention was suddenly
+ arrested by the name Le Breton, printed in conspicuous type near the
+ bottom of the third column. He looked closer at the paragraph, and saw
+ that it was headed &lsquo;Accident to British Tourists in Switzerland.&rsquo;
+ A strange tremor seized him immediately. Could anything have happened,
+ then, to Herbert? He read the telegram through at once, and found this
+ bald and concise summary before him of the fatal Pontresina accident:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘As Mr. H. Oswald, F.R.S., of Oriel College, Oxford, and Mr. Le Breton,
+ Fellow and Bursar of St. Aldate&rsquo;s College, along with three guides,
+ were making the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, in the Bernina Alps, this
+ morning, one of the party happened to slip near the great gulley known as
+ the Gouffre. Mr. Oswald and two of the guides were precipitated over the
+ edge of the cliff and killed immediately: the breaking of the rope at a
+ critical moment alone saved the lives of Mr. Le Breton and the remaining
+ guide. The bodies have been recovered this evening, and brought back to
+ Pontresina.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest laid down the paper with a thrill of horror. Poor Edie! How
+ absolutely his own small difficulties with Lord Exmoor faded out of has
+ memory at once in the face of that terrible, irretrievable calamity. Harry
+ dead! The hope and mainstay of the family&mdash;the one great pride and
+ glory of all the Oswalds, on whom their whole lives and affections
+ centred, taken from them unexpectedly, without a chance of respite,
+ without a moment&rsquo;s warning! Worst of all, they would probably learn
+ it, as he did, for the first time by reading it accidentally in the curt
+ language of the daily papers. Pray heaven the shock might not kill poor
+ Edie!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was only a minute in which to make up his mind, but in that minute
+ Ernest had fully decided what he ought to do, and how to do it. He must go
+ at once down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and try to lighten this great affliction
+ for poor little Edie. Nay, lighten it he could not, but at least he could
+ sympathise with her in it, and that, though little, was still some faint
+ shade better than nothing at all. How fortunate that his difference with
+ the Exmoors allowed him to go that very evening without a moment&rsquo;s
+ delay. When the hansom arrived at the door, Ernest told the cabman to
+ drive at once to Paddington Station. Almost before he had had time to
+ realise the full meaning of the situation, he had taken a third-class
+ ticket for Calcombe Road, and was rushing out of London by the Plymouth
+ express, in one of the convenient and commodious little wooden horse-boxes
+ which the Great Western Railway Company provide as a wholesome deterrent
+ for economical people minded to save half their fare by going third
+ instead of first or second.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Didcot, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Exeter, Newton Abbot, all followed one
+ after another, and by the time Ernest had reached Calcombe Road Station he
+ had begun to frame for himself a definite plan of future action. He would
+ stop at the Red Lion Inn that evening, send a telegram from Exeter
+ beforehand to Edie, to say he was coming next day, and find out as much as
+ possible about the way the family had borne the shock before he ventured
+ actually to see them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Calcombe omnibus, drawn by two lean and weary horses, toiled its way
+ slowly up the long steep incline for six miles to the Cross Foxes, and
+ then rattled down the opposite slope, steaming and groaning, till it drew
+ up at last with a sudden jerk and a general collapse in front of the old
+ Red Lion Inn in the middle of the High Street. There Ernest put up for the
+ present, having seen by the shutters at the grocer&rsquo;s shop on his way
+ down that the Oswalds had already heard of Harry&rsquo;s accident. He had
+ dinner by himself, with a sick heart, in the gloomy, close little
+ coffee-room of the village inn, and after dinner he managed to draw in the
+ landlord in person for a glass of sherry and half an hour&rsquo;s
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very sad thing, sir, this &lsquo;ere causality in Switzerland,&rsquo;
+ said the red-faced landlord, coming round at once to the topic of the day
+ at Calcombe, after a few unimportant preliminary generalities. ‘Young Mr.
+ Oswald, as has been killed, he lived here, sir; leastways his parents do.
+ He was a very promising young gentleman up at Oxford, they do tell me&mdash;not
+ much of a judge of horses, I should say, but still, I understand, quite
+ the gentleman for all that. Very sad thing, the causality, sir, for all
+ his family. &lsquo;Pears he was climbing up some of these &lsquo;ere Alps
+ they have over there in them parts, covered with snow from head to foot in
+ the manner of speaking, and there was another gentleman from Oxford with
+ him, a Mr. Le Breton&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My brother,&rsquo; Ernest put in, interrupting him; for he thought it
+ best to let the landlord know at once who he was talking to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, your brother, sir!&rsquo; said the red-faced landlord, with a gleam
+ of recognition, growing redder and hotter than ever; &lsquo;well, now you
+ mention it, sir, I find I remember your face somehow. No offence, sir, but
+ you&rsquo;re the young gentleman as come down in the spring to see young
+ Mr. Oswald, aren&rsquo;t you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest nodded assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, well, sir,&rsquo; the landlord went on more freely&mdash;for of
+ course all Calcombe had heard long since that Ernest was engaged to Edie
+ Oswald&mdash;&lsquo;you&rsquo;re one of the family like, in that case, if
+ I may make bold to say so. Well, sir, this is a shocking trouble for poor
+ old Mr. Oswald, and no mistake. The old gentleman was sort of centred on
+ his son, you see, as the saying is: never thought of nobody else hardly,
+ he didn&rsquo;t. Old Mr. Oswald, sir, was always a wonderful hand at
+ figgers hisself, and powerful fond of measurements and such kinds of
+ things. I&rsquo;ve heard tell, indeed, as how he knew more mathematics,
+ and trigononomy, and that, than the rector and the schoolmaster both put
+ together. There&rsquo;s not one in fifty as knows as much mathematics as
+ he do, I&rsquo;ll warrant. Well, you see, he brought up this son of his,
+ little Harry as was&mdash;I can remember him now, running to and from the
+ school, and figgerin&rsquo; away on the slates, doin&rsquo; the sums in
+ algemer for the other boys when they went a-mitchin&rsquo;&mdash;he
+ brought him up like a gentleman, as you know very well, sir, and sent him
+ to Oxford College: &ldquo;to develop his mathematical talents, Mr. Legge,&rdquo;
+ his father says to me here in this very parlour. What&rsquo;s the
+ consequence? He develops that boy&rsquo;s talent sure enough, sir, till he
+ comes to be a Fellow of Oxford College, they tell me, and even admitted
+ into the Royal Society up in London. But this is how he did it, sir: and
+ as you&rsquo;re a friend of the family like, and want to know all about
+ it, no doubt, I don&rsquo;t mind tellin&rsquo; you on the strict
+ confidential, in the manner of speakin&rsquo;.&rsquo; Here the landlord
+ drew his chair closer, and sipped the last drop in his glass of sherry
+ with a mysterious air of very private and important disclosures. Ernest
+ listened to his roundabout story with painful attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, sir,&rsquo; the landlord went on after a short and pensive pause,
+ ‘old Mr. Oswald&rsquo;s business ain&rsquo;t never been a prosperous one&mdash;though
+ he was such a clover hand at figgers, he never made it remunerative; a
+ bare livin&rsquo; for the family, I don&rsquo;t mind sayin&rsquo;; and he
+ always spent more&rsquo;n he ought to &lsquo;a done on Mr. Harry, and on
+ the young lady too, sir, savin&rsquo; your presence. So when Mr. Harry was
+ goin&rsquo; to Oxford to college, he come to me, and he says to me,
+ &ldquo;Mr. Legge,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s a very expensive thing
+ sending my boy to the University,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m
+ going to borrow money to send him with.&rdquo; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you go
+ a-doin&rsquo; that, Mr. Oswald,&rdquo; says I; &ldquo;your business don&rsquo;t
+ justify you in doin&rsquo; it, sir,&rdquo; says I. For you see, I knowed
+ all the ins and outs of that there business, and I knowed he hadn&rsquo;t
+ never made more&rsquo;n enough just to keep things goin&rsquo; decent
+ like, as you may say, without any money saved or put by against a
+ emergence. &ldquo;Yes, I will, Mr. Legge,&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;I can
+ trust confidentially in my son&rsquo;s abilities,&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;and
+ I feel confidential he&rsquo;ll be in a position to repay me before long.&rdquo;
+ So he borrowed the money on an insurance of Mr. Harry&rsquo;s life. Mr.
+ Harry he always acted very honourable, sir; he was a perfect gentleman in
+ every way, as YOU know, sir; and he began repayin&rsquo; his father the
+ loan as fast as he was able, and I daresay doin&rsquo; a great deal for
+ the family, and especially for the young lady, sir, out of his own pocket
+ besides. But he still owed his father a couple of hundred pound an&rsquo;
+ more when this causality happened, while the business, I know, had been
+ a-goin&rsquo; to rack and ruin for the last three year. To-day I seen the
+ agent of the insurance, and he says to me, &ldquo;Legge,&rdquo; says he,
+ most private like, &ldquo;this is a bad job about young Oswald, I&rsquo;m
+ afeard, worse&rsquo;n they know for.&rdquo; &ldquo;Why, sir?&rdquo; says
+ I. &ldquo;Well, Legge,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll never get a
+ penny of that there insurance, and the old gentleman&rsquo;ll have to pay
+ up the defissit on his own account,&rdquo; says he. &ldquo;How&rsquo;s
+ that, Mr. Micklethwaite?&rdquo; says I. &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; says he,
+ &ldquo;there&rsquo;s a clause in the policy agin exceptional risks, in
+ which is included naval and military services, furrin residences, topical
+ voyages, and mountain-climbin&rsquo;,&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;and you mark
+ my words,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;they&rsquo;ll never get a penny of it.&rdquo;
+ In which case, sir, it&rsquo;s my opinion that old Mr. Oswald&rsquo;ll be
+ clean broke, for he can&rsquo;t never make up the defissit out of his own
+ business, can he now?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest listened with sad forebodings to the red-faced landlord&rsquo;s
+ pitiful story, and feared in his heart that it was a bad look-out for the
+ poor Oswalds. He didn&rsquo;t sleep much that evening, and next day he
+ went round early to see Edie. The telegram he found would be a useless
+ precaution, for the gossip of Calcombe Pomeroy had recognised him at once,
+ and news had reached the Oswalds almost as soon as he arrived that young
+ Mr. Le Breton was stopping that evening at the Red Lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie opened the door for him herself, pale of face and with eyes reddened
+ by tears, yet looking beautiful even so in her simple black morning dress,
+ her mourning of course hadn&rsquo;t yet come home&mdash;and her deep white
+ linen collar. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s very good of you to have come so soon, Mr.
+ Le Breton,&rsquo; she said, taking his hand quietly&mdash;he respected her
+ sorrow too deeply to think of kissing her; &lsquo;he will be back with us
+ to-morrow. Your brother is bringing him back to us, to lay him in our
+ little churchyard, and we are all so very very grateful to him for it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest was more than half surprised to hear it. It was an unusual act of
+ kindly thoughtfulness on the part of Herbert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the body came home as Edie had said, and Ernest helped to lay it
+ reverently to rest in Calcombe churchyard. Poor old Mr. Oswald, standing
+ bowed and broken-hearted by the open grave side, looked as though he could
+ never outlive that solemn burial of all his hopes and aspirations in a
+ single narrow coffin. Yet it was wonderful to Ernest to see how much
+ comfort he took, even in this terrible grief, from the leader which
+ appeared in the &lsquo;Times&rsquo; that morning on the subject of the
+ Pontresina accident. It contained only a few of the stock newspaper
+ platitudes of regret at the loss of a distinguished and rising young light
+ of science&mdash;the ordinary glib commonplaces of obituary notices which
+ a practised journalist knows so well how to adapt almost mechanically to
+ the passing event of the moment; but they seemed to afford the shattered
+ old country grocer an amount of consolation and solemn relief that no mere
+ spoken condolences could ever possibly have carried with them. &lsquo;See
+ what a wonderful lot they thought of our boy up in London, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo;
+ he said, looking up from the paper tearfully, and wiping his big gold
+ spectacles, dim with moisture. &lsquo;See what the &ldquo;Times&rdquo;
+ says about him: &ldquo;One of the ablest among our young academical
+ mathematicians, a man who, if his life had been spared to us, might
+ probably have attained the highest distinction in his own department of
+ pure science.&rdquo; That&rsquo;s our Harry, Mr. Le Breton; that&rsquo;s
+ what the &ldquo;Times&rdquo; says about our dear, dead Harry! I wish he
+ could have lived to read it himself, Edie&mdash;&ldquo;a scholar of
+ singularly profound attainments, whose abilities had recently secured him
+ a place upon the historic roll of the Royal Society, and whom even the
+ French Academy of Sciences had held worthy out of all the competitors of
+ the civilised world, to be adjudged the highest mathematical honours of
+ the present season.&rdquo; My poor boy! my poor, dear, lost boy! I wish
+ you could have lived to hear it! We must keep the paper, Edie: we must
+ keep all the papers; they&rsquo;ll show us at least what people who are
+ real judges of these things thought about our dear, loved, lost Harry.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest dared hardly glance towards poor Edie, with the tears trickling
+ slowly down her face; but he felt thankful that the broken-hearted old
+ father could derive so much incomprehensible consolation from those cold
+ and stereotyped conventional phrases. Truly a wonderful power there is in
+ mere printer&rsquo;s ink properly daubed on plain absorbent white paper.
+ And truly the human heart, full to bursting and just ready to break will
+ allow itself to be cheated and cajoled in marvellous fashions by
+ extraordinary cordials and inexplicable little social palliatives. The
+ concentrated hopes of that old man&rsquo;s life were blasted and blighted
+ for ever; and he found a temporary relief from that stunning shock in the
+ artificial and insincere condolences of a stock leader-writer on a daily
+ paper!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walking back by himself in such sad meditations to the Red Lion, and
+ sitting there by the open window, Ernest overheard a tremulous chattering
+ voice mumbling out a few incoherent words at the Rector&rsquo;s doorway
+ opposite. &lsquo;Oh, yes,&rsquo; chirped out the voice in a tone of
+ cheerful resignation, &lsquo;it&rsquo;s very sad indeed, very sad and
+ shocking, and I&rsquo;m naturally very sorry for it, of course. I always
+ knew how it would be: I warned them of it; but they&rsquo;re a pig-headed,
+ heedless, unmannerly family, and they wouldn&rsquo;t be guided by me. I
+ said to him, &ldquo;Now, Oswald, this is all very wrong and foolish of
+ you. You go and put your son to Oxford, when he ought to be stopping at
+ home, minding the shop and learning your business. You borrow money
+ foolishly to send him there with. He&rsquo;ll go to Oxford; he&rsquo;ll
+ fall in with a lot of wealthy young gentlemen&mdash;people above his own
+ natural station&mdash;he&rsquo;ll take up expensive, extravagant ways, and
+ in the end he&rsquo;ll completely ruin himself. He won&rsquo;t pay you
+ back a penny, you may depend upon it&mdash;these boys never do, when you
+ make fine gentlemen of them; they think only of their cigars and their
+ horses, and their dog-carts and so forth, and neglect their poor old
+ fathers and mothers, that brought them up and scraped and saved to make
+ fine gentlemen of them. You just take my advice, Oswald, and don&rsquo;t
+ send him to college.&rdquo; But Oswald was always a presumptuous,
+ high-headed, independent sort of man, and instead of listening to me, what
+ does he do but go and send this sharp boy of his up to Oxford. Well, now
+ the boy&rsquo;s gone to Switzerland with one of the young Le Bretons&mdash;brother
+ of the poor young man they&rsquo;ve inveigled into what they call an
+ engagement with Miss Edith, or Miss Jemima, or whatever the girl&rsquo;s
+ name is&mdash;very well-connected people, the Le Bretons, and personal
+ friends of the Archdeacon&rsquo;s&mdash;and there he&rsquo;s thrown
+ himself over a precipice or something of the sort, no doubt to avoid his
+ money-matters and debts and difficulties. At any rate, Micklethwaite tells
+ me the poor old father&rsquo;ll have to pay up a couple of hundred pound
+ to the insurance company: and how on earth he&rsquo;s ever to do it <i>I</i>
+ don&rsquo;t know, for to my certain knowledge the rent of the shop is in
+ arrears half-a-year already. But it&rsquo;s no business of mine, thank
+ goodness!&mdash;and I only hope that exposure will serve to open that poor
+ young Le Breton&rsquo;s eyes, and to warn him against having anything
+ further to say to Miss Jemima. A designing young minx, if ever there was
+ one! Poor young Le Breton&rsquo;s come down here for the funeral, I hear,
+ which I must say was very friendly and proper and honourable of him; but
+ now it&rsquo;s over, I hope he&rsquo;ll go back again, and see Miss Jemima
+ in her true colours.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest turned back into the stuffy little coffee-room with his face on
+ fire and his ears tingling with mingled shame and indignation. ‘Whatever
+ happens,&rsquo; he thought to himself, &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t permit Edie to
+ be subjected any longer to such insolence as this! Poor, dear, guileless,
+ sorrowing little maiden! One would have thought her childish innocence and
+ her terrible loss would have softened the heart even of such a
+ cantankerous, virulent old harridan as that, till a few weeks were over,
+ at least. She spoke of the Archdeacon: it must be old Miss Luttrell!
+ Whoever it is, though, Edie shan&rsquo;t much longer be left where she can
+ possibly come in contact with such a loathsome mass of incredible and
+ unprovoked malice. That Edie should lose her dearly-loved brother is
+ terrible enough; but that she should be exposed afterwards to be triumphed
+ over in her most sacred grief by that bad old woman&rsquo;s querulous
+ &ldquo;I told you so&rdquo; is simply intolerable!&rsquo; And he paced up
+ and down the room with a boiling heart, unable to keep down his righteous
+ anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; FLAT REBELLION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For the next fortnight Ernest remained at the Red Lion, though painfully
+ conscious that he was sadly wasting his little reserve of funds from his
+ late tutorship, in order to find out exactly what the Oswalds&rsquo;
+ position would be after the loss of poor Harry. Towards the end of that
+ time he took Edie, pale and pretty in her simple new mourning, out once
+ more into the Bourne Close for half an hour&rsquo;s quiet conversation.
+ Very delicate and sweet and refined that tiny girlish face and figure
+ looked in the plain unostentatious black and white of her great sorrow,
+ and Ernest felt as he walked along by her side that she seemed to lean
+ upon him naturally now; the loss of her main support and chief advisor in
+ life seemed to draw her closer and closer every day to her one remaining
+ prop and future husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Edie,&rsquo; he said to her, as they rested once more beside the old
+ wooden bridge across the little river, &lsquo;I think it&rsquo;s time now
+ we should begin to talk definitely over our common plans for the future. I
+ know you&rsquo;d naturally rather wait a little longer before discussing
+ them; I wish for both our sakes we could have deferred it; but time
+ presses, and I&rsquo;m afraid from what I hear in the village that things
+ won&rsquo;t go on henceforth exactly as they used to do with your dear
+ father and mother.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie coloured slightly as she answered, &lsquo;Then you&rsquo;ve heard of
+ all that already, Ernest&rsquo;&mdash;she was learning to call him &lsquo;Ernest&rsquo;
+ now quite naturally. &lsquo;The Calcombe tattle has got round to you so
+ soon! I&rsquo;m glad of it, though, for it saves me the pain of having to
+ tell you. Yes, it&rsquo;s quite true, and I&rsquo;m afraid it will be a
+ terrible, dreadful struggle for poor darling father and mother.&rsquo; And
+ the tears came up afresh, as she spoke, into her big black eyes&mdash;too
+ familiar with them of late to make her even try to brush them away hastily
+ from Ernest&rsquo;s sight with her little handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sorry to know it&rsquo;s true,&rsquo; Ernest said, taking her
+ hand gently; ‘very, very sorry. We must do what we can to lighten the
+ trouble for them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes,&rsquo; Edie replied, looking at him through her tears; &lsquo;I mean
+ to try. At any rate, I won&rsquo;t be a burden to them myself any longer.
+ I&rsquo;ve written already up to an agency in London to see whether they
+ can manage to get me a place as a nursery-governess.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You a governess, Edie!&rsquo; Ernest exclaimed hastily, with a gesture of
+ deprecation. &lsquo;You a governess! Why, my own precious darling, you
+ would never do for it!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh yes, indeed,&rsquo; Edie answered quickly, &lsquo;I really think I
+ could, Ernest. Of course I don&rsquo;t know very much&mdash;not judged by
+ a standard like yours or our dear Harry&rsquo;s. Harry used to say all a
+ woman could ever know was to find out how ignorant she was. Dear fellow!
+ he was so very learned himself he couldn&rsquo;t understand the
+ complacency of little perky, half-educated schoolmistresses. But still, I
+ know quite as much, I think, in my little way, as a great many girls who
+ get good places in London as governesses. I can speak French fairly well,
+ you know, and read German decently; and then dear Harry took such a lot of
+ pains to make me get up books that he thought were good for me&mdash;history
+ and so forth&mdash;and even to teach me a little, a very little, Latin. Of
+ course I know I&rsquo;m dreadfully ignorant; but not more so, I really
+ believe, than a great many girls whom people consider quite well-educated
+ enough to teach their daughters. After all, the daughters themselves are
+ only women, too, you see, Ernest, and don&rsquo;t expect more than a
+ smattering of book-knowledge, and a few showy fashionable accomplishments.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Edie,&rsquo; Ernest answered, smiling at her gently in spite of
+ her tearful earnestness; &lsquo;you quite misunderstand me. It wasn&rsquo;t
+ THAT I was thinking of at all. There are very few governesses and very few
+ women anywhere who have half the knowledge and accomplishments and
+ literary taste and artistic culture that you have; very few who have had
+ the advantage of associating daily with such a man as poor Harry; and if
+ you really wanted to get a place of the sort, the mere fact that you&rsquo;re
+ Harry&rsquo;s sister, and that he interested himself in superintending
+ your education, ought, by itself, to ensure your getting a very good one.
+ But what I meant was rather this&mdash;I couldn&rsquo;t endure to think
+ that you should be put to all the petty slights and small humiliations
+ that a governess has always to endure in rich families. You don&rsquo;t
+ know what it is, Edie; you can&rsquo;t imagine the endless devices for
+ making her feel her dependence and her artificial inferiority that these
+ great people have devised in their cleverness and their Christian
+ condescension. You don&rsquo;t know what it is, Edie, and I pray heaven
+ you may never know; but <i>I</i> do, for I&rsquo;ve seen it&mdash;and,
+ darling, I CAN&rsquo;T let you expose yourself to it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To say the truth, at that moment there rose very vividly before Ernest&rsquo;s
+ eyes the picture of poor shy Miss Merivale, the governess at Dunbude to
+ little Lady Sybil, Lynmouth&rsquo;s younger sister. Miss Merivale was a
+ rector&rsquo;s daughter&mdash;an orphan, and a very nice girl in her way;
+ and Ernest had often thought to himself while he lived at the Exmoors&rsquo;,
+ &lsquo;With just the slightest turn of Fortune&rsquo;s wheel that might be
+ my own Edie.&rsquo; Now, for himself he had never felt any sense of social
+ inferiority at all at Dunbude; he was an Oxford man, and by the ordinary
+ courtesy of English society he was always treated accordingly in every way
+ as an equal. But there were galling distinctions made in Miss Merivale&rsquo;s
+ case which he could not think of even at the time without a blush of
+ ingenuous shame, and which he did not like now even to mention to pretty,
+ shrinking, eager little Edie. One thing alone was enough to make his
+ cheeks burn whenever he thought of it&mdash;a little thing, and yet how
+ unendurable! Miss Merivale lunched with the family and with her pupil in
+ the middle of the day, but she did not dine with them in the evening. She
+ had tea by herself instead in Lady Sybil&rsquo;s little school-room. Many
+ a time when Ernest had been out walking with her on the terrace just
+ before dinner, and the dressing-gong sounded, he had felt almost too
+ ashamed to go in at the summons and leave the poor little governess out
+ there alone with her social disabilities. The gong seemed to raise such a
+ hideous artificial barrier between himself and that delicately-bred,
+ sensitive, cultivated English lady. That Edie should be subjected to such
+ a life of affronts as that was simply unendurable. True, there are social
+ distinctions of the sort which even Ernest Le Breton, communist as he was,
+ could not practically get over; but then they were distinctions
+ familiarised to the sufferers from childhood upward, and so perhaps a
+ little less insupportable. But that Harry Oswald&rsquo;s sister&mdash;that
+ Edie, his own precious delicate little Edie, a dainty English wild-flower
+ of the tenderest, should be transplanted from her own appreciative home to
+ such a chilly and ungenial soil as that&mdash;the very idea of it was
+ horribly unspeakable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, Ernest,&rsquo; Edie answered, breaking in upon his bitter
+ meditation, ‘I assure you I wouldn&rsquo;t mind it a bit. I know&mdash;it&rsquo;s
+ very dreadful, but then,&rsquo;&mdash;and here she blushed one of her
+ pretty apologetic little blushes&mdash;&lsquo;you know I&rsquo;m used to
+ it. People in business always are. They expect to be treated just like
+ servant&mdash;now THAT, I know you&rsquo;ll say, is itself a piece of
+ hubris, the expression of a horrid class prejudice. And so it is, no
+ doubt. But they do, for all that. As dear Harry used to say, even the
+ polypes in aristocratic useless sponges at the sea-bottom won&rsquo;t have
+ anything to say to the sponges of commerce. I&rsquo;m sure nobody I could
+ meet in a governess&rsquo;s place could possibly be worse in that respect
+ than poor old Miss Catherine Luttrell.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘That may be true, Edie darling,&rsquo; Ernest answered, not caring to let
+ her know that he had overheard a specimen of the Calcombe squirearchy,
+ &lsquo;but in any case I don&rsquo;t want you to be troubled now, either
+ with old Miss Luttrell or any other bitter old busybodies. I want to speak
+ seriously to you about a very different project. Just look at this
+ advertisement.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took a scrap of paper from his pocket and handed it to Edie. It ran
+ thus:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &lsquo;WANTED at Pilbury Regis Grammar School, Dorset, a
+ Third Classical Master. Must be a Graduate of Oxford or
+ Cambridge; University Prizeman preferred. If unmarried,
+ to take house duty. Commence September 20th. Salary,
+ 200L a year. Apply, as above, to the Rev. J. Greatrex,
+ D.D., Head Master.&rsquo;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Edie read it through slowly. &lsquo;Well, Ernest?&rsquo; she said, looking
+ up from it into his face. &lsquo;Do you think of taking this mastership?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If I can get it,&rsquo; Ernest answered. &lsquo;You see, I&rsquo;m not a
+ University Prizeman, and that may be a difficulty in the way; but
+ otherwise I&rsquo;m not unlikely to suit the requirements. Herbert knows
+ something of the school&mdash;he&rsquo;s been down there to examine; and
+ Mrs. Greatrex had a sort of distant bowing acquaintance with my mother; so
+ I hope their influence might help me into it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Ernest?&rsquo; Edie cried again, feeling pretty certain in her own
+ heart what was coming next, and reddening accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Edie, in that case, would you care to marry at once, and try the
+ experiment of beginning life with me upon two hundred a year? I know it&rsquo;s
+ very little, darling, for our wants and necessities, brought up as you and
+ I have been: but Herr Max says, you know, it&rsquo;s as much as any one
+ family ought ever to spend upon its own gratifications; and at any rate I
+ dare say you and I could manage to be very happy upon it, at least for the
+ present. In any case it would be better than being a governess. Will you
+ risk it, Edie?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘To me, Ernest,&rsquo; Edie answered with her unaffected simplicity, ‘it
+ really seems quite a magnificent income. I don&rsquo;t suppose any of our
+ friends or neighbours in Calcombe spend nearly as much as two hundred a
+ year upon their own families.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes, they do, darling. But that isn&rsquo;t the only thing. Two
+ hundred a year is a very different matter in quiet, old-world, little
+ Calcombe and in a fashionable modern watering-place like Pilbury Regis. We
+ shall have to live in lodgings, Edie, and live very quietly indeed; but
+ even so I think it will be better than for you to go out and endure the
+ humiliation of becoming a governess. Then I may understand that, if I can
+ get this mastership, you&rsquo;ll consent to be married, Edie, before the
+ end of September?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Ernest, that&rsquo;s dreadfully soon!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, it is, darling; but you must have a very quiet wedding; and I can&rsquo;t
+ bear to leave you here now any longer without Harry to cheer and protect
+ you. Shall we look upon it as settled?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie blushed and looked down as she answered almost inaudibly, ‘As you
+ think best, dear Ernest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that very evening Ernest sent off an application to Pilbury Regis,
+ together with such testimonials as he had by him, mentioning at the same
+ time his intention to marry, and his recent engagement at Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s.
+ &lsquo;I hope they won&rsquo;t make a point about the University Prize,
+ Edie,&rsquo; he said timidly; &lsquo;but I rather think they don&rsquo;t
+ mean to insist upon it. I&rsquo;m afraid it may be put in to some extent
+ mainly as a bait to attract parents. Advertisements are often so very
+ dishonest. At any rate, we can only try; and if I get it, I shall be able
+ to call you my little wife in September.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon after poor Harry&rsquo;s death he hardly liked to say much about
+ how happy that consciousness would make him; but he sent off the letter
+ with a beating heart, and waited anxiously for the head master&rsquo;s
+ answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Maria,&rsquo; said Dr. Greatrex to his wife next morning, turning over
+ the pile of letters at the breakfast table, &lsquo;who do you think has
+ applied for the third mastership? Very lucky, really, isn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Considering that there are some thirty millions of people in England, I
+ believe, Dr. Greatrex,&rsquo; said his wife with dignity, ‘that some
+ seventy of those have answered your advertisement, and that you haven&rsquo;t
+ yet given me an opportunity even of guessing which it is of them all, I&rsquo;m
+ sure I can&rsquo;t say so far whether it&rsquo;s lucky or otherwise.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re pleased to be satirical, my dear,&rsquo; the doctor answered
+ blandly; he was in too good a humour to pursue the opening further. ‘But
+ no matter. Well, I&rsquo;ll tell you, then; it&rsquo;s young Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s son!&rsquo; cried Mrs. Greatrex, forgetting
+ her dignity in her surprise. &lsquo;Well, that certainly is very lucky.
+ Now, if we could only get her to come down and stay with us for a week
+ sometimes, after he&rsquo;s been here a little while, what a splendid
+ advertisement it would be for the place, to be sure, Joseph!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Capital!&rsquo; the head master said, eyeing the letter complacently as
+ he sipped his coffee. &lsquo;A perfect jewel of a master, I should say,
+ from every possible point of view. Just the sort of person to attract
+ parents and pupils. &ldquo;Allow me to introduce you to our third master,
+ Mr. Le Breton; I hope Lady Le Breton was quite well when you heard from
+ her last, Le Breton?&rdquo; and all that sort of thing. Depend upon it,
+ Maria, there&rsquo;s nothing in the world that makes a middle-class parent&mdash;and
+ our parents are unfortunately all middle-class&mdash;prick up his ears
+ like the faintest suspicion or echo of a title. &ldquo;Very good school,&rdquo;
+ he goes back and says to his wife immediately; &ldquo;we&rsquo;ll send
+ Tommy there; they have a master who&rsquo;s an honourable or something of
+ the sort; sure to give the boys a thoroughly high gentlemanly tone.&rdquo;
+ It&rsquo;s snobbery, I admit, sheer snobbery: but between ourselves,
+ Maria, most people are snobs, and we have to live, professionally, by
+ accommodating ourselves to their foolish prejudices.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘At the same time, doctor,&rsquo; said his wife severely, &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ think we ought to allow it too freely, at least with the door open.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re quite right, my dear,&rsquo; the head master answered
+ submissively, rising at the same time to shut the door. &lsquo;But what
+ makes this particular application all the better is that young Le Breton
+ would come here straight from the Earl of Exmoor&rsquo;s where he has been
+ acting as tutor to the son and heir, Viscount Lynmouth. That&rsquo;s
+ really admirable, now, isn&rsquo;t it? Just consider the advantages of the
+ situation. A doubtful parent comes to inspect the arrangements; sniffs at
+ the dormitories, takes the gauge of the studies, snorts over the
+ playground, condescends to approve of the fives courts. Then, after doing
+ the usual Christian principles business and working in the high moral tone
+ a little, we invite him to lunch, and young Le Breton to meet him. You
+ remark casually in the most unconscious and natural fashion&mdash;I admit,
+ my dear, that you do these little things much better than I do&mdash;&ldquo;Oh,
+ talking of cricket, Mr. Le Breton, your old pupil, Lord Lynmouth, made a
+ splendid score the other day at the Eton and Harrow.&rdquo; Fixes the
+ wavering parent like a shot. &ldquo;Third master something or other in the
+ peerage, and has been tutor to a son of Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s. Place to send
+ your boys to if you want to make perfect gentlemen of them.&rdquo; I think
+ we&rsquo;d better close at once with this young man&rsquo;s offer, Maria.
+ He&rsquo;s got a very decent degree, too; a first in Mods and Greats;
+ really very decent.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But will he take a house-mastership do you think, doctor?&rsquo; asked
+ the careful lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, he won&rsquo;t; he&rsquo;s married or soon going to be. We must let
+ him off the house duty.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Married!&rsquo; said Mrs. Greatrex, turning it over cautiously. &lsquo;Who&rsquo;s
+ he going to marry, I wonder? I hope somebody presentable.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, of course!&rsquo; Dr. Greatrex answered, as who should feel shocked
+ at the bare suggestion that a young man of Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ antecedents could conceivably marry otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘His wife, or rather his wife that is to be, is a sister, he tells me, of
+ that poor Mr. Oswald&mdash;the famous mathematician, you know, of Oriel&mdash;who
+ got killed, you remember, by falling off the Matterhorn or somewhere, just
+ the other day. You must have seen about it in the &ldquo;Times.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I remember,&rsquo; Mrs. Greatrex answered, in placid contentment; &lsquo;and
+ I should say you can&rsquo;t do better than take him immediately. It&rsquo;d
+ be an excellent thing for the school, certainly. As the third mastership&rsquo;s
+ worth only two hundred a year, of course he can&rsquo;t intend to marry
+ upon THAT; so he must have means of his own, which is always a good thing
+ to encourage in an under-master: or if his wife has money, that comes in
+ the end to the same thing. They&rsquo;ll take a house of their own, no
+ doubt; and she&rsquo;ll probably entertain&mdash;very quietly, I daresay;
+ still, a small dinner now and then gives a very excellent tone to the
+ school in its own way. Social considerations, as I always say, Joseph, are
+ all-important in school management; and I think we may take it for granted
+ that Mr. Le Breton would be socially a real acquisition.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it was shortly settled that Dr. Greatrex should write back accepting
+ Ernest Le Breton as third master; and Mrs. Greatrex began immediately
+ dropping stray allusions to &lsquo;Lady Le Breton, our new master&rsquo;s
+ mother, you know,&rsquo; among her various acquaintance, especially those
+ with rising young families. The doctor and she thought a good deal of this
+ catch they were making in the person of Ernest Le Breton. Poor souls, they
+ little knew what sort of social qualities they were letting themselves in
+ for. A firebrand or a bombshell would really have been a less remarkable
+ guest to drop down straight into the prim and proper orthodox society of
+ Pilbury Regis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ernest received the letter in which Dr. Greatrex informed him that he
+ might have the third mastership, he hardly knew how to contain his joy. He
+ kissed Edie a dozen times over in his excitement, and sat up late making
+ plans with her which would have been delightful but for poor Edie&rsquo;s
+ lasting sorrow. In a short time it was all duly arranged, and Ernest began
+ to think that he must go back to London for a day or two, to let Lady Le
+ Breton hear of his change of plans, and got everything in order for their
+ quiet wedding. He grudged the journey sadly, for he was beginning to
+ understand now that he must take care of the pence for Edie&rsquo;s sake
+ as well as for humanity&rsquo;s&mdash;his abstraction was individualising
+ itself in concrete form&mdash;but he felt so much at least was demanded of
+ him by filial duty, and, besides, he had one or two little matters to
+ settle at Epsilon Terrace which could not so well be managed in his
+ absence even by his trusty deputy, Ronald. So he ran up to town once more
+ in a hurry, and dropped in as if nothing had happened, at his mother&rsquo;s
+ house. It was no unusual matter for him to pass a fortnight at Wilton
+ Place without finding time to call round at Epsilon Terrace to see Ronald,
+ and his mother had not heard at all as yet of his recent change of
+ engagement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Le Breton listened with severe displeasure to Ernest&rsquo;s account
+ of his quarrel with Lord Exmoor. It was quite unnecessary and wrong, she
+ said, to prevent Lynmouth from his innocent boyish amusements.
+ Pigeon-shooting was practised by the very best people, and she was quite
+ sure, therefore, there could be no harm of any sort in it. She believed
+ the sport was countenanced, not only by bishops, but even by princes.
+ Pigeons, she supposed, had been specially created by Providence for our
+ use and enjoyment&mdash;&lsquo;their final cause being apparently the
+ manufacture of pigeon-pie,&rsquo; Ronald suggested parenthetically: but we
+ couldn&rsquo;t use them without killing them, unfortunately; and shooting
+ was probably as painless a form of killing as any other. Peter or
+ somebody, she distinctly remembered, had been specially commanded to
+ arise, kill, and eat. To object to pigeon-shooting indeed, in Lady Le
+ Breton&rsquo;s opinion, was clearly flying in the face of Providence. Of
+ Ronald&rsquo;s muttered reference to five sparrows being sold for two
+ farthings, and yet not one of them being forgotten, she would not
+ condescend to take any notice. However, thank goodness, the fault was none
+ of hers; she could wash her hands entirely of all responsibility in the
+ matter. She had done her best to secure Ernest a good place in a
+ thoroughly nice family, and if he chose to throw it up at a moment&rsquo;s
+ notice for one of his own absurd communistical fads, it was happily none
+ of her business. She was glad, at any rate, that he&rsquo;d got another
+ berth, with a conscientious, earnest, Christian man like Dr. Greatrex.
+ &lsquo;And indeed, Ernest,&rsquo; she said, returning once more to the
+ pigeon-shooting question, &lsquo;even your poor dear papa, who was full of
+ such absurd religious fancies, didn&rsquo;t think that sport was
+ unchristian, I&rsquo;m certain; for I remember once, when we were
+ quartered at Moozuffernugger in the North-West Provinces, he went out into
+ a nullah near our compound one day, and with his own hand shot a
+ man-eating tiger, which had carried off three little native children from
+ the thanah; so that shows that he couldn&rsquo;t really object to sport;
+ and I hope you don&rsquo;t mean to cast disrespect upon the memory of your
+ own poor father!&rsquo;. All of which profound moral and religious
+ observations Ernest, as in duty bound, received with the most respectful
+ and acquiescent silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now he had to approach the more difficult task of breaking to his
+ mother his approaching marriage with Edie Oswald. He began the subject as
+ delicately as he could, dwelling strongly upon poor Harry Oswald&rsquo;s
+ excellent position as an Oxford tutor, and upon Herbert&rsquo;s visit with
+ him to Switzerland&mdash;he knew his mother too well to suppose that the
+ real merits of the Oswald family would impress her in any way, as compared
+ with their accidental social status; and then he went on to speak as
+ gently as possible about his engagement with little Edie. At this point,
+ to his exceeding discomfiture, Lady Le Breton adopted the unusual tactics
+ of bursting suddenly into a flood of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Ernest,&rsquo; she sobbed out inarticulately through her scented
+ cambric handkerchief, &lsquo;for heaven&rsquo;s sake don&rsquo;t tell me
+ that you&rsquo;ve gone and engaged yourself to that designing girl! Oh, my
+ poor, poor, misguided boy! Is there really no way to save you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No way to save me!&rsquo; exclaimed Ernest, astonished and disconcerted
+ by this unexpected outburst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, yes!&rsquo; Lady Le Breton went on, almost passionately. &lsquo;Can&rsquo;t
+ you manage somehow to get yourself out of it? I hope you haven&rsquo;t
+ utterly compromised yourself! Couldn&rsquo;t dear Herbert go down to What&rsquo;s-his-name
+ Pomeroy, and induce the father&mdash;a grocer, if I remember right&mdash;induce
+ him, somehow or other, to compromise the matter?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Compromise!&rsquo; cried Ernest, uncertain whether to laugh or be angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, compromise it!&rsquo; Lady Le Breton answered, endeavouring to calm
+ herself. &lsquo;Of course that Machiavellian girl has tried to drag you
+ into it; and the family have aided and abetted her; and you&rsquo;ve been
+ weak and foolish&mdash;though not, I trust, wicked&mdash;and allowed them
+ to get their net closed almost imperceptibly around you. But it isn&rsquo;t
+ too late to withdraw even now, my poor, dear, deluded Ernest. It isn&rsquo;t
+ too late to withdraw even now. Think of the disgrace and shame to the
+ family! Think of your dear brothers and their blighted prospects! Don&rsquo;t
+ allow this designing girl to draw you helplessly into such an ill-assorted
+ marriage! Reflect upon your own future happiness! Consider what it will be
+ to drag on years of your life with a woman, no longer perhaps externally
+ attractive, whom you could never possibly respect or love for her own
+ internal qualities! Don&rsquo;t go and wreck your own life, and your
+ brothers&rsquo; lives, for any mistaken and Quixotic notions of false
+ honour! You mayn&rsquo;t like to throw her over, after you&rsquo;ve once
+ been inveigled into saying &ldquo;Yes&rdquo; (and the feeling, though
+ foolish, does your heart credit); but reflect, my dear boy, such a
+ promise, so obtained, can hardly be considered binding upon your
+ conscience! I&rsquo;ve no doubt dear Herbert, who&rsquo;s a capital man of
+ business, would get them readily enough to agree to a compromise or a
+ compensation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear mother,'said Ernest white with indignation, but speaking very
+ quietly, as soon as he could edge in a word, &lsquo;you quite
+ misunderstand the whole question. Edie Oswald is a lady by nature, with
+ all a lady&rsquo;s best feelings&mdash;I hate the word because of its
+ false implications, but I can&rsquo;t use any other that will convey to
+ you my meaning&mdash;and I love and admire and respect and worship her
+ with all my heart and with all my soul. She hasn&rsquo;t inveigled me or
+ set her cap at me, as you call it, in any way; she&rsquo;s the sweetest,
+ timidest, most shrinking little thing that ever existed; on the contrary,
+ it is I who have humbly asked her to accept me, because I know no other
+ woman to whom I could give my whole heart so unreservedly. To tell you the
+ truth, mother, with my ideas and opinions, I could hardly be happy with
+ any girl of the class that you would call distinctively ladies: their
+ class prejudices and their social predilections would jar and grate upon
+ me at every turn. But Edie Oswald&rsquo;s a girl whom I could worship and
+ love without any reserve&mdash;whom I can reverence for her beautiful
+ character, her goodness, and her delicacy of feeling. She has honoured me
+ by accepting me, and I&rsquo;m going to marry her at the end of this
+ month, and I want, if possible, to get your consent to the marriage before
+ I do so. She&rsquo;s a wife of whom I shall be proud in every way; I wish
+ I could think she would have equal cause to be proud of her husband.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Le Breton threw herself once more into a paroxysm of tears. ‘Oh,
+ Ernest,&rsquo; she cried, &lsquo;do spare me! do spare me! This is too
+ wicked, too unfeeling, too cruel of you altogether! I knew already you
+ were very selfish and heartless and headstrong, but I didn&rsquo;t know
+ you were quite so unmanageable and so unkind as this. I appeal to your
+ better nature&mdash;for you HAVE a better nature&mdash;I&rsquo;m sure you
+ have a better nature: you&rsquo;re MY son, and you can&rsquo;t be utterly
+ devoid of good impulses. I appeal confidently to your better nature to
+ throw off this unhappy, designing, wicked girl before it is too late! She
+ has made you forget your duty to your mother, but not, I hope,
+ irrevocably. Oh, my poor, dear, wandering boy, won&rsquo;t you listen to
+ the voice of reason? won&rsquo;t you return once more like the prodigal
+ son, to your neglected mother and your forgotten duty?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear mother,&rsquo; Ernest said, hardly knowing how to answer, &lsquo;you
+ WILL persist in completely misunderstanding me. I love Edie Oswald with
+ all my heart; I have promised to marry her, because she has done me the
+ great and undeserved honour of accepting me as her future husband; and
+ even if I wanted to break off the engagement (which it would break my own
+ heart to do), I certainly couldn&rsquo;t break it off now without the most
+ disgraceful and dishonourable wickedness. That is quite fixed and certain,
+ and I can&rsquo;t go back upon it in any way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you insist, you unnatural boy,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton, wiping
+ her eyes, and assuming the air of an injured parent, &lsquo;you insist,
+ against my express wish, in marrying this girl Osborne, or whatever you
+ call her?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I do, mother,&rsquo; Ernest answered quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘In that case,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton, coldly, &lsquo;I must beg of
+ you that you won&rsquo;t bring this lady, whether as your wife or
+ otherwise, under my roof. I haven&rsquo;t been accustomed to associate
+ with the daughters of tradesmen, and I don&rsquo;t wish to associate with
+ them now in any way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If so,&rsquo; Ernest said, very softly, &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t remain under
+ your roof myself any longer. I can go nowhere at all where my future wife
+ will not be received on exactly the same terms that I am.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you had bettor go,&rsquo; said Lady Le Breton, in her chilliest
+ manner. &lsquo;Ronald, do me the favour to ring the bell for a cab for
+ your brother Ernest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I shall walk, thank you, mother,&rsquo; said Ernest quietly. &lsquo;Good
+ morning, dear Ronald.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald rose solemnly and opened the door for him. &lsquo;Therefore shall a
+ man leave his father and mother,&rsquo; he said in his clear, soft voice,
+ &lsquo;and shall cleave unto his wife; and they twain shall be one flesh.
+ Amen.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Le Breton darted a withering glance at her younger son as Ernest shut
+ the door after him, and burst once more into a sudden flood of
+ uncontrollable tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; &lsquo;COME YE OUT AND BE YE SEPARATE.&rsquo;
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s London lodgings were wonderfully snug and
+ comfortable for the second floor of a second-rate house in a small retired
+ side street near the Embankment at Chelsea. He had made the most of the
+ four modest little rooms, with his quick taste and his deft, cunning
+ fingers:&mdash;four rooms, or rather boxes, one might almost call them; a
+ bedroom each for himself and the Progenitor; a wee sitting-room for meals
+ and music&mdash;the two Berkeleys would doubtless as soon have gone
+ without the one as the other; and a tiny study where Arthur might work
+ undisturbed at his own desk upon his new and original magnum opus,
+ destined to form the great attraction of the coming season at the
+ lately-opened Ambiguities Theatre. Things had prospered well with the
+ former Oxford curate during the last twelve-month. His cantata at Leeds
+ had proved a wonderful success, and had finally induced him to remove to
+ London, and take to composing as a regular profession. He had his qualms
+ about it, to be sure, as one who had put his hand to the plough and then
+ turned back; he did not feel quite certain in his own mind how far he was
+ justified in giving up the more spiritual for the more worldly calling;
+ but natures like Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s move rather upon passing feeling
+ than upon deeper sentiment; and had he not ample ground, he asked himself,
+ for this reconsideration of the monetary position? He had the Progenitor&rsquo;s
+ happiness to insure before thinking of the possible injury to his
+ non-existent parishioners. If he was doing Whippingham Parva or
+ Norton-cum-Sutton out of an eloquent and valuable potential rector, if he
+ was depriving the Church in the next half-century of a dignified and
+ portly prospective archdeacon, he is at least making his father&rsquo;s
+ last days brighter and more comfortable than his early ones had ever been.
+ And then, was not music, too, in its own way, a service, a liturgy, a
+ worship? Surely he could do higher good to men&rsquo;s souls&mdash;as they
+ call them&mdash;to whatever little spark of nobler and better fire there
+ might lurk within those dull clods of common clay he saw all around him&mdash;by
+ writing such a work as his Leeds cantata, than by stringing together for
+ ever those pretty centos of seventeenth-century conceits and
+ nineteenth-century doubts or hesitations which he was accustomed to call
+ his sermons! Whatever came of it, he must give up the miserable pittance
+ of a curacy, and embrace the career open to the musical talents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he fitted up his little Chelsea rooms in his own economically sumptuous
+ fashion with some bits of wall paper, a few jugs and vases, and an etching
+ or two after Meissonier; planted the Progenitor down comfortably in a
+ large easy-chair, with a melodious fiddle before him; and set to work
+ himself to do what he could towards elevating the British stage and
+ pocketing a reasonable profit on his own account from that familiar and
+ ever-rejuvenescent process. He was quite in earnest, now, about producing
+ a totally new effect of his own; and believing in his work, as a good
+ workman ought to do, he wrought at it indefatigably and well in the
+ retirement of a second-pair back, overlooking a yardful of fluttering
+ clothes, and a fine skyline vista of bare, yellowish brick chimneys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What part are you working at to-day, Artie?&rsquo; said the old
+ shoemaker, looking over his son&rsquo;s shoulder at the blank music paper
+ before him. &lsquo;Quartette of Biological Professors, eh?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, father,&rsquo; Berkeley answered with a smile. &lsquo;How do you
+ think it runs now?&rsquo; and he hummed over a few lines of his own words,
+ set with a quaint lilt to his own inimitable and irresistible music:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And though in unanimous chorus
+ We mourn that from ages before us
+ No single enaliosaurus
+ To-day should survive,
+
+ Yet joyfully may we bethink us,
+ With the earliest mammal to link us,
+ We still have the ornithorhyncus
+ Extant and alive!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ‘How do you think the score does for that, father, eh? Catching air
+ rather, isn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not a better air in the whole piece, Artie; but, my boy, who do you think
+ will ever understand the meaning of the words. The gods themselves won&rsquo;t
+ know what you&rsquo;re driving at.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But I&rsquo;m going to strike out a new line, Daddie dear. I&rsquo;m not
+ going to play to the gallery; I mean to play to the stalls and boxes.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Was there ever such a born aristocrat as this young parson is!&rsquo;
+ cried the old man, lifting up both his hands with a playful gesture of
+ mock-deprecation. &lsquo;He&rsquo;s hopeless! He&rsquo;s terrible! He&rsquo;s
+ incorrigible! Why, you unworthy son of a respectable Paddington shoemaker,
+ if even the intelligent British artizans in the gallery don&rsquo;t
+ understand you, how the dickens do you suppose the oiled and curled
+ Assyrian bulls in the stalls and boxes will have a glimmering idea of what
+ you&rsquo;re driving at? The supposition&rsquo;s an insult to the popular
+ intelligence&mdash;in other words, to me, sir, your Progenitor.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berkeley laughed. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that, father,&rsquo; he
+ said, holding up the page of manuscript music at arm&rsquo;s length
+ admiringly before him; &lsquo;but I do know one thing: this comic opera of
+ mine is going to be a triumphant success.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘So I&rsquo;ve thought ever since you began it, Artie. You see, my boy,
+ there&rsquo;s a great many points in its favour. In the first place you
+ can write your own libretto, or whatever you call it; and you know I&rsquo;ve
+ always held that though that Wagner man was wrong in practice&mdash;a most
+ inflated thunder-bomb, his Lohengrin&mdash;yet he was right in theory,
+ right in theory, Artie; every composer ought to be his own poet. Well,
+ then, again, you&rsquo;ve got a certain peculiar vein of humour of your
+ own, a kind of delicate semi-serious burlesque turn about you that&rsquo;s
+ quite original, both in writing and in composing; you&rsquo;re a humourist
+ in verse and a humourist in music, that&rsquo;s the long and the short of
+ it. Now, you&rsquo;ve hit upon a fresh lode of dramatic ore in this opera
+ of yours, and if my judgment goes for anything, it&rsquo;ll bring the
+ house down the first evening. I&rsquo;m a bit of a critic, Artie; by hook
+ or by crook, you know, paper or money, I&rsquo;ve heard every good opera,
+ comic or serious, that&rsquo;s been given in London these last thirty
+ years, and I flatter myself I know something by this time about operatic
+ criticism.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re wrong about Wagner, father,&rsquo; said Arthur, still
+ glancing with paternal partiality at his sheet of manuscript: &lsquo;Lohengrin&rsquo;s
+ a very fine work, a grand work, I assure you. I won&rsquo;t let you run it
+ down. But, barring that, I think you&rsquo;re pretty nearly right in your
+ main judgment. I&rsquo;m not modest, and it strikes me somehow that I&rsquo;ve
+ invented a genre. That&rsquo;s about what it comes to.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If you&rsquo;d confine yourself to your native tongue, Mr. Parson, your
+ ignorant old father might have some chance of agreeing or disagreeing with
+ you; but as he doesn&rsquo;t even know what the thingumbob you say you&rsquo;ve
+ invented may happen to be, he can&rsquo;t profitably continue the
+ discussion of that subject. However, my only fear is that you may perhaps
+ be writing above the heads of the audience. Not in the music, Artie; they
+ can&rsquo;t fail to catch that; it rings in one&rsquo;s head like the song
+ of a hedge warbler&mdash;tirree, tirree, lu-lu-lu, la-la, tirree, tu-whit,
+ tu-whoo, tra-la-la&mdash;but in the words and the action. I&rsquo;m half
+ afraid that&rsquo;ll be over their heads, even in the gallery. What do you
+ think you&rsquo;ll finally call it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m hesitating, Daddy, between &ldquo;Evolution&rdquo; and &ldquo;The
+ Primate of Fiji.&rdquo; Which do you recommend&mdash;tell me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The Primate, by all means,&rsquo; said the old man gaily. &lsquo;And you
+ still mean to open with the debate in the Fijian Parliament on the
+ Deceased Grandmother&rsquo;s Second Cousin Bill?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, I don&rsquo;t, Daddy. I&rsquo;ve written a new first scene this week,
+ in which the President of the Board of Trade remonstrates with the
+ mermaids on their remissness in sending their little ones to the Fijian
+ Board Schools, in order to receive primary instruction in the art of
+ swimming. I&rsquo;ve got a capital chorus of mermaids to balance the other
+ chorus of Biological Professors on the Challenger Expedition. I consider
+ it&rsquo;s a happy cross between Ariosto and Aristophanes. If you like, I&rsquo;ll
+ give you the score, and read over the words to you.&rsquo; &lsquo;Do,&rsquo;
+ said the old man, settling himself down in comfort in his son&rsquo;s
+ easy-chair, and assuming the sternest air of an impartial critic. Arthur
+ Berkeley read on dramatically, in his own clever airy fashion, suiting
+ accent and gesture to the subject matter through the whole first three
+ acts of that exquisitely humorous opera, the Primate of Fiji. Sometimes he
+ hummed the tune over to himself as he went; sometimes he played a few
+ notes upon his flute by way of striking the key-note; sometimes he rose
+ from his seat in his animation, and half acted the part he was reading
+ with almost unconscious and spontaneous mimicry. He read through the
+ famous song of the President of the Local Government Board, that everybody
+ has since heard played by every German band at the street corners; through
+ the marvellously catching chorus of the superannuated tide-waiters;
+ through the culminating dialogue between the London Missionary Society&rsquo;s
+ Agent and the Hereditary Grand Sacrificer to the King of Fiji. Of course
+ the recital lacked everything of the scenery and dresses that give it so
+ much vogue upon the stage; but it had at least the charmingly suggestive
+ music, the wonderful linking of sound to sense, the droll and inimitable
+ intermixture of the plausible and the impossible which everybody has
+ admired and laughed at in the acted piece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker listened in breathless silence, keeping his eye fixed
+ steadily all the time upon the clean copy of the score. Only once he made
+ a wry face to himself, and that was in the chorus to the debate in the
+ Fijian Parliament on the proposal to leave off the practice of obligatory
+ cannibalism. The conservative party were of opinion that if you began by
+ burying instead of eating your deceased wife, you might end by the
+ atrocious practice of marrying your deceased wife&rsquo;s sister; and they
+ opposed the revolutionary measure in that well known refrain:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Of change like this we&rsquo;re naturally chary,
+ Nolumus leges Fijiae mutari.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That passage evidently gave the Progenitor deep pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Stick to your own language, my boy,&rsquo; he murmured; &lsquo;stick to
+ your own language. The Latin may be very fine, but the gallery wil never
+ understand it.&rsquo; However, when Arthur finished at last, he drew a
+ long breath, and laid down the roll of manuscript with an involuntary
+ little cry of half-stifled applause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Artie,&rsquo; he said rising from the chair slowly, &lsquo;Artie, that&rsquo;s
+ not so bad for a parson, I can tell you. I hope the Archbishop won&rsquo;t
+ be tempted to cite you for displaying an amount of originality unworthy of
+ your cloth.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Father,&rsquo; said Arthur, suddenly, after a short pause, with a tinge
+ of pensiveness in his tone that was not usual with him, in speaking at
+ least; &lsquo;Father, I often think I ought never to have become a parson
+ at all.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, my boy,&rsquo; said the old man, looking up at him sharply with his
+ keen eyes, &lsquo;I knew that long ago. You&rsquo;ve never really believed
+ in the thing, and you oughtn&rsquo;t to have gone in for it from the very
+ beginning. It was the music, and the dresses, and the decorations that
+ enticed you, Artie, and not the doctrine.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur turned towards him with a pained expression. &lsquo;Father,&rsquo;
+ he said, half reproachfully, &lsquo;Father, dear father, don&rsquo;t talk
+ to me like that. Don&rsquo;t think I&rsquo;m so shallow or so dishonest as
+ to subscribe to opinions I don&rsquo;t believe in. It&rsquo;s a curious
+ thing to say, a curious thing in this unbelieving age, and I&rsquo;m half
+ ashamed to say it, even to you; but do you know, father, I really do
+ believe it: in my very heart of hearts, I fancy I believe every word of
+ it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man listened to him compassionately and tenderly, as a woman
+ listens to the fears and troubles of a little child. To him, that plain
+ confession of faith was, in truth, a wonder and a stumbling-block. Good,
+ simple-hearted, easy-going, logical-minded, sceptical shoemaker that he
+ was, with his head all stuffed full of Malthus, and John Stuart Mill, and
+ political economy, and the hard facts of life and science, how could he
+ hope to understand the complex labyrinth of metaphysical thinking, and
+ childlike faith, and aesthetic attraction, and historical authority, which
+ made a sensitive man like Arthur Berkeley, in his wayward, half-serious,
+ emotional fashion, turn back lovingly and regretfully to the fair old
+ creed that his father had so long deserted? How strange that Artie, a
+ full-grown male person, with all the learning of the schools behind him,
+ should relapse at last into these childish and exploded mediaeval
+ superstitions! How incredible that, after having been brought up from his
+ babyhood upward on the strong meat of the agnostic philosophers, he should
+ fall back in his manhood on the milk for babes administered to him by
+ orthodox theology! The simple-minded old sceptic could hardly credit it,
+ now that Arthur told him so with his own lips, though he had more than
+ once suspected it when he heard him playing sacred music with that last
+ touch of earnestness in his execution which only the sincerest conviction
+ and most intimate realisation of its import can ever give. Ah well, ah
+ well, good sceptical old shoemaker; there are perhaps more things in
+ heaven and earth and in the deep soul of man than are dreamt of in your
+ philosophy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, though the avowal shocked and disappointed him a little, the old
+ man could not find it in his heart to say one word of sorrow or
+ disapproval, far less of ridicule or banter, to his dearly loved boy. He
+ felt instinctively, what Herbert Le Breton could not feel, that this
+ sentimental tendency of his son&rsquo;s, as he thought it, lay far too
+ deep and seemed far too sacred for mere argument or common discussion.
+ &lsquo;Perhaps,&rsquo; he said to himself softly, &lsquo;Artie&rsquo;s
+ emotional side has got the better of his intellectual. I brought him up
+ without telling him any thing of these things, except negatively, and by
+ way of warning against superstitious tendencies; and when he went to
+ Oxford, and saw the doctrines tricked out in all the authority of a great
+ hierarchy, with its cathedrals, and chapels, and choirs, and altars, and
+ robes, and fal-lal finery, it got the better of him; got the better of
+ him, very naturally. Artie&rsquo;s a cleverer fellow than his old father&mdash;had
+ more education, and so on; and I&rsquo;m fond of him, very fond of him;
+ but his logical faculty isn&rsquo;t quite straight, somehow: he lets his
+ feelings have too much weight and prominence against his calmer reason! I
+ can easily understand how, with his tastes and leanings, the clericals
+ should have managed to get a hold over him. The clericals are such
+ insinuating cunning fellows. A very impressionable boy Artie was, always;
+ the poetical temperament and the artistic temperament always is
+ impressionable, I suppose; but shoemaking certainly does develop the
+ logical faculties. Seems as though the logical faculties were situated in
+ the fore-part of the brain, as they mark them out on the phrenological
+ heads; and the leaning forward that gives us the shoemaker&rsquo;s
+ forehead must tend to enlarge them&mdash;give them plenty of room to
+ expand and develop!&rsquo; Saying which thing to himself musingly, the
+ father took his son&rsquo;s hand gently in his, and only smoothed it
+ quietly as he looked deep into Arthur&rsquo;s eyes, without uttering a
+ single word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Arthur Berkeley, he sat silent, too, half averting his face from
+ his father&rsquo;s gaze, and feeling a little blush of shame upon his
+ cheek at having been surprised unexpectedly into such an unwonted avowal.
+ How could he ever expect his father to understand the nature of his
+ feelings! To him, good old man that he was, all these things were just
+ matters of priestcraft and obscurantism&mdash;fables invented by the
+ ecclesiastical mind as a means of getting fat livings and comfortable
+ deaneries out of the public pocket. And, indeed, Arthur was well
+ accustomed at Oxford to keeping his own opinions to himself on such
+ subjects. What chance of sympathy or response was there for such a man as
+ he in that coldly critical and calmly deliberative learned society? Not,
+ of course, that all Oxford was wholly given over even then to extreme
+ agnosticism. There were High Churchmen, and Low Churchmen, and Broad
+ Churchmen enough, to be sure: men learned in the Fathers, and the Canons,
+ and the Acts of the General Councils; men ready to argue on the
+ intermediate state, or on the three witnesses, or on the heretical nature
+ of the Old Catholic schism; men prepared with minute dogmatic opinions
+ upon every conceivable or inconceivable point of abstract theology. There
+ were people who could trace the Apostolic succession of the old Cornish
+ bishops, and people who could pronounce authoritatively upon the exact
+ distinction between justification and remission of sins. But for all these
+ things Arthur Berkeley cared nothing. Where, then, among those learned
+ exegetical theologians, was there room for one whose belief was a matter,
+ not of reason and argument, but of feeling and of sympathy? He did not
+ want to learn what the Council of Trent had said about such and such a
+ dogma; he wanted to be conscious of an inner truth, to find the world
+ permeated by an informing righteousness, to know himself at one with the
+ inner essence of the entire universe. And though he could never feel sure
+ whether it was all illusion or not, he had hungered and thirsted after
+ believing it, till, as he told his father timidly that day, he actually
+ did believe it somehow in his heart of hearts. Let us not seek to probe
+ too deeply into those inner recesses, whose abysmal secrets are never
+ perfectly clear even to the introspective eyes of the conscious
+ self-dissector himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a pause Arthur spoke again. He spoke this time in a very low voice,
+ as one afraid to open his soul too much, even to his father. ‘Dear, dear
+ father,&rsquo; he said, releasing his hand softly, &lsquo;you don&rsquo;t
+ quite understand what I mean about it. It isn&rsquo;t because I don&rsquo;t
+ believe, or try to believe, or hope I believe, that I think I ought never
+ to have become a parson. In my way, as in a glass, darkly, I do strive my
+ best to believe, though perhaps my belief is hardly more in its way than
+ Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s unbelieving. I do want to think that this great
+ universe we see around us isn&rsquo;t all a mistake and an abortion. I
+ want to find a mind and an order and a purpose in it; and, perhaps because
+ I want it, I make myself believe that I have really found it. In that hope
+ and belief, with the ultimate object of helping on whatever is best and
+ truest in the world, I took orders. But I feel now that it was an error
+ for me. I&rsquo;m not the right man to make a parson. There are men who
+ are born for that rôle; men who know how to conduct themselves in it
+ decently and in seemly fashion; men who can quietly endure all its
+ restraints, and can fairly rise to the height of all its duties. But I can&rsquo;t.
+ I was intended for something lighter and less onerous than that. If I stop
+ in the Church I shall do no good to myself or to it; if I come out of it,
+ I shall make both parties freer, and shall be able to do more good in my
+ own generation. And so, father, for the very same reasons that made me go
+ into it, I mean to come out again. Not in any quarrel with it, nor as
+ turning my back upon it, but just as the simple acknowledgment of a
+ mistaken calling. It wouldn&rsquo;t be seemly, for example, for a parson
+ to write comic operas. But I feel I can do more good by writing comic
+ operas than by talking dogmatically about things I hardly understand to
+ people who hardly understand me. So before I get this opera acted I mean
+ to leave off my white tie, and be known in future, henceforth and for
+ ever, as plain Arthur Berkeley.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker listened in respectful silence. &lsquo;It isn&rsquo;t
+ for me, Artie,&rsquo; he said, as his son finished, &lsquo;to stand
+ between a man and his conscience. As John Stuart Mill says in his essay on
+ &ldquo;Liberty,&rdquo; we must allow full play to every man&rsquo;s
+ individuality. Wonderful man, John Stuart Mill; I understand his
+ grandfather was a shoemaker. Well, I won&rsquo;t talk with you about the
+ matter of conviction; but I never wanted you to be a parson, and I shall
+ feel all the happier myself when you&rsquo;ve ceased to be one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And I,&rsquo; said Arthur, &lsquo;shall feel all the freer; but if I had
+ been able to remain where I was, I should have felt all the worthier, for
+ all that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; A QUIET WEDDING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Fate was adverse for the moment to Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s well meant
+ designs for shuffling off the trammels of his ecclesiastical habit. He was
+ destined to appear in public at least once more, not only in the black
+ coat and white tie of his everyday professional costume, but even in the
+ flowing snowy surplice of a solemn and decorous spiritual function. The
+ very next morning&rsquo;s post brought him a little note from Ernest Le
+ Breton specially begging him, in his own name and Edie&rsquo;s, to come
+ down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and officiate as parson at their approaching
+ wedding. The note had cost Ernest a conscientious struggle, for he would
+ have personally preferred to be married at a Registry Office, as being
+ more in accordance with the duties of a good citizen, and savouring less
+ of effete ecclesiastical superstition; but he felt he couldn&rsquo;t even
+ propose such a step to Edie; she wouldn&rsquo;t have considered herself
+ married at all, unless she were married quite regularly by a duly
+ qualified clerk in holy orders of the Church of England as by law
+ established. Already, indeed, Ernest was beginning to recognise with a
+ sigh that if he was going to live in the world at all, he must do so by
+ making at least a partial sacrifice of political consistency. You may step
+ out of your own century, if you choose, yourself, but you can&rsquo;t get
+ all the men and women with whom you come in contact to step out of it also
+ in unison just to please you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Ernest had sat down reluctantly to his desk, and consented to ask
+ Arthur Berkeley to assist at the important ceremony in his professional
+ clerical capacity. If he was going to have a medicine man or a priest at
+ all to marry him to the girl of his choice&mdash;a barbaric survival, at
+ the best, he thought it&mdash;he would, at any rate, prefer having his
+ friend Arthur&mdash;a good man and true&mdash;to having the fat,
+ easy-going, purse-proud rector of the parish; the younger son of a wealthy
+ family who had gone into the Church for the sake of the living, and who
+ rolled sumptuously down the long hilly High Street every day in his
+ comfortable carriage, leaning back with his fat hands folded complacently
+ over his ample knees, and gazing abstractedly, with his little pigs&rsquo;-eyes
+ half buried in his cheek, at the beautiful prospect afforded him by the
+ broad livery-covered backs of his coachman and his footman. Ernest could
+ never have consented to lot that lazy, overfed, useless encumbrance on a
+ long-suffering commonwealth, that idle gorger of dainty meats and choice
+ wines from the tithes of the tolling, suffering people, bear any part in
+ what was after all the most solemn and serious contract of his whole
+ lifetime. And, to say the truth, Edie quite agreed with him on that point,
+ too. Though her moral indignation against poor, useless, empty-headed old
+ Mr. Walters didn&rsquo;t burn quite so fierce or so clear as Ernest&rsquo;s&mdash;she
+ regarded the fat old parson, indeed, rather from the social point of view,
+ as a ludicrously self-satisfied specimen of the lower stages of humanity,
+ than from the political point of view, as a greedy swallower of large
+ revenues for small work inefficiently performed&mdash;she would still have
+ felt that his presence at her wedding jarred and grated on all the finer
+ sensibilities of her nature, as out of accord with the solemn and tender
+ associations of that supreme moment. To have been married by prosy old Mr.
+ Walters, to have taken the final benediction on the greatest act of her
+ life from those big white fat fingers, would have spoilt the reminiscence
+ of the wedding day for her as long as she lived. But when Ernest suggested
+ Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s name to her, she acquiesced with all her heart in
+ the happy selection. She liked Berkeley better than anybody else she had
+ ever met, except Ernest; and she knew that his presence would rather add
+ one more bright association to the day than detract from it in the coming
+ years. Her poor little wedding would want all the additions that friends
+ could make to its cheerfulness, to get over the lasting gloom and blank of
+ dear Harry&rsquo;s absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You will come and help us, I know, Berkeley,&rsquo; Ernest wrote to
+ Arthur in his serious fashion. &lsquo;We feel there is nobody else we
+ should so like to have present at our wedding as yourself. Come soon, too,
+ for there are lots of things I want to talk over with you. It&rsquo;s a
+ very solemn responsibility, getting married: you have to take upon
+ yourself the duty of raising up future citizens for the state; and with
+ our present knowledge of how nature works through the laws of heredity,
+ you have to think whether you two who contemplate marriage are well fitted
+ to act as parents to the generations that are to be. When I remember that
+ all my own faults and failings may be handed on relentlessly to those that
+ come after us&mdash;built up in the very fibre of their being&mdash;I am
+ half appalled at my own temerity. Then, again, there is the inexorable
+ question of money; is it prudent or is it wrong of us to marry on such an
+ uncertainty? I&rsquo;m afraid that Schurz and Malthas would tell us&mdash;very
+ wrong. I have turned over these things by myself till I&rsquo;m tired of
+ arguing them out in my own head, and I want you to come down beforehand,
+ so as to cheer me up a bit with your lighter and brighter philosophy. On
+ the very eve of my marriage, I&rsquo;m somehow getting dreadfully
+ pessimistic.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur read the letter through impatiently and crumpled it up in his hands
+ with a gesture of despondency. &lsquo;Poor little Miss Butterfly,&rsquo;
+ he said to himself, pityingly, &lsquo;was there ever such an abstraction
+ of an ethical unit as this good, solemn, self-torturing Ernest! How will
+ she ever live with him? How will he ever live with her? Poor little soul!
+ Harry is gone like the sunshine out of her life; and now this
+ well-meaning, gloomy, conscientious cloud comes caressingly to overspread
+ her with the shadowing pall of its endless serious doubts and hesitations.
+ Fancy a man who has won little Miss Butterfly&rsquo;s heart&mdash;dear
+ little Miss Butterfly&rsquo;s gay, laughing, tender little heart&mdash;writing
+ such a letter as that to the friend who&rsquo;s going to marry them! Upon
+ my word, I&rsquo;ve half a mind to go into the concientious scruples
+ business on my own account! Have I any right to be a party to fettering
+ poor airy fairy little Miss Butterfly, with a heavy iron chain for life
+ and always, to this great lumbering elephantine moral Ernest? Am I
+ justified in tying the cable round her dainty little neck with a silken
+ thread, and then fastening it round his big leg with rivets of hardened
+ steel on the patent Bessemer process? If a couple of persons, duly called
+ by banns in their own respective parishes, or furnished with the right
+ reverend&rsquo;s perquisite, a licence, come to me, a clerk in holy
+ orders, and ask me to marry them, I&rsquo;ve a vague idea that unless I
+ comply I lay myself open to the penalties of praemunire, or something else
+ equally awful and mysterious. But if the couple write and ask me to come
+ down into Devonshire and marry them, that&rsquo;s quite another matter. I
+ can lawfully answer, &lsquo;Non possumus.&rsquo; There&rsquo;s a fine
+ ecclesiastical ring, by the way, about answering &lsquo;Non possumus;&rsquo;
+ it sums up the entire position of the Church in a nutshell! Well, I doubt
+ whether I ought to go; but as a matter of friendship, I&rsquo;ll throw
+ overboard my poor conscience. It&rsquo;s used to the process by this time,
+ no doubt, like eels to skinning; and as Hudibras says,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ However tender it may be,
+ &lsquo;Tis passing blind where &lsquo;twill not see.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If she&rsquo;d only have taken ME, now, who knows but I might in time have
+ risen to be a Prebendary or even a Dean? &lsquo;They that have used the
+ office of a deacon well, purchase to themselves a good degree,&rsquo; Paul
+ wrote to Timothy once; but it&rsquo;s not so now, it&rsquo;s not so now;
+ preferment goes by favour, and the deacon must e&rsquo;en shift as best he
+ can on his own account.&rsquo; So, in the end, Arthur packed up his
+ surplice in his little handbag, and took his way peacefully down to
+ Calcombe Pomeroy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a very quiet, almost a sombre wedding, for the poor Oswalds were
+ still enveloped in the lasting gloom of their great loss, and not much
+ outward show or preparation, such as the female heart naturally delights
+ in, could possibly be made under these painful circumstances. Still, all
+ the world of Calcombe came to see little Miss Oswald married to the grave
+ gentleman from Oxford; and most of them gave her their hearty good wishes,
+ for Edie was a general favourite with gentle and simple throughout the
+ whole borough. Herbert was there, like a decorous gentleman, to represent
+ the bridegroom&rsquo;s family, and so was Ronald, who had slipped away
+ from London without telling Lady Le Breton, for fear of another
+ distressful scone at the last moment. Arthur Berkeley read the service in
+ his beautiful impressive manner, and looked his part well in his flowing
+ white surplice. But as he uttered the solemn words, &lsquo;Whom God hath
+ joined together, let no man put asunder,&rsquo; the musical ring of his
+ own voice sounded to his heart like the knell of his own one love&mdash;the
+ funeral service over the only romance he could ever mix in throughout his
+ whole lifetime. Poor fellow, he had taken the duty upon him with all
+ friendly heartiness; but he felt an awful and lonely feeling steal over
+ him when it was all finished, and when he knew that his little Miss
+ Butterfly was now Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s lawful wife for ever and ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the vestry, after signing the books, Herbert and Ronald and some of the
+ others insisted on their ancient right of kissing the bride in good old
+ English fashion. But Arthur did not. It would not have been loyal. He felt
+ in his heart that he had loved little Miss Butterfly too deeply himself
+ for that; to claim a kiss would be abusing the formal dues of his
+ momentary position. Henceforth he would not even think of her to himself
+ in that little pet name of his brief Oxford dream: he would call her
+ nothing in his own mind but Mrs. Le Breton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie&rsquo;s simple little presents were all arranged in the tiny parlour
+ behind the shop. Most of them were from her own personal friends: a few
+ were from the gentry of the surrounding neighbourhood: but there were two
+ handsomer than the rest: they came from outside the narrow little circle
+ of Calcombe Pomeroy society. One was a plain gold bracelet from Arthur
+ Berkeley; and on the gold of the inner face, though neither Edie nor
+ Ernest noticed it, he had lightly cut with his knife on the soft metal the
+ one word, &lsquo;Frustra.&rsquo; The other was a dressing-case, with a
+ little card inside, &lsquo;Miss Oswald, from Lady Hilda Tregellis.&rsquo;
+ Hilda had heard of Ernest&rsquo;s approaching wedding from Herbert (who
+ took an early opportunity of casually lunching at Dunbude, in order to
+ show that he mustn&rsquo;t be identified with his socialistic brother);
+ and the news had strangely proved a slight salve to poor Hilda&rsquo;s
+ wounded vanity&mdash;or, perhaps it would be fairer to say, to her
+ slighted higher instincts. &lsquo;A country grocer&rsquo;s daughter!&rsquo;
+ she said to herself: &lsquo;the sister of a great mathematical scholar!
+ How very original of him to think of marrying a grocer&rsquo;s daughter!
+ Why, of course, he must have been engaged to her all along before he came
+ here! And even if he hadn&rsquo;t been, one might have known at once that
+ such a man as he is would never go and marry a girl whose name&rsquo;s in
+ the peerage, when he could strike out a line for himself by marrying a
+ grocer&rsquo;s daughter. I really like him better than ever for it. I must
+ positively send her a little present. They&rsquo;ll be as poor as church
+ mice, I&rsquo;ve no doubt. I ought to send her something that&rsquo;ll be
+ practically useful.&rsquo; And by way of sending something practically
+ useful, Lady Hilda chose at last a handsome silver-topped Russia leather
+ dressing-case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not such a wedding as Edie had pictured to herself in her first
+ sweet maidenly fancies; but still, when they drove away alone in the
+ landau from the side-door of the Red Lion to Calcombe Road Station, she
+ felt a quiet pride and security in her heart from the fact that she was
+ now the wedded wife of a man she loved so dearly as Ernest Le Breton. And
+ even Ernest so far conquered his social scruples that he took first-class
+ tickets, for the first time in his life, to Ilfracombe, where they were to
+ spend their brief and hasty fragment of a poor little honeymoon. It&rsquo;s
+ so extremely hard to be a consistent socialist where women are concerned,
+ especially on the very day of your own wedding!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; INTO THE FIRE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘Let me see, Le Breton,&rsquo; Dr. Greatrex observed to the new master,
+ ‘you&rsquo;ve taken rooms for yourself in West Street for the present&mdash;you&rsquo;ll
+ take a house on the parade by-and-by, no doubt. Now, which church do you
+ mean to go to?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, really,&rsquo; Ernest answered, taken a little aback at the
+ suddenness of the question, &lsquo;I haven&rsquo;t had time to think about
+ it yet.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor frowned slightly. &lsquo;Not had time to think about it,&rsquo;
+ he repeated, rather severely. &lsquo;Not had time to think about such a
+ serious question as your particular place of worship! You quite surprise
+ me. Well, if you&rsquo;ll allow me to make a suggestion in the matter it
+ would be that you and Mrs. Le Breton should take seats, for the present at
+ least, at St. Martha&rsquo;s. The parish church is high, decidedly high,
+ and I wouldn&rsquo;t recommend you to go there; most of our parents don&rsquo;t
+ approve of it. You&rsquo;re an Oxford man, I know, and so I suppose you&rsquo;re
+ rather high yourself; but in this particular matter I would strongly
+ advise you to subordinate your own personal feelings to the parents&rsquo;
+ wishes. Then there&rsquo;s St. Jude&rsquo;s; St. Jude&rsquo;s is
+ distinctly low&mdash;quite Evangelical in fact: indeed, I may say,
+ scarcely what I should consider sound church principles at all in any way;
+ and I think you ought most certainly to avoid it sedulously. Evangelicism
+ is on the decline at present in Pilbury Regis. As to St. Barnabas&mdash;Barabbas
+ they call it generally, a most irreverent joke, but, of course, inevitable&mdash;Barabbas
+ is absolutely Ritualistic. Many of our parents object to it most strongly.
+ But St. Martha&rsquo;s is a quiet, moderate, inoffensive church in every
+ respect&mdash;sound and sensible, and free from all extremes. You can give
+ no umbrage to anybody, even the most cantankerous, by going to St. Martha&rsquo;s.
+ The High Church people fraternise with it on the one hand, and the
+ moderate church people fraternise with it on the other, while as to the
+ Evangelicals and the dissenters, they hardly contribute any boys to the
+ school, or if they do, they don&rsquo;t object to unobtrusive church
+ principles. Indeed, my experience has been, Le Breton, that even the most
+ rabid dissenters prefer to have their sons educated by a sound, moderate,
+ high-principled, and, if I may say so, neutral-tinted church clergyman.&rsquo;
+ And the doctor complacently pulled his white tie straight before the big
+ gilt-framed drawing-room mirror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then, again,&rsquo; the doctor went on placidly in a bland tone of mild
+ persuasion, &lsquo;there&rsquo;s the question of politics. Politics are a
+ very ticklish matter, I can assure you, in Pilbury Regis. Have you any
+ fixed political opinions of your own, Le Breton, or are you waiting to
+ form them till you&rsquo;ve had some little experience in your profession?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My opinions,&rsquo; Ernest answered timidly, &lsquo;so far as they can be
+ classed under any of the existing political formulas at all, are decidedly
+ Liberal&mdash;I may even say Radical.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor bit his lip and frowned severely. &lsquo;Radical,&rsquo; he
+ said, slowly, with a certain delicate tinge of acerbity in his tone. ‘That&rsquo;s
+ bad. If you will allow me to interpose in the matter, I should strongly
+ advise you, for your own sake, to change them at once and entirely. I don&rsquo;t
+ object to moderate Liberalism&mdash;perhaps as many as one-third of our
+ parents are moderate Liberals; but decidedly the most desirable form of
+ political belief for a successful schoolmaster is a quiet and gentlemanly,
+ but unswerving Conservatism. I don&rsquo;t say you ought to be an
+ uncompromising old-fashioned Tory&mdash;far from it: that alienates not
+ only the dissenters, but even the respectable middle-class Liberals. What
+ is above all things expected in a schoolmaster is a central position in
+ politics, so to speak&mdash;a careful avoidance of all extremes&mdash;a
+ readiness to welcome all reasonable progress, while opposing in a
+ conciliatory spirit all revolutionary or excessive changes&mdash;in short,
+ an attitude of studied moderation. That, if you will allow me to advise
+ you, Le Breton, is the sort of thing, you may depend upon it, that most
+ usually meets the wishes of the largest possible number of pupils&rsquo;
+ parents.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid,&rsquo; Ernest answered, as respectfully as possible,
+ &lsquo;my political convictions are too deeply seated to be subordinated
+ to my professional interests.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Eh! What!&rsquo; the doctor cried sharply. &lsquo;Subordinate your
+ principles to your personal interests! Oh, pray don&rsquo;t mistake me so
+ utterly as that! Not at all, not at all, my dear Le Breton. I don&rsquo;t
+ mean that for the shadow of a second. What I mean is rather this,&rsquo;
+ and here the doctor cleared his throat and pulled round his white tie a
+ second time, &lsquo;that a schoolmaster, considering attentively what is
+ best for his pupils, mark you&mdash;we all exist for our pupils, you know,
+ my dear fellow, don&rsquo;t we?&mdash;a schoolmaster should avoid such
+ action as may give any unnecessary scandal, you see, or seem to clash with
+ the ordinary opinion of the pupils&rsquo; parents. Of course, if your
+ views are fully formed, and are of a mildly Liberal complexion (put it so,
+ I beg of you, and don&rsquo;t use that distressful word Radical), I wouldn&rsquo;t
+ for the world have you act contrary to them. But I wouldn&rsquo;t have you
+ obtrude them too ostentatiously&mdash;for your own sake, Le Breton, for
+ your own sake, I assure you. Remember, you&rsquo;re a very young man yet:
+ you have plenty of time before you to modify your opinions in: as you go
+ on, you&rsquo;ll modify them&mdash;moderate them&mdash;bring them into
+ harmony with the average opinions of ordinary parents. Don&rsquo;t commit
+ yourself at present&mdash;that&rsquo;s all I would say to you&mdash;don&rsquo;t
+ commit yourself at present. When you&rsquo;re as old as I am, my dear
+ fellow, you&rsquo;ll see through all these youthful extravagances.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And as to the church, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; said Mrs. Greatrex, with
+ bland suggestiveness from the ottoman, &lsquo;of course, we regard the
+ present very unsatisfactory arrangement as only temporary. The doctor
+ hopes in time to get a chapel built, which is much nicer for the boys, and
+ also more convenient for the masters and their families&mdash;they all
+ have seats, of course, in the chancel. At Charlton College, where the
+ doctor was an assistant for some years, before we came to Pilbury, there
+ was one of the under-masters, a young man of very good family, who took
+ such an interest in the place that he not only contributed a hundred
+ pounds out of his own pocket towards building a chapel, but also got ever
+ so many of his wealthy friends elsewhere to subscribe, first to that, and
+ then to the organ and stained-glass window. We&rsquo;ve got up a small
+ building fund here ourselves already, of which the doctor&rsquo;s
+ treasurer, and we hope before many years to have a really nice chapel,
+ with good music and service well done&mdash;the kind of thing that&rsquo;ll
+ be of use to the school, and have an excellent moral effect upon the boys
+ in the way of religious training.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No doubt,&rsquo; Ernest answered evasively, &lsquo;you&rsquo;ll soon
+ manage to raise the money in such a place as Pilbury.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No doubt,&rsquo; the doctor replied, looking at him with a searching
+ glance, and evidently harbouring an uncomfortable suspicion, already, that
+ this young man had not got the moral and religious welfare of the boys
+ quite so deeply at heart as was desirable in a model junior assistant
+ master. &lsquo;Well, well, we shall see you at school to-morrow morning,
+ Le Breton: till then I hope you&rsquo;ll find yourselves quite comfortable
+ in your new lodgings.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest went back from this visit of ceremony with a doubtful heart, and
+ left Dr. and Mrs. Greatrex alone to discuss their new acquisition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Maria,&rsquo; said the doctor, in a dubious tone of voice, as soon
+ as Ernest was fairly out of hearing, &lsquo;what do you think of him?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Think!&rsquo; answered Mrs. Greatrex, energetically. &lsquo;Why, I don&rsquo;t
+ think at all. I feel sure he&rsquo;ll never, never, never make a
+ schoolmaster!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid not,&rsquo; the doctor responded, pensively. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ afraid not, Maria. He&rsquo;s got ideas of his own, I regret to say; and,
+ what&rsquo;s worse, they&rsquo;re not the right ones.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, he&rsquo;ll never do,&rsquo; Mrs. Greatrex continued, scornfully.
+ &lsquo;Nothing at all professional about him in any way. No interest or
+ enthusiasm in the matter of the chapel; not a spark of responsiveness even
+ about the stained-glass window; hardly a trace of moral or religious
+ earnestness, of care for the welfare and happiness of the dear boys. He
+ wouldn&rsquo;t in the least impress intending parents&mdash;or, rather, I
+ feel sure he&rsquo;d impress them most unfavourably. The best thing we can
+ do, now we&rsquo;ve got him, is to play off his name on relations in
+ society, but to keep the young man himself as far as possible in the
+ background. I confess he&rsquo;s a disappointment&mdash;a very great and
+ distressing disappointment.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He is, he is certainly,&rsquo; the doctor acquiesced, with a sigh of
+ regretfulness. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid we shall never be able to make much
+ of him. But we must do our best&mdash;for his own sake, and the sake of
+ the boys and parents, it&rsquo;s our duty, Maria, to do our best with him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, of course,&rsquo; Mrs. Greatrex replied, languidly: &lsquo;but I&rsquo;m
+ bound to say, I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;ll prove a very thankless piece of
+ duty. Young men of his sort have never any proper sense of gratitude.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Edie, in the little lodgings in a side street near the
+ school-house, had run out quickly to open the door for Ernest, and waited
+ anxiously to hear his report upon their new employers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Ernest dear,&rsquo; she asked, with something of the old childish
+ brightness in her eager manner, &lsquo;and what do you think of them?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, Edie,&rsquo; Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead gently, ‘I
+ don&rsquo;t want to judge them too hastily, but I&rsquo;m inclined to
+ fancy, on first sight, that both the doctor and his wife are most
+ egregious and unmitigated humbugs.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Humbugs, Ernest! why, how do you mean?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Edie, they&rsquo;ve got the moral and religious welfare of the boys
+ at their very finger ends; and, do you know&mdash;I don&rsquo;t want to be
+ uncharitable&mdash;but I somehow imagine they haven&rsquo;t got it at
+ heart as well. However, we must do our best, and try to fall in with them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And for a whole year Ernest and Edie did try to fall in with them to the
+ best of their ability. It was hard work, for though the doctor himself was
+ really at bottom a kind-hearted man, with a mere thick veneer of
+ professional humbug inseparable from his unhappy calling, Mrs. Greatrex
+ was a veritable thorn in the flesh to poor little natural honest-hearted
+ Edie. When she found that the Le Bretons didn&rsquo;t mean to take a house
+ on the Parade or elsewhere, but were to live ingloriously in wee side
+ street lodgings, her disappointment was severe and extreme; but when she
+ incidentally discovered that Mrs. Le Breton was positively a grocer&rsquo;s
+ daughter from a small country town, her moral indignation against the
+ baseness of mankind rose almost to white heat. To think that young Le
+ Breton should have insinuated himself into the position of third master
+ under false pretences&mdash;should have held out as qualifications for the
+ post his respectable connections, when he knew perfectly well all the time
+ that he was going to marry somebody who was not in Society&mdash;it was
+ really quite too awfully wicked and deceptive and unprincipled of him! A
+ very bad, dishonest young man, she was very much afraid; a young man with
+ no sense of truth or honour about him, though, of course, she wouldn&rsquo;t
+ say so for the world before any of the parents, or do anything to injure
+ the poor young fellow&rsquo;s future prospects if she could possibly help
+ it. But Mrs. Greatrex felt sure that Ernest had come to Pilbury of malice
+ prepense, as part of a deep-laid scheme to injure and ruin the doctor by
+ his horrid revolutionary notions. &lsquo;He does it on purpose,&rsquo; she
+ used to say; &lsquo;he talks in that way because he knows it positively
+ shocks and annoys us. He pretends to be very innocent all the time; but at
+ heart he&rsquo;s a malignant, jealous, uncharitable creature. I&rsquo;m
+ sure I wish he had never come to Pilbury Regis! And to go quarrelling with
+ his own mother, too&mdash;the unnatural man! The only respectable relation
+ he had, and the only one at all likely to produce any good or salutary
+ effect upon intending parents!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear,&rsquo; the doctor would answer apologetically, &lsquo;you&rsquo;re
+ really quite too hard upon young Le Breton. As far as school-work goes, he&rsquo;s
+ a capital master, I assure you&mdash;so conscientious, and hard-working,
+ and systematic. He does his very best with the boys, even with that stupid
+ lout, Blenkinsopp major; and he has managed to din something into them in
+ mathematics somehow, so that I&rsquo;m sure the fifth form will pass a
+ better examination this term than any term since we first came here. Now
+ that, you know, is really a great thing, even if he doesn&rsquo;t quite
+ fall in with our preconceived social requirements.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t know about the mathematics or the fifth
+ form, Joseph,&rsquo; Mrs. Geatrex used to reply, with great dignity.
+ &lsquo;That sort of thing falls under your department, I&rsquo;m aware,
+ not under mine. But I&rsquo;m sure that for all social purposes, Mr. Le
+ Breton is really a great deal worse than useless. A more unchristian,
+ disagreeable, self-opinionated, wrong-headed, objectionable young man I
+ never came across in the whole course of my experience. However, you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t listen to my advice upon the subject, so it&rsquo;s no use
+ talking any longer about it. I always advised you not to take him without
+ further enquiry into his antecedents; and you overbore me: you said he was
+ so well-connected, and so forth, and would hear nothing against him; so I
+ wish you joy now of your precious bargain. The only thing left for us is
+ to find some good opportunity of getting rid of him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I like the young man, as far as he goes,&rsquo; Dr. Greatrex replied
+ once, with unwonted spirit, &lsquo;and I won&rsquo;t get rid of him at
+ all, my dear, unless he obliges me to. He&rsquo;s really well meaning, in
+ spite of all his absurdities, and upon my word, Maria, I believe he&rsquo;s
+ thoroughly honest in his opinions.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Greatrex only met this flat rebellion by an indirect remark to the
+ effect that some people seemed absolutely destitute of the very faintest
+ glimmering power of judging human character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. &mdash; LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE DRAMA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; was duly accepted and put into rehearsal by
+ the astute and enterprising manager of the Ambiguities Theatre. ‘It&rsquo;s
+ a risk,&rsquo; he said candidly, when he read the manuscript over, ‘a
+ decided risk, Mr. Berkeley; I acknowledge the riskiness, but I don&rsquo;t
+ mind trying it for all that. You see, you&rsquo;ve staked everything upon
+ the doubtful supposition that the Public possesses a certain amount of
+ elementary intelligence, and a certain appreciation of genuine original
+ wit and humour. Your play&rsquo;s literature, good literature; and that&rsquo;s
+ rather a speculative element to introduce into the regular theatre
+ nowadays. Illegitimate, I should call it; decidedly illegitimate&mdash;but
+ still, perhaps, worth trying. Do you know the story about old Simon
+ Burbury, the horsedealer? Young Simon says to him one morning, &ldquo;Father,
+ don&rsquo;t you think we might manage to conduct this business of ours
+ without always telling quite so many downright lies about it?&rdquo; The
+ old man looks back at him reproachfully, and says with a solemn shake of
+ the head, &ldquo;Ah, Simon, Simon, little did I ever think I should live
+ to see a son of mine go in for speculation!&rdquo; Well, my dear sir, that&rsquo;s
+ pretty much how a modern manager feels about the literary element in the
+ drama. The Public isn&rsquo;t accustomed to it, and there&rsquo;s no
+ knowing how they may take it. Shakespeare, now, they stand readily enough,
+ because he&rsquo;s an old-established and perfectly respectable family
+ purveyor. Sheridan, too, of course, and one play of Goldsmith&rsquo;s, and
+ a trifle or so of George Colman&mdash;all recognised and all tolerated
+ because of their old prescriptive respectability. But for a new author to
+ aim at being literary&rsquo;s rather presumptuous; now tell me yourself,
+ isn&rsquo;t it? Seems as if he was setting himself up for a heaven-sent
+ genius, and trying to sit upon the older dramatists of the present
+ generation. Melodrama, sensation, burlesque&mdash;that&rsquo;s all right
+ enough&mdash;perfectly legitimate; but a real literary comic opera, with
+ good words and good music&mdash;it IS a little strong, for a beginner, Mr.
+ Berkeley, you WILL acknowledge.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But don&rsquo;t you think,&rsquo; Arthur answered, smiling
+ good-humouredly at his cynical frankness, &lsquo;an educated and cultured
+ Public is beginning to grow up that may, perhaps, really prefer a little
+ literature, provided it&rsquo;s made light enough and attractive enough
+ for their rapid digestion? Don&rsquo;t you think intelligent people are
+ beginning to get just a trifle sick of burlesque, and spectacle, and
+ sensation, and melodrama?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, my dear sir,&rsquo; the manager answered promptly, &lsquo;that&rsquo;s
+ the exact chance on which I&rsquo;m calculating when I venture to accept
+ your comic opera from an unknown beginner. It&rsquo;s clever, there&rsquo;s
+ no denying that, and I hope the fact won&rsquo;t be allowed to tell
+ against it: but the music&rsquo;s bright and lively; the songs are quaint
+ and catching; the dialogue&rsquo;s brisk and not too witty; and there&rsquo;s
+ plenty of business&mdash;plenty of business in it. I incline to think we
+ can get together a house at the Ambiguities that&rsquo;ll enter into the
+ humour of the thing, and see what your play&rsquo;s driving at. How did
+ you learn all about stage requirements, though? I never saw a beginner&rsquo;s
+ play with so little in it that was absolutely impossible.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I was a Shooting Star at Oxford,&rsquo; Berkeley answered simply, ‘so
+ that I know something&mdash;like a despised amateur&mdash;about stage
+ necessities; and I&rsquo;ve written one or two little pieces before for
+ private acting. Besides, Watkiss has helped me with all the technical
+ arrangements of the little opera.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;ll do,&rsquo; the manager answered, more confidently; &lsquo;I
+ won&rsquo;t predict a success, because you know a manager should never
+ prophesy unless he knows; but I think there&rsquo;s a Public in London
+ that&rsquo;ll take it in, just as they took in &ldquo;Caste&rdquo; and
+ &ldquo;Society,&rdquo; twenty years back, at the Prince of Wales&rsquo;s.
+ Anyhow, I&rsquo;m quite prepared to give it a fair trial.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the first night, Arthur Berkeley and the Progenitor went down in fear
+ and trembling to the stage door of the Ambiguities. There was a full
+ house, and the critics were all present, in some surprise at the temerity
+ of this new man; for it was noised abroad already by those who had seen
+ the rehearsals that &lsquo;The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; was a fresh
+ departure, after its own fashion, in the matter of English comic opera.
+ The curtain rose upon the chorus of mermaids, and the first song was a
+ decided hit. Still the Public, as becomes a first night, maintained a
+ dignified and critical reserve. When the President of the Board of Trade,
+ in full court costume, appeared upon the scene, in the midst of the very
+ realistic long-haired sea-ladies, the audience was half shocked for a
+ moment by the utter incongruity of the situation; but after a while they
+ began to discover that the incongruity was part of the joke, and they
+ laughed quietly a sedate and moderate laugh of suspended judgment. As the
+ Progenitor had predicted, the gods were the first to enter into the spirit
+ of the fun, and to give a hand to the Primate&rsquo;s first sermon. The
+ scientific professors on the Challenger Expedition took the fancy of the
+ house a little more decidedly; and even the stalls thawed visibly when the
+ professor of biology delivered his famous exposition of the evolution
+ hypothesis to the assembled chiefs of Raratouga. But it was the one feeble
+ second-hand old joke of the piece that really brought pit and boxes down
+ together in a sudden fit of inextinguishable laughter. The professor of
+ political economy enquired diligently, with note book in hand, of the
+ Princess of Fiji, whether she thought the influence of the missionaries
+ beneficial or otherwise; whether she considered these preachers of a new
+ religion really good or not; to which the unsophisticated child of nature
+ responded naively, &lsquo;Good, very good&mdash;roasted; but not quite so
+ good boiled,&rsquo; and the professor gravely entered the answer in his
+ philosophic note-book. It was a very ancient jest indeed, but it tickled
+ the ribs of the house mightily, as ancient jests usually do, and they
+ burst forthwith into a hearty roar of genuine approval. Then Arthur began
+ to breathe more freely. After that the house toned down again quietly, and
+ gave no decided token of approbation till the end of the piece. When the
+ curtain dropped there was a lull of hushed expectation for poor Arthur
+ Berkeley; and at its close the house broke out into a storm of applause,
+ and ‘The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; had firmly secured its position as the one
+ great theatrical success of the present generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a loud cry of &lsquo;Author! Author!&rsquo; and Arthur Berkeley,
+ hardly knowing how he got there, or what he was standing on, found himself
+ pushed from behind by friendly hands, on to the narrow space between the
+ curtain and the footlights. He became aware that a very hot and red body,
+ presumably himself, was bowing mechanically to a seething and clapping
+ mass of hands and faces over the whole theatre. Backing out again, in the
+ same semi-conscious fashion, with the universe generally reeling on more
+ than one distinct axis all around him, he was seized and hand-shaken
+ violently, first by the Progenitor, then by the manager, and then by half
+ a dozen other miscellaneous and unknown persons. At last, after a lot more
+ revolutions of the universe, he found himself comfortably pitched into a
+ convenient hansom, with the Progenitor by his side; and hardly knew
+ anything further till he discovered his own quiet supper table at the
+ Chelsea lodgings, and saw his father mixing a strong glass of brandy and
+ seltzer for him, to counteract the strength of the excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning Arthur Berkeley &lsquo;awoke, and found himself famous.&rsquo;
+ ‘The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; was the rage of the moment. Everybody went to
+ hear it&mdash;everybody played its tunes at their own pianos&mdash;everybody
+ quoted it, and adapted it, and used its clever catchwords as the pet
+ fashionable slang expressions of the next three seasons. Arthur Berkeley
+ was the lion of the hour; and the mantelpiece of the quiet little Chelsea
+ study was ranged three rows deep with cards of invitation from people
+ whose very names Arthur had never heard of six months before, and whom the
+ Progenitor declared it was a sin and shame for any respectable young man
+ of sound economical education even to countenance. There were countesses,
+ and marchionesses, too, among the senders of those coronetted
+ parallelograms of waste pasteboard, as the Progenitor called them&mdash;nay,
+ there was even one invitation on the mantelpiece that bore the three
+ strawberry leaves and other insignia of Her Grace the Duchess of
+ Leicestershire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Can&rsquo;t you give us just ONE evening, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; said Lady
+ Hilda Tregellis, as she sat on the centre ottoman in Mrs. Campbell
+ Moncrieff&rsquo;s drawing-room with Arthur Berkeley talking lightly to her
+ about the nothings which constitute polite conversation in the nineteenth
+ century. &lsquo;Just one evening, any day after the next fortnight? We
+ should be so delighted if you could manage to favour us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, I&rsquo;m afraid I can&rsquo;t, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; Arthur answered.
+ &lsquo;My evenings are so dreadfully full just now; and besides, you know,
+ I&rsquo;m not accustomed to so much society, and it unsettles me for my
+ daily work. After all, you see, I&rsquo;m a journeyman playwright now, and
+ I have to labour at my unholy calling just like the theatrical carpenter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How delightfully frank,&rsquo; thought Lady Hilda. &lsquo;Really I like
+ him quite immensely.&mdash;Not even the afternoon on Wednesday fortnight?&rsquo;
+ she went on aloud. &lsquo;You might come to our garden party on Wednesday
+ fortnight.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Quite impossible,&rsquo; Arthur Berkeley answered. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s my
+ regular day at Pilbury Regis.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Pilbury Regis!&rsquo; cried Lady Hilda, starting a little. &lsquo;You don&rsquo;t
+ mean to say you have engagements, and in the thick of the season, too, at
+ Pilbury Regis!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I have, every Wednesday fortnight,&rsquo; Berkeley answered, with a
+ smile. &lsquo;I go there regularly. You see, Lady Hilda, Wednesday&rsquo;s
+ a half-holiday at Pilbury Grammar School; so every second week I run down
+ for the day to visit an old friend of mine, who&rsquo;s also an
+ acquaintance of yours, I believe,&mdash;Ernest Le Breton. He&rsquo;s
+ married now, you know, and has got a mastership at the Pilbury Grammar
+ School.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you know Mr. Le Breton!&rsquo; cried Lady Hilda, charmed at this
+ rapprochement of two delightfully original men. &lsquo;He is so nice. I
+ like him immensely, and I&rsquo;m so glad you&rsquo;re a friend of his.
+ And Mrs. Le Breton, too; wasn&rsquo;t it nice of him? Tell me, Mr.
+ Berkeley, was she really and truly a grocer&rsquo;s daughter?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berkeley&rsquo;s voice grew a little stiffer and colder as he answered,
+ ‘She was a sister of Oswald of Oriel, the great mathematician, who was
+ killed last year by falling from the summit of a peak in the Bernina.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, yes, yes, I know all about that, of course,&rsquo; said Lady Hilda,
+ quickly and carelessly. &lsquo;I know her brother was very clever and all
+ that sort of thing; but then there are so many men who are very clever,
+ aren&rsquo;t there? The really original thing about it all, you know, was
+ that he actually married a grocer&rsquo;s daughter. That was really quite
+ too delightfully original. I was charmed when I heard about it: I thought
+ it was so exactly like dear Mr. Le Breton. He&rsquo;s so deliciously
+ unconventional in every way. He was Lynmouth&rsquo;s tutor for a while, as
+ you&rsquo;ve heard, of course; and then he went away from us, at a moment&rsquo;s
+ notice, so nicely, because he wouldn&rsquo;t stand papa&rsquo;s abominable
+ behaviour, and quite right, too, when it was a matter of conscience&mdash;I
+ dare say he&rsquo;s told you all about it, that horrid pigeon-shooting
+ business. Well, and so you know Mrs. Le Breton&mdash;do tell me, what sort
+ of person is she?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She&rsquo;s very nice, and very good, and very pretty, and very clever,&rsquo;
+ Arthur answered, a little constrainedly. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t know that I
+ can tell you anything more about her than that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you really like her?&rsquo; said Lady Hilda, warmly. &lsquo;You
+ think her a fit wife for Mr. Le Breton, do you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I think him a very lucky fellow indeed to have married such a charming
+ and beautiful woman,&rsquo; Arthur answered, quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda noticed his manner, and read through it at once with a woman&rsquo;s
+ quickness. &lsquo;Aha!&rsquo; she said to herself: &lsquo;the wind blows
+ that way, does it? What a very remarkable girl she must be, really, to
+ have attracted two such men as Mr. Berkeley and Mr. Le Breton. I&rsquo;ve
+ lost one of them to her; I can&rsquo;t very well lose the other, too: for
+ after Ernest Le Breton, I&rsquo;ve never seen any man I should care to
+ marry so much as Mr. Arthur Berkeley.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Lady Hilda,&rsquo; said the hostess, coming up to her at that moment,
+ ‘you&rsquo;ll play us something, won&rsquo;t you? You know you promised to
+ bring your music.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda rose at once with stately alacrity. Nothing could have pleased her
+ better. She went to the piano, and, to the awe and astonishment of Mrs.
+ Campbell Moncrieff, took out an arrangement of the Fijian war-dance from
+ &lsquo;The Primate of Fiji.&rsquo; It suited her brilliant slap-dash style
+ of execution admirably; and she felt she had never played so well in her
+ life before. The presence of the composer, which would have frightened and
+ unnerved most girls of her age, only made Hilda Tregellis the bolder and
+ the more ambitious. Here was somebody at least who knew something about
+ it; none of your ordinary fashionable amateurs and mere soulless
+ professional performers, but the very man who had made the music&mdash;the
+ man in whose brain the notes had first gathered themselves together into
+ speaking melody, and who could really judge the comparative merits of her
+ rapid execution. She played with wonderful verve and spirit, so that Lady
+ Exmoor, seated on the side sofa opposite, though shocked at first at Hilda&rsquo;s
+ choice of a piece, glanced more than once at the wealthiest young commoner
+ present (she had long since mentally resigned herself to the prospect of a
+ commoner for that poor dear foolish Hilda), and closely watched his face
+ to see what effect this unwonted outburst of musical talent might succeed
+ in producing upon his latent susceptibilities. But Lady Hilda herself wasn&rsquo;t
+ thinking of the wealthy commoner; she was playing straight at Arthur
+ Berkeley: and when she saw that Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s mouth had melted
+ slowly into an approving smile, she played even more brilliantly and
+ better than ever, after her bold, smart, vehement fashion. As she left the
+ piano, Arthur said, &lsquo;Thank you; I have never heard the piece better
+ rendered.&rsquo; And Lady Hilda felt that that was a triumph which far
+ outweighed any number of inane compliments from a whole regiment of
+ simpering Algies, Monties, and Berties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You can&rsquo;t say any evening, then, Mr. Berkeley?&rsquo; she said once
+ more, as she held out her hand to him to say &lsquo;Good-night&rsquo; a
+ little later: &lsquo;not any evening at all, or part of an evening? You
+ might really reconsider your engagements.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur hesitated visibly. &lsquo;Well, possibly I might manage it,&rsquo;
+ he said, wavering, &lsquo;though, I assure you, my evenings are very much
+ more than full already.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then don&rsquo;t make it an evening,&rsquo; said Lady Hilda, pressingly.
+ ‘Make it lunch. After all, Mr. Berkeley, it&rsquo;s we ourselves who want
+ to see you; not to show you off as a curiosity to all the rest of London.
+ We have silly people enough in the evenings; but if you&rsquo;ll come to
+ lunch with us alone one day, we shall have an opportunity of talking to
+ you on our own account.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda was tall and beautiful, and Lady Hilda spoke, as she always
+ used to speak, with manifest sincerity. Now, it is not in human nature not
+ to feel flattered when a beautiful woman pays one genuine homage; and
+ Arthur Berkeley was quite as human, after all, as most other people.
+ &lsquo;You&rsquo;re very kind,&rsquo; he said, smiling. ‘I must make it
+ lunch, then, though I really ought to be working in the mornings instead
+ of running about merely to amuse myself. What day will suit you best?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, not to amuse yourself, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; Hilda answered pointedly,
+ ‘but to gratify us. That, you know, is a work of benevolence. Say Monday
+ next, then, at two o&rsquo;clock. Will that do for you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Perfectly,&rsquo; Berkeley answered, taking her proffered hand extended
+ to him with just that indefinable air of frankness which Lady Hilda knew
+ so well how to throw into all her actions. &lsquo;Good evening. Wilton
+ Place, isn&rsquo;t it!&mdash;Gracious heavens!&rsquo; he thought to
+ himself, as he glanced after her satin train sweeping slowly down the
+ grand staircase, &lsquo;what on earth would the dear old Progenitor say if
+ only he saw me in the midst of these meaningless aristocratic orgies. I am
+ positively half-wheedled, it seems, into making love to an earl&rsquo;s
+ daughter! If this sort of thing continues, I shall find myself, before I
+ know it, connected by marriage with two-thirds of the British peerage. A
+ beautiful woman, really, and quite queen-like in her manner when she doesn&rsquo;t
+ choose rather to be unaffectedly gracious. How she sat upon that tall
+ young man with the brown moustaches over by the mantelpiece! I didn&rsquo;t
+ hear what she said to him, but I could see he was utterly crushed by the
+ way he slank away with his tail between his legs, like a whipped spaniel.
+ A splendid woman&mdash;and no doubt about it; looks as if she&rsquo;d
+ stepped straight out of the canvas of Titian, with the pearls in her hair
+ and everything else exactly as he painted them. The handsomest girl I ever
+ saw in my life&mdash;but not like Edie Le Breton. They say a man can only
+ fall in love once in a lifetime. I wonder whether there&rsquo;s any truth
+ in it! Well, well, you won&rsquo;t often see a finer woman in her own
+ style than Lady Hilda Tregellis. Monday next, at two precisely; I needn&rsquo;t
+ make a note of it&mdash;no fear of my forgetting.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I really do think,&rsquo; Lady Hilda said to herself as she unrolled the
+ pearls from her thick hair in her own room that winter evening, ‘I almost
+ like him better than I did Ernest Le Breton. The very first night I saw
+ him at Lady Mary&rsquo;s I fell quite in love with his appearance, before
+ I knew even who he was; and now that I&rsquo;ve found out all about him, I
+ never did hear anything so absolutely and delightfully original. His
+ father a common shoemaker! That, to begin with, throws Ernest Le Breton
+ quite into the shade! HIS father was a general in the Indian army&mdash;nothing
+ could be more BANAL. Then Mr. Berkeley began life as a clergyman; but now
+ he&rsquo;s taken off his white choker, and wears a suit of grey tweed like
+ any ordinary English gentleman. So delightfully unconventional, isn&rsquo;t
+ it? At last, to crown it all, he not only composes delicious music, but
+ goes and writes a comic opera&mdash;such a comic opera! And the best of it
+ is, success hasn&rsquo;t turned his head one atom. He doesn&rsquo;t run
+ with vulgar eagerness after the great people, like your ordinary everyday
+ successful nobody. He took no more notice of me, myself, at first, because
+ I was Lady Hilda Tregellis, than if I&rsquo;d been a common milkmaid; and
+ he wouldn&rsquo;t come to our garden party because he wanted to go down to
+ Pilbury Regis to visit the Le Bretons at their charity school or
+ something! It was only after I played the war-dance arrangement so well&mdash;I
+ never played so brilliantly in my life before&mdash;that he began to alter
+ and soften a little. Certainly, these pearls do thoroughly become me. I
+ think he looked after me when I was leaving the room just a tiny bit, as
+ if he was really pleased with me for my own sake, and not merely because I
+ happen to be called Lady Hilda Tregellis.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. &mdash; OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s really very annoying, this letter from Selah,&rsquo; Herbert
+ Le Breton murmured to himself, as he carefully burnt the compromising
+ document, envelope and all, with a fusee from his oriental silver pocket
+ match-case. &lsquo;I had hoped the thing had all been forgotten by this
+ time, after her long silence, and my last two judiciously chilly letters&mdash;a
+ sort of slow refrigerating process for poor shivering naked little Cupid.
+ But here, just at the very moment when I fancied the affair had quite
+ blown over, comes this most objectionable letter, telling me that Selah
+ has actually betaken herself to London to meet me; and what makes it more
+ annoying still, I wanted to go up myself this week to dine at home with
+ Ethel Faucit. Mother&rsquo;s plan about Ethel Faucit is exceedingly
+ commendable; a girl with eight hundred a year, cultivated tastes, and no
+ father or other encumbrances dragging after her. I always said I should
+ like to marry a poor orphan. A very desirable young woman to annex in
+ every way! And now, here&rsquo;s Selah Briggs&mdash;ugh! how could I ever
+ have gone and entangled myself in my foolish days with a young woman
+ burdened by such a cognomen!&mdash;here&rsquo;s Selah Briggs must needs
+ run away from Hastings, and try to hunt me up on her own account in
+ London. If I dared, I wouldn&rsquo;t go up to see her at all, and would
+ let the thing die a natural death of inanition&mdash;sine Cerere et
+ Baccho, and so forth&mdash;(I&rsquo;m afraid, poor girl, she&rsquo;ll be
+ more likely to find Bacchus than Ceres if she sticks in London); but the
+ plain fact is, I don&rsquo;t dare&mdash;that&rsquo;s the long and the
+ short of it. If I did, Selah&rsquo;d be tracking me to earth here in
+ Oxford, and a nice mess that&rsquo;d make of it! She doesn&rsquo;t know my
+ name, to be sure; but as soon as she called at college and found nobody of
+ the name of Walters was known there, she&rsquo;d lie in wait for me about
+ the gates, as sure as my name&rsquo;s Herbert Le Breton, and sooner or
+ later she&rsquo;d take it out of me, one way or the other. Selah has as
+ many devils in her as the Gergesene who dwelt among the tombs, I&rsquo;ll
+ be sworn to it; and if she&rsquo;s provoked, she&rsquo;ll let them all
+ loose in a legion to crush me. I&rsquo;d better see her and have it out
+ quietly, once for all, than try to shirk it here in Oxford and let myself
+ in at the end for the worse condemnation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under this impression, Herbert Le Breton, leaning back in his well-padded
+ oak armchair, ordered his scout to pack his portmanteau, and set off by
+ the very first fast train for Paddington station. He would get over his
+ interview with Selah Briggs in the afternoon, and return to Epsilon
+ Terrace in good time for Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s dinner. Say what you like
+ of it, Ethel Faucit and eight hundred a year, certe redditum, was a thing
+ in no wise to be sneezed at by a judicious and discriminating person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert left his portmanteau in the cloakroom at Paddington, and drove off
+ in a hansom to the queer address which Selah had given him. It was a fishy
+ lodging of the commoner sort in a back street at Notting Hill, not far
+ from the Portobello Road. At the top of the stairs, Selah stood waiting to
+ meet him, and seemed much astonished when, instead of kissing her, as was
+ his wont, he only shook her hand somewhat coolly. But she thought to
+ herself that probably he didn&rsquo;t wish to be too demonstrative before
+ the eyes of the lodging-house people, and so took no further notice of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Selah,&rsquo; Herbert said, as soon as he entered the room, and
+ seated himself quietly on one of the straight-backed wooden chairs, ‘why
+ on earth have you come to London?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Goodness gracious, Herbert,&rsquo; Selah answered, letting loose the
+ floodgates of her rapid speech after a week&rsquo;s silence, &lsquo;don&rsquo;t
+ you go and ask me why I&rsquo;ve done it. Ask me rather why I didn&rsquo;t
+ go and do it long ago. Father, he&rsquo;s got more and more aggravating
+ every day for the last twelve-month, till at last I couldn&rsquo;t stand
+ him any longer. Prayer meetings, missionary meetings, convention meetings,
+ all that sort of thing I could put up with somehow; but when it came to
+ private exhortations and prayer over me with three or four of the godliest
+ neighbours, I made up my mind not to put up with it one day longer. So
+ last week I packed up two or three little things hurriedly, and left a
+ note behind to say I felt I was too unregenerate to live in such spiritual
+ company any longer; and came straight up here to London, and took these
+ lodgings. Emily Lucas, she wrote to me from Hastings&mdash;she&rsquo;s the
+ daughter of the hairdresser in our street, you know, and I told her to
+ write to me to the Post-office. Emily Lucas wrote to me that there was
+ weeping and gnashing of teeth, and swearing almost, when they found out I&rsquo;d
+ really left them. And well there might be, indeed, for I did more work for
+ them (mostly just to get away for a while from the privileges) than they&rsquo;ll
+ ever get a hired servant to do for them in this world, Herbert.&rsquo;
+ Herbert moved uneasily on his chair, as he noticed how glibly she called
+ him now by his Christian name instead of saying &lsquo;Mr. Walters.&rsquo;
+ &lsquo;And Emily says,&rsquo; Selah went on, without stopping to take
+ breath for a second, &lsquo;that father put an advertisement at once into
+ the &ldquo;Christian Mirror&rdquo;&mdash;pah, as if it was likely I should
+ go buying or reading the &ldquo;Christian Mirror,&rdquo; indeed&mdash;to
+ say that if &ldquo;S. B.&rdquo; would return at once to her affectionate
+ and injured parents, the whole past would be forgotten and forgiven.
+ Forgotten and forgiven! I should think it would, indeed! But he didn&rsquo;t
+ ask me whether their eternal bothering and plaguing of me about my
+ precious soul for twenty years past would also be forgotten and forgiven!
+ He didn&rsquo;t ask me whether all their meetings, and conventions, and
+ prayers, and all the rest of it, would be forgotten and forgiven! My
+ precious soul! In Turkey they say the women have no souls! I often wished
+ it had been my happy lot to be born in Turkey, and then, perhaps, they
+ wouldn&rsquo;t have worried me so much about it. I&rsquo;m sure I often
+ said to them, &ldquo;Oh don&rsquo;t bother on account of my poor
+ unfortunate misguided little soul any longer. It&rsquo;s lost altogether,
+ I don&rsquo;t doubt, and it doesn&rsquo;t in the least trouble me. If it
+ was somebody else&rsquo;s, I could understand your being in such a fearful
+ state of mind about it; but as it&rsquo;s only mine, you know, I&rsquo;m
+ sure it really doesn&rsquo;t matter.&rdquo; And then they&rsquo;d only go
+ off worse than ever,&mdash;mother doing hysterics, and so forth&mdash;and
+ say I was a wicked, bad, abominable scoffer, and that it made them
+ horribly frightened even to listen to me. As if I wasn&rsquo;t more likely
+ to know the real value of my own soul than anybody else was!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert looked at her curiously and anxiously as she delivered this long
+ harangue in a voluble stream, without a single pause or break; and then he
+ said, in his quiet voice, &lsquo;How old are you, Selah?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Twenty-two,&rsquo; Selah answered, carelessly. &lsquo;Why, Herbert?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, nothing,&rsquo; Herbert replied, turning away his eyes from her keen,
+ searching gaze uncomfortably. He congratulated himself inwardly on the
+ lucky fact that she was fully of age, for then at least he could only get
+ into a row with her, and not with her parents. &lsquo;And now, Selah, do
+ you know what I strongly advise you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘To get married at once,&rsquo; Selah put in promptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert drew himself up stiffly, and looked at her cautiously out of the
+ corner of his eyes. &lsquo;No,&rsquo; he said slowly, &lsquo;not to get
+ married, but to go back again for the present to your people at Hastings.
+ Consider, Selah, you&rsquo;ve done a very foolish thing indeed by coming
+ here alone in this way. You&rsquo;ve compromised yourself, and you&rsquo;ve
+ compromised me. Indeed, if it weren&rsquo;t for the lasting affection I
+ bear you&rsquo;&mdash;he put this in awkwardly, but he felt it necessary
+ to do so, for the flash of Selah&rsquo;s eyes fairly cowed him for the
+ moment&mdash;&lsquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have come here at all this afternoon
+ to see you. It might get us both into very serious trouble, and&mdash;and&mdash;and
+ delay the prospect of our marriage. You see, everything depends upon my
+ keeping my fellowship until I can get an appointment to marry on. Anything
+ that risks loss of the fellowship is really a measurable danger for both
+ of us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah looked at him very steadily with her big eyes, and Herbert felt that
+ he was quailing a little under their piercing, withering inquisition. By
+ Jove, what a splendid woman she was, though, when she was angry! &lsquo;Herbert,&rsquo;
+ she said, rising from her chair and standing her full height imperiously
+ before him, &lsquo;Herbert, you&rsquo;re deceiving me. I almost believe
+ you&rsquo;re shilly-shallying with me. I almost believe you don&rsquo;t
+ ever really mean to marry me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert moved uneasily upon his wooden seat. What was he to do? Should he
+ make a clean breast of it forthwith, and answer boldly, ‘Well, Selah, you
+ have exactly diagnosed my mental attitude&rsquo;? Or should he try to put
+ her off a little with some meaningless explanatory platitudes? Or should
+ he&mdash;by Jove, she was a very splendid woman!&mdash;should he take her
+ in his arms that moment, kiss her doubts and fears away like a donkey, and
+ boldly and sincerely promise to marry her? Pooh! not such a fool as all
+ that comes to! not even with Selah before him now; for he was no boy any
+ longer, and not to be caught by the mere vulgar charms of a flashy,
+ self-asserting greengrocer&rsquo;s daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Selah,&rsquo; he said at last, after a long pause, &lsquo;I strongly
+ advise you once more to return to Hastings for the present. You&rsquo;ll
+ find it better for you in the end. If your people are quite unendurable&mdash;as
+ I don&rsquo;t doubt they are from what you tell me&mdash;you could look
+ about meanwhile for a temporary appointment, say as&rsquo;&mdash;he
+ checked himself from uttering the word &lsquo;shop girl,&rsquo; and
+ substituted for it, &lsquo;draper&rsquo;s assistant.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah looked at him angrily. &lsquo;What fools you men are about such
+ things!&rsquo; she said in a voice of utter scorn. &lsquo;When do you
+ suppose I ever learnt the drapery? Or who do you suppose would ever give
+ me a place in a shop of that sort without having learnt the drapery? I
+ dare say you think it takes ten years to make one of you fine gentlemen at
+ college, with your Greek and your Latin, but that the drapery, or the
+ millinery, or the confectionery, comes by nature! However, that&rsquo;s
+ not the question now. The question&rsquo;s simply this&mdash;Herbert
+ Walters, do you or don&rsquo;t you mean to marry me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I must temporise,&rsquo; Herbert thought to himself, placidly. &lsquo;This
+ girl&rsquo;s quite too unreservedly categorical! She eliminates modality
+ with a vengeance!&rsquo; &lsquo;Well, Selah,&rsquo; he said in his calmest
+ and most deliberate manner, &lsquo;we must take a great many points into
+ consideration before deciding on that matter.&rsquo; And then he went on
+ to tell her what seemed to him the pros and cons of an immediate marriage.
+ Couldn&rsquo;t she get a place meanwhile of some sort? Couldn&rsquo;t she
+ let him have time to look about him? Couldn&rsquo;t she go back just for a
+ few days to Hastings, until he could hear of something feasible for either
+ of them? Selah interrupted him more than once with forcible interjectional
+ observations such as &lsquo;bosh!&rsquo; and &lsquo;rubbish!&rsquo; and
+ when he had finished she burst out once more into a long and voluble
+ statement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For more than an hour Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs fenced with one
+ another, each after their own fashion, in the little fishy lodgings; and
+ at every fresh thrust, Herbert parried so much the worse that at last
+ Selah lost patience utterly, and rose in the end to the dignity of the
+ situation. &lsquo;Herbert Walters,&rsquo; she said, looking at him with
+ unspeakable contempt, &lsquo;I see through your flimsy excuses now, and I
+ feel certain you don&rsquo;t mean to marry me! You never did mean to marry
+ me! You wanted to amuse yourself by making love to a poor girl in a
+ country town, and now you&rsquo;d like to throw her overboard and leave
+ her alone to her own devices. I knew you meant that when you didn&rsquo;t
+ write to me; but I wouldn&rsquo;t condemn you unheard; I gave you a chance
+ to clear yourself. I see now you were trying to drop the acquaintance
+ quietly, and make it seem as if I had backed out of it as well as you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert felt the moment for breaking through all reserve had finally
+ arrived. &lsquo;You admirably interpret my motives in the matter, Selah,&rsquo;
+ he said coldly. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t think it would be just of me to
+ interfere with your prospects in life any longer. I can&rsquo;t say how
+ long it may be before I am able to afford marriage; and, meanwhile, I&rsquo;m
+ preventing you from forming a natural alliance with some respectable and
+ estimable young man in your own station. I should be sorry to stand in
+ your way any further; but if I could offer you any small pecuniary
+ assistance at any time, either now or hereafter, you know I&rsquo;d be
+ very happy indeed to do so, Selah.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The angry girl turned upon him fiercely. &lsquo;Selah!&rsquo; she cried in
+ a tone of crushing contempt. &lsquo;What do you mean by calling me Selah,
+ sir? How dare you speak to me by my Christian name in the same breath you
+ tell me you don&rsquo;t mean to marry me? How dare you have the insolence
+ and impertinence to offer me money! Never say another word to me as long
+ as you live, Herbert Walters; and leave me now, for I don&rsquo;t want to
+ have anything more to say to you or your money for ever.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert took up his hat doubtfully. &lsquo;Selah!&mdash;Selah!&mdash;Miss
+ Briggs, I mean,&rsquo; he said, falteringly, for at that moment Selah&rsquo;s
+ face was terrible to look at. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m very sorry, I can assure
+ you, that this interview&mdash;and our pleasant acquaintance&mdash;should
+ unfortunately have had such a disagreeable termination. For my own part&rsquo;&mdash;Herbert
+ was always politic&mdash;&lsquo;I should have wished to part with you in
+ no unfriendly spirit. I should have wished to learn your plans for the
+ future, and to aid you in forming a suitable settlement in life hereafter.
+ May I venture to ask, before I go, whether you mean to remain in London or
+ to return to Hastings? As one who has been your sincere friend, I should
+ at least like to know what are your movements for the immediate present.
+ How long do you mean to stop here, and when you leave these rooms where do
+ you think you will next go to?&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Confoundedly awkward,&rsquo;
+ he thought to himself, &lsquo;to have her prowling about and dogging one&rsquo;s
+ footsteps here in London.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah read through his miserable transparent little pretences at once with
+ a woman&rsquo;s quick instinctive insight. &lsquo;Ugh!&rsquo; she cried,
+ pushing him away from her, figuratively, with a gesture of disgust, ‘do
+ you think, you poor suspicious creature, I want to go spying you or
+ following you all over London? Are you afraid, in your sordid little
+ respectable way, that I&rsquo;ll come up to Oxford to pry and peep into
+ that snug comfortable fellowship of yours? Do you suppose I&rsquo;m so
+ much in love with you, Herbert Walters, that I can&rsquo;t let you go
+ without wanting to fawn upon you and run after you ever afterwards! Pah!
+ you miserable, pitiable, contemptible cur and coward, are you afraid even
+ of a woman! Go away, and don&rsquo;t be frightened. I never want to see
+ you or speak to you again as long as I live, you wretched, lying,
+ shuffling hypocrite. I&rsquo;d rather go back to my own people at Hastings
+ a thousand times over than have anything more to do with you. They may be
+ narrow-minded, and bigoted, and ignorant, and stupid, but at least they&rsquo;re
+ honest&mdash;they&rsquo;re not liars and hypocrites. Go this minute,
+ Herbert Walters, go away this minute, and don&rsquo;t stand there fiddling
+ and quivering with your hat like a whipped schoolboy, but go at once, and
+ take my eternal loathing and contempt for a parting present with you!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert held the door gingerly ajar for half a second, trying to think of
+ a neat and appropriate epigram, but at that particular moment, for the
+ life of him, he couldn&rsquo;t hit on one. So he closed the door after him
+ quietly, and walking out alone into the street, immediately nailed a
+ passing hansom. &lsquo;I didn&rsquo;t come out of that dilemma very
+ creditably to myself, I must admit,&rsquo; he thought with a burning face,
+ as he rolled along quickly in the hansom; &lsquo;but anyhow, now I&rsquo;m
+ well out of it. The coast&rsquo;s all clear at last for Ethel Faucit. It&rsquo;s
+ well to be off with the old love before you&rsquo;re on with the new, as
+ that horrid vulgar practical proverb justly though somewhat coarsely puts
+ it. Still, she&rsquo;s a perfectly magnificent creature, is Selah; and by
+ Jove, when she got into that towering rage (and no wonder, for I won&rsquo;t
+ be unjust to her in that respect), her tone and attitude would have done
+ credit to any theatre. I should think Mrs. Siddons must have looked like
+ that, say as Constance. Poor girl, I&rsquo;m really sorry for her; from
+ the very bottom of my heart, I&rsquo;m really sorry for her. If it rested
+ with me alone, hang me if I don&rsquo;t think I would positively have
+ married her. But after all, the environment, you know, the environment is
+ always too strong for us!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, in the shabby lodgings near the Portobello Road, poor Selah,
+ the excitement once over, was lying with her proud face buried in the
+ pillows, and crying her very life out in great sobs of utter misery. The
+ daydream of her whole existence was gone for ever: the bubble was burst;
+ and nothing stood before her but a future of utter drudgery. &lsquo;The
+ brute, the cur, the mean wretch,&rsquo; she said aloud between her sobs;
+ &lsquo;and yet I loved him. How beautifully he talked, and how he made me
+ love him. If it had only been a common everyday Methodist sweetheart, now!
+ but Herbert Walters! Oh, God, how I hate him, and how I did love him!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Herbert reached his mother&rsquo;s house in Epsilon Terrace, Lady Le
+ Breton met him anxiously at the door. &lsquo;Herbert,&rsquo; she said,
+ almost weeping, &lsquo;my dear boy, what on earth should I do if it were
+ not for you! You&rsquo;re the one comfort I have in all my children. Would
+ you believe it&mdash;no, you won&rsquo;t believe it&mdash;as I was walking
+ back here this afternoon with Mrs. Faucit (Ethel&rsquo;s aunt, of all
+ people in the world), what do you think I saw, in our own main street,
+ too, but a young man, decently dressed, in his shirt sleeves. No coat, I
+ assure you, but only his shirt sleeves. Imagine my horror when he came up
+ to us&mdash;Mrs. Faucit, too, you know&mdash;and said to me out loud, in
+ the most unconcerned voice, &ldquo;Well, mother!&rdquo; I couldn&rsquo;t
+ believe my eyes. Herbert, but I solemnly declare to you it was positively
+ Ronald! You really could have knocked me down with a feather. Disgraceful,
+ wasn&rsquo;t it, perfectly disgraceful!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How on earth did he come so?&rsquo; asked Herbert, almost smiling in
+ spite of himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, do you know, Herbert,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton answered somewhat
+ obliquely, &lsquo;a few days since, I met him wheeling along a barrow full
+ of coals for a dirty, grimy, ragged little girl from some alley or gutter
+ somewhere. I believe they call the place the Mews&mdash;at the back of the
+ terrace, you remember. He pretended the child wasn&rsquo;t big enough to
+ wheel the coals, which was absurd, of course, or else her parents wouldn&rsquo;t
+ have sent her; but I&rsquo;m sure he really did it on purpose to annoy me.
+ He never does these things when I&rsquo;m not by to see; or if he does, I
+ never see him. Now, that was bad enough in all conscience, wasn&rsquo;t
+ it? but to-day what he did was still more outrageous. He met a poor man,
+ as he calls him, in Westbourne Grove, who was one of his Christian
+ brethren (is that the right expression?) and who declared he was next door
+ to starving. So what must Ronald do, but run into a pawnbroker&rsquo;s&mdash;I
+ shouldn&rsquo;t have thought he could ever have heard of such a place&mdash;and
+ sell his coat, or something of the sort, and give the man (who was
+ doubtless an impostor) all the money. Then he positively walked home in
+ his shirt sleeves. I call it a most unchristian thing to do&mdash;and to
+ walk straight into my very arms, too, as I was coming along with Mrs.
+ Faucit.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert offered at once such condolences as were in his power. &lsquo;And
+ are the Faucits coming to night?&rsquo; he asked eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Le Breton kissed him again gently on the forehead. &lsquo;Oh,
+ Herbert,&rsquo; she said warmly, &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t tell you what a
+ comfort you always are to me. Oh yes, the Faucits are coming; and do you
+ know, Herbert, my dear boy, I&rsquo;m quite sure that old Mr. Faucit, the
+ uncle, wouldn&rsquo;t at all object to the match, and that Ethel&rsquo;s
+ really very much disposed indeed to like you immensely. You&rsquo;ve only
+ to follow up the advantage, my dear boy, and I don&rsquo;t for a moment
+ think she&rsquo;d ever refuse you. And I&rsquo;ve been talking to Sir
+ Sydney Weatherhead about your future, too, and he tells me (quite
+ privately, of course) that, with your position and honours at Oxford, he
+ fully believes he can easily push you into the first good vacant post at
+ the Education Office; only you must be careful to say nothing about it
+ beforehand, or the others will say it&rsquo;s a job, as they call it. Oh,
+ Herbert, I really and truly can&rsquo;t tell you what a joy and a comfort
+ you always are to me!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII. &mdash; THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear,&rsquo; said Dr. Greatrex, looking up in alarm from the lunch
+ table one morning, in the third term of Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s stay at
+ Pilbury, &lsquo;what an awful apparition! Do you know, I positively see
+ Mr. Blenkinsopp, father of that odious boy Blenkinsopp major, distinctly
+ visible to the naked eye, walking across the front lawn&mdash;on the grass
+ too&mdash;to our doorway. The pupil&rsquo;s parent is really the very
+ greatest bane of all the banes that beset a poor harassed overdriven
+ schoolmaster&rsquo;s unfortunate existence!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Blenkinsopp?&rsquo; Mrs. Greatrex said reflectively. &lsquo;Blenkinsopp?
+ Who is he? Oh, I remember, a tobacco-pipe manufacturer somewhere in the
+ midland counties, isn&rsquo;t he? Mr. Blenkinsopp, of Staffordshire, I
+ always say to other parents&mdash;not Brosely&mdash;Brosely sounds
+ decidedly commercial and unpresentable. No nice people would naturally
+ like their sons to mix with miscellaneous boys from a place called
+ Brosely. Now, what on earth can he be coming here for, I wonder, Joseph?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, <i>I</i> know,&rsquo; the doctor answered with a deep-drawn sigh.
+ &lsquo;I know, Maria, only too well. It&rsquo;s the way of all parents. He&rsquo;s
+ come to inquire after Blenkinsopp major&rsquo;s health and progress. They
+ all do it. They seem to think the sole object of a head-master&rsquo;s
+ existence is to look after the comfort and morals of their own particular
+ Tommy, or Bobby, or Dicky, or Harry. For heaven&rsquo;s sake, what form is
+ Blenkinsopp major in? For heaven&rsquo;s sake, what&rsquo;s his Christian
+ name, and age last birthday, and place in French and mathematics, and
+ general state of health for past quarter? Where&rsquo;s the prompt-book,
+ with house-master&rsquo;s and form-master&rsquo;s report, Maria? Oh, here
+ it is, thank goodness! Let me see; let me see&mdash;he&rsquo;s ringing at
+ the door this very instant. &ldquo;Blenkinsopp... major... Charles
+ Warrington... fifteen... fifth form... average, twelfth boy of twelve...
+ idle, inattentive, naturally stupid; bad disposition... health invariably
+ excellent... second eleven... bats well.&rdquo; That&rsquo;ll do. Run my
+ eye down once again, and I shall remember all about him. How about the
+ other? &ldquo;Blenkinsopp... minor... Cyril Anastasius Guy Waterbury
+ Macfarlane&rdquo;&mdash;heavens, what a name!... &ldquo;thirteen... fourth
+ form... average, seventh boy of eighteen... industrious and well-meaning,
+ but heavy and ineffective... health good... fourth eleven... fields badly.&rdquo;
+ Ah, that&rsquo;s the most important one. Now I&rsquo;m primed. Blenkinsopp
+ major I remember something about, for he&rsquo;s one of the worst and most
+ hopelessly stupid boys in the whole school&mdash;I&rsquo;ve caned him
+ frequently this term, and that keeps a boy green in one&rsquo;s memory;
+ but Blenkinsopp minor, Cyril Anastasius Guy Thingumbob Whatyoumaycallit,&mdash;I
+ don&rsquo;t remember HIM a bit. I suppose he&rsquo;s one of those
+ inoffensive, mildly mediocre sort of boys who fail to impress their
+ individuality upon one in any way. My experience is that you can always
+ bear in mind the three cleverest boys at the top of each form, and the
+ three stupidest or most mischievous boys at the bottom; but the nine or a
+ dozen meritorious nobodies in the middle of the class are all so like one
+ another in every way that you might as well try to discriminate between
+ every individual sheep of a flock in a pasture. And yet, such is the
+ natural contradictiousness and vexatious disposition of the British
+ parent, that you&rsquo;ll always find him coming to inquire after just one
+ of those very particular Tommies or Bobbies. Charles Warrington:&mdash;Cyril
+ Anastasius Guy Whatyoumay&mdash;call it: that&rsquo;ll do: I shall
+ remember now all about them.&rsquo; And the doctor arranged his hair
+ before the looking glass into the most professional stiffness, as a
+ preparatory step to facing Mr. Blenkinsopp&rsquo;s parental inquiries in
+ the head-master&rsquo;s study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What! Mr. Blenkinsopp! Yes, it is really. My dear sir, how DO you do?
+ This is a most unexpected pleasure. We hadn&rsquo;t the least idea you
+ were in Pilbury. When did you come here?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I came last night, Dr. Greatrex,&rsquo; answered the dreaded parent
+ respectfully: &lsquo;we&rsquo;ve come down from Staffordshire for a week
+ at the seaside, and we thought we might as well be within hail of Guy and
+ Charlie.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Quite right, quite right, my dear sir,&rsquo; said the doctor, mentally
+ noting that Blenkinsopp minor was familiarly known as Guy, not Cyril;
+ &lsquo;we&rsquo;re delighted to see you. And now you want to know all
+ about our two young friends, don&rsquo;t you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, yes, Dr. Greatrex; I SHOULD like to know how they are getting on.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, of course, of course. Very right. It&rsquo;s such a pleasure to us
+ when parents give us their active and hearty co-operation! You&rsquo;d
+ hardly believe, Mr. Blenkinsopp, how little interest some parents seem to
+ feel in their boys&rsquo; progress. To us, you know, who devote our whole
+ time and energy assiduously to their ultimate welfare, it&rsquo;s
+ sometimes quite discouraging to see how very little the parents themselves
+ seem to care about it. But your boys are both doing capitally. The eldest&mdash;Blenkinsopp
+ major, we call him; Charles Warrington, isn&rsquo;t it? (His home name&rsquo;s
+ Charlie, if I recollect right. Ah, quite so.) Well, Charlie&rsquo;s the
+ very picture of perfect health, as usual.&rsquo; (&lsquo;Health is his
+ only strong point, it seems to me,&rsquo; the doctor thought to himself
+ instinctively. &lsquo;We must put that first and foremost.&rsquo;) &lsquo;In
+ excellent health and very good spirits. He&rsquo;s in the second eleven
+ now, and a capital batter: I&rsquo;ve no doubt he&rsquo;ll go into the
+ first eleven next term, if we lose Biddlecomb Tertius to the university.
+ In work, as you know, he&rsquo;s not very great; doesn&rsquo;t do his
+ abilities full justice, Mr. Blenkinsopp, through his dreadful inattention.
+ He&rsquo;s generally near the bottom of the form, I&rsquo;m sorry to say;
+ generally near the bottom of the form.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, I dare say there&rsquo;s no harm in that, sir,&rsquo; said Mr.
+ Blenkinsopp, senior, warmly. &lsquo;I was always at the bottom of the form
+ at school myself, Doctor, but I&rsquo;ve picked it up in after life; I&rsquo;ve
+ picked it up, sir, as you see, and I&rsquo;m fully equal with most other
+ people nowadays, as you&rsquo;ll find if you inquire of any town
+ councilman or man of position down our way, at Brosely.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, I dare say you were, Mr. Blenkinsopp,&rsquo; the doctor answered
+ blandly, with just the faintest tinge of unconscious satire, peering at
+ his square unintelligent features as a fancier peers at the face of a
+ bull-dog; &lsquo;I dare say you were now. After all, however clever a set
+ of boys may be, one of them MUST be at the bottom of the form, in the
+ nature of things, mustn&rsquo;t he? And your Charlie, I think, is only
+ fifteen. Ah, yes; well, well; he&rsquo;ll do better, no doubt, if we keep
+ him here a year or two longer. So then there&rsquo;s the second: Guy, you
+ call him, if I remember right&mdash;Cyril Anastasius Guy&mdash;our
+ Blenkinsopp minor. Guy&rsquo;s a good boy; an excellent boy: to tell you
+ the plain truth, Mr. Blenkinsopp, I don&rsquo;t know much of him
+ personally myself, which is a fact that tells greatly in his favour.
+ Charlie I must admit I have to call up some times for reproof: Guy, never.
+ Charlie&rsquo;s in the fifth form: Guy&rsquo;s seventh in the fourth. A
+ capital place for a boy of his age! He&rsquo;s very industrious, you know&mdash;what
+ we call a plodder. They call it a plodder, you see, at thirteen, Mr.
+ Blenkinsopp, but a man of ability at forty.&rsquo; Dr. Greatrex delivered
+ that last effective shot point-blank at the eyes of the inquiring parent,
+ and felt in a moment that its delicate generalised flattery had gone home
+ straight to the parent&rsquo;s susceptible heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But there&rsquo;s one thing, Doctor,&rsquo; Mr. Blenkinsopp began, after
+ a few minutes&rsquo; further conversation on the merits and failings of
+ Guy and Charlie, &lsquo;there&rsquo;s one other thing I feel I should like
+ to speak to you about, and that&rsquo;s the teaching of your fifth form
+ master, Mr. Le Breton. From what Charlie tells me, I don&rsquo;t quite
+ like that young man&rsquo;s political ideas and opinions. It&rsquo;s said
+ things to his form sometimes that are quite horrifying, I assure you;
+ things about Property, and about our duty to the poor, and so on, that are
+ positively enough to appal you. Now, for example, he told them&mdash;I don&rsquo;t
+ quite like to repeat it, for it&rsquo;s sheer blasphemy I call it&mdash;but
+ he told them in a Greek Testament lesson that the Apostles themselves were
+ a sort of Republicans&mdash;Socialists, I think Charlie said, or else
+ Chartists, or dynamiters. I&rsquo;m not sure he didn&rsquo;t say St. Peter
+ himself was a regular communist!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Greatrex drew a long breath. &lsquo;I should think, Mr. Blenkinsopp,&rsquo;
+ he suggested blandly, &lsquo;Charlie must really have misunderstood Mr. Le
+ Breton. You see, they&rsquo;ve been reading the Acts of the Apostles in
+ their Greek Testament this term. Now, of course, you remember that, during
+ the first days of the infant Church, while its necessities were yet so
+ great, as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and
+ brought the prices of the things that were sold, and laid them down at the
+ apostles&rsquo; feet; and distribution was made unto every man according
+ as he had need. You see, here&rsquo;s the passage, Mr. Blenkinsopp, in the
+ authorised version. I won&rsquo;t trouble you with the original. You&rsquo;ve
+ forgotten most of your Greek, I dare say: ah, I thought go. It doesn&rsquo;t
+ stick to us like the Latin, does it? Now, perhaps, in expounding that
+ passage, Mr. Le Breton may have referred in passing&mdash;as an
+ illustration merely&mdash;to the unhappily prevalent modern doctrines of
+ socialism and communism. He may have warned his boys, for example, against
+ confounding a Christian communism like this, if I may so style it, with
+ the rapacious, aggressive, immoral forms of communism now proposed to us,
+ which are based upon the forcible disregard of all Property and all vested
+ interests of every sort. I don&rsquo;t say he did, you know, for I haven&rsquo;t
+ conferred with him upon the subject: but he may have done so; and he may
+ even have used, as I have used, the phrase &ldquo;Christian communism,&rdquo;
+ to define the temporary attitude of the apostles and the early Church in
+ this matter. That, perhaps, my dear sir, may be the origin of the
+ misapprehension.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Blenkinsopp looked hard at the three verses in the big Bible the
+ doctor had handed him, with a somewhat suspicious glare. He was a
+ self-made man, with land and houses of his own in plenty, and he didn&rsquo;t
+ quite like this suggestive talk about selling them and laying the prices
+ at the apostles&rsquo; feet. It savoured to him both of communism and
+ priestcraft. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s an awkward text, you know,&rsquo; he
+ said, looking up curiously from the Bible in his hand into the doctor&rsquo;s
+ face, &lsquo;a very awkward text; and I should say it was rather a
+ dangerous one to set too fully before young people. It seems to me to make
+ too little altogether of Property. You know, Dr. Greatrex, at first sight
+ it DOES look just a little like communism.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Precisely what Mr. Le Breton probably said,&rsquo; the doctor answered,
+ following up his advantage quickly. &lsquo;At first sight, no doubt, but
+ at first sight only, I assure you, Mr. Blenkinsopp. If you look on to the
+ fourth verse of the next chapter, you&rsquo;ll see that St. Peter, at
+ least, was no communist,&mdash;which is perhaps what Mr. Le Breton really
+ said. St. Peter there argues in favour of purely voluntary beneficence,
+ you observe; as when you, Mr. Blenkinsopp, contribute a guinea to our
+ chapel window:&mdash;you see, we&rsquo;re grateful to our kind
+ benefactors: we don&rsquo;t forget them. And if you&rsquo;ll look at the
+ Thirty-eighth Article of the Church of England, my dear sir, you&rsquo;ll
+ find that the riches and goods of Christians are not common, as touching
+ the right, title, and possession of the same as certain Anabaptists&mdash;(Gracious
+ heavens, is he a Baptist, I wonder?&mdash;if so, I&rsquo;ve put my foot in
+ it)&mdash;certain Anabaptists do falsely boast&mdash;referring, of course,
+ to sundry German fanatics of the time&mdash;followers of one Kniperdoling,
+ a crazy enthusiast, not to the respectable English Baptist denomination;
+ but that nevertheless every man ought, of such things as he possesseth,
+ liberally to give alms to the poor. That, you see, is the doctrine of the
+ Church of England, and that, I&rsquo;ve no doubt, is the doctrine that Mr.
+ Le Breton pointed out to your boys as the true Christian communism of St.
+ Peter and the apostles.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, I hope so, Dr. Greatrex,&rsquo; Mr. Blenkinsopp answered
+ resignedly. ‘I&rsquo;m sure I hope so, for his own sake, as well as for
+ his pupils&rsquo;. Still, in these days, you know, when infidelity and
+ Radicalism are so rife, one ought to be on one&rsquo;s guard against
+ atheism and revolution, and attacks on Property in every form; oughtn&rsquo;t
+ one, Doctor? These opinions are getting so rampant all around us, Property
+ itself isn&rsquo;t safe. One really hardly knows what people are coming to
+ nowadays. Why, last night I came down here and stopped at the Royal
+ Marine, on the Parade, and having nothing else to do, while my wife was
+ looking after the little ones, I turned into a hall down in Combe Street,
+ where I saw a lot of placards up about a Grand National Social Democratic
+ meeting. Well, I turned in, Dr. Greatrex, and there I heard a German
+ refugee fellow from London&mdash;a white-haired man of the name of
+ Schurts, or something of the sort&rsquo;&mdash;Mr. Blenkinsopp pronounced
+ it to rhyme with &lsquo;hurts&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;who was declaiming away
+ in a fashion to make your hair stand on end, and frighten you half out of
+ your wits with his dreadful communistic notions. I assure you, he
+ positively took my breath away. I ran out of the hall at last, while he
+ was still speaking, for fear the roof should fall in upon our heads and
+ crush us to pieces. I declare to you, sir, I quite expected a visible
+ judgment!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Did you really now?&rsquo; said Dr. Greatrex, languidly. &lsquo;Well, I
+ dare say, for I know there&rsquo;s a sad prevalence of revolutionary
+ feeling among our workmen here, Mr. Blenkinsopp. Now, what was this man
+ Schurz talking about?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, sheer communism, sir,&rsquo; said Mr. Blenkinsopp, severely: &lsquo;sheer
+ communism, I can tell you. Co-operation of workmen to rob their employers
+ of profits; gross denunciation of capital and capitalists; and regular
+ inciting of them against the Property of the landlords, by quoting
+ Scripture, too, Doctor, by quoting the very words of Scripture. They say
+ the devil can quote Scripture to his own destruction, don&rsquo;t they,
+ Doctor? Well, he quoted something out of the Bible about woe unto them
+ that join field to field, or words to that effect, to make themselves a
+ solitude in the midst of the earth. Do you know, it strikes me that it&rsquo;s
+ a very dangerous book, the Bible&mdash;in the hands of these socialistic
+ demagogues, I mean. Look now, at that passage, and at what Mr. Le Breton
+ said about Christian communism!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, my dear Mr. Blenkinsopp,&rsquo; the doctor cried, in a tone of
+ gentle deprecation, &lsquo;I hope you don&rsquo;t confound a person like
+ this man Schurz, a German refugee of the worst type, with our Mr. Le
+ Breton, an Oxford graduate and an English gentleman of excellent family. I
+ know Schurz by name through the papers: he&rsquo;s the author of a
+ dreadful book called &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate,&rdquo; or something
+ of that sort&mdash;a revolutionary work like Tom Paine&rsquo;s &ldquo;Age
+ of Reason,&rdquo; I believe&mdash;and he goes about the country now and
+ then, lecturing and agitating, to make money, no doubt, out of the poor,
+ misguided, credulous workmen. You quite pain me when you mention him in
+ the same breath with a hard-working, conscientious, able teacher like our
+ Mr. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh,&rsquo; Mr. Blenkinsopp went on, a little mollified, &lsquo;then Mr.
+ Le Breton&rsquo;s of a good family, is he? That&rsquo;s a great safeguard,
+ at any rate, for you don&rsquo;t find people of good family running
+ recklessly after these bloodthirsty doctrines, and disregarding the claims
+ of Property.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear sir,&rsquo; the doctor continued, &lsquo;we know his mother, Lady
+ Le Breton, personally. His father, Sir Owen, was a distinguished
+ officer-general in the Indian army in fact; and all his people are
+ extremely well connected with some of our best county families. Nothing
+ wrong about him in any way, I can answer for it. He came here direct from
+ Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s, where he&rsquo;d been acting as tutor to Viscount
+ Lynmouth, the eldest son of the Tregellis family: and you may be sure THEY
+ wouldn&rsquo;t have anybody about them in any capacity who wasn&rsquo;t
+ thoroughly and perfectly responsible, and free from any prejudice against
+ the just rights of property.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At each successive step of this collective guarantee to Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ perfect respectability, Mr. Blenkinsopp&rsquo;s square face beamed
+ brighter and brighter, till at last when the name of Lord Exmour was
+ finally reached, his mouth relaxed slowly into a broad smile, and he felt
+ that he might implicitly trust the education of his boys to a person so
+ intimately bound up with the best and highest interests of religion and
+ Property in this kingdom. &lsquo;Of course,&rsquo; he said placidly,
+ &lsquo;that puts quite a different complexion upon the matter, Dr.
+ Greatrex. I&rsquo;m very glad to hear young Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s such an
+ excellent and trustworthy person. But the fact is, that Schurts man gave
+ me quite a turn for the moment, with his sanguinary notions. I wish you
+ could see the man, sir; a long white-haired, savage-bearded, fierce-eyed
+ old revolutionist if ever there was one. It made me shudder to look at
+ him, not raving and ranting like a madman&mdash;I shouldn&rsquo;t have
+ minded so much if he&rsquo;d a done that; but talking as cool and calm and
+ collected, Doctor, about &ldquo;eliminating the capitalist&rdquo;&mdash;cutting
+ off my head, in fact&mdash;as we two are talking here together at this
+ moment. His very words were, sir, &ldquo;we must eliminate the capitalist.&rdquo;
+ Why, bless my soul,&rsquo;&mdash;and here Mr. Blenkinsopp rushed to the
+ window excitedly&mdash;&lsquo;who on earth&rsquo;s this coming across your
+ lawn, here, arm in arm with Mr. Le Breton, into the school-house? Man
+ alive, Dr. Greatrex, whatever you choose to say, hanged if it isn&rsquo;t
+ realty that German cut-throat fellow himself, and no mistake at all about
+ it!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Greatrex rose from his magisterial chair and glanced with dignified
+ composure out of the window. Yes, there was positively no denying it!
+ Ernest Le Breton, in cap and gown, with Edie by his side, was walking arm
+ in arm up to the school-house with a long-bearded, large-headed
+ German-looking man, whose placid powerful face the Doctor immediately
+ recognised as the one he had seen in the illustrated papers above the name
+ of Max Schurz, the defendant in the coming state trial for unlawfully
+ uttering a seditious libel! He could hardly believe his eyes. Though he
+ knew Ernest&rsquo;s opinions were dreadfully advanced, he could not have
+ suspected him of thus consorting with positive murderous political
+ criminals. In spite of his natural and kindly desire to screen his own
+ junior master, he felt that this public exhibition of irreconcilable views
+ was quite unpardonable and irretrievable. &lsquo;Mr. Blenkinsopp,&rsquo;
+ he said gravely, turning to the awe-struck tobacco-pipe manufacturer with
+ an expression of sympathetic dismay upon his practised face, &lsquo;I must
+ retract all I have just been saying to you about our junior master. I was
+ not aware of this. Mr. Le Breton must no longer retain his post as an
+ assistant at Pilbury Regis Grammar School.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Blenkinsopp sank amazed into an easy-chair, and sat in dumb
+ astonishment to see the end of this extraordinary and unprecedented
+ adventure. The Doctor walked out severely to the school porch, and stood
+ there in solemn state to await the approach of the unsuspecting offender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s so delightful, dear Herr Max,&rsquo; Ernest was saying at that
+ exact moment, &lsquo;to have you down here with us even for a single
+ night. You can&rsquo;t imagine what an oasis your coming has been to us
+ both. I&rsquo;m sure Edie has enjoyed it just as much as I have, and is
+ just as anxious you should stop a little time here with us as I myself
+ could possibly be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, yes, Herr Schurz,&rsquo; Edie put in persuasively with her sweet
+ little pleading manner; &lsquo;do stay a little longer. I don&rsquo;t know
+ when dear Ernest has enjoyed anything in the world so much as he has
+ enjoyed seeing you. You&rsquo;ve no idea how dull it is down here for him,
+ and for me too, for that matter; everybody here is so borné, and
+ narrow-minded and self-centred; nothing expansive or sympathetic about
+ them, as there used to be about Ernest&rsquo;s set in dear, quiet,
+ peaceable old Oxford. It&rsquo;s been such a pleasure to us to hear some
+ conversation again that wasn&rsquo;t about the school, and the rector, and
+ the Haigh Park people, and the flower show, and old Mrs. Jenkins&rsquo;s
+ quarrel with the vicar of St. Barnabas. Except when Mr. Berkeley runs down
+ sometimes for a Saturday to Monday trip to see us, and takes Ernest out
+ for a good blow with him on the top of the breezy downs over yonder, we
+ really never hear anything at all except the gossip and the small-talk of
+ Pilbury Regis.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And what makes it worse, Herr Max,&rsquo; said Ernest, looking up in the
+ old man&rsquo;s calm strong face with the same reverent almost filial love
+ and respect as ever, &lsquo;is the fact that I can&rsquo;t feel any real
+ interest and enthusiasm in the work that&rsquo;s set before me. I try to
+ do it as well as I can, and I believe Dr. Greatrex, who&rsquo;s a
+ kind-hearted good sort of man in his way, is perfectly satisfied with it;
+ but my heart isn&rsquo;t in it, you see, and can&rsquo;t be in it. What
+ sort of good is one doing the world by dinning the same foolish round of
+ Horace and Livy and Latin elegiacs into the heads of all these useless,
+ eat-all, do-nothing young fellows, who&rsquo;ll only be fit to fight or
+ preach or idle as soon as we&rsquo;ve finished cramming them with our
+ indigestible unserviceable nostrums!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, Ernest, Ernest,&rsquo; said Herr Max, nodding his heavy head gravely,
+ ‘you always WILL look too seriously altogether at your social duties. I
+ can&rsquo;t get other people to do it enough; and I can&rsquo;t get you
+ not to do it too much entirely. Remember, my dear boy, my pet old saying
+ about a little leaven. You&rsquo;re doing more good by just unobtrusively
+ holding your own opinions here at Pilbury, and getting in the thin end of
+ the wedge by slowly influencing the minds of a few middle-class boys in
+ your form, than you could possibly be doing by making shoes or weaving
+ clothes for the fractional benefit of general humanity. Don&rsquo;t be so
+ abstract, Ernest; concrete yourself a little; isn&rsquo;t it enough that
+ you&rsquo;re earning a livelihood for your dear little wife here, whom I&rsquo;m
+ glad to know at last and to receive as a worthy daughter? I may call you,
+ Edie, mayn&rsquo;t I, my daughter? So this is your school, is it? A
+ pleasant building! And that stern-looking old gentleman yonder, I suppose,
+ is your head master?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dr. Greatrex,&rsquo; said Edie innocently, stepping up to him in her
+ bright elastic fashion, &lsquo;let me introduce you to our friend Herr
+ Schurz, whose name I dare say you know&mdash;the German political
+ economist. He&rsquo;s come down to Pilbury to deliver a lecture here, and
+ we&rsquo;ve been fortunate enough to put him up at our little lodging.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor bowed very stiffly. &lsquo;I have heard of Herr Schurz&rsquo;s
+ reputation already,&rsquo; he said with as much diplomatic politeness as
+ he could command, fortunately bethinking himself at the right moment of
+ the exact phrase that would cover the situation without committing him to
+ any further courtesy towards the terrible stranger. ‘Will you excuse my
+ saying, Mrs. Le Breton, that we&rsquo;re very busy this afternoon, and I
+ want to have a few words with your husband in private immediately? Perhaps
+ you&rsquo;d better take Herr Schurz on to the downs&rsquo; (&lsquo;safer
+ there than on the Parade, at any rate,&rsquo; he thought to himself
+ quickly), &lsquo;and Le Breton will join you in the combe a little later
+ in the afternoon. I&rsquo;ll take the fifth form myself, and let him have
+ a holiday with his friend here if he&rsquo;d like one. Le Breton, will you
+ step this way please?&rsquo; And lifting his square cap with stern
+ solemnity to Edie, the doctor disappeared under the porch into the
+ corridor, closely followed by poor frightened and wondering Ernest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked at Herr Max in dismay, for she saw clearly there was something
+ serious the matter with the doctor. The old man shook his head sadly.
+ &lsquo;It was very wrong of me,&rsquo; he said bitterly: &lsquo;very wrong
+ and very thoughtless. I ought to have remembered it and stopped away. I&rsquo;m
+ a caput lupinum, it seems, in Pilbury Regis, a sort of moral scarecrow or
+ political leper, to be carefully avoided like some horrid contagion by a
+ respectable, prosperous head-master. I might have known it, I might have
+ known it, Edie; and now I&rsquo;m afraid by my stupidity I&rsquo;ve got
+ dear Ernest unintentionally into a pack of troubles. Come on, my child, my
+ poor dear child, come on to the downs, as he told us; I won&rsquo;t
+ compromise you any longer by being seen with you in the streets, in the
+ decent decorous whited sepulchres of Pilbury Regis.&rsquo; And the grey
+ old apostle, with two tears trickling unreproved down his wrinkled cheek,
+ took Edie&rsquo;s arm tenderly in his, and led her like a father up to the
+ green grassy slope that overlooks the little seaward combe by the nestling
+ village of Nether Pilbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex had taken Ernest into the breakfast-room&mdash;the
+ study was already monopolised by Mr. Blenkinsopp&mdash;and had seated
+ himself nervously, with his hands folded before him, on a straight-backed
+ chair There was a long and awkward pause, for the doctor didn&rsquo;t care
+ to begin the interview; but at last he sighed deeply and said in a tone of
+ genuine disappointment and difficulty, &lsquo;My dear Le Breton, this is
+ really very unpleasant.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked at him, and said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Do you know,&rsquo; the doctor went on kindly after a minute, &lsquo;I
+ really do like you and sympathise with you. But what am I to do after
+ this? I can&rsquo;t keep you at the school any longer, can I now? I put it
+ to your own common-sense. I&rsquo;m afraid, Le Breton&mdash;it gives me
+ sincere pain to say so&mdash;but I&rsquo;m afraid we must part at the end
+ of the quarter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest only muttered that he was very sorry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But what are we to do about it, Le Breton?&rsquo; the doctor continued
+ more kindly than ever. &lsquo;What are we ever to do about it? For my own
+ sake, and for the boys&rsquo; sake, and for respectability&rsquo;s sake,
+ it&rsquo;s quite impossible to let you remain here any longer. The first
+ thing you must do is to send away this Schurz creature&rsquo;&mdash;Ernest
+ started a little&mdash;&lsquo;and then we must try to let it blow over as
+ best we can. Everybody&rsquo;ll be talking about it; you know the man&rsquo;s
+ become quite notorious lately; and it&rsquo;ll be quite necessary to say
+ distinctly, Le Breton, before the whole of Pilbury, that we&rsquo;ve been
+ obliged to dismiss you summarily. So much we positively MUST do for our
+ own protection. But what on earth are we to do for you, my poor fellow? I&rsquo;m
+ afraid you&rsquo;ve cut your own throat, and I don&rsquo;t see any way on
+ earth out of it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How so?&rsquo; asked Ernest, half stunned by the suddenness of this
+ unexpected dismissal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, just look the thing in the face yourself, Le Breton. I can&rsquo;t
+ very well give you a recommendation to any other head master without
+ mentioning to him why I had to ask you for your resignation. And I&rsquo;m
+ afraid if I told them, nobody else would ever take you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Indeed?&rsquo; said Ernest, very softly. &lsquo;Is it such a heinous
+ offence to know so good a man as Herr Schurz&mdash;the best follower of
+ the apostles I ever knew?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear fellow,&rsquo; said the doctor, confidentially, with an unusual
+ burst of outspoken frankness, &lsquo;so far as my own private feelings are
+ concerned, I don&rsquo;t in the least object to your knowing Herr Schurz
+ or any other socialist whatsoever. To tell you the truth, I dare say he
+ really is an excellent and most well-meaning person at bottom. Between
+ ourselves, I&rsquo;ve always thought that there was nothing very heterodox
+ in socialism; in fact, I often think, Le Breton, the Bible&rsquo;s the
+ most thoroughly democratic book that ever was written. But we haven&rsquo;t
+ got to deal in practice with first principles; we have to deal with
+ Society&mdash;with men and women as we find them. Now, Society doesn&rsquo;t
+ like your Herr Schurz, objects to him, anathematises him, wants to
+ imprison him. If you walk about with him in public, Society won&rsquo;t
+ send its sons to your school. Therefore, you should disguise your
+ affection, and if you want to visit him, you should visit him, like
+ Nicodemus, by night only.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid,&rsquo; said Ernest very fixedly, &lsquo;I shall never
+ be able so far to accommodate myself to the wishes of Society.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid not, myself, Le Breton,&rsquo; the doctor went on with
+ imperturbable good temper. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid not, and I&rsquo;m
+ sorry for it. The fact is, you&rsquo;ve chosen the wrong profession. You
+ haven&rsquo;t pliability enough for a schoolmaster; you&rsquo;re too
+ isolated, too much out of the common run; your ideas are too peculiar.
+ Now, you&rsquo;ve got me to-day into a dreadful pickle, and I might very
+ easily be angry with you about it, and part with you in bad blood; but I
+ really like you, Le Breton, and I don&rsquo;t want to do that; so I only
+ tell you plainly, you&rsquo;ve mistaken your natural calling. What it can
+ be I don&rsquo;t know; but we must put our two heads together, and see
+ what we can do for you before the end of the quarter. Now, go up to the
+ combe to your wife, and try to get that terrible bugbear of a German out
+ of Pilbury as quickly and as quietly as possible. Good-bye for to-day, Le
+ Breton; no coolness between us, for this, I hope, my dear fellow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest grasped his hand warmly. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re very kind, Dr.
+ Greatrex,&rsquo; he said with genuine feeling. &lsquo;I see you mean well
+ by me, and I&rsquo;m very, very sorry if I&rsquo;ve unintentionally caused
+ you any embarrassment.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not at all, not at all, my dear fellow. Don&rsquo;t mention it. We&rsquo;ll
+ tide it over somehow, and I&rsquo;ll see whether I can get you anything
+ else to do that you&rsquo;re better fitted for.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the door closed on Ernest, the doctor just gently wiped a certain
+ unusual dew off his gold spectacles with a corner of his spotless
+ handkerchief. &lsquo;He&rsquo;s a good fellow,&rsquo; he murmured to
+ himself, ‘an excellent fellow; but he doesn&rsquo;t manage to combine with
+ the innocence of the dove the wisdom of the serpent. Poor boy, poor boy, I&rsquo;m
+ afraid he&rsquo;ll sink, but we must do what we can to keep his chin
+ floating above the water. And now I must go back to the study to have out
+ my explanation with that detestable thick-headed old pig of a Blenkinsopp!
+ &ldquo;Your views about young Le Breton,&rdquo; I must say to him, &ldquo;are
+ unfortunately only too well founded; and I have been compelled to dismiss
+ him this very hour from Pilbury Grammar School.&rdquo; Ugh&mdash;how
+ humiliating! the profession&rsquo;s really enough to give one a perfect
+ sickening of life altogether!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII. &mdash; THE STREETS OF ASKELON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Before the end of the quarter, two things occurred which made almost as
+ serious a difference to Ernest&rsquo;s and Edie&rsquo;s lives as the
+ dismissal from Pilbury Regis Grammar School. It was about a week or ten
+ days after Herr Max&rsquo;s unfortunate visit that Ernest awoke one
+ morning with a very curious and unpleasant taste in his mouth, accompanied
+ by a violent fit of coughing. He knew what the taste was well enough; and
+ he mentioned the matter casually to Edie a little later in the morning.
+ Edie was naturally frightened at the symptoms, and made him go to see the
+ school doctor. The doctor felt his pulse attentively, listened with his
+ stethoscope at the chest, punched and pummelled the patient all over in
+ the most orthodox fashion, and asked the usual inquisitorial personal
+ questions about all the other members of his family. When he heard about
+ Ronald&rsquo;s predisposition, he shook his head seriously, and feared
+ there was really something in it. Increased vocal resonance at the top of
+ the left lung, he must admit. Some tendency to tubercular deposit there,
+ and perhaps even a slight deep-seated cavity. Ernest must take care of
+ himself for the present, and keep himself as free as possible from all
+ kind of worry or anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Is it consumption, do you think, Dr. Sanders?&rsquo; Edie asked
+ breathlessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, consumption, Mrs. Le Breton, is a very vague and indefinite
+ expression,&rsquo; said the doctor, tapping his white shirtcuff with his
+ nail in his slowest and most deliberate manner. &lsquo;It may mean a great
+ deal, or it may mean very little. I don&rsquo;t want in any way to alarm
+ you, or to alarm your husband; but there&rsquo;s certainly a marked
+ incipient tendency towards tubercular deposit. Yes, tubercular deposit...
+ Well, if you ask me the question point-blank, I should say so...
+ certainly... I should say it was phthisis, very little doubt of it... In
+ short, what some people would call consumption.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest went home with Edie, comforting her all the way as well as he was
+ able, and trying to make light of it, but feeling in his own heart that
+ the look-out was decidedly beginning to gather blacker and darker than
+ ever before them. Through the rest of that term he worked as well as he
+ could; but Edie noticed every morning that the cough was getting worse and
+ worse; and long before the time came for them to leave Pilbury he had
+ begun to look distinctly delicate. Care for Edie and for the future was
+ telling on him: his frame had never been very robust, and the anxieties of
+ the last year had brought out the same latent hereditary tendency which
+ had shown itself earlier and more markedly in the case of his brother
+ Ronald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex was assiduous in looking about for something or
+ other that Ernest could turn his hand to, and writing letters with
+ indefatigable kindness to all his colleagues and correspondents: for
+ though he was, as Ernest said, a most unmitigated humbug, that was really
+ his only fault; and when his sympathies were once really aroused, as the
+ Le Bretons had aroused them, there was no stone he would leave unturned if
+ only his energy could be of any service to those whom he wished to
+ benefit. But unfortunately in this case it couldn&rsquo;t. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ at my wit&rsquo;s end what to do with you, Le Breton,&rsquo; he said
+ kindly one morning to Ernest: &lsquo;but how on earth I&rsquo;m to manage
+ anything, I can&rsquo;t imagine. For my own part, you know, though your
+ conduct about that poor man Schurz (a well-meaning harmless fanatic, I
+ dare say) was really a public scandal&mdash;from the point of view of
+ parents I mean, my dear fellow, from the point of view of parents&mdash;I
+ should almost be inclined to keep you on here in spite of it, and brave
+ the public opinion of Pilbury Regis, if it depended entirely upon my own
+ judgment. But in the management of a school, my dear boy, as you yourself
+ must be aware, a head master isn&rsquo;t the sole and only authority;
+ there are the governors, for example, Le Breton, and&mdash;and&mdash;and,
+ ur, there&rsquo;s Mrs. Greatrex. Now, in all matters of social discipline
+ and attitude, Mrs. Greatrex is justly of equal authority with me; and Mrs.
+ Greatrex thinks it would never do to keep you at Pilbury. So, of course,
+ that practically settles the question. I&rsquo;m awfully sorry, Le Breton,
+ dreadfully sorry, but I don&rsquo;t see my way out of it. The mischief&rsquo;s
+ done already, to some extent, for all Pilbury knows now that Schurz came
+ down here to stop with you at your lodgings: but if I were to keep you on
+ they&rsquo;d say I didn&rsquo;t disapprove of Schurz&rsquo;s opinions, and
+ that would naturally be simple ruination for the school&mdash;simple
+ ruination.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest thanked him sincerely for the trouble he had taken, but wondered
+ desperately in his own heart what sort of future could ever be in store
+ for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second event was less unexpected, though quite equally embarrassing
+ under existing circumstances. Hardly more than a month before the end of
+ the quarter, a little black-eyed baby daughter came to add to the
+ prospective burdens of the Le Breton family. She was a wee, fat,
+ round-faced, dimpled Devonshire lass to look at, as far surpassing every
+ previous baby in personal appearance as each of those previous babies, by
+ universal admission, had surpassed all their earlier predecessors&mdash;a
+ fact which, as Mr. Sanders remarked, ought to be of most gratifying import
+ both to evolutionists and to philanthropists in general, as proving the
+ continuous and progressive amelioration of the human race: and Edie was
+ very proud of her indeed, as she lay placidly in her very plain little
+ white robes on the pillow of her simple wickerwork cradle. But Ernest,
+ though he learned to love the tiny intruder dearly afterwards, had no
+ heart just then to bear the conventional congratulations of his friends
+ and fellow-masters. Another mouth to feed, another life dependent upon
+ him, and little enough, as it seemed, for him to feed it with. When Edie
+ asked him what they should name the baby&mdash;he had just received an
+ adverse answer to his application for a vacant secretaryship&mdash;he
+ crumpled up the envelope bitterly in his hand, and cried out in his
+ misery, &lsquo;Call her Pandora, Edie, call her Pandora; for we&rsquo;ve
+ got to the very bottom of the casket, and there is nothing at all left for
+ us now but hope&mdash;and even of that very little!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they duly registered her name as Pandora; but her mother shortened it
+ familiarly into Dot; and as little Dot she was practically known ever
+ after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost as soon as poor Edie was able to get about again, the time came
+ when they would have to leave Pilbury Regis. The doctor&rsquo;s search had
+ been quite ineffectual, and he had heard of absolutely nothing that was at
+ all likely to suit Ernest Le Breton. He had tried Government offices,
+ Members of Parliament, colonial friends, every body he knew in any way who
+ might possibly know of vacant posts or appointments, but each answer was
+ only a fresh disappointment for him and for Ernest. In the end, he was
+ fain to advise his peccant under-master, since nothing else remained for
+ it, that he had better go up to London for the present, take lodgings, and
+ engage in the precarious occupation known as &lsquo;looking about for
+ something to turn up.&rsquo; On the morning when Edie and he were to leave
+ the town, Dr. Greatrex saw Ernest privately in his own study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wish very much I could have gone to the station to see you off, Le
+ Breton,&rsquo; he said, pressing his hand warmly; &lsquo;but it wouldn&rsquo;t
+ do, you know, it wouldn&rsquo;t do, and Mrs. Greatrex wouldn&rsquo;t like
+ it. People would say I sympathised secretly with your political opinions,
+ which might offend Sir Matthew Ogle and others of our governors. But I&rsquo;m
+ sorry to get rid of you, really and sincerely sorry, my dear fellow; and
+ apart from personal feeling, I&rsquo;m sure you&rsquo;d have made a good
+ master in most ways, if it weren&rsquo;t for your most unfortunate
+ socialistic notions. Get rid of them, Le Breton, I beg of you: do get rid
+ of them. Well, the only thing I can advise you now is to try your hand,
+ for the present only&mdash;till something turns up, you know&mdash;at
+ literature and journalism. I shall be on the look-out for you still, and
+ shall tell you at once of anything I may happen to hear of. But meanwhile,
+ you must try to be earning something. And if at any time, my dear friend,
+ you should be temporarily in want of money,&rsquo;&mdash;the doctor said
+ this in a shame-faced, hesitating sort of way, with not a little humming
+ and hawing&mdash;&lsquo;in want of money for immediate necessities merely,
+ if you&rsquo;ll only be so kind as to write and tell me, I should consider
+ it a pleasure and a privilege to lend you a ten pound note, you know&mdash;just
+ for a short time, till you saw your way clear before you. Don&rsquo;t
+ hesitate to ask me now, be sure; and I may as well say, write to me at the
+ school, Le Breton, not at the school-house, so that even Mrs. Greatrex
+ need never know anything about it. In fact, if you&rsquo;ll excuse me, I&rsquo;ve
+ put a small sum into this envelope&mdash;only twenty pounds&mdash;which
+ may be of service to you, as a loan, as a loan merely; if you&rsquo;ll
+ take it&mdash;only till something turns up, you know&mdash;you&rsquo;ll
+ really be conferring a great favour upon me. There, there, my dear boy;
+ now don&rsquo;t be offended: I&rsquo;ve borrowed money myself at times,
+ when I was a young man like you, and I hadn&rsquo;t a wife and family then
+ as an excuse for it either. Put it in your pocket, there&rsquo;s a good
+ fellow; you&rsquo;ll need it for Mrs. Le Breton and the baby, you see; now
+ do please put it in your pocket.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears rode fast and hot in Ernest&rsquo;s eyes, and he grasped the
+ doctor&rsquo;s other hand with grateful fervour. &lsquo;Dear Dr. Greatrex,&rsquo;
+ he said as well as he was able, &lsquo;it&rsquo;s too kind of you, too
+ kind of you altogether. But I really can&rsquo;t take the money. Even
+ after the expenses of Edie&rsquo;s illness and of baby Dot&rsquo;s
+ wardrobe, we have a little sum, a very little sum laid by, that&rsquo;ll
+ help us to tide over the immediate present. It&rsquo;s too good of you,
+ too good of you altogether. I shall remember your kindness for ever with
+ the most sincere and heartfelt gratitude.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Ernest looked into the doctor&rsquo;s half-averted eyes, swimming and
+ glistening just a little with sympathetic moisture, his heart smote him
+ when he thought that he had ever described that good, kindly, generous man
+ as an unmitigated humbug. &lsquo;It shows how little one can trust the
+ mere outside shell of human beings,&rsquo; he said to Edie,
+ self-reproachfully, as they sat together in their hare third-class
+ carriage an hour later. &lsquo;The humbug&rsquo;s just the conventional
+ mask of his profession&mdash;necessary enough, I suppose, for people who
+ are really going to live successfully in the world as we find it: the
+ heart within him&rsquo;s a thousand times warmer and truer and more
+ unspoiled than one could ever have imagined from the outer covering. He
+ offered me his twenty pounds so delicately and considerately that but for
+ my father&rsquo;s blood in me, Edie, for your sake, I believe I could
+ almost have taken it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they got to London, Ernest wished to leave Edie and Dot at Arthur
+ Berkeley&rsquo;s rooms (he knew nowhere else to leave them), while he went
+ out by himself to look about for cheap lodgings. Edie was still too weak,
+ he said, to carry her baby about the streets of London in search of
+ apartments. But Edie wouldn&rsquo;t hear of this arrangement; she didn&rsquo;t
+ quite like going to Arthur&rsquo;s, and she felt sure she could bargain
+ with the London landladies a great deal more effectually than a man like
+ Ernest&mdash;which was an important matter in the present very reduced
+ condition of the family finances. In the end it was agreed that they
+ should both go out on the hunt together, but that Ernest should be
+ permitted to relieve Edie by turns in taking care of the precious baby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They&rsquo;re dreadful people, I believe, London landladies,&rsquo; said
+ Edie, in her most housewifely manner; &lsquo;regular cheats and
+ skinflints, I&rsquo;ve always heard, who try to take you in on every
+ conceivable point and item. We must be very careful not to let them get
+ the better of us, Ernest, and to make full inquiries about all extras, and
+ so forth, beforehand.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned towards Holloway and the northern district, to look for cheap
+ rooms, and they saw a great many, more or less dear, and more or less
+ dirty and unsuitable, until their poor hearts really began to sink within
+ them. At last, in despair, Edie turned up a small side street in Holloway,
+ and stopped at a tiny house with a clean white curtain in its wee front
+ bay window. &lsquo;This is awfully small, Ernest,&rsquo; she said,
+ despondently, &lsquo;but perhaps, after all, it might really suit us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was opened for them by a tall, raw-boned, hard-faced woman, the
+ very embodiment and personification of Edie&rsquo;s ideal skinflint London
+ landlady. Might they see the lodgings, Edie asked dubiously. Yes, they
+ might, indeed, mum, answered the hard-faced woman. Edie glanced at Ernest
+ significantly, as who should say that these would really never do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lodgings were very small, but they were as clean as a new pin. Edie
+ began to relent, and thought, perhaps in spite of the landlady, they might
+ somehow manage to put up with them. &lsquo;What was the rent?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hard-faced landlady looked at Edie steadily, and then answered
+ ‘Fifteen shillings, mum.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, that&rsquo;s too much for us, I&rsquo;m afraid,&rsquo; said Edie
+ ruefully. &lsquo;We don&rsquo;t want to go as high as that. We&rsquo;re
+ very poor and quiet people.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, mum,&rsquo; the landlady assented quickly, &lsquo;it is &lsquo;igh
+ for the rooms, perhaps, mum, though I&rsquo;ve &lsquo;ad more; but it IS
+ &lsquo;igh, mum. I won&rsquo;t deny it. Still, for you, mum, and the baby,
+ I wouldn&rsquo;t mind making it twelve and sixpence.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Couldn&rsquo;t you say half-a-sovereign?&rsquo; Edie asked timidly,
+ emboldened by success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Arf a suvveran, mum? Well, I &lsquo;ardly rightly know,&rsquo; said the
+ hard-faced landlady deliberately. &lsquo;I can&rsquo;t say without askin&rsquo;
+ of my &lsquo;usband whether he&rsquo;ll let me. Excuse me a minnit, mum; I&rsquo;ll
+ just run down and ask &lsquo;im.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie glanced at Ernest, and whispered doubtfully, &lsquo;They&rsquo;ll do,
+ but I&rsquo;m afraid she&rsquo;s a dreadful person.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the hard-faced landlady had run downstairs quickly, and called
+ out in a pleasant voice of childish excitement to her husband. &lsquo;John,
+ John,&rsquo; she cried&mdash;&lsquo;drat that man, where&rsquo;s he gone
+ to. Oh, a smokin&rsquo; of course, in the back kitching. Oh, John, there&rsquo;s
+ the sweetest little lady you ever set eyes on, all in black, with a dear
+ baby, a dear little speechless infant, and a invalid &lsquo;usband, I
+ should say by the look of &lsquo;im, &lsquo;as come to ask the price of
+ the ground floor lodgin&rsquo;s. And seein&rsquo; she was so nice and
+ kindlike, I told her fifteen shillings, instead of a suvveran; and she
+ says, can&rsquo;t you let &lsquo;em for less? says she; and she was that
+ pretty and engagin&rsquo; that I says, well, for you I&rsquo;ll make it
+ twelve and sixpence, mum, says I: and says she, you couldn&rsquo;t say
+ &lsquo;arf a suvveran, could you? and says I, I&rsquo;ll ask my &lsquo;usband:
+ and oh, John, I DO wish you&rsquo;d let me take &lsquo;em at that, for a
+ kinder, sweeter-lookin&rsquo; dearer family I never did, an&rsquo; that I
+ tell you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John drew his pipe slowly out of his mouth&mdash;he was a big, heavy,
+ coachman-built sort of person, in waistcoat and shirt-sleeves&mdash;and
+ answered with a kindly smile, &lsquo;Why, Martha, if you want to take
+ &lsquo;em for &lsquo;arf a suvveran, in course you&rsquo;d ought to do it.
+ Got a baby, pore thing, &lsquo;ave she now? Well, there, there, you just
+ go this very minnit, and tell &lsquo;em as you&rsquo;ll take &lsquo;em.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hard-faced landlady went up the stairs again, only stopping a moment
+ to observe parenthetically that a sweeter little lady she never did, and
+ what was &lsquo;arf-a-crown a week to you and me, John? and then, holding
+ the corner of her apron in her hand, she informed Edie that her &lsquo;usband
+ was prepared to accept the ten shillings weekly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ll try to make you and the gentleman comfortable, mum,&rsquo; she
+ said, eagerly; &lsquo;the gentleman don&rsquo;t look strong, now do he? We
+ must try to feed &lsquo;im up and keep &lsquo;im cheerful. And we&rsquo;ve
+ got plenty of flowers to make the room bright, you see: I&rsquo;m very
+ fond of flowers myself, mum: seems to me as if they was sort of company to
+ one, like, and when you water &lsquo;em and tend &lsquo;em always, I feel
+ as if they was alive, and got to know one again, I do, and that makes one
+ love ‘em, now don&rsquo;t it, mum? To see &lsquo;em brighten up after you&rsquo;ve
+ watered ‘em, like that there maiden-&rsquo;air fern there, why it&rsquo;s
+ enough to make one love &lsquo;em the same as if they was Christians, mum.&rsquo;
+ There was a melting tenderness in her voice when she talked about the
+ flowers that half won over Edie&rsquo;s heart, even in spite of her hard
+ features.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m glad you&rsquo;re so fond of flowers, Mrs.&mdash;&mdash;. Oh,
+ you haven&rsquo;t told us your name yet,&rsquo; Edie said, beginning
+ vaguely to suspect that perhaps the hard-faced landlady wasn&rsquo;t quite
+ as bad as she looked to a casual observer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Alliss, mum,&rsquo; the landlady answered, filling up Edie&rsquo;s
+ interrogatory blank. &lsquo;My name is &lsquo;Alliss.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Alice what?&rsquo; Edie asked again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, no, mum, you don&rsquo;t rightly understand me,&rsquo; the landlady
+ replied, getting very red, and muddling up her aspirates more decidedly
+ than ever, as people with her failing always do when they want to be
+ specially deliberate and emphatic: &lsquo;not Halice, but &lsquo;Alliss;
+ haitch, hay, hell, hell, hi, double hess&mdash;&lsquo;Alliss: my full name&rsquo;s
+ Martha &lsquo;Alliss, mum; my &lsquo;usband&rsquo;s John &lsquo;Alliss.
+ When would you like to come in?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘At once,&rsquo; Edie answered. &lsquo;We&rsquo;ve left our luggage at the
+ cloak-room at Waterloo, and my husband will go back and fetch it, while I
+ stop here with the baby.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not that, he shan&rsquo;t, indeed, mum,&rsquo; cried the hard-faced
+ landlady, hastily; &lsquo;beggin&rsquo; your pardon for sayin&rsquo; so.
+ Our John shall go&mdash;that&rsquo;s my &lsquo;usband, mum; and you shall
+ give &lsquo;im the ticket. I wouldn&rsquo;t let your good gentleman there
+ go, and &lsquo;im so tired, too, not for the world, I wouldn&rsquo;t. Just
+ you give me the ticket, mum, and John shall go this very minnit and fetch
+ it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But perhaps your husband&rsquo;s busy,&rsquo; said Ernest, reflecting
+ upon the probable cost of cab hire; &lsquo;and he&rsquo;ll want a cab to
+ fetch it in.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Bless your &lsquo;eart, sir,&rsquo; said the landlady, busily arranging
+ things all round the room meanwhile for the better accommodation of the
+ baby, &lsquo;&rsquo;e ain&rsquo;t noways busy &lsquo;e ain&rsquo;t.
+ &lsquo;E&rsquo;s a lazy man, nowadays, John is: retired from business,
+ &lsquo;e says, sir, and ain&rsquo;t got nothink to do but clean the
+ knives, and lay the fires, and split the firewood, and such like. John
+ were a coachman, sir, in a gentleman&rsquo;s family for most of &lsquo;is
+ life, man and boy, these forty year, come Christmas; and we&rsquo;ve saved
+ a bit o&rsquo; money between us, so as we don&rsquo;t need for nothink:
+ and &lsquo;e don&rsquo;t want the cab, puttin&rsquo; you to expense, sir,
+ onnecessary, to bring the luggage round in. &lsquo;E&rsquo;ll just borrer
+ the hand-barrer from the livery in the mews, sir, and wheel it round
+ ‘isself, in &lsquo;arf an hour, and make nothink of it. Just you give me
+ the ticket, and set you right down there, and I&rsquo;ll make you and the
+ lady a cup of tea at once, and John&rsquo;ll bring round the luggage by
+ the time you&rsquo;ve got your things off.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked at Edie, and Edie looked at Ernest. Could they have judged
+ too hastily once more, after their determination to be lenient in first
+ judgments for the future? So Ernest gave Mrs. Halliss the cloak-room
+ ticket, and Mrs. Halliss ran downstairs with it immediately. &lsquo;John,&rsquo;
+ the cried again, &lsquo;&mdash;drat that man, where&rsquo;s &lsquo;e gone
+ to? Oh, there you are, dearie! Just you put on your coat an&rsquo; &lsquo;at
+ as fast as ever you can, and borrer Tom Wood&rsquo;s barrer, and run down
+ to Waterloo, and fetch up them two portmanteaus, will you? And you drop in
+ on the way at the Waterfield dairy&mdash;not Jenkins&rsquo;s: Jenkins&rsquo;s
+ milk ain&rsquo;t good enough for them&mdash;and tell &lsquo;em to send
+ round two penn&rsquo;orth of fresh this very minnit, do y&rsquo;ear, John,
+ this very minnit, as it&rsquo;s extremely pertickler. And a good thing I
+ didn&rsquo;t give you them two eggs for your dinner, as is fresh-laid by
+ our own &lsquo;ens this mornin&rsquo;, and no others like &lsquo;em to be
+ &lsquo;ad in London for love or money; and they shall &lsquo;ave &lsquo;em
+ boiled light for their tea this very evenin&rsquo;. And you look sharp,
+ John,&mdash;drat the man, &lsquo;ow long &lsquo;e is&mdash;for I tell yon,
+ these is reel gentlefolk, and them pore too, which makes it all the
+ &lsquo;arder; and they&rsquo;ve got to be treated the same in every
+ respect as if they was paying a &lsquo;ole suvverin, bless their &lsquo;earts,
+ the pore creechurs.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Pore,&rsquo; said John, vainly endeavouring to tear on his coat with
+ becoming rapidity under the influence of Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s voluble
+ exhortations. &lsquo;Pore are they, pore things? and so they may be. I&rsquo;ve
+ knowed the sons of country gentlemen, and that baronights too, Martha, as
+ &lsquo;ad kep&rsquo; their &lsquo;ounds, redooced to be that pore as they
+ couldn&rsquo;t have afforded to a took our lodgings, even &lsquo;umble as
+ they may be. Pore ain&rsquo;t nothink to do with it noways, as respecks
+ gentility. I&rsquo;ve lived forty years in gentlemen&rsquo;s families, up
+ an&rsquo; down, Martha, and I think I&rsquo;d ought to know somethink
+ about the ‘abits and manners of the aristocracy. Pore ain&rsquo;t in the
+ question at all, it ain&rsquo;t, as far as breedin&rsquo; goes: and if
+ they&rsquo;re pore, and got to be gentlefolks too all the same&rsquo;&mdash;John
+ spoke of this last serious disability in a tone of unfeigned pity&mdash;&lsquo;why,
+ Martha, wot I says is, we&rsquo;d ought to do the very best we can for
+ &lsquo;em any &lsquo;ow, now, oughtn&rsquo;t we?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Drat the man!&rsquo; cried Mrs. Halliss again, impatiently; &lsquo;don&rsquo;t
+ stand talkin&rsquo; and sermonin&rsquo; about it there no longer like a
+ poll parrot, but just you run along and send in the milk, like a dear,
+ will you? or that dear little lady&rsquo;ll have to be waitin&rsquo; for
+ her tea&mdash;and her with a month-old baby, too, the pretty thing, just
+ to think of it!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed, long before John Halliss had got back again with the two wee
+ portmanteaus&mdash;&lsquo;I could &lsquo;a carried that lot on my &lsquo;ead,&rsquo;
+ he soliloquised when he saw them, &lsquo;without &lsquo;avin&rsquo;
+ troubled to wheel round a onnecessary encumbrance in the way of a barrer&rsquo;&mdash;Mrs.
+ Halliss had put the room tidy, and laid the baby carefully in a borrowed
+ cradle in the corner, and brought up Edie and Ernest a big square tray
+ covered by a snow-white napkin&mdash;&lsquo;My own washin&rsquo;, mum&rsquo;&mdash;and
+ conveying a good cup of tea, a couple of crisp rolls, and two such
+ delicious milky eggs as were never before known in the whole previous
+ history of the county of Middlesex. And while they drank their tea, Mrs.
+ Halliss insisted upon taking the baby down into the kitchen, so that they
+ mightn&rsquo;t be bothered, pore things; for the pore lady must be tired
+ with nursin&rsquo; of it herself the livelong day, that she must: and when
+ she got it into the kitchen, she was compelled to call over the back yard
+ wall to Mrs. Bollond, the greengrocer&rsquo;s wife next door, with the
+ ultimate view to getting a hare&rsquo;s brain for the dear baby to suck at
+ through a handkerchief. And Mrs. Bollond, being specially so invited, came
+ in by the area door, and inspected the dear baby; and both together
+ arrived at the unanimous conclusion that little Dot was the very prettiest
+ and sweetest child that ever sucked its fat little fingers, Lord bless
+ her!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the neat wee parlour upstairs, Edie, pouring out tea from the
+ glittering tin teapot into one of the scrupulously clean small whitey-gold
+ teacups, was saying meanwhile to Ernest, &lsquo;Well, after all, Ernest
+ dear, perhaps London landladies aren&rsquo;t all quite as black as they&rsquo;re
+ usually painted.&rsquo; A conclusion which neither Edie nor Ernest had
+ ever after any occasion for altering in any way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV. &mdash; THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now, what were Ernest and Edie to do for a living! That was the
+ practical difficulty that stared them at last plainly in the face&mdash;no
+ mere abstract question of right and justice, of socialistic ideals or of
+ political economy, but the stern, uncompromising, pressing domestic
+ question of daily bread. They had come from Pilbury Regis with a very
+ small reserve indeed in their poor lean little purses; and though Mrs.
+ Halliss&rsquo;s lodgings might be cheap enough as London lodgings go,
+ their means wouldn&rsquo;t allow them to stop there for many weeks
+ together unless that hypothetical something of which they were in search
+ should happen to turn up with most extraordinary and unprecedented
+ rapidity. As soon as they were settled in at their tiny rooms, therefore,
+ Ernest began a series of weary journeys into town, in search of work of
+ some sort or another; and he hunted up all his old Oxford acquaintances in
+ the Temple or elsewhere, to see if they could give him any suggestions
+ towards a possible means of earning a livelihood. Most of them, he found
+ to his surprise, though they had been great chums of his at college,
+ seemed a little shy of him nowadays: one old Oxford friend, in particular,
+ an impeccable man in close-cut frock coat and hat of shiny perfection, he
+ overheard saying to another, he followed him accidentally up a long
+ staircase in King&rsquo;s Bench Walk, &lsquo;Ah, yes, I met Le Breton in
+ the Strand yesterday, when I was walking with a Q.C., too; he&rsquo;s
+ married badly, got no employment, and looks awfully seedy. So very
+ embarrassing, you know, now wasn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo; And the other answered
+ lightly, in the same unconcerned tone, &lsquo;Oh, of course, dreadfully
+ embarrassing, really.&rsquo; Ernest slank down the staircase again with a
+ sinking heart, and tried to get no further hints from the respectabilities
+ of King&rsquo;s Bench Walk, at least in this his utmost extremity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Night after night, as the dusk was beginning to throw its pall over the
+ great lonely desert of London&mdash;one vast frigid expanse of living
+ souls that knew and cared nothing about him&mdash;Ernest turned back,
+ foot-sore and heart-sick, to the cheery little lodgings in the short
+ side-street at Holloway. There good Mrs. Halliss, whose hard face seemed
+ to grow softer the longer you looked at it, had a warm clip of tea always
+ ready against his coming: and Edie, with wee Dot sleeping placidly on her
+ arm, stood at the door to welcome him back again in wife-like fashion. The
+ flowers in the window bloomed bright and gay in the tiny parlour: and
+ Edie, with her motherly cares for little Dot, seemed more like herself
+ than ever she had done before since poor Harry&rsquo;s death had clouded
+ the morning of her happy lifetime. But to Ernest, even that pretty picture
+ of the young mother and her sleeping baby looked only like one more
+ reminder of the terrible burden he had unavoidably yet too lightly taken
+ upon him. Those two dear lives depended wholly upon him for their daily
+ bread, and where that daily bread was ever to come from he had absolutely
+ not the slightest notion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no place in which it is more utterly dreary to be quite
+ friendless than in teeming London. Still, they were not absolutely
+ friendless even in that great lurid throng of jarring humanity, all
+ eagerly intent on its own business, and none of it troubling its
+ collective head about two such nonentities as Ernest and Edie. Ronald used
+ to come round daily to see them and cheer them up with his quiet
+ confidence in the Disposer of all things: and Arthur Berkeley, neglecting
+ his West End invitations and his lady admirers, used to drop in often of
+ an evening for a friendly chat and a rational suggestion or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why don&rsquo;t you try journalism, Le Breton?&rsquo; he said to Ernest
+ one night, as they sat discussing possibilities for the future in the
+ little parlour together. &lsquo;Literature in some form or other&rsquo;s
+ clearly the best thing for a man like you to turn his hand to. It demands
+ less compliance with conventional rules than any other profession. No
+ editor or publisher would ever dream of dismissing you, for example,
+ because you invited your firebrand friend Max Schurz to dinner. On the
+ contrary, if it comes to that, he&rsquo;d ask you what Herr Max thought
+ about the future of trades unions and the socialist movement in Germany,
+ and he&rsquo;d advise you to turn it into a column and a half of copy,
+ with a large type sensational heading, &ldquo;A Communistic Leader
+ Interviewed. From our Special Correspondent.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But it&rsquo;s such a very useless, unsocialistic trade,&rsquo; Ernest
+ answered doubtfully. &lsquo;Do you think it would be quite right, Arthur,
+ for a man to try and earn money by it? Of course it isn&rsquo;t much worse
+ than school-mastering, I dare say; nobody can say he&rsquo;s performing a
+ very useful function for the world by hammering a few lines of Ovid into
+ the skull of poor stupid Blenkinsopp major, who after all will only use
+ what he calls his education, if he uses it in any way at all, to enable
+ him to make rather more money than any other tobacco-pipe manufacturer in
+ the entire trade. Still, one does feel for all that, that mere writing of
+ books and papers is a very unsatisfactory kind of work for an ethical
+ being to perform for humanity. How much better, now, if one could only be
+ a farm-labourer or a shoemaker!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley looked across at him half angrily. &lsquo;My dear Ernest,&rsquo;
+ he said, in a severer voice than he often used, &lsquo;the time has gone
+ by now for this economical puritanism of yours. It won&rsquo;t do any
+ longer. You have to think of your child and of Mrs. Le Breton. Your first
+ duty is to earn a livelihood for them and yourself; when you&rsquo;ve done
+ that satisfactorily, you may begin to think of the claims of humanity. Don&rsquo;t
+ be vexed with me, my dear fellow, if I speak to you very plainly. You&rsquo;ve
+ lost your place at Pilbury because you wouldn&rsquo;t be practical. You
+ might have known they wouldn&rsquo;t let you go hobnobbing publicly before
+ the very eyes of boys and parents with a firebrand German Socialist. Mind,
+ I don&rsquo;t say anything against Herr Schurz myself&mdash;what little I
+ know about him is all in his favour&mdash;that he&rsquo;s a thorn in the
+ side of those odious prigs, the political economists. I&rsquo;ve often
+ noticed that when a man wants to dogmatise to his heart&rsquo;s content
+ without fear of contradiction, he invariably calls himself a political
+ economist. Then if people differ from him, he smiles at them the benign
+ smile of superior wisdom, and says superciliously, &ldquo;Ah, I see you
+ don&rsquo;t understand political economy!&rdquo; Now, your Herr Schurz is
+ a dissenter among economists, I believe&mdash;a sort of embryo Luther come
+ to tilt with a German toy lance against their economical infallibilities;
+ and I&rsquo;m told he knows more about the subject than all the rest of
+ them put together. Of course, if you like him and respect him&mdash;and I
+ know you have one superstition left, my dear fellow&mdash;there&rsquo;s no
+ reason on earth why you shouldn&rsquo;t do so; but you mustn&rsquo;t
+ parade him too openly before the scandalised faces of respectable Pilbury.
+ In future, you must be practical. Turn your hand to whatever you can get
+ to do, and leave humanity at large to settle the debtor and creditor
+ account with you hereafter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ll do my best, Berkeley,&rsquo; Ernest answered submissively;
+ &lsquo;and if you like, I&rsquo;ll strangle my conscience and try my hand
+ at journalism.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Do, there&rsquo;s a good man,&rsquo; Arthur Berkeley said, delighted at
+ his late conversion. &lsquo;I know two or three editor fellows pretty
+ well, and if you&rsquo;ll only turn off something, I&rsquo;ll ask them to
+ have a look at it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, at breakfast, Ernest discussed the possibilities of this new
+ venture very seriously with sympathising Edie. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s a great
+ risk,&rsquo; he said, turning it over dubiously in his mind; &lsquo;a
+ great risk, and a great expense too, for nothing certain. Let me see,
+ there&rsquo;ll be a quire of white foolscap to start with; that&rsquo;ll
+ be a shilling&mdash;a lot of money as things go at present, Edie, isn&rsquo;t
+ it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why not begin with half a quire, Ernest?&rsquo; said his little wife,
+ cautiously. &lsquo;That&rsquo;d be only sixpence, you see.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Do they halve quires at the stationer&rsquo;s, I wonder?&rsquo; Ernest
+ went on still mentally reckoning. &lsquo;Well, suppose we put it at
+ sixpence. Then we&rsquo;ve got pens already by us, but not any ink&mdash;that&rsquo;s
+ a penny&mdash;and there&rsquo;s postage, say about twopence; total
+ ninepence. That&rsquo;s a lot of money, isn&rsquo;t it, now, for a pure
+ uncertainty?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;d try it, Ernest dear, if I were you,&rsquo; Edie answered.
+ &lsquo;We must do something, mustn&rsquo;t we, dear, to earn our living.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘We must,&rsquo; Ernest said, sighing. &lsquo;I wish it were anything but
+ that; but I suppose what must be must be. Well, I&rsquo;ll go out a walk
+ by myself in the quietest streets I can find, and try if I can think of
+ anything on earth a man can write about. Arthur Berkeley says I ought to
+ begin with a social article for a paper; he knows the &ldquo;Morning
+ Intelligence&rdquo; people, and he&rsquo;ll try to get them to take
+ something if I can manage to write it. I wonder what on earth would do as
+ a social article for the &ldquo;Morning Intelligence&rdquo;! If only they&rsquo;d
+ let me write about socialism now! but Arthur says they won&rsquo;t take
+ that; the times aren&rsquo;t yet ripe for it. I wish they were, Edie, I
+ wish they were; and then perhaps you and I would find some way to earn
+ ourselves a decent living.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Ernest went out, and ruminated quietly by himself, as well as he was
+ able, in the least frequented streets of Holloway and Highgate. After
+ about half an hour&rsquo;s excogitation, a brilliant idea at last flashed
+ across him; he had found in a tobacconist&rsquo;s window something to
+ write about! Your practised journalist doesn&rsquo;t need to think at all;
+ he writes whatever comes uppermost without the unnecessarily troublesome
+ preliminary of deliberate thinking. But Ernest Le Breton was only making
+ his first experiment in the queer craft, and he looked upon himself as a
+ veritable Watt or Columbus when he had actually discovered that hitherto
+ unknown object, a thing to write about. He went straight back to good Mrs.
+ Halliss&rsquo;s with his discovery whirling in his head, stopping only by
+ the way at the stationer&rsquo;s, to invest in half a quire of white
+ foolscap. &lsquo;The best&rsquo;s a shilling a quire, mister,&rsquo; said
+ the shopman; &lsquo;second best, tenpence.&rsquo; Communist as he was,
+ Ernest couldn&rsquo;t help noticing the unusual mode of address; but he
+ took the cheaper quality quietly, and congratulated himself on his good
+ luck in saving a penny upon the original estimate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he got home, he sat down at the plain wooden table by the window, and
+ began with nervous haste to write away rapidly at his first literary
+ venture. Edie sat by in her little low chair and watched him closely with
+ breathless interest. Would it be a success or a failure? That was the
+ question they were both every moment intently asking themselves. It was
+ not a very important piece of literary workmanship, to be sure; only a
+ social leader for a newspaper, to be carelessly skimmed to-day and used to
+ light the fire to-morrow, if even that; and yet had it been the greatest
+ masterpiece ever produced by the human intellect Ernest could not have
+ worked at it with more conscientious care, or Edie watched him with
+ profounder admiration. When Shakespeare sat down to write ‘Hamlet,&rsquo;
+ it may be confidently asserted that neither Mistress Anne Shakespeare nor
+ anybody else awaited the result of his literary labours with such
+ unbounded and feverish anxiety. By the time Ernest had finished his second
+ sheet of white foolscap&mdash;much erased and interlined with interminable
+ additions and corrections&mdash;Edie ventured for a moment briefly to
+ interrupt his creative efforts. ‘Don&rsquo;t you think you&rsquo;ve
+ written as much as makes an ordinary leader now, Ernest?&rsquo; she asked,
+ apologetically. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;re making it a good deal
+ longer than it ought to be by rights.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t know, Edie,&rsquo; Ernest answered, gazing
+ at the two laboured sheets with infinite dubitation and searching of
+ spirit. ‘I suppose one ought properly to count the words in an average
+ leader, and make it the same length as they always are in the &ldquo;Morning
+ Intelligence.&rdquo; I think they generally run to just a column.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Of course you ought, dear,&rsquo; Edie answered. &lsquo;Run out this
+ minute and buy one before you go a single line further.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked back at his two pages of foolscap somewhat ruefully. ‘That&rsquo;s
+ a dreadful bore,&rsquo; he said, with a sigh: &lsquo;it&rsquo;ll just run
+ away with the whole penny I thought I&rsquo;d managed to save in getting
+ the second quality of foolscap for fivepence. However, I suppose it can&rsquo;t
+ be helped, and after all, if the thing succeeds, one can look upon the
+ penny in the light of an investment. It&rsquo;s throwing a sprat to catch
+ a whale, as the proverb says: though I&rsquo;m afraid Herr Max would say
+ that that was a very immoral capitalist proverb. How horribly low we must
+ be sinking, Edie, when we come to use the anti-social language of those
+ dreadful capitalists!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t think capitalists deal much in proverbs, dear,&rsquo; said
+ Edie, smiling in spite of herself; &lsquo;but you needn&rsquo;t go to the
+ expense of buying a &ldquo;Morning Intelligence,&rdquo; I dare say, for
+ perhaps Mrs. Halliss may have an old one in the house; or if not, she
+ might be able to borrow one from a neighbour. She has a perfect genius for
+ borrowing, Mrs. Halliss; she borrows everything I want from somebody or
+ other. I&rsquo;ll just run down to the kitchen this minute and ask her.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few seconds Edie returned in triumph with an old soiled and torn copy
+ of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence,&rsquo; duly procured by the ingenious
+ Mrs. Halliss from the dairy opposite. It was a decidedly antiquated copy,
+ and it had only too obviously been employed by its late possessor to wrap
+ up a couple of kippered herrings; but it was still entire, so far as
+ regarded the leaders at least, and it was perfectly legible in spite of
+ its ancient and fish-like smell. To ensure accuracy, Ernest and Edie took
+ a leader apiece, and carefully counted up the number of words that went to
+ the column. They came on an average to fifteen hundred. Then Ernest
+ counted his own manuscript with equal care&mdash;no easy task when one
+ took into consideration the interlined or erased passages&mdash;and, to
+ his infinite disgust, discovered that it only extended to seven hundred
+ and fifty words. &lsquo;Why, Edie,&rsquo; he said, in a very disappointed
+ tone, &lsquo;how little it prints into! I should certainly have thought I&rsquo;d
+ written at least a whole column. And the worst of it is, I believe I&rsquo;ve
+ really said all I have to say about the subject.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What is it, Ernest dear?&rsquo; asked Edie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Italian organ-boys,&rsquo; Ernest answered. &lsquo;I saw on a placard in
+ the news shop that one of them had been taken to a hospital in a starving
+ condition.&rsquo; He hardly liked to tell even Edie that he had stood for
+ ten minutes at a tobacconist&rsquo;s window and read the case in a sheet
+ of &lsquo;Lloyd&rsquo;s News&rsquo; conspicuously hung up there for public
+ perusal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, let me hear what you have written, Ernest dear, and then see if you
+ couldn&rsquo;t expand it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest read it over most seriously and solemnly&mdash;it was only a social
+ leader, of the ordinary commonplace talky-talky sort; but to those two
+ poor young people it was a very serious and solemn matter indeed&mdash;no
+ less a matter than their own two lives and little Dot&rsquo;s into the
+ bargain. It began with the particular case of the particular organ-boy who
+ formed the peg on which the whole article was to be hung; it went on to
+ discourse on the lives and manners of organ-boys in general; it digressed
+ into the natural history of the common guinea-pig, with an excursus on the
+ scenery of the Lower Apennines; and it finished off with sundry abstract
+ observations on the musical aspect of the barrel-organ and the aesthetic
+ value of hurdygurdy performances. Edie listened to it all with deep
+ attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s very good, Ernest dear,&rsquo; she said, with wifely
+ admiration, as soon as he had finished. &lsquo;Just like a real leader
+ exactly; only, do you know, there aren&rsquo;t any anecdotes in it. I
+ think a social leader of that sort ought always to have a lot of
+ anecdotes. Couldn&rsquo;t you manage to bring in something about Fox and
+ Sheridan, or about George IV. and Beau Brummel? They always do, you know,
+ in most of the papers.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest gazed at her in silent admiration. &lsquo;How clever of you, Edie,&rsquo;
+ he said, &lsquo;to think of that! Why, of course there ought to be some
+ anecdotes. They&rsquo;re the very breath of life to this sort of
+ meaningless writing. Only, somehow, George IV. and Beau Brummel don&rsquo;t
+ seem exactly relevant to Italian organ-grinders, now do they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I thought,&rsquo; said Edie, with hardly a touch of unintentional satire,
+ ‘that the best thing about anecdotes of that kind in a newspaper was their
+ utter irrelevancy. But if Beau Brummel won&rsquo;t do, couldn&rsquo;t you
+ manage to work in Guicciardini and the galleys? That&rsquo;s strictly
+ Italian, you know, and therefore relevant; and I&rsquo;m sure the
+ newspaper leaders are extremely fond of that story about Guiccardini.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘They are,&rsquo; Ernest answered,'most undoubtedly; but perhaps for that
+ very reason readers may be beginning to get just a little tired of it by
+ this time.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t think the readers matter much,&rsquo; said Edie, with a
+ brilliant, flash of practical common-sense; &lsquo;at least, not nearly
+ half as much, Ernest, as the editor.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Quite true,&rsquo; Ernest replied, with another admiring look; &lsquo;but
+ probably the editor more or less consults the taste and feelings of the
+ readers. Well, I&rsquo;ll try to expand it a bit, and I&rsquo;ll manage to
+ drag in an anecdote or two somehow&mdash;if not Guicciardini, at least
+ something or other else Italian. You see Italy&rsquo;s a tolerably rich
+ subject, because you can do any amount about Raffael, and Michael Angelo,
+ and Leonardo, and so forth, not to mention Botticelli. The papers have
+ made a dreadful run lately on Botticelli.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Ernest sat down once more at the table by the window, and began to
+ interlard the manuscript with such allusions to Italy and the Italians as
+ could suggest themselves on the spur of the moment to his anxious
+ imagination. At the end of half an hour&mdash;about the time a practised
+ hand would have occupied in writing the whole article&mdash;he counted
+ words once more, and found there were still two hundred wanting. Two
+ hundred more words to say about Italian organ-boys! Alas for the untrained
+ human fancy! A master leader writer at the office of the &lsquo;Morning
+ Intelligence&rsquo; could have run on for ever on so fertile and
+ suggestive a theme&mdash;a theme pregnant with unlimited openings for all
+ the cheap commonplaces of abstract journalistic philanthropy; but poor
+ Ernest, a &lsquo;prentice hand at the trade, had yet to learn the fluent
+ trick of the accomplished news purveyor; he absolutely could not write
+ without thinking about it. A third time he was obliged to recommit his
+ manuscript, and a third time to count the words over. This time, oh joy,
+ the reckoning came out as close as possible to the even fifteen hundred.
+ Ernest gave a sigh of relief, and turned to read it all over again, as
+ finally enlarged and amended, to the critical ears of admiring Edie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was anecdote enough now, in all conscience, in the article; and
+ allusions enough to stock a whole week&rsquo;s numbers of the &lsquo;Morning
+ Intelligence.&rsquo; Edie listened to the whole tirade with an air of the
+ most severe and impartial criticism. When Ernest had finished, she rose up
+ and kissed him. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;ll do, Ernest,&rsquo; she
+ said confidently. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s exactly like a real leader. It&rsquo;s
+ quite beautiful&mdash;a great deal more beautiful, in fact, than anything
+ else I ever read in a newspaper: it&rsquo;s good enough to print in a
+ volume.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I hope the editor&rsquo;ll think so,&rsquo; Ernest answered, dubiously.
+ &lsquo;If not, what a lot of valuable tenpenny foolscap wasted all for
+ nothing! Now I must write it all out again clean, Edie, on fresh pieces.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Newspaper men, it must be candidly admitted, do not usually write their
+ articles twice over; indeed, to judge by the result, it may be charitably
+ believed that they do not even, as a rule, read them through when written,
+ to correct their frequent accidental slips of logic or English; but Ernest
+ wrote out his organ-boy leader in his most legible and roundest hand,
+ copperplate fashion, with as much care and precision as if it were his
+ first copy for presentation to the stern writing-master of a Draconian
+ board school. &lsquo;Editors are more likely to read your manuscript if it&rsquo;s
+ legible, I should think, Edie,&rsquo; he said, looking up at her with more
+ of hope in his face than had often been seen in it of late. &lsquo;I
+ wonder, now, whether they prefer it sent in a long envelope, folded in
+ three; or in a square envelope, folded twice over; or in a paper cover,
+ open like a pamphlet. There must be some recognised professional way of
+ doing it, and I should think one&rsquo;s more likely to get it taken if
+ one sends it in the regular professional fashion, than if one makes it
+ look too amateurish. I shall go in for the long envelope; at any rate, if
+ not journalistic, it&rsquo;s at least official.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo; is an important
+ personage in contemporary politics, and a man of more real weight in the
+ world than half-a-dozen Members of Parliament for obscure country
+ boroughs; but even that mighty man himself would probably have been a
+ little surprised as well as amused (if he could have seen it) at the way
+ in which Ernest and Edie Le Breton anxiously endeavoured to conciliate
+ beforehand his merest possible personal fads and fancies. As a matter of
+ fact, the question of the particular paper on which the article was
+ written mattered to him absolutely less than nothing, inasmuch as he never
+ looked at anything whatsoever until it had been set up in type for him to
+ pass off-hand judgment upon its faults or its merits. His time was far too
+ valuable to be lightly wasted on the task of deciphering crabbed
+ manuscript.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon, Berkeley called to see whether Ernest had followed his
+ suggestion, and was agreeably surprised to find a whole article already
+ finished. He glanced through the neatly written pages, and was still more
+ pleased to discover that Ernest, with an unsuspected outburst of
+ practicality and practicability, had really hit upon a possible subject.
+ &lsquo;This may do, Ernest,&rsquo; he said with a sigh of relief. &lsquo;I
+ dare say it will. I know Lancaster wants leader writers, and I think this
+ is quite good enough to serve his turn. I&rsquo;ve spoken to him about
+ you: come round with me now&mdash;he&rsquo;ll be at the office by four o&rsquo;clock&mdash;and
+ we&rsquo;ll see what we can do for you. It&rsquo;s absolutely useless
+ sending anything to the editor of a daily paper without an introduction.
+ You might write with the pen of the angel Gabriel, or turn out leaders
+ which were a judicious mean between Gladstone, Burke, and Herbert Spencer,
+ and it would profit you nothing, for the simple reason that he hasn&rsquo;t
+ got the time to read them. He would toss Junius and Montesquieu into the
+ waste paper basket, and accept copy on the shocking murder in the Borough
+ Road from one of his regular contributors instead. He can&rsquo;t help
+ himself: and what you must do, Ernest, is to become one of the regular
+ ring, and combine to keep Junius and Montesquieu permanently outside.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The struggle for existence gives no quarter,&rsquo; Ernest said sadly
+ with half a sigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And takes none,&rsquo; Berkeley answered quickly. &lsquo;So for your wife&rsquo;s
+ sake you must try your best to fight your way through it on your own
+ account, for yourself and your family.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The editor of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence,&rsquo; Mr. Hugh Lancaster,
+ was a short, thick-set, hard-headed sort of man, with a kindly twinkle in
+ his keen grey eyes, and a harassed smile playing continually around the
+ corners of his firm and dose mouth. He looked as though he was naturally a
+ good-humoured benevolent person, overdriven at the journalistic mill till
+ half the life was worn out of him, leaving the benevolence as a wearied
+ remnant, without energy enough to express itself in any other fashion than
+ by the perpetual harassed smile. He saw Arthur Berkeley and Ernest Le
+ Breton at once in his own sanctum, and took the manuscript from their
+ hands with a languid air of perfect resignation. &lsquo;This is the friend
+ you spoke of, is it, Berkeley?&rsquo; he said in a wearied way. &lsquo;Well,
+ well, we&rsquo;ll see what we can do for him.&rsquo; At the same time he
+ rang a tiny hand-bell. A boy, rather the worse for printer&rsquo;s ink,
+ appeared at the summons. Mr. Lancaster handed him Ernest&rsquo;s careful
+ manuscript unopened, with the laconic order, &lsquo;Press. Proof
+ immediately.&rsquo; The boy took it without a word. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m very
+ busy now,&rsquo; Mr. Lancaster went on in the same wearied dispirited
+ manner: &lsquo;come again in thirty-five minutes. Jones, show these
+ gentlemen into a room somewhere.&rsquo; And the editor fell back forthwith
+ into his easy-chair and his original attitude of listless indifference.
+ Berkeley and Ernest followed the boy into a bare back room, furnished only
+ with a deal table and two chairs, and there anxiously awaited the result
+ of the editor&rsquo;s critical examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Don&rsquo;t be afraid of Lancaster, Ernest,&rsquo; Arthur said kindly.
+ &lsquo;His manner&rsquo;s awfully cold, I know, but he means well, and I
+ really believe he&rsquo;d go out of his way, rather than not, to do a
+ kindness for anybody he thought actually in want of occupation. With most
+ men, that&rsquo;s an excellent reason for not employing you: with
+ Lancaster I do truly think it&rsquo;s a genuine recommendation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of thirty-five minutes the grimy-faced office-boy returned with
+ a friendly nod. &lsquo;Editor&rsquo;ll see you,&rsquo; he said, with the
+ Spartan brevity of the journalistic world&mdash;nobody connected with
+ newspapers ever writes or speaks a single word unnecessarily, if he isn&rsquo;t
+ going to be paid for it at so much per thousand&mdash;and Ernest followed
+ him, trembling from head to foot, into Mr. Lancaster&rsquo;s private
+ study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great editor took up the steaming hot proof that had just been brought
+ him, and glanced down it carelessly with a rapid scrutiny. Then he turned
+ to Ernest, and said in a dreamy fashion, &lsquo;This will do. We&rsquo;ll
+ print this to-morrow. You may send us a middle very occasionally. Come
+ here at four o&rsquo;clock, when a subject suggests itself to you, and
+ speak to me about it. My time&rsquo;s very fully occupied. Good morning,
+ Mr. Le Breton. Berkeley, stop a minute, I want to talk with you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was all done in a moment, and almost before Ernest knew what had
+ happened he was out in the street again, with tears filling his eyes, and
+ joy his heart, for here at last was bread, bread, bread, for Edie and the
+ baby! He ran without stopping all the way back to Holloway, rushed
+ headlong into the house and fell into Edie&rsquo;s arms, calling out
+ wildly, &lsquo;He&rsquo;s taken it! He&rsquo;s taken it!&rsquo; Edie
+ kissed him half-a-dozen times over, and answered bravely, &lsquo;I knew he
+ would, Ernest. It was such a splendid article.&rsquo; And yet thousands of
+ readers of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo; next day skimmed lightly
+ over the leader on organ-boys in their ordinary casual fashion, without
+ even thinking what hopes and fears and doubts and terrors had gone to the
+ making of that very commonplace bit of newspaper rhetoric. For if the
+ truth must be told, Edie&rsquo;s first admiring criticism was perfectly
+ correct, and Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s leader was just for all the world
+ exactly the same as anybody else&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stayed behind as requested in Mr. Lancaster&rsquo;s
+ study, and waited to hear what Mr. Lancaster had to say to him. The editor
+ looked up at him wearily from his chair, passed his bread hand slowly
+ across his bewildered forehead, and then said the one word, &lsquo;Poor?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nothing on earth to do,&rsquo; Berkeley answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He might make a journalist, perhaps,&rsquo; the editor said, sleepily.
+ ‘This social&rsquo;s up to the average. At any rate, I&rsquo;ll do my very
+ best for him. But he can&rsquo;t live upon socials. We have too many
+ social men already. What can he do? That&rsquo;s the question. It won&rsquo;t
+ do to say he can write pretty nearly as well about anything that turns up
+ as any other man in England can do. I can get a hundred young fellows in
+ the Temple to do that, any day. The real question&rsquo;s this: is there
+ anything he can write about a great deal better than all the other men in
+ all England put together?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, there is,&rsquo; Berkeley answered with commendable promptitude,
+ undismayed by Mr. Lancaster&rsquo;s excessive requirements. &lsquo;He
+ knows more about communists, socialists, and political exiles generally,
+ than anybody else in the whole of London.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good,&rsquo; the editor answered, brightening up, and speaking for a
+ moment a little less languidly. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s good. There&rsquo;s
+ this man Schurz, now, the German agitator. He&rsquo;s going to be tried
+ soon for a seditious libel it seems, and he&rsquo;ll be sent to prison,
+ naturally. Now, does your friend know anything at all of this fellow?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He knows him personally and intimately,&rsquo; Berkeley replied,
+ delighted to find that the card which had proved so bad a one at Pilbury
+ Regis was turning up trumps in the more Bohemian neighbourhood of the
+ Temple and Fleet Street. &lsquo;He can give you any information you want
+ about Schurz or any of the rest of those people. He has associated with
+ them all familiarly for the last six or seven years.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then he takes an interest in politics,&rsquo; said Mr. Lancaster, almost
+ waking up now. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s good again. It&rsquo;s so very
+ difficult to find young men nowadays, able to write, who take a genuine
+ interest in politics. They all go off after literature and science and
+ aesthetics, and other dry uninteresting subjects. Now, what does your
+ average intelligent daily paper reader care, I should like to know, about
+ literature and science and aesthetics and so forth? Well, he&rsquo;ll do,
+ I&rsquo;ve very little doubt: at any rate, I&rsquo;ll give him a trial.
+ Perhaps he might be able to undertake this Great Widgerly disenfranchising
+ case. Stop! he&rsquo;s poor, isn&rsquo;t he? I daresay he&rsquo;d just as
+ soon not wait for his money for this social. In the ordinary course, he
+ wouldn&rsquo;t get paid till the end of the quarter; but I&rsquo;ll give
+ you a cheque to take back to him now; perhaps he wants it. Poor fellow,
+ poor fellow! he really looks very delicate. Depend upon it, Berkeley, I&rsquo;ll
+ do anything on earth for him, if only he&rsquo;ll write tolerably.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re awfully good,&rsquo; Arthur said, taking the proffered
+ cheque gratefully. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sure the money will be of great use to
+ him: and it&rsquo;s very kind indeed of you to have thought of it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not at all, not at all,'the editor answered, collapsing dreamily. ‘Good
+ morning, good morning.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s lodgings in Holloway, Edie was just saying to
+ Ernest over their simple tea, &lsquo;I wonder what they&rsquo;ll give you
+ for it, Ernest.&rsquo; And Ernest had just answered, big with hope,
+ &lsquo;Well, I should think it would be quite ten shillings, but I shouldn&rsquo;t
+ be surprised, Edie, if it was as much as a pound;&rsquo; when the door
+ opened, and in walked Arthur Berkeley, with a cheque in his hand, which he
+ laid by Edie&rsquo;s teacup. Edie took it up and gave a little cry of
+ delight and astonishment. Ernest caught it from her hand in his eagerness,
+ and gazed upon it with dazed and swimming vision. Did he read the words
+ aright, and could it be really, &lsquo;Pay E. Le Breton, Esq., or order,
+ three guineas&rsquo;? Three guineas! Three guineas! Three real actual
+ positive gold and silver guineas! It was almost too much for either of
+ them to believe, and all for a single morning&rsquo;s light labour! What a
+ perfect Eldorado of wealth and happiness seemed now to be opening out
+ unexpectedly before them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much Arthur Berkeley, his own eyes glistening too with a sympathetic
+ moisture, saw and heard before he went away in a happier mood and left
+ them to their own domestic congratulations. But he did not see or know the
+ reaction that came in the dead of night, after all that day&rsquo;s
+ unwonted excitement, to poor, sickening, weary, over-burdened Ernest. Even
+ Edie never knew it all, for Ernest was careful to hide it as much as
+ possible from her knowledge. But he knew himself, though he would not even
+ light the candle to see it, that he had got those three glorious guineas&mdash;the
+ guineas they had so delighted in&mdash;with something more than a morning&rsquo;s
+ labour. He had had to pay for them, not figuratively but literally, with
+ some of his very life-blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXV. &mdash; HARD PRESSED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A week or two later, while &lsquo;The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; was still
+ running vigorously at the Ambiguities Theatre, Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s
+ second opera, &lsquo;The Duke of Bermondsey; or, the Bold Buccaneers of
+ the Isle of Dogs,&rsquo; was brought out with vast success and immense
+ exultation at the Marlborough. There is always a strong tendency to
+ criticise a little severely the second work of a successful beginner:
+ people like to assume a knowing air, and to murmur self-complacently that
+ they felt sure from the beginning he couldn&rsquo;t keep up permanently to
+ his first level. But in spite of that natural tendency of the unregenerate
+ human mind, and in spite, too, of a marked political bias on the author&rsquo;s
+ part, &lsquo;The Duke of Bermondsey&rsquo; took the town by storm almost
+ as completely as &lsquo;The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; had done before it.
+ Everybody said that though the principles of the piece were really quite
+ atrocious, when one came to think of them seriously, yet the music and the
+ dialogue were crisp and brisk enough to float any amount of social or
+ economical heresy that that clever young man, Mr. Arthur Berkeley, might
+ choose to put into one of his amusing and original operas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The social and economical heresies, of course, were partly due to Ernest
+ Le Breton&rsquo;s insidious influence. At the same time that Berkeley was
+ engaged in partially converting Ernest, Ernest was engaged in the counter
+ process of partially converting Berkeley. To say the truth, the conversion
+ was not a very difficult matter to effect; the neophyte had in him
+ implicitly already the chief saving doctrines of the socialistic faith,
+ or, if one must put it conversely, the germs of the disease were
+ constitutionally implanted in his system, and only needed a little
+ external encouragement to bring the poison out fully in the most virulent
+ form of the complaint. The great point of &lsquo;The Duke of Bermondsey&rsquo;
+ consisted in the ridiculous contrast it exhibited between the wealth,
+ dignity, and self-importance of the duke himself, and the squalid,
+ miserable, shrinking poverty of the East-end purlieus from which he drew
+ his enormous revenues. Ernest knew a little about the East-end from
+ practical experience; he had gone there often with Ronald, on his rounds
+ of mercy, and had seen with his own eyes those dens of misery which most
+ people have only heard or read about. It was Ernest who had suggested this
+ light satirical treatment of the great social problem, whose more serious
+ side he himself had learnt to look at in Max Schurz&rsquo;s revolutionary
+ salon; and it was to Ernest that Arthur Berkeley owed the first hint of
+ that famous scene where the young Countess of Coalbrookdale converses
+ familiarly on the natural beauties of healthful labour with the chorus of
+ intelligent colliery hands, in the most realistic of grimy costumes, from
+ her father&rsquo;s estates in Staffordshire. The stalls hardly knew
+ whether to laugh or frown when the intelligent colliers respectfully
+ invited the countess, in her best Ascot flounces and furbelows, to enjoy
+ the lauded delights of healthful mine labour in propriâ personâ: but they
+ quite recovered their good humour when the band of theatrical buccaneers,
+ got up by the duke in Spanish costumes, with intent to deceive his lawless
+ tenants in the East-end, came unexpectedly face to face with the genuine
+ buccaneers of the Isle of Dogs, clothed in real costermonger caps and
+ second-hand pilot-jackets of the marine-storedealers&rsquo; fashionable
+ pattern. It was all only the ridiculous incongruity of our actual society
+ represented in the very faintest shades of caricature upon the stage; but
+ it made the incongruities more incongruous still to see them crowded
+ together so closely in a single concentrated tableau. Unthinking people
+ laughed uproariously at the fun and nonsense of the piece; thinking people
+ laughed too, but not without an uncomfortable side twinge of conscientious
+ remorse at the pity of it all. Some wise heads even observed with a shrug
+ that when this sort of thing was applauded upon the stage, the fine old
+ institutions of England were getting into dangerous contact with these
+ pernicious continental socialistic theories. And no doubt those good
+ people were really wise in their generation. &lsquo;When Figaro came,&rsquo;
+ Arthur Berkeley said himself to Ernest, &lsquo;the French revolution wasn&rsquo;t
+ many paces behind on the track of the ages.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Better even than the Primate, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; said Hilda Tregellis,
+ as she met him in a London drawing-room a few days later. &lsquo;What a
+ delightful scene, that of the Countess of Coalbrookdale! You&rsquo;re
+ doing real good, I do believe, by making people think about these things
+ more seriously, you know. As poor dear Mr. Le Breton would have said, you&rsquo;ve
+ got an ethical purpose&mdash;isn&rsquo;t that the word?&mdash;underlying
+ even your comic operas. By the way, do you ever see the Le Bretons now?
+ Poor souls, I hear they&rsquo;re doing very badly. The elder brother,
+ Herbert Le Breton&mdash;horrid wretch!&mdash;he&rsquo;s here to-night;
+ going to marry that pretty Miss Faucit, they say; daughter of old Mr.
+ Faucit, the candle-maker&mdash;no, not candles, soap I think it is&mdash;but
+ it doesn&rsquo;t matter twopence nowadays, does it? Well, as I was saying,
+ you&rsquo;re doing a great deal of good with characters like this Countess
+ of Coalbrookdale. We want more mixture of classes, don&rsquo;t we? more
+ free intercourse between them; more familiarity of every sort. For my
+ part, now, I should really very much like to know more of the inner life
+ of the working classes.&rsquo; ‘If only he&rsquo;d ask me to go to lunch,&rsquo;
+ she thought, &lsquo;with his dear old father, the superannuated shoemaker!
+ so very romantic, really!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Arthur only smiled a sphinx-like smile, and answered lightly, ‘You
+ would probably object to their treatment of you as much as the countess
+ objected to the uupleasant griminess of the too-realistic coal galleries.
+ Suppose you were to fall into the hands of a logical old radical workman,
+ for example, who tore you to pieces, mentally speaking, with a shake or
+ two of his big teeth, and calmly informed you that in his opinion you were
+ nothing more than a very empty-headed, pretentious, ignorant young woman&mdash;perhaps
+ even, after the plain-spoken vocabulary of hie kind, a regular downright
+ minx and hussey?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Charming,&rsquo; Lady Hilda answered, with perfect candour; &lsquo;so
+ very different from the senseless adulation of all the Hughs, and Guys,
+ and Berties! What I do love in talking to clever men, Mr. Berkeley, is
+ their delicious frankness and transparency. If they think one a fool, they
+ tell one so plainly, or at least they let one see it without any reserve.
+ Now that, you know, is really such a very delightful trait in clever
+ people&rsquo;s characters!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t know how you can have had the opportunity of judging, Lady
+ Hilda,&rsquo; Arthur answered, looking at her handsome open face with a
+ momentary glance of passing admiration&mdash;Hilda Tregellis was improving
+ visibly as she matured&mdash;&lsquo;for no one can possibly ever have
+ thought anything of the sort with you, I&rsquo;m certain: and that I can
+ say quite candidly, without the slightest tinge of flattery or adulation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What! YOU don&rsquo;t think me a fool, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; cried Lady
+ Hilda, delighted even with that very negative bit of favourable
+ appreciation. ‘Now, that I call a real compliment, I assure you, because I
+ know you clever people pitch your standard of intelligence so very, very
+ high! You consider everybody fools, I&rsquo;m sure, except the few people
+ who are almost as clever as you yourselves are. However, to return to the
+ countess: I do think there ought to be more mixture of classes in England,
+ and somebody told me&rsquo;&mdash;this was a violent effort to be literary
+ on Hilda&rsquo;s part, by way of rising to the height of the occasion&mdash;&lsquo;somebody
+ told me that Mr. Matthew Arnold, who&rsquo;s so dreadfully satirical, and
+ cultivated, and so forth, thinks exactly the same thing, you know. Why
+ shouldn&rsquo;t the Countess of Coalbrookdale have really married the
+ foreman of the colliers? I daresay she&rsquo;d have been a great deal
+ happier with a kind-hearted sensible man like him than with that
+ lumbering, hunting, pheasant-shooting, horse-racing lout of a Lord
+ Coalbrookdale, who would go to Norway on a fishing tour without her&mdash;now
+ wouldn&rsquo;t she?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very probably,&rsquo; Berkeley answered: &lsquo;but in these matters we
+ don&rsquo;t regard happiness only,&mdash;that, you see, would be mere
+ base, vulgar, commonplace utilitarianism:&mdash;we regard much more that
+ grand impersonal overruling entity, that unseen code of social morals,
+ which we commonly call the CONVENANCES. Proper people don&rsquo;t take
+ happiness into consideration at all, comparatively: they act religiously
+ after the fashion that the CONVENANCES impose upon them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, but why, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; Lady Hilda said, vehemently, &lsquo;why
+ should the whole world always take it for granted that because a girl
+ happens to be born the daughter of people whose name&rsquo;s in the
+ peerage, she must necessarily be the slave of the proprieties, devoid of
+ all higher or better instincts? Why should they take it for granted that
+ she&rsquo;s destitute of any appreciation for any kind of greatness except
+ the kind that&rsquo;s represented by a million and a quarter in the three
+ per cents., or a great-great-grandfather who fought at the battle of
+ Naseby? Why mayn&rsquo;t she have a spark of originality? Why mayn&rsquo;t
+ she be as much attracted by literature, by science, by art, by... by... by
+ beautiful music, as, say, the daughter of a lawyer, a doctor, or, or, or a
+ country shopkeeper? What I want to know is just this, Mr. Berkeley: if
+ people don&rsquo;t believe in distinctions of birth, why on earth should
+ they suppose that Lady Mary, or Lady Betty, or Lady Winifred, must
+ necessarily be more banale and vulgar-minded, and common-place than plain
+ Miss Jones, or Miss Brown, or Miss Robinson? You admit that these other
+ girls may possibly care for higher subjects: then why on earth shouldn&rsquo;t
+ we, can you tell me?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Certainly,&rsquo; Arthur Berkeley answered, looking down into Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ beautiful eyes after a dreamy fashion, &lsquo;certainly there&rsquo;s no
+ inherent reason why one person shouldn&rsquo;t have just as high tastes by
+ nature as another. Everything depends, I suppose, upon inherited
+ qualities, variously mixed, and afterwards modified by society and
+ education.&mdash;It&rsquo;s very hot here, to-night, Lady Hilda, isn&rsquo;t
+ it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very,&rsquo; Lady Hilda echoed, taking his arm as she spoke. &lsquo;Shall
+ we go into the conservatory?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I was just going to propose it myself,&rsquo; Berkeley said, with a faint
+ tremor thrilling in his voice. She was a very beautiful woman, certainly,
+ and her unfeigned appreciation of his plays and his music was undeniably
+ very flattering to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Unless I bring him fairly to book this evening,&rsquo; Hilda thought to
+ herself as she swept with him gracefully into the conservatory, &lsquo;I
+ shall have to fall back upon the red-haired hurlyburlying Scotch
+ professor, after all&mdash;if I don&rsquo;t want to end by getting into
+ the clutches of one of those horrid Monties or Algies!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVI. &mdash; IRRECLAIMABLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The occasional social articles for the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo;
+ supplied Ernest with work enough for the time being to occupy part of his
+ leisure, and income enough to keep the ship floating somehow, if not
+ securely, at least in decent fair-weather fashion. His frequent trips with
+ Ronald into the East-end gave him something comparatively fresh to write
+ about, and though he was compelled to conceal his own sentiments upon many
+ points, in order to conform to that impersonal conscience, &lsquo;the
+ policy of the paper,&rsquo; he was still able to deal with subjects that
+ really interested him, and in which he fancied he might actually be doing
+ a little good. A few days after he had taken seriously to the new
+ occupation, good Mrs. Halliss made her appearance in the tiny sitting-room
+ one morning, and with many apologies and much humming and hawing ventured
+ to make a slight personal representation to wondering little Edie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If you please, mum,&rsquo; she said nervously, fumbling all the while
+ with the corner of the table cloth she was folding on the breakfast-table,
+ ‘if I might make so bold, mum, without offence, I should like to say as me
+ an&rsquo; John &lsquo;as been talkin&rsquo; it hover, an&rsquo; we think
+ now as your good gentleman &lsquo;as so much writin&rsquo; to do, at
+ &lsquo;is littery work, mum, as I may make bold to call it, perhaps you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t mind, so as not to disturb &lsquo;im with the blessed baby&mdash;not
+ as that dear child couldn&rsquo;t never disturb nobody, bless &lsquo;er
+ dear &lsquo;eart, the darling, not even when she&rsquo;s cryin&rsquo;, she&rsquo;s
+ that sweet and gentle,&mdash;but we thought, mum, as littery gentlemen
+ likes to &lsquo;ave the coast clear, in the manner of speakin&rsquo;, and
+ perhaps you wouldn&rsquo;t mind bein&rsquo; so good as to use the little
+ front room upstairs, mum, for a sort o&rsquo; nursery, as I may call it,
+ for the dear baby. It was our bedroom, that was, where John an&rsquo; me
+ used to sleep; but we&rsquo;ve been an&rsquo; putt our things into the
+ front hattic, mum, as is very nice and comfortable in every way, so as to
+ make room for the dear baby. An&rsquo; if you won&rsquo;t take it as a
+ liberty, mum, me an&rsquo; John &lsquo;ud be more&rsquo;n glad if you&rsquo;d
+ kindly make use of that there room for a sort of occasional nursery for
+ the dear baby.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie bit her lip hard in her momentary confusion. &lsquo;Oh, dear, Mrs.
+ Halliss,&rsquo; she said, almost crying at the kindly meant offer, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ afraid we can&rsquo;t afford to have THREE rooms all for ourselves as
+ things go at present. How much do you propose to charge us for the
+ additional nursery?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Charge you for it, mum,&rsquo; Mrs. Halliss echoed, almost indignantly;
+ ‘charge our lodgers for any little hextry accommodation like the small
+ front room upstairs, mum&mdash;now, don&rsquo;t you go and say that to
+ John, mum, I beg of you; for &lsquo;is temper&rsquo;s rather short at
+ times, mum, thro&rsquo; boin&rsquo; asmatic and the rheumatiz, though you
+ wouldn&rsquo;t think it to look at &lsquo;im, that you wouldn&rsquo;t; an&rsquo;
+ I&rsquo;m reely afraid, mum, he might get angry if anybody was to holler
+ &lsquo;im anythink for a little bit of hextry accommodation like that
+ there. Lord bless your dear &lsquo;eart, mum, don&rsquo;t you say nothink
+ more about that, I beg of you; for if John was to &lsquo;ear of it, he&rsquo;d
+ go off in a downright tearin&rsquo; tantrum at the bare notion. An&rsquo;
+ about dinner, mum, you&rsquo;ll ‘ave the cold mutton an&rsquo; potatoes,
+ and a bit of biled beetroot; and I&rsquo;ll just run round to the
+ greengrocer&rsquo;s this moment to order it for early dinner.&rsquo; And
+ before Edie had time to thank her, the good woman was out of tha room
+ again, and down in the kitchen at her daily preparations, with tears
+ trickling slowly down both her hard red cheeks in her own motherly
+ fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So from that time forth, Ernest had the small sitting-room entirely to
+ himself, whenever he was engaged in his literary labours, while Edie and
+ Dot turned the front bedroom on the first floor into a neat and commodious
+ nursery. As other work did not turn up so rapidly as might have been
+ expected, and as Ernest grew tired after a while of writing magazine
+ articles on &lsquo;The Great Social Problem,&rsquo; which were invariably
+ &lsquo;declined with thanks&rsquo; so promptly as to lead to a
+ well-founded suspicion that they had never even been opened by the editor,
+ he determined to employ his spare time in the production of an important
+ economical volume, a treatise on the ultimate ethics of a labouring
+ community, to be entitled &lsquo;The Final Rule of Social Right Living.&rsquo;
+ This valuable economical work he continued to toil at for many months in
+ the intervals of his other occupations; and when at last it was duly
+ completed, he read it over at full length to dear little Edie, who
+ considered it one of the most profoundly logical and convincing political
+ treatises ever written. The various leading firms, however, to whom it was
+ afterwards submitted with a view to publication, would appear, oddly
+ enough, to have doubted its complete suitability to the tastes and demands
+ of the reading public in the present century; for they invariably replied
+ to Ernest&rsquo;s inquiries that they would be happy to undertake its
+ production for the trilling sum of one hundred guineas, payable in
+ advance; but that they did not see their way to accepting the risk and
+ responsibility of floating so speculative a volume on their own account.
+ In the end, the unhappy manuscript, after many refusals, was converted
+ into cock-boats, hats, and paper dollies for little Dot; and its various
+ intermediate reverses need enter no further into the main thread of this
+ history. It kept Ernest busy in the spare hours of several months, and
+ prevented him from thinking too much of his own immediate prospects, in
+ his dreams for the golden future of humanity; and insomuch it did actually
+ subserve some indirectly useful function; but on the other hand it wasted
+ a considerable quantity of valuable tenpenny foolscap, and provided him
+ after all with one more severe disappointment, to put on top of all the
+ others to which he was just then being subjected. Clearly, the reading
+ public took no paying interest in political economy; or if they did, then
+ the article practically affected by the eternal laws of supply and demand
+ was at least not the one meted out to them from the enthusiastic Schurzian
+ pen of Ernest Le Breton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One afternoon, not long after Ernest and Edie had taken rooms at Mrs.
+ Halliss&rsquo;s, they were somewhat surprised at receiving the honour of a
+ casual visit from a very unexpected and unusual quarter. Ronald was with
+ them, talking earnestly over the prospects of the situation, when a knock
+ came at the door, and to their great astonishment the knock was quickly
+ followed by the entrance of Herbert. He had never been there before, and
+ Ernest felt sure he had come now for some very definite and sufficient
+ purpose. And so he had indeed: it was a strange one for him; but Herbert
+ Le Breton was actually bound upon a mission of charity. We have all of us
+ our feelings, no doubt, and Herbert Le Breton, too, in his own fashion,
+ had his. Ernest was after all a good fellow enough at bottom, and his own
+ brother: (a man can&rsquo;t for very rospectability&rsquo;s sake let his
+ own brother go utterly to the dogs if he can possibly help it); and so
+ Herbert had made up his mind, much against his natural inclination, to
+ warn Ernest of the danger he incurred in having anything more to do or say
+ with this insane, disreputable old Schurz fellow. For his own part, he
+ hated giving advice; people never took it; and that was a deadly offence
+ against his amour propre and a gross insult to his personal dignity; but
+ still, in this case, for Ernest&rsquo;s sake, he determined after an
+ inward struggle to swallow his own private scruples, and make an effort to
+ check his brother on the edge of the abyss. Not that he would come to the
+ point at once; Herbert was a careful diplomatic agent, and he didn&rsquo;t
+ spoil his hand by displaying all his cards too openly at the outset; he
+ would begin upon comparatively indifferent subjects, and lead round the
+ conversation gradually to the perils and errors of pure Schurzianism. So
+ he set out by admiring his niece&rsquo;s fat arms&mdash;a remarkable
+ stretch of kindliness on Herbert&rsquo;s part, for of course other people&rsquo;s
+ babies are well known to be really the most uninteresting objects in the
+ whole animate universe&mdash;and then he passed on by natural transitions
+ to Ernest&rsquo;s housekeeping arrangements, and to the prospects of
+ journalism as a trade, and finally to the necessity for a journalist to
+ consult the tastes of his reading public. &lsquo;And by the way, Ernest,&rsquo;
+ he said quietly at last, &lsquo;of course after this row at Pilbury, you&rsquo;ll
+ drop the acquaintance of your very problematical German socialist.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie started in surprise. &lsquo;What? Herr Schurz?&rsquo; she said
+ eagerly. ‘Dear simple, kindly old Herr Schurz! Oh no, Herbert, that I&rsquo;m
+ sure he won&rsquo;t; Ernest will never drop HIS acquaintance, whatever
+ happens.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert coughed drily. &lsquo;Then there are two of them for me to contend
+ against,&rsquo; he said to himself with an inward smile. &lsquo;I should
+ really hardly have expected that, now. One would have said a priori that
+ the sound common-sense and practical regard for the dominant feelings of
+ society, which is so justly strong in most women, would have kept HER at
+ any rate&mdash;with her own social disabilities, too&mdash;from aiding and
+ abetting her husband in such a piece of egregious folly&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ sorry to hear it, Mrs. Le Breton,&rsquo; he went on aloud,&mdash;he never
+ called her by her Christian name, and Edie was somehow rather pleased that
+ he didn&rsquo;t: &lsquo;for you know Herr Schurz is far from being a
+ desirable acquaintance. Quite apart from his own personal worth, of course&mdash;which
+ is a question that I for my part am not called upon to decide&mdash;he&rsquo;s
+ a snare and a stumbling-block in the eyes of society, and very likely
+ indeed to injure Ernest&rsquo;s future prospects, as he has certainly
+ injured his career in the past. You know he&rsquo;s going to be tried in a
+ few weeks for a seditious libel and for inciting to murder the Emperor of
+ Russia. Now, you will yourself admit, Mrs. Le Breton, that it&rsquo;s an
+ awkward thing to be mixed up with people who are tried on a criminal
+ charge for inciting to murder. Of course, we all allow that the Czar&rsquo;s
+ a very despotic and autocratic sovereign, that his existence is an
+ anomaly, and that the desire to blow him up is a very natural desire for
+ every intelligent Russian to harbour privately in the solitude of his own
+ bosom. If we were Russians ourselves, no doubt we&rsquo;d try to blow him
+ up too, if we could conveniently do so without detection. So much, every
+ rational Englishman, who isn&rsquo;t blinded by prejudice or frightened by
+ the mere sound of words, must at once frankly acknowledge. But
+ unfortunately, you see, the mass of Englishmen ARE blinded by prejudice,
+ and ARE frightened by the mere sound of words. To them, blowing up a Czar
+ is murder (though of course blowing up any number of our own black people
+ isn&rsquo;t); and inciting to blow up the Czar, or doing what seems to
+ most Englishmen equivalent to such incitement, as for example, saying in
+ print that the Czar&rsquo;s government isn&rsquo;t quite ideally perfect
+ and ought gradually and tentatively to be abolished&mdash;why, that, I
+ say, is a criminal offence, and is naturally punishable by a term of
+ imprisonment. Now, is it worth while to mix oneself up with people like
+ that, Ernest, when you can just as easily do without having anything on
+ earth to say to them?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie&rsquo;s face burnt scarlet as she listened, but Ernest only answered
+ more quietly&mdash;he never allowed anything that Herbert said to disturb
+ his equanimity&mdash;&lsquo;We don&rsquo;t think alike upon this subject,
+ you know, Herbert; and I&rsquo;m afraid the disagreement is fundamental.
+ It doesn&rsquo;t matter so much to us what the world thinks as what is
+ abstractly right; and Edie would prefer to cling to Herr Schurz, through
+ good report and evil report, rather than to be applauded by your mass of
+ Englishmen for having nothing to do with inciting to murder. We know that
+ Herr Max never did anything of the kind; that he is the gentlest and best
+ of men; and that in Russian affairs he has always been on the side of the
+ more merciful methods, as against those who would have meted out to the
+ Czar the harsher measure of pure justice.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well,&rsquo; Herbert answered bravely, with a virtuous determination not
+ to be angry at this open insult to his own opinion, but to persevere in
+ his friendly efforts for his brother&rsquo;s sake, &lsquo;we won&rsquo;t
+ take Herr Max into consideration at all, but will look merely at the
+ general question. The fact is, Ernest, you&rsquo;ve chosen the wrong side.
+ The environment is too strong for you; and if you set yourself up against
+ it, it&rsquo;ll crush you between the upper and the nether mill-stone. It
+ isn&rsquo;t your business to reform the world; it&rsquo;s your business to
+ live in it; and if you go on as you&rsquo;re doing now, it strikes me that
+ you&rsquo;ll fail at the outset in that very necessary first particular.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘If I fail,&rsquo; Ernest answered with a heavy heart, &lsquo;I can only
+ die once; and after all every man can do no more than till to the best of
+ his ability the niche in nature that he finds already cut out for him by
+ circumstances.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘My dear Ernest,&rsquo; Herbert continued quietly, twisting himself a
+ cigarette with placid deliberateness, as a preliminary to his departure;
+ &lsquo;your great mistake in life is that you WILL persist in considering
+ the universe as a cosmos. Now the fact is, it isn&rsquo;t a cosmos; it&rsquo;s
+ a chaos, and a very poor one at that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes,&rsquo; Ernest answered gravely; &lsquo;nobody recognises that
+ fact more absolutely than I do; but surely it&rsquo;s the duty of man to
+ try as far as in him lies to cosmise his own particular little corner of
+ it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘In the abstract, certainly: as a race, most distinctly so; but as
+ individuals, why, the thing&rsquo;s clearly impossible. There was one man
+ who once tried to do it, and his name was Don Quixote.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There was another, I always thought,&rsquo; Ernest replied more solemnly,
+ ‘and after his name we&rsquo;ve all been taught as children to call
+ ourselves Christians. At bottom, my ideal is only the Christian ideal.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, my dear fellow, don&rsquo;t you see that the survival of the fittest
+ must succeed in elbowing your ideal, for the present at least, out of
+ existence? Look here, Ernest, you&rsquo;re going the wrong way to work
+ altogether for your own happiness and comfort. It doesn&rsquo;t matter to
+ me, of course; you can do as you like with yourself, and I oughtn&rsquo;t
+ to interfere with you; but I do it because I&rsquo;m your brother, and
+ because I take a certain amount of interest in you accordingly. Now, I
+ quite grant with you that the world&rsquo;s in a very unjust social
+ condition at present. I&rsquo;m not a fool, and I can&rsquo;t help seeing
+ that wealth is very badly distributed, and that happiness is very
+ unequally meted. But I don&rsquo;t feel called upon to make myself the
+ martyr of the cause of readjustment for all that. If I were a working man,
+ I should take up the side that you&rsquo;re taking up now; I should have
+ everything to gain, and nothing to lose by it. But your mistake is just
+ this, that when you might identify your own interests with the side of the
+ &ldquo;haves,&rdquo; as I do, you go out of your way to identify them with
+ the side of the &ldquo;have-nots,&rdquo; out of pure idealistic Utopian
+ philanthropy. You belong by birth to the small and intrinsically weak
+ minority of persons specially gifted by nature and by fortune; and why do
+ you lay yourself out with all your might to hound on the mass of your
+ inferiors till they trample down and destroy whatever gives any special
+ importance, interest, or value to intellectual superiority, vigour of
+ character, political knowledge, or even wealth? I can understand that the
+ others should wish to do this; I can understand that they will inevitably
+ do it in the long run; but why on earth do you, of all men, want to help
+ them in pulling down a platform on which you yourself might, if you chose,
+ stand well above their heads and shoulders?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Because I feel the platform&rsquo;s an unjust one,&rsquo; Ernest
+ answered, warmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘An excellent answer for them,&rsquo; Herbert chimed in, in his coldest
+ and calmest tone, &lsquo;but a very insufficient one for you. The
+ injustice, if any, tells all in your own favour. As long as the mob doesn&rsquo;t
+ rise up and tear the platform down (as it will one day), why on earth
+ should you be more anxious about it than they are?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Because, Herbert, if there must be injustice, I would rather suffer it
+ than do it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, go your own way,&rsquo; Herbert answered, with a calm smile of
+ superior wisdom; &lsquo;go your own way and let it land you where it will.
+ For my part, I back the environment. But it&rsquo;s no business of mine; I
+ have done my best to warn you. Liberavi animam meam. You won&rsquo;t take
+ my advice, and I must leave you to your own devices.&rsquo; And with just
+ a touch of the hand to Edie, and a careless nod to his two brothers, he
+ sauntered out of the room without another word. &lsquo;As usual,&rsquo; he
+ thought to himself as he walked down the stairs, ‘I go out of my way to
+ give good advice to a fellow-creature, and I get only the black
+ ingratitude of a snubbing in return. This is really almost enough to make
+ even me turn utterly and completely selfish!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wonder, Ernest,&rsquo; said Ronald, looking up as Herbert shut the door
+ gently behind him, &lsquo;how you and I ever came to have such a brother
+ as Herbert!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I think it&rsquo;s easy enough to understand, Ronald, on plain hereditary
+ principles.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald sighed. &lsquo;I see what you mean,&rsquo; he said; &lsquo;it&rsquo;s
+ poor mother&rsquo;s strain&mdash;the Whitaker strain&mdash;coming out in
+ him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I often fancy, Ronald, I can see the same two strains in varying
+ intensity, running through all three of us alike. In Herbert the Whitaker
+ strain is uppermost, and the Le Breton comparatively in abeyance; in me,
+ they&rsquo;re both more or less blended; in you, the Le Breton strain
+ comes out almost unadulterated. Yet even Herbert has more of a Le Breton
+ in him than one might imagine, for he&rsquo;s with us intellectually; it&rsquo;s
+ the emotional side only that&rsquo;s wanting to him. Even when members of
+ a family are externally very much unlike one another in the mere surface
+ features of their characters, I believe you can generally see the family
+ likeness underlying it for all that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Only you must know how to analyse the character to see it,&rsquo; said
+ Edie. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t think it ever struck me before that there was
+ anything in common between you and Herbert, Ernest, and yet now you point
+ it out I believe there really is something after all. I&rsquo;m sorry you
+ told me, for I can&rsquo;t bear to think that you&rsquo;re like Herbert.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, no,&rsquo; Ronald put in hastily; &lsquo;it isn&rsquo;t Ernest who
+ has something in him like Herbert; it&rsquo;s Herbert who has something in
+ him like Ernest. There&rsquo;s a great deal of difference between the one
+ thing and the other. Besides, he hasn&rsquo;t got enough of it, Edie, and
+ Ernest has.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVII. &mdash; RONALD COMES OF AGE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ‘Strange,&rsquo; Ronald Le Breton thought to himself, as he walked along
+ the Embankment between Westminster and Waterloo, some weeks later&mdash;the
+ day of Herr Max&rsquo;s trial,&mdash;&lsquo;I had a sort of impulse to
+ come down here alone this afternoon: I felt as if there was an unseen Hand
+ somehow impelling me. Depend upon it, one doesn&rsquo;t have instincts of
+ that sort utterly for nothing. The Finger that guides us guides us always
+ aright for its own wise and unfathomable purposes. What a blessing and a
+ comfort it is to feel that one&rsquo;s steps are continually directed from
+ above, and that even an afternoon stroll through the great dreary town is
+ appointed to us for some fit and sufficient reason! Look at that poor girl
+ over there now, at the edge of the Embankment! I wonder what on earth she
+ can have come here for. Why...how pale and excited she looks. What&rsquo;s
+ she going so near the edge for? Gracious heavens! it can&rsquo;t
+ be...yes...it is... no, no, but still it must be...that&rsquo;s what the
+ Finger was guiding me here for this afternoon. There&rsquo;s no denying
+ it. The poor creature&rsquo;s tempted to destroy herself. My instinct
+ tells me so at once, and it never tells me wrong. Oh, Inscrutable Wisdom,
+ help me, help me: give me light to act rightly! I must go up this very
+ moment and speak to her!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl was walking moodily along the edge of the bank, and looking in a
+ dreamy fashion over the parapet into the sullen fast-flowing brown water
+ below. An eye less keen than Ronald&rsquo;s might have seen in a moment,
+ from her harassed weary face and her quick glance to right and left after
+ the disappearing policeman, that she was turning over in her own mind
+ something more desperate than any common everyday venture. Ronald stepped
+ up to her hastily, and, firm in his conviction that the Finger was guiding
+ him aright, spoke out at once with boldness on the mere strength of his
+ rapid instinctive conjecture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Stop, stop,&rsquo; he said, laying his hand gently on her shoulder:
+ &lsquo;not for a moment, I beg of you, not for a moment. Not till you&rsquo;ve
+ at least told me what is your trouble.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah turned round sharply and looked up in his face with a vague feeling
+ of indefinable wonder. &lsquo;What do you mean?&rsquo; she asked, in a
+ husky voice. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t do what? How do you know I was going to do
+ anything?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You were going to throw yourself into the river,'Ronald answered
+ confidently; &lsquo;or at least you were debating about it in your own
+ soul. I know you were, because a sure Guide tells me so.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah&rsquo;s lip curled a little at the sound of that familiar language.
+ ‘And suppose I was,&rsquo; she replied, defiantly, in her reckless
+ fashion; &lsquo;suppose I was: what&rsquo;s that to you or anybody, I
+ should like to know? Are you your brother&rsquo;s keeper, as your own
+ Bible puts it? Well, yes, then, perhaps I WAS going to drown myself: and
+ if I choose, as soon as your back&rsquo;s turned, I shall go and do it
+ still; so there; and that&rsquo;s all I have to say about it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald turned his face towards her with an expression of the intensest
+ interest, but before he could put in a single word, Selah interrupted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I know what you&rsquo;re going to say,&rsquo; she went on, looking up at
+ him rebelliously. &lsquo;I know what you&rsquo;re going to say every bit
+ as well as if you&rsquo;d said it. You&rsquo;re one of these city
+ missionary sort of people, you are; and you&rsquo;re going to tell me it&rsquo;s
+ awfully wicked of me to try and destroy myself, and ain&rsquo;t I afraid
+ of a terrible hereafter! Ugh! I hate and detest all that mummery.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald looked down upon her in return with a sort of silent wondering
+ pity. &lsquo;Awfully wicked,&rsquo; he said slowly, &lsquo;awfully wicked!
+ How meaningless! How incomprehensible! Awfully wicked to be friendless, or
+ poor, or wretched, or unhappy! Awfully wicked to be driven by despair, or
+ by heartlessness, to such a pitch of misery or frenzy that you want to
+ fling yourself wildly into the river, only to be out of it all, anywhere,
+ in a minute! Why you poor, unhappy girl, how on earth can you possibly
+ help it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something in the tone of his earnest voice that melted for a
+ moment even Selah Briggs&rsquo;s pride and vehemence. It was very
+ impertinent of him to try and interfere with her purely personal business,
+ no doubt, but he seemed to do so in a genuinely kindly rather than in a
+ fussy interfering spirit. At any rate he didn&rsquo;t begin by talking to
+ her that horrid cant about the attempt to commit suicide being so
+ extremely wicked! If he had done that, Selah would have felt it was not
+ only an unwarrantable intrusion upon her liberty of action, but a
+ grotesque insult to her natural intelligence as well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ve a right to drown myself if I choose,&rsquo; she faltered out,
+ leaning faintly as she spoke against the parapet, &lsquo;and nobody else
+ has any possible right to hinder or prevent me. If you people make laws
+ against my rights in that matter, I shall set your laws aside whenever and
+ wherever it happens to suit my personal convenience.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Exactly so,&rsquo; Ronald answered, in the same tone of gentle and
+ acquiescent persuasion. &lsquo;I quite agree with you. It&rsquo;s as clear
+ as daylight that every individual human being has a perfect right to put
+ an end to his own life whenever it becomes irksome or unpleasant to him;
+ and nobody else has any right whatever to interfere with him. The
+ prohibitions that law puts upon our freedom in that respect are only of a
+ piece with the other absurd restrictions of our existing unchristian
+ legislation&mdash;as opposed to the spirit of the Word as the old rule
+ that made us bury a suicide at four cross roads with a hideously barbarous
+ and brutal ceremonial. They&rsquo;re all mere temporary survivals from a
+ primitive paganism: the truth shall make us free. But though we mayn&rsquo;t
+ rightly interfere, we may surely inquire in a brotherly spirit of
+ interest, whether it isn&rsquo;t possible for us to make life less irksome
+ for those who, unhappily, want to get rid of it. After all, the causes of
+ our discontent are often quite removable. Tell me, at least, what yours
+ are, and let me see whether I&rsquo;m able to do anything towards removing
+ them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah hung back a little sullenly. This was a wonderful mixture of tongues
+ that the strange young man was talking in! When he spoke about the right
+ and wrong of suicide, ethically considered, it might have been Herbert
+ Walters himself who was addressing her: when he glided off sideways to the
+ truth and the Word, it might have been her Primitive Methodist friends at
+ Hastings, in full meeting assembled. And, by the way, he reminded her
+ strangely, somehow, of Herbert Walters! What manner of man could he be,
+ she wondered, and what strange sort of new Gospel was this that he was
+ preaching to her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How do I know who you are?&rsquo; she asked him, carelessly. &lsquo;How
+ do I know what you want to know my story for? Perhaps you&rsquo;re only
+ trying to get something out of me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Trust me,&rsquo; Ronald said simply. &lsquo;By faith we live, you know.
+ Only trust me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah answered nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Come over here to the bench by the garden,&rsquo; Ronald went on
+ earnestly. ‘We can talk there more at our leisure. I don&rsquo;t like to
+ see you leaning so close to the parapet. It&rsquo;s a temptation; I know
+ it&rsquo;s a temptation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah looked at him again inquiringly. She had never before met anybody so
+ curious, she fancied. &lsquo;Aren&rsquo;t you afraid of being seen sitting
+ with me like this,&rsquo; she said, &lsquo;on the Embankment benches? Some
+ of your fine friends might come by and wonder who on earth you had got
+ here with you.&rsquo; And, indeed, Selah&rsquo;s dress had grown very
+ shabby and poor-looking during a long and often fruitless search for
+ casual work or employment in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Ronald only surveyed her gently from head to foot with a quiet smile,
+ and answered softly, &lsquo;Oh, no; there&rsquo;s no reason on earth why
+ we shouldn&rsquo;t sit down and talk together; and even if there were, my
+ friends all know me far too well by this time to be surprised at anything
+ I may do, when the Hand guides me. If you will only sit down and tell me
+ your story, I should like to see whether I could possibly do anything to
+ help you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah let him lead her in his gentle half-womanly fashion to the bench,
+ and sat down beside him mechanically. Still, she made no attempt to begin
+ her pitiful story. Ronald suspected for a second some special cause for
+ her embarrassment, and ventured to suggest a possible way out of it.
+ &lsquo;Perhaps,&rsquo; he said timidly, &lsquo;you would rather speak to
+ some older and more fatherly man about it, or to some kind lady. If so, I
+ have many good friends in London who would listen to you with as much
+ interest and attention as I should.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old spirit flared up in Selah for a second, as she answered quickly,
+ &lsquo;No, no, sir, it&rsquo;s nothing of that sort. I can tell YOU as
+ well as I can tell anybody. If I&rsquo;ve been unfortunate, it&rsquo;s
+ been through no fault of my own, thank goodness, but only through the
+ hard-heartedness and unkindness of other people. I&rsquo;d rather speak to
+ you than to anyone else, because I feel somehow&mdash;why, I don&rsquo;t
+ know&mdash;as if you had something or other really good in you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I beg your pardon,&rsquo; Ronald said hastily, &lsquo;for even suggesting
+ it but you see, I often have to meet a great many people who&rsquo;ve been
+ unhappy through a great many different causes, and that leads one
+ occasionally for a time into mistaken inferences. Let me hear all your
+ history, please, and I firmly believe, through the aid that never forsakes
+ us, I shall be able to do something or other to help you in your
+ difficulties.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus adjured, Selah began and told her whole unhappy history through,
+ without pause or break, into Ronald&rsquo;s quietly sympathetic ear. She
+ told him quite frankly and fully how she had picked up the acquaintance of
+ a young Mr. Walters from Oxford at Hastings: how this Mr. Walters had led
+ her to believe he would marry her: how she had left her home hurriedly,
+ under the belief that he would be induced to keep his promise: how he had
+ thrown her over to her own devices: and how she had ever since been trying
+ to pick up a precarious livelihood for herself in stray ways as a
+ sempstress, work for which she wag naturally very ill-fitted, and for
+ which she had no introductions. She slurred over nothing on either side of
+ the story; and especially she did not forget to describe the full measure
+ of her troubles and trials from her Methodist friends at Hastings. Ronald
+ shook his head sympathetically at this stage of the story. &lsquo;Ah, I
+ know, I know,&rsquo; he muttered, half under his breath; &lsquo;nasty
+ pious people! Very well meaning, very devout, very earnest, one may be
+ sure of it&mdash;but oh! what terrible soul-killing people to live among!
+ I can understand all about it, for I&rsquo;ve met them often&mdash;Sabbath-keeping
+ folks; preaching and praying folks; worrying, bothering, fussy-religious
+ folks: formalists, Pharisees, mint-anise and-cummin Christians: awfully
+ anxious about your soul, and so forth, and doing their very best to make
+ you as miserable all the time as a slave at the torture! I don&rsquo;t
+ wonder you ran away from them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And I wasn&rsquo;t really going to drown myself, you know, when you spoke
+ to me.&rsquo; Selah said, quite apologetically. &lsquo;I was only just
+ looking over into the beautiful brown water, and thinking how delicious it
+ would be to fling oneself in there, and be carried off down to the sea,
+ and rolled about for ever into pebbles on the shingle, and there would be
+ an end of one altogether&mdash;oh, how lovely!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very natural,&rsquo; Ronald answered calmly. &lsquo;Very natural. Of
+ course it would. I&rsquo;ve often thought the same thing myself. Still,
+ one oughtn&rsquo;t, if possible, to give way to these impulses: one ought
+ to do all that&rsquo;s in one&rsquo;s power to prevent such a miserable
+ termination to one&rsquo;s divinely allotted existence. After all, it is
+ His will, you see, that we should be happy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Selah had quite finished all her story, Ronald began drawing circles
+ in the road with the end of his stick, and perpending within himself what
+ had better be done about it, now that all was told him. &lsquo;No work,&rsquo;
+ he said, half to himself; &lsquo;no money; no food. Why, why, I suppose
+ you must be hungry.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah nodded assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Will you allow me to offer you a little lunch?&rsquo; he asked,
+ hesitatingly, with something of Herbert&rsquo;s stately politeness. Even
+ in this last extremity, Ronald felt instinctively what was due to Selah
+ Briggs&rsquo;s natural sentiments of pride and delicacy. He must speak to
+ her deferentially as if she were a lady, not give her alms as if she were
+ a beggar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then for the first time that day Selah burst suddenly into tears. ‘Oh,
+ sir,&rsquo; she said, sobbing, &lsquo;you are very kind to me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald waited a moment or two till her eyes were dry, and then took her
+ across the gardens and into Gatti&rsquo;s. Any other man might have chosen
+ some other place of entertainment under the circumstances, but Ronald, in
+ his perfect simplicity of heart, looked only for the first shop where he
+ could get Selah the food she needed. He ordered something hot hastily,
+ and, when it came, though he had had his own lunch already, he played a
+ little with a knife and fork himself for show&rsquo;s sake, in order not
+ to seem as if he were merely looking on while Selah was eating. These
+ little touches of feeling were not lost upon Selah: she noticed them at
+ once, and recognised in what Ernest would have called her aboriginal
+ unregenerate vocabulary that she was dealing with a true gentleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Walters,&rsquo; Ronald said, pausing a second with a bit of chop poised
+ lightly on the end of his fork; &lsquo;let me see&mdash;Walters. I don&rsquo;t
+ know any man of that name, myself, but I&rsquo;ve had two brothers at
+ Oxford, and perhaps one of them could tell me who he is. Walters&mdash;Walters.
+ You said your own name was Miss Briggs, I think, didn&rsquo;t you? My name&rsquo;s
+ Ronald Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How curious,&rsquo; Selah said, colouring up. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sure I
+ remember Mr. Walters talking more than once to me about his brother
+ Ronald.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Indeed,&rsquo; Ronald answered, without even a passing tinge of
+ suspicion. That any man should give a false name to other people with
+ intent to deceive was a thing that would never have entered into his
+ simple head&mdash;far less that his own brother Herbert should be guilty
+ of such a piece of disgraceful meanness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I think,&rsquo; Ronald went on, as soon as Selah had finished her lunch,
+ ‘you&rsquo;d better come with me back to my mother&rsquo;s house for the
+ present. I suppose, now you&rsquo;ve talked it over a little, you won&rsquo;t
+ think of throwing yourself into the river any more for to-day. You&rsquo;ll
+ postpone your intention for the present, won&rsquo;t you? Adjourn it sine
+ die till we can see what can be done for you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah smiled faintly. Even with the slight fresh spring of hope that this
+ chance rencontre had roused anew within her, it seemed rather absurd and
+ childish of her to have meditated suicide only an hour ago. Besides, she
+ had eaten and drunk since then, and the profoundest philosophers have
+ always frankly admitted that the pessimistic side of human nature is
+ greatly mitigated after a good dinner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald called a hansom, and drove up rapidly to Epsilon Terrace. When he
+ got there, he took Selah into the little back breakfast room, regardless
+ of the proprieties, and began once more to consider the prospects of the
+ future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Is Lady Le Breton in?&rsquo; he asked the servant: and Selah noticed with
+ surprise and wonder that this strange young man&rsquo;s mother was
+ actually &lsquo;a lady of title,&rsquo; as she called it to herself in her
+ curious ordinary language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, sir,&rsquo; the girl answered; &lsquo;she have been gone out about an
+ hour.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then I must leave you here while I go out and get you lodgings for the
+ present,&rsquo; Ronald said, quietly; &lsquo;you won&rsquo;t object to my
+ doing that, of course: you can easily pay me back from your salary as soon
+ as we succeed in finding you some suitable occupation. Let me see, where
+ can I put you for the next fortnight? Naturally you wouldn&rsquo;t like to
+ live with religious people, would you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I hate them,&rsquo; Selah answered vigorously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Of course, of course,&rsquo; Ronald went on, as if to himself. &lsquo;Perfectly
+ natural. She hates them! So should I if I&rsquo;d been bothered and
+ worried out of my life by them in the way she has. I hate them myself&mdash;that
+ kind: or, rather, it&rsquo;s wrong to say that of them, poor creatures,
+ for they mean well, they really mean well at bottom, in their blundering,
+ formal, pettifogging way. They think they can take the kingdom of Heaven,
+ not by storm, but by petty compliances, like servile servants who have to
+ deal with a capricious, exacting master. Poor souls, they know no better.
+ They measure the universe by the reflection in their muddy mill-pond.
+ Nasty pious people is what I always call them; nasty pious people: little
+ narrow souls, trying hard to be Christians after their lights, and only
+ attaining, after all, to a sort of second-hand diluted Judaism, a religion
+ of cup-washing, and phylacteries, and new moons, and sabbaths, and daily
+ sacrifices. However, that&rsquo;s neither here nor there. I won&rsquo;t
+ hand you over, Miss Briggs, to any of those poor benighted people. No, nor
+ to any religious people at all. It wouldn&rsquo;t suit you: you want to be
+ well out of it. I know the very place for you. There are the Baumanns:
+ they&rsquo;d be glad to let a room: Baumann&rsquo;s a German refugee, and
+ a friend of Ernest&rsquo;s: a good man, but a secularist. THEY wouldn&rsquo;t
+ bother you with any religion: poor things, they haven&rsquo;t got any.
+ Mrs. Baumann&rsquo;s an excellent woman&mdash;educated, too; no objection
+ at all in any way to the Baumanns. They&rsquo;re people I like and respect
+ immensely&mdash;every good quality they have; and I&rsquo;m often grieved
+ to think such excellent people should be deprived of the comfort and
+ pleasure of believing. But, then, so&rsquo;s my dear brother Ernest; and
+ you know, they&rsquo;re none the worse for it, apparently, any of them:
+ indeed, I don&rsquo;t know that there&rsquo;s anybody with whom I can talk
+ more sympathetically on spiritual matters than dear Ernest. Depend upon
+ it, most of the most spiritually-minded people nowadays are outside all
+ the churches altogether.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah listened in blank amazement to this singular avowal of heterodox
+ opinion from an obviously religious person. What Ronald Le Breton could be
+ she couldn&rsquo;t imagine; and she thought with an inward smile of the
+ very different way in which her friends at Hastings would have discussed
+ the spiritual character of a wicked secularist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at that moment a latch-key turned lightly in the street door, and two
+ sets of footsteps came down the passage to Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s little
+ back breakfast-room. One set turned up the staircase, the other halted for
+ a second at the breakfast-room doorway. Then the door opened gently, and
+ Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs stood face to face again in blank
+ astonishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a moment&rsquo;s pause, as Selah rose with burning cheeks from
+ the chair where she was sitting; and neither spoke a word as they looked
+ with eyes of mutual suspicion and dislike into each other&rsquo;s faces.
+ At last Herbert Le Breton turned with some acerbity to his brother Ronald,
+ and asked in a voice of affected contempt, &lsquo;Who is this woman?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘This LADY&rsquo;S name is Miss Briggs,&rsquo; Ronald answered, pointedly,
+ but, of course, quite innocently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I needn&rsquo;t ask you who this man is,&rsquo; Selah said, with bitter
+ emphasis. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s Herbert Walters.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A horrible light burst in upon Ronald instantaneously as she uttered the
+ name; but he could not believe it; he would not believe it: it was too
+ terrible, too incredible. &lsquo;No, no,&rsquo; he said falteringly,
+ turning to Selah; &lsquo;you must be mistaken. This is not Mr. Walters.
+ This is my brother, Herbert Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah gazed into Herbert&rsquo;s slinking eyes with a concentrated
+ expression of scorn and disgust. &lsquo;Then he gave me a false name,&rsquo;
+ she said, slowly, fronting him like a tigress. &lsquo;He gave me a false
+ name, it seems, from the very beginning. All through, the false wretch,
+ all through, he actually meant to deceive me. He laid his vile scheme for
+ it beforehand. I never wish to see you again, you miserable cur, Herbert
+ Le Breton, if that&rsquo;s your real name at last. I never wish to see you
+ again: but I&rsquo;m glad I&rsquo;ve done it now by accident, if it were
+ only to inflict upon you the humiliation of knowing that I have measured
+ the utmost depth of your infamy! You mean, common, false scoundrel, I have
+ measured to the bottom the depth of your infamy!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, don&rsquo;t,&rsquo; Ronald said imploringly, laying his hand upon her
+ arm. ‘He deserves it, no doubt; but don&rsquo;t glory over his
+ humiliation.&rsquo; He had no need to ask whether she spoke the truth; his
+ brother&rsquo;s livid and scarlet face was evidence enough against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert, however, answered nothing. He merely turned angrily to Ronald.
+ &lsquo;I won&rsquo;t bandy words,&rsquo; he said constrainedly in his
+ coldest tone, &lsquo;with this infamous woman whom you have brought here
+ on purpose to insult me; but I must request you to ask her to leave the
+ house immediately. Your mother&rsquo;s home is no place to which to bring
+ people of such a character.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, the door opened again, and Lady Le Breton, attracted by the
+ sound of angry voices, entered unexpectedly. &lsquo;What does all this
+ riot mean, Herbert?&rsquo; she asked, imperiously. &lsquo;Who on earth is
+ this young woman that Ronald has brought into my own house, actually
+ without my permission?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert whispered a few words quietly into her ear, and then left the room
+ hurriedly with a stiff and formal bow to his brother Ronald. Lady Le
+ Breton turned round to the culprit severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Disgraceful, Ronald!&rsquo; she cried in her sternest and most angry
+ voice; &lsquo;perfectly disgraceful! You aid and abet this wretched
+ creature&mdash;whose object is only to extort money by false pretences out
+ of your brother Herbert&mdash;you aid and abet her in her abominable
+ stratagems, and you even venture to introduce her clandestinely into my
+ own breakfast-room. I wonder you&rsquo;re not ashamed of yourself. What on
+ earth can you mean by such extraordinary, such unChristian conduct? Go to
+ your own room this moment, sir, and ask this young woman to leave the
+ house immediately.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I shall go without being asked,&rsquo; Selah said, proudly, her big eyes
+ flashing defiance haughtily into Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s. &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ know who you all may be, or what this gentleman who brought me here may
+ have to do with you: but if you are in any way connected with that wretch
+ Herbert Le Breton, who called himself Herbert Walters for the sake of
+ deceiving me, I don&rsquo;t want to have anything further to say to any of
+ the whole pack of you. Please stand out of my way,&rsquo; she went on to
+ Ronald, &lsquo;and I shall have done with you all together this very
+ instant. I wish to God I had never seen a single one of you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, no, not just yet, please,&rsquo; Ronald put in hastily. &lsquo;You
+ mustn&rsquo;t go just yet, I implore you, I beg of you, till I have
+ explained to my mother, before you, how this all happened; and then, when
+ you go, I shall go with you. Though I have the misfortune to be the
+ brother of the man who gave you a false name in order to deceive you, I
+ trust you will still allow me to help you as far as I am able, and to take
+ you to my German friends of whom I spoke to you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ronald,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton cried, in her most commanding tone, &lsquo;you
+ must have taken leave of your senses. How dare you keep this person a
+ moment longer in my house against my wish, when even she herself is
+ anxious to quit it? Let her go at once, let her go at once, sir.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, mother,&rsquo; Ronald answered firmly. &lsquo;We are commanded in the
+ Word to obey our parents in all things, &ldquo;in the Lord.&rdquo; I think
+ you&rsquo;ve forgotten that proviso, mother, &ldquo;in the Lord.&rdquo;
+ Now, mother, I will tell you all about it.&rsquo; And then, in a rapid
+ sketch, Ronald, with his back planted solidly against the door, told his
+ mother briefly all he knew about Selah Briggs, how he had found her, how
+ he had brought her home not knowing who she was, and how she had
+ recognised Herbert as her unfaithful lover. Lady Le Breton, when she saw
+ that escape was practically impossible, flung herself back in an
+ easy-chair, where she swayed herself backward and forward gently all the
+ while, without once lifting her eyes towards Ronald, and sighed
+ impatiently from time to time audibly, as if the story merely bored her.
+ As for poor Selah, she stood upright in front of Ronald without a word,
+ looking neither to the right nor to the left, and waiting eagerly for the
+ story to be finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ronald had said his say, Lady Le Breton looked up at last and said
+ simply, with a pretended yawn, &lsquo;Now, Ronald, will you go to your own
+ room?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I will not,&rsquo; Ronald answered, in a soft whisper. &lsquo;I will go
+ with this lady to the rooms of which I have spoken to her.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton said coldly, &lsquo;you shall not return
+ here. It seems I&rsquo;m to lose all my children, one after another, by
+ their extraordinary rebelliousness!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘By your own act&mdash;yes,&rsquo; Ronald answered, very calmly. &lsquo;You
+ forgot that last Thursday was my birthday, I daresay, mother; but I didn&rsquo;t
+ forget it; it was; and I came of age then. I&rsquo;m my own master now. I&rsquo;ve
+ stopped here as long as I could, mother, because of the commandment: but I
+ can&rsquo;t stop here any longer. I shall go to Ernest&rsquo;s for
+ to-night as soon as I&rsquo;ve got rooms for this lady.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good evening,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton said, bowing frigidly, without
+ another word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good evening, mother,&rsquo; Ronald replied, in his natural voice.
+ &lsquo;Miss Briggs, will you come with me? I&rsquo;m very sorry that this
+ unhappy scene should have been inflicted upon you against my will; but I
+ hope and pray that you won&rsquo;t have lost all confidence in my wish to
+ help you, in spite of these unfortunate accidents.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah followed him blindly, in a dazzled fashion, out on to the flagstones
+ of Epsilon Terrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dear me, dear me,&rsquo; moaned Lady Le Breton, sinking back vacantly
+ once more, with an air of resignation after her efforts, into the
+ easy-chair: &lsquo;was there ever a mother so plagued and burdened with
+ unnatural and undutiful sons as I am? If it weren&rsquo;t for dear
+ Herbert, I&rsquo;m sure I don&rsquo;t know what I should ever do between
+ them. Ronald, too, who always pretended to be so very, very religious! To
+ think that he should go and uphold the word of a miserable, abandoned,
+ improper adventuress against his own brother Herbert! Atrocious, perfectly
+ atrocious! Where on earth he can have picked up such a woman I&rsquo;m
+ positively at a loss to imagine. But it&rsquo;s exactly like his poor dear
+ father: I remember once when we were stationed at Moozuffernugger, in the
+ North-West Provinces, with the 14th Bengal, poor Owen absolutely insisted
+ on taking up the case of some Eurasian woman, who pretended she&rsquo;d
+ been badly treated by young Walker of our regiment! I call it quite
+ improper&mdash;almost unseemly&mdash;to meddle in the affairs of such
+ people. I daresay Herbert has had something or other to say to this horrid
+ girl; young men will be young men, and in the army we know how to make
+ allowances for that sort of thing: but that Ronald should positively think
+ of bringing such a person into my breakfast-room is not to be heard of.
+ Ronald&rsquo;s a pure Le Breton&mdash;that&rsquo;s undeniable, thank
+ goodness; not a single one of the good Whitaker points to be found in all
+ his nature. However, poor dear Sir Owen, in spite of all his nonsense, was
+ at least an officer and a gentleman; whereas the nonsense these boys have
+ picked up at Oxford and among their German refugee people is both
+ irreligious, and, I may even say, indecent, or, to put it in the mildest
+ way, indecorous. I wish with all my heart I&rsquo;d never sent them to
+ Oxford. I&rsquo;ve always thought that if only Ernest had gone in for a
+ direct commission, he&rsquo;d soon have got all that absurd revolutionary
+ rubbish knocked out of him in a mess-room! But it&rsquo;s a great comfort
+ to me to think I have one real blessing in dear Herbert, who&rsquo;s just
+ such a son as any mother might well be thoroughly proud of in every way!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Lady Le Breton was thus communing with herself in the
+ breakfast-room, and while Herbert was trying to patch up a hollow truce
+ with his own much-bruised self-respect in his own bedroom, Ronald was
+ taking poor dazed and wearied Selah round to the refuge of the Baumanns&rsquo;
+ hospitable roof. As soon as that matter was temporarily arranged to the
+ mutual satisfaction of all the parties concerned, Ronald walked over alone
+ to Ernest&rsquo;s little lodgings at Holloway. He would sleep there that
+ night, and send round a letter to Amelia, the housemaid, in the morning,
+ asking her to pack up his things and forward them at once to Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s.
+ For himself, he did not propose, unless circumstances compelled it, again
+ to enter his mother&rsquo;s rooms, except by her own express invitation.
+ After all, he thought, even his little income, if clubbed with Edie and
+ Ernest&rsquo;s, would probably help them all to live now in tolerable
+ comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he told Edie all his story, and Edie listened to it with an approving
+ smile. &lsquo;I think, dear Ronald,&rsquo; she said, taking his hand in
+ hers, &lsquo;you did quite right&mdash;quite as Ernest himself would have
+ done under the circumstances.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Where&rsquo;s Ernest?&rsquo; asked Ronald, half smiling at that naive
+ wifely standard of right conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Gone with Mr. Berkeley to the trial,&rsquo; Edie answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The trial! What trial?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, don&rsquo;t you know? Herr Max&rsquo;s. They&rsquo;re trying him
+ to-day for littering a seditious libel and inciting to murder the chief of
+ the Third Section at St. Petersburg.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But he said nothing at all,&rsquo; Ronald cried in astonishment. &lsquo;I
+ read the article myself. He said nothing that any Englishman mightn&rsquo;t
+ have said under the same circumstances. Why, I could have written the
+ libel, as they call it, myself, even, and I&rsquo;m not much of a
+ politician either! They can&rsquo;t ever be trying him in a country like
+ England for anything so ridiculously little as that!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But they are,&rsquo; Edie answered quietly; &lsquo;and dear Ernest&rsquo;s
+ dreadfully afraid the verdict will go against him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nonsense,&rsquo; Ronald answered with natural confidence. &lsquo;No
+ English jury would ever convict a man for speaking up like that against an
+ odious and abominable tyranny.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very late in the afternoon, Ernest and Berkeley returned to the lodgings.
+ Ernest&rsquo;s face was white with excitement, and his lips were trembling
+ violently with suppressed emotion. His eyes were red and swollen. Edie
+ hardly needed to ask in a breathless whisper of Arthur Berkeley, &lsquo;What
+ verdict?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Guilty,&rsquo; Arthur Berkeley answered with a look of unfeigned horror
+ and indignation. He had learnt by this time quite to take the communistic
+ view of such questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Guilty,&rsquo; Ronald cried, jumping up from his chair in astonishment.
+ ‘Impossible! And what sentence?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Twelve months&rsquo; hard labour,&rsquo; Berkeley answered, slowly and
+ remorsefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘An atrocious sentence!&rsquo; Ronald exclaimed, turning red with
+ excitement. ‘An abominable sentence! A most malignant and vindictive
+ sentence! Who was the judge, Arthur?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Bassenthwaite,&rsquo; Berkeley replied half under his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And may the Lord have mercy upon his soul!&rsquo; said Ronald solemnly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Ernest never said a single word. He only sat down and ate his supper
+ in silence, like one stunned and dazzled. He didn&rsquo;t even notice
+ Ronald&rsquo;s coming. And Edie knew by his quick breath and his face
+ alternately flushed and pallid that there would be another crisis in his
+ gathering complaint before the next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. &mdash; TELL IT NOT IN OATH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As they sat silent in that little sitting-room after supper, a double
+ knock at the door suddenly announced the arrival of a telegram for Ernest.
+ He opened it with trembling lingers. It was from Lancaster:&mdash;&lsquo;Come
+ down to the office at once. Schurz has been sentenced to a year&rsquo;s
+ imprisonment, and we want a leader about him for to-morrow.&rsquo; The
+ telegram roused Ernest at once from his stupefied lethargy. Here was a
+ chance at last of doing something for Max Schurz and for the cause of
+ freedom! Here was a chance of waking up all England to a sense of the
+ horrible crime it had just committed through the voice of its duly
+ accredited judicial mouthpiece! The country was trembling on the brink of
+ an abyss, and he, Ernest Le Breton, might just be in time to save it. The
+ Home Secretary must be compelled by the unanimous clamour of thirty
+ millions of free working people to redress the gross injustice of the law
+ in sending Max Sohurz, the greatest, noblest, and purest-minded of
+ mankind, to a common felon&rsquo;s prison! Nothing else on earth could
+ have moved Ernest, jaded and dispirited as he was at that moment, to the
+ painful exertion of writing a newspaper leader after the day&rsquo;s
+ fatigues and excitements, except the thought that by doing so he might not
+ only blot out this national disgrace, as he considered it, but might also
+ help to release the martyr of the people&rsquo;s rights from his
+ incredible, unspeakable punishment. Flushed and feverish though he was, he
+ rose straight up from the table, handed the telegram to Edie without a
+ word, and started off alone to hail a hansom cab and drive down
+ immediately to the office. Arthur Berkeley, fearful of what might happen
+ to him in his present excited state, stole out after him quietly, and
+ followed him unperceived in another hansom at a little distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ernest got to the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo; buildings, he
+ was shown up at once into the editorial room. He expected to find Mr.
+ Lancaster at the same white heat of indignation as himself; but to his
+ immense surprise he actually found him in the usual sleepy languid
+ condition of apathetic impartiality. &lsquo;I wired for you, Le Breton,&rsquo;
+ the impassive editor said calmly, &lsquo;because I understand you know all
+ about this man Schurz, who has just got his twelve months&rsquo;
+ imprisonment this evening. I suppose, of course, you&rsquo;ve heard
+ already all about it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ve been at the trial all day,&rsquo; Ernest answered, &lsquo;and
+ myself heard the verdict and sentence.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good,&rsquo; Mr. Lancaster said, with a dreamy touch of approval in his
+ tone. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s good journalism, certainly, and very smart of
+ you. Helps you to give local colour and realistic touches to the matter.
+ But you ought to have called in here to see me immediately. We shall have
+ a regular reporter&rsquo;s report of the trial, of course; but reporters&rsquo;
+ reports are fearfully and wonderfully lifeless. If you like, besides the
+ leader, you might work up a striking headed article on the Scene in Court.
+ This is an important case, and we want something more about it than mere
+ writing, you know; a little about the man himself and his personal
+ history, which Berkeley tells me you&rsquo;re well acquainted with. He&rsquo;s
+ written something called &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate,&rdquo; or
+ whatever it is; just tell our readers all about it. As to the leader, say
+ what you like in it&mdash;of course I shall look over the proof, and tone
+ it down a bit to suit the taste of our public&mdash;we appeal mainly to
+ the mercantile middle class, I need hardly say; but you know the general
+ policy of the paper, and you can just write what you think best, subject
+ to subsequent editorial revision. Get to work at once, please, as the
+ articles are wanted immediately, and send down slips as fast as they&rsquo;re
+ written to the printers.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest could hardly contain his surprise at Mr. Lancaster&rsquo;s calmness
+ under such unheard-of circumstances, when the whole laborious fabric of
+ British liberties was tottering visibly to its base&mdash;but he wisely
+ concluded to himself that the editor had to see articles written about
+ every possible subject every evening&mdash;from a European convulsion to a
+ fire at a theatre,&mdash;and that use must have made it in him a property
+ of easiness. When a man&rsquo;s obliged to work himself up perpetually
+ into a state of artificial excitement about every railway accident,
+ explosion, shipwreck, earthquake, or volcanic eruption, in Europe, Asia,
+ Africa, America, and the islands of the Pacific Ocean, why then, Ernest
+ charitably said to himself, his sympathies must naturally end by getting a
+ trifle callous, especially when he&rsquo;s such a very apathetic person to
+ start with as this laconic editorial Lancaster. So he turned into the
+ little bare box devoted to his temporary use, and began writing with
+ perfectly unexampled and extraordinary rapidity at his leader and his
+ article about the injured and martyred apostle of the slighted communistic
+ religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only a few months since Ernest had, with vast toil and forethought,
+ spun slowly out his maiden newspaper article on the Italian organ-boy, and
+ now he found himself, to his own immense surprise, covering sheet after
+ sheet of paper in feverish haste with a long account of Max Schurz&rsquo;s
+ splendid life and labours, and with a really fervid and eloquent appeal to
+ the English people not to suffer such a man as he to go helplessly and
+ hopelessly to an English prison, at the bare bidding of a foreign despot.
+ He never stopped for one moment to take thought, or to correct what he had
+ written; in the excitement of the moment his pen travelled along over the
+ paper as if inspired, and he found the words and thoughts thronging his
+ brain almost faster than his lagging hand could suffice to give them
+ visible embodiment. As each page was thrown off hurriedly, he sent it
+ down, still pale and wet, to the printers in the office; and before two o&rsquo;clock
+ in the morning, he had full proofs of all he had written sent up to him
+ for final correction. It was a stirring and vigorous leader, he felt quite
+ certain himself as he read it over; and he thought with a swelling breast
+ that it would appear next day, with all the impersonal authority of the
+ &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo; stamped upon its face, at ten thousand
+ English breakfast tables, where it might rouse the people in their
+ millions to protest sternly before it was too late against this horrid
+ violation of our cherished and boasted national hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stopped at the office, and run in hastily
+ for five minutes&rsquo; talk with the terrible editor. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t
+ say anything to shock Le Breton, I beg of you, Lancaster,&rsquo; he said,
+ ‘about this poor man Schurz who has just been sent for a year to prison.
+ It&rsquo;s a very hard case, and I&rsquo;m awfully sorry for the man
+ myself, though that&rsquo;s neither here nor there. I can see from your
+ face that you, for your part, don&rsquo;t sympathise with him; but at any
+ rate, don&rsquo;t say anything about it to hurt Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ feelings. He&rsquo;s in a dreadfully feverish and excited condition this
+ evening; Max Schurz has always been to him almost like a father, and he
+ naturally takes his sentence very bitterly to heart. To tell you the
+ truth, I regret it a great deal myself, I know a little of Schurz, through
+ Le Breton, and I know what a well-meaning, ardent, enthusiastic person he
+ really is, and how much good actually underlies all his chaotic
+ socialistic notions. But at any rate, I do beg of you, don&rsquo;t say
+ anything to further excite and hurt poor Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Certainly not,&rsquo; the editor answered, smoothing his large hands
+ softly one over the other. &lsquo;Certainly not; though I confess, as a
+ practical man, I don&rsquo;t sympathise in the least with this
+ preposterous German refugee fellow. So far as I can learn, he&rsquo;s been
+ at the bottom of half the revolutionary and insurrectionary movements of
+ the last twenty years&mdash;a regular out-and-out professional socialistic
+ incendiary.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You wouldn&rsquo;t say so,&rsquo; Berkeley replied quietly, &lsquo;if you&rsquo;d
+ seen more of him, Lancaster.&rsquo; But being a man of the world, and
+ having come mainly on Ernest&rsquo;s account, he didn&rsquo;t care to
+ press the abstract question of Herr Max&rsquo;s political sincerity any
+ further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well,&rsquo; the editor went on, a little testily, &lsquo;be that as it
+ may, I won&rsquo;t discuss the subject with your friend Le Breton, who&rsquo;s
+ really a nice, enthusiastic young fellow, I think, as far as I&rsquo;ve
+ seen him. I&rsquo;ll simply let him write to-night whatever he pleases,
+ and make the necessary alterations in proof afterwards, without talking it
+ over with him personally at all. That&rsquo;ll avoid any needless
+ discussion and ruffling of his supersensitive communistic feelings. Poor
+ fellow, he looks very ill indeed to-night. I&rsquo;m really extremely
+ sorry for him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘When will he be finished?&rsquo; asked Arthur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘At two,&rsquo; the editor answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;ll send a cab for him,&rsquo; Arthur said; &lsquo;there&rsquo;ll
+ be none about at that hour, probably. Will you kindly tell him it&rsquo;s
+ waiting for him?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At two o&rsquo;clock or a little after, Ernest drove home with his heart
+ on fire, full of eagerness and swelling hope for to-morrow morning. He
+ found Edie waiting for him, late as it was, with a little bottle of wine&mdash;an
+ unknown luxury at Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s lodgings&mdash;and such light
+ supper as she thought he could manage to swallow in his excitement. Ernest
+ drank a glass of the wine, but left the supper untasted. Then he went to
+ bed, and tossed about uneasily till morning. He couldn&rsquo;t sleep
+ through his anxiety to see his great leader appear in all the added
+ dignity of printer&rsquo;s ink and rouse the slumbering world of England
+ up to a due sense of Max Schurz&rsquo;s wrongs and the law&rsquo;s
+ incomprehensible iniquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before seven, he rose very quietly, dressed himself without saying a word,
+ and stole out to buy an early copy of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence.&rsquo;
+ He got one at the small tobacconist&rsquo;s shop round the corner, where
+ he had taken his first hint for the Italian organ-boy leader. It was with
+ difficulty that he could contain himself till he was back in Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s
+ little front parlour; and there he tore open the paper eagerly, and turned
+ to the well-remembered words at the beginning of his desperate appealing
+ article. He could recollect the very run of every clause and word he had
+ written: &lsquo;No Englishman can read without a thrill of righteous
+ indignation,&rsquo; it began,'the sentence passed last night upon Max
+ Schurz, the author of that remarkable economical work, &ldquo;Gold and the
+ Proletariate.&rdquo; Herr Schurz is one of those numerous refugees from
+ German despotism who have taken advantage of the hospitable welcome
+ usually afforded by England to the oppressed of all creeds or nations&rsquo;&mdash;and
+ so forth, and so forth. Where was it now? Yes, that was it, in the place
+ of honour, of course&mdash;the first leader under the clock in the &lsquo;Morning
+ Intelligence.&rsquo; His eye caught at once the opening key-words, &lsquo;No
+ Englishman.&rsquo; Sinking down into the easy-chair by the flowers in the
+ window he prepared to run it through at his leisure with breathless
+ anxiety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No Englishman can read without a feeling of the highest approval the
+ sentence passed last night upon Max Schurz, the author of that misguided
+ economical work, &ldquo;Gold and the Proletariate.&rdquo; Herr Schurz is
+ one of those numerous refugees from German authority, who have taken
+ advantage of the hospitable welcome usually afforded by England to the
+ oppressed of all creeds or nations, in order to hatch plots in security
+ against the peace of sovereigns or governments with which we desire always
+ to maintain the most amicable and cordial relations.&rsquo; Ernest&rsquo;s
+ eyes seemed to fail him. The type on the paper swam wildly before his
+ bewildered vision. What on earth could this mean? It was his own leader,
+ indeed, with the very rhythm and cadence of the sentences accurately
+ preserved, but with all the adjectives and epithets so ingeniously altered
+ that it was turned into a crushing condemnation of Max Schurz, his
+ principles, his conduct, and his ethical theories. From beginning to end,
+ the article appealed to the common-sense of intelligent Englishmen to
+ admire the dignity of the law in thus vindicating itself against the
+ atrocious schemes of a dangerous and ungrateful political exile who had
+ abused the hospitality of a great free country to concoct vile plots
+ against the persons of friendly sovereigns and innocent ministers on the
+ European continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest laid down the paper dreamily, and leant back for a moment in his
+ chair, to let his brain recover a little from the reeling dizziness of
+ that crushing disappointment. Then he turned in a giddy mechanical fashion
+ to the headed article on the fourth page. There the self-same style of
+ treatment met once more his astonished gaze. All the minute facts as to
+ Max Schurz&rsquo;s history and personality were carefully preserved; the
+ description of his simple artisan life, his modest household, his Sunday
+ evening receptions, his great following of earnest and enthusiastic
+ refugees&mdash;every word of all this, which hardly anyone else could have
+ equally well supplied, was retained intact in the published copy; yet the
+ whole spirit of the thing had utterly evaporated, or rather had been
+ perverted into the exact opposite unsympathetic channel. Where Ernest had
+ written &lsquo;enthusiasm,&rsquo; Lancaster had simply altered the word to
+ ‘fanaticism;&rsquo; where Ernest had spoken of Herr Max&rsquo;s &lsquo;single-hearted
+ devotion,&rsquo; Lancaster had merely changed the phrase into &lsquo;undisguised
+ revolutionary ardour.&rsquo; The whole paper was one long sermon against
+ Max Schurz&rsquo;s Utopian schemes, imputing to him not only folly but
+ even positive criminality as well. We all know how we all in England look
+ upon the foreign political refugee&mdash;a man to be hit again with
+ impunity, because he has no friends; but to Ernest, who had lived so long
+ in his own little socialistic set, the discovery that people could openly
+ say such things against his chosen apostle at the very moment of his
+ martyrdom, was a hideous and blinding disillusionment. He put the paper
+ down upon the table once more, and buried his face helplessly between his
+ burning hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worst of it all was this: if Herr Max ever saw those articles he would
+ naturally conclude that Ernest had been guilty of the basest treachery,
+ and that too on the very day when he most needed the aid and sympathy of
+ all his followers. With a thrill of horror he thought in his own soul that
+ the great leader might suspect him for an hour of being the venal Judas of
+ the little sect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How Ernest ever got through that weary day he did not know himself;
+ nothing kept him up through it except his burning indignation against
+ Lancaster&rsquo;s abominable conduct. About eleven o&rsquo;clock, Arthur
+ Berkeley called in to see him. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;ve been a
+ little disappointed,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;about the turn Lancaster has
+ given to your two articles. He told me he meant to alter the tone so as to
+ suit the policy of the paper, and I see he&rsquo;s done so very
+ thoroughly. You can&rsquo;t look for much sympathy from commonplace, cold,
+ calculating Englishmen for enthusiastic natures like Herr Max&rsquo;s.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest turned to him in blank amazement. He had expected Berkeley to be as
+ angry as himself at Lancaster&rsquo;s shameful mutilation of his appealing
+ leader; and he found now that even Berkeley accepted it as an ordinary
+ incident in the course of journalistic business. His heart sank within him
+ as he thought how little hope there could be of Herr Max&rsquo;s
+ liberation, when even his own familiar friend Berkeley looked upon the
+ matter in such a casual careless fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I shall never write another word for the &ldquo;Morning Intelligence,&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ he cried vehemently, after a moment&rsquo;s pause. &lsquo;If we starve for
+ it, I shall never write another word in that wicked, abominable,
+ dishonourable paper. I can die easily enough, heaven knows, without a
+ murmur: but I can&rsquo;t be disloyal to dear Herr Max, and to all my
+ innate ingrained principles.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Don&rsquo;t say that, Ernest,&rsquo; Berkeley answered gently. &lsquo;Think
+ of Mrs. Le Breton and the baby. The luxury of starvation for the sake of a
+ cause is one you might venture to allow yourself if you were alone in the
+ world as I am, but not one which you ought to force unwillingly upon your
+ wife and children. You&rsquo;ve been getting a trifle more practical of
+ late under the spur of necessity; don&rsquo;t go and turn impossible again
+ at the supreme moment. Whatever happens, it&rsquo;s your plain duty to go
+ on writing for the &ldquo;Morning Intelligence.&rdquo; You say with your
+ own hand only what you think and believe yourself: the editor alone is
+ responsible for the final policy of the paper.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest only muttered slowly to himself,&mdash;&lsquo;Never, never, never!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, though the first attempt had failed, Ernest did not wholly give up
+ his hopes of doing something towards the release of Herr Max from that
+ unutterable imprisonment. He drew up a form of petition to the Home
+ Secretary, in which he pointed out the reasons for setting aside the
+ course of the law in the case of this particular political prisoner. With
+ feverish anxiety he ran about London for the next two days, trying to get
+ influential signatures to his petition, and to rouse the people in their
+ millions to demand the release of the popular martyr. Alas for the stolid
+ indifference of the British public! The people in their millions sat down
+ to eat and drink, and rose up to play, exactly as if nothing unusual in
+ any way had happened. Most of them had never heard at all of Herr Max, or
+ of &lsquo;Gold and the Proletariate,&rsquo; and those who had heard
+ understood for the most part that he was a bad lot who was imprisoned for
+ trying nefariously to blow up the Emperor of Rooshia. Crowds of people
+ nightly besieged the doors of the Ambiguities and the Marlborough, to hear
+ the fate of &lsquo;The Primate of Fiji&rsquo; and &lsquo;The Duke of
+ Bermondsey;&rsquo; but very few among the millions took the trouble to
+ sign their names to Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s despairing petition. Even the
+ advanced radicals of the market-place, the men who figured largely at
+ Trafalgar Square meetings and Agricultural Labourers&rsquo; Unions, feared
+ to damage their reputation for moderation and sobriety by getting
+ themselves mixed up with a continental agitator like this man Schurz that
+ people were talking about. The Irish members expressed a pious horror of
+ the very word dynamite: the working-man leaders hemmed and hawed, and
+ regretted their inability, in their very delicate position, to do anything
+ which might seem like countenancing Russian nihilism. In the end, Ernest
+ sent, in his petition with only half a dozen unknown signatures; and the
+ Home Secretary&rsquo;s private prompter threw it into the waste-paper
+ basket entire, without even taking the trouble to mention its existence to
+ his harassed and overburdened chief. Just a Marylebone communist refugee
+ in prison! How could a statesman with half the bores and faddists of
+ England on his troubled hands, find time to look at uninfluential
+ petitions about an insignificant worthless nobody like that?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So gentle, noble-natured, learned Herr Max went to prison and served his
+ year there uncomplainingly, like any other social malefactor; and Society
+ talked about his case with languid interest for nearly a fortnight, and
+ then straightway found a new sensation, and forgot all about him. But
+ there are three hundred and sixty-five days of twenty-four hours each in
+ every year; and for every one of those days Herr Max and Herr Max&rsquo;s
+ friends never forgot for an hour together that he was in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at the end of the week Ernest got a letter from Lancaster, enclosing a
+ cheque for eight guineas. That is a vast sum of money, eight guineas: just
+ think of all the bread, and meat, and tea, and clothing one can buy with
+ it for a small family! &lsquo;My dear Le Breton,&rsquo; the editor wrote&mdash;in
+ his own hand, too; a rare honour; for he was a kindly man, and he had
+ learned, much to his surprise, from Arthur Berkeley, that Ernest was angry
+ at his treatment of the Schurzian leader: &lsquo;My dear Le Breton, I
+ enclose cheque for eight guineas, for your two articles. I hope you didn&rsquo;t
+ mind the way I was obliged to cut them up in some unessential details, so
+ as to suit the policy of the paper. I kept whatever was really most
+ distinctive as embodying special information in them. You know we are
+ above all things strictly moderate. Please send us another social shortly.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a kind letter, undoubtedly a kind and kindly-meant letter: but
+ Ernest flung it from him as though he had been stung by a serpent or a
+ scorpion. Then he handed the cheque to Edie in solemn silence, to see what
+ she would do with it. He merely wanted to try her constancy. For himself,
+ he would have felt like a Judas indeed if he had taken and used their
+ thirty pieces of silver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked at the cheque intently and sighed a deep sigh of regret. How
+ could she do otherwise? They were so very poor, and it was such an immense
+ sum of money! Then she rose quietly without saying a word, and lighted a
+ match from the box on the mantelpiece. She held the cheque firmly between
+ her finger and thumb till it was nearly burnt, end let it drop slowly at
+ last into the empty fireplace. Ernest rose up and kissed her tenderly. The
+ leaden weight of the thirty pieces of silver was fairly off their united
+ conscience. They had made what reparation they could for the evil of that
+ unhappy, undesigned leader. After all Ernest had wasted the last remnant
+ of his energy on one eventful evening, all for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Edie sat looking wistfully at the smouldering fragments of the burnt
+ cheque, Ernest roused her again by saying quietly, &lsquo;To-day&rsquo;s
+ Saturday. Have we got anything for to-morrow&rsquo;s dinner, Edie?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nothing,&rsquo; Edie answered, simply. &lsquo;How much money have you
+ left, Ernest?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Sixpence,&rsquo; Ernest said, without needing to consult his empty purse
+ for confirmation&mdash;he had counted the pence, as they went, too
+ carefully for that already. &lsquo;Edie, I&rsquo;m afraid we must go at
+ last to the poor man&rsquo;s banker till I can get some more money.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Ernest&mdash;not&mdash;not&mdash;not the pawnbroker!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, Edie, the pawnbroker.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears came quickly into Edie&rsquo;s eyes, but she answered nothing.
+ They must have food, and there was no other way open before them. They
+ rose together and went quietly into the bedroom. There they gathered
+ together the few little trinkets and other things that might be of use to
+ them, and Ernest took down his hat from the stand to go out with them to
+ the pawnbroker&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he turned out he was met energetically on the landing by a stout
+ barricade from good Mrs. Halliss. &lsquo;No, sir, not you, sir,&rsquo; the
+ landlady said firmly, trying to take the parcel from him as he went
+ towards the door. &lsquo;I beg your pardon, sir, for &lsquo;avin&rsquo;
+ over&rsquo;eard what wasn&rsquo;t meant for me to &lsquo;ear, no doubt,
+ but I couldn&rsquo;t &lsquo;elp it, sir, and John an&rsquo; me can&rsquo;t
+ allow nothink of this sort, we can&rsquo;t. We&rsquo;re used to this sort
+ o&rsquo; things, sir, John and me is; but you and the dear lady isn&rsquo;t
+ used to &lsquo;em, sir, and didn&rsquo;t nought to be neither, and John an&rsquo;
+ me can&rsquo;t allow it, not anyhow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest turned scarlet with shame, but could say nothing. Edie only
+ whispered softly, &lsquo;Dear, dear Mrs. Halliss, we&rsquo;re so sorry,
+ but we can&rsquo;t help it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘'Elp it, ma&rsquo;am,&rsquo; said Mrs. Halliss, herself almost crying,
+ &lsquo;nor there ain&rsquo;t no reason why you should try to &lsquo;elp it
+ neither. As I says to John, &ldquo;John,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;there ain&rsquo;t
+ no &lsquo;arm in it, noways,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;but I can&rsquo;t stand
+ by,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;and see them two poor dear young creechurs,&rdquo;
+ meanin&rsquo; no offence, ma&rsquo;am, &ldquo;a-pawning of their own
+ jewelry and things to go and pay for their Sunday&rsquo;s dinner.&rdquo;
+ And John, &lsquo;e says, says &lsquo;e, &ldquo;Quite right, Martha,&rdquo;
+ says &lsquo;e; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t let &lsquo;em, my dear,&rdquo; says
+ &lsquo;e. &ldquo;The Lord has prospered us a bit in our ‘umble way,
+ Martha,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e, &ldquo;and we ain&rsquo;t got no cause to
+ want, we ain&rsquo;t; and if the dear lady and the good gentleman wouldn&rsquo;t
+ take it as a liberty,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e, &ldquo;it &lsquo;ud be better
+ they should just borrer a pound or two for a week from us,&rdquo; says
+ &lsquo;e, beggin&rsquo; your pardon, ma&rsquo;am, for &lsquo;intin&rsquo;
+ of it, &ldquo;than that there Mr. Le Breting, as ain&rsquo;t accustomed to
+ such places nohow, should go a-makin&rsquo; acquaintance, for the fust
+ time of his life, as you may say, with the inside of a pawnbroker&rsquo;s
+ shop,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e. &ldquo;John,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+ my belief the lady and gentleman &lsquo;ud be insulted,&rdquo; says I,
+ &ldquo;though they ARE the sweetest unassoomin&rsquo;est young gentlefolk
+ I ever did see,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;if we were to go as tin&rsquo; them
+ to accept the loan of money from the likes of you and me, John, as is no
+ better, by the side of them, nor old servants, in the manner o&rsquo;
+ speakin&rsquo;.&rdquo; &ldquo;Insulted,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e; &ldquo;not a
+ bit of it, they needn&rsquo;t, Martha,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e, &ldquo;for I
+ knows the ways of the aristocracy,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e, &ldquo;and I
+ knows as there&rsquo;s many a gentleman as owns &lsquo;is own &lsquo;osses
+ and ‘is own &lsquo;ounds as isn&rsquo;t afraid to borrer a pound or so
+ from &lsquo;is own coachman, or even from &lsquo;is own groom&mdash;not
+ but what to borrer from a groom is lowerin&rsquo;,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e,
+ &ldquo;in a tempory emergency. Mind you, Martha,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e,
+ &ldquo;a tempory emergency is a thing as may &lsquo;appen to landed
+ gentlefolks any day,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s like a
+ &lsquo;ole in your coat made by a tear,&rdquo; says &lsquo;e; &ldquo;a
+ haccident as may &lsquo;appen to-morrer to the Prince of Wales &lsquo;isself
+ upon the &lsquo;untin&rsquo; field,&rdquo; &lsquo;e says. &ldquo;Well,
+ then, John,&rdquo; says I, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just go an&rsquo; speak to
+ &lsquo;em about it, this very minnit,&rdquo; says I, and if I might make
+ so bold, ma&rsquo;am, without seemin&rsquo; too presumptious, I should be
+ very glad if you&rsquo;d kindly allow me, ma&rsquo;am, to lend Mr. Le
+ Breting a few suvverins till ‘e gets &lsquo;is next remittances, ma&rsquo;am.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie looked at Ernest, and Ernest looked at Edie and the landlady; and
+ then they all three burst out crying together without further apology.
+ Perhaps it was the old Adam left in Ernest a little; but though he could
+ stand kindness from Dr. Greatrex or from Mr. Lancaster stoically enough,
+ he couldn&rsquo;t watch the humble devotion of those two honest-hearted
+ simple old servants without a mingled thrill of shame and tenderness.
+ &lsquo;Mrs. Halliss,&rsquo; he said, catching up the landlady&rsquo;s hard
+ red hand gratefully in his own, &lsquo;you are too good and too kind, and
+ too considerate for us altogether. I feel we have done nothing to deserve
+ such great kindness from you. But I really don&rsquo;t think it would be
+ right of us to borrow from you when we don&rsquo;t even know how long it
+ may be before we&rsquo;re able to return your money or whether we shall
+ ever be able to return it at all. We&rsquo;re so much obliged to you, so
+ very very much obliged to you, dear Mrs. Halliss, but I think we ought as
+ a matter of duty to pawn these few little things rather than run into debt
+ which we&rsquo;ve no fair prospect at present of ever redeeming.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘HAS you please, sir,&rsquo; Mrs. Halliss said gently, wiping her eyes
+ with her snow-white apron, for she saw at once that Ernest really meant
+ what he said. &lsquo;Not that John an&rsquo; me would think of it for a
+ minnit, sir, so long as you wouldn&rsquo;t mind our takin&rsquo; the
+ liberty; but any&rsquo;ow, sir, we can&rsquo;t allow you to go out
+ yourself and go to the pawnbroker&rsquo;s. It ain&rsquo;t no fit place for
+ the likes of you, sir, a pawnbroker&rsquo;s ain&rsquo;t, in all that low
+ company; and I don&rsquo;t suppose you&rsquo;d rightly know &lsquo;ow much
+ to hask on the articles, neither. John, &lsquo;e ain&rsquo;t afeard of
+ goin&rsquo;; an&rsquo; &lsquo;e says, &lsquo;e insists upon it as ‘e&rsquo;s
+ to go, for &lsquo;e don&rsquo;t think, sir, for the honour of the &lsquo;ouse,
+ ‘e says, sir, as a lodger of ours ought to be seen a-goin&rsquo; to the
+ pawnbroker&rsquo;s. Just you give them things right over to John, sir, and
+ &lsquo;e&rsquo;ll get you a better price on &lsquo;em by a long way nor
+ they&rsquo;d ever think of giving a gentleman like you, sir.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest fought off the question in a half-hearted fashion for a little
+ while, but Mrs. Halliss insisted upon it, and after a short time Ernest
+ gave way, for to say the truth he had very vague ideas himself as to how
+ he ought to proceed in a pawnbroking expedition. Mrs. Halliss ran down the
+ kitchen stairs quickly, for fear he should change his mind as soon as her
+ back was turned, and called out gaily to her husband in the first delight
+ of her unexpected triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘John,&rsquo; she cried, &lsquo;&mdash;drat that man, where is &lsquo;e?
+ John, dear, you just putt your &lsquo;at on, and purtend to run round the
+ corner a bit to Aston&rsquo;s the pawnbroker&rsquo;s. The Lord have mercy
+ upon me for the stories I&rsquo;ve been a-tellin&rsquo; of &lsquo;em, but
+ I couldn&rsquo;t bear to see them two pore things a-pawnin&rsquo; their
+ little bits of jewelry and sich, and Mr. Le Breting, too, &lsquo;im as ain&rsquo;t
+ fit to go knockin&rsquo; together with underbred folks like pawnbrokers.
+ So I told &lsquo;im as you&rsquo;d take ‘em round and pawn &lsquo;em for
+ &lsquo;im yourself; not as I don&rsquo;t suppose you&rsquo;ve never pawned
+ nothink in your &lsquo;ole life, John, leastways not since ever you an&rsquo;
+ me kep&rsquo; company, for afore that I suppose you was purty much like
+ other young men is, John, for all you shakes your &lsquo;ead at it now so
+ innocent like. But you just run round, there&rsquo;s a dear, and make as
+ if you was goin&rsquo; to the pawnbroker&rsquo;s, and then you come
+ straight &lsquo;ome again unbeknown to &lsquo;em. I ain&rsquo;t a goin&rsquo;
+ to let them two pore dears go pawnin&rsquo; their things for a dinner
+ nohow. You take them two suvverins out of your box, John, and putt away
+ these &lsquo;ere little things for the present time till the pore souls is
+ able to pay us, and if they never don&rsquo;t, small matter neither. Now
+ you go fast, John, there&rsquo;s a dear, and come back, and mind you give
+ them two suvverins to Mr. Le Breting as natural like as ever you&rsquo;re
+ able.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Pawn &lsquo;em,&rsquo; John said in a pitying voice, &lsquo;no indeed, it
+ ain&rsquo;t come to that yet, I should &lsquo;ope, that they need go
+ a-pawnin&rsquo; their effects while we&rsquo;ve got a suvverin or two laid
+ by in our box, Martha. Not as anybody need be ashamed of pawnin&rsquo; on
+ occasions, for that matter,&mdash;I don&rsquo;t say as a reg&rsquo;lar
+ thing, but now an&rsquo; then on occasions, as you may call it; for even
+ in the best dookal families, I&rsquo;ve &lsquo;eard tell they DO sometimes
+ &lsquo;ave to pawn the dimonds, so that pawnin&rsquo; ain&rsquo;t in the
+ runnin&rsquo; noways, bless you, as respects gentility. Not as I&rsquo;d
+ like to go into a pawnshop myself, Martha, as I&rsquo;ve always been
+ brought up respectable; but when you send for Mr. Hattenborough to your
+ own ressydence and say quite commandin&rsquo; like, &ldquo;&lsquo;Er Grace
+ &lsquo;ud be obleeged if you&rsquo;d wait upon &lsquo;er in Belgrave
+ Square to hinspeck &lsquo;er dimonds as I want to raise the wind on
+ &lsquo;em,&rdquo; why, that&rsquo;s quite another matter nat&rsquo;rally.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When honest John came back in a few minutes and handed the two sovereigns
+ over to Ernest, he did it with such an unblushing face as might have won
+ him applause on any stage for its perfect naturalness. &lsquo;Lor&rsquo;
+ bless your &lsquo;eart, sir,&rsquo; he said in answer to Ernest&rsquo;s
+ shamefaced thanks, touching the place where his hat ought to be
+ mechanically, &lsquo;it ain&rsquo;t nothing, sir, that ain&rsquo;t. If it
+ weren&rsquo;t for the dookal families of England, sir, it&rsquo;s my
+ belief the pawnbrokin&rsquo; business wouldn&rsquo;t be worth mentioning
+ in the manner o&rsquo; speakin&rsquo;.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening, Ernest paced up and down the little parlour rather moodily
+ for half an hour with three words ringing perpetually in his dizzy
+ ears-the &lsquo;Never, never, never,&rsquo; he had used so short a tune
+ since about the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence.&rsquo; He must get money
+ somehow for Dot and Edie! he must get money somehow to pay good Mrs.
+ Halliss for their board and lodging! There was only one way possible.
+ Fight against it as he would, in the end he must come back to that
+ inevitable conclusion. At last he sat down with a gloomy face at the
+ centre table, and pulled out a sheet of blank foolscap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What are you going to do, Ernest?&rsquo; Edie asked him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest groaned. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m writing a social for the &ldquo;Morning
+ Intelligence,&rdquo; Edie,&rsquo; he answered bitterly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, Ernest!&rsquo; Edie said with a face of horror and surprise. &lsquo;Not
+ after the shameful way they&rsquo;ve treated poor Max Schurz!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest groaned again. &lsquo;There&rsquo;s nothing else to be done, Edie,&rsquo;
+ he said, looking up at her despondently. &lsquo;I must earn money somehow
+ to keep the house going.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the business of the truthful historian to narrate facts, not to
+ palliate or extenuate the conduct of the various actors. Whether Ernest
+ did right or wrong, at least he did it; he wrote a playful social for
+ Monday&rsquo;s &lsquo;Morning Intelligence,&rsquo; and carried it into the
+ office on Sunday afternoon himself, because there was no postal delivery
+ in the London district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, he lay awake once more for hours together, tossing and
+ turning, and reflecting bitterly on his own baseness and his final moral
+ downfall. Herbert was right, after all. The environment was beginning to
+ conquer. He could hold out no longer. Herr Max was in prison; the world
+ was profoundly indifferent; he himself had fallen away like Peter; and
+ there was nothing left for him now but to look about and find himself a
+ dishonourable grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Dot? And Edie? What was to become of them after? Ah me, for the pity
+ of it when a man cannot even crawl quietly into a corner and die in peace
+ like a dog, without being tortured by fears and terrors beforehand as to
+ what will come to those he loves far better than life when he himself is
+ quietly dead and buried out of the turmoil!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIX. &mdash; A MAN AND A MAID.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IF Ernest and Edie had permitted it, Ronald Le Breton would have gone at
+ once, after his coming of age, to club income and expenditure with his
+ brother&rsquo;s household. But, as Edie justly remarked, when he proposed
+ it, such a course would pretty nearly have amounted to clubbing HIS income
+ with THEIR expenditure; and even in their last extreme of poverty that was
+ an injustice which neither she nor her husband could possibly permit.
+ Ronald needed all his little fortune for his own simple wants, and though
+ they themselves starved, they couldn&rsquo;t bear to deprive him of the
+ small luxuries which had grown into absolute necessaries for one so feeble
+ and weak. Indeed, ill as Ernest himself now was, he had never outgrown the
+ fixed habit of regarding Ronald as the invalid of the family; and to have
+ taken anything, though in the direst straits, from him, would have seemed
+ like robbing the helpless poor of their bare necessities. So Ronald was
+ fain at last to take lodgings for himself with a neighbour of good Mrs.
+ Halliss&rsquo;s, and only to share in Ernest&rsquo;s troubles to the small
+ extent of an occasional loan, which Edie would have repaid to time if she
+ had to go without their own poor little dinner for the sake of the
+ repayment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Ronald had another interest on hand which to his enthusiastic
+ nature seemed directly imposed upon him by the finger of Providence&mdash;to
+ provide a home and occupation for poor Selah, whom Herbert had cast aside
+ as a legacy to him. As soon as he had got settled down to his own new mode
+ of life in the Holloway lodgings, he began to look about for a fit place
+ for the homeless girl&mdash;a place, he thought to himself, which must
+ combine several special advantages; plenty of work&mdash;she wanted that
+ to take her mind off brooding; good, honest, upright people; and above
+ all, no religion. Ronald recognised that last undoubted requirement as of
+ absolutely paramount importance. &lsquo;She&rsquo;ll stand any amount of
+ talk or anything else from me,&rsquo; he said to himself often, &lsquo;because
+ she knows I&rsquo;m really in earnest; but she wouldn&rsquo;t stand it for
+ a moment from those well-meaning, undiscriminating, religious busy-bodies,
+ who are so awfully anxious about other people&rsquo;s souls, though they
+ never seem for a single minute to consider in any way other people&rsquo;s
+ feelings.&rsquo; After a little careful hunting among his various
+ acquaintances, however, he found at last a place that would exactly suit
+ Selah at a stationer&rsquo;s in Netting Hill; and there he put her&mdash;with
+ full confidence that Selah would do the work entrusted to her well and
+ ably, if not from conscientiousness, at least from personal pride, &lsquo;which,
+ after all,&rsquo; Roland soliloquised dreamily, ‘is as good a substitute
+ for the genuine article as one can reasonably expect to find in poor
+ fallen human nature.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I wish, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; Selah said, quite timidly for her (maidenly
+ reserve, it must be admitted, was not one of Selah Briggs&rsquo;s strong
+ points), &lsquo;that I wasn&rsquo;t going to be quite so far from you as
+ Notting Hill. If I could see you sometimes, you know, I should feel that
+ it might keep me more straight&mdash;keep me away from the river in
+ future, I mean. I can&rsquo;t stand most people&rsquo;s preaching, but
+ somehow, your preaching seems to do me more good than harm, really, which
+ is just the exact opposite way, it seems to me, from everybody else&rsquo;s.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald smiled sedately. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m glad you want to see me
+ sometimes,&rsquo; he said, with a touch of something very like gallantry
+ in his tone that was wholly unusual with him. &lsquo;I shall walk over
+ every now and then, and look you up at your lodgings over yonder; and
+ besides, you can come on Sundays to dear Edie&rsquo;s, and I shall be able
+ to meet you there once a fortnight or thereabouts. But I&rsquo;m not going
+ to let you call me Mr. Le Breton any longer; it isn&rsquo;t friendly: and,
+ what&rsquo;s more, it isn&rsquo;t Christian. Why should there be these
+ artificial barriers between soul and soul, eh, Selah? I shall call you
+ Selah in future: it seems more genuine and heartfelt, and unencumbered
+ with needless conventions, than your misters and misses. After all, why
+ should we keep up such idle formalities between brethren and
+ fellow-workers?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah started a little&mdash;she knew better than Ronald himself did what
+ such first advances really led to. &lsquo;Oh, Mr. Le Breton,&rsquo; she
+ said quickly, &lsquo;I really can&rsquo;t call you Ronald. I can never
+ call any other man by his Christian name as long as I live, after&mdash;your
+ brother.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You mistake me, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald put in hastily, with his quaint
+ gravity. &lsquo;I mean it merely as a sign of confidence and a mark of
+ Christian friendship. Sisters call their brothers by their Christian
+ names, don&rsquo;t they? So there can be no harm in that, surely. It seems
+ to me that if you call me Mr. Le Breton, you&rsquo;re putting me on the
+ footing of a man merely; if you call me Ronald, you&rsquo;re putting me on
+ the footing of a brother, which is really a much more harmless and
+ unequivocal position for me to stand in. Do, please, Selah, call me
+ Ronald.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid I can&rsquo;t,&rsquo; Selah answered. &lsquo;I daren&rsquo;t.
+ I mustn&rsquo;t.&rsquo; But she faltered a little for a moment,
+ notwithstanding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You must, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald said, with all the force of his
+ enthusiastic nature, fixing his piercing eyes full upon her. &lsquo;You
+ must, I tell you. Call me Ronald.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very well&mdash;Ronald,&rsquo; Selah said at last, after a long pause.
+ ‘Good-bye, now. I must be going. Good-bye, and thank you. Thank you. Thank
+ you.&rsquo; There was a tear quivering even in Selah Briggs&rsquo;s eye,
+ as she held his hand lingeringly a moment in hers before releasing it. He
+ was a very good fellow, really, and he had been so very kind, too, in
+ interesting himself about her future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What a marvellous thread of sameness,&rsquo; Ronald thought to himself,
+ as he walked back rapidly to his solitary lodgings, &lsquo;runs through
+ the warp and woof of a single family, after all! What an underlying unity
+ of texture there must be throughout, in all its members, however outwardly
+ dissimilar they may seem to be from one another! One would say at first
+ sight there was very little, if anything, in common between me and
+ Herbert. And yet this girl interests me wonderfully. Of course I&rsquo;m
+ not in love with her&mdash;the notion of MY falling in love with anybody
+ is clearly too ridiculous. But I&rsquo;m attracted by her, drawn towards
+ her, fascinated as it were; I feel a sort of curious spell upon me
+ whenever I look into her deep big eyes, flashing out upon one with their
+ strange luminousness. It isn&rsquo;t merely that the Hand has thrown her
+ in my way: that counts for something, no doubt, but not for everything.
+ Besides, the Hand doesn&rsquo;t act blindly&mdash;nay, rather, acts with
+ supreme wisdom, surpassing the powers or the comprehension of man. When it
+ threw Selah Briggs in my way, depend upon it, it was because the Infinite
+ saw in me something that was specially adapted to her, and in her
+ something that was specially adapted to me. The instrument is duly shaped
+ by inscrutable Wisdom for its own proper work. Now, whatever interests ME
+ in her, must have also interested Herbert in her equally and for the same
+ reason. We&rsquo;re drawn towards her, clearly; she exercises over both of
+ us some curious electric power that she doesn&rsquo;t exercise,
+ presumably, over other people. For Herbert must have been really in love
+ with her&mdash;not that I&rsquo;m in love with her, of course; but still,
+ the phenomena are analogous, even if on a slightly different plane&mdash;Herbert
+ must have been really in love with her, I&rsquo;m sure, or such a prudent
+ man as he is would never have let himself get into what he would consider
+ such a dangerous and difficult entanglement. Yes, clearly, there&rsquo;s
+ something in Selah Briggs that seems to possess a singular polarity, as
+ Ernest would call it, for the Le Breton character and individuality!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And then, it cuts both ways, too, for Selah was once desperately in love
+ with Herbert: of that I&rsquo;m certain. She must have been, to judge from
+ the mere strength of the final revulsion. She&rsquo;s a girl of intensely
+ deep passions&mdash;I like people to have some depth to their character,
+ even if it&rsquo;s only in the way of passion&mdash;and she&rsquo;d never
+ have loved him at all without loving him fervently and almost wildly: hers
+ is a fervent, wild, indomitable nature. Yes, she was certainly in love
+ with Herbert; and now, though of course I don&rsquo;t mean to say she&rsquo;s
+ in love with me (I hope it isn&rsquo;t wrong to think in this way about an
+ unmarried girl), still I can&rsquo;t help seeing that I have a certain
+ influence over her in return&mdash;that she pays much attention to what I
+ say and think, considers me a person worth considering, which she doesn&rsquo;t
+ do, I&rsquo;m sure, with most other people. Ah, well, there&rsquo;s a vast
+ deal of truth, no doubt, in these new hereditary doctrines of Darwin&rsquo;s
+ and Galton&rsquo;s that Herbert and Ernest talk about so much; a family&rsquo;s
+ a family, that&rsquo;s certain, not a mere stray collection of casual
+ acquaintances. How the likeness runs through the very inmost structure of
+ our hearts and natures! I see in Selah very much what Herbert saw in
+ Selah: Selah sees in me very much what she saw in Herbert. Extraordinary
+ insight into human nature men like Darwin and Galton have, to be sure? And
+ David, too, what a marvellous thinker he was, really! What unfathomed
+ depths of meaning lie unexpected in that simple sentence of his, &ldquo;I
+ am fearfully and wonderfully made.&rdquo; Fearfully and wonderfully,
+ indeed, when one remembers that from one father and mother Herbert and I
+ have both been compounded, so unlike in some things that we scarcely seem
+ to be comparable with one another (look at Herbert&rsquo;s splendid
+ intellect beside mine!), so like in others that Selah Briggs&mdash;goodness
+ gracious, what am I thinking of? I was just going to say that Selah Briggs
+ falls in love first with one of us and then with the other. I do hope and
+ trust it isn&rsquo;t wrong of me to fill my poor distracted head so much
+ with these odd thoughts about that unfortunate girl, Selah!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXX. &mdash; THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY TRIUMPHS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Winter had come, and on a bitter cold winter&rsquo;s night, Ernest Le
+ Breton once more received an unexpected telegram asking him to hurry down
+ without a moment&rsquo;s delay on important business to the ‘Morning
+ Intelligence&rsquo; office. The telegram didn&rsquo;t state at all what
+ the business was; it merely said it was urgent and immediate without in
+ any way specifying its nature. Ernest sallied forth in some perturbation,
+ for his memories of the last occasion when the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo;
+ required his aid on important business were far from pleasant ones; but
+ for Edie&rsquo;s sake he felt he must go, and so he went without a murmur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Sit down, Le Breton,&rsquo; Mr. Lancaster said slowly when Ernest
+ entered. &lsquo;The matter I want to see you about&rsquo;s a very peculiar
+ one. I understand from some of my friends that you&rsquo;re a son of Sir
+ Owen Le Breton, the Indian general.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I am,&rsquo; Ernest answered, wondering within himself to what end
+ this curious preamble could possibly be leading up. If there&rsquo;s any
+ one profession, he thought, which is absolutely free from the slightest
+ genealogical interest in the persons of its professors, surely that
+ particular calling ought to be the profession of journalism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, so I hear, Le Breton. Now, I believe I&rsquo;m right in saying, am
+ I not, that it was your father who first subdued and organised a certain
+ refractory hill-tribe on the Tibetan frontier, known as the Bodahls, wasn&rsquo;t
+ it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Quite right,&rsquo; Ernest replied, with a glimmering idea slowly rising
+ in his mind as to what Mr. Lancaster was now driving at.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, that&rsquo;s good, very good indeed, certainly. Well, tell me, Le
+ Breton, do you yourself happen to know anything on earth about these
+ precious insignificant people?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I know all about them,&rsquo; Ernest answered quickly. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve
+ read all my father&rsquo;s papers and despatches, and seen his maps and
+ plans and reports in our house at home from my boyhood upward. I know as
+ much about the Bodahls, in fact, as I know about Bayswater, or Holborn, or
+ Fleet Street.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Capital, capital,&rsquo; the editor said, fondling his big hands softly;
+ ‘that&rsquo;ll exactly suit us. And could you get at these plans and
+ papers now, this very evening, just to refresh the gaps in your memory?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I could have them all down here,&rsquo; Ernest answered, &lsquo;at an
+ hour&rsquo;s notice.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good,&rsquo; the editor said again. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll send a boy for them
+ with a cab. Meanwhile, you&rsquo;d better be perpending this telegram from
+ our Simla correspondent, just received. It&rsquo;s going to be the
+ question of the moment, and we should very much like you to give us a
+ leader of a full column about the matter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest took the telegram and read it over carefully. It ran in the usual
+ very abbreviated newspaper fashion: &lsquo;Russian agents revolted Bodahls
+ Tibetan frontier. Advices Peshawur state Russian army marching on Merv.
+ Bodahls attacked Commissioner, declared independence British raj.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Will you write us a leader?&rsquo; the editor asked, simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest drew a long breath. Three guineas! Edie, Dot, an empty exchequer!
+ If he could only have five minutes to make his mind up! But he couldn&rsquo;t.
+ After all, what did it matter what he said about these poor unknown
+ Bodahls? If HE didn&rsquo;t write the leader, somebody else who knew far
+ less about the subject than he did would be sure to do it. He wasn&rsquo;t
+ responsible for that impalpable entity &lsquo;the policy of the paper.&rsquo;
+ Beside the great social power of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence,&rsquo;
+ of the united English people, what was he, Ernest Le Breton, but a
+ miserable solitary misplaced unit? One way or the other, he could do very
+ little indeed, for good or for evil. After half a minute&rsquo;s internal
+ struggle, he answered back the editor faintly, &lsquo;Yes, I will.&rsquo;
+ &lsquo;For Edie,&rsquo; he muttered half audibly to himself; &lsquo;I must
+ do it for dear Edie.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And you&rsquo;ll allow me to make whatever alterations I think necessary
+ in the article to suit the policy of the paper?&rsquo; the editor asked
+ once more, looking through him with his sleepy keen grey eyes. ‘You see,
+ Le Breton, I don&rsquo;t want to annoy you, and I know your own principles
+ are rather peculiar; but of course all we want you for is just to give us
+ the correct statement of facts about these outlandish people. All that
+ concerns our own attitude towards them as a nation falls naturally under
+ the head of editorial matter. You must see yourself that it&rsquo;s quite
+ impossible for us to let any one single contributor dictate from his own
+ standpoint the policy of the paper.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest bent his head slowly. &lsquo;You&rsquo;re very kind to argue out
+ the matter with me so, Mr. Lancaster,&rsquo; he said, trembling with
+ excitement. ‘Yes, I suppose I must bury my scruples. I&rsquo;ll write a
+ leader about these Bodahls, and let you deal with it afterwards as you
+ think proper.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They showed him into the bare little back room, and sent a boy up with a
+ hastily written note to Ronald for the maps and papers. There Ernest sat
+ for an hour or two, writing away for very life, and putting on paper
+ everything that he knew about the poor Bodahls. By two o&rsquo;clock, the
+ proofs had all come up to him, and he took his hat in a shamefaced manner
+ to sally out into the cold street, where he hoped to hide his rising
+ remorse and agony under cover of the solitary night. He knew too well what
+ &lsquo;the policy of the paper&rsquo; would be, to venture upon asking any
+ questions about it. As he left the office, a boy brought him down a sealed
+ envelope from Mr. Lancaster. With his usual kindly thoughtfulness the
+ editor had sent him at once the customary cheque for three guineas. Ernest
+ folded it up with quivering fingers, and felt the blood burn in his cheeks
+ as he put it away in his waistcoat pocket. That accursed money! For it he
+ had that night sold his dearest principles! And yet, not for it, not for
+ it, not for it&mdash;oh, no, not for it, but for Dot and Edie!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy had a duplicate proof in his other hand, and Ernest saw at once
+ that it was his own leader, as altered and corrected by Mr. Lancaster. He
+ asked the boy whether he might see it; and the boy, knowing it was Ernest&rsquo;s
+ own writing, handed it to him at once without further question. Ernest did
+ not dare to look at it then and there for fear he should break down
+ utterly before the boy; he put it for the moment into his inner pocket,
+ and buttoned his thin overcoat tightly around him. It was colder still in
+ the frosty air of early morning, and the contrast to the heated atmosphere
+ of the printing house struck him with ominous chill as he issued slowly
+ forth into the silent precincts of unpeopled Fleet Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a terrible memorable night, that awful Tuesday; the coldest night
+ known for many years in any English winter. Snow lay deep upon the ground,
+ and a few flakes were falling still from the cloudy sky, for it was in the
+ second week of January. The wind was drifting it in gusty eddies down the
+ long streets, and driving the drifts before it like whirling dust in an
+ August storm. Not a cab was to be seen anywhere, not even a stray hansom
+ crawling home from clubs or theatres; and Ernest set out with a rueful
+ countenance to walk as best he might alone through the snow all the way to
+ Holloway. It is a long and dreary trudge at any time; it seemed very long
+ and dreary indeed to Ernest Le Breton, with his delicate frame and weak
+ chest, battling against the fierce wind on a dark and snowy winter&rsquo;s
+ night, and with the fever of a great anxiety and a great remorse silently
+ torturing his distracted bosom. At each step he took through the snow, he
+ almost fancied himself a hunted Bodahl. Would British soldiers drive those
+ poor savage women and children to die so of cold and hunger on their snowy
+ hilltops? Would English fathers and mothers, at home at their ease,
+ applaud the act with careless thoughtlessness as a piece of our famous
+ spirited foreign policy? And would his own article, written with his own
+ poor thin cold fingers in that day&rsquo;s &lsquo;Morning Intelligence,&rsquo;
+ help to spur them on upon that wicked and unnecessary war? What right had
+ we to conquer the Bodahls? What right had we to hold them in subjection or
+ to punish them for revolting? And above all, what right had he, Ernest Le
+ Breton, upon whose head the hereditary guilt of the first conquest ought
+ properly to have weighed with such personal heaviness&mdash;what right had
+ he, of all men, directly or indirectly, to aid or abet the English people
+ in their immoral and inhuman resolve? Oh, God, his sin was worse than
+ theirs; for they sinned, thinking they did justly; but as for him, he
+ sinned against the light; he knew the better, and, bribed by gold, he did
+ the worse. At that moment, the little slip of printed paper in his
+ waistcoat pocket seemed to burn through all the frosts of that awful
+ evening like a chain of molten steel into his very marrow!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trudging on slowly through the white stainless snow, step by step,&mdash;snow
+ that cast a sheet of pure white even over the narrow lanes behind the
+ Farringdon Road,&mdash;cold at foot and hot at heart, he reached at last
+ the wide corner by the Angel at Islington. The lights in the windows were
+ all out long ago, of course, but the lamps outside were still flaring
+ brightly, and a solitary policeman was standing under one of them, trying
+ to warm his frozen hands by breathing rapidly on the curved and distorted
+ fingers. Ernest was very tired of his tramp by that time, and emboldened
+ by companionship he stopped awhile to rest himself in the snow and wind
+ under the opposite lamplight. Putting his back against the post, he drew
+ the altered proof of his article slowly out of his inner pocket. It had a
+ strange fascination for him, and yet he dreaded to look at it. With an
+ effort, he unfolded it in his stiff fingers, and held the paper up to the
+ light, regardless of the fact that the policeman was watching his
+ proceedings with the interest naturally due from a man of his profession
+ to a suspicious-looking character who was probably a convicted pickpocket.
+ The first sentence once more told him the worst. There was no doubt at all
+ about it. The three guineas in his pocket were the price of blood!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The insult to British prestige in the East,&rsquo; ran that terrible
+ opening paragraph, &lsquo;implied in the brief telegram which we publish
+ this morning from our own Correspondent at Simla, calls for a speedy and a
+ severe retribution. It must be washed out in blood.&rsquo; Blood, blood,
+ blood! The letters swam before his eyes. It was this, then, that he, the
+ disciple of peace-loving Max Schurz, the hater of war and conquest, the
+ foe of unjust British domination over inferior races&mdash;it was this
+ that he had helped to make plausible with his special knowledge and his
+ ready pen! Oh, heaven, what reparation could he make for this horrid crime
+ he had knowingly and wilfully committed? What could he do to avoid the
+ guilt of those poor savages&rsquo; blood upon his devoted head? In one
+ moment he thought out a hundred scenes of massacre and pillage&mdash;scenes
+ such as he knew only too well always precede and accompany the blessings
+ of British rule in distant dependencies. The temptation had been strong&mdash;the
+ money had been sorely wanted&mdash;there was very little food in the
+ house; but how could he ever have yielded to such a depth of premeditated
+ wickedness! He folded the piece of paper into his pocket once more, and
+ buried his face in his hands for a whole minute. The policeman now began
+ to suspect that he was not so much a pickpocket as an escaped lunatic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so he was, no doubt. Of course we who are practical men of the world
+ know very well that all this foolish feeling on Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ part was very womanish and weak and overwrought; that he ought to have
+ done the work that was set before him, asking no questions for conscience&rsquo;
+ sake; and that he might honestly have pocketed the three guineas, letting
+ his supposed duty to a few naked brown people somewhere up in the Indian
+ hill-country take care of itself, as all the rest of us always do. But
+ some allowance must naturally be made for his peculiar temperament and for
+ his particular state of health. Consumptive people are apt to take a
+ somewhat hectic view of life in every way; they lack the common-sense
+ ballast that makes most of us able to value the lives of a few hundred
+ poor distant savages at their proper infinitesimal figure. At any rate,
+ Ernest Le Breton, as a matter of fact, rightly or wrongly, did take this
+ curious standpoint about things in general; and did then and there turn
+ back through the deep snow, all his soul burning within him, fired with
+ dire remorse, and filled only with one idea&mdash;how to prevent this
+ wicked article to which he had contributed so many facts and opinions from
+ getting printed in to-morrow&rsquo;s paper. True, it was not he who had
+ put in the usual newspaper platitudes about the might of England, and the
+ insult to the British flag, and the immediate necessity for a stern
+ retaliation; but all that vapouring wicked talk (as he thought it) would
+ go forth to the world fortified by the value of his special facts and his
+ obviously intimate acquaintance with the whole past history of the Bodahl
+ people. So he turned back and battled once more with the wind and snow as
+ far as Fleet Street; and then he rushed excitedly into the &lsquo;Morning
+ Intelligence&rsquo; office, and asked with the wildness of despair to see
+ the editor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Lancaster had gone home an hour since, the porter said; but Mr. Wilks,
+ the sub-editor, was still there, superintending the printing of the paper,
+ and if Ernest liked, Mr. Wilks would see him immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest nodded assent at once, and was forthwith ushered up into Mr. Wilks&rsquo;s
+ private sanctum. The sub-editor was a dry, grizzly-bearded man, with a
+ prevailing wolfish greyness of demeanour about his whole person; and he
+ shook Ernest&rsquo;s proffered hand solemnly, in the dreary fashion that
+ is always begotten of the systematic transposition of night and day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘For heaven&rsquo;s sake, Mr. Wilks,&rsquo; Ernest cried imploringly,
+ &lsquo;I want to know whether you can possibly suppress or at least alter
+ my leader on the Bodahl insurrection!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wilks looked at him curiously, as one might look at a person who had
+ suddenly developed violent symptoms of dangerous insanity. ‘Suppress the
+ Bodahl leader,&rsquo; he said slowly like one dreaming. ‘Suppress the
+ Bodahl leader! Impossible! Why, it&rsquo;s the largest type heading in the
+ whole of to-day&rsquo;s paper, is this Bodahl business. &ldquo;Shocking
+ Outrage upon a British Commissioner on the Indian Frontier. Revolt of the
+ Entire Bodahl Tribe. Russian Intrigue in Central Asia. Dangerous Position
+ of the Viceroy at Simla.&rdquo; Oh, dear me, no; not to have a leader upon
+ THAT, my dear sir, would be simply suicidal!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But can&rsquo;t you cut out my part of it, at least,&rsquo; Ernest said
+ anxiously. &lsquo;Oh, Mr. Wilks, you don&rsquo;t know what I&rsquo;ve
+ suffered to-night on account of this dreadful unmerited leader. It&rsquo;s
+ wicked, it&rsquo;s unjust, it&rsquo;s abominable, and I can&rsquo;t bear
+ to think that I have had anything to do with sending it out into the world
+ to inflame the passions of unthinking people! Do please try to let my part
+ of it be left out, and only Mr. Lancaster&rsquo;s, at least, be printed.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wilks looked at him again with the intensest suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘A sub-editor,&rsquo; he answered evasively, &lsquo;has nothing at all to
+ do with the politics of a paper. The editor alone manages that department
+ on his own responsibility. But what on earth would you have me do? I can&rsquo;t
+ stop the machines for half an hour, can I, just to let you have the chance
+ of doctoring your leader? If you thought it wrong to write it, you ought
+ never to have written it; now it&rsquo;s written it must certainly stand.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest sank into a chair, and said nothing; but he turned so deadly pale
+ that Mr. Wilks was fain to have recourse to a little brown flask he kept
+ stowed away in a corner of his desk, and to administer a prompt dose of
+ brandy and water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There, there,&rsquo; he said, in the kindest manner of which he was
+ capable, &lsquo;what are you going to do now? You can&rsquo;t be going out
+ again in this state and in this weather, can you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, I am,&rsquo; Ernest answered feebly. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m going to walk
+ home at once to Holloway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘To Holloway!&rsquo; the sub-editor said in a tone of comparative horror.
+ &lsquo;Oh! no, I can&rsquo;t allow that. Wait here an hour or two till the
+ workmen&rsquo;s trains begin running. Or, stay; Lancaster left his
+ brougham here for me to-night, as I have to be off early to-morrow on
+ business; I&rsquo;ll send you home in that, and let Hawkins get me a cab
+ from the mews by order.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest made no resistance; and so the sub-editor sent him home at once in
+ Lancaster&rsquo;s brougham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he got home in the early grey of morning, he found Edie still sitting
+ up for him in her chair, and wondering what could be detaining him so long
+ at the newspaper office. He threw himself wildly at her feet, and, in such
+ broken sentences as he was able to command, he told her all the pitiful
+ story. Edie soothed him and kissed him as he went along, but never said a
+ word for good or evil till he had finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It was a terrible temptation, darling,&rsquo; she said softly: &lsquo;a
+ terrible temptation, indeed, and I don&rsquo;t wonder you gave way to it;
+ but we mustn&rsquo;t touch the three guineas. As you say rightly, it&rsquo;s
+ blood-money.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest drew the cheque slowly from his pocket, and held it hesitatingly a
+ moment in his hand. Edie looked at him curiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What are you going to do with it, darling?&rsquo; she asked in a low
+ voice, as he gazed vacantly at the last dying embers in the little
+ smouldering fireplace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nothing, Edie dearest,&rsquo; Ernest answered huskily, folding it up and
+ putting it away in the drawer by the window. They neither of them dared to
+ look the other in the face, but they had not the heart to burn it boldly.
+ It was blood-money, to be sure; but three guineas are really so very
+ useful!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four days later, little Dot was taken with a sudden illness. Ernest and
+ Edie sat watching by her little cradle throughout the night, and saw with
+ heavy hearts that she was rapidly growing feebler. Poor wee soul, they had
+ nothing to keep her for: it would be better, perhaps, if she were gone;
+ and yet, the human heart cannot be stifled by such calm deliverances of
+ practical reason; it WILL let its hot emotions overcome the cold
+ calculations of better and worse supplied it by the unbiassed intellect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All night long they sat there tearfully, fearing she would not live till
+ morning; and in the early dawn they sent round hastily for a neighbouring
+ doctor. They had no money to pay him with, to be sure; but that didn&rsquo;t
+ much matter; they could leave it over for the present, and perhaps some
+ day before long Ernest might write another social, and earn an honest
+ three guineas. Anyhow, it was a question of life and death, and they could
+ not help sending for the doctor, whatever difficulty they might afterwards
+ find in paying him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor came, and looked with the usual professional seriousness at the
+ baby patient. Did they feed her entirely on London milk? he asked
+ doubtfully. Yes, entirely. Ah! then that was the sole root of the entire
+ mischief. She was very dangerously ill, no doubt, and he didn&rsquo;t know
+ whether he could pull her through anyhow; but if anything would do it, it
+ was a change to goat&rsquo;s milk. There was a man who sold goat&rsquo;s
+ milk round the corner. He would show Ernest where to find him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest looked doubtfully at Edie, and Edie looked back again at Ernest.
+ One thought rose at once in both their minds. They had no money to pay for
+ it with, except&mdash;except that dreadful cheque. For four days it had
+ lain, burning a hole in Ernest&rsquo;s heart from its drawer by the
+ window, and he had not dared to change it. Now he rose without saying a
+ word, and opened the drawer in a solemn, hesitating fashion. He looked
+ once more at Edie inquiringly; Edie nodded a faint approval. Ernest, pale
+ as death, put on his hat, and went out totteringly with the doctor. He
+ stopped on the way to change the cheque at the baker&rsquo;s where they
+ usually dealt, and then went on to the goat&rsquo;s milk shop. How that
+ sovereign he flung upon the counter seemed to ring the knell of his
+ seif-respect! The man who changed it noticed the strangeness of Ernest&rsquo;s
+ look, and knew at once he had not come by the money honestly. He rang it
+ twice to make sure it was good, and then gave the change to Ernest. But
+ Dot, at least, was saved; that was a great thing. The milk arrived duly
+ every morning for some weeks, and, after a severe struggle, Dot grew
+ gradually better. While the danger lasted, neither of them dared think
+ much of the cheque; but when Dot had got quite well again, Ernest was
+ conscious of a certain unwonted awkwardness of manner in talking to Edie.
+ He knew perfectly well what it meant; they were both accomplices in crime
+ together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ernest wrote his &lsquo;social&rsquo; after Max Schurz&rsquo;s
+ affair, he felt he had already touched the lowest depths of degradation.
+ He knew now that he had touched a still lower one. Oh! horrible abyss of
+ self-abasement!&mdash;he had taken the blood-money. And yet, it was to
+ save Dot&rsquo;s life! Herbert was right, after all: quite right. Yes,
+ yes, all hope was gone: the environment had finally triumphed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the awful self-reproach of that deadly remorse for the acceptance of
+ the blood-money, Ernest Le Breton felt at last in his heart that surely
+ the bitterness of death was past. It would be better for them all to die
+ together than to live on through such a life of shame and misery. Ah,
+ Peter, Peter, you are not the only one that has denied his Lord and
+ Master!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, Ernest Le Breton had only written part of a newspaper leader
+ about a small revolt of the Bodahls. And he suffered more agony for it
+ than many a sensitive man, even, has suffered for the commission of some
+ obvious crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I say, Berkeley,&rsquo; Lancaster droned out in the lobby of their club
+ one afternoon shortly afterwards, &lsquo;what on earth am I ever to do
+ about that socialistic friend of yours, Le Breton? I can&rsquo;t ever give
+ him any political work again, you know. Just fancy! first, you remember, I
+ set him upon the Schurz imprisonment business, and he nearly went mad then
+ because I didn&rsquo;t back up Schurz for wanting to murder the Emperor of
+ Russia. After that, just now the other day, I tried him on the Bodahl
+ business, and hang me if he didn&rsquo;t have qualms of conscience about
+ it afterwards, and trudge back through all the snow that awful Tuesday, to
+ see if he couldn&rsquo;t induce Wilks to stop the press, and let him cut
+ it all out at the last moment! He&rsquo;s as mad as a March hare, you
+ know, and if it weren&rsquo;t that I&rsquo;m really sorry for him I wouldn&rsquo;t
+ go on taking socials from him any longer. But I will; I&rsquo;ll give him
+ work as long as he&rsquo;ll do it for me on any terms; though, of course,
+ it&rsquo;s obviously impossible under the circumstances to let him have
+ another go at politics, isn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You&rsquo;re really awfully kind, Lancaster,&rsquo; Berkeley answered
+ warmly. ‘No other fellow would do as much for Le Breton as you do. I admit
+ he&rsquo;s absolutely impracticable, but I would give more than I can tell
+ you if only I thought he could be made to pull through somehow.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Impracticable!&rsquo; the editor said shortly, &lsquo;I believe you,
+ indeed. Why, do you remember that ridiculous Schurz business? Well, I sent
+ Le Breton a cheque for eight guineas for that lot, and can you credit it,
+ it&rsquo;s remained uncashed from that day to this. I really think he must
+ have destroyed it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No doubt,&rsquo; Arthur answered, with a smile. &lsquo;And the Bodahls?
+ What about them?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh! he kept that cheque for a few days uncashed&mdash;though I&rsquo;m
+ sure he wanted money at the time; but in the end, I&rsquo;m happy to say,
+ he cashed it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur&rsquo;s countenance fell ominously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He did!&rsquo; he said gloomily. &lsquo;He cashed it! That&rsquo;s bad
+ news indeed, then. I must go and see them to-morrow morning early. I&rsquo;m
+ afraid they must be at the last pitch of poverty before they&rsquo;d
+ consent to do that. And yet, Solomon says, men do not despise a thief if
+ he steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry. And Le Breton, after all,
+ has a wife and child to think of.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lancaster stared at him blankly, and turned aside to glance at the
+ telegrams, saying to himself meanwhile, that all these young fellows of
+ the new school alike were really quite too incomprehensible for a
+ sensible, practical man like himself to deal with comfortably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXI. &mdash; DE PROFUNDIS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After all Ernest didn&rsquo;t get many more socials to write for the
+ ‘Morning Intelligence,&rsquo; as it happened; for the war that came on
+ shortly after crowded such trifles as socials fairly out of all the
+ papers, and he had harder work than ever to pick up a precarious living
+ somehow by the most casual possible contributions. Of course he tried many
+ other channels; but he had few introductions, and then his views were
+ really so absurdly ultra that no reasonable editor could ever be expected
+ to put up with them. He got tired at last of seeing his well-meant papers
+ return to him, morning after morning, with the unvarying legend, &lsquo;Declined
+ with thanks;&rsquo; and he might have gone to the wall utterly but for the
+ kindly interest which Arthur Berkeley still took in his and Edie&rsquo;s
+ future. On the very day after his conversation with Lancaster at the club
+ Arthur dropped round casually at Holloway, and brought with him a proposal
+ which he said had just been made him by a colonial newsagent. It was a
+ transparent little ruse enough; but Ernest and Edie were not learned in
+ the ways of the world and did not suspect it so readily as older and wiser
+ heads might probably have done. Would Ernest supply a fortnightly letter,
+ to go by the Australian mail, to the Paramatta ‘Chronicle and News,&rsquo;
+ containing London political and social gossip of a commonplace kind&mdash;just
+ the petty chit-chat he could pick up easily out of &lsquo;Truth&rsquo; and
+ the &lsquo;World&rsquo;&mdash;for the small sum of thirty shillings a
+ letter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, Ernest thought he could manage that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very well, then. The letter must be sent on alternate Wednesdays to the
+ colonial newsagent&rsquo;s address, and it would be duly forwarded by mail
+ to the office of the Paramatta &lsquo;Chronicle.&rsquo; A little
+ suspicious, that item, Berkeley thought, but Ernest swallowed it like a
+ child and made no comment. It must be addressed to &lsquo;Paramatta, care
+ of Lane &amp; Co.,&rsquo; and the payments would be made fortnightly
+ through the same agency. Arthur watched his friend&rsquo;s face narrowly
+ at this point again; but Ernest in his simple-minded, unsuspecting way,
+ never noticed the obvious meaning of this little deception. He thanked
+ Arthur over and over again for his kindness, but he never guessed how far
+ it extended. The letters kept him employed for two days a week, or
+ thereabouts, and though they never got to Paramatta, nor any farther than
+ Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s own study in the little house he had taken for
+ himself at Chelsea, they were regularly paid for through the colonial
+ newsagents, by means of a cheque which really owed its ultimate origin to
+ Arthur Berkeley himself. Fifteen shillings a week is not a large fortune,
+ certainly; but still it is considerably better than nothing, when you come
+ to try both methods of living by practical experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even so, however, Ernest and Edie had a hard struggle, with their habits
+ of life and Ernest&rsquo;s delicate health, to make both ends meet upon
+ that modest income. They found the necessity for recourse to the imaginary
+ pawnbroker growing upon them with alarming rapidity; and though the few
+ small articles that they sent out for that purpose never really went
+ beyond kind Mrs. Halliss&rsquo;s kitchen dresser, yet so far as Ernest and
+ Edie were concerned, the effect was much the same as if they had been
+ really pledged to the licensed broker. The good woman hid them away
+ carefully in the back drawers of the dresser, sending up as much money for
+ the poor little trinkets as she thought it at all credible that any man in
+ his senses could possibly advance&mdash;if she had given altogether too
+ much, she thought it probable that even the unsuspicious Le Bretons would
+ detect the kindly deception&mdash;at the time remarking to John that
+ &lsquo;if ever them pore dear young creechurs was able to redeem &lsquo;em
+ again, why, well an&rsquo; good; an&rsquo; if not, why, they could just
+ find some excuse to give &lsquo;em back to the dear lady after pore Mr. Le
+ Breting was dead an&rsquo; gone, as he must be, no doubt, afore many
+ months was over.&rsquo; What wretched stuff that is that some
+ narrow-minded cynics love to talk, after their cheap moralising fashion,
+ about the coldness and cruelty of the world! The world is not cold and
+ cruel; it is brimming over everywhere with kindliness and warmth of heart;
+ and you have only got to put yourself into the proper circumstances in
+ order to call forth at once on every hand, and in all classes, its
+ tenderest and truest sympathies. None but selfish, unsympathetic people
+ themselves ever find it otherwise in the day of trouble. It is not the
+ world that is cold and heartless&mdash;it is not the individual members of
+ the world that are cruel and unkind&mdash;it is the relentless march of
+ circumstances&mdash;the faulty organisation which none of us can control,
+ and for which none of us is personally responsible, that grinds us to
+ powder under its Juggernaut wheels. Private kindliness is for ever trying,
+ feebly and unsuccessfully, but with its best efforts, to undo the evil
+ that general mismanagement is for ever perpetrating in its fateful course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, a few weeks later, Arthur Berkeley called in again, and on the
+ stairs he met a child playing&mdash;a neighbour&rsquo;s child whom good
+ Mrs. Halliss allowed to come in and amuse herself while the mother went
+ out charing. The girl had a bright gold object in her hand; and Arthur,
+ wondering how she came by it, took it from her and looked at it curiously.
+ He recognised it in a moment for what it was&mdash;a gold bracelet, a well
+ remembered gold bracelet&mdash;the very one that he himself had given as a
+ wedding present to poor Edie. He turned it over and looked closely at the
+ inside: cut into the soft gold he saw the one word &lsquo;Frustra,&rsquo;
+ that he himself had carved into it with his penknife the night before the
+ memorable wedding.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Where did you get this?&rsquo; he asked the child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mrs. &lsquo;Alliss give it me,&rsquo; the little one answered, beginning
+ to cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur ran lightly down the steps again, and knocked at the door of Mrs.
+ Halliss&rsquo;s kitchen, with the tell-tale bracelet in his hand. Mrs.
+ Halliss opened the dcor to him respectfully, and after a faint attempt at
+ innocent prevarication, felt bound to let out all the pitiful little
+ secret without further preamble. So Arthur, good, kind-hearted,
+ delicate-souled Arthur, took his seat sadly upon one of the hard wooden
+ kitchen chairs, and waited patiently while Mrs. Halliss and honest John,
+ in their roundabout inarticulate fashion, slowly unfolded the story how
+ them two pore young creechurs upstairs had been druv that low through want
+ of funs that Mrs. Le Breting, God bless &lsquo;er &lsquo;eart, &lsquo;ad
+ &lsquo;ad to pawn her poor little bits of jewelry and such like: and how
+ they &lsquo;adn&rsquo;t &lsquo;ad the face to go an&rsquo; pawn it for
+ her, and so &lsquo;ad locked it up in their drawers, and waited hopefully
+ for better times. Arthur listened to all this with an aching heart, and
+ went home alone to ponder on the best way of still further assisting them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only thing that occurred to him was a plan for giving Edie, too, a
+ little relief, in the way of what she might suppose to be money-getting
+ occupation. She used to paint a little in water-colours, he remembered, in
+ the old days; so he put an advertisement in a morning paper, which he got
+ Mrs. Halliss to show Edie, asking for drawings of orchids, the flowers to
+ be supplied and accurately copied by an amateur at a reasonable price.
+ Edie fell into the harmless friendly trap readily enough, and was duly
+ supplied with orchids by a florist in Regent Street, who professed to
+ receive his instructions from the advertiser. The pictures were all
+ produced in due time, and were sent to a fixed address, where a gentleman
+ in a hansom used to call for them at regular intervals. Arthur Berkeley
+ kept those poor little water-colours long afterwards locked up in a
+ certain drawer all by themselves: they were sacred mementoes to him of
+ that old hopeless love for the little Miss Butterfly of his Oxford days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the very first three guineas that Edie earned, carefully saved and
+ hoarded out of her payments for the water-colours, she insisted in the
+ pride of her heart that Ernest should go and visit a great London
+ consulting physician. Sir Antony Wraxall was the best specialist in town
+ on the subject of consumption, she had heard, and she was quite sure so
+ clever a man must do Ernest a great deal of good, if he didn&rsquo;t even
+ permanently cure him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s no use, Edie darling,&rsquo; Ernest said to her imploringly.
+ &lsquo;You&rsquo;ll only be wasting your hard-earned money. What I want is
+ not advice or medicine; I want what no doctor on earth can possibly give
+ me&mdash;relief from this terrible crushing responsibility.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Edie would bear no refusal. It was HER money, she said, the first she
+ had ever earned in her whole life, and she should certainly do as she
+ herself liked with it. Sir Antony Wraxall, she was quite confident, would
+ soon be able to make him better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Ernest, overborne by her intreaties, yielded at last, and made an
+ appointment with Sir Antony Wraxall. He took his quarter-hour in due form,
+ and told the great physician all his symptoms as though he believed in the
+ foolish farce. Sir Antony held his head solemnly on one side, weighed him
+ with puritanical scrupulosity to a quarter of an ounce on his delicate
+ balance, listened attentively at the chest with his silver-mounted
+ stethoscope, and perpended the net result of his investigation with
+ professional gravity; then he gave Edie his full advice and opinion to the
+ maximum extent of five minutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Your husband&rsquo;s case is not a hopeful one, Mrs. Le Breton,&rsquo; he
+ said solemnly, &lsquo;but still, a great deal may be done for him.&rsquo;
+ Edie&rsquo;s face brightened visibly. &lsquo;With care, his life may be
+ prolonged for many years,&mdash;I may even say, indeed, quite
+ indefinitely.&rsquo; Edie smiled with joy and gratitude. &lsquo;But you
+ must strictly observe my rules and directions&mdash;the same that I&rsquo;ve
+ just given in a similar case to the Crown Prince of Servia who was here
+ before you. In the first place, your husband must give up work altogether.
+ He must be content to live perfectly and absolutely idle. Then, secondly,
+ he must live quite away from England. I should recommend the Engadine in
+ summer, and Algeria or the Nile trip every winter; but, if that&rsquo;s
+ beyond your means&mdash;and I understand from Mr. Le Breton that you&rsquo;re
+ in somewhat straitened circumstances&mdash;I don&rsquo;t object to
+ Catania, or Malaga, or even Mentone and the Riviera. You can rent
+ furnished villas for very little on the Riviera. But he must in no case
+ come farther north, even in summer, than the Lake of Geneva. That, I
+ assure you, is quite indispensable, if he wishes to live another
+ twelvemonth. Take him south at once, in a coupé-lit of course, and break
+ the journey once or twice at Lyons and Marseilles. Next, as to diet, he
+ must live generously&mdash;very generously. Don&rsquo;t let him drink
+ claret; claret&rsquo;s poor sour stuff; a pint of good champagne daily, or
+ a good, full-bodied, genial vintage Burgundy would be far better and more
+ digestible for him. Oysters, game, sweetbreads, red mullet, any little
+ delicacy of that sort as much as possible. Don&rsquo;t let him walk; let
+ him have carriage exercise daily; you can hire carriages for a mere trifle
+ monthly at Cannes and Mentone. Above all things, give him perfect freedom
+ from anxiety. Allow him to concentrate his whole attention on the act of
+ getting well, and you&rsquo;ll find he&rsquo;ll improve astonishingly in
+ no time. But if you keep him here in England and feed him badly and
+ neglect my directions, I can&rsquo;t answer for his getting through
+ another winter....Don&rsquo;t disturb yourself, I beg of you; don&rsquo;t,
+ pray, give way to tears; there is really no occasion for it, my dear
+ madam, no occasion for it at all, if you&rsquo;ll only do as I tell
+ you....Quite right, thank you. Good morning.&mdash;Next case, McFarlane.&mdash;Good
+ morning. Good morning.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that was the end of weeping little Edie&rsquo;s poor hardly-spared
+ three guineas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very next day Arthur Berkeley happened to mount the stairs quietly, at
+ an earlier hour than usual, and knocked at the door of Ernest&rsquo;s
+ lodging. There was no answer, so he turned the handle, and entered by
+ himself. The remains of breakfast lay upon the table. Arthur did not want
+ to spy, but he couldn&rsquo;t help remarking that these remains were
+ extremely meagre and scanty. Half a loaf of bread stood upon a solitary
+ plate in the centre; a teapot and two cups occupied one side; and&mdash;that
+ was all. In spite of himself, he couldn&rsquo;t restrain his curiosity,
+ and he looked more closely at the knives and plates. Not a mark of
+ anything but crumbs upon them, not even butter! He looked into the cups.
+ Nothing but milkless tea at the bottom! Yes, the truth was only too
+ evident; they had had no meat for breakfast, no butter, no milk, no sugar;
+ it was quite clear that the meal had consisted entirely of dry bread with
+ plain tea&mdash;call it hot water&mdash;and that for a dying man and a
+ delicate over-worked lady! Arthur looked at that pitiable breakfast-table
+ with a twinge of remorse, and the tears rose sharply and involuntarily
+ into his eyes. He had not done enough for them, then; he had not done
+ enough for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor little Miss Butterfly! and had it really come to this! You, so
+ bright, so light, so airy, in want, in positive want, in hunger even, with
+ your good, impossible, impracticable Ernest! Had it come to this! Bread
+ and water; dry bread and water! Down tears, down; a man must be a man;
+ but, oh, what a bitter sight for Arthur Berkeley! And yet, what could he
+ do to mend it? Money they would not take; he dare not even offer it; and
+ he was at his wit&rsquo;s end for any other contrivance for serving them
+ without their knowledge. He must do what he could; but how he was to do
+ it, he couldn&rsquo;t imagine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he stood there, ruminating bitterly over that poor bare table, he
+ thought he heard sounds above, as of Edie coming downstairs with Dot on
+ her shoulder. He knew she would not like to know that he had surprised the
+ secret of their dire poverty; and he turned silently and cautiously to
+ descend the stair. There was only just time enough to get away, for Edie
+ was even then opening the door of the nursery. Noiselessly, with cat-like
+ tread, he crept down the steps once more, and heard Edie descending, and
+ singing as she came down to Dot. It was a plaintive little song, in a sad
+ key&mdash;a plaintive little song of his own&mdash;but not wholly
+ distressful, Arthur thought; she could still sing, then, to her baby! With
+ the hot tears rising a second time to his eyes, he groped his way to the
+ foot of the staircase. There he brushed them hurriedly aside with his
+ hand, and turned out into the open street. The children were playing and
+ tumbling in the sun, and a languid young man in a faultless frock coat and
+ smooth silk hat was buying a showy button-hole flower from the little
+ suburban florist&rsquo;s opposite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a heavy heart Arthur Berkeley turned homeward to his own cosy little
+ cottage; that modest palace of art which he had once hoped little Miss
+ Butterfly might have shared with him. He went up the steps, and turned
+ quickly into his own small study. The Progenitor was there, sitting
+ reading in an easy-chair. &lsquo;At least,&rsquo; Arthur thought to
+ himself, &lsquo;I have made HIS old age happy. If I could only do as much
+ for little Miss Butterfly! for little Miss Butterfly! for little Miss
+ Butterfly! If I could only do as much for her, oh, how happy and contented
+ I should be!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He flung himself down on his own sofa, and brushed big eyes nervously with
+ his handkerchief before he dared lookup again towards the Progenitor.
+ &lsquo;Father,&rsquo; he said, clutching his watchchain hard and playing
+ with it nervously to keep down his emotion, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m afraid those
+ poor Le Bretons are in an awfully bad way. I&rsquo;m afraid, do you know,
+ that they actually haven&rsquo;t enough to eat! I went into their rooms
+ just now, and, would you believe it, I found nothing on the table for
+ breakfast but dry bread and tea!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Progenitor looked up quietly from the volume of Morley&rsquo;s &lsquo;Voltaire&rsquo;
+ which he was at that moment placidly engaged in devouring. &lsquo;Nothing
+ but dry bread and tea,&rsquo; he said, in what seemed to Arthur a horribly
+ unconcerned tone. &lsquo;Really, hadn&rsquo;t they? Well, I dare say they
+ ARE very badly off, poor people. But after all, you know, Artie, they can&rsquo;t
+ be really poor, for Le Breton told me himself he was generally earning
+ fifteen shillings or a pound a week, and that, you see, is really for
+ three people a very good income, now isn&rsquo;t it?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur, delicate-minded, gentle, chivalrous Arthur, gazed in surprise and
+ sudden distress at that dear, good, unselfish old father of his. How
+ extraordinary that the kindly old man couldn&rsquo;t grasp the full horror
+ of the situation! How strange that he, who would himself have been so
+ tender, so considerate, so womanly in his care and sympathy towards
+ anything that seemed to him like real poverty or real suffering, should
+ have been so blinded by his long hard workingman life towards the peculiar
+ difficulties and trials of classes other than his own as not to recognise
+ the true meaning of that dreadful disclosure! Arthur was not angry with
+ him&mdash;he felt too fully at that moment what depths of genuine silent
+ hardship uncomplainingly endured were implied in the stoically calm frame
+ of mind which could treat Edie Le Breton&rsquo;s penury of luxuries as a
+ comparatively slight matter: after all, his father was right at bottom;
+ such mere sentimental middle-class poverty is as nothing to the privations
+ of the really poor; yet he could not help feeling a little disappointed
+ for all that. He wanted sympathy in his pity, and he could clearly expect
+ none here. &lsquo;Why, father,&rsquo; he cried bitterly, &lsquo;you don&rsquo;t
+ throw yourself into the position as you ought to do. A pound a week, paid
+ regularly, would be a splendid income of course for people brought up like
+ you or me. But just consider how those two young people have been brought
+ up! Consider their wants and their habits! Consider the luxury they have
+ been accustomed to! And then think of their being obliged to want now
+ almost for food in their last extremity!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His father answered in the same quiet tone&mdash;not hardly, but calmly,
+ as though he were discussing a problem in political economy instead of the
+ problem of Edie Le Breton&rsquo;s happiness&mdash;&lsquo;Well, you see, it&rsquo;s
+ all a matter of the standard of comfort. These two friends of yours have
+ been brought up above their future; and now that they&rsquo;re got to come
+ down to their natural level, why, of course, they feel it, depend upon it,
+ they feel it. Their parents, of course, shouldn&rsquo;t have accustomed
+ them to a style of life above their station. Good dry bread, not too
+ stale, does nobody any harm: still, I dare say they don&rsquo;t like
+ coming down to it. But bless your heart, Artie, if you&rsquo;d seen the
+ real want and poverty that I&rsquo;ve seen, my boy&mdash;the actual hunger
+ and cold and nakedness that I&rsquo;ve known honest working people brought
+ down to by no work, and nothing but the House open before them, or not
+ that even, you wouldn&rsquo;t think so much of the sentimental grievances
+ of people who are earning fifteen shillings a week in ease and comfort.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, Father,&rsquo; Arthur went on, scarcely able to keep down the rising
+ tone of indignation at such seeming heartlessness, &lsquo;Ernest doesn&rsquo;t
+ earn even that always. Sometimes he earns nothing, or next to nothing; and
+ it&rsquo;s the uncertainty and insecurity that tells upon them even more
+ than the poverty itself. Oh, Father, Father, you who have always been so
+ good and kind, I never heard you speak so cruelly about anyone before as
+ you&rsquo;re speaking now about that poor, friendless, helpless,
+ penniless, heart-broken little woman!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker caught at the word suddenly, and looking him through and
+ through with an unexpected gleam of discovery, laid down the life of
+ Voltaire on the table with a bang, and sat straight upright in his chair,
+ nodding his head, and muttering slowly to himself, &lsquo;Little woman&mdash;he
+ said &ldquo;little woman!&rdquo; Poor Artie, Poor Artie!&rsquo; in a tone
+ of inexpressible pity. At last he turned to Arthur and cried with a voice
+ of womanly tenderness, &lsquo;My boy, my boy, I didn&rsquo;t know before
+ it was the lassie you were thinking of; I thought it was only poor young
+ Le Breton. I see it all now; I&rsquo;ve surprised your secret; you&rsquo;ve
+ let it out to me without knowing it. Oh, Artie, if that&rsquo;s She, I&rsquo;m
+ sorry for her, and I&rsquo;m sorry for you, my boy, from the bottom of my
+ heart. If that&rsquo;s She, Artie, we&rsquo;ll put our heads together, and
+ see what plan we can manage to save her from what she has never been
+ accustomed to. Don&rsquo;t think too hardly of your old Progenitor, Artie;
+ he hasn&rsquo;t mixed with these people all his life, and learned to
+ sympathise with them as you&rsquo;ve done, my son; he doesn&rsquo;t
+ understand them or know their troubles as you do: but if that&rsquo;s her
+ that you told me about one day, we shall find the means to make her happy
+ and comfortable yet, if we have to starve for it. Dear Arthur, do not
+ think I could be harsh or unfeeling for a moment to the woman that you
+ ever once in passing fixed your heart upon. Let&rsquo;s talk it over and
+ think it over, and sooner or later we&rsquo;ll surely find the way to
+ accomplish it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXII. &mdash; PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Whether Ronald Le Breton&rsquo;s abstruse speculations on the theory of
+ heredity were well founded or not, it certainly did happen, at any rate,
+ that the more he saw of Selah Briggs the better he liked her; and the more
+ Selah saw of him the better she liked him in return. Curiously enough,
+ too, Selah did actually recognise in him what he fancied he recognised in
+ himself, that part of his brother&rsquo;s nature (not all wholly assumed)
+ which was just what Selah had first been drawn to admire in Herbert
+ himself. It wasn&rsquo;t merely the originality of his general point of
+ view: it was something more deep-seated and undefinable than that&mdash;in
+ a word, his idiosyncrasy. Selah Briggs, with her peculiar fiery soul and
+ rebellious nature, found in both the Le Bretons something that seemed at
+ once to satisfy her wants, to fulfil her desires, to saturate her
+ affinities: and with Ronald, as with Herbert before, she was conscious of
+ a certain awe and respect which was all the more pleasant to her because
+ her untamed spirit had never felt anything like it with any other human
+ being. She didn&rsquo;t understand them, and she didn&rsquo;t want to
+ understand them: that constituted just the very charm of their whole
+ personality to her peculiar fancy. All the other people she had ever met
+ were as transparent as glass, for good or for evil; she could see through
+ all their faults and virtues as easily as one sees through a window: the
+ Le Bretons were to her inscrutable, novel, incomprehensible, inexplicable,
+ and she prized them for their very inscrutability. And so it came to pass,
+ that almost by a process of natural and imperceptible transference, she
+ passed on at last to Ronald&rsquo;s account very much the same intensity
+ of feeling that she had formerly felt towards his brother Herbert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at the same time, Selah never for a moment let him see it. She was too
+ proud to confess now that she could ever love another man: the Mr. Walters
+ she had once believed in had never, never, never existed: and she would
+ raise no other idol in future to take the place of that vanished ideal.
+ She was grateful to Ronald, and even fond of him: but that was
+ all-outwardly at least. She never let him see, by word or act, that in her
+ heart of hearts she was beginning to love him. And yet Ronald
+ instinctively knew it. He himself could not have told you why; but he knew
+ it. Even a woman cannot hide a secret from a man with that peculiarly
+ penetrating intuitive temperament which belongs to sensitive, delicate
+ types like Ronald Le Breton&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One Sunday evening, when Selah had been spending a few hours at Edie&rsquo;s
+ lodgings (Ronald always made it an excuse for finding them a supper, on
+ the ground that Selah was really his guest, though he could not
+ conveniently ask her to his own rooms), he walked home towards Notting
+ Hill with Selah; and as they crossed the Regent&rsquo;s Park, he took the
+ opportunity to say something to her that he had had upon his mind for a
+ few weeks past, in some vague, indefinite, half-unconscious fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Selah,&rsquo; he began, a little timidly, &lsquo;don&rsquo;t you think it&rsquo;s
+ very probable we shan&rsquo;t have Ernest here much longer with us?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid it is, Ronald,&rsquo; Selah answered. She had got quite
+ accustomed now to calling him Ronald. With such a poor, weak, sickly
+ fellow as that, why really, after all, it did not much matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald went on, gravely, his eyes filling with tears
+ as he spoke, &lsquo;in that case, you know, I can&rsquo;t think what&rsquo;s
+ to become of poor Edie. It&rsquo;s a dreadful contingency to talk about,
+ Selah, and I can&rsquo;t bear talking about it; but we MUST face these
+ things, however terrible, mustn&rsquo;t we? and in this case one&rsquo;s
+ absolutely bound to face it for poor Edie&rsquo;s sake as well as for
+ Ernest&rsquo;s. Selah, she must have a home to go to, when dear Ernest&rsquo;s
+ taken from us.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m very sorry for her, Ronald,&rsquo; Selah answered, with unusual
+ softness of manner, &lsquo;but I really don&rsquo;t see how a home can
+ possibly be provided for her.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I do,&rsquo; Ronald answered, more calmly; &lsquo;and for their sakes,
+ Selah, I want you to help me in trying to provide it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How?&rsquo; Selah asked, looking up in his face curiously, as they passed
+ into a ray of lamplight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Listen, Selah, and I&rsquo;ll tell you. Why, by marrying me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Never?&rsquo; Selah answered, firmly, and with a decided tinge of the old
+ Adam in her trembling voice. &lsquo;Never, Ronald! Never, never, never!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Wait a minute, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald pleaded, &lsquo;till you&rsquo;ve
+ heard the end of what I have to say to you. Consider that when dear Ernest&rsquo;s
+ gone (oh! Selah, you must excuse me; it makes me cry so to think of it),
+ there&rsquo;ll be nowhere on earth for poor little Edie and Dot to go to.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Did ever a man propose to a girl so extraordinarily in all this world,&rsquo;
+ Selah thought to herself, angrily. &lsquo;He actually expects me to marry
+ him in order to provide a home for his precious sister-in-law. That&rsquo;s
+ really carrying unselfishness a step too far, I call it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Edie couldn&rsquo;t come and live with me, of course,&rsquo; Ronald went
+ on, quickly, &lsquo;if I were a bachelor; but if I were married, why then,
+ naturally, she and Dot could come and live with us; and she could earn a
+ little money somehow, no doubt; and, at any rate, it&rsquo;d be better for
+ her than starvation.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah stopped a minute, and tapped the hard ground two or three times
+ angrily with the point of her umbrella. &lsquo;And me, Ronald?&rsquo; she
+ said in a curious defiant voice. &lsquo;And ME? I suppose you&rsquo;ve
+ forgotten all about ME. You don&rsquo;t ask me to marry you because you
+ love me; you don&rsquo;t ask me whether I love you or not; you only
+ propose to me that I should quietly turn domestic housekeeper for Mrs.
+ Ernest Le Breton. And for my part, I answer you plainly, once for all,
+ that I&rsquo;m not going to do it&mdash;no, never, never, never!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She spoke haughtily, flashing her eyes at him in the fierce old fashion,
+ and Ronald was almost frightened at the angry intensity of her
+ contemptuous gestures. &lsquo;Selah,&rsquo; he cried, trying to take her
+ hand, which she tore away from him hurriedly: &lsquo;Selah, you
+ misunderstand me. I only approached the subject that way because I didn&rsquo;t
+ want to seem overweening and presumptuous. It&rsquo;s a very great piece
+ of vanity, it seems to me, for any man to ask a woman whether she loves
+ him. I&rsquo;m too conscious of all my own faults and failings, Selah, to
+ venture upon asking you ever to love me; but I do love you, Selah, I&rsquo;m
+ sure I do love you; and I hoped, I somehow fancied&mdash;it may have been
+ mere fancy, but I DID imagine&mdash;that I detected, I can&rsquo;t say
+ how, that you did really love me, too, just a very very little. Oh, Selah,
+ it&rsquo;s because I really love you that I ask you whether you&rsquo;ll
+ marry me, such as I am; I know I&rsquo;m a poor sort of person to marry,
+ but I ventured to hope you might love me just a little for all that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked so frail and gentle as he stood there pleading in the pale
+ moonlight, that Selah could have taken him to her bosom then and there and
+ fondled him as one would pet a sick child, for pure womanliness; but the
+ devil in her blood kept her from doing it, and she answered haughtily,
+ instead: &lsquo;Ronald, if you wanted to marry me, you ought to have asked
+ me for my own sake. Now that you&rsquo;ve asked me for another&rsquo;s,
+ you can&rsquo;t expect me to give you an answer. Keep your money, my poor
+ boy; you&rsquo;ll want it all for you and her hereafter; don&rsquo;t go
+ sharing it and spending it on perfect strangers such as me. And don&rsquo;t
+ go talking to me again about this business as long as your sister-in-law
+ is unprovided for. I&rsquo;m not going to take the bread out of her mouth,
+ and I&rsquo;m not going to marry a man who doesn&rsquo;t utterly and
+ entirely love me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But I do,&rsquo; Ronald answered, earnestly; &lsquo;I do, Selah; I love
+ you truly and faithfully from the very bottom of my heart.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Leave off, Roland,&rsquo; Selah said in the same angry tone. &lsquo;If
+ you ever talk to me of this again, I give you my word of honour about it,
+ I&rsquo;ll never speak another word to you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Ronald, who deeply respected the sanctity of a promise, were it only a
+ threat, bided his time, and said no more about it for the present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, as Ronald sat reading in his own rooms, he was much surprised at
+ hearing a well-known voice at the door, inquiring with some asperity
+ whether Mr. Le Breton was at home. He listened to the voice in intense
+ astonishment. It was his mother&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ronald,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton began, the moment she had been shown into
+ his little sitting-room, &lsquo;I didn&rsquo;t think, after your
+ undutiful, ungrateful conduct&mdash;with that abominable woman, too&mdash;that
+ I should ever have come to see you, unless you came first, as you ought
+ clearly to do, and begged my pardon penitently for your disgraceful
+ behaviour. It&rsquo;s hard, I know, to acknowledge oneself in the wrong,
+ but every Christian ought to be above vindictiveness and obstinate
+ self-will; and I expect you, therefore, sooner or later, to come and ask
+ forgiveness for your dreadful unkindness to me. Till then, as I said, I
+ didn&rsquo;t expect to call upon you in any way. But I&rsquo;ve felt
+ compelled to-day to come and speak to you about a matter of duty, and as a
+ matter of duty strictly I regard it, not as any relaxation of my just
+ attitude of indignant expectancy towards yourself; no parent ought rightly
+ to overlook such conduct as yours on the part of a son.&rsquo; Ronald
+ inclined his head respectfully. ‘Well, what I&rsquo;ve come to speak to
+ you about to-day, Ronald, is about your poor misguided brother Ernest. He,
+ too, as you know, has behaved very badly to me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No,&rsquo; Ronald answered stoutly, without further note or comment.
+ Where the matter touched himself only he could maintain a decent silence,
+ but where it touched poor dying Ernest he couldn&rsquo;t possibly restrain
+ himself, even from a sense of filial obligation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very badly to me,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton went on sternly, without in any
+ way noticing the brief interruption, &lsquo;and I can&rsquo;t, of course,
+ go to see him either, especially not as I should by so doing expose myself
+ to meeting the person whom he has chosen to make his wife. Still, as I
+ hear that Ernest a in a very serious or even dangerous condition&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘He&rsquo;s dying,&rsquo; Ronald answered, the quick tears once more
+ finding the easy road to his eyes as usual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I considered, as a mother, it was my duty to warn him to take a little
+ thought about his soul.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘His soul!&rsquo; Ronald exclaimed in astonishment. &lsquo;Ernest&rsquo;s
+ soul! Why, mother, dear Ernest has no need to look after his soul. He
+ doesn&rsquo;t take that sordid, petty, limited view of our relations with
+ eternity, and of our relations with the Infinite, which makes them all
+ consist of the miserable, selfish, squalid desire to save our own poor
+ personal little souls at all hazards. Ernest has something better and
+ nobler to think of, I can assure you, than such a mere self-centred idea
+ as that.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ronald!&rsquo; Lady Breton exclaimed, drawing herself up with much
+ dignity; &lsquo;how on earth you, who have always pretended to be a
+ religious person, can utter such a shocking and wicked sentiment as that,
+ really passes my comprehension. What in the world is religion for, I
+ should like to know, if it isn&rsquo;t to teach us how to save our own
+ souls? But the particular thing I want to speak to you about is just this:
+ couldn&rsquo;t you manage to induce Ernest to see the Archdeacon a little,
+ and let the Archdeacon speak to him about his deplorable spiritual
+ condition? I thought about you both so much at church yesterday, when the
+ dear Archdeacon was preaching such a beautiful sermon; his text was like
+ this, as far as I can remember it. &ldquo;There is a way that seemeth
+ right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.&rdquo; I
+ couldn&rsquo;t help thinking all the time of my own two poor rebellious
+ boys, and of the path that their misguided notions were leading them on.
+ For I believe Ernest does really somehow persuade himself that he&rsquo;s
+ in the right&mdash;it&rsquo;s inconceivable, but it&rsquo;s the fact; and
+ I&rsquo;m afraid the end thereof will be the ways of death; and then, as
+ the dear Archdeacon said, &ldquo;After death the judgment.&rdquo; Oh,
+ Ronald, when I think of your poor dear brother Ernest&rsquo;s open
+ unbelief, it makes me tremble for his future, so that I couldn&rsquo;t
+ rest upon my bed until I&rsquo;d been to see you and urged you to go and
+ try to save him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Mother,&rsquo; Ronald said with that tone in which he was well accustomed
+ to answering Lady Le Breton&rsquo;s religious harangues; &lsquo;I don&rsquo;t
+ think you need feel any uneasiness whatever on dear Ernest&rsquo;s
+ account, so far as all that&rsquo;s concerned. What does HE want with
+ saving his soul, mother? &ldquo;Whosoever will save his life shall lose
+ it.&rdquo; Remember what is written: &ldquo;Not every one that saith unto
+ me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But, Ronald,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton continued, half angrily, &lsquo;consider
+ his unbelief, his dreadful opinions, his errors of doctrine! How on earth
+ can we be happy about him when we think of those?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t think, Mother,&rsquo; Ronald answered gently, &lsquo;that
+ Infinite Justice and Infinite Love take much account of a man&rsquo;s
+ opinions. They take account of his life and soul only, not of the
+ correctness of his propositions in dogmatic theology; &ldquo;Other sheep
+ have I which are not of this fold&mdash;them also must I bring.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It seems to me, Ronald,&rsquo; Lady Le Breton rejoined coldly, &lsquo;that
+ you don&rsquo;t in the least care for whatever is most distinctive and
+ characteristic in the whole of Christian doctrine. You talk so very very
+ differently on religious subjects from that dear, good, excellent
+ Archdeacon.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. &mdash; A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda Tregellis rang the bell resolutely. &lsquo;I shall have no more
+ nonsense about it,&rsquo; she said to herself in her most decisive and
+ determined manner. &lsquo;Whether mamma wishes it or not, I shall go and
+ see them this very day without another word upon the subject.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant answered the bell and stood waiting for his orders by the
+ doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Harris, will you tell Jenkins at once that I shall want the carriage at
+ half-past eleven?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Yes, my lady.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘All right then. That&rsquo;ll do. Don&rsquo;t stand staring at me there
+ like an image, but go this minute and do as I tell you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Beg pardon, my lady, but her ladyship said she wanted the carriage
+ herself at twelve puncshual.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She can&rsquo;t have it, then, Harris. That&rsquo;s all. Go and give my
+ message to Jenkins at once, and I&rsquo;ll settle about the carriage with
+ my lady myself.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She&rsquo;s the rummest young lady ever I come across,&rsquo; the man
+ murmured to himself in a dissatisfied fashion, as he went down the stairs
+ again: &lsquo;but there, it&rsquo;s none of my business, thank goodness.
+ The places and the people she does go and hunt up when she&rsquo;s got the
+ fit on are truly ridic&rsquo;lous: blest if she didn&rsquo;t acshally make
+ Mr. Jenkins drive her down into Camberwell the other mornin&rsquo;, to see
+ ‘ow the poor lived, she said; as if it mattered tuppence to us in our
+ circles of society &lsquo;ow the poor live. I wonder what little game she&rsquo;s
+ up to now? Well, well, what the aristocracy is coming to in these days is
+ more&rsquo;n I can fathom, as sure as my name&rsquo;s William ‘Arris.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little game that Lady Hilda was up to that morning was one that a
+ gentleman in Mr. Harris&rsquo;s position was certainly hardly like to
+ appreciate or sympathise with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evening before, she had met Arthur Berkeley once more at a small At
+ Home, and had learned from him full particulars as to the dire straits
+ into which the poor Le Bretons had finally fallen. Now, Hilda Tregellis
+ was a kind-hearted girl at bottom, and when she heard all about it, she
+ said at once to Arthur, &lsquo;I shall go and see them myself to-morrow,
+ Mr. Berkeley, whether mamma allows me or not.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What good will it do?&rsquo; Arthur had answered her quickly. &lsquo;You
+ can&rsquo;t find work for poor Le Breton, can you? and of course if you
+ can&rsquo;t do that you can be of no earthly use in any way to the poor
+ creatures.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rsquo; Hilda responded warmly. &lsquo;Sympathy&rsquo;s
+ always something, isn&rsquo;t it, Mr. Berkeley? Nobody ought to know that
+ better than you do. Besides, there&rsquo;s no saying when one may happen
+ to turn up useful. Of course, I&rsquo;ve never been of the slightest use
+ to anybody in all my life, myself, I know, and I dare say I never shall
+ be, but at least there&rsquo;s no harm in trying, is there? I&rsquo;m on
+ speaking terms with such an awful lot of people, all of them rich and many
+ of them influential&mdash;Parliament, and Government offices, and all that
+ sort of nonsense, you know&mdash;people who have no end of things to give
+ away, and can&rsquo;t tell who on earth they&rsquo;d better give them to,
+ for fear of offending all the others, that I might possibly hear of
+ something or other.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; Berkeley answered smiling, &lsquo;none
+ of those people would have anything to offer that could possibly be of the
+ slightest use to poor Le Breton. If he&rsquo;s to be saved at all, he must
+ be saved in his own time and by his own methods. For my own part, I don&rsquo;t
+ see what conceivable chance of success in life there is left for him. You
+ can&rsquo;t imagine a man like him making money and living comfortably. It&rsquo;s
+ a tragedy&mdash;all the dramas of real life always ARE tragedies; but I&rsquo;m
+ terribly afraid there&rsquo;s no conceivable way out of it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda only looked at him with bold good humour. &lsquo;Nonsense,&rsquo;
+ she said bravely. &lsquo;All pure rubbishing pessimistic nonsense. (I hope
+ pessimistic&rsquo;s the right word&mdash;it&rsquo;s a very good word,
+ anyhow, even if it isn&rsquo;t in the proper place.) Well, I don&rsquo;t
+ agree with you at all about this question, Mr. Berkeley. I&rsquo;m very
+ fond of Mr. Le Breton, really very fond of him; and I believe there&rsquo;s
+ a corner somewhere for every man if only he can jog down properly into his
+ own corner instead of being squeezed forcibly into somebody else&rsquo;s.
+ The worst of it is, all the holes are round, and Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s a
+ square man, I allow: he wants all the angles cutting down off him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But you can&rsquo;t cut them off; that&rsquo;s the very trouble,&rsquo;
+ Arthur answered, with just a faint rising suspicion that he was half
+ jealous of the interest Hilda showed even in poor lonely Ernest Le Breton.
+ Gracious heavens! could he be playing false at last to the long-cherished
+ memory of little Miss Butterfly? could he be really beginning to fall just
+ a little in love, after all, with this bold beautiful Lady Hilda
+ Tregellis? He didn&rsquo;t know, and yet he somehow hardly liked himself
+ to think it. And while Edie was still so poor too!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, you can&rsquo;t cut them off; I know that perfectly well,&rsquo;
+ Hilda rejoined quickly. &lsquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t care twopence for him if I
+ thought you could. It&rsquo;s the angles that give him all his charming
+ delicious originality. But you can look out a square hole for him
+ somewhere, you know, and that of course would be a great deal better.
+ Depend upon it, Mr. Berkeley, there are square holes up and down in the
+ world, if only we knew where to look for them; and the mistake that
+ everybody has made in poor Mr. Le Breton&rsquo;s case has been that
+ instead of finding one to suit him, they&rsquo;ve gone on trying to poke
+ him down anyhow by main force into one of the round ones. That goes
+ against the grain, you know; besides which I call it a clear waste of the
+ very valuable solid mahogany corners.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley looked at her silently for a moment, as if a gleam of
+ light had burst suddenly in upon him. Then he said to her slowly and
+ deliberately, &lsquo;Perhaps you&rsquo;re right, Lady Hilda, though I
+ never thought of it quite in that light before. But one thing certainly
+ strikes me now, and that is that you&rsquo;re a great deal cleverer after
+ all than I ever thought you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda made a little mock curtsey. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s very good of you
+ to say so,&rsquo; she answered, half-saucily. &lsquo;Only the compliment
+ is rather double-edged, you must confess, because it implies that up to
+ now you&rsquo;ve had a dreadfully low opinion of my poor little
+ intelligence.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So after that conversation Lady Hilda made up her mind that she would
+ certainly go the very next day and call as soon as possible upon Edie Le
+ Breton. Nobody could tell what good might possibly come of it; but at
+ least there could come no harm. And so, when the carriage drew up it the
+ door at half-past eleven, Hilda Tregellis stepped into it with a vague
+ consciousness of an important mission, and ordered Jenkins to drive at
+ once to the side street in Holloway, whose address Arthur Berkeley had
+ last night given her. Jenkins touched his hat with mechanical respect, but
+ inwardly wondered what the dickens my lady would think if only she came to
+ know of these ‘ere extrornary goin&rsquo;s on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the door of the lodgings Hilda alighted and rang the bell herself. Good
+ Mrs. Halliss opened the door, and answered quickly that Mrs. Le Breton was
+ at home. Her woman&rsquo;s eye detected at once the coronet on the
+ carriage, and she was ready to burst with delight when the tall visitor
+ handed her a card for Edie, bearing the name of Lady Hilda Tregellis. It
+ was almost the first time that Edie had had any lady callers; certainly
+ the first time she had had any of such social distinction; and Mrs.
+ Halliss made haste to usher her up in due form, and then ran down hastily
+ to communicate the good news to honest John, who in his capacity of past
+ coachman was already gazing out of the area window with deep interest at
+ the carriage and horses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There, John dear,&rsquo; she cried, with tears of joy in her eyes,
+ forgetting in her excitement to drat the man for not being in the back
+ kitchen, &lsquo;to think that we should see a carriage an&rsquo; pair like
+ that there a-drawin&rsquo; up in front of out own very &lsquo;ouse, and
+ Lady ‘Ilder Tergellis, or summat o&rsquo; the sort, a-comin&rsquo; &lsquo;ere
+ to see that dear little lady in the parlour, why, it&rsquo;s enough to
+ make one&rsquo;s ‘eart burst, nearly, just you see now if it reelly isn&rsquo;t.
+ You could a&rsquo; knocked me down with a feather, a&rsquo;most, when that
+ there Lady ‘Ilder &lsquo;anded me &lsquo;er curd, and asked so sweet-like
+ if Mrs. Le Breting was at &lsquo;ome. Mr. Le Breting&rsquo;s people is
+ comin&rsquo; round, you may be sure of it; &lsquo;is mother&rsquo;s a lady
+ of title, that much we know for certing; and she wouldn&rsquo;t go and let
+ &lsquo;er own flesh an&rsquo; blood die &lsquo;ere of downright poverty,
+ as they&rsquo;re like to do and won&rsquo;t let us &lsquo;elp it, pore
+ dears, without sendin&rsquo; round to inquire and assist ‘em. Married
+ against &lsquo;er will, I understand, from what that dear Mr. Berkeley,
+ bless &lsquo;is kind &lsquo;eart, do tell me; not as I can believe ‘e
+ married beneath &lsquo;im, no, not no ways; for a sweeter, dearer, nicer
+ little lady than our Mrs. Le Breting I never did, an&rsquo; that I tell
+ you. Sweeter manners you never did see yourself, John, for all you&rsquo;ve
+ lived among the aristocracy: an&rsquo; I always knew &lsquo;is people ‘ud
+ come round at last, and do what was right by &lsquo;im. An&rsquo; you may
+ depend upon it, John, this &lsquo;ere Lady &lsquo;Ilder&rsquo;s one of his
+ relations, an&rsquo; she&rsquo;s come round on a message from Lady Le
+ Breting, to begin a reconciliation. And though we should be sorry to lose
+ &lsquo;em, as ‘as stood by &lsquo;em through all their troubles, I&rsquo;m
+ glad to &lsquo;ear it, John, that I am, for I can&rsquo;t a-bear to see
+ that dear young fellow a-eatin&rsquo; &lsquo;is life out with care and
+ anxiety.&rsquo; And Mrs. Halliss, who had always felt convinced in her own
+ mind that Ernest must really be the unacknowledged heir to a splendid
+ fortune, began to wipe her eyes violently in her delight at this evident
+ realisation of her wildest fancies and wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, upstairs in the little parlour, Edie had risen in some
+ trepidation as Mrs. Halliss placed in her hands Lady Hilda Tregellis&rsquo;s
+ card. Ernest was out, gone to walk feebly around the streets of Holloway,
+ and she hardly knew at first what to say to so unexpected a visitor. But
+ Lady Hilda put her almost at her ease at once by coming up to her with
+ both her arms outstretched, as to an old friend, and saying, with one of
+ her pleasantest smiles:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You must forgive me, Mrs. Le Breton, for never having come to call on you
+ before; but I have been long meaning to, and doubting whether you would
+ care to see me or not. You know, I&rsquo;m a very old friend of your
+ husband&rsquo;s&mdash;he was SO kind to me always when he was down at our
+ place in dear old Devonshire. (You&rsquo;re a Devonshire girl yourself,
+ aren&rsquo;t you? just as I am. I thought so. I&rsquo;m so glad of it. I
+ always get on so well with the dear old Devonshire folk.) Well, I&rsquo;ve
+ been meaning to come for ever so long, and putting it off, and putting it
+ off, and putting it off, as one WILL put things off, you know, when you&rsquo;re
+ not quite sure about them, until last evening. And then our friend, Mr.
+ Arthur Berkeley, who knows everybody, talked to me about your husband and
+ you, and told me he thought you wouldn&rsquo;t mind my coming to see you,
+ for he fancied you hadn&rsquo;t much society up here that you cared for or
+ sympathised with: though, of course, I&rsquo;m dreadfully afraid of coming
+ to call upon you, because I know you&rsquo;re the sister of that very
+ clever Mr. Oswald, whose sad death we were all so sorry to hear about in
+ the papers; and naturally, as you&rsquo;ve lived so much with him and with
+ Mr. Le Breton, you must be so awfully learned and all that sort of thing,
+ and no doubt despise ignorant people like myself dreadfully. But you
+ really mustn&rsquo;t despise me, Mrs. Le Breton, because, you see, I haven&rsquo;t
+ had all the advantages that you&rsquo;ve had; indeed, the only clever
+ people I&rsquo;ve ever met in all my life are your husband and Mr. Arthur
+ Berkeley, except, of course, Cabinet ministers and so forth, and they don&rsquo;t
+ count, because they&rsquo;re political, and so very old, and solemn, and
+ grand, and won&rsquo;t take any notice of us girls, except to sit upon us.
+ So that&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s made me rather afraid to call upon you,
+ because I thought you&rsquo;d be quite too much in the higher education
+ way for a girl like me; and I haven&rsquo;t got any education at all,
+ except in rubbish, as your husband used always to tell me. And now I want
+ you to tell me all about Mr. Le Breton, and the baby&mdash;Dot, you call
+ her, Mr. Berkeley told me&mdash;and yourself, too; for, though I&rsquo;ve
+ never seen you before, I feel, of course, like an old friend of the
+ family, having known your husband so very intimately.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Hilda designedly delivered all this long harangue straight off
+ without a break, in her go-ahead, breathless, voluble fashion, because she
+ felt sure Edie wouldn&rsquo;t feel perfectly at her ease at first, and she
+ wanted to give her time to recover from the first foolish awe of that
+ meaningless prefix, Lady. Moreover, Lady Hilda, in spite of her offhand
+ manner was a good psychologist, and a true woman: and she had concocted
+ her little speech on the spur of the moment with some cleverness, so as
+ just to suit her instinctive reading of Edie&rsquo;s small personal
+ peculiarities. She saw in a moment that that slight, pale, delicate girl
+ was lost in London, far from her own home and surroundings; and that the
+ passing allusion to their common Devonshire origin would please and
+ conciliate her, as it always does with the clannish, warm-hearted,
+ simple-minded West Country folk. Then again, the deft hints as to their
+ friendship with Arthur Berkeley, as to Ernest&rsquo;s stay at Dunbude, and
+ as to her own fear lest Edie should be too learned for her, all tended to
+ bring out whatever points of interest they had together: while the casual
+ touch about poor Harry&rsquo;s reputation, and the final mention of little
+ Dot by name, completed the conquest of Edie&rsquo;s simple, gentle little
+ woman&rsquo;s heart. So this was the great Lady Hilda Tregellis, she
+ thought, of whom she had heard so much, and whom she had dreaded so
+ greatly as a grand rival! Why, after all, she was exactly like any other
+ Devonshire girl in Calcombe Pomeroy, except, perhaps, that she was easier
+ to get on with, and smiled a great deal more pleasantly than ten out of a
+ dozen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s very kind indeed of you to come,&rsquo; Edie answered, smiling
+ back as well as she was able the first moment that Lady Hilda allowed her
+ a chance to edge in a word sideways. &lsquo;Ernest will be so very very
+ sorry that he&rsquo;s missed you when he comes in. He&rsquo;s spoken to me
+ a great deal about you ever so many times.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘No, has he really?&rsquo; Lady Hilda asked quickly, with unmistakable
+ interest and pleasure. &lsquo;Well, now, I&rsquo;m so glad of that, for to
+ tell you the truth, Mrs. Le Breton, though he was really always very kind
+ to me, and so patient with all my stupidity, I more than half fancied he
+ didn&rsquo;t exactly like me. In fact, I was dreadfully afraid he thought
+ me a perfect nuisance. I&rsquo;m so sorry he isn&rsquo;t in, because the
+ truth is, I came partly to see him as well as to see you, and I should be
+ awfully disappointed if I had to miss him. Where&rsquo;s he gone, if I may
+ ask? Perhaps I may be able to wait and see him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Oh, he&rsquo;s only out walking somewhere&mdash;ur&mdash;somewhere about
+ Holloway,&rsquo; Edie answered, half blushing at the nature of their
+ neighbourhood, and glancing round the little room to see how it was likely
+ to strike so grand a person as Lady Hilda Tregellis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda noticed the glance, and made as if she did not notice it. Her heart
+ had begun to warm at once to this poor, pale, eager-looking little woman,
+ who had had the doubtful happiness of winning Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ love. &lsquo;Then I shall certainly wait and see him, Mrs. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ she said cordially. &lsquo;What a dear cosy little room you&rsquo;ve got
+ here, to be sure. I do so love those nice bright little cottage parlours,
+ with their pretty pots of flowers and cheerful furniture&mdash;so much
+ warmer and more comfortable, you know, than the great dreary empty barns
+ that most people go and do penance by living in. If ever I marry&mdash;which
+ I don&rsquo;t suppose I ever shall do, for nobody&rsquo;ll have me, I&rsquo;m
+ sorry to say: at least, nobody but stupid people in the peerage, Algies
+ and Berties and Monties I always call them&mdash;well, if I ever do marry,
+ I shall have a cosy little house just like this one, with no unnecessary
+ space to walk over every time you come in or out, and with a chance of
+ keeping yourself warm without having to crone over the fire in order to
+ get safely out of the horrid draughts. And Dot, now let me see, how old is
+ she by this time? I ought to remember, I&rsquo;m sure, for Mr. Berkeley
+ told me all about her at the time; and I said should I write and ask if I
+ might stand as godmother; and Mr. Berkeley laughed at me, and said what
+ could I be dreaming of, and did I think you were going to make your baby
+ liable to fine and imprisonment if it ever published works hereafter on
+ philosophy or something of the sort. So delightfully original of all of
+ you, really.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once started on that fertile theme of female conversation, Edie and Hilda
+ got on well enough in all conscience to satisfy the most exacting mind.
+ Dot was duly brought in and exhibited by Mrs. Halliss; and was pronounced
+ to be the very sweetest, dearest, darlingest little duck ever seen on
+ earth since the beginning of all things. Her various points of likeness to
+ all her relations were duly discussed; and Hilda took particular pains to
+ observe that she didn&rsquo;t in the very faintest degree resemble that
+ old horror, Lady Le Breton. Then her whole past history was fully related,
+ she had been fed on, and what illnesses she had had, and how many teeth
+ she had got, and all the other delightful nothings so perennially
+ interesting to the maternal heart. Hilda listened to the whole account
+ with unfeigned attention, and begged leave to be allowed to dance Dot in
+ her own strong arms, and tickled her fat cheek with her slender
+ forefinger, and laughed with genuine delight when the baby smiled again at
+ her and turned her face to be tickled a second time. Gradually Hilda
+ brought the conversation round to Ernest&rsquo;s journalistic experiences,
+ and at last she said very quietly, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m sorry to learn from
+ Mr. Berkeley, dear, that your husband doesn&rsquo;t get quite as much work
+ to do as he would like to have.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie&rsquo;s tender eyes filled at once with swimming tears. That one word
+ &lsquo;dear,&rsquo; said so naturally and simply, touched her heart at
+ once with its genuine half unspoken sympathy. &lsquo;Oh, Lady Hilda,&rsquo;
+ she answered falteringly, &lsquo;please don&rsquo;t make me talk about
+ that. We are so very, very, very poor. I can&rsquo;t bear to talk about it
+ to you. Please, please don&rsquo;t make me.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda looked at her with the moisture welling up in her own eyes too, and
+ said softly, &lsquo;I&rsquo;m SO sorry: dear, dear little Mrs. Le Breton,
+ I&rsquo;m so very, very, very sorry for you! from the bottom of my heart I&rsquo;m
+ sorry for you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It isn&rsquo;t for myself, you know,&rsquo; Edie answered quickly:
+ &lsquo;for myself, of course, I could stand anything; but it&rsquo;s the
+ trouble and privations for darling Ernest. Oh, Lady Hilda, I can&rsquo;t
+ bear to say it, but he&rsquo;s dying, he&rsquo;s dying.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda took the pretty small hand affectionately in hers. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t,
+ dear, don&rsquo;t,&rsquo; she said, brushing away a tear from her own eyes
+ at the same time. &lsquo;He isn&rsquo;t, believe me, he isn&rsquo;t. And
+ don&rsquo;t call me by that horrid stiff name, dear, please don&rsquo;t.
+ Call me Hilda. I should be so pleased and flattered if you would call me
+ Hilda. And may I call you Edie? I know your husband calls you Edie,
+ because Mr. Ronald Le Breton told me so. I want to be a friend of yours;
+ and I feel sure, if only you will let me, that we might be very good and
+ helpful friends indeed together.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edie pressed her hand softly. How very different from the imaginary Lady
+ Hilda she had pictured to herself in her timid, girlish fancy! How much
+ even dear Ernest had been mistaken as to what there was of womanly really
+ in her. &lsquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t speak so kindly to me,&rsquo; she said
+ imploringly; &lsquo;don&rsquo;t speak so kindly, or else you&rsquo;ll make
+ me cry. I can&rsquo;t bear to hear you speak so kindly.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Cry, dear,&rsquo; Lady Hilda whispered in a gentle tone, kissing her
+ forehead delicately as she spoke: &lsquo;cry and relieve yourself. There&rsquo;s
+ nothing gives one so much comfort when one&rsquo;s heart is bursting as a
+ regular good downright cry.&rsquo; And, suiting the action to the word,
+ forthwith Lady Hilda laid her own statuesque head down beside Edie&rsquo;s,
+ and so those two weeping women, rivals once in a vague way, and now bound
+ to one another by a new-found tie, mingled their tears silently together
+ for ten minutes in unuttered sympathy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they sat there, both tearful and speechless, with Lady Hilda soothing
+ Edie&rsquo;s wan hand tenderly in hers, and leaning above her, and
+ stroking her hair softly with a sister&rsquo;s fondness, the door opened
+ very quietly, and Arthur Berkeley stood for a moment pausing in the
+ passage, and looking in without a word upon the unexpected sight that
+ greeted his wondering vision. He had come to call upon Ernest about some
+ possible opening for a new writer on a paper lately started; and hearing
+ the sound of sobs within had opened the door quietly and tentatively. He
+ could hardly believe his own eyes when he actually saw Lady Hilda
+ Tregellis sitting there side by side with Edie Le Breton, kissing her pale
+ forehead a dozen times in a minute, and crying over her like a child with
+ unwonted tears of unmistakable sympathy. For ten seconds Arthur held the
+ door ajar in his hands, and gazed silently with the awe of chivalrous
+ respect upon the tearful, beautiful picture. Then he shut the door again
+ noiselessly and unperceived, and stole softly out into the street to wait
+ alone for Ernest&rsquo;s return. It was not for him to intrude his
+ unbidden presence upon the sacred sorrow of those two weeping
+ sister-women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lighted a cigar outside, and walked up and down a neighbouring street
+ feverishly till he thought it likely the call would be finished. &lsquo;Dear
+ little Mrs. Le Breton,&rsquo; he said to himself softly, ‘dear little Miss
+ Butterfly of the days that are dead; softened and sweetened still more by
+ suffering, with the beauty of holiness glowing in your face, how I wish
+ some good for you could unexpectedly come out of this curious visit.
+ Though I don&rsquo;t see how it&rsquo;s possible: I don&rsquo;t see how it&rsquo;s
+ possible. The stream carries us all down unresistingly before its
+ senseless flood, and sweeps us at last, sooner or later, like helpless
+ logs, into the unknown sea. Poor Ernest is drifting fast thitherwards
+ before the current, and nothing on earth, it seems to me, can conceivably
+ stop him!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paced up and down a little, with a quick, unsteady tread, and took a
+ puff or two again at his cigar abstractedly. Then he held it thoughtfully
+ between his fingers for a while and began to hum a few bars from his own
+ new opera then in course of composition&mdash;a stately long-drawn air, it
+ was something like the rustle of Hilda Tregellis&rsquo;s satin train as
+ she swept queenlike down the broad marble staircase of some great
+ Elizabethan country palace. &lsquo;And dear Lady Hilda too,&rsquo; he went
+ on, musingly: &lsquo;dear, kind, sympathising Lady Hilda. Who on earth
+ would ever have thought she had it in her to comfort that poor, weeping,
+ sorrowing girl as I just now saw her doing? Dear Lady Hilda! Kind Lady
+ Hilda! I have undervalued you and overlooked you, because of the mere
+ accident of your titled birth, but I could have kissed you myself, for
+ pure gratitude, that very minute, Hilda Tregellis, when I saw you stooping
+ down and kissing that dear white forehead that looked so pale and womanly
+ and beautiful. Yes, Hilda, I could have kissed you. I could have kissed
+ your own grand, smooth, white marble forehead. And no very great trial of
+ endurance, either, Arthur Berkeley, if it comes to that; for say what you
+ will of her, she&rsquo;s a beautiful, stately, queenlike woman indeed; and
+ it somehow strikes me she&rsquo;s a truer and better woman, too, than you
+ have ever yet in your shallow superficiality imagined. Not like little
+ Miss Butterfly! Oh, no, not like little Miss Butterfly! But still, there
+ are keys and keys in music; and if every tune was pitched to the self-same
+ key, even the tenderest, what a monotonous, dreary world it would be to
+ live and sing in after all. Perhaps a man might make himself a little
+ shrine not wholly without sweet savour of pure incense for beautiful,
+ stately, queenlike Hilda Tregellis too! But no; I mustn&rsquo;t think of
+ it. I have no other duty or prospect in life possible as yet while dear
+ little Miss Butterfly still remains practically unprovided for!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0034" id="link2HCH0034"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXIV. &mdash; HOPE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ From Edie Le Breton&rsquo;s lodgings, Hilda Tregellis drove straight,
+ without stopping all the way, to Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s house at Chelsea;
+ for Arthur had long since risen to the dignity of an enfranchised
+ householder, and had bought himself a pretty cottage near the Embankment,
+ with room enough for himself and the Progenitor, and even for any possible
+ future domestic contingency in the way of wife and children. It was a very
+ unconventional thing for her to do, no doubt; but Lady Hilda was certainly
+ not the person to be deterred from doing anything she contemplated on the
+ bare ground of its extreme unconventionally; and so far was she from
+ objecting personally to her visit on this score, that before she rang the
+ Berkeleys&rsquo; bell she looked quietly at her little bijou watch, and
+ said with a bland smile to the suspicious Mr. Jenkins, &lsquo;Let me see,
+ Jenkins; it&rsquo;s one o&rsquo;clock. I shall lunch with my friends here
+ this morning; so you may take the carriage home now for my lady, and I
+ shall cab it back, or come round by Metropolitan.&rsquo; Jenkins was too
+ much accustomed to Lady Hilda&rsquo;s unaccountable vagaries to express
+ any surprise at her wildest resolutions, even if she had proposed to go
+ home on a costermonger&rsquo;s barrow; so he only touched his hat
+ respectfully, in his marionette fashion, and drove away at once without
+ further colloquy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Is Mr. Berkeley at home?&rsquo; Hilda asked of the pretty servant girl
+ who opened the door to her, mentally taking note at the same time that
+ Arthur&rsquo;s aesthetic tendencies evidently extended even to his human
+ surroundings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Which Mr. Berkeley?&rsquo; the girl asked in reply. &lsquo;Mr. Berkeley
+ senerer, &lsquo;e&rsquo;s at &lsquo;ome, but Mr. Arthur, &lsquo;e&rsquo;s
+ gone up this mornin&rsquo; to &lsquo;Olloway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda seized with avidity upon this unexpected and almost providential
+ opening. &lsquo;No, is he?&rsquo; she said, delighted. &lsquo;Then I&rsquo;ll
+ go in and see Mr. Berkeley senior. No card, thank you: no name: tell him
+ merely a lady would like to see him. I dare say Mr. Arthur&rsquo;ll be
+ back before long from Holloway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl hesitated a moment as if in doubt, and surveyed Lady Hilda from
+ head to foot. Hilda, whose eyes were still red from crying, couldn&rsquo;t
+ help laughing outright at the obvious cause of the girl&rsquo;s
+ hesitation. &lsquo;Do as I tell you,&rsquo; she said in her imperious way.
+ &lsquo;Who on earth do you take me for, my good girl? That&rsquo;s my
+ card, see: but you needn&rsquo;t give it to Mr. Berkeley senior. Now go
+ and tell him at once that a lady is waiting to see him.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The innate respect of the English working classes for the kind of nobility
+ that is supposed to be represented by the British peerage made the girl
+ drop an instinctive curtsey as she looked at the card, and answer in a
+ voice of hushed surprise, &lsquo;Yes, my lady.&rsquo; She had heard Lady
+ Hilda Tregellis spoken of more than once at her master&rsquo;s table, and
+ she knew, of course, that so great a personage as that could do no wrong.
+ So she merely ushered her visitor at once into Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s
+ beautiful little study, with its delicate grey pomegranate wall paper and
+ its exquisite unpolished oak fittings, and said simply, in an overawed
+ manner, &lsquo;A lady wishes to speak to you, sir.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old shoemaker looked up from the English translation of Ribot&rsquo;s
+ ‘Psychologie Anglaise Contemporaine,&rsquo; with whose intricacies he was
+ manfully struggling, and rose with native politeness to welcome Hilda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Good morning,&rsquo; Hilda said, extending her hand to him with one of
+ her beaming disarming smiles, and annihilating all that was most
+ obtrusively democratic in him at once by her pleasant manner. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m
+ a friend of your son&rsquo;s, Mr. Berkeley, and I&rsquo;ve come here to
+ see him about very particular private business&mdash;in short, on an
+ errand of charity. Will he be long gone, do you know?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not very,&rsquo; the Progenitor answered, in a somewhat embarrassed
+ manner, surveying her curiously. &lsquo;At least, I should think not. He&rsquo;s
+ gone to Holloway for an hour or two, but I fancy he&rsquo;ll be back for
+ two o&rsquo;clock luncheon, Miss&mdash;&mdash;ur, I don&rsquo;t think I
+ caught your name, did I?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘To Holloway,&rsquo; Hilda echoed, taking no notice of his suggested
+ query. &lsquo;Oh, then he&rsquo;s gone to see the poor dear Le Bretons, of
+ course. Why, that&rsquo;s just what I wanted to see him about. If you&rsquo;ll
+ allow me then, I&rsquo;ll just stop and have lunch with you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The dickens you will,&rsquo; the Progenitor thought to himself in
+ speechless astonishment. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s really awfully cool of you.
+ However, I dare say it&rsquo;s usual to invite oneself in the state of
+ life that that boy Artie has gone and hoisted himself into, most
+ unnaturally. A fine lady, no doubt, of their modern pattern; but in my
+ day, up in Paddington, we should have called her a brazen hussey.&mdash;Certainly,
+ if you will,&rsquo; he added aloud. &lsquo;If you&rsquo;ve come on any
+ errand that will do any good to the Le Bretons, I&rsquo;m sure my son&rsquo;ll
+ be delighted to see you. He&rsquo;s greatly grieved at their unhappy
+ condition.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m afraid I&rsquo;ve nothing much to suggest of any very practical
+ sort,&rsquo; Hilda answered, with a slight sigh; &lsquo;but at least I
+ should like to talk with him about the matter. Something must be done for
+ these two poor young people, you know, Mr. Berkeley. Something must really
+ be done to help them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you&rsquo;re interested in them, Miss&mdash;ur&mdash;ur&mdash;ah,
+ yes&mdash;are you?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Look at my eyes,&rsquo; Hilda said plumply. &lsquo;Are they very red, Mr.
+ Berkeley?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well....ur...yes, if I may venture to say so to a lady,&rsquo; the old
+ shoemaker answered hesitatingly, with unwonted gallantry. &lsquo;I should
+ say they were a trifle, ur, just a trifle roseate, you know.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Quite so,&rsquo; Hilda went on, seriously. &lsquo;That&rsquo;s it. They&rsquo;re
+ red with crying. I&rsquo;ve been crying like a baby all the morning with
+ that poor, dear, sweet little angel of a Mrs. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then you&rsquo;re a great friend of hers, I suppose,&rsquo; the
+ Progenitor suggested mildly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Never set eyes on her in my life before this morning, on the contrary,&rsquo;
+ Hilda continued in her garrulous fashion. &lsquo;But, oh, Mr. Berkeley, if
+ you&rsquo;d only seen that dear little woman, crying as if her heart would
+ break, and telling me that dear Ernest was dying, actually dying; why&mdash;there&mdash;excuse
+ me&mdash;I can&rsquo;t help it, you know; we women are always crying about
+ something or other, aren&rsquo;t we?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man laid his hand on hers quietly. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t mind ME, my
+ dear,&rsquo; he said with genuine tenderness. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t mind me a
+ bit; I&rsquo;m only an old shoemaker, as I dare say you&rsquo;ve heard
+ before now; but I know you&rsquo;ll be the better for crying&mdash;women
+ always are&mdash;and tears shed on somebody else&rsquo;s account are never
+ thrown away, my dear, are they?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda took his hand between hers, and wiping her eyes once more whispered
+ softly, &lsquo;No, Mr. Berkeley, no; perhaps they&rsquo;re not; but oh,
+ they&rsquo;re so useless; so very, very, very useless. Do you know, I
+ never felt my own powerlessness and helplessness in all my life so much as
+ I did at that dear, patient little Mrs. Le Breton&rsquo;s this very
+ morning. There I sat, knowing she was in dire need of money for her poor
+ husband, and wanting sufficient food and drink, perhaps, for herself, and
+ him, and the dear darling baby; and in my hand in my muff I had my purse
+ there with five tenners&mdash;Bank of England ten-pound notes, you know&mdash;fifty
+ pounds altogether, rolled up inside it; and I would have given anything if
+ only I could have pulled them out and made them a present to her then and
+ there; and I couldn&rsquo;t, you see: and, oh, Mr. Berkeley, isn&rsquo;t
+ it terrible to look at them? And then, before I left, poor Mr. Le Breton
+ himself came in, and I was quite shocked to see him. I used to know him a
+ few years ago, and even then he wasn&rsquo;t what you&rsquo;d call robust
+ by any means; but now, oh, dear me, he does look so awfully ill and
+ haggard and miserable that it quite made me break down again, and I cried
+ about him before his very face; and the moment I got away, I said to the
+ coachman, &ldquo;Jenkins, drive straight off to the Embankment at Chelsea;&rdquo;
+ and here I am, you see, waiting to talk with your clever son about it;
+ for, really, Mr. Berkeley, the poor Le Bretons haven&rsquo;t got a single
+ friend anywhere like your son Arthur.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then Lady Hilda went on to praise Arthur&rsquo;s music to the
+ Progenitor, and to speak of how much admired he was everywhere, and to
+ hint that so much genius and musical power must of course be largely
+ hereditary. Whereat the old man, not unmoved by her gentle insinuating
+ flattery, at last confessed to his own lifelong musical tastes, and even
+ casually acknowledged that the motive for one or two of the minor songs in
+ the famous operas was not entirely of Arthur&rsquo;s own unaided
+ invention. And so, from one subject to another, they passed on so quickly,
+ and hit it off with one another so exactly (for Hilda had a wonderful
+ knack of leading up to everybody&rsquo;s strong points), that long before
+ lunch was ready, the Progenitor had been quite won over by the
+ fascinations of the brazen hussey, and was prepared to admit that she was
+ really a very nice, kind, tender-hearted, intelligent, appreciative, and
+ discriminating young lady. True, she had not read Mill or Fawcett, and was
+ ignorant of the very name of Herbert Spencer; but she had a vast
+ admiration for his dear boy Artie, and she saw that he himself knew a
+ thing or two in his own modest way, though he was only what the grand
+ world she moved in would doubtless call an old superannuated journeyman
+ shoemaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Ah, yes, a shoemaker! so I&rsquo;ve heard somewhere, I fancy,&rsquo; Lady
+ Hilda remarked brightly, when for the third time in the course of their
+ conversation he informed her with great dignity of the interesting fact;
+ &lsquo;how very delightful and charming that is, really, now isn&rsquo;t
+ it? So original, you know, to make shoes instead of going into some
+ useless profession, especially when you&rsquo;re such a great reader and
+ student and thinker as you are&mdash;for I see you&rsquo;re a philosopher
+ and a psychologist already, Mr. Berkeley&rsquo;&mdash;Hilda considered it
+ rather a bold effort on her part to pronounce the word &lsquo;psychologist&rsquo;
+ at the very first trial without stumbling; but though she was a little
+ doubtful about the exact pronunciation of that fearful vocable, she felt
+ quite at her ease about the fact at least, because she carefully noticed
+ him lay down Ribot on the table beside him, name upward; &lsquo;one can&rsquo;t
+ help finding that much out on a very short acquaintance, can one? Though,
+ indeed, now I come to think of it, I believe I&rsquo;ve heard often that
+ men of your calling generally ARE very fond of reading, and are very
+ philosophical, and clever, and political, and all that sort of thing; and
+ they say that&rsquo;s the reason, of course, why Northampton&rsquo;s such
+ an exceptionally intelligent constituency, and always returns such
+ thoroughgoing able logical Radicals.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man&rsquo;s eyes beamed, as she spoke, with inexpressible pride
+ and pleasure. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m very glad indeed to hear you say so,&rsquo;
+ he answered promptly with a complacent self-satisfied smile, &lsquo;and I
+ believe you&rsquo;re right too, Miss, ur&mdash;ur&mdash;ur&mdash;quite so.
+ The practice of shoemaking undoubtedly tends to develop a very high and
+ exceptional level of general intelligence and logical power.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I&rsquo;m sure of it,&rsquo; Hilda answered demurely, in a tone of the
+ deepest and sincerest conviction; &lsquo;and when I heard somebody say
+ somewhere, that your son was...&mdash;well, WAS your son, I said to myself
+ at once, &ldquo;Ah, well, there now, that quite accounts, of course, for
+ young Mr. Berkeley&rsquo;s very extraordinary and unusual abilities!&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘She&rsquo;s really a most sensible, well-informed young woman, whoever
+ she is,&rsquo; the Progenitor thought to himself silently; &lsquo;and it&rsquo;s
+ certainly a pity that dear Artie couldn&rsquo;t take a fancy to some nice,
+ appreciative, kind-hearted, practical girl like that now, instead of
+ wearing away all the best days of his life in useless regret for that poor
+ slender, unsubstantial nonentity of a watery little Mrs. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By two o&rsquo;clock lunch was ready, and just as it had been announced,
+ Arthur Berkeley ran up the front steps, and let himself in with his
+ proprietory latch-key. Turning straight into the dining-room, he was just
+ in time to see his own father walking into lunch arm in arm with Lady
+ Hilda Tregellis. As Mrs. Hallis had graphically expressed it, he felt as
+ if you might have knocked him down with a feather! Was she absolutely
+ ubiquitous, then, this pervasive Lady Hilda? and was he destined wherever
+ he went to come upon her suddenly in the most unexpected and
+ incomprehensible situations?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Will you sit down here, my dear,&rsquo; the Progenitor was saying to
+ Hilda at the exact moment he entered, &lsquo;or would you prefer your back
+ to the fire?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur Berkeley opened his eyes wide with unspeakable amazement. ‘What,
+ YOU here,&rsquo; he exclaimed, coming forward suddenly to shake hands with
+ Hilda; &lsquo;why, I saw you only a couple of hours since at the Le
+ Bretons&rsquo; at Holloway.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘You did!&rsquo; Hilda cried with almost equal astonishment, &lsquo;Why,
+ how was that? I never saw YOU.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur sighed quietly. &lsquo;No,&rsquo; he answered, with a curious look
+ at the Progenitor; &lsquo;you were engaged when I opened the door, and I
+ didn&rsquo;t like to disturb you. You were&mdash;you were speaking with
+ poor little Mrs. Le Breton. But I&rsquo;m so much obliged to you for your
+ kindness to them, Lady Hilda; so very much obliged to you for your great
+ kindness to them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the Progenitor&rsquo;s turn now to start in surprise. &lsquo;What!
+ Lady Hilda!&rsquo; he cried with a bewildered look. &lsquo;Lady Hilda! Did
+ I hear you say &ldquo;Lady Hilda&rdquo;? Is this Lady Hilda Tregellis,
+ then, that I&rsquo;ve heard you talk about so often, Artie?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, of course, Father. You didn&rsquo;t know who it was, then, didn&rsquo;t
+ you? Lady Hilda, I&rsquo;m afraid you&rsquo;ve been stealing a march upon
+ the poor unsuspecting hostile Progenitor.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not quite that, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; Hilda replied, laughing; &lsquo;only
+ after the very truculent character I had heard of your father as a regular
+ red-hot militant Radical, I thought I&rsquo;d better not send in my name
+ to him at once for fear it might prejudice him against me before first
+ acquaintance.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Progenitor looked at her steadfastly from head to foot, standing
+ before him there in her queenly beauty, as if she were some strange wild
+ beast that he had been requested to inspect and report upon for a
+ scientific purpose. &lsquo;Lady Hilda Tregellis!&rsquo; he said slowly and
+ deliberately; &lsquo;Lady Hilda Tregellis! So this is Lady Hilda
+ Tregellis, is it? Well, all I can say is this, then, that as far as I can
+ judge her, Lady Hilda Tregellis is a very sensible, modest, intelligent,
+ well-conducted young woman, which is more than I could possibly have
+ expected from a person of her unfortunate and distressing hereditary
+ antecedents. But you know, my dear, it was a very mean trick of you to go
+ and take an old man&rsquo;s heart by guile and stratagem in that way!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda laughed a little uneasily. The Progenitor&rsquo;s manner was perhaps
+ a trifle too open and unconventional even for her. &lsquo;It wasn&rsquo;t
+ for that I came, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; she said again with one of her sunny
+ smiles, which brought the Progenitor metaphorically to her feet again,
+ &lsquo;but to talk over this matter of the poor Le Bretons with your son.
+ Oh, Mr. Arthur, something must really be done to help them. I know you say
+ there&rsquo;s nothing to be done; but there must be; we must find it out;
+ we must invent it; we must compel it. When I sat there this morning with
+ that dear little woman and saw her breaking her full heart over her
+ husband&rsquo;s trouble, I said to myself, somehow, Hilda Tregellis, if
+ you can&rsquo;t find a way out of this, you&rsquo;re not worth your salt
+ in this world, and you&rsquo;d better make haste and take a rapid
+ through-ticket at once to the next, if there is one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Which is more than doubtful, really,&rsquo; the Progenitor muttered
+ softly half under his breath; &lsquo;which, as Strauss has conclusively
+ shown, is certainly a good deal more than doubtful.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur took no notice of the interruption, but merely answered
+ imploringly, with a despairing gesture of his hands, &lsquo;What are we to
+ do, Lady Hilda? What can we possibly do?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, sit down and have some lunch first,&rsquo; Hilda rejoined with
+ practical common-sense, &lsquo;and then talk it over rationally
+ afterwards, instead of wringing our hands helplessly like a pair of
+ Frenchmen in a street difficulty.&rsquo; (Hilda had a fine old crusted
+ English contempt, by the way, for those vastly inferior and foolish
+ creatures known as foreigners.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus adjured, Berkeley sat down promptly, and they proceeded to take
+ counsel together in this hard matter over the cutlets and claret provided
+ before them. &lsquo;Ernest and Mrs. Le Breton told me all about your
+ visit,&rsquo; Arthur went on, soon after; &lsquo;and they&rsquo;re so much
+ obliged to you for having taken the trouble to look them up in their sore
+ distress. Do you know, Lady Hilda, I think you&rsquo;ve quite made a
+ conquest of our dear little friend, Mrs. Le Breton.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rsquo; Hilda responded with a smile,
+ &lsquo;but I&rsquo;m sure, at any rate, that the sweet little woman quite
+ made a conquest of me, Mr. Berkeley. In fact, I can&rsquo;t say what you
+ think, but for my part I&rsquo;m determined an effort must be made one way
+ or another to save them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s no use,&rsquo; Arthur answered, shaking his head sadly;
+ &lsquo;it can&rsquo;t be done. There&rsquo;s nothing for it but to let
+ them float down helplessly with the tide, wherever it may bear them.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Stuff and nonsense,&rsquo; Hilda replied energetically. &lsquo;All
+ rubbish, utter rubbish, and if I were a man as you are, Mr. Berkeley, I
+ should be ashamed to take such a desponding view of the situation. If we
+ say it&rsquo;s got to be done, it will be done, and that&rsquo;s an end of
+ it. Work must and can be found for him somehow or somewhere.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But the man&rsquo;s dying,&rsquo; Arthur interrupted with a vehement
+ gesture. ‘There&rsquo;s no more work left in him. The only thing that&rsquo;s
+ any use is to send him off to Madeira, or Egypt, or Catania, or somewhere
+ of that sort, and let him die quietly among the palms and cactuses and
+ aloes. That&rsquo;s Sir Antony Wraxall&rsquo;s opinion, and surely nobody
+ in London can know half as well as he does about the matter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Sir Antony&rsquo;s a fool,&rsquo; Hilda responded with refreshing
+ bluntness. ‘He knows nothing on earth at all about it. He&rsquo;s
+ accustomed to prescribing for a lot of us idle good-for-nothing rich
+ people&rsquo;&mdash;(&lsquo;Very true,&rsquo; the Progenitor assented
+ parenthetically;) &lsquo;and he&rsquo;s got into a fixed habit of
+ prescribing a Nile voyage, just as he&rsquo;s got into a fixed habit of
+ prescribing old wine, and carriage exercise, and ten thousand a year to
+ all his patients. What Mr. Le Breton really wants is not Egypt, or old
+ wine, or Sir Antony, or anything of the sort, but relief from this
+ pressing load of anxiety and responsibility. Put him in my hands for six
+ months, and I&rsquo;ll back myself at a hundred to six against Sir Antony
+ to cure him for a monkey.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘For a what!&rsquo; the Progenitor asked with a puzzled expression of
+ countenance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Back myself for a monkey, you know,&rsquo; Hilda answered, without
+ perceiving the cause of the old man&rsquo;s innocent confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Progenitor was evidently none the wiser still for Hilda&rsquo;s
+ answer, though he forbore to pursue the subject any farther, lest he
+ should betray his obvious ignorance of aristocratic manners and dialect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Arthur looked up at Lady Hilda with something like the gleam of a
+ new-born hope on his distressed features. &lsquo;Lady Hilda,&rsquo; he
+ said almost cheerfully, &lsquo;you really speak as if you had some
+ practicable plan actually in prospect. It seems to me, if anybody can pull
+ them through, you can, because you&rsquo;ve got such a grand reserve of
+ faith and energy. What is it, now, you think of doing?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well,&rsquo; Hilda answered, taken a little aback at this practical
+ question, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve hardly got my plan matured yet; but I&rsquo;ve
+ got a plan; and I thought it all out as far as it went as I came along
+ here just now in the carriage. The great thing is, we must inspire Mr. Le
+ Breton with a new confidence; we must begin by showing him we believe in
+ him, and letting him see that he may still manage in some way or other to
+ retrieve himself. He has lost all hope: we must begin with him over again.
+ I&rsquo;ve got an idea, but it&rsquo;ll take money. Now, I can give up
+ half my allowance for the next year&mdash;the Le Bretons need never know
+ anything about it&mdash;that&rsquo;ll be something: you&rsquo;re a rich
+ man now, I believe, Mr. Berkeley; will you make up as much as I do, if my
+ plan seems a feasible one to you for retrieving the position?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Progenitor answered quickly for him: &lsquo;Miss Tregellis,&rsquo; he
+ said, with a little tremor in his voice, &lsquo;&mdash;you&rsquo;ll excuse
+ me, my dear, but it&rsquo;s against my principles to call anybody my lady:&mdash;he
+ will, I know he will; and if he wouldn&rsquo;t, why, my dear, I&rsquo;d go
+ back to my cobbling and earn it myself rather than that you or your
+ friends should go without it for a single minute.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur said nothing, but he bowed his head silently. What a lot of good
+ there was really in that splendid woman, and what a commanding, energetic,
+ masterful way she had about her! To a feckless, undecided, faltering man
+ like Arthur Berkeley there was something wonderfully attractive and
+ magnificent, after all, in such an imperious resolute woman as Lady Hilda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Then this is my plan,&rsquo; Hilda went on hastily. &lsquo;We must do
+ something that&rsquo;ll take Mr. Le Breton out of himself for a short time
+ entirely&mdash;that&rsquo;ll give him occupation of a kind he thinks
+ right, and at the same time put money in his pocket. Now, he&rsquo;s
+ always talking about this socialistic business of his; but why doesn&rsquo;t
+ he tell us what he has actually seen about the life and habits of the
+ really poor? Mrs. Le Breton tells me he knows the East End well: why doesn&rsquo;t
+ he sit down and give us a good rattling, rousing, frightening description
+ of all that&rsquo;s in it? Of course, I don&rsquo;t care twopence about
+ the poor myself&mdash;not in the lump, I mean&mdash;I beg your pardon, Mr.
+ Berkeley,&rsquo;&mdash;for the Progenitor gave a start of surprise and
+ astonishment&mdash;&lsquo;you know we women are nothing if not concrete;
+ we never care for anything in the abstract, Mr. Le Breton used to tell me;
+ we want the particular case brought home to our sympathies before we can
+ interest ourselves about it. After all, even YOU who are men don&rsquo;t
+ feel very much for all the miserable wretched people there are in China,
+ you know; they&rsquo;re too far away for even you to bother your heads
+ about. But I DO care about the Le Bretons, and it strikes me we might help
+ them a little in this way. I know a lot of artists, Mr. Berkeley; and I
+ know one who I think would just do for the very work I want to set him.
+ (He&rsquo;s poor, too, by the way, and I don&rsquo;t mind giving him a
+ lift at the same time and killing two birds with one stone.) Very well,
+ then; I go to him, and say, &ldquo;Mr. Verney,&rdquo; I say,&mdash;there
+ now, I didn&rsquo;t mean to tell you his name, but no matter; &ldquo;Mr.
+ Verney,&rdquo; I shall say, &ldquo;a friend of mine in the writing line is
+ going to pay some visits to the very poor quarters in the East End, and
+ write about it, which will make a great noise in the world as sure as
+ midday.&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘But how do you know it will?&rsquo; asked the Progenitor, simply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda turned round upon him with an unfeigned look of startled
+ astonishment. &lsquo;How do I know it will?&rsquo; she said confidently.
+ &lsquo;Why, because I mean it to, Mr. Berkeley. Because I say it shall.
+ Because I choose to make it. Two Cabinet ministers shall quote it in the
+ House, and a duke shall write letters to the &ldquo;Times&rdquo;
+ denouncing it as an intensely wicked and revolutionary publication. If I
+ choose to float it, I WILL float it.&mdash;Well, &ldquo;Mr. Verney,&rdquo;
+ I say for example, &ldquo;will you undertake to accompany him and make
+ sketches? It&rsquo;ll be unpleasant work, I know, because I&rsquo;ve been
+ there myself to see, and the places don&rsquo;t smell nice at all&mdash;worse
+ than Genoa or the old town at Nice even, I can tell you: but it&rsquo;ll
+ make you a name; and in any case the publisher who&rsquo;s getting it up&rsquo;ll
+ pay you well for it.&rdquo; Of course, Mr. Verney says &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ Then we go on to Mr. Le Breton and say, &ldquo;A young artist of my
+ acquaintance is making a pilgrimage into the East End to see for himself
+ how the people live, and to make pictures of them to stir up the sluggish
+ consciences of the lazy aristocrats&rdquo;&mdash;that&rsquo;s me and my
+ people, of course: that&rsquo;ll be the way to work it. Play upon Mr. Le
+ Breton&rsquo;s tenderest feelings. Make him feel he&rsquo;s fighting for
+ the Cause; and he&rsquo;ll be ready to throw himself, heart and soul, into
+ the spirit of the project. I don&rsquo;t care twopence about the Cause
+ myself, of course, so that&rsquo;s flat, and I don&rsquo;t pretend to,
+ either, Mr. Berkeley; but I care a great deal for the misery of that poor,
+ dear, pale little woman, sitting there with me this morning and regularly
+ sobbing her heart out; and if I can do anything to help her, why, I shall
+ be only too delighted.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Le Breton&rsquo;s a well-meaning young fellow, certainly,&rsquo; the
+ Progenitor murmured gently in a voice of graceful concession; &lsquo;and I
+ believe his heart&rsquo;s really in the Cause, as you call it; but you
+ know, my dear, he&rsquo;s very far from being sound in his economical
+ views as to the relations of capital and labour. Far from sound, as John
+ Stuart Mill would have judged the question, I can solemnly assure you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Very well,&rsquo; Hilda went on, almost without noticing the
+ interruption. ‘We shall say to him, or rather we shall get our publisher
+ to say to him, that as he&rsquo;s interested in the matter, and knows the
+ East End well, he has been selected&mdash;shall we put it on somebody&rsquo;s
+ recommendation?&mdash;to accompany the artist, and to supply the reading
+ matter, the letter-press I think you call it; in fact, to write up to our
+ illustrator&rsquo;s pictures; and that he is to be decently paid for his
+ trouble. He must do something graphic, something stirring, something to
+ wake up lazy people in the West End to a passing sense of what he calls
+ their responsibilities. That&rsquo;ll seem like real work to Mr. Le
+ Breton. It&rsquo;ll put new heart into him; he&rsquo;ll take up the matter
+ vigorously; he&rsquo;ll do it well; he&rsquo;ll write a splendid book; and
+ I shall guarantee its making a stir in the world this very dull season.
+ What&rsquo;s the use of knowing half the odiously commonplace bores and
+ prigs in all London if you can&rsquo;t float a single little heterodox
+ pamphlet for a particular purpose? What do you think of it, Mr. Berkeley?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur sighed again. &lsquo;It seems to me, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; he said,
+ regretfully, ‘a very slender straw indeed to hang Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ life on: but any straw is better than nothing to a drowning man. And you
+ have so much faith yourself, and mean to fling yourself into it so
+ earnestly, that I shouldn&rsquo;t be wholly surprised if you were somehow
+ to pull it through. If you do, Lady Hilda&mdash;if you manage to save
+ these two poor young people from the verge of starvation&mdash;you&rsquo;ll
+ have done a very great good work in your day, and you&rsquo;ll have made
+ me personally eternally your debtor.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it mere fancy, the Progenitor wondered, or did Hilda cast her eyes
+ down a little and half blush as she answered in a lower and more tremulous
+ tone than usual, &lsquo;I hope I shall, Mr. Berkeley; for their sakes, I
+ hope I shall.&rsquo; The Progenitor didn&rsquo;t feel quite certain about
+ it, but somehow, more than once that evening, as he sat reading Spencer&rsquo;s
+ &lsquo;Data of Ethics&rsquo; in his easy-chair, a curious vision of Lady
+ Hilda as a future daughter-in-law floated vaguely with singular
+ persistence before the old shoemaker&rsquo;s bewildered eyes. &lsquo;It&rsquo;d
+ be a shocking falling away on Artie&rsquo;s part from his father&rsquo;s
+ principles,&rsquo; he muttered inarticulately to himself several times
+ over; &lsquo;and yet, on the other hand, I can&rsquo;t deny that this bit
+ of a Tregellis girl is really a very tidy, good-looking, respectable,
+ well-meaning, intelligent, and appreciative sort of a young woman, who&rsquo;d,
+ maybe, make Artie as good a wife as anybody else he&rsquo;d be likely to
+ pitch on.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0035" id="link2HCH0035"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXV. &mdash; THE TIDE TURNS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Ernest Le Breton got a letter from the business house of a well-known
+ publishing firm, asking him whether he would consent to supply appropriate
+ letterpress for an illustrated work on the poor of London, then in course
+ of preparation, his delight and relief were positively unbounded. That
+ anyone should come and ask him for work, instead of his asking them, was
+ in itself a singular matter for surprise and congratulation; that the
+ request should be based on the avowed ground of his known political and
+ social opinions was almost incredible. Ernest felt that it was a triumph,
+ not only for him, but for his dearly-loved principles and beliefs as well.
+ For the first time in his life, he was going to undertake a piece of work
+ which he not only thought not wrong, but even considered hopeful and
+ praise-worthy. Arthur Berkeley, who called round as if by accident the
+ same morning, saw with delight that Lady Hilda&rsquo;s prognostication
+ seemed likely to be fulfilled, and that if only Ernest could be given some
+ congenial occupation there was still a chance, after all, for his
+ permanent recovery; for it was clear enough that as there was hope, there
+ must be a little life yet left in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Lady Hilda who, as she herself expressively phrased it, had squared
+ the publishers. She had called upon the head of the well-known house in
+ person, and had told him fully and frankly exactly what was the nature of
+ the interest she took in the poor of London. At first the publisher was
+ scandalised and obdurate: the thing was not regular, he said&mdash;not in
+ the ordinary way of business; his firm couldn&rsquo;t go writing letters
+ of that sort to unknown young authors and artists. If she wanted the work
+ done, she must let them give her own name as the promoter of the
+ undertaking. But Hilda persevered, as she always did; she smiled, pleaded,
+ cajoled, threatened, and made desperate love to the publisher to gain his
+ acquiescence in her benevolent scheme. After all, even publishers are only
+ human (though authors have been frequently known to deny the fact); and
+ human nature, especially in England, is apt to be very little proof
+ against the entreaties of a pretty girl who happens also to be an earl&rsquo;s
+ daughter. So in the end, when Lady Hilda said most bewitchingly, &lsquo;I
+ put it upon the grounds of a personal favour, Mr. Percival,&rsquo; the
+ obdurate publisher gave way at last, and consented to do her bidding
+ gladly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For six weeks Ernest went daily with Ronald and the young artist into the
+ familiar slums of Bethnal Green, and Bermondsey, and Lambeth, whose ins
+ and outs he was beginning to know with painful accuracy; and every night
+ he came back, and wrote down with a glowing pen all that he had seen and
+ heard of distressing and terrible during his day&rsquo;s peregrination. It
+ was an awful task from one point of view, for the scenes he had to visit
+ and describe were often heart-rending; and Arthur feared more than once
+ that the air of so many loathsome and noxious dens might still further
+ accelerate the progress of Ernest&rsquo;s disease; but Lady Hilda said
+ emphatically, No; and somehow Arthur was beginning now to conceive an
+ immense respect for the practical value of Lady Hilda&rsquo;s vehement
+ opinions. As a matter of fact, indeed, Ernest did not visibly suffer at
+ all either from the unwonted hard work or from the strain upon mind and
+ body to which he had been so little accustomed. Distressing as it all was,
+ it was change, it was variety, it was occupation, it was relief from that
+ terrible killing round of perpetual personal responsibility. Above all,
+ Ernest really believed that here at last was an opportunity of doing some
+ practical good in his generation, and he threw himself into it with all
+ the passionate ardour of a naturally eager and vivid nature. The
+ enthusiasm of humanity was upon him, and it kept him going at
+ high-pressure rate, with no apparent loss of strength and vigour
+ throughout the whole ordeal. To Arthur Berkeley&rsquo;s intense delight,
+ he was even visibly fatter to the naked eye at the end of his six weeks&rsquo;
+ exploration of the most dreary and desolate slums in all London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The book was written at white heat, as the best of such books always are,
+ and it was engraved and printed at the very shortest possible notice.
+ Terrible and ghastly it certainly was at last&mdash;instinct with all the
+ grim local colouring of those narrow, squalid, fever-stricken dens, where
+ misfortune and crime huddle together indiscriminately in dirt and misery&mdash;a
+ book to make one&rsquo;s blood run cold with awe and disgust, and to stir
+ up even the callous apathy of the great rich capitalist West End to a
+ passing moment&rsquo;s ineffective remorse; but very clever and very
+ graphic after its own sort beyond the shadow of a question, for all its
+ horror. When Arthur Berkeley turned over the first proof-sheets of &lsquo;London&rsquo;s
+ Shame,&rsquo; with its simple yet thrilling recital of true tales taken
+ down from the very lips of outcast children or stranded women, with its
+ awful woodcuts and still more awful descriptions&mdash;word-pictures
+ reeking with the vice and filth and degradation of the most pestilent,
+ overcrowded, undrained tenements&mdash;he felt instinctively that Ernest
+ Le Breton&rsquo;s book would not need the artificial aid of Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ influential friends in order to make it successful and even famous. The
+ Cabinet ministers might be as silent as they chose, the indignant duke
+ might confine his denunciations to the attentive and sympathetic ear of
+ his friend Lord Connemara; but nothing on earth could prevent Ernest Le
+ Breton&rsquo;s fiery and scathing diatribe from immediately enthralling
+ the public attention. Lady Hilda had hit upon the exact subject which best
+ suited his peculiar character and temperament, and he had done himself
+ full justice in it. Not that Ernest had ever thought of himself, or even
+ of his style, or the effect he was producing by his narrative; it was just
+ the very non-self-consciousness of the thing that gave it its power. He
+ wrote down the simple thoughts that came up into his own eager mind at the
+ sight of so much inequality and injustice; and the motto that Arthur
+ prefixed upon the title-page, &lsquo;Facit indignatio versum,&rsquo; aptly
+ described the key-note of that fierce and angry final denunciation.
+ &lsquo;Yes, Lady Hilda had certainly hit the right nail on the head,&rsquo;
+ Arthur Berkeley said to himself more than once: ‘A wonderful woman, truly,
+ that beautiful, stately, uncompromising, brilliant, and still really
+ tender Hilda Tregellis.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda, on her part, worked hard and well for the success of Ernest&rsquo;s
+ book as soon as it appeared. Nay, she even condescended (not being what
+ Ernest himself would have described as an ethical unit) to practise a
+ little gentle hypocrisy in suiting her recommendations of &lsquo;London&rsquo;s
+ Shame&rsquo; to the tastes and feelings of her various acquaintances. To
+ her Radical Cabinet minister friend, she openly praised its outspoken zeal
+ for the cause of the people, and its value as a wonderful storehouse of
+ useful facts at first hand for political purposes in the increasingly
+ important outlying Metropolitan boroughs. &lsquo;Just think, Sir Edmund,&rsquo;
+ she said, persuasively, &lsquo;how you could crush any Conservative
+ candidate for Hackney or the Tower Hamlets out of that awful chapter on
+ the East End match-makers;&rsquo; while with the Duke, to whom she
+ presented a marked copy as a sample of what our revolutionary thinkers
+ were really coming to, she insisted rather upon its wicked interference
+ with the natural rights of landlords, and its abominable insinuation (so
+ subversive of all truly English ideas as to liberty and property) that
+ they were bound not to poison their tenants by total neglect of sanitary
+ precautions. &lsquo;If I were you, now,&rsquo; she said to the Duke in the
+ most seemingly simple-minded manner possible, &lsquo;I&rsquo;d just quote
+ those passages I&rsquo;ve marked in pencil in the House to-night on the
+ Small Urban Holdings Bill, and point out how the wave of Continental
+ Socialism is at last invading England with its devastating flood.&rsquo;
+ And the Duke, who was a complacent, thick-headed, obstinate old gentleman,
+ congenitally incapable of looking at any question from any other point of
+ view whatsoever except that of his own order, fell headlong passively into
+ Lady Hilda&rsquo;s cruel little trap, and murmured to himself as he rolled
+ down luxuriously to the august society of his peers that evening, &lsquo;Tremendous
+ clever girl, Hilda Tregellis, really. &ldquo;Wave of Continental Socialism
+ at last invading England with its what-you-may-call-it flood,&rdquo; she
+ said, if I remember rightly. Capital sentence to end off one&rsquo;s
+ speech with, I declare. Devizes&rsquo;ll positively wonder where I got it
+ from. I&rsquo;d no idea before that girl took such an intelligent interest
+ in political questions. So they want their cottages whitewashed, do they?
+ What&rsquo;ll they ask for next, I wonder? Do they think we&rsquo;re to be
+ content at last with one and a-half per cent, upon the fee-simple value of
+ our estates, I should like to know? Why, some of the places this
+ writer-fellow talks about are on my own property in The Rookery&mdash;&ldquo;one
+ of the most noisome court-yards in all London,&rdquo; he actually calls
+ it. Whitewash their cottages, indeed! The lazy improvident creatures! They&rsquo;ll
+ be asking us to put down encaustic tiles upon the floors next, and to
+ paper their walls with Japanese leather or fashionable dados. Really, the
+ general ignorance that prevails among the working classes as to the
+ clearest principles of political economy is something absolutely
+ appalling, absolutely appalling.&rsquo; And his Grace scribbled a note in
+ his memorandum-book of Hilda&rsquo;s ready-made peroration, for fear he
+ should forget its precise wording before he began to give the House the
+ benefit of his views that night upon the political economy of Small Urban
+ Holdings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, all London was talking of the curious coincidence by which a
+ book from the pen of an unknown author, published only one day previously,
+ had been quoted and debated upon simultaneously in both Houses of
+ Parliament on a single evening. In the Commons, Sir Edmund Calverley, the
+ distinguished Radical minister, had read a dozen pages from the unknown
+ work in his declamatory theatrical fashion, and had so electrified the
+ House with its graphic and horrible details that even Mr.
+ Fitzgerald-Grenville, the well-known member for the Baroness
+ Drummond-Lloyd (whose rotten or at least decomposing borough of Cherbury
+ Minor he faithfully represented in three successive Parliaments), had
+ mumbled out a few half-inaudible apologetic sentences about this state of
+ things being truly deplorable, and about the necessity for meeting such a
+ distressing social crisis by the prompt and vigorous application of that
+ excellent specific and familiar panacea, a spirited foreign policy. In the
+ Lords, the Duke himself, by some untoward coincidence, had been moved to
+ make a few quotations, accompanied by a running fire of essentially ducal
+ criticism, from the very selfsame obscure author; and to his immense
+ surprise, even the members of his own party moved uneasily in their seats
+ during the course of his speech; while later in the evening, Lord Devizes
+ muttered to him angrily in the robing-room, &lsquo;Look here, Duke, you&rsquo;ve
+ been and put your foot in it, I assure you, about that Radical book you
+ were ill-advised enough to quote from. You ought never to have treated the
+ Small Urban Holdings Bill in the way you did; and just you mark my words,
+ the papers&rsquo;ll all be down upon you to-morrow morning, as sure as
+ daylight. You&rsquo;ve given the &ldquo;Bystander&rdquo; such an opening
+ against you as you&rsquo;ll never forget till your dying day, I can tell
+ you.&rsquo; And as the Duke drove back again after his arduous legislative
+ efforts that evening, he said to himself between the puffs at his Havana,
+ &lsquo;This comes, now, of allowing oneself to be made a fool of by a
+ handsome woman. How the dooce I could ever have gone and taken Hilda
+ Tregellis&rsquo;s advice on a political question is really more than I can
+ fathom:&mdash;and at my time of life too! And yet, all the same, there&rsquo;s
+ no denying that she&rsquo;s a devilish fine woman, by Jove, if ever there
+ was one.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, everybody asked themselves next day what this book ‘London&rsquo;s
+ Shame&rsquo; was like, and who on earth its author could be; so much so,
+ indeed, that a large edition was completely exhausted within a fortnight.
+ It was the great sensational success of that London season. Everybody read
+ it, discussed it, dissected it, corroborated it, refuted it, fought over
+ it, and wrote lengthy letters to all the daily papers about its faults and
+ its merits. Imitators added their sincerest flattery: rivals proclaimed
+ themselves the original discoverers of &lsquo;London&rsquo;s Shame&rsquo;:
+ one enterprising author even thought of going to law about it as a
+ question of copyright. Owners of noisome lanes in the East End trembled in
+ their shoes, and sent their agents to inquire into the precise degree of
+ squalor to be found in the filthy courts and alleys where they didn&rsquo;t
+ care to trust their own sensitive aristocratic noses. It even seemed as if
+ a little real good was going to come at last out of Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s
+ impassioned pleading&mdash;as if the sensation were going to fall not
+ quite flat at the end of its short run in the clubs and drawing-rooms of
+ London as a nine days&rsquo; wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Ernest Le Breton? and Edie? In the little lodgings at Holloway, they
+ sat first trembling for the result, and ready to burst with excitement
+ when Lady Hilda, up at the unwonted hour of six in the morning, tore into
+ their rooms with an early copy of the &lsquo;Times&rsquo; to show them the
+ Duke&rsquo;s speech, and Sir Edmund&rsquo;s quotations, and the editorial
+ leader in which even that most dignified and reticent of British journals
+ condescended to speak with studiously moderated praise of the immense
+ collection of facts so ably strung together by Mr. Ernest Le Breton (in
+ all the legible glory of small capitals, too,) as to the undoubtedly
+ disgraceful condition of some at least among our London alleys. How Edie
+ clung around Lady Hilda and kissed her! and how Lady Hilda kissed her back
+ and cried over her with tears of happier augury! and how they both kissed
+ and cried over unconscious wondering little Dot! And how Lady Hilda could
+ almost have fallen upon Ernest, too, as he sat gazing in blank
+ astonishment and delight at his own name in the magnificent small capitals
+ of a &lsquo;Times&rsquo; leader. Between crying and laughing, with much
+ efficient aid in both from good Mrs. Halliss, they hardly knew how they
+ ever got through the long delightful hours of that memorable epoch-making
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then there came the gradual awakening to the fact that this was really
+ fame&mdash;fame, and perhaps also competence. First in the field, of
+ course, was the editor of the &lsquo;Cosmopolitan Review,&rsquo; with a
+ polite request that Ernest would give the readers of that intensely
+ hot-and-hot and thoughtful periodical the opportunity of reading his
+ valuable views on the East End outcast question, before they had had time
+ to be worth nothing for journalistic purposes, through the natural and
+ inevitable cooling of the public interest in this new sensation. Then his
+ old friends of the &lsquo;Morning Intelligence&rsquo; once more begged
+ that he would be good enough to contribute a series of signed and headed
+ articles to their columns, on the slums and fever dens of poverty-stricken
+ London. Next, an illustrated weekly asked him to join with his artist
+ friend in getting up another pilgrimage into yet undiscovered metropolitan
+ plague-spots. And so, before the end of a month, Ernest Le Breton, for the
+ first time in his life, had really got more work to do than he could
+ easily manage, and work, too, that he felt he could throw his whole life
+ and soul into with perfect honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the first edition of &lsquo;London&rsquo;s Shame&rsquo; was
+ exhausted, there was already a handsome balance to go to Ernest and his
+ artist coadjutor, who, by the terms of the agreement, were to divide
+ between them half the profits. The other half, for appearance&rsquo; sake,
+ Lady Hilda and Arthur had been naturally compelled to reserve for
+ themselves: for of course it would not have been probable that any
+ publisher would have undertaken the work without any hope of profit in any
+ way. Arthur called upon Hilda at Lord Exmoor&rsquo;s house in Wilton Place
+ to show her the first balance-sheet and accompanying cheque. &lsquo;What
+ on earth can we do with it?&rsquo; he asked seriously. &lsquo;We can&rsquo;t
+ divide it between us: and yet we can&rsquo;t give it to the poor Le
+ Bretons. I don&rsquo;t see how we&rsquo;re to manage.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, of course,&rsquo; Hilda answered promptly. &lsquo;Put it into the
+ Consols or whatever you call it, for the benefit of little Dot.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The very thing!&rsquo; Arthur answered in a tone of obvious admiration.
+ ‘What a wonderfully practical person you really are, Lady Hilda.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to Ernest and Edie, when they got their own cheque for their quarter of
+ the proceeds, they gazed in awe and astonishment at the bigness of the
+ figure; and then they sat down and cried together like two children, with
+ their hands locked in one another&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And you&rsquo;ll get well, now, Ernest dear,&rsquo; Edie whispered
+ gently. ‘Why, you&rsquo;re ever so much fatter, darling, already. I&rsquo;m
+ sure you&rsquo;ll get well in no time, now, Ernest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Upon my word, Edie,&rsquo; Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead
+ tenderly, &lsquo;I really and truly believe I shall. It&rsquo;s my opinion
+ that Sir Antony Wraxall&rsquo;s an unmitigated ignorant humbug.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks later, when Ernest&rsquo;s remarkable article on &lsquo;How to
+ Improve the Homes of the Poor&rsquo; appeared in one of the leading
+ magazines, Mr. Herbert Le Breton of the Education Office looked up from
+ his cup of post-prandial coffee in his comfortable dining-room at South
+ Kensington, and said musingly to his young wife, &lsquo;Do you know,
+ Ethel, it seems to me that my brother Ernest&rsquo;s going to score a
+ success at last with this slum-hunting business that he&rsquo;s lately
+ invented. There&rsquo;s an awful lot about it now in all the papers and
+ reviews. Perhaps it might be as well, after all, to scrape an acquaintance
+ with him again, especially as he&rsquo;s my own brother. There&rsquo;s no
+ knowing, really, when a man of his peculiar ill-regulated mercurial
+ temperament may be going to turn out famous. Don&rsquo;t you think you&rsquo;d
+ better find out where they&rsquo;re living now&mdash;they&rsquo;ve left
+ Holloway, no doubt, since this turn of the tide&mdash;and go and call upon
+ Mrs. Ernest?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereto Mrs. Herbert Le Breton, raising her eyes for a moment from the
+ pages of her last new novel, answered languidly: &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t you
+ think, Herbert, it&rsquo;d be better to wait a little while and see how
+ things turn out with them in the long run, you know, before we commit
+ ourselves by going to call upon them? One swallow, you see, doesn&rsquo;t
+ make a summer, does it, dear, ever?&rsquo; Whence the acute and
+ intelligent reader will doubtless conclude that Mrs. Herbert Le Breton was
+ a very prudent sensible young woman, and that perhaps even Herbert himself
+ had met at last with his fitting Nemesis. For what worse purgatory could
+ his bitterest foe wish for a selfishly prudent and cold-hearted man, than
+ that he should pass his whole lifetime in congenial intercourse with a
+ selfishly prudent and cold-hearted wife, exactly after his own pattern?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVI. &mdash; OUT OF THE HAND OP THE PHILISTINES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Ernest&rsquo;s unexpected success with &lsquo;London&rsquo;s Shame&rsquo;
+ was not, as Arthur Berkeley at first feared it might be, the mere last
+ dying flicker of a weak and failing life. Arthur was quite right, indeed,
+ when he said one day to Lady Hilda that its very brilliancy and fervour
+ had the hectic glow about it, as of a man who was burning himself out too
+ fiercely and rapidly; you could read the feverish eagerness of the writer
+ in every line; but still, Lady Hilda answered with her ordinary calm
+ assurance that it was all going well, and that Ernest only needed the
+ sense of security to pull him round again; and as usual, Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ practical sagacity was not at fault. The big pamphlet&mdash;for it was
+ hardly more than that&mdash;soon proved an opening for further work, in
+ procuring which Hilda and Arthur were again partially instrumental. An
+ advanced Radical member of Parliament, famous for his declamations against
+ the capitalist faction, and his enormous holding of English railway stock,
+ was induced to come forward as the founder of a new weekly paper, ‘in the
+ interest of social reform.&rsquo; Of course the thing was got up solely
+ with an idea to utilising Ernest as editor, for, said the great
+ anti-capitalist with his usual charming frankness, &lsquo;the young fellow
+ has a positive money-value, now, if he&rsquo;s taken in hand at once
+ before the sensation&rsquo;s over, and there can be no harm in turning an
+ honest penny by exploiting him, you know, and starting a popular paper.&rsquo;
+ When Ernest was offered the post of editor to the new periodical, at a
+ salary which almost alarmed him by its plutocratic magnificence (for it
+ was positively no less than six hundred a year), he felt for a moment some
+ conscientious scruples about accepting so splendid a post. And when Lady
+ Hilda in her emphatic fashion promptly over-ruled these nascent scruples
+ by the application of the very simple solvent formula, &lsquo;Bosh!&rsquo;
+ he felt bound at least to stipulate that he should be at perfect liberty
+ to say whatever he liked in the new paper, without interference or
+ supervision from the capitalist proprietor. To which the Radical member,
+ in his business capacity, immediately responded, &lsquo;Why, certainly.
+ What we want to pay you for is just your power of startling people, which,
+ in its proper place, is a very useful marketable commodity. Every pig has
+ its value&mdash;if only you sell it in the best market.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The Social Reformer, a Weekly Advocate of the New Economy,&rsquo;
+ achieved at once an immense success among the working classes, and grew
+ before long to be one of the most popular journals of the second rank in
+ all London. The interest that Ernest had aroused by his big pamphlet was
+ carried on to his new venture, which soon managed to gain many readers by
+ its own intrinsic merits. &lsquo;Seen your brother&rsquo;s revolutionary
+ broadsheet, Le Breton?&rsquo; asked a friend at the club of Herbert not
+ many weeks later&mdash;he was the same person who had found it &lsquo;so
+ very embarrassing&rsquo; to recognise Ernest&mdash;in his shabby days when
+ walking with a Q.C.&mdash;&lsquo;It&rsquo;s a dreadful tissue of the
+ reddest French communism, I believe, but still, it&rsquo;s scored the
+ biggest success of its sort in journalism, I&rsquo;m told, since the days
+ of Kenealy&rsquo;s &ldquo;Englishman.&rdquo; Bradbury, who&rsquo;s found
+ the money to start it&mdash;deuced clever fellow in his way, Bradbury!&mdash;is
+ making an awful lot out of the speculation, they say. What do you think of
+ the paper, eh?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herbert drew himself up grimly. &lsquo;To tell you the truth,&rsquo; he
+ said in his stiffest style, &lsquo;I haven&rsquo;t yet had time to look at
+ a copy. Ernest Le Breton&rsquo;s not a man in whose affairs I feel called
+ upon to take any special interest; and I haven&rsquo;t put myself to the
+ trouble of reading his second-hand political lucubrations. Faint echoes of
+ Max Schurz, all of it, no doubt; and having read and disposed of Schurz
+ himself long ago, I don&rsquo;t feel inclined now to go in for a second
+ supplementary course of Schurz and water.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, well, that may be so,&rsquo; the friend answered, turning over the
+ pages of the peccant periodical carelessly; &lsquo;but all the same I&rsquo;m
+ afraid your brother&rsquo;s really going to do an awful lot of mischief in
+ the way of setting class against class, and stirring up the dangerous
+ orders to recognise their own power. You see, Le Breton, the real danger
+ of this sort of thing lies in the fact that your brother Ernest&rsquo;s a
+ more or less educated and cultivated person. I don&rsquo;t say he&rsquo;s
+ really got any genuine depth of culture&mdash;would you believe it, he
+ told me once he&rsquo;d never read Rabelais, and didn&rsquo;t want to?&mdash;and
+ of course a man of true culture in the grain, like you and me now, my dear
+ fellow, would never dream of going and mistaking these will-o&rsquo;-the-wisps
+ of socialism for the real guiding light of regenerated humanity&mdash;of
+ course not. But the dangerous symptom at the present day lies just in the
+ fact that while the papers written for the mob used to be written by
+ vulgar, noisy, self-made, half-educated demagogues, they&rsquo;re sent out
+ now with all the authority and specious respectability of decently
+ instructed and comparatively literary English gentlemen. Now, nobody can
+ deny that that&rsquo;s a thing very seriously to be regretted; and for my
+ part I&rsquo;m extremely sorry your brother has been ill-advised enough to
+ join the mob that&rsquo;s trying to pull down our comfortably built and
+ after all eminently respectable, even if somewhat patched up, old British
+ constitution.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘The subject&rsquo;s one,&rsquo; Herbert answered curtly, &lsquo;in which
+ I for my part cannot pretend to feel the remotest personal interest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest and Edie, howerer, in the little lodgings up at Holloway, which
+ they couldn&rsquo;t bear to desert even now in this sudden burst of
+ incredible prosperity, went their own way as self-containedly as usual,
+ wholly unconcerned by the non-arrival of Mrs. Herbert on a visit of
+ ceremony, or the failure of the &lsquo;Social Reformer&rsquo; to pierce
+ the lofty ethereal regions of abstract contemplation where Herbert himself
+ sat throned like an Epicurean god in the pure halo of cultivated
+ pococurantism. Every day, as that eminent medical authority, Hilda
+ Tregellis, had truly prophesied, Ernest&rsquo;s cheeks grew less and less
+ sunken, and a little colour returned slowly to their midst; while Edie&rsquo;s
+ face was less pale than of old, and her smile began to recover something
+ of its old-fashioned girlish joyousness. She danced about once more as of
+ old, and Arthur Berkeley, when he dropped in of a Sunday afternoon for a
+ chat with Ernest, noticed with pleasure that little Miss Butterfly was
+ beginning to flit round again almost as naturally as in the old days when
+ he first saw her light little form among the grey old pillars of Magdalen
+ Cloisters. Yet he couldn&rsquo;t help observing, too, that his feeling
+ towards her was more one of mere benevolence now, and less of tender
+ regret, than it used to be even a few short months before, in the darkest
+ days of Edie&rsquo;s troubles. Could it be, he asked himself more than
+ once, that the tall stately picture of Hilda Tregellis was overshadowing
+ in his heart the natural photograph of that unwedded Edie Oswald that he
+ once imagined was so firmly imprinted there? Ah well, ah well, it may be
+ true that a man can love really but once in his whole lifetime; and yet,
+ the second spurious imitation is positively sometimes a very good
+ facsimile of the genuine first impression, for all that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the months went slowly round, too, the time came in the end for good
+ Herr Max to be released at last from his long imprisonment. On the day
+ that he came out, there was a public banquet at the Marylebone dancing
+ saloon; and all the socialists and communards were there, and all the
+ Russian nihilists, and all the other wicked revolutionary plotters in all
+ London: and in the chair sat Ernest Le Breton, now the editor of an
+ important social paper, while at his left hand, to balance the guest of
+ the evening, sat Arthur Berkeley, the well-known dramatic author, who was
+ himself more than suspected of being the timid Nicodemus of the new faith.
+ And when Ernest announced that Herr Schurz had consented to aid him on the
+ ‘Social Reformer,&rsquo; and to add the wisdom of age to the impetuosity
+ of youth in conducting its future, the simple enthusiasm of the wicked
+ revolutionists knew no bounds. And they cried &lsquo;Hoch!&rsquo; and
+ &lsquo;Viva!&rsquo; and &lsquo;Hooray!&rsquo; and many other like
+ inarticulate shouts in many varieties of interjectional dialect all the
+ evening; and everybody agreed that after all Herr Max was VERY little
+ grayer than before the trial, in spite of his long and terrible term of
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He WAS a little embittered by his troubles, no doubt;&mdash;what can you
+ expect if you clap men in prison for the expression of their honest
+ political convictions?&mdash;but Ernest tried to keep his eye steadily
+ rather on the future than on the past; and with greater ease and unwonted
+ comforts the old man&rsquo;s cheerfulness as well as his enthusiasm
+ gradually returned. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m too old now to do anything more worth
+ doing myself before I die,&rsquo; he used to say, holding Ernest&rsquo;s
+ arm tightly in his vice-like grip: &lsquo;but I have great hopes in spite
+ of everything for friend Ernest; I have very great hopes indeed for friend
+ Ernest here. There&rsquo;s no knowing yet what he may accomplish.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ernest only smiled a trifle sadly, and murmured half to himself that this
+ was a hard world, and he began himself to fear there was no fitting
+ feeling for a social reformer except one of a brave despair. ‘We can do
+ little or nothing, after all,&rsquo; he said slowly; &lsquo;and our only
+ consolation must be that even that little is perhaps just worth doing.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0037" id="link2HCH0037"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXXVII. &mdash; LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT LAND?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Long before the &lsquo;Social Reformer&rsquo; had fully made its mark in
+ the world, another event had happened of no less importance to some of the
+ chief actors in the little drama whose natural termination it seemed to
+ form. While the pamphlet and the paper were in course of maturation,
+ Arthur Berkeley had been running daily in and out of the house in Wilton
+ Place in what Lady Exmoor several times described as a positively
+ disgraceful and unseemly manner. (&lsquo;What Hilda can mean,&rsquo; her
+ ladyship observed to her husband more than once, &lsquo;by encouraging
+ that odd young man&rsquo;s extraordinary advances in the way she does is
+ really more than I can understand even in her.&rsquo;) But when the Le
+ Bretons were fairly launched at last on the favourable flood of full
+ prosperity, both Hilda and Arthur began to feel as though they had
+ suddenly been deprived of a very pleasant common interest. After all,
+ benevolent counsel on behalf of other people is not so entirely innocent
+ and impersonal in certain cases as it seems to be at first sight. &lsquo;Do
+ you know, Lady Hilda,&rsquo; Berkeley said one afternoon, when he had come
+ to pay, as it were, a sort of farewell visit, on the final completion of
+ their joint schemes for restoring happiness to the home of the Le Bretons,
+ ‘our intercourse together has been very delightful, and I&rsquo;m quite
+ sorry to think that in future we must see so much less of one another than
+ we&rsquo;ve been in the habit of doing for the last month or so.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda looked at him straight and said in her own frank unaffected fashion,
+ &lsquo;So am I, Mr. Berkeley, very sorry, very sorry indeed.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arthur looked back at her once more, and their eyes met. His look was full
+ of admiration, and Hilda saw it. She moved a little uneasily upon the
+ ottoman, waiting apparently as though she expected Arthur to say something
+ else. But Arthur looked at her long and steadfastly, and said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he seemed to wake from his reverie, and make up his mind for a
+ desperate venture. Could he be mistaken? Could he have read either record
+ wrong&mdash;his own heart, or Hilda&rsquo;s eyes? No, no, both of them
+ spoke to him too plainly and evidently. His heart was fluttering like a
+ wind-shaken aspen-leaf; and Hilda&rsquo;s eyes were dimming visibly with a
+ tender moisture. Yes, yes, yes, there was no misreading possible. He knew
+ he loved her! he knew she loved him!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bending over towards where Hilda sat, he took her hand in his dreamily:
+ and Hilda let him take it without a movement. Then he looked deeply into
+ her eyes, and felt a curious speechlessness coming over him, deep down in
+ the ball of his throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Lady Hilda,&rsquo; he began at last with an effort, in a low voice, not
+ wholly untinged with natural timidity, &lsquo;Lady Hilda, is a working man&rsquo;s
+ son&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda looked back at him with a sudden look of earnest deprecation. ‘Not
+ that way, Mr. Berkeley,&rsquo; she said quietly: &lsquo;not that way,
+ please: you&rsquo;ll hurt me if you do: you know that&rsquo;s not the way
+ <i>I</i> look at the matter. Why not simply &ldquo;Hilda&rdquo;?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Berkeley clasped her hand eagerly and raised it to his lips. &lsquo;Hilda,
+ then,&rsquo; he said, kissing it twice over. &lsquo;It SHALL be Hilda.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hilda rose and stood before him erect in all her queenlike beauty. ‘So now
+ that&rsquo;s settled,&rsquo; she said, with a vain endeavour to control
+ her tears of joy. &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t let&rsquo;s talk about it any more,
+ now; I can&rsquo;t bear to talk about it: there&rsquo;s nothing to
+ arrange, Arthur. Whenever you like will suit me. But, oh, I&rsquo;m so
+ happy, so happy, so happy&mdash;I never thought I could be so happy.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Nor I,&rsquo; Arthur answered, holding her hand a moment in his tenderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘How strange,&rsquo; Hilda said again, after a minute&rsquo;s delicious
+ silence; ‘it&rsquo;s the poor Le Bretons who have brought us two thus
+ together. And yet, they were both once our dearest rivals. YOU were in
+ love with Edie Le Breton: <i>I</i> was half in love with Ernest Le Breton:
+ and now&mdash;why, now, Arthur, I DO believe we&rsquo;re both utterly in
+ love with one another. What a curious little comedy of errors!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And yet only a few months ago it came very near being a tragedy, rather,&rsquo;
+ Arthur put in softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Never mind!&rsquo; Hilda answered in her brightest and most joyous tone,
+ as she wiped the joyful tears from her eyes. &lsquo;It isn&rsquo;t a
+ tragedy, now, after all, Arthur, and all&rsquo;s well that ends well!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Countess heard of Hilda&rsquo;s determination&mdash;Hilda didn&rsquo;t
+ pretend to go through the domestic farce of asking her mother&rsquo;s
+ consent to her approaching marriage&mdash;she said that so far as she was
+ concerned a more shocking or un-Christian piece of conduct on the part of
+ a well-brought-up girl had never yet been brought to her knowledge. To
+ refuse Lord Connemara, and then go and marry the son of a common cobbler!
+ But the Earl only puffed away vigorously at his cheroot, and observed
+ philosophically that for his part he just considered himself jolly well
+ out of it. This young fellow Berkeley mightn&rsquo;t be a man of the sort
+ of family Hilda would naturally expect to marry into, but he was decently
+ educated and in good society, and above all, a gentleman, you know, don&rsquo;t
+ you know: and, hang it all, in these days that&rsquo;s really everything.
+ Besides, Berkeley was making a pot of money out of these operas of his,
+ the Earl understood, and as he had always expected that Hilda&rsquo;d
+ marry some penniless painter or somebody of that sort, and be a perpetual
+ drag upon the family exchequer, he really didn&rsquo;t see why they need
+ trouble their heads very much about it. By George, if it came to that, he
+ rather congratulated himself that the girl hadn&rsquo;t taken it into her
+ nonsensical head to run away with the groom or the stable-boy! As to
+ Lynmouth, he merely remarked succinctly in his own dialect, &lsquo;Go it,
+ Hilda, go it, my beauty! You always were a one-er, you know, and it&rsquo;s
+ my belief you always will be.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was somewhere about the same time that Ronald Le Breton, coming back
+ gladdened in soul from a cheerful talk with Ernest, called round of an
+ evening in somewhat unwonted exultation at Selah&rsquo;s lodgings. &lsquo;Selah,&rsquo;
+ he said to her calmly, as she met him at the door to let him in herself,
+ &lsquo;I want to have a little talk with you.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What is it about, Ronald?&rsquo; Selah asked, with a perfect
+ consciousness in her own mind of what the subject he wished to discourse
+ about was likely to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald went on in his quiet, matter-of-fact,
+ unobtrusive manner, &lsquo;do you know, I think we may fairly consider
+ Ernest and Edie out of danger now.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘I hope so, Ronald,&rsquo; Selah answered imperturbably. &lsquo;I&rsquo;ve
+ no doubt your brother&rsquo;ll get along all right in future, and I&rsquo;m
+ sure at least that he&rsquo;s getting stronger, for he looks ten per cent.
+ better than he did three months ago.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Selah!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Well, Ronald!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, in that case, you see, your objection falls to the ground. There can
+ be no possible reason on either side why you should any longer put off
+ marrying me. We needn&rsquo;t consider Edie now; and you can&rsquo;t have
+ any reasonable doubt that I want to marry you for your own sake this time.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘What a nuisance the man is!&rsquo; Selah cried impetuously. &lsquo;Always
+ bothering a body out of her nine senses to go and marry him. Have you
+ never read what Paul says, that it&rsquo;s good for the unmarried and
+ widows to abide? He was always dead against the advisability of marriage,
+ Paul was.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Brother Paul was an able and earnest preacher,&rsquo; Ronald murmured
+ gravely, &lsquo;from whose authority I should be sorry to dissent except
+ for sufficient and weighty reason; but you must admit that on this
+ particular question he was prejudiced, Selah, decidedly prejudiced, and
+ that the balance of the best opinion goes distinctly the other way.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah laughed lightly. &lsquo;Oh, does it?&rsquo; she said, in her
+ provoking, mocking manner. &lsquo;Then you propose to marry me, I suppose,
+ on the balance of the best Scriptural opinion.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Not at all, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald replied without a touch of anything but
+ grave earnestness in his tone&mdash;it must be admitted Ronald was
+ distinctly lacking in the sense of humour. &lsquo;Not at all, I assure
+ you. I propose to marry you because I love you, and I believe in your
+ heart of hearts you love me, too, you provoking girl, though you&rsquo;re
+ too proud or too incomprehensible ever to acknowledge it.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘And even if I do?&rsquo; Selah asked. &lsquo;What then?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Why, then, Selah,&rsquo; Ronald answered confidently, taking her hand
+ boldly in his own and actually kissing her&mdash;yes, kissing her; &lsquo;why,
+ then, Selah, suppose we say Monday fortnight?&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘It&rsquo;s awfully soon,&rsquo; Selah replied, half grumbling. &lsquo;You
+ don&rsquo;t give a body time to think it over.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Certainly not,&rsquo; Ronald responded, quickly, taking the handsome face
+ firmly between his two spare hands, and kissing her lips half a dozen
+ times over in rapid succession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Let me go, Ronald,&rsquo; Selah cried, struggling to be free, and trying
+ in vain to tear down his thin wiry arms with her own strong shapely hands.
+ &lsquo;Let me go at once,&mdash;there&rsquo;s a good boy, and I&rsquo;ll
+ marry you on Monday fortnight, or do anything else you like, just to keep
+ you quiet. After all, you&rsquo;re a kind-hearted fellow enough, and you
+ want looking after and taking care of, and if you insist upon it, I don&rsquo;t
+ mind giving way to you in this small matter.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ronald stepped back a pace or two, and stood looking at her a little sadly
+ with his hands folded. &lsquo;Oh, Selah,&rsquo; he cried in a tone of
+ bitter disappointment, &lsquo;don&rsquo;t speak like that to me, don&rsquo;t,
+ please. Don&rsquo;t, don&rsquo;t tell me that you don&rsquo;t really love
+ me&mdash;that you&rsquo;re going to marry me for nothing else but out of
+ mere compassion for my weakness and helplessness!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Selah burst at once into a wild flood of uncontrollable tears: &lsquo;Oh,
+ Ronald,&rsquo; she cried in her old almost fiercely passionate manner,
+ flinging her arms around his neck and covering him with kisses; ‘Oh,
+ Ronald, how can you ever ask me whether I really really love you! You know
+ I love you! You know I love you! You&rsquo;ve given me back life and
+ everything that&rsquo;s dear in it, and I never want to live for anything
+ any longer except to love you, and wait upon you, and make you happy. I&rsquo;m
+ stronger than you, Ronald, and I shall be able to do a little to make you
+ happy, I do believe. My ways are not your ways, nor my thoughts your
+ thoughts, my darling; but I love you all the better for that, Ronald, I
+ love you all the better for that; and if you were to kick me, beat me,
+ trample on me now, Ronald, I should love you, love you, love you for ever
+ still.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they two were quietly married, with no audience save Ernest and Edie,
+ on that very Monday fortnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Herbert Le Breton heard of it from his mother a few days later, he
+ went home at once to his own eminently cultured home and told Mrs. Le
+ Breton the news, of course without much detailed allusion to Selah&rsquo;s
+ earlier antecedents. &lsquo;And do you know, Ethel,&rsquo; he added
+ significantly, &lsquo;I think it was an excellent thing that you decided
+ not to call after all upon Ernest&rsquo;s wife, for I&rsquo;m sure it&rsquo;ll
+ be a great deal safer for you and me to have nothing to say in any way to
+ the whole faction of them. A greengrocer&rsquo;s daughter, you know&mdash;quite
+ unpresentable. They&rsquo;ll be all mixed up together in future, which&rsquo;ll
+ make it quite impossible to know the one without at the same time knowing
+ the other. Now, it&rsquo;d be just practicable for you to call upon Mrs.
+ Ernest, I must admit, but to call upon Mrs. Ronald would be really and
+ truly too inconceivable.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the first year of the &lsquo;Social Reformer,&rsquo; the
+ annual balance was duly audited, and it showed a very considerable and
+ solid surplus to go into the pocket of the enterprising Radical
+ proprietor. Ernest and Herr Max scanned it closely together, and even
+ Ernest could not refrain from a smile of pleasure when he saw how
+ thoroughly successful the doubtful venture had finally turned out. &lsquo;And
+ yet,&rsquo; he said regretfully, as he looked at the heavy balance-sheet,
+ &lsquo;what a strange occupation after all for the author of &ldquo;Gold
+ and the Proletariate,&rdquo; to be looking carefully over the sum-total of
+ a capitalist&rsquo;s final balance! To think, too, that all that money has
+ come out of the hard-earned scraped-up pennies of the toiling poor! I
+ often wish, Herr Max, that even so I had been brought up an honest
+ shoemaker! But whether I&rsquo;m really earning my salt at the hands of
+ humanity now or not is a deep problem I often have many an uncomfortable
+ internal sigh over to this day.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘There is work and work, friend Ernest,&rsquo; Herr Max answered, as
+ gently as had been his wont in older years; &lsquo;and for my part it
+ seems to me you are better here writing your Social Reformers than making
+ shoes for a single generation. One man builds for to-day, another man
+ builds for to-morrow; and he that plants a fruit tree for his children to
+ eat of is doing as much good work in the world as he that sows the corn in
+ spring to be reaped and eaten at this autumn&rsquo;s harvest.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Perhaps so,&rsquo; Ernest answered softly. &lsquo;I wish I could think
+ so. But after all I&rsquo;m not quite sure whether, if we had all starved
+ eighteen months ago together, as seemed so likely then, it wouldn&rsquo;t
+ have been the most right thing in the end that could possibly have
+ happened to all of us. As things are constituted now, there seems only one
+ life that&rsquo;s really worth living for an honest man, and that&rsquo;s
+ a martyr&rsquo;s. A martyr&rsquo;s or else a worker&rsquo;s. And I, I
+ greatly fear, have managed somehow to miss being either. The wind carries
+ us this way and that, and when we would do that which is right, it drifts
+ us away incontinently into that which is only profitable.&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ‘Dear Ernest,&rsquo; Edie cried in her bright old-fashioned manner from
+ the office door, &lsquo;Dot has come in her new frock to bring Daddy home
+ for her birthday dinner as she was promised. Come quick, or your little
+ daughter&rsquo;ll be very angry with you. And Lady Hilda Berkeley has
+ come, too, to drive us back in her own brougham. Now don&rsquo;t be a
+ silly, there&rsquo;s a dear, or say that you can&rsquo;t drive away from
+ the office of the &ldquo;Social Reformer&rdquo; in Lady Hilda&rsquo;s
+ brougham!&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/7phls10.txt b/old/7phls10.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/7phls10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,14995 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Philistia, by Grant Allen
+(#8 in our series by Grant Allen)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+Title: Philistia
+
+Author: Grant Allen
+
+Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6060]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 30, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, PHILISTIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Charles Aldarondo, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team
+
+
+
+PHILISTIA
+
+BY
+
+GRANT ALLEN
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. CHILDREN OF LIGHT
+ II. THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES
+ III. MAGDALEN QUAD
+ IV. A LITTLE MUSIC
+ V. ASKELON VILLA, GATH
+ VI. DOWN THE RIVER
+ VII. GHOSTLY COUNSEL
+ VIII. IN THE CAMP OF THE PHILISTINES
+ IX. THE WOMEN OF THE LAND
+ X. THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN
+ XI. CULTURE AND CULTURE
+ XII. THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY
+ XIII. YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA
+ XIV. WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS HERE
+ XV. EVIL TIDINGS
+ XVI. FLAT REBELLION
+ XVII. COME YE OUT AND BE YE SEPARATE!
+ XVIII. A QUIET WEDDING
+ XIX. INTO THE FIRE
+ XX. LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE DRAMA
+ XXI. OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE
+ XXII. THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH
+ XXIII. THE STREETS OF ASKELON
+ XXIV. THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK
+ XXV. HARD PRESSED
+ XXVI. IRRECLAIMABLE
+ XXVII. RONALD COMES OF AGE
+XXVIII. TELL IT NOT IN GATH
+ XXIX. A MAN AND A MAID
+ XXX. THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY TRIUMPHS
+ XXXI. DE PROFUNDIS
+ XXXII. PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE
+XXXIII. A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE
+ XXXIV. HOPE
+ XXXV. THE TIDE TURNS
+ XXXVI. OUT OF THE HAND OF THE PHILISTINES
+XXXVII. LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT LAND?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+CHILDREN OF LIGHT.
+
+
+It was Sunday evening, and on Sundays Max Schurz, the chief of the
+London Socialists, always held his weekly receptions. That night
+his cosmopolitan refugee friends were all at liberty; his French
+disciples could pour in from the little lanes and courts in Soho,
+where, since the Commune, they had plied their peaceful trades as
+engravers, picture-framers, artists'-colourmen, models, pointers,
+and so forth--for most of them were hangers-on in one way or another
+of the artistic world; his German adherents could stroll round,
+pipe in mouth, from their printing-houses, their ham-and-beef shops,
+or their naturalists' chambers, where they stuffed birds or set up
+exotic butterflies in little cabinets--for most of them were more
+or less literary or scientific in their pursuits; and his few English
+sympathisers, chiefly dissatisfied philosophical Radicals of the
+upper classes, could drop in casually for a chat and a smoke, on
+their way home from the churches to which they had been dutifully
+escorting their un-emancipated wives and sisters. Max Schurz kept
+open house for all on Sunday evenings, and there was not a drawing-room
+in London better filled than his with the very advanced and not
+undistinguished set who alone had the much-prized entree of his
+exclusive salon.
+
+The salon itself did not form any component part of Max Schurz's
+own private residence in any way. The great Socialist, the man whose
+mandates shook the thrones of Russia and Austria, whose movements
+spread terror in Paris and Berlin, whose dictates were even obeyed
+in Kerry and in Chicago, occupied for his own use two small rooms
+at the top of a shabby composite tenement in a doubtful district
+of Marylebone. The little parlour where he carried on his trade of
+a microscope-lens grinder would not have sufficed to hold one-tenth
+of the eager half-washed crowd that pressed itself enthusiastically
+upon him every Sunday. But a large room on the ground floor of the
+tenement, opening towards the main street, was used during the
+week by one of his French refugee friends as a dancing-saloon;
+and in this room on every Sunday evening the uncrowned king of the
+proletariate Socialists was permitted to hold his royal levees.
+Thither all that was best and truest in the socially rebellions
+classes domiciled in London used to make its way; and there men
+calmly talked over the ultimate chances of social revolutions which
+would have made the hair of respectable Philistine Marylebone stand
+stiffly on end, had it only known the rank political heresies that
+were quietly hatching in its unconscious midst.
+
+While Max Schurz's hall was rapidly filling with the polyglot crowd
+of democratic solidarists, Ernest Le Breton and his brother were
+waiting in the chilly little drawing-room at Epsilon Terrrace,
+Bayswater, for the expected arrival of Harry Oswald. Ernest had
+promised to introduce Oswald to Max Schurz's reception; and it
+was now past eight o'clock, getting rather a late hour for those
+simple-minded, early-rising Communists. 'I'm afraid, Herbert,'
+said Ernest to his brother, 'he forgets that Max is a working-man
+who has to be at his trade again punctually by seven o'clock
+to-morrow. He thinks he's going out to a regular society At Home,
+where ten o'clock's considered just the beginning of the evening. Max
+won't at all like his turning up so late; it smells of non-productivity.'
+
+'If Herr Schurz wants to convert the world,' Herbert answered
+chillily, rolling himself a tiny cigarette, 'he must convince the
+unproductive as well as the proletariate before he can set things
+fairly on the roll for better arrangement. The proletariate's
+all very well in its way, no doubt, but the unproductive happen to
+hold the key of the situation. One convert like you or me is worth
+a thousand ignorant East-end labourers, with nothing but their
+hands and their votes to count upon.'
+
+'But you are not a convert, Herbert.'
+
+'I didn't say I was. I'm a critic. There's no necessity to throw
+oneself open-armed into the embrace of either party. The wise man
+can wait and watch the progress of the game, backing the winner
+for the time being at all the critical moments, and hedging if
+necessary when the chances turn momentarily against the favourite.
+There's a ring at the bell: that's Oswald; let's go down to the
+door to meet him.'
+
+Ernest ran down the stairs rapidly, as was his wont; Herbert
+followed in a more leisurely fashion, still rolling the cigarette
+between his delicate finger and thumb. 'Goodness gracious, Oswald!'
+Ernest exclaimed as his friend stepped in, 'why, you've actually
+come in evening dress! A white tie and all! What on earth will
+Max say? He'll be perfectly scandalised at such a shocking and
+unprecedented outrage. This will never do; you must dissemble
+somehow or other.'
+
+Oswald laughed. 'I had no idea,' he said, 'Herr Schurz was such
+a truculent sans-culotte as that comes to. As it was an evening
+reception I thought, of course, one ought to turn up in evening
+clothes.'
+
+'Evening clothes! My dear fellow, how on earth do you suppose a
+set of poor Leicester Square outlaws are going to get themselves
+correctly set up in black broadcloth coats and trousers? They might
+wash their white ties themselves, to be sure; they mostly do their
+own washing, I believe, in their own basins.' ('And not much at
+that either,' put in Herbert, parenthetically.) 'But as to evening
+clothes, why, they'd as soon think of arraying themselves for dinner
+in full court dress as of putting on an obscurantist swallow-tail.
+It's the badge of a class, a distinct aristocratic outrage; we must
+alter it at once, I assure you, Oswald.'
+
+'At any rate,' said Oswald laughing, 'I've had the pleasure of finding
+myself accused for the first time in the course of my existence of
+being aristocratic. It's quite worth while going to Max Schurz's
+once in one's life, if it were only for the sake of that single
+new sensation.'
+
+'Well, my dear fellow, we must rectify you, anyhow, before you go.
+Let me see; luckily you've got your dust-coat on, and you needn't
+take that off; it'll do splendidly to hide your coat and waistcoat.
+I'll lend you a blue tie, which will at once transform your upper
+man entirely. But you show the cloven hoof below; the trousers
+will surely betray you. They're absolutely inadmissible under any
+circumstances whatsoever, as the Court Circular says, and you must
+positively wear a coloured pair of Herbert's instead of them. Run
+upstairs quickly, there's a good fellow, and get rid of the mark
+of the Beast as fast as you can.'
+
+Oswald did as he was told without demur, and in about a minute more
+presented himself again, with the mark of the Beast certainly most
+effectually obliterated, at least so far as outer appearance went.
+His blue tie, light dust-coat, and borrowed grey trousers, made up
+an ensemble much more like an omnibus conductor out for a holiday
+than a gentleman of the period in correct evening dress. 'Now
+mind,' Ernest said seriously, as he opened the door, 'whatever you
+do, Oswald, if you stew to death for it--and Schurz's rooms are
+often very close and hot, I can assure you--don't for heaven's sake
+go and unbutton your dust-coat. If you do they'll see at once you're
+a wolf in sheep's clothing, and I shouldn't be at all surprised
+if they were to turn and rend you. At least, I'm sure Max would be
+very much annoyed with me for unsocially introducing a plutocratic
+traitor into the bosom of the fold.'
+
+They walked along briskly in the direction of Marylebone, and
+stopped at last at a dull, yellow-washed house, which bore on
+its door a very dingy brass plate, inscribed in red letters, 'M.
+et Mdlle. Tirard. Salon de Danse.' Ernest opened the door without
+ringing, and turned down the passage towards the salon. 'Remember,'
+he said, turning to Harry Oswald by way of a last warning, with his
+hand on the inner door-handle, 'coute que coute, my dear fellow,
+don't on any account open your dust-coat. No anti-social opinions;
+and please bear in mind that Max is, in his own way, a potentate.'
+
+The big hall, badly lighted by a few contribution candles (for the
+whole colony subscribed to the best of its ability for the support
+of the weekly entertainment), was all alive with eager figures and
+the mingled busy hum of earnest conversation. A few chairs ranged
+round the wall were mostly occupied by Mdlle. Tirard and the other
+ladies of the Socialist party; but the mass of the guests were
+men, and they were almost all smoking, in utter indifference to the
+scanty presence of the fair sex. Not that they were intentionally
+rude or boorish; that they never were; except where an emperor or an
+aristocrat is concerned, there is no being on earth more courteous,
+kindly, and considerate for the feelings of others than your
+exiled Socialist. He has suffered much himself in his own time, and
+so miseris succurrere discit. Emperors he mentally classes with
+cobras, tarantulas, and scorpions, as outside the pale of humanitarian
+sympathies altogether; but, with this slight political exception,
+he is the broadest and tenderest and most catholic in his feelings
+of all living breathing creatures. However, the ladies of his party
+have all been brought up from their childhood onward in a mingled
+atmosphere of smoke and democracy; so that he no more thinks
+of abstaining from tobacco in their presence than he thinks of
+commiserating the poor fish for being so dreadfully wet, or the
+unfortunate mole for his unpleasantly slimy diet of live earthworms.
+
+'Herr Schurz,' said Ernest, singling out the great leader in the
+gloom immediately, 'I've brought my brother Herbert here, whom
+you know already, to see you, as well as another Oxford friend of
+mind, Mr. Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel. He's almost
+one of us at heart, I'm happy to say, and at any rate I'm sure
+you'll be glad to make his acquaintance.'
+
+The little spare wizened-up grey man, in the threadbare brown velveteen
+jacket, who stood in the middle of the hall, caught Ernest's hand
+warmly, and held it for a moment fettered in his iron grip. There
+was an honesty in that grip and in those hazy blue-spectacled eyes
+that nobody could for a second misunderstand. If an emperor had
+been introduced to Max Schurz he might have felt a little abashed
+one minute at the old Socialist's royal disdain, but he could not
+have failed to say to himself as he looked at him from head to
+foot, 'Here, at least, is a true man.' So Harry Oswald felt, as
+the spare grey thinker took his hand in his, and grasped it firmly
+with a kindly pressure, but less friendly than that with which he
+had greeted his known admirer, Ernest Le Breton. As for Herbert, he
+merely bowed to him politely from a little distance; and Herbert,
+who had picked up at once with a Polish exile in a corner, returned
+the bow frigidly without coming up to the host himself at all for
+a moment's welcome.
+
+'I'm always pleased to meet friends of the cause from Oxford,'
+Herr Schurz said, in almost perfect English. 'We want recruits most
+of all among the thinking classes. If we are ever to make headway
+against the banded monopolies--against the place-holders, the
+land-grabbers, the labour-taxers, the robbers of the poor--we must
+first secure the perfect undivided confidence of the brain-workers,
+the thinkers, and the writers. At present everything is against us;
+we are but a little leaven, trying vainly in our helpless fashion
+to leaven the whole lump. The capitalist journals carry off all
+the writing talent in the world; they are timid, as capital must
+always be; they tremble for their tens of thousands a year, and
+their vast circulations among the propertied classes. We cannot
+get at the heart of the people, save by the Archimedean lever of
+the thinking world. For that reason, my dear Le Breton, I am always
+glad to muster here your Oxford neophytes.'
+
+'And yet, Herr Schurz,' said Ernest gently, 'you know we must not
+after all despair. Look at the history of your own people! When
+the cause of Jehovah seemed most hopeless, there were still seven
+thousand left in Israel who had not bowed the knee to Baal. We are
+gaining strength every day, while they are losing it.'
+
+'Ah yes, my friend. I know that too,' the old man answered, with a
+solemn shake of the head; 'but the wheels move slowly, they move
+slowly--very surely, but oh, so slowly. You are young, friend
+Ernest, and I am growing old. You look forward to the future with
+hope; I look back to the past with regret: so many years gone, so
+little, so very little done. It will come, it will come as surely
+as the next glacial period, but I shall not live to see it. I stand
+like Moses on Pisgah; I see the promised land before me; I look
+down upon the equally allotted vineyards, and the glebe flowing
+with milk and honey in the distance; but I shall not lead you into
+it; I shall not even lead you against the Canaanites; another than
+I must lead you in. But I am an old man, Mr. Oswald, an old man
+now, and I am talking all about myself--an anti-social trick we have
+inherited from our fathers. What is your friend's special line at
+Oxford, did you say, Ernest?'
+
+'Oswald is a mathematician, sir,' said Ernest, 'perhaps the greatest
+mathematician among the younger men in the whole University.'
+
+'Ah! that is well. We want exact science. We want clear and definite
+thinking. Biologists and physicists and mathematicians, those are
+our best recruits, you may depend upon it. We need logic, not mere
+gas. Our French friends and our Irish friends--I have nothing in
+the world to say against them; they are useful men, ardent men,
+full of fire, full of enthusiasm, ready to do and dare anything--but
+they lack ballast. You can't take the kingdom of heaven by storm.
+The social revolution is not to be accomplished by violence, it is
+not even to be carried by the most vivid eloquence; the victory
+will be in the end to the clearest brain and the subtlest intellect.
+The orthodox political economists are clever sophists; they mask
+and confuse the truth very speciously; we must have keen eyes and
+sharp noses to spy out and scent out their tortuous fallacies. I'm
+glad you're a mathematician, Mr. Oswald. And so you have thought
+on social problems?'
+
+'I have read "Gold and the Proletariate,"' Oswald answered modestly,
+'and I learned much from it, and thought more. I won't say you have
+quite converted me, Herr Schurz, but you have given me plenty of
+food for future reflection.'
+
+'That is well, said the old man, passing one skinny brown hand
+gently up and down over the other. 'That is well. There's no hurry.
+Don't make up your mind too fast. Don't jump at conclusions. It's
+intellectual dishonesty to do that. Wait till you have convinced
+yourself. Spell out your problems slowly; they are not easy ones;
+try to see how the present complex system works; try to probe
+its inequalities and injustices; try to compare it with the ideal
+commonwealth: and you'll find the light in the end, you'll find
+the light.'
+
+As he spoke, Herbert Le Breton lounged up quietly from his farther
+corner towards the little group. 'Ah, your brother, Ernest!' said
+Max Schurz, drawing himself up a little more stiffly; 'he has found
+the light already, I believe, but he neglects it; still he is not
+with us, and he that is not with us is against us. You hold aloof
+always, Mr. Herbert, is it not so?'
+
+'Well, not quite aloof, Herr Schurz, I'm certain, but not on
+your side exactly either. I like to look on and hold the balance
+evenly, not to throw my own weight too lightly into either stale.
+The objective attitude of the mere spectator is after all the right
+one for an impartial philosopher to take up.'
+
+'Ah, Mr. Herbert, this philosophy of your Oxford contemplative
+Radicals is only another name for a kind of social selfishness,
+I fancy,' said the old man solemnly. 'It seems to me your head is
+with us, but your heart, your heart is elsewhere.'
+
+Herbert Le Breton played a moment quietly with the Roman aureus of
+Domitian on his watch-chain; then he said slowly in his clear cold
+voice, 'There may be something in that, no doubt, Herr Schurz, for
+each of us has his own game to play, and while the world remains
+unreformed, he must play it on his own gambit to a great extent,
+without reference to the independent game of others. We all agree
+that the board is too full of counters, and as each counter is not
+responsible for its own presence and position on the board, having
+been put there without previous consultation by the players, we
+must each do the best we can for ourselves in our own fashion. My
+sympathies, as you say, are on your side, but perhaps my interests
+lie the other way, and after all, till you start your millennium,
+we must all rattle along as well as we can in the box together,
+jarring against one another in our old ugly round of competition,
+and supply and demand, and survival of the fittest, and mutual
+accommodation, and all the rest of it, to the end of the chapter.
+Every man for himself and God for us all, you know. You have the
+logic, to be sure, Herr Schurz, but the monopolists have the law
+and the money.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' said the old Socialist grimly; 'Demas, Demas; he and his
+silver mine; you remember your Bunyan, don't you? Well, all faiths
+and systems have their Demases. The cares of this world and the
+deceitfulness of riches. He's bursar of his college, isn't he, Ernest?
+I thought so. "He had the bag, and bare what was put therein." A
+dangerous office, isn't it, Mr. Oswald? A very dangerous office.
+You can't touch pitch or property without being defiled.'
+
+'You at least, sir, said Ernest, reverentially, 'have kept yourself
+unspotted from the world.'
+
+The old man sighed, and turned for a moment to speak in French to
+a tall, big-bearded new-comer who advanced to meet him. 'Impossible!'
+he said quickly; 'I am truly distressed to hear it. It is very
+imprudent, very unnecessary.'
+
+'What is the news?' asked Ernest, also in French.
+
+The new-comer answered him with a marked South Russian accent.
+'There has been another attempt on the life of Alexander Nicolaiovitch.'
+
+'You don't mean to say so!' cried Ernest in surprise.
+
+'Yes, I do,' replied the Russian, 'and it has nearly succeeded
+too.'
+
+'An attempt on whom?' asked Oswald, who was new to the peculiar
+vocabulary of the Socialists, and not particularly accustomed to
+following spoken French.
+
+'On Alexander Nicolaiovitch,' answered the red-bearded stranger.
+
+'Not the Czar?' Oswald inquired of Ernest.
+
+'Yes, the one whom you call Czar,' said the stranger, quickly, in
+tolerable English. The confusion of tongues seemed to be treated as
+a small matter at Max Schurz's receptions, for everybody appeared
+to speak all languages at once, in the true spirit of solidarity,
+as though Babel had never been.
+
+Oswald did not attempt to conceal a slight gesture of horror. The
+tall Russian looked down upon him commiseratingly. 'He is of the
+Few?' he asked of Ernest, that being the slang of the initiated
+for a member of the aristocratic and capitalist oligarchy.
+
+'Not exactly,' Ernest answered with a smile; 'but he has not entirely
+learned the way we here regard these penal measures. His sympathies
+are one-sided as to Alexander, no doubt. He thinks merely of the
+hunted, wretched life the man bears about with him, and he forgets
+poor bleeding, groaning, down-trodden, long-suffering Russia. It
+is the common way of Englishmen. They do not realise Siberia and
+Poland and the Third Section, and all the rest of it; they think
+only of Alexander as of the benevolent despot who freed the serf
+and befriended the Bulgarian. They never remember that they have
+all the freedom and privileges themselves which you poor Russians
+ask for in vain; they do not bear in mind that he has only to sign
+his name to a constitution, a very little constitution, and he
+might walk abroad as light-hearted in St. Petersburg to-morrow as
+you and I walk in Regent Street to-day. We are mostly lopsided,
+we English, but you must bear with us in our obliquity; we have
+had freedom ourselves so long that we hardly know how to make due
+allowance for those unfortunate folks who are still in search of
+it.'
+
+'If you had an Alexander yourselves for half a day,' the Russian
+said fiercely, turning to Oswald, 'you would soon see the difference.
+You would forget your virtuous indignation against Nihilist assassins
+in the white heat of your anger against unendurable tyranny. You
+had a King Charles in England once--the mere shadow of a Russian
+Czar--and you were not so very ceremonious with him, you order-loving
+English, after all.'
+
+'It is a foolish thing, Borodinsky,' said Max Schurz, looking up
+from the long telegram the other had handed him, 'and I told Toroloff
+as much a fortnight ago, when he spoke to me about the matter. You
+can do no good by these constant attacks, and you only rouse the
+minds of the oligarchy against you by your importunity. Bloodshed
+will avail us nothing; the world cannot be regenerated by a baptism
+like that. Every peasant won over, every student enrolled, every
+mother engaged to feed her little ones on the gospel of Socialism
+together with her own milk, is worth a thousand times more to
+us and to the people than a dead Czar. If your friends had really
+blown him up, what then? You would have had another Czar, and
+another Third Section, and another reign of terror, and another
+raid and massacre; and we should have lost twenty good men from our
+poor little side for ever. We must not waste the salt of the earth
+in that reckless fashion. Besides, I don't like this dynamite. It's
+a bad argument, it smacks too much of the old royal and repressive
+method. You know the motto Louis Quatorze used to cast on his
+bronze cannon--"Ultima ratio regum." Well, we Socialists ought to
+be able to find better logic for our opponents than that, oughtn't
+we?'
+
+'But in Russia,' cried the bearded man hotly, 'in poor stricken-down
+groaning Russia, what other argument have they left us? Are we to
+be hunted to death without real law or trial, tortured into sham
+confessions, deluded with mock pardons, arraigned before hypocritical
+tribunals, ensnared by all the chicanery, and lying, and treachery,
+and ferreting of the false bureaucracy, with its spies, and its
+bloodhounds, and its knout-bearing police-agents; and then are we
+not to make war the only way we can--open war, mind you, with fair
+declaration, and due formalities, and proper warning beforehand--against
+the irresponsible autocrat and his wire-pulled office-puppets who
+kill us off mercilessly? You are too hard upon us, Herr Schurz;
+even you yourself have no sympathy at all for unhappy Russia.'
+
+The old man looked up at him tenderly and regretfully. 'My poor
+Borodinsky,' he said in a gentle tremulous voice, 'I have indeed
+sympathy and pity in abundance for you. I do not blame you; you
+will have enough and to spare to do that, even here in free England;
+I would not say a harsh word against you or your terrible methods
+for all the world. You have been hard-driven, and you stand at
+bay like tigers. But I think you are going to work the wrong way,
+not using your energies to the best possible advantage for the
+proletariate. What we have really got to do is to gain over every
+man, woman, and child of the working-classes individually, and to
+array on our side all the learning and intellect and economical
+science of the thinking classes individually; and then we can present
+such a grand united front to the banded monopolists that for very
+shame they will not dare to gainsay us. Indeed, if it comes to
+that, we can leave them quietly alone, till for pure hunger they
+will come and beg our assistance. When we have enticed away all
+the workmen from their masters to our co-operative factories, the
+masters may keep their rusty empty mills and looms and engines to
+themselves as long as they like, but they must come to us in the
+end, and ask us to give them the bread they used to refuse us. For
+my part, I would kill no man and rob no man; but I would let no
+man kill or rob another either.'
+
+'And how about Alexander Nicolaiovitch, then?' persisted the
+Russian, eagerly. 'Has he killed none in his loathsome prisons and
+in his Siberian quicksilver mines? Has he robbed none of their own
+hardly got earnings by his poisoned vodki and his autocratically
+imposed taxes and imposts? Who gave him an absolute hereditary right
+to put us to death, to throw us in prison, to take our money from
+us against our will and without our leave, to treat us as if we
+existed, body and soul, and wives and children, only as chattels
+for the greater glory of his own orthodox imperial majesty? If we
+may justly slay the highway robber who meets us, arms in hand, in
+the outskirts of the city, and demands of us our money or our life,
+may we not justly slay Alexander Nicolaiovitch, who comes to our
+homes in the person of his tax-gatherers to take the bread out of
+our children's mouths and to help himself to whatever he chooses by
+the divine right of his Romanoff heirship? I tell you, Herr Max,
+we may blamelessly lie in wait for him wherever we find him, and
+whoso says us nay is siding with the wolf against the lambs, with
+the robber and the slayer against the honest representative of
+right and justice.'
+
+'I never met a Nihilist before,' said Oswald to Ernest, in a
+half-undertone,' and it never struck me to think what they might
+have to say for themselves from their own side of the question.'
+
+'That's one of the uses of coming here to Herr Schurz's,' Ernest
+answered quickly. 'You may not agree with all you hear, but at
+least you learn to see others as they see themselves; whereas if
+you mix always in English society, and read only English papers,
+you will see them only as we English see them.'
+
+'But just fancy,' Oswald went on, as they both stood back a little
+to make way for others who wished for interviews with the great
+man, 'just fancy that this Borodinsky, or whatever his name may be,
+has himself very likely helped in dynamite plots, or manufactured
+nitro-glycerine cartridges to blow up the Czar; and yet we stand
+here talking with him as coolly as if he were an ordinary respectable
+innocent Englishman.'
+
+'What of that?' Ernest answered, smiling. 'Didn't we meet Prince
+Strelinoffsky at Oriel last term, and didn't we talk with him too,
+as if he was an honest, hard-working, bread-earning Christian? and
+yet we knew he was a member of the St. Petersburg office clique,
+and at the bottom of half the trouble in Poland for the last ten
+years or so. Grant even that Borodinsky is quite wrong in his way
+of dealing with noxious autocrats, and yet which do you think is
+the worst criminal of the two--he with his little honest glazier's
+shop in a back slum of Paddington, or Strelinoffsky with his jewelled
+fingers calmly signing accursed warrants to send childing Polish
+women to die of cold and hunger and ill-treatment on the way to
+Siberia?'
+
+'Well, really, Le Breton, you know I'm a passably good Radical,
+but you're positively just one stage too Radical even for me.'
+
+'Come here oftener,' answered Ernest; 'and perhaps you'll begin to
+think a little differently about some things.'
+
+An hour later in the evening Max Schurz found Ernest alone in a
+quiet corner. 'One moment, my dear Le Breton,' he said; 'you know
+I always like to find out all about people's political antecedents;
+it helps one to fathom the potentialities of their characters. From
+what social stratum, now, do we get your clever friend, Mr. Oswald?'
+
+'His father's a petty tradesman in a country town in Devonshire,
+I believe,' Ernest answered; 'and he himself is a good general
+democrat, without any very pronounced socialistic colouring.'
+
+'A petty tradesman! Hum, I thought so. He has rather the mental
+bearing and equipment of a man from the petite bourgeoisie. I have
+been talking to him, and drawing him out. Clever, very, and with
+good instincts, but not wholly and entirely sound. A fibre wrong
+somewhere, socially speaking, a false note suspected in his ideas
+of life; too much acquiescence in the thing that is, and too little
+faith or enthusiasm for the thing that ought to be. But we shall
+make something of him yet. He has read "Gold" and understands it.
+That is already a beginning. Bring him again. I shall always be
+glad to see him here.'
+
+'I will,' said Ernest, 'and I believe the more you know him, Herr
+Max, the better you will like him.'
+
+'And what did you think of the sons of the prophets?' asked Herbert
+Le Breton of Oswald as they left the salon at the close of the
+reception.
+
+'Frankly speaking,' answered Oswald, looking half aside at Ernest,
+'I didn't quite care for all of them--the Nihilists and Communards
+took my breath away at first; but as to Max Schurz himself I think
+there can be only one opinion possible about him.'
+
+'And that is----?'
+
+'That he's a magnificent old man, with a genuine apostolic
+inspiration. I don't care twopence whether he is right or wrong,
+but he's a perfectly splendid old fellow, as honest and transparent
+as the day's long. He believes in it all, and would give his life
+for it freely, if he thought he could forward the cause a single
+inch by doing it.'
+
+'You're quite right,' said Herbert calmly. 'He's an Elijah thrown
+blankly upon these prosaic latter days; and what's more, his
+gospel's all true; but it doesn't matter a sou to you or me, for
+it will never come about in our time, no nor for a century after.
+"Post nos millennium." So what on earth's the good of our troubling
+our poor overworked heads about it?'
+
+'He's the only really great man I ever knew,' said Ernest
+enthusiastically, 'and I consider that his friendship's the one
+thing in my life that has been really and truly worth living for.
+If a pessimist were to ask me what was the use of human existence,
+I should give him a card of introduction to go to Max Schurz's.'
+
+'Excuse my interrupting your rhapsody, Ernest,' Herbert put in
+blandly, 'but will you have your own trousers tonight, Oswald, or
+will you wear mine back to your lodgings now, and I'll send one of
+the servants round with yours for them in the morning?'
+
+'Thanks,' said Harry Oswald, slapping the sides of the unopened
+dust-coat; 'I think I'll go home as I am at present, and I'll recover
+the marks of the Beast again to-morrow. You see, I didn't betray
+my evening waistcoat after all, now did I?'
+
+And they parted at the corner, each of them going his own way in
+his own mood and manner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES.
+
+
+The decayed and disfranchised borough of Calcombe Pomeroy, or
+Calcombe-on-the-Sea, is one of the prettiest and quietest little
+out-of-the-way watering-places in the whole smiling southern slope
+of the county of Devon. Thank heaven, the Great Western Railway,
+when planning its organised devastations along the beautiful rural
+region of the South Hams, left poor little Calcombe out in the cold;
+and the consequence is that those few people who still love to
+linger in the uncontaminated rustic England of our wiser forefathers
+can here find a beach unspoiled by goat-carriages or black-faced
+minstrels, a tiny parade uninvaded by stucco terraces or German
+brass bands, and an ancient stone pier off which swimmers may take
+a header direct, in the early morning, before the sumptuary edicts
+of his worship the Mayor compel them to resort to the use of
+bathing-machines and the decent covering of an approved costume,
+between the hours of eight and eight. A board beside the mouth of
+the harbour, signed by a Secretary of State to his late Majesty
+King William the Fourth, still announces to a heedless world the
+tolls to be paid for entry by the ships that never arrive; and a
+superannuated official in a wooden leg and a gold cap-band retains
+the honourable sinecure of a harbour-mastership, with a hypothetical
+salary nominally payable from the non-existent fees and port dues.
+The little river Cale, at the bottom of whose combe the wee town
+nestles snugly, has cut itself a deep valley in the soft sandstone
+hills; and the gap in the cliffs formed by its mouth gives room
+for the few hundred yards of level on which the antiquated little
+parade is warmly ensconced. On either hand tall bluffs of brilliant
+red marl raise their honeycombed faces fronting the sea; and in the
+distance the sheeny grey rocks of the harder Devonian promontories
+gleam like watered satin in the slant rays of the afternoon sun.
+Altogether a very sleepy little old-world place is Calcombe Pomeroy,
+specially reserved by the overruling chance of the universe to be
+a summer retreat for quiet, peace-loving, old-world people.
+
+The Londoner who escapes for a while from the great teeming human
+ant-hill, with its dark foggy lanes and solid firmament of hanging
+smoke, to draw in a little unadulterated atmosphere at Calcombe
+Pomeroy, finds himself landed by the Plymouth slow train at Calcombe
+Road Station, twelve miles by cross-country highway from his final
+destination. The little grey box, described in the time-tables
+as a commodious omnibus, which takes him on for the rest of his
+journey, crawls slowly up the first six miles to the summit of
+the intervening range at the Cross Foxes Inn, and jolts swiftly
+down the other six miles, with red hot drag creaking and groaning
+lugubriously, till it seems to topple over sheer into the sea
+at the clambering High Street of the old borough. As you turn to
+descend the seaward slope at the Cross Foxes, you appear to leave
+modern industrial England and the nineteenth century well behind
+you on the north, and you go down into a little isolated primaeval
+dale, cut off from all the outer world by the high ridge that girds
+it round on every side, and turned only on the southern front
+towards the open Channel and the backing sun. Half-way down the
+steep cobble-paved High Street, just after you pass the big dull
+russet church, a small shop on the left-hand side bears a signboard
+with the painted legend, 'Oswald, Family Grocer and Provision
+Dealer.' In the front bay window of that red-brick house, built
+out just over the shop, Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel
+College, Oxford, kept his big oak writing-desk; and at that desk
+he might be seen reading or writing on most mornings during the
+long vacation, after the end of his three weeks' stay at a London
+West-end lodging-house, from which he had paid his first visit to
+Max Schurz's Sunday evening receptions.
+
+'Two pounds of best black tea, good quality--yours is generally
+atrocious, Mrs. Oswald--that's the next thing on the list,' said
+poor trembling, shaky Miss Luttrell, the Squire's sister, a palsied
+old lady with a quavering, querulous, rasping voice. 'Two pounds
+of best black tea, and mind you don't send it all dust, as you usually
+do. No good tea to be got nowadays, since they took the duties off
+and ruined the country. And I see a tall young man lounging about
+the place sometimes, and never touching his hat to me as he ought
+to do. Young people have no manners in these times, Mrs. Oswald, as
+they used to have when you and I were young. Your son, I suppose,
+come home from sea or something? He's in the fish-curing line,
+isn't he, I think I've heard you say?'
+
+'I don't rightly know who 'ee may mean, Miss Luttrell,' replied
+the mother proudly, 'by a young man lounging about the place; but
+my son's at home from Oxford at present for his vacations, and he
+isn't in the fish-curing line at all, ma'am, but he's a Fellow of
+his college, as I've told 'ee more than once already; but you're
+getting old, I see, Miss Luttrell, and your memory isn't just what
+it had used to be, dost know.'
+
+'Oh, at Oxford, is he?' Miss Luttrell chimed on vacantly, wagging
+her wrinkled old head in solemn deprecation of tke evil omen. She
+knew it as well as Mrs. Oswald herself did, having heard the fact
+at least a thousand times before; but she made it a matter of
+principle never to encourage these upstart pretensions on the part
+of the lower orders, and just to keep them rigorously at their
+proper level she always made a feint of forgetting any steps in
+advance which they might have been bold enough to take, without
+humbly obtaining her previous permission, out of their original
+and natural obscurity. 'Fellow of his college is he, really? Fellow
+of a college! Dear me, how completely Oxford is going to the dogs.
+Admitting all kinds of odd people into the University, I understand.
+Why, my second brother--the Archdeacon, you know--was a Fellow of
+Magdalen for some time in his younger days. You surprise me, quite.
+Fellow of a college! You're perfectly sure he isn't a National
+schoolmaster at Oxford instead, and that you and his father haven't
+got the two things mixed up together in your heads, Mrs. Oswald?'
+
+'No, ma'am, we'in perfectly sure of it, and we haven't got the
+things mixed up in our heads at all, no more nor you have, Miss
+Luttrell. He was a scholar of Trinity first, and now he's got
+a Fellowship at Oriel. You must mind hearing all about it at the
+time, only you're getting so forgetful like now, with years and
+such like.' Mrs. Oswald knew there was nothing that annoyed the old
+lady so much as any allusion to her increasing age or infirmities,
+and she took her revenge out of her in that simple retributive
+fashion.
+
+'A scholar of Trinity, was he? Ah, yes, patronage will do a great
+deal in these days, for certain. The Rector took a wonderful
+interest in your boy, I think, Mrs. Oswald. He went to Plymouth
+Grammar School, I remember now, with a nomination no doubt; and
+there, I dare say, he attracted some attention, being a decent,
+hard-working lad, and got sent to Oxford with a sizarship, or
+something of the sort; there are all kinds of arrangements like
+that at the Universities, I believe, to encourage poor young men
+of respectable character. They become missionaries or ushers in
+the end, and often get very good salaries, considering everything,
+I'm told.'
+
+'There you're wrong, again, ma'am,' put in Mrs. Oswald, stoutly.
+'My husband, he sent Harry to Plymouth School at our own expense;
+and after that he got an exhibition from the school, and an open
+scholarship, I think they call it, at the college; and he's been no
+more beholden to patronage, ma'am, than your brother the Archdeacon
+was, nor for the matter o' that not so much neither; for I've a'ways
+understood the old Squire sent him first to the Charterhouse, and
+afterwards he got a living through Lord Modbury's influence, as
+the Squire voted regular with the Modbury people for the borough
+and county. But George was always independent, Miss Luttrell, and
+beholden to neither Luttrells nor Modburies, and that I tell 'ee
+to your face, ma'am, and no shame of it either.'
+
+'Well, well, Mrs. Oswald,' said the old lady, shaking her head more
+violently than ever at this direct discomfiture, 'I don't want to
+argue with you about the matter. I dare say your son's a very worthy
+young man, and has worked his way up into a position he wasn't
+intended for by Providence. But it's no business of mine, thank
+heaven, it's no business of mine, for I'm not responsible for all
+the vagaries of all the tradespeople on my brother's estate, nor
+don't want to be. There's Mrs. Figgins, now, the baker's wife; her
+daughter has just chosen to get married to a bank clerk in London;
+and I said to her this morning, "Well, Mrs. Figgins, so you've let
+your Polly go and pick up with some young fellow from town that
+you've never seen before, haven't you? And that's the way of all you
+people. You marry your girls to bank clerks without a reference, for
+the sake of getting 'em off your hands, and what's the consequence?
+They rob their employers to keep up a pretty household for their
+wives, as if they were fine ladies; and then at last the thing's
+discovered, there comes a smash, they run away to America, and you
+have your daughters and their children thrown back again penniless
+upon your hands." That's what I said to her, Mrs. Oswald. And how's
+YOUR daughter, by the way--Jemima I think you call her; how's she,
+eh, tell me?'
+
+'I beg your pardon, Miss Luttrell, but her name's not Jemima; it's
+Edith.'
+
+'Oh, Edith, is it? Well to be sure! The grand names girls have
+dangling about with them nowadays! My name's plain Catherine, and
+it's good enough for me, thank goodness. But these young ladies
+of the new style must be Ediths and Eleanors and Ophelias, and all
+that heathenish kind of thing, as if they were princesses of the
+blood or play-actresses, instead of being good Christian Susans
+and Janes and Betties, like their grandmothers were before them.
+And Miss Edith, now, what is SHE doing?'
+
+'She's doing nothing in particular at this moment, Miss Luttrell,
+leastways not so far as I know of; but she's going up to Oxford
+part of this term on a visit to her brother.'
+
+'Going up to Oxford, my good woman! Why, heaven bless the girl,
+she'd much better stop at home and learn her catechism. She should
+try to do her duty in that station of life to which it has pleased
+Providence to call her, instead of running after young gentlemen
+above her own rank and place in society at Oxford. Tell her so
+from me, Mrs. Oswald, and mind you don't send the tea dusty. Two
+pounds of your best, if you please, as soon as you can send it.
+Good-morning.' And Miss Luttrell, having discovered the absolute
+truth of the shocking rumour which had reached her about Edith's
+projected visit, the confirmation of which was the sole object of
+her colloquy, wagged her way out of the shop again successfully,
+and was duly assisted by the page-boy into her shambling little
+palsied donkey-chair.
+
+'That was all the old cat came about, you warr'nt you,' muttered
+Mr. Oswald himself from behind his biscuit-boxes. 'Must have heard
+it from the Rector's wife, and wanted to find out if it was true,
+to go and tell Mrs. Walters o' such a bit o' turble presumptiousness.'
+
+Meanwhile, in the little study with the bow-window over the shop,
+Harry and Edie Oswald were busily discussing the necessary preparations
+for Edie's long-promised visit to the University.
+
+'I hope you've got everything nice in the way of dress, you know,
+Edie,' said Harry. 'You'll want a decent dinner dress, of course,
+for you'll be asked out to dine at least once or twice; and I want
+you to have everything exceedingly proper and pretty.'
+
+'I think I've got all I need in that way, Harry; I've my dark poplin,
+cut square in the bodice, for one dinner dress, and my high black
+silk to fall back upon for another. Worn open in front, with a lace
+handkerchief and a locket, it does really very nicely. Then I've
+got three afternoon dresses, the grey you gave me, the sage-greeny
+aesthetic one, and the peacock-blue with the satin box-pleats. It's
+a charming dress, the peacock-blue; it looks as if it might have
+stepped straight out of a genuine Titian. It came home from Miss
+Wells's this morning. Wait five minutes, like a dear boy, and I'll
+run and put it on and let you see me in it.'
+
+'That's a good girl, do. I'm so anxious you should have all your
+clothes the exact pink of perfection, Popsy. Though I'm afraid I'm
+a very poor critic in that matter--if you were only a problem in
+space of four dimensions, now! Yet, after all, every man or woman
+is more of a problem than anything in x square plus y square you
+can possibly set yourself.'
+
+Edie ran lightly up into her own room, and soon reappeared clad
+resplendent in the new peacock-blue dress, with hat and parasol
+to match, and a little creamy lamb's-wool scarf thrown with artful
+carelessness around her pretty neck and shoulders. Harry looked at
+her with unfeigned admiration. Indeed, you would not easily find
+many lighter or more fairly-like little girls than Edie Oswald,
+even in the beautiful half-Celtic South Hams of Devon. In figure
+she was rather small than short, for though she was but a wee thing,
+her form was so exactly and delicately modelled that she might have
+looked tall if she stood alone at a little distance. She never
+walked, but seemed to dance about from place to place, so buoyant
+and light, that Harry doubted whether in her case gravitation could
+really vary as the square of the distance--it seemed, in fact,
+to be almost diminished in the proportions of the cube. Her hair
+and eyes--such big bright eyes!--were dark; but her complexion
+was scarcely brunette, and the colour in her cheeks was rich and
+peach-like, after the true Devonian type. She was dimpled whenever
+she smiled, and she smiled often; her full lips giving a peculiar
+ripe look to her laughing mouth that suited admirably with her
+light and delicate style of beauty. Perhaps some people might have
+thought them too full; certainly they irresistibly suggested to
+a critical eye the distinct notion of kissability. As she stood
+there, faintly blushing, waiting to be admired by her brother, in
+her neatly fitting dainty blue dress, her lips half parted, and her
+arms held carelessly at her side, she looked about as much like a
+fairy picture as it is given to mere human flesh and blood to look.
+
+'It's delicious, Edie,' said Harry, surveying her from, head
+to foot with a smile of satisfaction which made her blush deepen;
+'it's simply delicious. Where on earth did you get the idea of it?'
+
+'Well, it's partly the present style,' said Edie; 'but I took the
+notion of the bodice partly too from that Vandyck, you know, in
+the Palazzo Bossi at Genoa.'
+
+'I remember, I remember,' Harry answered, contemplating her with
+an admiring eye. 'Now just turn round and show me how it sits
+behind, Edie. You recollect Theophile Gautier says the one great
+advantage which a beautiful woman possesses over a beautiful statue
+is this, that while a man has to walk round the beautiful statue
+in order to see it from every side, he can ask the beautiful woman
+to turn herself round and let him see her, without requiring to
+take that trouble.'
+
+'Theophile Gautier was a horrid man, and if anybody but my brother
+quoted such a thing as that to me I should be very angry with him
+indeed.'
+
+'Theophile Gautier was quite as horrid as you consider him to be,
+and if you were anybody but my sister it isn't probable I should
+have quoted him to you. But if there is any statue on earth prettier
+or more graceful than you are in that dress at this moment, Edie,
+then the Venus of Milo ought immediately to be pulverised to ultimate
+atoms for a rank artistic impostor.'
+
+'Thank you, Harry, for the compliment. What pretty things you must
+be capable of saying to somebody else's sister, when you're so
+polite and courtly to your own.'
+
+'On the contrary, Popsy, when it comes to somebody else's sister
+I'm much too nervous and funky to say anything of the kind. But
+you must at least do Gautier the justice to observe that if I had
+described a circle round you, instead of allowing you to revolve
+once on your own axis, I shouldn't have been able to get the gloss
+on the satin in the sunlight as I do now that you turn the panniers
+toward the window. That, you must admit, is a very important
+aesthetic consideration.'
+
+'Oh, of course it's essentially a sunshiny dress,' said Edie,
+smiling. 'It's meant to be worn out of doors, on a fine afternoon,
+when the light is falling slantwise, you know, just as it does now
+through the low window. That's the light painters always choose
+for doing satin in.'
+
+'It's certainly very pretty,' Harry went on, musing; 'but I'm afraid
+Le Breton would say it was a serious piece of economic hubris.'
+
+'Piece of what?' asked Edie quickly.
+
+'Piece of hubris--an economical outrage, don't you see; a gross
+anti-social and individualist demonstration. Hubris, you know, is
+Greek for insolence; at least, not quite insolence, but a sort
+of pride and overweening rebelliousness against the gods, the kind
+of arrogance that brings Nemesis after it, you understand. It was
+hubris in Agamemnon and Xerxes to go swelling about and ruffling
+themselves like turkey-cocks, because they were great conquerors
+and all that sort of thing; and it was their Nemesis to get murdered
+by Clytemnestra, or jolly well beaten by the Athenians at Salamis.
+Well, Le Breton always uses the word for anything that he thinks
+socially wrong--and he thinks a good many things socially wrong,
+I can tell you--anything that partakes of the nature of a class
+distinction, or a mere vulgar ostentation of wealth, or a useless
+waste of good, serviceable, labour-gotten material. He would call
+it hubris to have silver spoons when electroplate would do just as
+well; or to keep a valet for your own personal attendant, making
+one man into the mere bodily appanage of another; or to buy anything
+you didn't really need, causing somebody else to do work for you
+which might otherwise have been avoided.'
+
+'Which Mr. Le Breton--the elder or the younger one?'
+
+'Oh, the younger--Ernest. As for Herbert, the Fellow of St. Aldate's,
+he's not troubled with any such scruples; he takes the world as he
+finds it.'
+
+'They've both gone in for their degrees, haven't they?'
+
+'Yes, Herbert has got a fellowship; Ernest's up in residence still
+looking about for one.'
+
+
+'It's Ernest that would think my dress a piece of what-you-may-call-it?'
+
+'Yes, Ernest.'
+
+'Then I'm sure I shan't like him. I should insist upon every woman's
+natural right to wear the dress or hat or bonnet that suits her
+complexion best.'
+
+'You can't tell, Edie, till you've met him. He's a very good
+fellow; and of one thing I'm certain, whatever he thinks right he
+does, and sticks to it.'
+
+'But do YOU think, Harry, I oughtn't to wear a new peacock-blue
+camel-hair dress on my first visit up to Oxford?'
+
+'Well, Edie dear, I don't quite know what my own opinions are
+exactly upon that matter. I'm not an economist, you see, I'm a man
+of science. When I look at you, standing there so pretty in that
+pretty dress, I feel inclined to say to myself, "Every woman ought
+to do her best to make herself look as beautiful as she can for the
+common delectation of all humanity." Your beauty, a Greek would
+have said, is a gift from the gods to us all, and we ought all
+gratefully to make the most of it. I'm sure _I_ do.'
+
+'Thank you, Harry, again. You're in your politest humour this
+afternoon.'
+
+'But then, on the other hand, I know if Le Breton were here he'd
+soon argue me over to the other side. He has the enthusiasm of
+humanity so strong upon him that you can't help agreeing with him
+as long as he's talking to you.'
+
+'Then if he were here you'd probably make me put away the peacock-blue,
+for fear of hubris and Nemesis and so forth, and go up to Oxford
+a perfect fright in my shabby old Indian tussore!'
+
+'I don't know that I should do that, even then, Edie. In the first
+place, nothing on earth could make you look a perfect fright, or
+anything like one, Popsy dear; and in the second place, I don't
+know that I'm Socialist enough myself ever to have the courage of
+my opinions as Le Breton has. Certainly, I should never attempt to
+force them unwillingly upon others. You must remember, Edie, it's
+one thing for Le Breton to be so communistic as all that comes to,
+and quite another thing for you and me. Le Breton's father was a
+general and a knight, you see; and people will never forget that
+his mother's Lady Le Breton still, whatever he does. He may do
+what he likes in the way of social eccentricities, and the world
+will only say he's such a very strange advanced young fellow. But
+if I were to take you up to Oxford badly dressed, or out of the
+fashion, or looking peculiar in any way, the world wouldn't put it
+down to our political beliefs, but would say we were mere country
+tradespeople by birth, and didn't know any better. That makes a
+lot of difference, you know.'
+
+'You're quite right, Harry; and yet, do you know, I think there must
+be something, too, in sticking to one's own opinions, like Mr. Le
+Breton. I should stick to mine, I'm sure, and wear whatever dress
+I liked, in spite of anybody. It's a sweet thing, really, isn't
+it?' And she turned herself round, craning over her shoulder to look
+at the effect, in a vain attempt to assume an objective attitude
+towards her own back.
+
+'I'm glad I'm going to Oxford at last, Harry,' she said, after a
+short pause. 'I HAVE so longed to go all these years while you were
+an undergraduate; and I'm dying to have got there, now the chance
+has really come at last, after all. I shall glory in the place,
+I'm certain; and it'll be so nice to make the acquaintance of all
+your clever friends.'
+
+'Well, Edie,' said her brother, smiling gently at the light, joyous,
+tremulous little figure, 'I think I've done right in putting it
+off till now. It's just as well you haven't gone up to Oxford till
+after your trip on the Continent with me. That three months in
+Paris, and Switzerland, and Venice, and Florence, did you a lot of
+good, you see; improved you, and gave you tone, and supplied you
+with things to talk about.'
+
+'Why, you oughtn't to think I needed any improvement at all, sir,'
+Edie answered, pouting; 'and as to talking, I'm not aware I had ever
+any dearth of subjects for conversation even before I went on the
+Continent. There are things enough to be said about heaven and earth
+in England, surely, without one having to hurry through France and
+Italy, like Cook's excursionists, just to hunt up something fresh
+to chatter about. It's my belief that a person who can't find
+anything new to say about the every-day world around her won't
+discover much suggestive matter for conversation in a Continental
+Bradshaw. It's like that feeble watery lady I met at the table
+d'hote at Geneva. From something she said I gathered she'd been
+in India, and I asked her how she liked it. "Oh," she said, "it's
+very hot." I told her I had heard so before. Presently she said
+something casually about having been in Brazil. I asked her what
+sort of place Brazil was. "Oh." she said, "it's dreadfully hot."
+I told her I'd heard that too. By-and-by she began to talk again
+about Barbadoes. "What did you think of the West Indies?" I said.
+"Oh," said she, "they're terribly hot, really." I told her I had
+gathered as much from previous travellers. And that was positively
+all in the end I ever got out of her, for all her travels.'
+
+'My dear Edie, I've always admitted that you were simply perfect,'
+Harry said, glancing at her with visible admiration, 'and I
+don't think anything on earth could possibly improve you--except
+perhaps a judicious course of differential and integral calculus,
+which might possibly serve to tone down slightly your exuberant
+and excessive vitality. Still, you know, from the point of view
+of society, which is a force we have always to reckon with--a
+constant, in fact, that we may call Pi--there can be no doubt in
+the world that to have been on the Continent is a differentiating
+factor in one's social position. It doesn't matter in the least
+what your own private evaluation of Pi may be; if you don't happen
+to know the particular things and places that Pi knows, Pi's evaluation
+of you will be approximately a minimum, of that you may be certain.'
+
+'Well, for my part, I don't care twopence about Pi as you call it,'
+said Edie, tossing her pretty little head contemptuously; 'but
+I'm very glad indeed to have been on the Continent for my own sake,
+because of the pictures, and palaces, and mountains, and waterfalls
+we've seen, and not because of Pi's opinion of me for having seen
+them. I would have been the same person really whether I'd seen
+them or not; but I'm so much the richer myself for that view from
+the top of the Col de Balme, and for that Murillo--oh, do you
+remember the flood of light on that Murillo?--in the far corner
+of that delicious gallery at Bologna. Why, mother darling, what on
+earth has been vexing you?'
+
+'Nothing at all, Edie dear; leastways, that is, nothing to speak
+of,' said her mother, coming up from the shop hot and flurried from
+her desperate encounter with the redoubtable Miss Luttrell.
+
+'Oh, I know just what it is, darling,' cried the girl, putting her
+arm around her mother's waist caressingly, and drawing her down to
+kiss her face half a dozen times over in her outburst of sympathy.
+'That horrid old Miss Catherine has been here again, I'm sure, for
+I saw her going out of the shop just now, and she's been saying
+something or other spiteful, as she always does, to vex my dearie.
+What did she say to you to-day, now do tell us, duckie mother?'
+
+'Well, there,' said Mrs. Oswald, half laughing and half crying, 'I
+can't tell 'ee exactly what she did say, but it was just the kind
+of thing that she mostly does, impudent like, just to hurt a body's
+feelings. She said you'd better not go to Oxford, Edie, but stop
+at home and learn your catechism.'
+
+'You might have pointed out to her, mother dear,' said the young
+man, smoothing her hair softly with his hand, and kissing her
+forehead, 'that in the most advanced intellectual centres the Church
+catechism is perhaps no longer regarded as the absolute ultimatum
+of the highest and deepest economical wisdom.'
+
+'Bless your heart, Harry, what'd be the good of talking that way
+to the likes of she? She wouldn't understand a single word of what
+you were driving at. It must be all plain sailing with her, without
+it's in the way of spite, and then she sees her chance to tack round
+the hardest corner with half a wind in her sails only, as soon as
+look at it. Her sharpness goes all off toward ill-nature, that it
+do. Why, she said you'd got on at Oxford by good patronage!'
+
+'There, you see, Edie,' cried Harry demonstratively, 'that's
+an infinitesimal fraction of Pi; that's a minute decimal of this
+great, sneering, ugly aggregate "society" that we have to deal with
+whether we will or no, and that rends us and grinds us to powder
+if only it can once get in the thin end of a chance. Take shaky
+bitter old Miss Catherine for your unit, multiply her to the nth,
+and there you see the irreducible power we have to fight against.
+All one's political economy is very well in its way; but the
+practical master of the situation is Pi, sitting autocratically in
+many-headed judgment on our poor solitary little individualities,
+and crushing us irretrievably with the dead weight of its inexorable
+cumulative nothingness. And to think that that quivering old mass of
+perambulating jealousy--that living incarnation of envy, hatred,
+malice, and all uncharitableness--should be able to make you
+uncomfortable for a single moment, mother darling, with her petty,
+dribbling, doddering venom, why, it's simply unendurable.'
+
+'There now, Harry,' said Mrs. Oswald, relenting, 'you mustn't be
+too hard, neither, on poor old Miss Catherine. She's a bit soured,
+you see, by disappointments and one thing and another. She doesn't
+mean it, really, but it's just her nature. Folks can't be blamed
+for their nature, now, can they?'
+
+'It occurs to me,' said Harry quietly, 'that vipers only sting because
+it's their nature; and Dr. Watts has made a similar observation
+with regard to the growling and fighting of bears and lions. But
+I'm not aware that anybody has yet proposed to get up a Society
+for the protection of those much-misunderstood creatures, on the
+ground that they are not really responsible for their own inherited
+dispositions. Mr. William Sikes had a nature (no doubt congenital)
+which impelled him to beat his wife--I'm not sure that she was
+even his wife at all, now I come to think of it, but that's a mere
+detail--and to kick his familiar acquaintances casually about the
+head. We, on the other hand, have natures which impel us, when we
+catch Mr. William Sikes indulging in these innate idiosyncrasies
+by way of recreation, to clap him promptly into prison, and even,
+under certain aggravating conditions, to cause him to be hanged
+by the neck till he be dead. This may be a regrettable incident of
+our own peculiar dispositions, mother dear, but it has at least
+the same justification as Mr. Sikes's or the bears' and lions',
+that 'tis our nature to. And I feel pretty much the same way about
+old Miss Luttrell.'
+
+'Well, there,' said his mother, kissing him gently, 'you're a bad
+rebellious boy to be calling names, like a chatter-mag, and I won't
+listen to you any longer. How pretty Edie do look in her new dress,
+to be sure, Harry. I'll warr'nt there won't be a prettier girl
+in Oxford next week than what she is; no, nor a better one and a
+sweeter one neither.'
+
+Harry put his arms round both their waists at once, with an
+affectionate pressure; and they went down to their old-fashioned
+tea together in the little parlour behind the shop, looking out over
+the garden, and the beach, and the great cliffs beyond on either
+hand, to the very farthest edge of the distant clear-cut blue
+horizon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+MAGDALEN QUAD.
+
+
+The Reverend Arthur Collingham Berkeley, curate of St. Fredegond's,
+lounged lazily in his own neatly padded wickerwork easy-chair,
+opposite the large lattice-paned windows of his pretty little
+first-floor rooms in the front quad of Magdalen.
+
+'There's a great deal to be said, Le Breton, in favour of October
+term,' he observed, in his soft, musical voice, as he gazed pensively
+across the central grass-plot to the crimson drapery of the Founder's
+Tower. 'Just look at that magnificent Virginia creeper over there,
+now; just look at the way the red on it melts imperceptibly into
+Tyrian purple and cloth of gold! Isn't that in itself argument
+enough to fling at Hartmann's head, if he ventured to come here
+sprinkling about his heresies, with his affected little spray-shooter,
+in the midst of a drowsy Oxford autumn? The Cardinal never saw
+Virginia creeper, I suppose; a man of his taste wouldn't have been
+guilty of committing such a gross practical anachronism as that,
+any more than he would have smoked a cigarette before tobacco was
+invented; but if only he could have seen the October effect on that
+tower yonder, he'd have acknowledged that his own hat and robe were
+positively nowhere in the running, for colour, wouldn't he?'
+
+'Well,' answered Herbert, putting down the Venetian glass goblet
+he had been examining closely with due care into its niche in the
+over-mantel, 'I've no doubt Wolsey had too much historical sense
+ever to step entirely out of his own century, like my brother Ernest,
+for instance; but I've never heard his opinion on the subject of
+colour-harmonies, and I should suspect it of having been distinctly
+tinged with nascent symptoms of renaissance vulgarity. This is a
+lovely bit of Venetian, really, Berkeley. How the dickens do you
+manage to pick up all these pretty things, I wonder? Why can't I
+afford them, now?'
+
+'What a question for the endowed and established to put to a poor
+starving devil of a curate like me!' said Berkeley lightly. 'You,
+an incarnate sinecure and vested interest, a creature revelling in
+an unearned income of fabulous Oriental magnificence--I dare say,
+putting one thing with another, fully as much as five hundred a
+year--to ask me, the unbeneficed and insignificant, with my wretched
+pittance of eighty pounds per annum and my three pass-men a term
+for classical mods, how I scrape together the few miserable, hoarded
+ha'pence which I grudgingly invest in my pots and pipkins! I save
+them from my dinner, Mr. Bursar--I save them. If the Church only
+recognised modest merit as it ought to do!--if the bishops only
+listened with due attention to the sound and scholarly exegesis of
+my Sunday evening discourses at St. Fredegond's!--then, indeed, I
+might be disposed to regard things through a more satisfied medium
+--the medium of a nice, fat, juicy country living. But for you,
+Le Breton--you, sir, a pluralist and a sanguisorb of the deepest
+dye--to reproach me with my Franciscan poverty--oh, it's too
+cruel!'
+
+'I'm an abuse, I know,' Herbert answered, smiling and waving his
+hand gracefully. 'I at once admit it. Abuses exist, unhappily; and
+while they continue do so, isn't it better they should envisage
+themselves as me than as some other and probably less deserving
+fellow?'
+
+'No, it's not, decidedly. I should much prefer that one of them
+envisaged itself as me.'
+
+'Ah, of course. From your own strictly subjective point of view
+that's very natural. I also look at the question abstractly from
+the side of the empirical ego, and correctly deduce a corresponding
+conclusion. Only then, you see, the terms of the minor premiss are
+luckily reversed.'
+
+'Well, my dear fellow,' said the curate, 'the fact about the
+tea-things is this. You eat up your income, devour your substance
+in riotous living; I prefer to feast my eyes and ears to my grosser
+senses. You dine at high table, and fare sumptuously every day;
+I take a commons of cold beef for lunch, and have tea off an egg
+and roll in my own rooms at seven. You drink St. Emilion or still
+hock; I drink water from the well or the cup that cheers but
+not obfuscates. The difference goes to pay for the crockery. Do
+likewise, and with your untold wealth you might play Aunt Sally at
+Oriental blue, and take cock-shots with a boot-jack at hawthorn-pattern
+vases.'
+
+'At any rate, Berkeley, you always manage to get your money's worth
+of amusement out of your money.'
+
+'Of course, because I lay myself out to do it. Buy a bottle of
+champagne, drink it off, and there you have to show for your total
+permanent investment on the transaction the memory of a noisy evening
+and a headache the next morning. Buy a flute, or a book of poems,
+or a little picture, or a Palissy platter, and you have something
+to turn to with delight and admiration for half a lifetime.'
+
+'Ah, but it isn't everybody who can isolate himself so utterly
+from the workaday world and live so completely in his own little
+paradise of art as you can, my dear fellow. Non omnia possumus
+omnes. You seem to be always up in the aesthetic clouds, with your
+own music automatically laid on, and no need of cherubim or seraphim
+to chant continually for your gratification. Play me something of
+your own on your flute now, like a good fellow.'
+
+'No, I won't; because the spirit doesn't move me. It's treachery
+to the divine gift to play when you don't want to. Besides, what's
+the use of playing before YOU when you're not the dean of a musical
+cathedral? David was wiser; he played only before Saul, who had
+of course all the livings in his own gift, no doubt. I've got a
+new thing running in my head this very minute that you shall hear
+though, all the same, as soon as I've hammered it into shape--a
+sort of villanette in music, a little whiff of country freshness,
+suggested by the new ethereal acquisition, little Miss Butterfly.
+Have you seen Miss Butterfly yet?'
+
+'Not by that name, at any rate. Who is she?'
+
+'Oh, the name's my own invention. Mademoiselle Volauvent, I
+mean--the little bit of whirligig thistledown from Devonshire,
+Oswald's sister, you know, of Oriel.'
+
+'Ah, that one! Yes; just caught a glimpse of her in the High on
+Thursday. Very pretty, certainly, and as airy as a humming-bird.'
+
+'That's her! She's coming here to lunch this morning. If you're
+a good boy, and will promise not to say anything naughty, you may
+stop and meet her. She's a nice little thing, but rather timid at
+seeing so many fresh faces. You mustn't frighten her by discussing
+the Absolute and the Unconditioned, or bore her by talking about
+Aristotle's Politics, or the revolutions in Corcyra. For you know,
+my dear Le Breton, if you HAVE a fault, it is that you're such a
+consummate and irrepressible prig; now aren't you really?'
+
+'I'm hardly a fair judge on that subject, I suppose, Berkeley; but
+if YOU have a rudimentary glimmering of a virtue, it is that you're
+such a deliciously frank and yet considerate critic. I'll pocket
+your rudeness though, and eat your lunch, in spite of it. Is Miss
+Butterfly, as you call her, as stand-off as her brother?'
+
+'Not at all. She's accueillante to the last degree.'
+
+'Very restricted, I suppose--a country girl of the first water?
+Horizon absolutely bounded by the high hedges of her native parish?'
+
+'Oh dear no! Anything but that. She's like her brother, naturally
+quick and adaptive.'
+
+'Oswald's an excellent fellow in his way,' said Herbert, button-holing
+his own waistcoat; 'but he's spoilt by two bad traits. In the first
+place, he's so dreadfully conscious of the fact that he has risen
+from a lower position; and then, again, he's so engrossingly and
+pervadingly mathematical. X square seems to have seized upon him
+bodily, and to have wormed its fatal way into his very marrow.'
+
+'Ah, you must remember, he's true to his first love. Culture came
+to him first, while yet he abode in Philistia, under the playful
+disguise of a conic section. He scaled his way out of Gath by means
+of a treatise on elementary trigonometry, and evaded Askelon on
+the wings of an undulatory theory of light. It is different with
+us, you know, who have emerged from the land of darkness by the
+regular classical and literary highway. We feed upon Rabelais and
+Burton; he flits carelessly from flower to flower of the theory of
+Quantics. If he were an idealist painter, like Rossetti, he would
+paint great allegorical pictures for us, representing an asymptotic
+curve appearing to him in a dream, and introducing that blushing
+maiden, Hyperbola, to his affectionate consideration.'
+
+As Berkeley spoke, a rap sounded on the oak, and Ernest Le Breton
+entered the room.
+
+'What, you here, Herbert?' he said with a shade of displeasure in
+his tone. 'Are you, too, of the bidden?'
+
+'Berkeley has asked me to stop and lunch with him, if that's what
+you mean.'
+
+'We shall be quite a party,' said Ernest, seating himself, and looking
+abstractedly round the room. 'Why, Berkeley,' as his eye fell upon
+the Venetian vase, 'you've positively got some more gew-gaws here.
+This one's new, isn't it? Eh!'
+
+'Yes. I picked it up for a song, this long, at a stranded village
+in the Apennines. Literally for a song, for it cost me just what
+I got from Fradelli for that last little piece of mine. It's very
+pretty, isn't it?'
+
+'Very; exquisite, really; the blending of the tones is so perfect.
+I wish I knew what to think about these things. I can't make up
+my mind about them. Sometimes I think it's all right to make them
+and buy them; sometimes I think it's all wrong.'
+
+'Oh, if that's your difficulty,' said Berkeley, pulling his white
+tie straight at the tiny round looking-glass, 'I can easily reassure
+you. Do you think a hundred and eighty pounds a year an excessive
+sum for one person to spend upon his own entire living?'
+
+'It doesn't seem so, as expenses go amongst US,' said Ernest, seriously,
+'though I dare say it would look like shocking extravagance to a
+working man with a wife and family.'
+
+'Very well, that's the very outside I ever spend upon myself in
+any one year, for the excellent reason that it's all I ever get to
+spend in any way. Now, why shouldn't I spend it on the things that
+please me best and are joys for ever, instead of on the things that
+disappear at once and perish in the using?'
+
+'Ah, but that's not the whole question,' Ernest answered, looking
+at the curate fixedly. 'What right have you and I to spend so much
+when others are wanting for bread? And what right have you or I
+to make other people work at producing these useless trinkets for
+our sole selfish gratification?'
+
+'Well now, Le Breton,' said the parson, assuming a more serious tone,
+'you know you're a reasonable creature, so I don't mind discussing
+this question with you. You've got an ethical foundation to
+your nature, and you want to see things done on decent grounds of
+distributive justice. There I am one with you. But you've also got
+an aesthetic side to your nature, which makes you worth arguing
+with upon the matter. I won't argue with your vulgar materialised
+socialist, who would break up the frieze of the Parthenon for road
+metal, or pull down Giotto's frescoes because they represent scenes
+in the fabulous lives of saints and martyrs. You know what a work
+of art is when you see it; and therefore you're worth arguing
+with, which your vulgar Continental socialist really isn't. The
+one cogent argument for him is the whiff of grape-shot.'
+
+'I recognise,' said Ernest, 'that the works of art, of poetry, or
+of music, which we possess are a grand inheritance from the past;
+and I would do all I could to preserve them intact for those that
+come after us.'
+
+'I'm sure you would. No restoration or tinkering in you, I'm
+certain. Well, then, would you give anything for a world which
+hadn't got this aesthetic side to its corporate existence? Would
+you give anything for a world which didn't care at all for painting,
+sculpture, music, poetry? I wouldn't. I don't want such a world.
+I won't countenance such a world. I'll do nothing to further or
+advance such a world. It's utterly repugnant to me, and I banish
+it, as Themistocles banished the Athenians.'
+
+'But consider,' said Ernest, 'we live in a world where men and women
+are actually starving. How can we reconcile to our consciences the
+spending of one penny on one useless thing when others are dying
+of sheer want, and cold, and nakedness? That's the great question
+that's always oppressing my poor dissatisfied conscience.'
+
+'So it does everybody's--except Herbert's: he explains it all on
+biological grounds as the beautiful discriminative action of natural
+selection. Simple, but not consolatory. Still, look at the other
+side of the question. Suppose you and everybody else were to give
+up all superfluities, and confine all your energies to the unlimited
+production of bare necessaries. Suppose you occupy every acre
+of land with your corn-fields, or your piggeries; and sweep away
+all the parks, and woods, and heaths, and moorlands in England.
+Suppose you keep on letting your population multiply as fast as it
+chooses--and it WILL multiply, you know, in that ugly, reckless,
+anti-Malthusian fashion of its own--till every rood of ground
+maintains its man, and only just maintains him; and what will you
+have got then?'
+
+'A dead level of abject pauperism,' put in Herbert blandly; 'a
+reductio ad absurdum of all your visionary Schurzian philosophy,
+my dear Ernest. Look at it another way, now, and just consider.
+Which really and truly matters most to you and me, a great work
+of art or a highly respectable horny-handed son of toil, whose
+acquaintance we have never had the pleasure of personally making?
+Suppose you read in the Times that the respectable horny-handed
+one has fallen off a scaffolding and broken his neck; and that the
+Dresden Madonna has been burnt by an unexpected accident; which
+of the two items of intelligence affects you the most acutely? My
+dear fellow, you may push your humanitarian enthusiasm as far as
+ever you like; but in your heart of hearts you know as well as I
+do that you'll deeply regret the loss of the Madonna, and you'll
+never think again about the fate of the respectable horny-handed,
+his wife or children.'
+
+Ernest's answer, if he had any to make, was effectually nipped in
+the bud by the entrance of the scout, who came in to announce Mr.
+and Miss Oswald and Mrs. Martindale. Edie wore the grey dress,
+her brother's present, and flitted into the room after her joyous
+fashion, full of her first fresh delight at the cloistered quad of
+Magdalen.
+
+'What a delicious college, Mr. Berkeley!' she said, holding out
+her hand to him brightly. 'Good-morning, Mr. Le Breton; this is
+your brother, I know by the likeness. I thought New College very
+beautiful, but nothing I've seen is quite as beautiful as Magdalen.
+What a privilege to live always in such a place! And what an
+exquisite view from your window here!'
+
+'Yes,' said Berkeley, moving a few music-books from the seat in the
+window-sill; 'come and sit by it, Miss Oswald. Mrs. Martindale,
+won't you put your shawl down? How's the Professor to-day? So sorry
+he couldn't come.'
+
+'Ah, he had to go to sit on one of his Boards,' said the old lady,
+seating herself. 'But you know I'm quite accustomed to going out
+without him.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley knew as much; indeed, being a person of minute
+strategical intellect, he had purposely looked out a day on which
+the Professor had to attend a meeting of the delegates of something
+or other, so as to secure Mrs. Martindale's services without the
+supplementary drawback of that prodigious bore. Not that he was
+particularly anxious for Mrs. Martindale's own society, which was
+of the most strictly negative character; but he didn't wish Edie
+to be the one lady in a party of four men, and he invited the
+Professor's wife as an excellent neutral figure-head, to keep her
+in countenance. Ladies were scarcer then in Oxford than they are
+nowadays. The married fellow was still a tentative problematical
+experiment in those years, and the invasion of the Parks by young
+couples had hardly yet begun in earnest. So female society was
+still at a considerable local premium, and Berkeley was glad enough
+to secure even colourless old Mrs. Martindale to square his party
+at any price.
+
+'And how do you like Oxford, Miss Oswald?' asked Ernest, making
+his way towards the window.
+
+'My dear Le Breton, what a question to put to her!' said Berkeley,
+smiling. 'As if Oxford were a place to be appraised offhand, on
+three days' acquaintance. You remind me of the American who went
+to look at Niagara, and made an approving note in his memorandum
+book to say that he found it really a very elegant cataract.'
+
+'Oh, but you MUST form some opinion of it at least, at first sight,'
+cried Edie; 'you can't help having an impression of a place from
+the first moment, even if you haven't a judgment on it, can you
+now? I think it really surpasses my expectations, Mr. Le Breton,
+which is always a pleasant surprise. Venice fell below them; Florence
+just came up to them; but Oxford, I think, really surpasses them.'
+
+'We have three beautiful towns in Britain,' Berkeley said. ('As if
+he were a Welsh Triad,' suggested Herbert Le Breton, parenthetically.)
+'Torquay, Oxford, Edinburgh. Torquay is all nature, spoilt by what
+I won't call art; Oxford is all art, superimposed on a swamp that
+I won't call nature; Edinburgh is both nature and art, working pretty
+harmoniously together, to make up a unique and exquisite picture.'
+
+'Just like Naples, Venice, and Heidelberg,' said Edie, half to
+herself; but Berkeley caught at the words quickly as she said them.
+'Yes,' he answered; 'a very good parallel, only Oxford has a trifle
+more nature about it than Venice. The lagoon, without the palaces,
+would be simply hideous; the Oseney flats, without the colleges,
+would be nothing worse than merely dull.'
+
+'We owe a great deal,' said Ernest, gazing out towards the quadrangle,
+'to the forgotten mass of labouring humanity who piled all those
+blocks of shapeless stone into beautiful forms for us who come after
+to admire and worship. I often wonder, when I sit here in Berkeley's
+window-seat, and look across the quad to the carved pinnacles on
+the Founder's Tower there, whether any of us can ever hope to leave
+behind to our successors any legacy at all comparable to the one
+left us by those nameless old mediaeval masons. It's a very saddening
+thought that we for whom all these beautiful things have been put
+together--we whom labouring humanity has pampered and petted from
+our cradles upward, feeding us on its whitest bread, and toiling
+for us with all its weary sinews--that we probably will never do
+anything at all for it and for the world in return, but will simply
+eat our way through life aimlessly, and die forgotten in the end like
+the beasts that perish. It ought to make us, as a class, terribly
+ashamed of our own utter and abject inutility.'
+
+Edie looked at him with a sort of hushed surprise; she was accustomed
+to hear Harry talk radical talk enough after his own fashion, but
+radicalism of this particular pensive tinge she was not accustomed
+to. It interested her, and made her wonder what sort of man Mr. Le
+Breton might really be.
+
+'Well, you know, Mr. Le Breton,' said old Mrs. Martindale,
+complacently, 'we must remember that Providence has wisely ordained
+that we shouldn't all of us be masons or carpenters. Some of us are
+clergymen, now, and look what a useful, valuable life a clergyman's
+is, after all, isn't it, Mr. Berkeley?' Berkeley smiled a faint
+smile of amusement, but said nothing. 'Others are squires and
+landed gentry; and I'm sure the landed gentry are very desirable
+in keeping up the tone of the country districts, and setting a
+pattern of virtue and refinement to their poorer neighbours. What
+would the country villages be, for example, if it weren't for the
+centres of culture afforded by the rectory and the hall, eh, Miss
+Oswald.' Edith thought of quavering old Miss Catherine Luttrell
+gossiping with the rector's wife, and held her peace. 'You may depend
+upon it Providence has ordained these distinctions of classes for
+its own wise purposes, and we needn't trouble our heads at all
+about trying to alter them.'
+
+'I've always observed,' said Harry Oswald, 'that Providence is
+supposed to have ordained the existing order for the time being,
+whatever it may be, but not the order that is at that exact moment
+endeavouring to supplant it. If I were to visit Central Africa,
+I should confidently expect to be told by the rain-doctors that
+Providence had ordained the absolute power of the chief, and the
+custom of massacring his wives and slaves at his open grave side.
+I believe in Russia it's usually allowed that Providence has placed
+the orthodox Czar at the head of the nation, and that any attempt
+to obtain a constitution from him is simply flat rebellion and
+flying in the face of Providence. In England we had a King John
+once, and we extracted a constitution out of him and sundry other
+kings by main force; and here, it's acquiescence in the present
+limited aristocratic government that makes up obedience to
+the Providential arrangement of things apparently. But how about
+America? eh, Mrs. Martindale? Did Providence ordain that George
+Washington was to rebel against his most sacred majesty King George
+III., or did it not? And did it ordain that George Washington was
+to knock his most sacred majesty's troops into a cocked hat, or
+did it not? And did it ordain that Abraham Lincoln was to free the
+slaves, or did it not? What I want to know is this: can it be said
+that Providence has ordained every class distinction in the whole
+world, from Dahomey to San Francisco? And has it ordained every
+Government, past and present, from the Chinese Empire to the French
+Convention? Did it ordain, for example, the revolution of '89?
+That's the question I should like to have answered.'
+
+'Dear me, Mr. Oswald,' said the old lady meekly, taken aback by
+Harry's voluble vehemence: 'I suppose Providence permits some things
+and ordains others.'
+
+'And does it permit American democracy or ordain it?' asked the
+merciless Harry.
+
+'Don't you see, Mrs. Martindale,' put in Berkeley, coming gently
+to her rescue, 'your principle amounts in effect to saying that
+whatever is, is right.'
+
+'Exactly,' said the old lady, forgetting at once all about Dahomey
+or the Convention, and coming back mentally to her squires and
+rectors. 'The existing order is wisely arranged by Providence, and
+we mustn't try to set ourselves up against it.'
+
+'But if whatever is, is right,' Edie said, laughing, 'then Mr. Le
+Breton's socialism must be right too, you see, because it exists
+in him no doubt for some wise purpose of Providence; and if he and
+those who think with him can succeed in changing things generally
+according to their own pattern, then the new system that they
+introduce will be the one that Providence has shown by the result
+to be the favoured one.'
+
+'In short,' said Ernest, musingly, 'Mrs. Martindale's principle
+sanctifies success. It's the old theory of "treason never
+prospers--what's the reason? Because whene'er it prospers 'tis not
+treason." If we could only introduce a socialist republic, then it
+would be the reactionaries who would be setting themselves up against
+constituted authority, and so flying in the face of Providence.'
+
+'Fancy lecturing a recalcitrant archbishop and a remonstrant
+ci-devant duchess,' cried Berkeley, lightly, 'upon the moral guilt
+and religious sinfulness of rebellion against the constituted
+authority of a communist phalanstery. It would be simply charming.
+I can imagine myself composing a dignified exhortation to deliver
+to his grace, entirely compiled out of his own printed pastorals, on
+the duty of submission and the danger of harbouring an insubordinate
+spirit. Do make me chaplain-in-ordinary to your house of correction
+for irreclaimable aristocrats, Le Breton, as soon as you once get
+your coming socialist republic fairly under way.'
+
+'Luncheon is on the table, sir,' said the scout, breaking in
+unceremoniously upon their discussion.
+
+If Arthur Berkeley lunched by himself upon a solitary commons of
+cold beef, he certainly did not treat his friends and guests in
+corresponding fashion. His little entertainment was of the daintiest
+and airiest character, so airy that, as Edie herself observed
+afterwards to Harry, it took away all the sense of meat and drink
+altogether, and left one only a pleased consciousness of full
+artistic gratification. Even Ernest, though he had his scruples
+about the aspic jelly, might eat the famous Magdalen chicken cutlets,
+his brother said, 'with a distinct feeling of exalted gratitude to
+the arduous culinary evolution of collective humanity.'
+
+'Consider,' said Herbert, balancing neatly a little pyramid of
+whip cream and apricot jam upon his fork, 'consider what ages of
+slow endeavour must have gone to the development of such a complex
+mixture as this, Ernest, and thank your stars that you were born
+in this nineteenth century of Soyer and Francatelli, instead of
+being condemned to devour a Homeric feast with the unsophisticated
+aid of your own five fingers.'
+
+'But do tell me, Mr. Le Breton,' asked Edie, with one of her pretty
+smiles, 'what will this socialist republic of yours be like when
+it actually comes about? I'm dying to know all about it.'
+
+'Really, Miss Oswald,' Ernest answered, in a half-embarrassed tone,
+'I don't quite know how to reply to such a very wide and indefinite
+question. I haven't got any cut-and-dried constitutional scheme of
+my own for reorganising the whole system of society, any distinct
+panacea to cure all the ills that collective flesh is heir to. I
+leave the details of the future order to your brother Harry. The
+thing that troubles me is not so much how to reform the world at
+large as how to shape one's own individual course aright in the
+actual midst of it. As a single unit of the whole, I want rather
+guidance for my private conduct than a scheme for redressing the
+universal dislocation of things in general. It seems to me, every
+man's first duty is to see that he himself is in the right attitude
+towards society, and afterwards he may proceed to enquire whether
+society is in the right attitude towards him and all its other
+members. But if we were all to begin by redressing ourselves,
+there would be nothing left to redress, I imagine, when we turned
+to attack the second half of our problem. The great difficulty I
+myself experience is this, that _I_ can't discover any adequate
+social justification for my own personal existence. But I really
+oughtn't to bore other people with my private embarrassments upon
+that head.'
+
+'You see,' said Herbert Le Breton, carelessly, 'my brother represents
+the ethical element in the socialist movement, Miss Oswald, while
+Harry represents the political element. Each is valuable in its
+way; but Oswald's is the more practical. You can move great masses
+into demanding their rights; you can't so easily move them into
+cordially recognising their duties. Hammer, hammer, hammer at the
+most obvious abuses; that's the way all the political victories
+are finally won. If I were a radical at all, I should go with you,
+Oswald. But happily I'm not one; I prefer the calm philosophic
+attitude of perfectly objective neutrality.'
+
+'And if I were a radical,' said Berkeley, with a tinge of sadness
+in his voice as he poured himself out a glass of hock, 'I should
+go with Le Breton. But unfortunately I'm not one, Miss Oswald, I'm
+only a parson.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A LITTLE MUSIC.
+
+
+After lunch, Herbert Le Breton went off for his afternoon ride--a
+grave social misdemeanour, Ernest thought it--and Arthur Berkeley
+took Edie round to show her about the college and the shady gardens.
+Ernest would have liked to walk with her himself, for there was
+something in her that began to interest him somewhat; and besides,
+she was so pretty, and so graceful, and so sympathetic: but he
+felt he must not take her away from her host for the time being,
+who had a sort of proprietary right in the pleasing duty of acting
+as showman to her over his own college. So he dropped behind with
+Harry Oswald and old Mrs. Martindale, and endeavoured to simulate
+a polite interest in the old lady's scraps of conversation upon
+the heads of houses, their wives and families.
+
+'This is Addison's Walk, Miss Oswald,' said Berkeley, taking her
+through the gate into the wooded path beside the Cherwell; 'so
+called because the ingenious Mr. Addison is said to have specially
+patronised it. As he was an undergraduate of this college, and a
+singularly lazy person, it's very probable that he really did so;
+every other undergraduate certainly does, for it's the nearest walk
+an idle man can get without ever taking the trouble to go outside
+the grounds of Magdalen.'
+
+'The ingenious Mr. Addison was quite right then,' Edie answered,
+smiling; 'for he couldn't have chosen a lovelier place on earth to
+stroll in. How exquisite it looks just now, with the mellow light
+falling down upon the path through this beautiful autumnal foliage!
+It's just a natural cathedral aisle, with a lot of pale straw-coloured
+glass in the painted windows, like that splendid one we went to
+see the other day at Merton Chapel.'
+
+'Yes, there are certainly tones in that window I never saw in any
+other,' Berkeley said, 'and the walk to-day is very much the same
+in its delicate colouring. You're fond of colour, I should think,
+Miss Oswald, from what you say.'
+
+'Oh, nobody could help being struck by the autumn colouring of the
+Thames valley, I should fancy,' said Edie, blushing. 'We noticed
+it all the way up as we came in the train from Reading, a perfect
+glow of crimson and orange at Pangbourne, Goring, Mapledurham, and
+Nuneham. I always thought the Dart in October the loveliest blaze
+of warm reds and yellows I had ever seen anywhere in nature, but
+the Thames valley beats it hollow, as Harry says. This walk to-day
+is just one's ideal picture of Milton's Vallombrosa.'
+
+'Ah, yes, I always look forward to the first days of October term,'
+said Berkeley, slowly, 'as one of the greatest and purest treats
+in the whole round workaday twelvemonth. When the creeper on the
+Founder's Tower first begins to redden and crimson in the autumn,
+I could sit all day long by my open window, and just look at that
+glorious sight alone instead of having my dinner. But I'm very fond
+of these walks in full summer time too. I often stop up alone all
+through the long (being tied to my curacy here permanently, you
+know), and then I have the run of the place entirely to myself.
+Sometimes I take my flute out, and sit under the shade here and
+compose some of my little pieces.'
+
+'I can easily understand that they were composed here,' said Edie
+quickly. 'They've caught exactly the flavour of the place--especially
+your exquisite little Penseroso.'
+
+'Ah, you know my music, then, Miss Oswald?'
+
+'Oh yes, Harry always brings me home all your pieces whenever he
+comes back at the end of term. I can play every one of them without
+the notes. But the Penseroso is my special favourite.'
+
+'It's mine, too. I'm so glad you like it. But I'm working away at
+a little thing now which you shall hear as soon as I've finished
+it; something lighter and daintier than anything else I've ever
+attempted. I shall call it the Butterfly Canzonet.'
+
+'Why don't you publish your music under your own name, Mr. Berkeley?'
+
+'Oh, because it would never do. I'm a parson now, and I must
+keep up the dignity of the cloth by fighting shy of any aesthetic
+heterodoxies. It would be professional suicide for me to be suspected
+of artistic leanings. All very well in an archdeacon, you know,
+to cultivate his tastes for chants and anthems, but for a simple
+curate!--and secular songs too!--why, it would be sheer contumacy.
+His chances of a living would shrink at once to what your brother
+would call a vanishing quantity.'
+
+'Well, you can't imagine how much I admire your songs and airs,
+Mr. Berkeley. I was so pleased when you invited us, to think I was
+going to lunch with a real composer. There's no music I love so
+much as yours.'
+
+'I'm very glad to hear it, Miss Oswald, I assure you. But I'm only
+a beginner and a trifler yet. Some day I mean to produce something
+that will be worth listening to. Only, do you remember what some
+French novelist once said?--"A poet's sweetest poem is always
+the one he has never been able to compose." I often think that's
+true of music, too. Away up in the higher stories of one's brain
+somewhere, there's a tune floating about, or rather a whole oratorio
+full of them, that one can never catch and fix upon ruled paper.
+The idea's there, such a beautiful and vague idea, so familiar to
+one, but so utterly unrealisable on any known instrument--a sort
+of musical Ariel, flitting before one and tantalising one for
+ever, but never allowing one to come up with it and see its real
+features. I'm always dissatisfied with what I've actually written,
+and longing to crystallise into a score the imaginary airs I can
+never catch. Except in this last piece of mine; that's the only
+thing I've ever done that thoroughly and completely pleases me.
+Come and see me next week, and I'll play it over to you.'
+
+They walked all round the meadows, and back again beside the arches
+of the beautiful bridge, and then returned to Berkeley's rooms once
+more for a cup of afternoon tea, and an air or two of Berkeley's
+own composing. Edie enjoyed the walk and the talk immensely; she
+enjoyed the music even more. In a way, it was all so new to her.
+For though she had always seen much of Harry, and though Harry, who
+was the kindest and proudest of brothers, had always instinctively
+kept her up to his own level of thought and conversation, still,
+she wasn't used to seeing so many intelligent and educated young
+men together, and the novelty of their society was delightfully
+exhilarating to her eager little mind. To a bright girl of nineteen,
+wherever she may come from, the atmosphere of Oxford has a wonderfully
+cheering and stimulating effect; to a country tradesman's daughter
+from a tiny west-country village it is like a little paradise on
+earth with a ceaseless round of intensely enjoyable breakfasts,
+luncheons, dinners, and water-parties.
+
+Ernest, for his part, was not so well pleased. He wanted to have a
+little conversation with Oswald's sister; and he was compelled by
+politeness to give her up in favour of Arthur Berkeley. However, he
+made up for it when he returned, and monopolised the pretty little
+visitor himself for almost the entire tea-hour.
+
+As soon as they had gone, Arthur Berkeley sported his oak, and sat
+down by himself in his comfortable crimson-covered basket chair.
+'I won't let anybody come and disturb me this evening,' he said to
+himself moodily. 'I won't let any of these noisy Magdalen men come
+with their racket and riot to cut off the memory of that bright little
+dream. No desecration after she has gone. Little Miss Butterfly!
+What a pretty, airy, dainty, delicate little morsel it is! How she
+flits, and sips, and natters about every possible subject, just
+touching the tip of it so gracefully with her tiny white fingers,
+and blushing so unfeignedly when she thinks she's paid you a
+compliment, or you've paid her one. How she blushed when she said
+she liked my music! How she blushed when I said she had a splendid
+ear for minute discrimination! Somehow, if I were a falling-in-love
+sort of fellow, I half fancy I could manage to fall in love with her
+on the spot. Or rather, if I were a good analytical psychologist,
+perhaps I ought more correctly to say I AM in love with her already.'
+
+He sat down idly at the piano and played a few bars softly
+to himself--a beautiful, airy sort of melody, as it shaped itself
+vaguely in his head at the moment, with a little of the new wine of
+first love running like a trill through the midst of its fast-flowing
+quavers and dainty undulations. 'That will do,' he said to himself
+approvingly. 'That will do very well; that's little Miss Butterfly.
+Here she flits, flits, flits, flickers, sip, sip, sip, at her
+honeyed flowers; twirl away, whirl away, off in the sunshine--there
+you go, Miss Butterfly, eddying and circling with your painted
+mate. Flirt, flirt, flirt, coquetting and curvetting, in your
+pretty rhythmical aerial quadrille. Down again, down to the hare-bell
+on the hill side; sip at it, sip at it, sip at it, sweet little
+honey-drops, clear little honey-drops, bright little honey-drops;
+oh, for a song to be set to the melody! Tra-la-la, tro-lo-lo, up
+again, Butterfly. Little silk handkerchief, little lace neckerchief,
+fluttering, fluttering! Feathery wings of her, bright little eyes
+of her, flit, flit, flicker! Now, she blushes, blushes, blushes;
+deep crimson; oh, what a colour! Paint it, painter! Now she speaks.
+Oh, what laughter! Silvery, silvery, treble, treble, treble; trill
+away, trill away, silvery treble. Musical, beautiful; beautiful,
+musical; little Miss Butterfly--fly--fly--fly away!' And he brought
+his fingers down upon the gamut at last, with a hasty, flickering
+touch that seemed really as delicate as Edie's own.
+
+'I can never get words for it in English,' he said again, half
+speaking with his parted lips; 'it's too dactylic in rhythm for
+English verse to go to it. Beranger might have written a lilt for
+it, as far as mere syllables go, but Beranger to write about Miss
+Butterfly!--pho, no Frenchman could possibly catch it. Swinburne
+could fit the metres, I dare say, but he couldn't fit the feeling.
+It shall be a song without words, unless I write some Italian lines
+for it myself. Animula, blandula vagula--that's the sort of ring
+for it, but Latin's mostly too heavy. Io, Hymen, Hymenae, Io; Io,
+Hymen, Hymenae! What's that? A wedding song of Catullus--absit omen.
+I must be in love with her indeed.' He got up from the piano, and
+paced quickly and feverishly up and down the room.
+
+'And yet,' he went on, 'if only I weren't bound down so by this
+unprofitable trade of parson! A curate on eighty pounds a year,
+and a few pupils! The presumptuousness of the man in venturing to
+think of falling in love, as if he were actually one of the beneficed
+clergy! What are deacons coming to, I wonder! And yet, hath not a
+deacon eyes; hath not a deacon hands, organs, dimensions, senses,
+affections, passions? If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle
+us, do we not laugh? And if you show us a little Miss Butterfly,
+beautiful to the finger-ends, do we not fall in love with her at
+least as unaffectedly as if we were canons residentiary or rural
+deans? Fancy little Miss Butterfly a rural deaness! the notion's
+too ridiculous. Fly away, little Miss Butterfly; fly away, sweet
+little frolicsome, laughsome creature. I won't try to tie you down
+to a man in a black clerical coat with a very distant hypothetical
+reversionary prospect of a dull and dingy country parsonage. Flit
+elsewhere, little Miss Butterfly, flit elsewhere, and find yourself
+a gayer, gaudier-coloured mate!'
+
+He sat down again, and strummed a few more bars of his half-composed,
+half-extemporised melody. Then he leant back on the music-stool,
+and said gently to himself once more: 'Still, if it were possible,
+how happy I should try to make her! Bright little Miss Butterfly,
+I would try never to let a cold cloud pass chillily over your
+sunshiny head! I would live for you, and work for you, and write
+songs for your sake, all full of you, you, you, and so all full of
+life and grace and thrilling music. What's my life good for, to me
+or to the world? "A clergyman's life is such a useful one," that
+amiable old conventionality gurgled out this morning; what's the
+good of mine, as it stands now, to its owner or to anybody else,
+I should like to know, except the dear old Progenitor? A mere bit
+of cracked blue china, a fanciful air from a comic opera, masquerading
+in black and white as a piece of sacred music! What good am I to
+anyone on earth but the Progenitor (God bless him!), and when he's
+gone, dear old fellow, what on earth shall I have left to live
+for. A selfish blank, that's all. But with HER, ah, how different!
+With her to live for and to cherish, with an object to set before
+oneself as worth one's consideration, what mightn't I do at last?
+Make her happy--after all, that's the great thing. Make her fond
+of my music, that music that floats and evades me now, but would
+harden into scores as if by magic with her to help one to spell it
+out--I know it would, at last, I know it would. Ah, well, perhaps
+some day I may be able; perhaps some day the dream will realise
+itself; till then, work, work, work; let me try to work towards
+making it possible, a living or a livelihood, no matter which. But
+not a breath of it to you meanwhile, Miss Butterfly; flit about
+freely and joyously while you may; I would not spoil your untrammelled
+flight for worlds by trying to tether it too soon around the fixed
+centre of my own poor doubtful diaconal destinies.'
+
+At the same moment while Arthur Berkeley was thus garrulously conversing
+with his heated fancy, Harry and Edie Oswald were strolling lazily
+down the High, to Edie's lodgings.
+
+'Well, what do you think now of Berkeley and Le Breton, Edie?'
+asked her brother. 'Which of them do you like the best?'
+
+'I like them both immensely, Harry; I really can't choose between
+them. When Mr. Berkeley plays, he almost makes me fall in love with
+him; and when Mr. Le Breton talks, he almost makes me transfer my
+affections to him instead... But Mr. Berkeley plays divinely... And
+Mr. Le Breton talks beautifully... You know, I've never seen such
+clever men before--except you, of course, Harry dear, for you're
+cleverer and nicer than anybody. Oh, do let me look at those lovely
+silks over there?' And she danced across the road before he could
+answer her, like a tripping sylph in a painter's dreamland.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton's very nice,' she went on, after she had duly examined
+and classified the silks, 'but I don't exactly understand what it
+is he's got on his conscience.'
+
+'Nothing whatsoever, except the fact of his own existence,' Harry
+answered with a laugh. 'He has conscientious scruples against the
+existence of idle people in the community--do-nothings and eat-alls--and
+therefore he has conscientious scruples against himself for not
+immediately committing suicide. I believe, if he did exactly what
+he thought was abstractly right, he'd go away and cut his own throat
+incontinently for an unprofitable, unproductive, useless citizen.'
+
+'Oh, dear, I hope he'll do nothing of the sort,' cried Edie hastily.
+'I think I shall really ask him not to for my sake, if not for
+anybody else's.'
+
+'He'd be very much flattered indeed by your interposition on his
+behalf, no doubt, Popsy; but I'm afraid it wouldn't produce much
+effect upon his ultimate decision.'
+
+'Tell me, Harry, is Mr. Berkeley High Church?'
+
+'Oh dear no, I shouldn't say so. I don't suppose he ever gave the
+subject a single moment's consideration.'
+
+'But St. Fredegond's is very High Church, I'm told.'
+
+'Ah, yes; but Berkeley's curate of St. Fredegond's, not in virtue
+of his theology--I never heard he'd got any to speak of--but in
+virtue of his musical talents. He went into the Church, I suppose,
+on purely aesthetic grounds. He liked a musical service, and it
+seemed natural to him to take part in one, just as it seemed natural
+to a mediaeval Italian with artistic tendencies to paint Madonnas
+and St. Sebastians. There's nothing more in his clerical coat than
+that, I fancy, Edie. He probably never thought twice about it on
+theological grounds.'
+
+'Oh, but that's very wrong of him, Harry. I don't mean having
+no particular theological beliefs, of course; one expects that
+nowadays; but going into the Church without them.'
+
+'Well, you see, Edie, you mustn't judge Berkeley in quite the same
+way as you'd judge other people. In his mind, the aesthetic side
+is always uppermost; the logical side is comparatively in abeyance.
+Questions of creed, questions of philosophical belief, questions
+of science don't interest him at all; he looks at all of them from
+the point of view of the impression alone. What he sees in the
+Church is not a body of dogmas, like the High Churchmen, nor a set
+of opinions, like the Low Churchmen, but a close corporation of
+educated and cultivated gentlemen, charged with the duty of caring
+for a number of beautiful mediaeval architectural monuments,
+and of carrying on a set of grand and impressive musical or oral
+services. To him, a cathedral is a magnificent historical heritage;
+a sermon is a sort of ingenious literary exercise; and a hymn is
+a capital vehicle for very solemn emotional music. That's all; and
+we can hardly blame him for not seeing these things as we should
+see them.'
+
+'Well, Harry, I don't know. I like them both immensely. Mr.
+Berkeley's very nice, but perhaps I like Mr. Le Breton the best
+of the two.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ASKELON VILLA, GATH.
+
+
+Number, 28, Epsilon Terrace, Bayswater, was one of the very smallest
+houses that a person with any pretensions to move in that Society
+which habitually spells itself with a capital initial could ever
+possibly have dreamt of condescending to inhabit. Indeed, if
+Dame Eleanor, relict of the late Sir Owen Le Breton, Knight, had
+consulted merely the length of her purse and the interests of her
+personal comfort, she would doubtless have found for the same rental
+a far more convenient and roomy cottage in Upper Clapton or Stoke
+Newington. But Lady Le Breton was a thoroughly and conscientiously
+religious woman, who in all things consulted first and foremost
+the esoteric interests of her ingrained creed. It was a prime
+article of this cherished social faith that nobody with any shadow
+of personal self-respect could endure to live under any other
+postal letter than W. or S.W. Better not to be at all than to drag
+out a miserable existence in the painful obscurity of N. or S.E.
+Happily for people situated like Lady Le Breton, the metropolitan
+house-contractor (it would be gross flattery to describe him
+as a builder) has divined, with his usual practical sagacity, the
+necessity for supplying this felt want for eligible family residences
+at once comparatively cheap and relatively fashionable. By driving
+little culs-de-sac and re-entrant alleys at the back of his larger
+rows of shoddy mansions, he is enabled to run up a smaller terrace,
+or crescent, or place, as the case may be, composed of tiny shallow
+cottages with the narrowest possible frontage, and the tallest
+possible elevation, which will yet entitle their occupiers to feel
+themselves within the sacred pale of social salvation, in the blest
+security of the mystic W. Narrowest, shallowest, and tallest of
+these marginal Society residences is the little block of blank-faced,
+stucco-fronted, porticoed rabbit-hutches, which blazons itself
+forth in the Court Guide under the imposing designation of Epsilon
+Terrace, Bayswater.
+
+The interior of No. 28 in this eminently respectable back alley was
+quite of a piece, it must be confessed, with the vacant Philistinism
+of its naked exterior. 'Mother has really an immense amount of
+taste,' Herbert Le Breton used to say, blandly, 'and all of it of
+the most atrocious description; she picked it up, I believe, when
+my poor father was quartered at Lahore, a station absolutely fatal
+to the aesthetic faculties; and she will never get rid of it again
+as long as she lives.' Indeed, when once Lady Le Breton got anything
+whatsoever into her head, it was not easy for anybody else to get
+it out again; you might much more readily expect to draw one of her
+double teeth than to eliminate one of her pet opinions. Not that
+she was a stupid or a near-sighted woman--the mother of clever
+sons never is--but she was a perfectly immovable rock of social
+and political orthodoxy. The three Le Breton boys--for there was
+a third at home--would gladly have reformed the terrors of that
+awful drawing-room if they had dared; but they knew it was as much
+as their places were worth, Herbert said, to attempt a remonstrance,
+and they wisely left it alone, and said nothing.
+
+Of course the house was not vulgarly furnished, at least in the
+conventional sense of the word; Lady Le Breton was far too rigid
+in her social orthodoxy to have admitted into her rooms anything
+that savoured of what she considered bad form, according to her
+lights. It was only vulgar with the underlying vulgarity of mere
+tasteless fashionable uniformity. There was nothing in it that any
+well-bred footman could object to; nothing that anybody with one
+grain of genuine originality could possibly tolerate. The little
+occasional chairs and tables set casually about the room were of
+the strictest neglige Belgravian type, a sort of studied protest
+against the formal stiffness of the ordinary unused middle-class
+drawing-room. The portrait of the late Sir Owen in the wee library,
+presented by his brother-officers, was painted by that distinguished
+R. A., Sir Francis Thomson, a light of the middle of this century;
+and an excellent work of art it was too, in its own solemn academic
+kind. The dining-room, tiny as it was, possessed that inevitable
+Canaletti without which no gentleman's dining-room in England
+is ever considered to be complete. Everything spoke at once the
+stereotyped Society style of a dozen years ago (before Mr. Morris
+had reformed the outer aspect of the West End), entirely free from
+anything so startling or indecorous as a gleam of spontaneity in
+the possessor's mind. To be sure, it was very far indeed from the
+centre round-table and brilliant-flowered-table-cover style of the
+utter unregenerate Philistine household; but it was further still
+from the simple natural taste acd graceful fancy of Edie Oswald's
+cosy little back parlour behind the village grocer's shop at
+Calcombe-Pomeroy.
+
+The portrait and the Canaletti were relics of Lady Le Breton's best
+days, when Sir Owen was alive, and the boys were still in their
+first babyhood. Sir Owen was an Indian officer of the old school,
+a simple-minded, gentle, brave man, very religious after his
+own fashion, and an excellent soldier, with the true Anglo-Indian
+faculty for administration and organisation. It was partly from
+him, no doubt, that the boys inherited their marked intelligence;
+and it was wholly from him, beyond any doubt at all, that Ernest
+and his younger brother Ronald inherited their moral or religious
+sincerity--for that was an element in which poor formally orthodox
+Lady Le Breton was wholly deficient. The good General had been
+brought up in the strictest doctrines of the Clapham sect; he had
+gone to India young, as a cadet from Haileybury; and he had applied
+his intellect all his life long rather to the arduous task of
+extending 'the blessings of British rule' to Sikhs and Ghoorkas, than
+to those abstract ethical or theological questions which agitated
+the souls of a later generation. If a new district had to be
+assimilated in settlement to the established model of the British
+raj, if a tribe of hill-savages had to be conciliated by gentler
+means than rifles or bayonets, if a difficult bit of diplomatic
+duty had to be performed on the debateable frontiers, Sir Owen Le
+Breton was always the person chosen to undertake it. An earnest,
+honest, God-fearing man he remained to the end, impressed by a
+profound sense of duty as he understood it, and a firm conviction
+that his true business in life consisted in serving his Queen and
+country, and in bringing more and more of the native populations
+within the pale of the Company's empire, and the future evangelisation
+that was ultimately to follow. But during the great upheaval of
+the Mutiny, he fell at the head of his own unrevolted regiment in
+one of the hottest battles of that terrible time, and my Lady Le
+Breton found herself left alone with three young children, on little
+more than the scanty pension of a general officer's widow on the
+late Company's establishment.
+
+Happily, enough remained to bring up the boys, with the aid
+of their terminable annuities (which fell in on their attaining
+their majority), in decent respect for the feelings and demands of
+exacting Society; and as the two elder were decidedly clever boys,
+they managed to get scholarships at Oxford, which enabled them
+to tide over the dangerous intermediate period as far as their
+degree. Herbert then stepped at once into a fellowship and sundry
+other good things of like sort; and Ernest was even now trying to
+follow in his brother's steps, in this particular. Only the youngest
+boy, Ronald, still remained quite unprovided for. Ronald was a
+tall, pale, gentle, weakly, enthusiastic young fellow of nineteen,
+with so marked a predisposition to lung disease that it had not been
+thought well to let him run the chance of over-reading himself; and
+so he had to be content with remaining at home in the uncongenial
+atmosphere of Epsilon Terrace, instead of joining his two elder
+brothers at the university. Uncongenial, because Ronald alone
+followed Sir Owen in the religious half of his nature, and found
+the 'worldliness' and conventionality of his unflinching mother a
+serious bar to his enjoyment of home society.
+
+'Ronald,' said my lady, at the breakfast-table on the very morning
+of Arthur Berkeley's little luncheon party, 'here's a letter for
+you from Mackenzie and Anderson. No doubt your Aunt Sarah's will
+has been recovered and proved at last, and I hope it'll turn out
+satisfactory, as we wish it.'
+
+'For my part, I really almost hope it won't, mother,' said Ronald,
+turning it over; 'for I don't want to be compelled to profit by
+Ernest's excessive generosity. He's too good to me, just because he
+thinks me the weaker vessel; but though we must bear one another's
+burdens, you know, we should each bear his own cross as well,
+shouldn't we, mother?'
+
+'Well, it can't be much in any case,' said his mother, a little
+testily, 'whoever gets it. Open the envelope at once, my boy, and
+don't stand looking at it like a goose in that abstracted way.'
+
+'Oh, mother, she was my father's only sister, and I'm not in such
+a hurry to find out how she has disposed of her mere perishing
+worldly goods,' answered Ronald, gravely. 'It seems to me a terrible
+thing that before poor dear good Aunt Sarah is cold in her grave
+almost, we should be speculating and conjecturing as to what she
+has done with her poor little trifle of earthly riches.'
+
+'It's always usual to read the will immediately after the funeral,'
+said Lady Le Breton, firmly, to whom the ordinary usage of society
+formed an absolutely unanswerable argument; 'and how you, Ronald,
+who haven't even the common decency to wear a bit of crape around
+your arm for her--a thing that Ernest himself, with all his
+nonsensical theories, consents to do--can talk in that absurd way
+about what's quite right and proper to be done, I for my part,
+really can't imagine.'
+
+'Ah, but you know, mother, I object to wearing crape on the ground
+that it isn't allowable for us to sorrow as them that have no hope:
+and I'm sure I'm paying no disrespect to dear Aunt Sarah's memory
+in this matter, for she was always the first herself, you remember,
+to wish that I should follow the dictates of my own conscience.'
+
+'I remember she always upheld you in acts of opposition to your own
+mother, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton said coldly, 'and I suppose you're
+going to do honour to her religious precepts now by not opening
+that letter when your mother tells you to do so. In MY Bible, sir,
+I find a place for the Fourth Commandment.'
+
+Ronald looked at her gently and unreprovingly; but though a quiet
+smile played involuntarily around the corners of his mouth, he
+resisted the natural inclination to correct her mistake, and to
+suggest blandly that she probably alluded to the fifth. He knew
+he must turn his left cheek also--a Christian virtue which he had
+abundant opportunities of practising in that household; and he felt
+that to score off his mother for such a verbal mistake as the one
+she had just made would not be in keeping with the spirit of the
+commandment to which, no doubt, she meant to refer him. So without
+another word he opened the envelope and glanced rapidly at the
+contents of the letter it enclosed.
+
+'They've found the second will,' he said, after a moment, with a
+rather husky voice, 'and they're taking steps to get it confirmed,
+whatever that may be.'
+
+'Broad Scotch for getting probate, I believe,' said Lady Le Breton,
+in a slight tone of irony; for to her mind any departure from the
+laws or language she was herself accustomed to use, assumed at once
+the guise of a rank and offensive provincialism. 'Your poor Aunt
+WOULD go and marry a Scotchman, and he a Scotch business man too;
+so of course we must expect to put up with all kinds of ridiculous
+technicalities and Edinburgh jargon accordingly. All law's bad
+enough in the way of odd words, but commend me to Scotch law for
+utter and meaningless incomprehensibility. Well, and what does
+the second will say, Ronald?'
+
+'There, mother,' cried Ronald, flinging the letter down hurriedly
+with a burst of tears. 'Read it yourself, if you will, for I can't.
+Poor dear Aunt Sarah, and dear, good unselfish Ernest! It makes me
+cry even to think of them.'
+
+Lady Le Breton took the paper up from the table without a word and
+read it carefully through. 'I am very glad to hear it,' she said,
+'very glad indeed to hear it. "And in order to guard against any
+misinterpretation of my reasons for making this disposition of my
+property," your Aunt says, "I wish to put it on record that I had
+previously drawn up another will, bequeathing my effects to be divided
+between my two nephews Ernest and Ronald Le Breton equally; that I
+communicated the contents of that will"--a horrid Scotticism--"to
+my nephew Ernest; and that at his express desire I have now revoked
+it, and drawn up this present testament, leaving the share intended
+for him to his brother Ronald." Why, she never even mentions dear
+Herbert!'
+
+'She knew that Herbert had provided for himself,' Ronald answered,
+raising his head from his hands, 'while Ernest and I were unprovided
+for. But Ernest said he could fight the world for himself, while
+I couldn't; and that unearned wealth ought only to be accepted
+in trust for those who were incapacitated by nature or misfortune
+from earning their own bread. I don't always quite agree with
+all Ernest's theories any more than you do, but we must both admit
+that at least he always conscientiously acts up to them himself,
+mother, mustn't we?'
+
+'It's a very extraordinary thing,' Lady Le Breton went on, 'that Aunt
+Sarah invariably encouraged both you boys in all your absurdities
+and Quixotisms. She was Quixotic herself at heart, that's the truth
+of it, just like your poor dear father. I remember once, when we
+were quartered at Meean Meer in the Punjaub, poor dear Sir Owen
+nearly got into disgrace with the colonel--he was only a sub. in
+those days--because he wanted to go trying to convert his syces,
+which was a most imprudent thing to do, and directly opposed to
+the Company's orders. Aunt Sarah was just the same. Herbert's the
+only one of you three who has never given me one moment's anxiety,
+and of course poor Herbert must be passed over in absolute silence.
+However, I'm very glad she's left the money to you, Ronald, as
+you need it the most, and Mackenzie and Anderson say it'll come to
+about a hundred and sixty a year.'
+
+'One can do a great deal of good with that much money,' said Ronald
+meditatively. 'I mean, after arranging with you, mother, for the
+expenses of my maintenance at home, which of course I shall do, as
+soon as the pension ceases, and after meeting one's own necessary
+expenditure in the way of clothing and so forth. It's more than
+any one Christian man ought to spend upon himself, I'm sure.'
+
+'It's not at all too much for a young man in your position in
+society, Ronald; but there--I know you'll want to spend half of
+it on indiscriminate charity. However, there'll be time enough to
+talk about that when you've actually got it, thank goodness.'
+
+Ronald murmured a few words softly to himself, of which Lady Le
+Breton only caught the last echo--'laid them down at the apostles'
+feet; and distribution was made unto every man according as he had
+need.'
+
+'Just like Ernest's communistic notions,' she murmured in return,
+half audibly. 'I do declare, between them both, a plain woman hardly
+knows whether she's standing on her head or on her heels. I live
+in daily fear that one or other of them will be taken up by the
+police, for being implicated in some dynamite plot or other, to blow
+up the Queen or destroy the Houses of Parliament.' Ronald smiled
+again, gently, but answered nothing. 'There's another letter for
+you there, though, with the Exmoor coronet upon it. Why don't you
+open it? I hope it's an invitation for you to go down and stop at
+Dunbude for a week or two. Nothing on earth would do you so much
+good as to get away for a while from your ranters and canters, and
+mix occasionally in a little decent and rational society.'
+
+Ronald took up the second letter with a sigh. He feared as much
+himself, and had doleful visions of a painful fortnight to be
+spent in a big country house, where the conversation would be all
+concerning the slaughter of pheasants and the torture of foxes,
+which his soul loathed to listen to. 'It's from Lady Hilda,' he
+said, glancing through it, 'and it ISN'T an invitation after all.'
+He could hardly keep down a faint tone of gratification as he
+discovered this reprieve. 'Here's what she says:--
+
+'"DEAR MR. LE BRETON,--Mamma wishes me to write and tell you that
+Lynmouth's tutor, Mr. Walsh, is going to leave us at Christmas,
+and she thinks it just possible that one of your two brothers at
+Oxford might like to come down to Dunbude and give us their kind
+aid in taking charge of Lynmouth. He's a dreadful pickle, as you
+know; but we are very anxious to get somebody to look after him in
+whom mamma can have perfect confidence. We don't know your brothers'
+addresses or we would have written to them direct about it. Perhaps
+you will kindly let them hear this suggestion; and if they think
+the matter worth while, we might afterwards arrange details as to
+business and so forth. With kind regards to Lady Le Breton, believe
+me,
+
+'"Yours very sincerely,
+
+'"HILDA TREGELLIS."'
+
+'My dear Ronald,' said Lady Le Breton, much more warmly than before,
+'this is really quite providential. Are they at Dunbude now?'
+
+'No, mother. She writes from Wilton Place. They're up in town for
+Lord Exmoor's gout, I know. I heard they were on Sunday.'
+
+'Then I shall go and see Lady Exmoor this very morning about it.
+It's exactly the right place for Ernest. A little good society
+will get rid of all his nonsensical notions in a month or two. He's
+lived too exclusively among his radical set at Oxford. And then
+it'll be such a capital thing for him to be in the house continually
+with Hilda; she's a girl of such excellent tone. I fancy--I'm not
+quite sure, but I fancy--that Ernest has a decided taste for the
+company of people, and even of young girls, who are not in Society.
+He's so fond of that young man Oswald, who Herbert tells me is
+positively the son of a grocer--yes, I'm sure he said a grocer!--and
+it seems, from what Herbert writes me, that this Oswald has brought
+a sister of his up this term from behind the counter, on purpose
+to set her cap at Ernest. Now you boys have, unfortunately, no
+sisters, and therefore you haven't seen as much of girls of a good
+stamp--not daily and domestically I mean--as is desirable for you,
+from the point of view of Society. But if Ernest can only be induced
+to take this tutorship at the Exmoors', he'll have an opportunity
+of meeting daily with a really nice girl, like Hilda; and though
+of course it isn't likely that Hilda would take a fancy to her
+brother's tutor--the Exmoors are such VERY conservative people
+in matters of rank and wealth and family and so forth--quite
+un-Christianly so, I consider--yet it can't fail to improve Ernest's
+tone a great deal, and raise his standard of female society generally.
+It's really a very distressing thought to me, Ronald, that all my
+boys, except dear Herbert, should show such a marked preference for
+low and vulgar companionship. It seems to me, you both positively
+prefer as far as possible the society of your natural inferiors.
+There's Ernest must go and take up with the friendship of that
+snuffy old German Socialist glass-cutter; while you are always
+running after your Plymouth Brethren and your Bible Christians,
+and your other ignorant fanatical people, instead of going with
+me respectably to St. Alphege's to hear the dear Archdeacon! It's
+very discouraging to a mother, really, very discouraging.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+
+'Berkeley couldn't come to-day, Le Breton: it's Thursday, of
+course: I forgot about it altogether,' Oswald said, on the barge
+at Salter's. 'You know he pays a mysterious flying visit to town
+every Thursday afternoon--to see an imprisoned lady-love, I always
+tell him.'
+
+'It's very late in the season for taking ladies on the water, Miss
+Oswald,' said Ernest, putting his oar into the rowlock, and secretly
+congratulating himself on the deliverance; 'but better go now than
+not see Iffley church and Nuneham woods at all. You ought to have
+come up in summer term, and let us have the pleasure of showing you
+over the place when it was in its full leafy glory. May's decidedly
+the time to see Oxford to the greatest advantage.'
+
+'So Harry tells me, and he wanted me to come up then, but it wasn't
+convenient for them at home to spare me just at that moment, so I
+was obliged to put it off till late in the autumn. I have to help
+my mother a good deal in the house, you know, and I can't always
+go dancing about the world whenever I should like to. Which string
+must I pull, Harry, to make her turn into the middle of the river?
+She always seems to twist round the exact way I don't want her to.'
+
+'Right, right, hard right,' cried Harry irom the bow--they were in
+a tub pair bound down the river for Iffley. 'Keep to the Oxfordshire
+shore as far as the willows; then cross over to the Berkshire. Le
+Breton'll tell you when and where to change sides; he knows the
+river as well as I do.'
+
+'That'll do splendidly for the present,' Ernest said, looking
+ahead over his shoulder. 'Mind the flags there; don't go too near
+the corner. You certainly ought to see these meadows in early
+spring, when the fritillaries are all out over the spongy places,
+Miss Oswald. Has your brother ever sent you any of the fritillaries?'
+
+'What? snake-heads? Oh, boxes full of them. They're lovely flowers,
+but not lovelier than our own Devonshire daffodils. You should see
+a Devonshire water-meadow in April! Why don't you come down some
+time to Calcombe Pomeroy? It's the dearest little peaceful seaside
+corner in all England.'
+
+Harry bit his lip, for he was not over-fond of bringing people down
+to spy out his domestic sanctities; but Ernest answered cordially,
+'I should like it above everything in the world, Miss Oswald. If
+you will let me, I certainly shall as soon as possible. Mind, quick,
+get out of the way of that practising eight, or we shall foul her!
+Left, as hard as you can! That'll do. The cox was getting as red
+as a salamander, till he saw it was a lady steering. When coxes
+catch a man fouling them, their language is apt to be highly
+unparliamentary.--Yes, I shall try to get away to Calcombe as soon
+as ever I can manage to leave Oxford. It wouldn't surprise me if
+I were to run down and spend Christmas there.'
+
+'You'd find it as dull as ditch-water at Christmas, Le Breton,'
+said Harry. 'Much better wait till next summer.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't think so, Harry dear,' Edie interrupted, with that
+tell-tale blush of hers. 'If Mr. Le Breton wants to come then, I
+believe he'd really find it quite delightful. Of course he wouldn't
+expect theatres, or dances, or anything like that, in a country
+village; and we're dreadfully busy just about Christmas day itself,
+sending out orders, and all that sort of thing,'--Harry bit his
+lip again:--'but if you don't mind a very quiet place and a very
+quiet time, Mr. Le Breton, I don't think myself our cliffs ever look
+grander, or our sea more impressive, than in stormy winter weather.'
+
+'I wish to goodness she wasn't so transparently candid and guileless,'
+thought Harry to himself. 'I never CAN teach her duly to respect
+the prejudices of Pi. Not that it matters twopence to Le Breton,
+of course: but if she talks that way to any of the other men here,
+they'll be laughing in every common-room in Oxford over my Christmas
+raisins and pounds of sugar--commonplace cynics that they are.
+I must tell her about it the moment we get home again, and adjure
+her by all that's holy not to repeat the indiscretion.'
+
+'A penny for your thoughts, Harry,' cried Edie, seeing by his look
+that she had somehow vexed him. 'What are you thinking of?'
+
+'Thinking that all Oxford men are horrid cynics,' said Harry, boldly
+shaming the devil.
+
+'Why are they?' Edie asked.
+
+'I suppose because it's an inexpensive substitute for wit or
+intellect,' Harry answered. 'Indeed, I'm a bit of a cynic myself,
+I believe, for the same reason and on strictly economical principles.
+It saves one the trouble of having any intelligible or original
+opinion of one's own upon any subject.'
+
+Below Iffley Lock they landed for half an hour, in order to give
+Edie time for a pencil sketch of the famous old Norman church-tower,
+with its quaint variations on the dog-tooth ornament, and its
+ancient cross and mouldering yew-tree behind. Harry sat below in
+the boat, propped on the cushions, reading the last number of the
+'Nineteenth Century;' Ernest and Edie took their seat upon the
+bank above, and had a first chance of an unbroken tete-a-tete.
+
+'How delicious to live in Oxford always!' said Edie, sketching in
+the first outline of the great round arches. 'I would give anything
+to have the opportunity of settling here for life. Some day I shall
+make Harry set up house, and bring me up here as his housekeeper:--I
+mean,' she added with a blush, thinking of Harry's warning look
+just before, 'as soon as they can spare me from home.' She purposely
+avoided saying 'when they retire from business,' the first phrase
+that sprang naturally to her simple little lips. 'Let me see, Mr.
+Le Breton; you haven't got any permanent appointment here yourself,
+have you?'
+
+'Oh no,' Ernest answered: 'no appointment of any sort at all, Miss
+Oswald. I'm loitering up casually on the look-out for a fellowship.
+I've been in for two or three already, but haven't got them.'
+
+'Why didn't you?' asked Edie, with a look of candid surprise.
+
+'I suppose I wasn't clever enough,' Ernest answered simply. 'Not
+so clever, I mean, as the men who actually got them.'
+
+'Oh, but you MUST be,' Edie replied confidently; 'and a great deal
+cleverer, too, I'm sure. I know you must, because Harry told me
+you were one of the very cleverest men in the whole 'Varsity. And
+besides, I see you are, myself. And Harry says most of the men who
+get fellowships are really great donkeys.'
+
+'Harry must have been talking in one of those cynical moods he
+told us about,' said Ernest, laughing. 'At any rate, the examiners
+didn't feel satisfied with my papers, and I've never got a fellowship
+yet. Perhaps they thought my political economy just a trifle too
+advanced for them.'
+
+'You may depend upon it, that's it,' said Edie, jumping at the
+conclusion with the easy omniscience of a girl of nineteen. 'Next
+time, make your political economy a little more moderate, you
+know, without any sacrifice of principle, just to suit them. What
+fellowship are you going in for now?'
+
+'Pembroke, in November.'
+
+'Oh, I do hope you'll get it.'
+
+'Thank you very much. So do I. It would be very nice to have one.'
+
+'But of course it won't matter so much to you as it did to Harry.
+Your family are such very great people, aren't they?'
+
+Ernest smiled a broad smile at her delicious simplicity. 'If by
+very great people you mean rich,' he said, 'we couldn't very well
+be poorer--for people of our sort, I mean. My mother lives almost
+entirely on her pension; and we boys have only been able to come
+up to Oxford, just as Harry was, by the aid of our scholarships. If
+we hadn't saved in our first two years, while we had our government
+allowances, we shouldn't have been able to stop up for our degrees
+at all. So if I don't get a fellowship I shall have to take
+to school-mastering or something of the sort, for a livelihood.
+Indeed, this at Pembroke will be my very last chance, for I can't
+hold on much longer.'
+
+'And if you got a fellowship you could never marry, could you?'
+asked Edie, going on with her work.
+
+'Not, while I held it, certainly. But I wouldn't hold it long. I
+regard it only as a makeshift for a time. Unhappily, I don't know
+how to earn my own bread by the labour of my hands, as I think we
+ought all to do in a well-constituted society; so unless I choose
+to starve (about the rightfulness of which I don't feel quite certain),
+I MUST manage somehow to get over the interval. But as soon as I
+could I would try to find some useful work to do, in which I could
+repay society the debt I owe it for my bringing up. You see, I've
+been fed and educated by a Government grant, which of course came
+out of the taxes--your people have had to help, whether they would
+or not, in paying for my board and lodging--and I feel that I owe
+it as a duty to the world to look out some employment in which I
+could really repay it for the cost of my maintenance.'
+
+'How funnily you do look at everything, Mr. Le Breton,' said Edie.
+'It would never have struck me to think of a pension from the army
+in that light. And yet of course it's the right light; only we don't
+most of us take the trouble to go to the bottom of things, as you
+do. But what will you do if you don't get the fellowship?'
+
+'In that case, I've just heard from my mother that she would like
+me to take a tutorship at Lord Exmoor's,' Ernest answered. 'Lynmouth,
+their eldest son, was my junior at school by six or seven years,
+and now he's going to prepare for Christ Church. I don't quite know
+whether it's a right place for me to accept or not; but I shall ask
+Max Schurz about it, if I don't get Pembroke. I always take Herr
+Max's advice in all questions of conscience, for I'm quite sure
+whatever he approves of is the thing one ought to do for the greatest
+good of humanity.'
+
+'Harry told me about Herr Schurz,' Edie said, filling in the details
+of the doorway. 'He thinks him a very earnest, self-convinced,
+good old man, but a terrible revolutionist. For my part, I believe
+I rather like revolutionists, provided, of course, they don't cut
+off people's heads. Harry made me read Carlyle, and I positively
+fell in love with Camille Desmoulins; only I don't really think he
+ought to have approved of QUITE so much guillotining, do you? But
+why shouldn't you take the tutorship at the Exmoors'?'
+
+'Oh, because it isn't a very useful work in the world to prepare a
+young hereditary loafer like Lynmouth for going to Christ Church.
+Lynmouth will be just like his father when he grows up--an amiable
+wholesale partridge-slayer; and I don't see that the world at large
+will be any the better or the worse off for his being able to grope
+his way somehow through two plays of Sophocles and the first six
+books of Euclid. If only one were a shoemaker now! What a delightful
+thing to sit down at the end of a day and say to oneself, "I have
+made two pairs of good, honest boots for a fellow-mortal this
+week, and now I deserve to have my supper!" Still, it'll be better,
+anyway, than doing nothing at all, and living off my mother.'
+
+'If you went to Dunbude, when would you go?'
+
+'After the Christmas vacation, I suppose, from what Lady Hilda
+says.'
+
+'Lady Hilda? Oh, so there's a sister, is there?'
+
+'Yes. A very pretty girl, about twenty, I should say, and rather
+clever too, I believe. My mother knows them a little.'
+
+Poor little Edie! What made her heart jump so at the mere mention
+of Lady Hilda? and what made the last few strokes at the top
+of the broken yew-tree look so very weak and shaky? How absurd of
+herself, she thought, to feel so much moved at hearing that there
+was another girl in the world whom Ernest might possibly fall in
+love with! And yet she had never even seen Ernest only ten days
+ago! Lady Hilda! What a grand name, to be sure, and what a grand
+person she must be. And then Ernest himself belonged by birth to
+the same class! For in poor little Edie's mind, innocent as she was
+of the nice distinctions of the peerage, Lady So-and-So was Lady
+So-and-So still, whoever she might be, from the wife of a premier
+marquis to the wife of the latest created knight bachelor. To
+her, Lady Hilda Tregellis and Lady Le Breton were both 'ladies of
+title'; and the difference between their positions, which seemed
+so immense to Ernest, seemed nothing at all to the merry little
+country girl who sat sketching beside him. After all, how could
+she ever have even vaguely fancied that such a young man as Ernest,
+in spite of all his socialistic whims, would ever dream of caring
+for a girl of the people like her? No doubt he would go to the
+Exmoors', fall naturally in love with Lady Hilda, and marry decorously
+in what Edie considered his own proper sphere of life! She went
+on with the finishing touches of her little picture in silence, and
+folded it up into the tiny portfolio at last with a half-uttered
+sigh. So her poor wee castle in the air was knocked down before
+she had begun to build it up in any real seriousness, and she turned
+to join Harry in the boat almost without speaking.
+
+'I hope you'll get the Pembroke fellowship,' she said again, a
+little later, as they rowed onward down the river to Nuneham. 'But
+in any case, Mr. Le Breton, you mustn't forget you've half promised
+to come and look us up at Calcombe Pomeroy in the Christmas vacation.'
+
+Ernest smiled, and nodded acquiescence.
+
+Meanwhile, on that same Thursday afternoon, Arthur Berkeley had
+gone up from Oxford by the fast train to Paddington, as was his
+weekly wont, and had dived quickly down one of the small lanes that
+open out from the left-hand side of Praed Street. He walked along
+it for a little way, humming an air to himself as he went, and
+then stopped at last in front of a small, decent brick house, with
+a clean muslin blind across the window (clean muslin forms a notable
+object in most London back streets), and a printed card hanging from
+the central pane, bearing the inscription, 'G. Berkeley, Working
+Shoemaker.--The Trade supplied with Ready-closed Uppers.' At the
+window a beaming face was watching for his appearance, and Arthur
+said to himself as he saw it through the curtain, 'The dear old
+Progenitor's looking better again this week, God bless him!' In a
+moment he had opened the door, and greeted his father in the old
+boyish fashion, with an honest kiss on either cheek. They had kissed
+one another so whenever they met from Arthur's childhood upward;
+and the Oxford curate had never felt himself grown too much of a
+man to keep up a habit which seemed to him by far the most sacred
+thing in his whole existence.
+
+'Well, father dear, I needn't ask you how you are to-day,' said
+Arthur, seating himself comfortably in the second easy-chair of
+the trim little workshop parlour. 'I can see at once you're a good
+deal better. Any more pain in the head and eyes, eh, or any trouble
+about the forehead?'
+
+The old shoemaker passed his hand over his big, bulging brow, bent
+outward as it is so often in men of his trade by the constant habit
+of stooping over their work, and said briskly, 'No, Artie, my boy,
+not a sign of it this week--not a single sign of it. I've been
+taking a bit of holiday, you see, and it's done me a lot of good,
+I can tell you;--made me feel another man entirely. I've been
+playing my violin till the neighbours began to complain of it; and
+if I hadn't asked them to come and hear me tune up a bit, I really
+believe they'd have been having me up before the magistrate for a
+public nuisance.'
+
+'That's right, Daddy dear; I'm always glad when you've been having
+a little music. It does you more good than anything. And the jelly--I
+hope you've eaten the jelly?'
+
+'Oh, I've eaten it right enough, Artie, thank your dear heart;
+and the soup too, dearie. Came by a boy from Walters's every day,
+addressed to "Berkeley, Esquire, 42 Whalley Street;" and the boy
+wouldn't leave it the first day, because he thought there must
+have been a mistake about the address. His contention was that a
+journeyman shoemaker wasn't an esquire; and my contention was that
+the "Berkeley" was essential, and the "Esquire" accidental, which
+was beyond his logic, bless you, Artie; for I've often noticed, my
+son, that your errand-boy is a naturally illogical and contradictory
+creature. Now, shoemakers aren't, you know. I've always taken a just
+pride in the profession, and I've always asserted that it develops
+logic; it develops logic, Artie, or else why are all cobblers good
+Liberals, I should like to know? Eh, can you tell me that; with
+all your Oxford training, sir, can you tell me that?'
+
+'It develops logic beyond the possibility of a doubt. Daddy;
+and it develops a good kind heart as well,' said Arthur, smiling.
+'And it develops musical taste, and literary talent, and a marked
+predilection for the beautiful in art and nature. In fact, whenever
+I meet a good man of any sort, anywhere, I always begin now by
+inquiring which of his immediate ancestors can have been a journeyman
+shoemaker. Depend upon it, Daddy, there's nothing like leather.'
+
+'There you are, poking fun at your poor old Progenitor again,' said
+the old cobbler, with a merry twinkle in the corner of his eye.
+'If it weren't for the jelly, and the natural affections always
+engendered by shoemaking, I think I should almost feel inclined to
+cut you off with a shilling, Artie, my boy--to cut you off with a
+shilling. Well, Artie, I'm quite convalescent now (don't you call
+it? I'm afraid of my long shoemaker's words before you, nowadays,
+you've grown so literary; for I suppose parsons are more literary
+than even shoemakers). I'm quite convalescent now, and I think, my
+boy, I must get to work again this week, and have no more of your
+expensive soups and jellies. If I didn't keep a sharp look-out
+upon you, Artie, lad, I believe you'd starve yourself outright up
+there at Oxford to pamper your poor old useless father here with
+luxuries he's never been accustomed to in his whole life.'
+
+'My dear simple old Progenitor, you don't know how utterly you're
+mistaken,' cried Arthur, eagerly. 'I believe I'm really the most
+selfish and unnatural son in all Christendom. I'm positively
+rolling in wealth up there at Magdalen; I've had my room papered
+again since you saw it last long vacation; and I live like a prince,
+absolutely like a Russian prince, upon my present income. I assure
+you on my solemn word of honour, Father, that I eat meat for
+lunch--that's my dinner--every day; and an egg for tea as regular
+as clockwork. I often think when I look around my palatial rooms
+in college, what a shame it is that I should let you, who are worth
+ten of me, any day, live any longer in a back street up here in
+London; and I won't allow it, Daddy, I really won't allow it from
+this day forth, I'm determined. I've come up especially to speak
+to you about it this afternoon, for I've made up my mind that
+this abnormal state of things can't continue.'--'Very good word,
+abnormal,' murmured his father.--'And I've also made up my mind,'
+Arthur said, almost firmly, for him, 'that you shall come up and
+live at Oxford. I can't bear having you so far away from me, now
+that you're weaker than you used to be, Father dear, and so often
+ailing.'
+
+The old shoemaker laughed aloud. 'Oh no, Artie, my boy,' he
+said cheerily, shaking his head with a continuous series of merry
+chuckles. 'It won't do at all, it won't do, I assure you. I may be
+a terrible free-thinker and all that kind of thing, as the neighbours
+say I am--poor bodies, they never read a word of modern criticism
+in their lives, heaven bless 'em--stragglers from the march of
+intellect, mere stragglers--but I've too much respect for the cloth
+to bring a curate of St. Fredegond's into such disgrace as that
+would mean for you, Artie. You shan't have your career at Oxford
+spoiled by its being said of you that your father was a working
+shoemaker. What with the ready-closed uppers, and what with your
+ten shillings a week, and what with all the presents you give me,
+and what with the hire of the piano, I'm as comfortable as ever I
+want to be, growing into a gentleman in my old age, Artie, and I
+even begin to have my doubts as to whether it's quite consistent
+in me as a good Radical to continue my own acquaintance with
+myself--I'm getting to be such a regular idle do-nothing aristocrat!
+Go to Oxford and mend shoes, indeed, with you living there as a
+full-fledged parson in your own rooms at Magdalen! No, no, I won't
+hear of it. I'll come up for a day or two in long vacation, my boy,
+as I've always done hitherto, and take a room in Holywell, and look
+in upon you a bit, accidentally, so as not to shame you before the
+scouts (who are a servile set of flunkeys, incapable of understanding
+the elevated feelings of a journeyman shoemaker); but I wouldn't
+dream of going to live in the place, any more than I'd dream of
+asking to be presented at court on the occasion of my receiving a
+commission for a pair of evening shoes for the Queen's head footman.'
+
+'Father,' said Arthur, smiling, 'you're absolutely incorrigible. Such
+a dreadful old rebel against all constituted authority, human and
+divine, I never did meet in the course of my existence, I believe
+you're really capable of arguing a point of theology against an
+archbishop. But I don't want you to come up to Oxford as a shoemaker;
+I mean you to come up and live with me in rooms of our own, out
+of college. Whenever I think of you, dear Father--you, who are
+so infinitely nobler, and better, and truer, and more really a
+gentleman than any other than I ever knew in my life--whenever I
+think of you, coming secretly up to Oxford as if you were ashamed
+of yourself, and visiting your own son by stealth in his rooms in
+college as if you were a dun coming to ask him for money, instead
+of the person whom he delights to honour--whenever I think of it,
+Father, it makes my cheeks burn with shame, and I loathe myself for
+ever allowing you so to bemean your own frank, true, noble nature.
+I oughtn't to permit it, Father, I oughtn't to permit it; and I
+won't permit it any longer.'
+
+'Well, you never would have permitted it, Artie, if I hadn't compelled
+you; for I've got all the prudence and common sense of the family
+bottled up here in my own forehead,' said the old man, tapping
+his bulging brow significantly. 'I don't deny that Oxford may be
+an excellent school for Greek and Latin, and philosophy, and so
+forth; but if you want prudence and sagacity and common-sense it's
+a well-known fact that there's nothing like the practice of making
+ready-closed uppers, sir, to develop 'em. If I'd taken your advice,
+my boy, I'd have come up to visit you when you were an undergraduate,
+and ruined your prospects at the very outset. No, no, Artie, I shall
+stop here, and stick to my last, my dear boy, stick to my last, to
+the end of all things.'
+
+'You shall do nothing of the sort, Daddy; that I'm determined upon,'
+Arthur cried vehemently. 'I'm not going to let you do any more
+shoemaking. The time has come when you must retire, and devote all
+your undivided energies to the constant study of modern criticism.
+Whether you come to Oxford or stop in London, I've made up my mind
+that you shan't do another stroke of work as long as you live. Look
+here, dear old Daddy, I'm getting to be a perfect millionaire, I
+assure you. Do you see this fiver? well, I got that for knocking
+out that last trashy little song for Fradelli; and it cost me no
+more trouble to compose it than to sit down and write the score out
+on a sheet of ruled paper. I'm as rich as Croesus--made a hundred
+and eighty pounds last year, and expect to make over two hundred
+this one. Now, if a man with that perfectly prodigious fortune
+can't afford to keep his own father in comfort and affluence, what
+an absolute Sybarite and gourmand of a fellow he must be himself.'
+
+'It's a lot of money, certainly, Artie,' said the old shoemaker,
+turning it over thoughtfully: 'two hundred pounds is a lot of money;
+but I doubt very much whether it's more than enough to keep you up
+to the standard of your own society, up there at Oxford. As John
+Stuart Mill says, these things are all comparative to the standard
+of comfort of your class. Now, Artie, I believe you have to stint
+yourself of things that everybody else about you has at Oxford, to
+keep me in luxuries I was never used to.'
+
+'My dear Dad, it's only of the nature of a repayment,' cried Arthur,
+earnestly. 'You slaved and sacrificed and denied yourself when I
+was a boy to send me to school, without which I would never have
+got to Oxford at all; and you taught me music in your spare hours
+(when you had any); and I owe everything I have or am or ever will
+be to your unceasing and indefatigable kindness. So now you've
+got to take repayment whether you will or not, for I insist upon
+it. And if you won't come up to Oxford, which perhaps would be an
+uncongenial place for you in many ways, I'll tell you what I'll do,
+Daddy; I'll look out for a curacy somewhere in London, and we'll
+take a little house together, and I'll furnish it nicely, and there
+we shall live, sir, whatever you say, so not another word about
+it. And now I want you to listen to the very best thing I've ever
+composed, and tell me what you think of it.'
+
+He sat down to the little hired cottage piano that occupied the
+corner of the neat small room, and began to run his deft fingers
+lightly over the keys. It was the Butterfly fantasia. The father
+sat back in his red easy-chair, listening with all his ears, first
+critically, then admiringly, at last enthusiastically. As Arthur's
+closing notes died away softly towards the end, the old shoemaker's
+delight could be restrained no longer. 'Artie,' he cried, gloating
+over it, 'that's music! That's real music! You're quite right, my
+boy; that's far and away the best thing you've ever written. It's
+exquisite--so light, so airy, so unearthlike. But, Artie, there's
+more than that in it. There's soul in it; and I know what it means.
+You don't deceive your poor old Progenitor in a matter of musical
+inspiration, I can tell you. I know where you got that fantasia
+from as well as if I'd seen you getting it. You got it out of your
+own heart, my boy, out of your own heart. And the thing it says to me
+as plain as language is just this--you're in love! You're in love,
+Artie, and there's no good denying it. If any man ever wrote that fantasia
+without being in love at the time--first love--ecstasy--tremor--tiptoe
+of expectation--why, then, I tell you, music hasn't got such a
+thing as a tongue or a meaning in it.'
+
+Arthur looked at him gently and smiled, but said nothing.
+
+'Will you tell me about her, Artie?' asked the old man, caressingly,
+laying his hand upon his son's arm.
+
+'Not now, Father; not just now, please. Some other time, perhaps,
+but not now. I hardly know about it myself, yet. It may be
+something--it may be nothing; but, at any rate, it was peg enough
+to hang a fantasia upon. You've surprised my little secret, Father,
+and I dare say it's no real secret at all, but just a passing whiff
+of fancy. If it ever comes to anything, you shall know first of
+all the world about it. Now take out your violin, there's a dear
+old Dad, and give me a tune upon it.'
+
+The father took the precious instrument from its carefully covered
+case with a sort of loving reverence, and began to play a piece
+of Arthur's own composition. From the moment the bow touched the
+chords it was easy enough to see whence the son got his musical
+instincts. Old George Berkeley was a born musician, and he could
+make his violin discourse to him with rare power of execution.
+There they sat, playing and talking at intervals, till nearly eight,
+when Arthur went out hurriedly to catch the last train to Oxford,
+and left the old shoemaker once more to his week's solitude. 'Not
+for much longer,' the curate whispered to himself, as he got into
+his third-class carriage quickly; 'not for much longer, if I can
+help it. A curacy in or near London's the only right thing for me
+to look out for!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+GHOSTLY COUNSEL.
+
+
+November came, and with it came the Pembroke fellowship examination.
+Ernest went in manfully, and tried hard to do his best; for
+somehow, in spite of the immorality of fellowships, he had a sort
+of floating notion in his head that he would like to get one,
+because he was beginning to paint himself a little fancy picture
+of a home that was to be, with a little fairy Edie flitting through
+it, and brightening it all delightfully with her dainty airy
+presence. So he even went so far as to mitigate considerably the
+native truculence of his political economy paper, after Edie's
+advice--not, of course, by making any suggestion of opinions he did
+not hold, but by suppressing the too-prominent expression of those
+he actually believed in. Max Schurz's name was not once mentioned
+throughout the whole ten or twelve pages of closely written foolscap;
+'Gold and the Proletariate' was utterly ignored; and in place of
+the strong meat served out for men by the apostles of socialism in
+the Marylebone dancing-saloon, Ernest dished up for his examiner's
+edification merely such watery milk for babes as he had extracted
+from the eminently orthodox economical pages of Fawcett, Mill, and
+Thorold Rogers. He went back to his rooms, satisfied that he had
+done himself full justice, and anxiously waited for the result to
+be duly announced on the Saturday morning.
+
+Was it that piece of Latin prose, too obviously modelled upon the
+Annals of Tacitus, while the senior tutor was a confirmed Ciceronian,
+with the Second Philippic constitutionally on the brain? Was
+it the Greek verse, containing one senarius with a long syllable
+before the caesura in the fifth foot, as Herbert pointed out to
+his brother on the very evening when that hideous oversight--say
+rather crime--had been openly perpetrated in plain black and white
+on a virgin sheet of innocent paper? Was it some faint ineffaceable
+savour of the Schurzian economics, peeping through in spite of all
+disguises, like the garlic in an Italian ragout, from under the
+sedulous cloak of Ricardo's theory of rent? Was it some flying
+rumour, extra-official, and unconnected with the examination in
+any way, to the effect that young Le Breton was a person of very
+dubious religious, political, and social orthodoxy? Or was it merely
+that fortunate dispensation of Providence whereby Oxford almost
+invariably manages to let her best men slip unobserved through her
+fingers, and so insures a decent crop of them to fill up her share
+of the passing vacancies in politics, literature, science, and art?
+Heaven or the Pembroke examiners alone can answer these abstruse
+and difficult questions; but this much at least is certain, that
+when Ernest Le Breton went into the Pembroke porter's lodge on the
+predestined Saturday, he found another name than his placarded upon
+the notice board, and turned back, sick at heart and disappointed,
+to his lonely lodgings. There he spent an unhappy hour or two, hewing
+down what remained of his little aerial castle off-hand; and then
+he went out for a solitary row upon the upper river, endeavouring
+to work off his disappointment like a man, with a good hard spell
+of muscular labour.
+
+Edie had already returned to Calcombe-Pomeroy, so in the evening
+he went to tell his misfortune to Harry Oswald. Harry was really
+sorry to hear it, for Ernest was his best friend in Oxford, and
+he had hoped to have him settled close by. 'You'll stop up and
+try again for Christ Church in February, won't you, Le Breton?' he
+asked.
+
+'No,' said Ernest, shaking his head a little gloomily; 'I don't
+think I will. It's clear I'm not up to the Oxford standard for a
+fellowship, and I couldn't spend another term in residence without
+coming down upon my mother to pay my expenses--a thing she can't
+easily afford to do. So I suppose I must fall back for the present
+upon the Exmoor tutorship. That'll give me time to look about me,
+till I can get something else to do; and after all, it isn't a bit
+more immoral than a fellowship, when one comes to look it fairly
+in the face. However, I shall go first and ask Herr Max's opinion
+upon the matter.'
+
+'I'm going to spend a fortnight in town in the Christmas vac,'
+said Oswald, 'and I should like to go with you to Max's again, if
+I may.'
+
+Ernest coloured up a little, for he would have liked to invite Oswald
+to his mother's house; and yet he felt there were two reasons why
+he should not do so; he must himself be dependent this time upon
+his mother's hospitality, and he didn't think Lady Le Breton would
+be perfectly cordial in her welcome to Harry Oswald.
+
+In the end, however, it was arranged that Harry should engage rooms
+at his former lodgings in London, and that Ernest should take him
+once more to call upon the old socialist when he went to consult
+him on the question of conscience.
+
+'For my part, Ernest,' said Lady Le Breton to her son, the morning
+after his return from Oxford, 'I'm not altogether sorry you didn't
+get this Pembroke fellowship. It would have kept you among the
+same set you are at present mixing in for an indefinite period.
+Of course now you'll accept Lady Exmoor's kind proposal. I saw her
+about it the same morning we got Hilda's letter; and she offers
+200L. a year, which, of course, is mere pocket money, as your board
+and lodging are all found for you, so to speak, and you'll have
+nothing to do but to dress and amuse yourself.'
+
+'Well, mother, I shall see about it. I'm going to consult Herr
+Schurz upon the subject this morning.'
+
+'Herr Schurz!' said Lady Le Breton, in her bitterest tone of irony.
+'It appears to me you make that snuffy old German microscope man
+your father confessor. It's very disagreeable to a mother to find
+that her sons, instead of taking her advice about what is most
+material to their own interests, should invariably go to confer
+with communist refugees and ignorant ranters. Ronald, what is your
+programme, if you please, for this morning's annoyance?'
+
+Ronald, with the fear of the fifth commandment steadily before
+his eyes, took no notice of the last word, and answered calmly,
+'You know, mother, this is the regular day for the mission-house
+prayer-meeting.'
+
+'The mission-house prayer-meeting! I know nothing of the sort, I
+assure you. I don't keep a perfect calendar in my mind of all your
+meetings and your religious engagements. Then I suppose I must go
+alone to the Waltons' to see Mr. Walton's water-colours?'
+
+'I'll give up the prayer-meeting, if you wish it,' Ronald answered,
+with his unvarying meekness. 'Only, I'm afraid I must walk very
+slowly. My cough's rather bad this morning.'
+
+'No, no,' Ernest put in, 'you mustn't dream of going, Ronald;
+I couldn't allow you to walk so far on any account. I'll put off
+my engagement with Oswald, who was going with me to Herr Schurz's,
+and I'll take you round to the Waltons', mother, whenever you like.'
+
+'Dear me, dear me,' moaned Lady Le Breton, piteously, pretending
+to wring her hands in lady-like and mitigated despair; 'I can't
+do anything without its being made the opportunity for a scene, it
+seems. I shall NOT go to the Waltons'; and I shall leave you both
+to follow your own particular devices to your heart's content. I'm
+sorry I proposed anything whatsoever, I'm sure, and I shall take
+care never to do such an imprudent thing again.' And her ladyship
+walked in her stateliest and most chilly manner out of the freezing
+little dining-room.
+
+'It's a great cross, living always with poor mother, Ernest,' said
+Ronald, his eyes filling with tears as he spoke; 'but we must try
+to bear with her, you know, for after all she leads a very lonely
+life herself, because she's so very unsympathetic.' Ernest took
+the spare white hand in his and smoothed it compassionately. 'My
+dear, dear Ronald,' he said, 'I know it's hard for you. I must try
+the best I can to make it a little easier!'
+
+They walked together as far as the mission-house, arm in arm, for
+though in some things the two young Le Bretons were wide apart
+as the poles, in others they were fundamentally at one in inmost
+spirit; and even Ronald, in spite of his occasional little narrow
+sectarianisms, felt the underlying unity of purpose no less than
+Ernest. He was one of those enthusiastic ethereal natures which
+care little for outer forms or ceremonies, and nothing at all for
+churches and organisations, but love to commune as pure spirit
+with pure spirit, living every day a life of ecstatic spirituality,
+and never troubling themselves one whit about theological controversy
+or established religious constitutions. As long as Ronald Le Breton
+could read his Greek Testament every morning, and talk face to
+face in their own tongue with the Paul of First Corinthians or the
+John of the Epistles, in the solitude of his own bedroom, he was
+supremely indifferent about the serious question, of free-will
+and fore-knowledge, or about the important question of apostolical
+succession, or even about that other burning question of eternal
+punishment, which was just then setting his own little sect of
+Apostolic Christian Missioners roundly by the ears. These things
+seemed to his enthusiastic mind mere fading echoes of an alien
+language; all that he himself really cared for in religion was the
+constant sense of essential personal communion with that higher
+Power which spoke directly to his soul all day long and always; or
+the equally constant sense of moral exaltation which he drew from
+the reading of the written Word in its own original language. He
+had never BECOME an Apostolic Christian; he had grown up to be one,
+unconsciously to himself. 'Your son Ronald's religion, my dear
+Lady Le Breton,' Archdeacon Luttrell used often to say, 'is, I
+fear, too purely emotional. He cannot be made to feel sufficiently
+the necessity for a sound practical grasp of doctrinal Christianity.'
+To Ronald himself, he might as well have talked about the necessity
+for a sound practical grasp of doctrinal Buddhism. And if Ronald
+had really met a devout Buddhist, he would doubtless have found,
+after half an hour's conversation, that they were at one in everything
+save the petty matter of dialect and vocabulary.
+
+At Oswald's lodging, Ernest found his friend ready and waiting for
+him. They went on together to the same street in Marylebone as
+before, and mounted the stair till they reached Herr Schurz's gloomy
+little work-room on the third floor. The old apostle was seated
+at his small table by the half-open window, grinding the edges of
+a lens to fit the brass mounting at his side; while his daughter
+Uta, a still good-looking, quiet, broad-faced South German woman,
+about forty or a little more, sat close by, busily translating a
+scientific book into English by alternate reading and consultation
+with her father. Harry saw the title on her page was 'Researches
+into the Embryology of the Isopodal Crustaceans,' and conceived
+at once an immense respect for the learning and wisdom of the
+communist exile's daughter. Herr Schurz hardly stopped a moment
+from his work--he never allowed his numerous visitors to interfere
+in any way with his daily duties--but motioned them both to seats
+on the bare bench beside him, and waited to bear the nature of
+their particular business. It was an understood thing that no one
+came to see the Socialist leader on week days except for a good
+and sufficient reason.
+
+The talk at first was general and desultory; but after a little time
+Ernest brought conversation round to its proper focus, and placed
+his case of conscience fairly before his father confessor. Was it
+allowable for a consistent socialist to accept the place of tutor
+to the son of a peer and a landowner?
+
+'For my part, Herr Schurz,' Oswald said confidently, 'I don't see
+any reason on earth, from the point of view of any political economy
+whatsoever, why Ernest shouldn't take the position. The question
+isn't how the Exmoors have come by their money, even allowing that
+private property in land is in itself utterly indefensible; which
+is a proposition I don't myself feel inclined unreservedly to admit,
+though I know you and Le Breton do: the real question's this,--since
+they've got this money into their hands to distribute, and since
+in any case they will have the distribution of it, isn't it better
+that some of it should go into Le Breton's pocket than that it
+should go into any other person's? That's the way I for my part
+look at the matter.'
+
+'What do you say to that, friend Ernest?' asked the old German,
+smiling and waiting to see whether Ernest would detect what from
+their own standpoint he regarded as the ethical fallacy of Harry
+Oswald's argument.
+
+'Well, to tell you the truth, Herr Schurz,' answered Ernest, in his
+deliberate, quiet way, 'I don't think I've envisaged the subject
+to myself from quite the same point of view as Oswald has done. I
+have rather asked myself whether it was right of a man to accept
+a function in which he would really be doing nothing worthy for
+humanity in return for his daily board and lodging. It isn't so much
+a question who exactly is to get certain sums out of the Exmoors'
+pockets, which ought no doubt never to have been in them; it's more
+a question whether a man has any right to live off the collective
+labour of the world, and do nothing of any good to the world on
+his own part by way of repayment.'
+
+'That's it, friend Ernest,' cried the old man, with a pleased nod
+of his big grey head; 'the socialistic Iliad in a nutshell! That's
+the very root of the question. Don't be deceived by capitalist
+sophisms. So long as we go on each of us trying to get as much as
+we can individually out of the world, instead of asking what the
+world is getting out of us, in return, there will be no revolution
+and no millennium. We must make sure that we're doing some good
+ourselves, instead of sponging upon the people perpetually to feed
+us for nothing. What's the first gospel given to man at the creation
+in your popular cosmogonies? Why, that in the sweat of his face
+shall he eat bread, and till the ground from which he was taken.
+That's the native gospel of the toiling many, always; your doctrines
+of fair exchange, and honest livelihoods, and free contract, and
+all the rest of it, are only the artificial gospel of the political
+economists, and of the bourgeoisie and the aristocrats into whose
+hands they play--the rascals!'
+
+'Then you think I oughtn't to take the post?' asked Ernest, a little
+ruefully.
+
+'I don't say that, Le Breton--I don't say that,' said Herr Schurz,
+more quietly than before, still grinding away at his lens. 'The
+question's a broad one, and it has many aspects. The best work
+a man can do is undoubtedly the most useful work--the work that
+conduces most to the general happiness. But we of the proletariate
+can't take our choice always: as your English proverb plainly puts
+it, with your true English bluntness, "beggars mustn't be choosers."
+We must, each in his place, do the work that's set before us by the
+privileged classes. It's impossible for us to go nicely discriminating
+between work that's useful for the community, work that's merely
+harmless, and work that's positively detrimental. How can we insure
+it? A man's a printer, say. There's a generally useful trade, in
+which, on the whole, he labours for the good and enlightenment of
+the world--for he may print scientific books, good books, useful
+books; and most printing, on the average, is useful. But how's he
+to know what sort of thing he's printing? He may be printing "Gold
+and the Proletariate," or he may be printing obscurantist and
+retrogressive treatises by the enemies of humanity. Look at my own
+trade, again. You'd say at first sight, Mr. Oswald, that to make
+microscopes must be a good thing in the end for the world at large:
+and so it is, no doubt; but half of them--ay, more than half of
+them--are thrown away: mere wasted labour, a good workman's time
+and skill lavished needlessly on some foolish rich man's caprices
+and amusement. Often enough, now, I make a good instrument--an
+instrument, with all its fittings, worth fifty or a hundred pounds.
+That takes a long time to make, and I'm a skilled workman; and
+the instrument may fall into the hands of a scientific man who'll
+use it in discovery, in verification, in promoting knowledge, in
+lessening disease and mitigating human suffering. That's the good
+side of my trade. But, mark you, now,' and the old man wiped his
+forehead rapidly with his sleeve, 'it has its bad side too. As often
+as not, I know, some rich man will buy that machine, that cost me
+so much time and trouble to make, and will buy a few dozen stock
+slides with it, and will bring it out once in a moon to show his
+children or a few idle visitors the scales on a butterfly's wing,
+or the hairs on the leg of a common flea. Uta sets those things
+up by the thousand for the dealers to sell to indolent dilettanti.
+The appetite of the world at large for the common flea is simply
+insatiable. And it's for that, perhaps, that I'm spoiling my
+eyesight now, grinding and grinding and grinding at this very lens,
+and fitting the thing to an accurate fraction of a millimetre, as
+we always fit these things--we who are careful and honest workmen--to
+show an idle man's friends the hairs on a flea's fore-leg. If that
+isn't enough to make a man ashamed of our present wasteful and
+chaotic organisation, I should think he must be a survival from
+the preglacial epoch--as, indeed, most of us actually are!'
+
+'But, after all, Herr Schurz,' said Harry, expostulating, 'you get
+paid for your labour, and the rich man is doing better by encouraging
+your skill than by encouraging the less useful skill of other
+workmen.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' cried Herr Schurz, warmly, 'that's the doctrine of the
+one-eyed economists; that's the capitalist way of looking at it;
+but it isn't our way--it isn't ours. Is it nothing, think you,
+that all that toil of mine--of a sensible man's--goes to waste,
+to gratify the senseless passing whim of a wealthy nobody? Is it
+nothing that he uselessly monopolises the valuable product of my
+labour, which in other and abler hands might be bringing forth good
+fruit for the bettering and furthering of universal humanity? I
+tell you, Mr. Oswald, half the best books, half the best apparatus,
+half the best appliances in all Europe, are locked up idle in
+rich men's cabinets, effecting no good, begetting no discoveries,
+bringing forth no interest, doing nothing but foster the anti-social
+pride of their wealthy possessors. But that isn't what friend
+Ernest wants to ask me about to-day. He wants to know about his own
+course in a difficult case; and instead of answering him, here am
+I, maundering away, like an old man that I am, into the generalised
+platitudes of "Gold and the Proletariate." Well, Le Breton, what
+I should say in your particular instance is this. A man with the
+fear of right before his eyes may, under existing circumstances,
+lawfully accept any work that will keep him alive, provided he sees
+no better and more useful work equally open to him. He may take
+the job the capitalists impose, if he can get nothing worthier to
+do elsewhere. Now, if you don't teach this young Tregellis, what
+alternative have you? Why, to become a master in a school--Eton,
+perhaps, or Rugby, or Marlborough--and teach other equally useless
+members of prospective aristocratic society. That being so, I think
+you ought to do what's best for yourself and your family for the
+present--for the present--till the time of deliverance comes. You
+see, there is one member of your family to whom the matter is of
+immediate importance.'
+
+'Ronald,' said Ernest, interrupting him.
+
+'Yes, Ronald. A good boy; a socialist, too, though he doesn't know
+it--one of us, born of us, and only apart from us in bare externals.
+Well, would it be most comfortable for poor Ronald that you should
+go to these Exmoor people, or that you should take a mastership,
+get rooms somewhere, and let him live with you? He's not very happy
+with your mother, you say. Wouldn't he be happier with you? What
+think you? Charity begins at home, you know: a good proverb--a
+good, sound, sensible, narrow-minded, practical English proverb!'
+
+'I've thought of that,' Ernest said, 'and I'll ask him about it.
+Whichever he prefers, then, I'd better decide upon, had I?'
+
+'Do so,' Herr Max answered, with a nod. 'Other things equal, our
+first duty is to those nearest to us.'
+
+What Herr Max said was law to his disciples, and Ernest went his
+way contented.
+
+'Mr. Oswald seems a very nice young man,' Uta Schurz said, looking
+up from the microscope slides she had begun to mount at the moment
+her regular translating work was interrupted by their sudden entry.
+She had been taking quiet glances at Harry all the while, in her
+unobtrusive fashion; for Uta had learned always to be personally
+unobtrusive--'the prophet's donkey,' those irreverent French exiles
+used to call her--and she had come to the conclusion that he was
+a decidedly handsome and manly fellow.
+
+'Which do you like best, Uta--Oswald or Le Breton?' asked her
+father.
+
+'Personally,' Uta answered, 'I should prefer Mr. Oswald. To live
+always with Mr. Le Breton would be like living with an abstraction.
+No woman would ever care for him; she might just as well marry
+Spinoza's Ethics or the Ten Commandments. He's a perfect model of
+a socialist, and nothing else. Mr. Oswald has some human nature in
+him as well.'
+
+'There are two kinds of socialists,' said Herr Max, bending once
+more over his glasses; 'the one kind is always thinking most of
+its rights; the other kind is always thinking most of its duties.
+Oswald belongs to the first, Le Breton to the second. I've often
+observed it so among men of their two sorts. The best socialists
+never come from the bourgeoisie, nor even from the proletariate;
+they come from among the voluntarily declasses aristocrats. Your
+workman or your bourgeois who has risen, and who interests himself
+in social or political questions, is always thinking, "Why shouldn't
+I have as many rights and privileges as these other people have?"
+The aristocrat who descends is always thinking, "Why shouldn't
+these other people have as many rights and privileges as I have?"
+The one type begets aggressive self-assertion, the other type
+begets a certain gentle spirit of self-effacement. You don't often
+find men of the aristocratic class with any ethical element in
+them--their hereditary antecedents, their breeding, their environment,
+are all hostile to it; but when you do find them, mark my words,
+Uta, they make the truest and most earnest friends of the popular
+cause of any. Their sympathy and interest in it is all unselfish.'
+
+'And yet,' Uta answered firmly, 'I still prefer Mr. Oswald. And
+if you care for my opinion, I should say that the aristocrat does
+all the dreaming, but the bourgeois does all the fighting; and
+that's the most important thing practically, after all.'
+
+An hour later, Ernest was talking his future plans over with his
+brother Ronald. Would it be best for Ronald that he should take
+a mastership, and both should live together, or that he should go
+for the present to the Exmoors', and leave the question of Ronald's
+home arrangements still unsettled?
+
+'It's so good of you to think of me in the matter, Ernest,' Ronald
+said, pressing his hand gently; 'but I don't think I ought to
+go away from mother before I'm twenty-one. To tell you the truth,
+Ernest, I hardly flatter myself she'd be really sorry to get rid
+of me; I'm afraid I'm a dreadful thorn in her side at present; she
+doesn't understand my ways, and perhaps I don't sympathise enough
+with hers; but still, if I were to propose to go, I feel sure
+she'd be very much annoyed, and treat it as a serious act of
+insubordination on my part. While I'm a minor, at least, I ought
+to remain with her; the Apostle tells us to obey our parents, in
+the Lord; and as long as she requires nothing from me that doesn't
+involve a dereliction of principle I think I must bear with it,
+though I acknowledge it's a cross, a heavy cross. Thank you so much
+for thinking of it, dearest Ernest.' And his eyes filled once more
+with tears as he spoke.
+
+So it was finally arranged that for the present at least Ernest
+should accept Lady Exmoor's offer, and that as soon as Ronald
+was twenty-one he should look about for a suitable mastership, in
+order for the two brothers to go immediately into rooms together.
+Lady Le Breton was surprised at the decision; but as it was in her
+favour, she wisely abstained from gratifying her natural desire to
+make some more uncomplimentary references to the snuffy old German
+socialist. Sufficient unto the day was the triumph thereof; and she
+had no doubt in her own mind that if once Ernest could be induced
+to live for a while in really good society the well-known charms
+and graces of that society must finally tame his rugged breast,
+and wean him away from his unaccountable devotion to those horrid
+continental communists.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+IN THE CAMP OF THE PHILISTINES.
+
+
+Dunbude Castle, Lord Exmoor's family seat, stands on the last spurs
+of the great North Devon uplands, overlooking the steep glen of a
+little boulder-encumbered stream, and commanding a distant view of
+the Severn Sea and the dim outlines of the blue Welsh hills beyond
+it. Behind the house, a castle only by courtesy (on the same
+principle as that by which every bishop lives in a palace), rises
+the jagged summit of the Cleave, a great weather-worn granite hill,
+sculptured on top by wind and rain into those fantastic lichen-covered
+pillars and tora and logans in which antiquarian fancy used so long
+to find the visible monuments of Druidical worship. All around, a
+wide brown waste of heather undulates and tosses wildly to the sky;
+and on the summit of the rolling moor where it rises and swells in
+one of its many rounded bosses, the antlered heads and shoulders
+of the red deer may often be seen etched in bold relief against
+the clear sky-line to the west, on sunny autumn evenings. But the
+castle itself and the surrounding grounds are not planned to harmonise
+with the rough moorland English scenery into whose midst they were
+unceremoniously pitchforked by the second earl. That distinguished
+man of taste, a light of the artistic world in his own day,
+had brought back from his Grand Tour his own ideal of a strictly
+classical domestic building, formed by impartially compounding a
+Palladian palace, a Doric temple, and a square redbrick English
+manor-house. After pulling down the original fourteenth-century
+castle, he had induced an eminent architect of the time to conspire
+with him in giving solid and permanent reality to this his awful
+imagining; and when he had completed it all, from portico to attic,
+he had extorted even the critical praise of Horace Walpole, who
+described it in one of his letters as a 'singular triumph of classical
+taste and architectural ingenuity.' It still remains unrivalled in
+its kind, the ugliest great country-seat in the county of Devon--some
+respectable authorities even say in the whole of England.
+
+In front of the house an Italian garden, with balustrades of very
+doubtful marble, leads down by successive terraces and broad flights
+of steps to an artificial octagonal pool, formed by carefully
+destroying the whole natural beauty of the wild and rocky little
+English glen beneath. To feed it by fitting a conduit, the moss-grown
+boulders that strew the bed of the torrent above and below have
+been carefully removed, and the unwilling stream, as it runs into
+the pool, has been coerced into a long straight channel, bordered
+on either side by bedded turf, and planed off at measured intervals
+so as to produce a series of eminently regular and classical
+cascades. Even Lord Exmoor himself, who was a hunting man, without
+any pretence to that stupid rubbish about taste, did not care for
+the hopeless exterior of Dunbude Castle: he frankly admitted that
+the place was altogether too doosid artificial for the line of
+country. If they'd only left it alone, he said, in its own native
+condition, it would have been really pretty; but as they'd doctored
+it and spoilt it, why, there was nothing on earth to be done but
+just put up with it and whistle over it. What with the hounds, and
+the mortgages, and the settlements, and the red deer, and Goodwood,
+the estate couldn't possibly afford any money for making alterations
+down in the gardens.
+
+The dog-cart was in waiting at the station to carry Ernest up to
+the castle; and as he reached the front door, Lady Hilda Tregellis
+strolled up the broad flight of steps from the garden to meet him.
+Lady Hilda was tall and decidedly handsome, as Ernest had rightly
+told Edie, but not pretty, and she was also just twenty. There was
+a free, careless, bold look in her face, that showed her at once
+a girl of spirit; indeed, if she had not been born a Tregellis, it
+was quite clear that she would have been predestined to turn out
+a strong-minded woman. There was nothing particularly delicate in
+Lady Hilda's features; they were well-modelled, but neither regular
+nor cold, nor with that peculiar stamp of artificial breeding which
+is so often found in the faces of English ladies. On the contrary,
+she looked like a perfectly self-confident handsome actress, too
+self-confident to be self-conscious, and accustomed to admiration
+wherever she turned. As Ernest jumped down from the dog-cart she
+advanced quickly to shake hands with him, and look him over critically
+from head to foot like a schoolboy taking stock of a new fellow.
+
+'I'm so glad you've come, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, with an open
+smile upon her frank face. 'I was dreadfully afraid you wouldn't
+care for our proposition. Dunbude's the dullest hole in England,
+and we want somebody here to brighten it up, sadly. Did you ever
+see such an ugly monstrosity before, anywhere?'
+
+'The country about's lovely,' Ernest answered, 'but the house itself
+is certainly rather ugly.'
+
+'Ugly! It's hideous. And it's as dull as it's big,' said Hilda
+vehemently. 'You can't think what a time we have of it here half
+the year! I'm always longing for the season to come. Papa fills
+the house here with hunting men and shooting men--people without
+two ideas in their heads, you know, just like himself; and even THEY
+go out all day, and leave us women from morning till night to the
+society of their wives and daughters, who are exactly like them.
+Mr. Walsh--that's Lynmouth's last tutor--he was a perfect stick,
+a Cambridge man; Cambridge men always ARE sticks, I believe; you're
+Oxford, of course, aren't you? I thought so. Still, even Mr. Walsh
+was a little society, for I assure you, if it hadn't been for him,
+I should never have seen anybody, to talk to, from year's end to
+year's end. So when Mr. Walsh was going to leave us, I said to
+mamma, "Why not ask one of the Mr. Le Bretons?" I wanted to have
+somebody sensible here, and so I got her to let me write to your
+brother Ronald about the tutorship. Did he send you the letter? I
+hope you didn't think it was mine. Mamma dictated it, for I don't
+write such formal letters as that on my own account, I can tell
+you. I hate conventionality of any sort. At Dunbude we're all
+conventional, except me; but I won't be. Come up into the billiard-room,
+here, and sit down awhile; William will see about your portmanteau
+and things. Papa's out, of course, and so's Lynmouth; and mamma's
+somewhere or other, I don't know where; and so there's nobody in
+particular at home for you to report yourself to. You may as well
+come in here while I ring for them to get you some lunch ready.
+Nobody ever gets anything ready beforehand in this house. We
+lunched ourselves an hour ago.'
+
+Ernest smiled at her volubility, and followed her quickly into the
+big bare billiard-room. He walked over to the fire and began to
+warm himself, while Hilda took down a cue and made stray shots in
+extraordinary angles at impossible cannons, all the time, as she
+went on talking to him. 'Was it very cold on the way down?' she
+asked.
+
+'Yes, fairly. I'm not sorry to see the fire again. Why, you're
+quite an accomplished player.'
+
+'There's nothing else to do at Dunbude, that's why. I practise
+about half my lifetime. So I wrote to your brother Ronald, as I
+was telling you, from mamma's dictation; and when I heard you were
+really coming, I was quite delighted about it. Do you remember, I
+met you twice last year, once at the Dolburys', and once somewhere
+else; and I thought you'd be a very good sort of person for Dunbude,
+you know, and about as much use to Lynmouth as anybody could be,
+which isn't saying much, of course, for he's a dreadful pickle.
+I insisted on putting in my letter that he was a dreadful pickle
+(that's a good stroke off the red; just enough side on), though
+mamma didn't want me to; because I thought you ought to know about
+it beforehand. But you remember him at Marlborough, of course; he
+was only a little fellow then, but still a pickle. He always was and
+he always will be. He's out shooting, now, with papa; and you'll
+never get him to settle down to anything, as long as there's a
+snipe or a plover banging about on the moor anywhere. He's quite
+incorrigible. Do you play at all? Won't you take a cue till your
+lunch's ready?'
+
+'No, I don't play,' Ernest answered, half hesitating, 'or at least
+very little.'
+
+'Oh, then you'll learn here, because you'll find nothing else to
+do. Do you shoot?'
+
+'Oh no, never. I don't think it right.'
+
+'Ah, yes, I remember. How delightful! Lady Le Breton told me all
+about it. You've got notions, haven't you? You're a Nihilist or
+a Fenian or something of that sort, and you don't shoot anything
+but czars and grand dukes, do you? I believe you want to cut all
+our heads off and have a red republic. Well, I'm sure that's very
+refreshing; for down here we're all as dull as sticks together;
+Tories, every one of us to a man; perfect unanimity; no differences
+of opinion; all as conventional and proper as the vicar's sermons.
+Now, to have somebody who wants to cut your head off, in the house,
+is really delightful. I love originality. Not that I've ever seen
+anybody original in all my life, for I haven't, but I'm sure it
+would be delightful if I did. One reads about original people in
+novels, you know, Dickens and that sort of thing; and I often think
+I should like to meet some of them (good stroke again; legs, legs,
+legs, if you please--no, it hasn't legs enough); but here, or for
+the matter of that, in town either, we never see anybody but the same
+eternal round of Algies, and Monties, and Berties, and Hughs--all
+very nice young men, no doubt; exceedingly proper, nothing against
+them; good shots, capital partners, excellent families, everything on
+earth that anybody could desire, except a single atom of personal
+originality. I assure you, if they were all shaken up in a bag
+together and well mixed, in evening clothes (so as not to tell them
+apart by the tweeds, you know), their own mothers wouldn't be able
+to separate them afterwards. But if you don't shoot and don't play
+billiards, I'm sure I don't know what you'll ever find to do with
+yourself here at Dunbude.'
+
+'Don't you think,' Ernest said quietly, taking down a, cue, 'one
+ought to have something better to do with one's time than shooting
+and playing billiards? In a world where so many labouring people
+are toiling and slaving in poverty and misery on our behalf, don't
+you think we should be trying to do something or other in return
+for universal humanity, to whom we owe so much for our board and
+lodging and clothing and amusement?'
+
+'Well, now, that's just what I mean,' said Hilda ecstatically, with
+a neat shot off the cushion against the red and into the middle
+pocket; 'that's such a delightfully original way of looking at
+things, you see. We all of us here talk always about the partridges,
+and the red deer, and the turnips, and the Church, and dear Lady
+This, and that odious Lady That, and the growing insolence of the
+farmers, and the shocking insubordination of the lower classes, and
+the difficulty of getting really good servants, and the dreadful
+way those horrid Irish are shooting their kind-hearted indulgent
+landlords; or else we talk--the women especially--about how awfully
+bored we are. Lawn-tennis, you know, and dinners, and what a bad
+match Ethel Thingumbob has made. But you talk another kind of slang;
+I dare say it doesn't mean much; you know you're not working at
+anything very much more serious than we are; still it's a novelty.
+When we go to a coursing meeting, we're all on the hounds; but
+you're on the hare, and that's so delightfully original. I haven't
+the least doubt that if we were to talk about the Irish, you'd say
+you thought they ought to shoot their landlords. I remember you
+shocked mamma by saying something like it at the Dolburys'. Now, of
+course, it doesn't matter to me a bit which is right; you say the
+poor tenants are starving, and papa says the poor landlords can't
+get in their rents, and actually have to give up their hounds, poor
+fellows; and I don't know which of you is the most to be believed;
+only, what papa says is just the same thing that everybody says,
+and what you say has a certain charming freshness and variety
+about it. It's so funny to be told that one ought really to take
+the tenants into consideration. Exactly like your brother Ronald's
+notions about servants!'
+
+'Your lunch is ready in the dining-room, sir,' said a voice at the
+door.
+
+'Come back here when you've finished, Mr. Le Breton,' Hilda called
+after him. 'I'll teach you how to make that cannon you missed
+just now. If you mean to exist at Dunbude at all, it's absolutely
+necessary for you to learn billiards.'
+
+Ernest turned in to lunch with an uncomfortable misgiving on his
+mind already that Dunbude was not exactly the right place for such
+a man as he to live in.
+
+During the afternoon he saw nothing more of the family, save Lady
+Hilda; and it was not till the party assembled in the drawing-room
+before dinner that he met Lord and Lady Exmoor and his future pupil.
+Lynmouth had grown into a tall, handsome, manly-looking boy since
+Ernest last saw him; but he certainly looked exactly what Hilda
+had called him--a pickle. A few minutes' introductory conversation
+sufficed to show Ernest that whatever mind he possessed was wholly
+given over to horses, dogs, and partridges, and that the post of
+tutor at Dunbude Castle was not likely to prove a bed of roses.
+
+'Seen the paper, Connemara?' Lord Exmoor asked of one of his
+guests, as they sat down to dinner. 'I haven't had a moment myself
+to snatch a look at the "Times" yet this evening; I'm really too
+busy almost even to read the daily papers. Anything fresh from
+Ireland?'
+
+'Haven't seen it either,' Lord Connemara answered, glancing towards
+Lady Hilda. 'Perhaps somebody else has looked at the papers'?'
+
+Nobody answered, so Ernest ventured to remark that the Irish news
+was rather worse again. Two bailiffs had been murdered near Castlebar.
+
+'That's bad,' Lord Exmoor said, turning towards Ernest. 'I'm afraid
+there's a deal of distress in the West.'
+
+'A great deal,' Ernest answered; 'positive starvation, I believe,
+in some parts of County Galway.'
+
+'Well, not quite so bad as that,' Lord Exmoor replied, a little
+startled. 'I don't think any of the landlords are actually starving
+yet, though I've no doubt many of them are put to very great straits
+indeed by their inability to get in their rents.'
+
+Ernest couldn't forbear gently smiling to himself at the misapprehension.
+'Oh, I didn't mean the landlords,' he said quickly: 'I meant among
+the poor people.' As he spoke he was aware that Lady Hilda's eyes
+were fixed keenly upon him, and that she was immensely delighted
+at the temerity and originality displayed in the notion of his
+publicly taking Irish tenants into consideration at her father's
+table.
+
+'Ah, the poor people,' Lord Exmoor answered with a slight sigh of
+relief, as who should say that THEIR condition didn't much matter
+to a philosophic mind. 'Yes, to be sure; I've no doubt some of
+them are very badly off, poor souls. But then they're such an idle
+improvident lot. Why don't they emigrate now, I should like to
+know?'
+
+Ernest reflected silently that the inmates of Dunbude Castle did
+not exactly set them a model of patient industry; and that Lady
+Hilda's numerous allusions during the afternoon to the fact that
+the Dunbude estates were 'mortgaged up to the eyelids' (a condition
+of affairs to which she always alluded as though it were rather a
+subject of pride and congratulation than otherwise) did not speak
+very highly for their provident economy either. But even Ernest Le
+Breton had a solitary grain of worldly wisdom laid up somewhere
+in a corner of his brain, and he didn't think it advisable to give
+them the benefit of his own views upon the subject.
+
+'There's a great deal of rubbish talked in England about Irish
+affairs, you know, Exmoor,' said Lord Connemara confidently. 'People
+never understand Ireland, I'm sure, until they've actually lived
+there. Would you believe it now, the correspondent of one of the
+London papers was quite indignant the other day because my agent
+had to evict a man for three years' rent at Ballynamara, and the
+man unfortunately went and died a week later on the public roadside.
+We produced medical evidence to show that he had suffered for years
+from heart disease, and would have died in any case, wherever he
+had been; but the editor fellow wanted to make political capital
+out of it, and kicked up quite a fuss about my agent's shocking
+inhumanity. As if we could possibly help ourselves in the matter!
+People must get their rents in somehow, mustn't they?'
+
+'People must get their rents in somehow, of course,' Lord Exmoor
+assented, sympathetically; 'and I know all you men who are unlucky
+enough to own property in Ireland have a lot of trouble about it
+nowadays. Upon my word, what with Fenians, and what with Nihilists,
+and what with Communards, I really don't know what the world is
+coming to.'
+
+'Most unchristian conduct, I call it,' said Lady Exmoor, who went
+in for being mildly and decorously religious. 'I really can't
+understand how people can believe such wicked doctrines as these
+communistic notions that are coming over people in these latter
+days.'
+
+'No better than downright robbery,' Lord Connemara answered.
+'Shaking the very foundations of society, I think it. All done so
+recklessly, too, without any care or any consideration.'
+
+Ernest thought of old Max Schurz, with his lifelong economical
+studies, and wondered when Lord Connemara had found time to turn
+his own attention from foxes and fishing to economical problems;
+but, by a perfect miracle, he said nothing.
+
+'You wouldn't believe the straits we're put to, Lady Exmoor,' the
+Irish Earl went on, 'through this horrid no-rent business. Absolute
+poverty, I assure you--absolute downright poverty. I've had to
+sell the Maid of Garunda this week, you know, and three others of
+the best horses in my stable, just to raise money for immediate
+necessities. Wanted to buy a most interesting missal, quite
+unique in its way, offered me by Menotti and Cicolari, dirt cheap,
+for three thousand guineas. It's quite a gem of late miniaturist
+art--vellum folio, with borders and head-pieces by Giulio Clovio.
+A marvellous bargain!'
+
+'Giulio Clovio,' said Lord Exmoor, doubtfully. 'Who was he? Never
+heard of him in my life before.'
+
+'Never heard of Giulio Clovio!' cried Lord Connemara, seizing the
+opportunity with well-affected surprise. 'You really astonish me.
+He was a Croatian, I believe, or an Illyrian--I forget which--and
+he studied at Rome under Giulio Romano. Wonderful draughtsman in
+the nude, and fine colourist; took hints from Raphael and Michael
+Angelo.' So much he had picked up from Menotti and Cicolari, and,
+being a distinguished connoisseur, had made a mental note of the
+facts at once, for future reproduction upon a fitting occasion.
+'Well, this missal was executed for Cardinal Farnese, as a companion
+volume to the famous Vita Christi in the Towneley collection. You
+know it, of course, Lady Exmoor?'
+
+'Of course,' Lady Exmoor answered faintly, with a devout hope that
+Lord Connemara wouldn't question her any further upon the subject;
+in which case she thought it would probably be the safest guess to
+say that she had seen it at the British Museum or in the Hamilton
+Library.
+
+But Lord Connemara luckily didn't care to press his advantage.
+'The Towneley volume, you see,' he went on fluently--he was primed
+to the muzzle with information on that subject--'was given by
+the Cardinal to the Pope of that time--Paul the Third, wasn't it,
+Mr. Le Breton?--and so got into the possession of old Christopher
+Towneley, the antiquary. But this companion folio, it seems, the
+Cardinal wouldn't let go out of his own possession; and so it's
+been handed down in his own family (with a bar sinister, of course,
+Exmoor--you remember the story of Beatrice Malatesta?) to the present
+time. It's very existence wasn't suspected till Cicolari--wonderfully
+smart fellow, Cicolari--unearthed it the other day from a descendant
+of the Malatestas, in a little village in the Campagna. He offered it
+to me, quite as an act of friendship, for three thousand guineas;
+indeed, he begged me not to let Menotti know how cheap he was
+selling it. for fear he might interfere and ask a higher price for
+it. Well, I naturally couldn't let such a chance slip me--for the
+credit of the family, it ought to be in the collection--and the
+consequence was, though I was awfully sorry to part with her, I was
+absolutely obliged to sell the Maid for pocket-money, Lady Hilda--I
+assure you, for pocket-money. My tenants won't pay up, and nothing
+will make them. They've got the cash actually in the bank; but they
+keep it there, waiting for a set of sentimentalists in the House
+of Commons to interfere between us, and make them a present of
+my property. Rolling in money, some of them are, I can tell you.
+One man, I know as a positive fact, sold a pig last week, and yet
+pretends he can't pay me. All the fault of these horrid communists
+that you were speaking of, Lady Exmoor--all the fault of these
+horrid communists.'
+
+'You're rather a communist yourself, aren't you, Mr. Le Breton?'
+asked Lady Hilda boldly from across the table. 'I remember you told
+me something once about cutting the throats of all the landlords.'
+
+Lady Exmoor looked as though a bomb-shell had dropped into the
+drawing-room. 'My dear Hilda,' she said, 'I'm sure you must have
+misunderstood Mr. Le Breton. You can't have meant anything so
+dreadful as that, Mr. Le Breton, can you?'
+
+'Certainly not,' Ernest answered, with a clear conscience. 'Lady
+Hilda has put her own interpretation upon my casual words. I haven't
+the least desire to cut anybody's throat, even metaphorically.'
+
+Hilda looked a little disappointed; she had hoped for a good rattling
+discussion, in which Ernest was to shock the whole table--it does
+people such a lot of good, you know, to have a nice round shocking;
+but Ernest was evidently not inclined to show fight for her sole
+gratification, and so she proceeded to her alternative amusement
+of getting Lord Connemara to display the full force of his own
+inanity. This was an easy and unending source of innocent enjoyment
+to Lady Hilda, enhanced by the fact that she knew her father and
+mother were anxious to see her Countess of Connemara, and that they
+would be annoyed by her public exposition of that eligible young
+man's intense selfishness and empty-headedness.
+
+Altogether, Ernest did not enjoy his first week at the Exmoors'.
+Nor did he enjoy the second, or the third, or the fourth week much
+better. The society was profoundly distasteful to him: the world
+was not his world, nor the talk his talk; and he grew so sick of
+the perpetual discussion of horses, dogs, pheasants, dances, and
+lawn tennis, with occasional digressions on Giulio Clovio and the
+Connemara gallery, that he found even a chat with Lady Hilda (who
+knew and cared for nothing, but liked to chat with him because
+he was 'so original') a pleasant relief, by comparison, from the
+eternal round of Lord Exmoor's anecdotes about famous racers or
+celebrated actresses. But worst of all he did not like his work;
+he felt that, useless as he considered it, he was not successfully
+performing even the useless function he was paid to fulfil. Lynmouth
+couldn't learn, wouldn't learn, and wasn't going to learn. Ernest
+might as well have tried to din the necessary three plays of Euripides
+into the nearest lamp-post. Nobody encouraged him to learn in any
+way, indeed Lord Exmoor remembered that he himself had scraped
+through somehow at Christ Church, with the aid of a private tutor
+and the magic of his title, and he hadn't the least doubt that
+Lynmouth would scrape through in his turn in like manner. And so,
+though most young men would have found the Dunbude tutorship the
+very acme of their wishes--plenty of amusements and nothing to do
+for them--Ernest Le Breton found it to the last degree irksome and
+unsatisfactory. Not that he had ever to complain of any unkindliness
+on the part of the Exmoor family; they were really in their own
+way very kind-hearted, friendly sort of people--that is to say,
+towards all members of their own circle; and as they considered
+Ernest one of themselves, in virtue of their acquaintance with
+his mother, they really did their best to make him as happy and
+comfortable as was in their power. But then he was such a very
+strange young man! 'For what on earth can you do,' as Lord Exmoor
+justly asked, 'with a young fellow who won't shoot, and who won't
+fish, and who won't hunt, and who won't even play lansquenet?'
+Such a case was clearly hopeless. He would have liked to see more
+of Miss Merivale, little Lady Sybil's governess (for there were three
+children in the family); but Miss Merivale was a timid, sensitive
+girl, and she did not often encourage his advances, lest my lady
+should say she was setting her cap at the tutor. The consequence
+was that he was necessarily thrown much upon Lady Hilda's society;
+and as Lady Hilda was laudably eager to instruct him in billiards,
+lawn tennis, and sketching, he rapidly grew to be quite an adept at
+those relatively moral and innocuous amusements, under her constant
+instruction and supervision.
+
+'It seems to me,' said that acute observer, Lord Lynmouth, to his
+special friend and confidante, the lady's-maid, 'that Hilda makes
+a doocid sight too free with that fellow Le Breton. Don't you think
+so, Euphemia?'
+
+'I should hope, my lord,' Euphemia answered demurely, 'that Lady
+Hilda would know her own place too well to demean herself with such
+as your lordship's tutor. If I didn't feel sure of that, I should
+have to mention the matter seriously to my lady.'
+
+Nevertheless, the lady's-maid immediately stored up a mental note
+on the subject in the lasting tablets of her memory, and did not fail
+gently to insinuate her views upon the question to Lady Exmoor, as
+she arranged the pearls in the false plaits for dinner that very
+evening.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE WOMEN OF THE LAND.
+
+
+'Mr. Le Breton! Mr. Le Breton! Papa says Lynmouth may go
+out trout-fishing with him this afternoon. Come up with me to the
+Clatter. I'm going to sketch there.'
+
+'Very well, Lady Hilda; if you want my criticism, I don't mind if
+I do. Let me carry your things; it's rather a pull up, even for
+you, with your box and easel!'
+
+Hilda gave him her sketch-book and colours, and they turned together
+up the Cleave behind the Castle.
+
+A Clatter is a peculiar Devonshire feature, composed of long loose
+tumbled granite blocks piled in wild disorder along the narrow summit
+of a saddle-backed hill. It differs from a tor in being less high
+and castellated, as well as in its longer and narrower contour.
+Ernest and Hilda followed the rough path up through the gorse
+and heather to the top of the ridge, and then scrambled over the
+grey lichen-covered rooks together to the big logan-stone whose
+evenly-poised and tilted mass crowned the actual summit. The granite
+blocks were very high and rather slippery in places, for it was
+rainy April weather, so that Ernest had to take his companion's
+hand more than once in his to help her over the tallest boulders.
+It was a small delicate hand, though Hilda was a tall well-grown
+woman; ungloved, too, for the sake of the sketching; and Hilda
+didn't seem by any means unwilling to accept Ernest's proffered help,
+though if it had been Lord Connemara who was with her instead, she
+would have scorned assistance, and scaled the great mossy masses
+by herself like a mountain antelope. Light-footed and lithe of
+limb was Lady Hilda, as befitted a Devonshire lass accustomed to
+following the Exmoor stag-hounds across their wild country on her
+own hunter. Yet she seemed to find a great deal of difficulty in
+clambering up the Clatter on that particular April morning, and
+move than once Ernest half fancied to himself that she leaned on his
+arm longer than was absolutely necessary for support or assistance
+over the stiffest places.
+
+'Here, by the logan, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, motioning him where
+to put her camp-stool and papers. 'That's a good point of view
+for the rocks yonder. You can lie down on the rug and give me the
+benefit of your advice and assistance.'
+
+'My advice is not worth taking,' said Ernest. 'I'm a regular duffer
+at painting and sketching. You should ask Lord Connemara. He knows
+all about art and that sort of thing.'
+
+'Lord Connemara!' echoed Hilda contemptuously. 'He has a lot of
+pictures in his gallery at home, and he's been told by sensible men
+what's the right thing for him to say about them; but he knows no
+more about art, really, than he knows about fiddlesticks.'
+
+'Doesn't he, indeed?' Ernest answered languidly, not feeling any
+burning desire to discuss Lord Connemara's artistic attainments or
+deficiencies.
+
+'No, he doesn't,' Hilda went on, rather defiantly, as though Ernest
+had been Lady Exmoor; 'and most of these people that come here
+don't either. They have galleries, and they get artists and people
+who understand about pictures to talk with them, and so they learn
+what's considered the proper thing to say of each of them. But
+as to saying anything spontaneous or original of their own about a
+picture or any other earthly thing--why, you know, Mr. Le Breton,
+they couldn't possibly do it to save their lives.'
+
+'Well, there I should think you do them, as a class, a great
+injustice,' said Ernest, quietly; 'you're evidently prejudiced
+against your own people. I should think that if there's any subject
+on which our old families really do know anything, it's art. Look
+at their great advantages.'
+
+'Nonsense,' Hilda answered, decisively. 'Fiddlesticks for their
+advantages. What's the good of advantages without a head on your
+shoulders, I should like to know. And they haven't got heads on
+their shoulders, Mr. Le Breton; you know they haven't.'
+
+'Why, surely,' said Ernest, in his simple fashion, looking the
+question straight in the face as a matter of abstract truth, 'there
+must be a great deal of ability among peers and peers' sons. All
+history shows it; and it would be absurd if it weren't so; for the
+mass of peers have got their peerages by conspicuous abilities of
+one sort or another, as barristers, or soldiers, or politicians,
+or diplomatists, and they would naturally hand on their powers to
+their different descendants.'
+
+'Oh, yes, there are some of them with brains, I suppose,' Hilda
+answered, as one who makes a great concession. 'There's Herbert
+Alderney, who's member for somewhere or other--Church Stretton, I
+think--and makes speeches in the House; he's clever, they say, but
+such a conceited fellow to talk to. And there's Wilfrid Faunthorp,
+who writes poems, and gets them printed in the magazines, too,
+because he knows the editors. And there's Randolph Hastings, who
+goes in for painting, and has little red and blue daubs at the
+Grosvenor by special invitation of the director. But somehow they
+none of them strike me as being really original. Whenever I meet
+anybody worth talking to anywhere--in a railway train or so on--I
+feel sure at once he's an ordinary commoner, not even Honourable;
+and he is invariably, you may depend upon it.'
+
+'That would naturally happen on the average of instances,' Ernest
+put in, smiling, 'considering the relative frequency of peers
+and commoners in this realm of England. Peers, you know, or even
+Honourables are not common objects of the country, numerically
+speaking.'
+
+'They are to me, unfortunately,' Hilda replied, looking at him
+inquiringly. 'I hardly ever meet anybody else, you know, and I'm
+positively bored to death by them, and that's the truth, really.
+It's most unlucky, under the circumstances, that I should happen
+to be the daughter of one peer, and be offered promiscuously as
+wife to the highest bidder among half a dozen others, if only I
+would have them. But I won't, Mr. Le Breton, I really won't. I'm
+not going to marry a fool, just to please my mother. Nothing on
+earth would induce me to marry Lord Connemara, for example.'
+
+Ernest looked at her and smiled, but said nothing.
+
+Lady Hilda put in a stroke or two more to her pencil outline, and
+then continued her unsolicited confidences. 'Do you know, Mr. Le
+Breton,' she went on, 'there's a conspiracy--the usual conspiracy,
+but still a regular conspiracy I call it--between Papa and Mamma
+to make me marry that stick of a Connemara. What is there in him,
+I should like to know, to make any girl admire or love him? And
+yet half the girls in London would be glad to get him, for all his
+absurdity. It's monstrous, it's incomprehensible, it's abominable;
+but it's the fact. For my part, I must say I do like a little
+originality. And whenever I hear Papa, and Uncle Sussex, and Lord
+Connemara talking at dinner, it does seem to me too ridiculously
+absurd that they should each have a separate voice in Parliament,
+and that you shouldn't even have a fraction of a vote for a county
+member. What sort of superiority has Lord Connemara over you, I
+wonder?' And she looked at Ernest again with a searching glance,
+to see whether he was to be moved by such a personal and emphatic
+way of putting the matter.
+
+Ernest looked back at her curiously in his serious simplicity,
+and only answered, 'There are a great many queer inequalities and
+absurdities in all our existing political systems, Lady Hilda.'
+
+Hilda smiled to herself--a quiet smile, half of disappointment,
+half of complacent feminine superiority. What a stupid fellow he
+was in some ways, after all! Even that silly Lord Connemara would
+have guessed what she was driving at, with only a quarter as much
+encouragement. But Ernest must be too much afraid of the social
+barrier clearly; so she began again, this time upon a slightly
+different but equally obvious tack.
+
+'Yes, there are; absurd inequalities really, Mr. Le Breton; very
+absurd inequalities. You'd get rid of them all, I know. You told me
+that about cutting all the landlords' heads off, I'm sure, though
+you said when I spoke about it before Mamma, the night you first
+came here, that you didn't mean it. I remember it perfectly well,
+because I recollect thinking at the time the idea was so charmingly
+and deliciously original.'
+
+'You must be quite mistaken, Lady Hilda,' Ernest answered calmly. 'You
+misunderstood my meaning. I said I would get rid of landlords--by
+which I meant to say, get rid of them as landlords, not as individuals.
+I don't even know that I'd take away the land from them all at once,
+you know (though I don't think it's justly theirs); I'd deprive
+them of it tentatively and gradually.'
+
+'Well, I can't see the justice of that, I'm sure,' Hilda answered
+carelessly. 'Either the land's ours by right, or it isn't ours. If
+it's ours, you ought to leave it to us for ever; and if it isn't
+ours, you ought to take it away from us at once, and make it over
+to the people to whom it properly belongs. Why on earth should you
+keep them a day longer out of their own?'
+
+Ernest laughed heartily at this vehement and uncompromising
+sans-culottism. 'You're a vigorous convert, anyhow,' he said, with
+some amusement; 'I see you've profited by my instruction. You've
+put the question very plump and straightforward. But in practice it
+would be better, no doubt, gradually to educate out the landlords,
+rather than to dispossess them at one blow of what they honestly,
+though wrongly, imagine to be their own. Let all existing holders
+keep the land during their own lifetime and their heirs', and resume
+it for the nation after their lives, allowing for the rights of
+all children born of marriages between people now living.'
+
+'Not at all,' Hilda answered in a tone of supreme conviction. 'I'm
+in favour of simply cutting our heads off once for all, and making
+our families pay all arrears of rent from the very beginning.
+That or nothing. Put the case another way. Suppose, Mr. Le Breton,
+there was somebody who had got a grant from a king a long time ago,
+allowing him to hang any three persons he chose annually. Well,
+suppose this person and his descendants went on for a great many
+generations extorting money out of other people by threatening to
+kill them and letting them off on payment of a ransom. Suppose,
+too, they always killed three a year, some time or other, pour
+encourager les autres--just to show that they really meant it.
+Well, then, if one day the people grew wise enough to inquire into
+the right of these licensed extortioners to their black mail, would
+you say, "Don't deprive them of it too unexpectedly. Let them keep
+it during their own lifetime. Let their children hang three of us
+annually after them. But let us get rid of this fine old national
+custom in the third generation." Would that be fair to the people
+who would be hanged for the sake of old prescription in the interval,
+do you think?'
+
+Ernest laughed again at the serious sincerity with which ehe
+was ready to acquiesce in his economical heresies. 'You're quite
+right,' he said: 'the land is the people's, and there's no reason
+on earth why they should starve a minute longer in order to let
+Lord Connemara pay three thousand guineas for spurious copies of
+early Italian manuscripts. And yet it would be difficult to get
+most people to see it. I fancy, Lady Hilda, you must really be
+rather cleverer than most people.'
+
+'I score one,' thought Hilda to herself, 'and whatever happens,
+whether I marry a peer or a revolutionist, I certainly won't marry
+a fool.' 'I'm glad you think so,' she went on aloud, 'because I
+know your opinion's worth having. I should like to be clever, Mr.
+Le Breton, and I should like to know all about everything, but
+what chance has one at Dunbude? Do you know, till you came here, I
+never got any sensible conversation with anybody.' And she sighed
+gently as she put her head on one side to take a good view of her
+sketchy little picture. Lady Hilda's profile was certainly very
+handsome, and she showed it to excellent advantage when she put her
+head on one side. Ernest looked at her and thought so to himself;
+and Lady Hilda's quick eye, glancing sideways for a second from
+the paper, noted immediately that he thought so.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she began again, more confidentially than ever,
+'one thing I've quite made up my mind to; I won't be tied for life
+to a stick like Lord Connemara. In fact, I won't marry a man in
+that position at all. I shall choose for myself, and marry a man
+for the worth that's in him, I assure you it's a positive fact, I've
+been proposed to by no fewer than six assorted Algies and Berties
+and Monties in a single season; besides which some of them follow
+me even down here to Dunbude. Papa and mamma are dreadfully angry
+because I won't have any of them: but I won't. I mean to wait, and
+marry whoever I choose, as soon as I find a man I can really love
+and honour.'
+
+She paused and looked hard at Ernest. 'I can't speak much plainer
+than that,' she thought to herself, 'and really he must be stupider
+than the Algies and the Monties themselves if he doesn't see I want
+him to propose to me. I suppose all women would say it's awfully
+unwomanly of me to lead up to his cards in this way--throwing myself
+at his head they'd call it; but what does that matter? I WON'T
+marry a fool, and I WILL marry a man of some originality. That's
+the only thing in the world worth troubling one's head about. Why
+on earth doesn't he take my hand, I wonder? What further can he
+be waiting for?' Lady Hilda was perfectly accustomed to the usual
+preliminaries of a declaration, and only awaited Ernest's first
+step to proceed in due order to the second. Strange to say, her
+heart was actually beating a little by anticipation. It never even
+occurred to her--the belle of three seasons--that possibly Ernest
+mightn't wish to marry her. So she sat looking pensively at her
+picture, and sighed again quietly.
+
+But Ernest, wholly unsuspicious, only answered, 'You will do quite
+right, Lady Hilda, to marry the man of your own choice, irrespective
+of wealth or station.'
+
+Hilda glanced up at him curiously, with a half-disdainful smile,
+and was just on the point of saying, 'But suppose the man of my
+own choice won't propose to me?' However, as the words rose to her
+lips, she felt there was a point at which even she should yield
+to convention: and there were plenty of opportunities still before
+her, without displaying her whole hand too boldly and immediately.
+So she merely turned with another sigh, this time a genuine one, to
+her half-sketched outline. 'I shall bring him round in time,' she
+said to herself, blushing a little at her unexpected discomfiture.
+'I shall bring him round in time; I shall make him propose to me!
+I don't care if I have to live in a lodging with him, and wash up
+my own tea-things; I shall marry him; that I'm resolved upon. He's
+as mad as a March hare about his Communism and his theories and
+things; but I don't care for that; I could live with him in comfort,
+and I couldn't live in comfort with the Algies and Monties. In fact,
+I believe--in a sort of way--I believe I'm almost in love with him.
+I have a kind of jumpy feeling in my heart when I'm talking with
+him that I never feel when I'm talking with other young men, even
+the nicest of them. He's not nice; he's a bear; and yet, somehow,
+I should like to marry him.'
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she said aloud, 'the sun's all wrong for sketching
+to-day, and besides it's too chilly. I must run about a bit among
+the rocks.' ('At least I shall take his hand to help me,' she
+thought, blushing.) 'Come and walk with me? It's no use trying to
+draw with one's hands freezing.' And she crumpled up the unfinished
+sketch hastily between her fingers. Ernest jumped up to follow her;
+and they spent the next hour scrambling up and down the Clatter,
+and talking on less dangerous subjects than Lady Hilda's matrimonial
+aspirations.
+
+'Still I shall make him ask me yet,' Lady Hilda thought to herself,
+as she parted from him to go up and dress for dinner. 'I shall
+manage to marry him, somehow; or if I don't marry him, at any rate
+I'll marry somebody like him.' For it was really the principle,
+not the person, that Lady Hilda specially insisted upon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN.
+
+
+May, beautiful May, had brought the golden flowers, and the trees
+in the valley behind the sleepy old town of Calcombe Pomeroy were
+decking themselves in the first wan green of their early spring
+foliage. The ragged robins were hanging out, pinky red, from the
+hedgerows; the cuckoo was calling from the copse beside the mill
+stream; and the merry wee hedge-warblers were singing lustily from
+the topmost sprays of hawthorn, with their full throats bursting
+tremulously in the broad sunshine. And Ernest Le Breton, too,
+filled with the season, had come down from Dunbude for a fortnight's
+holiday, on his premised visit to his friend Oswald, or, to say
+the truth more plainly, to Oswald's pretty little sister Edie. For
+Ernest had fully made up his mind by this time what it was he had
+come for, and he took the earliest possible opportunity of taking
+a walk with Edie alone, through the tiny glen behind the town, where
+the wee stream tumbles lazily upon the big slow-turning vanes of
+the overshot mill-wheel.
+
+'Let us sit down a bit on the bank here, Miss Oswald,' he said to
+his airy little companion, as they reached the old stone bridge that
+crosses the stream just below the mill-house; 'it's such a lovely
+day one feels loath to miss any of it, and the scenery here looks
+so bright and cheerful after the endless brown heather and russet
+bracken about Dunbude. Not that Exmoor isn't beautiful in its way,
+too--all Devonshire is beautiful alike for that matter; but then
+it's more sombre and woody in the north, and much less spring-like
+than this lovely quiet South Devon country.'
+
+'I'm so glad you like Calcombe,' Edie said, with one of her unfailing
+blushes at the indirect flattery to herself implied in praise of
+her native county; 'and you think it prettier than Dunbude, then,
+do you?'
+
+'Prettier in its own way, yes, though not so grand of course;
+everything here is on a smaller scale. Dunbude, you know, is almost
+mountainous.'
+
+'And the Castle?' Edie asked, bringing round the conversation to
+her own quarter, 'is that very fine? At all like Warwick, or our
+dear old Arlingford?'
+
+'Oh, it isn't a castle at all, really,' Ernest answered; 'only
+a very big and ugly house. As architecture it's atrocious, though
+it's comfortable enough inside for a place of the sort.'
+
+'And the Exmoors, are they nice people? What kind of girl is Lady
+Hilda, now?' Poor little Edie? she asked the question shyly, but
+with a certain deep beating in her heart, for she had often canvassed
+with herself the vague possibility that Ernest might actually fall
+in love with Lady Hilda. Had he fallen in love with her already,
+or had he not? She knew she would be able to guess the truth by his
+voice and manner the moment he answered her. No man can hide that
+secret from a woman who loves him. Yet it was not without a thrill
+and a flutter that she asked him, for she thought to herself, what
+must she seem to him after all the grand people he had been mixing
+with so lately at Dunbude? Was it possible he could see anything
+in her, a little country village girl, coming to her fresh from
+the great ladies of that unknown and vaguely terrible society?
+
+'Lady Hilda!' Ernest answered, laughing--and as he said the words
+Edie knew in her heart that her question was answered, and blushed
+once more in her bewitching fashion. 'Lady Hilda! Oh, she's a
+very queer girl, indeed; she's not at all clever, really, but she
+has the one virtue of girls of her class--their perfect frankness.
+She's frank all over--no reserve or reticence at all about her.
+Whatever she thinks she says, without the slightest idea that you'll
+see anything to laugh at or to find fault with in it. In matters
+of knowledge, she's frankly ignorant. In matters of taste, she's
+frankly barbaric. In matters of religion, she's frankly heathen. And
+in matters of ethics, she's frankly immoral--or rather extra-moral,'
+he added, quickly correcting himself for the misleading expression.
+
+'I shouldn't think from your description she can be a very
+nice person,' Edie said, greatly relieved, and pulling a few tall
+grasses at her side by way of hiding her interest in the subject.
+'She can't be a really nice girl if she's extra-moral, as you call
+it.'
+
+'Oh, I don't mean she'd cut one's throat or pick one's pocket,
+you know,' Ernest went on quickly, with a gentle smile. 'She's got
+a due respect for the ordinary conventional moralities like other
+people, no doubt; but in her case they're only social prejudices,
+not genuine ethical principles. I don't suppose she ever seriously
+asked herself whether anything was right or wrong or not in her
+whole lifetime. In fact, I'm sure she never did; and if anybody
+else were to do so, she'd be immensely surprised and delighted at
+the startling originality and novelty of thought displayed in such
+a view of the question.'
+
+'But she's very handsome, isn't she?' Edie asked, following up
+her inquiry with due diligence.
+
+'Handsome? oh, yes, in a bold sort of actress fashion. Very handsome,
+but not, to me at least, pleasing. I believe most men admire her a
+great deal; but she lacks a feminine touch dreadfully. She dashes
+away through everything as if she was hunting; and she DOES hunt
+too, which I think bad enough in anybody, and horrible in a woman.'
+
+'Then you haven't fallen in love with her, Mr. Le Breton? I half
+imagined you would, you know, as I'm told she's so very attractive.'
+
+'Fallen in love with HER, Miss Oswald! Fallen in love with Hilda
+Tregellis! What an absurd notion! Heaven forbid it!'
+
+'Why so, please?'
+
+'Why, in the first place, what would be the use of it? Fancy Lady
+Exmoor's horror at the bare idea of her son's tutor falling in love
+with Lady Hilda! I assure you, Miss Oswald, she would evaporate at
+the very mention of such an unheard-of enormity. A man must be, if
+not an earl, at least a baronet with five thousand a year, before
+he dare face the inexpressible indignation of Lady Exmoor with an
+offer of marriage for Lady Hilda.'
+
+'But people don't always fall in love by tables of precedence,'
+Edie put in simply. 'It's quite possible, I suppose, for a man
+who isn't a duke himself to fall in love with a duke's daughter,
+even though the duke her papa mayn't personally happen to approve
+of the match. However, you don't seem to think Lady Hilda herself
+a pleasant girl, even apart from the question of Lady Exmoor's
+requirements?'
+
+'Miss Oswald,' Ernest said, looking at her suddenly, as she sat
+half hiding her face with her parasol, and twitching more violently
+than ever at the tall grasses; 'Miss Oswald, to tell you the truth,
+I haven't been thinking much about Hilda Tregellis or any of the
+other girls I've met at Dunbude, and for a very sufficient reason,
+because I've had my mind too much preoccupied by somebody else
+elsewhere.'
+
+Edie blushed even more prettily than before, and held her peace,
+half raising her eyes for a second in an enquiring glance at his,
+and then dropping them hastily as they met, in modest trepidation.
+At that moment Ernest had never seen anything so beautiful or so
+engaging as Edie Oswald.
+
+'Edie,' he said, beginning again more boldly, and taking her little
+gloved hand almost unresistingly in his; 'Edie, you know my secret.
+I love you. Can you love me?'
+
+Edie looked up at him shyly, the tears glistening and trembling a
+little in the corner of her big bright eyes, and for a moment she
+answered nothing. Then she drew away her hand hastily and said with
+a sigh, 'Mr. Le Breton, we oughtn't to be talking so. We mustn't.
+Don't let us. Take me home, please, at once, and don't say anything
+more about it.' But her heart beat within her bosom with a violence
+that was not all unpleasing, and her looks half belied her words
+to Ernest's keen glance even as she spoke them.
+
+'Why not, Edie?' he said, drawing her down again gently by her
+little hand as she tried to rise hesitatingly. 'Why not? tell me.
+I've looked into your face, and though I can hardly dare to hope
+it or believe it, I do believe I read in it that you really might
+love me.'
+
+'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie answered, a tear now quivering visibly
+on either eyelash, 'don't ask me, please don't ask me. I wish you
+wouldn't. Take me home, won't you?'
+
+Ernest dropped her hand quietly, with a little show of despondency
+that was hardly quite genuine, for his eyes had already told him
+better. 'Then you can't love me, Miss Oswald,' he said, looking at
+her closely. 'I'm sorry for it, very sorry for it; but I'm grieved
+if I have seemed presumptuous in asking you.'
+
+This time the two tears trickled slowly down Edie's cheek--not very
+sad tears either--and she answered hurriedly, 'Oh, I don't mean
+that, Mr. Le Breton, I don't mean that. You misunderstand me, I'm
+sure you misunderstand me.'
+
+Ernest caught up the trembling little hand again. 'Then you CAN
+love me, Edie?' he said eagerly, 'you can love me?'
+
+Edie answered never a word, but bowed her head and cried a little,
+silently. Ernest took the dainty wee gloved hand between his own two
+hands and pressed it tenderly. He felt in return a faint pressure.
+
+'Then why won't you let me love you, Edie?' he asked, looking at
+the blushing girl once more.
+
+'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie said, rising and moving away from
+the path a little under the shade of the big elm-tree, 'it's very
+wrong of me to let you talk so. I mustn't think of marrying you,
+and you mustn't think of marrying me. Consider the difference in
+our positions.'
+
+'Is that all?' Ernest answered gaily. 'Oh, Edie, if that's all,
+it isn't a very difficult matter to settle. My position's exactly
+nothing, for I've got no money and no prospects; and if I ask you
+to marry me, it must be in the most strictly speculative fashion,
+with no date and no certainty. The only question is, will you
+consent to wait for me till I'm able to offer you a home to live
+in? It's asking you a great deal, I know; and you've made me only
+too happy and too grateful already; but if you'll wait for me till
+we can marry, I shall live all my life through to repay you for
+your sacrifice.'
+
+'But, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie said, turning towards the path and
+drying her eyes quickly, 'I really don't think you ought to marry
+me. The difference in station is so great--even Harry would allow
+the difference in station. Your father was a great man, and a general
+and a knight, you know; and though my dear father is the best and
+kindest of men, he isn't anything of that sort, of course.'
+
+A slight shade of pain passed across Ernest's face. 'Edie,' he said,
+'please don't talk about that--please don't. My father was a just
+and good man, whom I loved and honoured deeply; if there's anything
+good in any of us boys, it comes to us from my dear father. But
+please don't speak to me about his profession. It's one of the
+griefs and troubles of my life. He was a soldier, and an Indian
+soldier too; and if there's anything more certain to me than the
+principle that all fighting is very wrong and indefensible, it's
+the principle that our rule in India is utterly unjust and wicked.
+So instead of being proud of my father's profession, much as
+I respected him, I'm profoundly ashamed of it; and it has been a
+great question to me always how far I was justified at all in living
+upon the pension given me for his Indian services.'
+
+Edie looked at him half surprised and half puzzled. It was to her
+such an odd and unexpected point of view. But she felt instinctively
+that Ernest really and deeply meant what he said, and she knew she
+must not allude to the subject again. 'I beg your pardon,' she said
+simply, 'if I've put it wrong; yet you know I can't help feeling
+the great disparity in our two situations.'
+
+'Edie,' said Ernest, looking at her again with all his eyes--'I'm
+going to call you "Edie" always now, so that's understood between
+us. Well, I shall tell you exactly how I feel about this matter.
+From the first moment I saw you I felt drawn towards you, I felt that
+I couldn't help admiring you and sympathising with you and loving
+you. If I dared I would have spoken to you that day at Iffley; but
+I said to myself "She will not care for me; and besides, it would
+be wrong of me to ask her just yet." I had nothing to live upon,
+and I oughtn't to ask you to wait for me--you who are so pretty,
+and sweet and good, and clever--I ought to leave you free to your
+natural prospect of marrying some better man, who would make you
+happier than I can ever hope to do. So I tried to put the impulse
+aside; I waited, saying to myself that if you really cared for me
+a little bit, you would still care for me when I came to Calcombe
+Pomeroy. But then my natural selfishness overcame me--you
+can forgive me for it, Edie; how could I help it when I had once
+seen you? I began to be afraid some other man would be beforehand
+with you; and I liked you so much I couldn't bear to think of the
+chance that you might be taken away from me before I asked you.
+All day long, as I've been walking alone on those high grey moors
+at Dunbude, I've been thinking of you; and at last I made up my
+mind that I MUST come and ask you to be my wife--some time--whenever
+we could afford to marry. I know I'm asking you to make a great
+sacrifice for me; it's more than I have any right to ask you; I'm
+ashamed of myself for asking it; I can only make you a poor man's
+wife, and how long I may have to wait even for that I can't say;
+but if you'll only consent to wait for me, Edie, I'll do the best
+that lies in me to make you as happy and to love you as well as
+any man on earth could ever do.'
+
+Edie turned her face towards his, and said softly, 'Mr. Le Breton,
+I will wait for you as long as ever you wish; and I'm so happy, oh
+so happy.'
+
+There was a pause for a few moments, and then, as they walked
+homeward down the green glen, Edie said, with something more of
+her usual archness, 'So after all you haven't fallen in love with
+Lady Hilda! Do you know, Mr. Le Breton, I rather fancied at Oxford
+you liked me just a little tiny bit; but when I heard you were
+going to Dunbude I said to myself, "Ah, now he'll never care for a
+quiet country girl like me!" And when I knew you were coming down
+here to Calcombe, straight from all those grand ladies at Dunbude,
+I felt sure you'd be disenchanted as soon as you saw me, and never
+think anything more about me.'
+
+'Then you liked me, Edie?' Ernest asked eagerly. 'You wanted me
+really to come to Calcombe to see you?'
+
+'Of course I did, Mr. Le Breton. I've liked you from the first
+moment I saw you.'
+
+'I'm so glad,' Ernest went on quickly. 'I believe all real love
+is love at first sight. I wouldn't care myself to be loved in any
+other way. And you thought I might fall in love with Lady Hilda?'
+
+'Well, you know, she is sure to be so handsome, and so accomplished,
+and to have had so many advantages that I have never had. I was
+afraid I should seem so very simple to you after Lady Hilda.'
+
+'Oh, Edie!' cried Ernest, stopping a moment, and gazing at the
+little light airy figure. 'I only wish you could know the difference.
+Coming from Dunbude to Calcombe is like coming from darkness into
+light. Up there one meets with nobody but essentially vulgar-minded
+selfish people--people whose whole life is passed in thinking and
+talking about nothing but dogs, and horses, and partridges, and
+salmon; racing, and hunting, and billiards, and wines; amusements,
+amusements, amusements, all of them coarse and most of them cruel,
+all day long. Their talk is just like the talk of grooms and
+gamekeepers in a public-house parlour, only a little improved by
+better English and more money. Will So-and-so win the Derby? What
+a splendid run we had with the West Somerset on Wednesday! Were
+you in at the death of that big fox at Coulson's Corner? Ought the
+new vintages of Madeira to be bottled direct or sent round the Cape
+like the old ones? Capital burlesque at the Gaiety, but very slow
+at the Lyceum. Who will go to the Duchess of Dorsetshire's dance
+on the twentieth:--and so forth for ever. Their own petty round
+of selfish pleasures from week's end to week's end--no thought of
+anybody else, no thought of the world at large, no thought even
+of any higher interest in their own personalities. Their politics
+are just a selfish calculation of their own prospects--land, Church,
+capital, privilege. Their religion (when they have any) is just
+a selfish regard for their own personal future welfare. From the
+time I went to Dunbude to this day, I've never heard a single word
+about any higher thought of any sort--I don't mean only about the
+troubles or the aspirations of other people, but even about books,
+about science, about art, about natural beauty. They live in a world
+of amusing oneself and of amusing oneself in vulgar fashions--as a
+born clown would do if he came suddenly into a large fortune. The
+women are just as bad as the men, only in a different way--not
+always even that; for most of them think only of the Four-in-hand
+Club and the pigeon-shooting at Hurlingham--things to sicken one.
+Now, I've known selfish people before, but not selfish people
+utterly without any tincture of culture. I come away from Dunbude,
+and come down here to Calcombe: and the difference in the atmosphere
+makes one's very breath come and go freer. And I look at you, Edie,
+and think of you beside Lady Hilda Tregellis, and I laugh in my
+heart at the difference that artificial rules have made between
+you. I wish you knew how immeasurably her superior you are in
+every way. The fact is, it's a comfort to escape from Dunbude for
+a while and get down here to feel oneself once more, in the only
+true sense of the word, in a little good society.'
+
+While these things were happening in the Bourne Close, palsied old
+Miss Luttrell, mumbling and grumbling inarticulately to herself,
+was slowly tottering down the steep High Street of Calcombe Pomeroy,
+on her way to the village grocer's. She shambled in tremulously
+to Mrs. Oswald's counter, and seating herself on a high stool, as
+was her wont, laid herself out distinctly for a list of purchases
+and a good deliberate ill-natured gossip.
+
+'Two pounds of coffee, if you please, Mrs. Oswald,' she began with
+a quaver; 'coffee, mind, I say, not chicory; your stuff always has
+the smallest possible amount of flavour in it, it seems to me, for
+the largest possible amount of quantity; all chicory, all chicory--no
+decent coffee to be had now in Calcombe Pomeroy. So your son's at
+home this week, is he? Out of work, I suppose? I saw him lounging
+about on the beach, idling away his time, yesterday; pity he wasn't
+at some decent trade, instead of hanging about and doing nothing,
+as if he was a gentleman. Five pounds of lump sugar, too; good lump
+sugar, though I expect I shall get nothing but beetroot; it's all
+beetroot now, my brother tells me; they've ruined the West Indies
+with their emancipation fads and their differential duties and
+the Lord knows what--we had estates in the West Indies ourselves,
+all given up to our negroes nowadays--and now I believe they have
+to pay the French a bounty or something of the sort to induce
+them to make sugar out of beetroot, because the negroes won't work
+without whipping, so I understand; that's what comes in the end of
+your Radical fal-lal notions. Well, five pounds of lump, and five
+pounds of moist, though the one's as bad as the other, really. A
+great pity about your son. I hope he'll get a place again soon. It
+must be a trial to you to have him so idle!'
+
+'Well, no, ma'am, it's not,' Mrs. Oswald answered, with such
+self-restraint as she could command. 'It's not much of a trial to
+his father and me, for we're glad to let him have a little rest
+after working so hard at Oxford. He works too hard, ma'am, but he
+gets compensation for it, don't 'ee see, Miss Luttrell, for he's
+just been made a Fellow of the Royal Society--"for his mathematical
+eminence," the "Times" says--a Fellow of the Royal Society.'
+
+Even this staggering blow did not completely crush old Miss Luttrell.
+'Fellow of the Royal Society,' she muttered feebly through her
+remaining teeth. 'Must be some mistake somewhere, Mrs. Oswald--quite
+impossible. A very meritorious young man, your son, doubtless;
+but a National schoolmaster's hardly likely to be made a Fellow of
+the Royal Society. Oh, I remember you told me he's not a National
+schoolmaster, but has something to do at one of the Oxford colleges.
+Yes, yes; I see what it is--Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.
+You subscribe a guinea, and get made a Fellow by subscription,
+just for the sake of writing F.R.G.S. after your name; it gives a
+young man a look of importance.'
+
+'No, Miss Luttrell, it isn't that; it's THE Royal Society; and if
+you'll wait a moment, ma'am, I'll fetch you the president's letter,
+and the diploma, to let you see it.'
+
+'Oh, no occasion to trouble yourself, Mrs. Oswald!' the old lady put
+in, almost with alacrity, for she had herself seen the announcement
+of Harry Oswald's election in the 'Times' a few days before. 'No
+occasion to trouble yourself, I'm sure; I daresay you may be right,
+and at any rate it's no business of mine, thank heaven. I never
+want to poke my nose into anybody else's business. Well, talking
+of Oxford, Mrs. Oswald, there's a very nice young man down here
+at present; I wonder if you know where he's lodging? I want to ask
+him to dinner. He's a young Mr. Le Breton--one of the Cheshire Le
+Bretons, you know. His father was Sir Owen Le Breton, a general in
+the Indian army--brother officer of Major Standish Luttrell's and
+very nice people in every way. Lady Le Breton's a great friend of
+the Archdeacon's, so I should like to show her son some little
+attention. He's had a very distinguished career at Oxford--your
+boy may have heard his name, perhaps--and now he's acting as tutor
+to Lord Lynmouth, the eldest son of Lord Exmoor, you know; Lady
+Exmoor was a second cousin of my brother's wife; very nice people,
+all of them. The Le Bretons are a really good family, you see; and
+the Archdeacon's exceedingly fond of them. So I thought if you could
+tell me where this young man is lodging--you shop-people pick up
+all the gossip in the place, always--I'd ask him to dinner to meet
+the Rector and Colonel Turnbull and my nephew, who would probably
+be able to offer him a little shooting.'
+
+'There's no partridges about in May, Miss Luttrell,' said Mrs.
+Oswald, quietly smiling to herself at the fancy picture of Ernest
+seated in congenial converse with the Rector, Colonel Turnbull,
+and young Luttrell; 'but as to Mr. Le Breton, I DO happen to know
+where he's stopping, though it's not often that I know any Calcombe
+gossip, save and except what you're good enough to tell me when you
+drop in, ma'am; for Mr. Le Breton's stopping here, in this house,
+with us, ma'am, this very minute.'
+
+'In this house, Mrs. Oswald!' the old lady cried with a start,
+wagging her unsteady old head this time in genuine surprise; 'why,
+I didn't know you let lodgings. I thought you and your daughter
+were too much of fine ladies for THAT, really. I'm glad to hear
+it. I'll leave a note for him.'
+
+'No, Miss Luttrell, we don't let lodgings, ma'am, and we don't need
+to,' Mrs. Oswald answered, proudly. 'Mr. Le Breton's stopping here
+as my son's guest. They were friends at Oxford together: and now
+that Mr. Le Breton has got his holiday, like, Harry's asked him
+down to spend a fortnight at Calcombe Pomeroy. And if you'll leave
+a note I'll be very happy to give it to him as soon as he comes
+in, for he's out walking now with Harry and Edith.'
+
+Old Miss Luttrell sat for half a minute in unwonted silence,
+revolving in her poor puzzled head what line of tactics she ought
+to adopt under such a very singular and annoying combination of
+circumstances. Stopping at the village grocer's!--this was really
+too atrocious! The Le Bretons were all as mad as hatters, that she
+knew well; all except the mother, who was a sensible person, and
+quite rational. But old Sir Owen was a man with the most absurd
+religious fancies--took an interest in the souls of the soldiers;
+quite right and proper, of course, in a chaplain, but really too
+ridiculous in a regular field officer. No doubt Ernest Le Breton
+had taken up some equally extraordinary notions--liberty, equality,
+fraternity, and a general massacre, probably; and he had picked up
+Harry Oswald as a suitable companion in his revolutionary schemes
+and fancies. There was no knowing what stone wall one of those
+mad Le Bretons might choose to run his head against. Still, the
+practical difficulty remained--how could she extricate herself from
+this awkward dilemma in such a way as to cover herself with glory,
+and inflict another bitter humiliation on poor Mrs. Oswald? If only
+she had known sooner that Ernest was stopping at the Oswalds, she
+wouldn't have been so loud in praise of the Le Breton family; she
+would in that case have dexterously insinuated that Lady Le Breton
+was only a half-pay officer's widow, living on her pension; and
+that her boys had got promotion at Oxford as poor scholars, through
+the Archdeacon's benevolent influence. It was too late now, however,
+to adopt that line of defence; and she fell back accordingly upon
+the secondary position afforded her by the chance of taking down
+Mrs. Oswald's intolerable insolence in another fashion.
+
+'Oh, he's out walking with your daughter, is he?' she said, maliciously.
+'Out walking with your daughter, Mrs. Oswald, NOT with your son.
+I saw her passing down the meadows half an hour ago with a strange
+young man; and her brother stopped behind near the millpond. A
+strange young man; yes, I noticed particularly that he looked like
+a gentleman, and I was quite surprised that you should let her walk
+out with him in that extraordinary manner. Depend upon it, Mrs.
+Oswald, when young gentlemen in Mr. Le Breton's position go out
+walking with young women in your daughter's position, they mean no
+good by it--they mean no good by it. Take my advice, Mrs. Oswald,
+and don't permit it. Mr. Le Breton's a very nice young man, and well
+brought up no doubt--I know his mother's a woman of principle--still,
+young men will be young men; and if your son goes bringing down
+his fine Oxford acquaintances to Calcombe Pomeroy, and you and your
+husband go flinging Miss Jemima--her name's Jemima, I think--at
+the young men's heads, why, then, of course, you must take
+the consequences--you must take the consequences!' And with this
+telling Parthian shot discharged carefully from the shadow of the
+doorway, accompanied by a running comment of shrugs, nods, and
+facial distortions, old Miss Luttrell successfully shuffled herself
+out of the shop, her list unfinished, leaving poor Mrs. Oswald
+alone and absolutely speechless with indignation. Ernest Le Breton
+never got a note of invitation from the Squire's sister: but before
+nightfall all that was visitable in Calcombe Pomeroy had heard at
+full length of the horrid conspiracy by which those pushing upstart
+Oswalds had inveigled a son of poor Lady Le Breton's down to stop
+with them, and were now trying to ruin his prospects by getting
+him to marry their brazen-faced hussey, Jemima Edith.
+
+When Edie returned from her walk that afternoon, Mrs. Oswald went
+up into her bedroom to see her daughter. She knew at once from
+Edie's radiant blushing face and moist eyes what had taken place,
+and she kissed the pretty shrinking girl tenderly on her forehead.
+'Edie darling, I hope you will be happy,' she whispered significantly.
+
+'Then you guess it all, mother dear?' asked Edie, relieved that
+she need not tell her story in set words.
+
+'Yes, darling,' said the mother, kissing her again. 'And you said
+"yes."'
+
+Edie coloured once more. 'I said "yes," mother, for I love him
+dearly.'
+
+'He's a dear fellow,' the mother answered gently; 'and I'm sure
+he'll do his best to make you happy.'
+
+Later on in the day, Harry came up and knocked at Edie's door. His
+mother had told him all about it, and so had Ernest. 'Popsy,' he
+said, kissing her also, 'I congratulate you. I'm so glad about
+it. Le Breton's the best fellow I know, and I couldn't wish you a
+better or a kinder husband. You'll have to wait for him, but he's
+worth waiting for. He's a good fellow and a clever fellow, and an
+affectionate fellow; and his family are everything that could be
+desired. It'll be a splendid thing for you to be able to talk in
+future about "my mother-in law, Lady Le Breton." Depend upon it,
+Edie dear, that always counts for something in society.'
+
+Edie blushed again, but this time with a certain tinge of shame
+and disappointment. She had never thought of that herself, and she
+was hurt that Harry should think and speak of it at such a moment.
+She felt with a sigh it was unworthy of him and unworthy of the
+occasion. Truly the iron of Pi and its evaluations had entered
+deeply into his soul!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CULTURE AND CULTURE.
+
+
+'I wonder, Berkeley,' said Herbert Le Breton, examining a coin
+curiously, 'what on earth can ever have induced you, with your
+ideas and feelings, to become a parson!'
+
+'My dear Le Breton, your taste, like good wine, improves with
+age,' answered Berkeley, coldly. 'There are many reasons, any one
+of which may easily induce a sensible man to go into the Church.
+For example, he may feel a disinterested desire to minister to
+the souls of his poorer neighbours; or he may be first cousin to a
+bishop; or he may be attracted by an ancient and honourable national
+institution; or he may possess a marked inclination for albs and
+chasubles; or he may reflect upon the distinct social advantages
+of a good living; or he may have nothing else in particular to do;
+or he may simply desire to rouse the impertinent curiosity of all
+the indolent quidnuncs of his acquaintance, without the remotest
+intention of ever gratifying their underbred Paul Pry proclivities.'
+
+Herbert Le Breton winced a little--he felt he had fairly laid himself
+open to this unmitigated rebuff--but he did not retire immediately
+from his untenable position. 'I suppose,' he said quietly, 'there
+are still people who really do take a practical interest in other
+people's souls--my brother Ronald does for one--but the idea
+is positively too ridiculous. Whenever I read any argument upon
+immortality it always seems to me remarkably cogent, if the souls
+in question were your soul and my soul; but just consider the
+transparent absurdity of supposing that every Hodge Chawbacon, and
+every rheumatic old Betty Martin, has got a soul, too, that must
+go on enduring for all eternity! The notion's absolutely ludicrous.
+What an infinite monotony of existence for the poor old creatures
+to endure for ever--being bored by their own inane personalities
+for a million aeons! It's simply appalling to think of!'
+
+But Berkeley wasn't going to be drawn into a theological discussion--that
+was a field which he always sedulously and successfully avoided.
+'The immortality of the soul,' he said quietly, 'is a Platonic dogma
+too frequently confounded, even by moderately instructed persons
+like yourself, Le Breton, with the Church's very different doctrine
+of the resurrection of the body. Upon this latter subject, my dear
+fellow, about which you don't seem to be quite clear or perfectly
+sound in your views, you'll find some excellent remarks in Bishop
+Pearson on the Creed--a valuable work which I had the pleasure of
+studying intimately for my ordination examination.'
+
+'Really, Berkeley, you're the most incomprehensible and mysterious
+person I ever met in my whole lifetime!' said Herbert, dryly. 'I
+believe you take a positive delight in deceiving and mystifying
+one. Do you seriously mean to tell me you feel any interest at the
+present time of day in books written by bishops?'
+
+'A modern bishop,' Berkeley answered calmly, 'is an unpicturesque
+but otherwise estimable member of a very distinguished ecclesiastical
+order, who ought not lightly to be brought into ridicule by lewd
+or lay persons. On that ground, I have always been in favour myself
+of gradually reforming his hat, his apron, and even his gaiters,
+which doubtless serve to render him at least conspicuous if not
+positively absurd in the irreverent eyes of a ribald generation.
+But as to criticising his literary or theological productions, my
+dear fellow, that would be conduct eminently unbecoming in a simple
+curate, and savouring of insubordination even in the person of an
+elderly archdeacon. I decline, therefore, to discuss the subject,
+especially with a layman on whose orthodoxy I have painful
+doubts.--Where's Oswald? Is he up yet?'
+
+'No; he's down in Devonshire, my brother Ernest writes me.'
+
+'What, at Dunbude? What's Oswald doing there?'
+
+'Oh dear no; not at Dunbude: the peerage hasn't yet adopted him--at
+a place called Calcombe Pomeroy, where it seems he lives. Ernest
+has gone down there from Exmoor for a fortnight's holiday. You
+remember, Oswald has a pretty sister--I met her here in your rooms
+last October, in fact--and I apprehend she may possibly form a
+measurable portion of the local attractions. A pretty face goes a
+long way with some people.'
+
+Berkeley drew a deep breath, and looked uneasily out of the window.
+This was dangerous news, indeed! What, little Miss Butterfly, has
+the boy with the gauze net caught sight of you already? Will he
+trap you and imprison you so soon in his little gilded matrimonial
+cage, enticing you thereinto with soft words and, sugared compliments
+to suit your dainty, delicate palate? and must I, who have meant to
+chase you for the chief ornament of my own small cabinet, be only
+in time to see you pinioned and cabined in your white lace veils
+and other pretty disguised entanglements, for his special and
+particular delectation? This must be looked into, Miss Butterfly;
+this must be prevented. Off to Calcombe Pomeroy, then, or other
+parts unknown, this very next to-morrow; and let us fight out the
+possession of little Miss Butterfly with our two gauze nets in
+opposition--mine tricked as prettily as I can trick it with tags
+and ends of art-allurements and hummed to in a delicate tune--before
+this interloping anticipating Le Breton has had time to secure you
+absolutely for himself. Too austere for you, little Miss Butterfly;
+good in his way, and kindly meaning, but too austere. Better come
+and sun yourself in the modest wee palace of art that I mean to
+build myself some day in some green, sunny, sloping valley, where
+your flittings will not be rudely disturbed by breath of poverty,
+nor your pretty feathery wings ruthlessly clipped with a pair
+of doctrinaire, ethico-socialistic scissors. To Calcombe, then,
+to Calcombe--and not a day's delay before I get there. So much of
+thought, in his own quaint indefinite fashion, flitted like lightning
+through Arthur Berkeley's perturbed mind, as he stood gazing
+wistfully for one second out of his pretty latticed creeper-clad
+window. Then he remembered himself quickly with a short little
+sigh, and turned to answer Herbert Le Breton's last half-sneering
+innuendo.
+
+'Something more than a pretty face merely,' he said, surveying
+Herbert coldly from head to foot; 'a heart too, and a mind, for
+all her flitting, not wholly unfurnished with good, sensible, solid
+mahogany English furniture. You may be sure Harry Oswald's sister
+isn't likely to be wanting in wits, at any rate.'
+
+'Oswald's a curious fellow,' Herbert went on, changing the venue,
+as he always did when he saw Berkeley was really in earnest; 'he's
+very clever, certainly, but he can never outlive his bourgeois
+origin. The smell of tea sticks about him somehow to the end of
+the chapter. Don't you know, Berkeley, there are some fellows whose
+clothes seem to have been born with them, they fit so perfectly
+and impede their movement so little; while there are other fellows
+whose clothes look at once as if they'd been made for them by a
+highly respectable but imperfectly successful tailor. That's just
+what I always think about Harry Oswald in the matter of culture.
+He's got a great deal of culture, the very best culture, from the
+very best shop--Oxford, in fact--dressed himself up in the finest
+suit of clothes from the most fashionable mental tailor; but it
+doesn't seem to fit him naturally. He moves about in it uneasily,
+like a man unaccustomed to be clothed by a good workman. He looks
+in his mental upholstery like a greengrocer in evening dress. Now
+there's all the difference in the world between that sort of put-on
+culture and culture in the grain, isn't there? You may train up a
+grocer's son to read Dante, and to play Mendelssohn's Lieder, and
+to admire Fra Angelico; but you can't train him up to wear these
+things lightly and gracefully upon him as you and I do, who come
+by them naturally. WE are born to the sphere; HE rises to it.'
+
+'You think so, Le Breton?' asked the curate with a quiet and
+suppressed smile, as he thought silently of the placid old shoemaker.
+
+'Think so! my dear fellow, I'm sure of it. I can spot a man of
+birth from a man of mere exterior polish any day, anywhere. Talk
+as much nonsense as you like about all men being born free and
+equal--they're not. They're born with natural inequalities in their
+very nerve and muscle. When I was an undergraduate, I startled
+one of the tutors of that time by beginning my English essay once,
+"All men are by nature born free and unequal." I stick to it still;
+it's the truth. They say it takes three generations to make a
+gentleman; nonsense utterly; it takes at least a dozen. You can't
+work out the common fibre in such a ridiculous hurry. That results
+as a simple piece of deductive reasoning from all modern theories
+of heredity and variation.'
+
+'I agree with you in part, Le Breton,' the parson said, eyeing him
+closely; 'in part but not altogether. What you say about Oswald's
+very largely true. His culture sits upon him like a suit made to
+order, not like a skin in which he was born. But don't you think
+that's due more to the individual man than to the class he happens
+to belong to? It seems to me there are other men who come from the
+same class as Oswald, or even from lower classes, but whose culture
+is just as much ingrained as, say, my dear fellow, yours is. They
+were born, no doubt, of naturally cultivated parents. And that's how
+your rule about the dozen generations that go to make a gentleman
+comes really true. I believe myself it takes a good many generations;
+but then none of them need have been gentlemen, in the ordinary sense
+of the word, before him. A gentleman, if I'm to use the expression
+as implying the good qualities conventionally supposed to be associated
+with it, a gentleman may be the final outcome and efflorescence of
+many past generations of quiet, unobtrusive, working-man culture--don't
+you think so?'
+
+Herbert Le Breton smiled incredulously. 'I don't know that I do,
+quite,' he answered languidly. 'I confess I attach more importance
+than you do to the mere question of race and family. A thoroughbred
+differs from a cart-horse, and a greyhound from a vulgar mongrel,
+in mind and character as well as in body. Oswald seems to me in
+all essentials a bourgeois at heart even now.'
+
+'But remember,' Berkeley said, rather warmly for him, 'the bourgeois
+class in England is just the class which must necessarily find
+it hardest to throw off the ingrained traces of its early origin.
+It has intermarried for a long time--long enough to have produced
+a distinct racial type like those you speak of among dogs and
+horses--the Philistine type, in fact--and when it tries to emerge,
+it must necessarily fight hard against the innate Philistinism of
+which it is conscious in its own constitution. No class has had
+its inequality with others, its natural inferiority, so constantly
+and cruelly thrust in its face; certainly the working-man has not.
+The working-man who makes efforts to improve himself is encouraged;
+the working-man who rises is taken by the hand; the working-man,
+whatever he does, is never sneered at. But it's very different with
+the shopkeeper. Naturally a little prone to servility--that comes
+from the very necessities of the situation--and laudably anxious
+to attain the level of those he considers his superiors, he gets
+laughed at on every hand. Being the next class below society,
+society is always engaged in trying to keep him out and keep him
+down. On the other hand, he naturally forms his ideal of what is
+fine and worth imitating from the example of the class above him;
+and therefore, considering what that class is, he has unworthy aims
+and snobbish desires. Either in his own person, or in the persons
+of his near relations, the wholesale merchant and the manufacturer--all
+bourgeois alike--he supplies the mass of nouveaux riches who are
+the pet laughing-stock of all our playwrights, and novelists, and
+comic papers. So the bourgeois who really knows he has something
+in him, like Harry Oswald, feels from the beginning painfully
+conscious of the instability of his position, and of the fact that
+men like you are cutting jokes behind his back about the smell of
+tea that still clings to him. That's a horrible drag to hold a man
+back--the sense that he must always be criticised as one of his
+own class--and that a class with many recognised failings. It makes
+him self-conscious, and I believe self-consciousness is really at
+the root of that slight social awkwardness you think you notice
+in Harry Oswald. A working-man's son need never feel that. I feel
+sure there are working-men's sons who go through the world as
+gentlemen mixing with gentlemen, and never give the matter of their
+birth one moment's serious consideration. Their position never
+troubles them, and it never need trouble them. Put it to yourself,
+now, Le Breton. Suppose I were to tell you my father was a working
+shoemaker, for example, or a working carpenter, you'd never think
+anything more about it; but if I were to tell you he was a grocer,
+or a baker, or a confectioner, or an ironmonger, you'd feel a certain
+indefinable class barrier set up between us two immediately and
+ever after. Isn't it so, now?'
+
+'Perhaps it is,' Herbert answered dubitatively. 'But as he's
+probably neither the one nor the other, the hypothesis isn't worth
+seriously discussing. I must go off now; I've got a lecture at
+twelve. Good-bye. Don't forget the tickets for Thursday's concert.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked after him with a contemptuous smile. 'The
+outcome of a race himself,' he thought, 'and not the best side
+of that race either. I was half tempted, in the heat of argument,
+to blurt out to him the whole truth about the dear gentle old
+Progenitor; but I'm glad I didn't now. After all, it's no use to
+cast your pearls before swine. For Herbert's essentially a pig--a
+selfish self-centred pig; no doubt a very refined and cultivated
+specimen of pigdom--the best breed; but still a most emphatic and
+consummate pig for all that. Not the same stuff in him that there is
+in Ernest--a fibre or two wanting somewhere. But I mustn't praise
+Ernest--a rival! a rival! It's war to the death between us two
+now, and no quarter. He's a good fellow, and I like him dearly;
+but all's fair in love and war; and I must go down to Calcombe
+to-morrow morning and forestall him immediately. Dear little Miss
+Butterfly, 'tis for your sake; you shall not be pinched and cramped
+to suit the Procrustean measure of Ernest Le Breton's communistic
+fancies. You shall fly free in the open air, and flash your bright
+silken wings, decked out bravely in scales of many hues, not toned
+down to too sober and quaker-like a suit of drab and dove-colour.
+You were meant by nature for the sunshine and the summer; you
+shall not be worried and chilled and killed with doses of heterodox
+political economy and controversial ethics. Better even a country
+rectory (though with a bad Late Perpendicular church), and flowers,
+and picnics, and lawn-tennis, and village small-talk, and the
+squire's dinner-parties, than bread and cheese and virtuous poverty
+in a London lodging with Ernest Le Breton. Romance lives again. The
+beautiful maiden is about to be devoured by a goggle-eyed monster,
+labelled on the back "Experimental Socialism"; the red cross knight
+flies to her aid, and drives away the monster by his magic music.
+Lance in rest! lyre at side! third class railway ticket in pocket!
+A Berkeley to the rescue! and there you have it.' And as he spoke,
+he tilted with his pen at an imaginary dragon supposed to be seated
+in the crimson rocking-chair by the wainscotted fireplace.
+
+'Yes, I must certainly go down to Calcombe. No use putting it off
+any longer. I've arranged to go next summer to London, to keep
+house for the dear old Progenitor; the music is getting asked for,
+two requests for more this very morning; trade is looking up. I
+shall throw the curacy business overboard (what chance for modest
+merit that ISN'T first cousin to a Bishop in the Church as at present
+constituted?) and take to composing entirely for a livelihood. I
+wouldn't ask Miss Butterfly before, because I didn't wish to tie
+her pretty wings prematurely; but a rival! that's quite a different
+matter. What right has he to go poaching on my preserves, I should
+like to know, and trying to catch the little gold fish I want to
+entice for my own private and particular fish-pond! An interloper, to
+be turned out unmercifully. So off to Calcombe, and that quickly.'
+
+He sat down to his desk, and taking out some sheets of blank
+music-paper, began writing down the score of a little song at which
+he had been working. So he continued till lunch-time, and then,
+turning to the table when the scout called him, took his solitary
+lunch of bread and butter, with a volume of Petrarch set open
+before him as he eat. He was lazily Englishing the soft lines of
+the original into such verse as suited his fastidious ear, when the
+scout came in suddenly once more, bringing in his hand the mid-day
+letters. One of them bore the Calcombe postmark. 'Strange,'
+Berkeley said to himself; 'at the very moment when I was thinking
+of going there. An invitation perhaps; the age of miracles is not
+yet past--don't they see spirits in a conjuror's room in Regent
+Street?--from Oswald, too; by Jove, it must be an invitation.'
+And he ran his eye down the page rapidly, to see if there was any
+mention of little Miss Butterfly. Yes; there was her name on the
+second sheet; what could her brother have to say to him about her?
+
+'We have Ernest Le Breton down here now,' Oswald wrote, 'on a
+holiday from the Exmoors', and you may be surprised to hear that
+I shall probably have him sooner or later for a brother-in-law. He
+has proposed to and been accepted by my sister Edith; and though
+it is likely, as things stand at present, to be a rather long
+engagement (for Le Breton has nothing to marry upon), we are all
+very much pleased about it here at Calcombe. He is just the exact
+man I should wish my sister to marry; so pleasant and good and
+clever, and so very well connected. Felicitate us, my dear Berkeley!'
+
+Arthur Berkeley laid the letter down with a quiet sigh, and folded
+his hands despondently before him. He hadn't seen very much of
+Edie, yet the disappointment was to him a very bitter one. It had
+been a pleasant day-dream, truly, and he was both to part with it
+so unexpectedly. 'Poor little Miss Butterfly,' he said to himself,
+tenderly and compassionately; 'poor, airy, flitting, bright-eyed
+little Miss Butterfly. I must give you up, must I, and Ernest Le
+Breton must take you for better, for worse, must he? La reyne le
+veult, it seems, and her word is law. I'm afraid he's hardly the
+man to make you happy, little lady; kind-hearted, well-meaning,
+but too much in earnest, too much absorbed in his ideas of right
+for a world where right's impossible, and every man for himself
+is the wretched sordid rule of existence. He will overshadow and
+darken your bright little life, I fear me; not intentionally--he
+couldn't do that--but by his Quixotic fads and fancies; good fads,
+honest fads, but fads wholly impracticable in this jarring universe
+of clashing interests, where he who would swim must keep his own
+head steadily above water, and he who minds his neighbour must sink
+like lead to the unfathomable bottom. He will sink, I doubt not,
+poor little Miss Butterfly; he will sink inevitably, and drag you
+down with him, down, down, down to immeasurable depths of poverty
+and despair. Oh, my poor little butterfly, I'm sorry for you, and
+sorry for myself. It was a pretty dream, and I loved it dearly.
+I had made you a queen in my fancy, and throned you in my heart,
+and now I have to dethrone you again, me miserable, and have my
+poor lonely heart bare and queenless!'
+
+The piano was open, and he went over to it instinctively, strumming
+a few wild bars out of his own head, made up hastily on the spur
+of the moment. 'No, not dethrone you,' he went on, leaning back
+on the music-stool, and letting his hand wander aimlessly over the
+keys; 'not dethrone you; I shall never, never be able to do that.
+Little Miss Butterfly, your image is stamped there too deep for
+dethronement, stamped there for ever, indelibly, ineffaceably, not
+to be washed out by tears or laughter. Ernest Le Breton may take
+you and keep you; you are his; you have chosen him, and you have
+chosen in most things not unwisely, for he's a good fellow and
+true (let me be generous in the hour of disappointment even to the
+rival, the goggle-eyed impracticable dragon monstrosity), but you
+are mine, too, for I won't give you up; I can't give you up; I must
+live for you still, even if you know it not. Little woman, I will
+work for you and I will watch over you; I will be your earthly
+Providence; I will try to extricate you from the quagmires into
+which the well-meaning, short-sighted dragon will infallibly lead
+you. Dear little bright soul, my heart aches for you; I know the
+trouble you are bringing upon yourself; but la reyne le veult, and
+it is not your humble servitor's business to interfere with your
+royal pleasure. Still, you are mine, for I am yours; yours, body
+and soul; what else have I to live for? The dear old Progenitor
+can't be with us many years longer; and when he is gone there will
+be nothing left me but to watch over little Miss Butterfly and her
+Don Quixote of a future husband. A man can't work and slave and
+compose sonatas for himself alone--the idea's disgusting, piggish,
+worthy only of Herbert Le Breton; I must do what I can for the
+little queen, and for her balloon-navigating Utopian Ernest. Thank
+heaven, no law prevents you from loving in your own heart the one
+woman whom you have once loved, no matter who may chance to marry
+her. Go, day-dream, fly, vanish, evaporate; the solid core remains
+still--my heart, and little Miss Butterfly. I have loved her once,
+and I shall love her, I shall love her for ever!'
+
+He crumpled the letter up in his fingers, and flung it half angrily
+into the waste-paper basket, as though it were the embodied day-dream
+he was mentally apostrophising. It was sermon-day, and he had to
+write his discourse that very afternoon. A quaint idea seized him.
+'Aha,' he said, almost gaily, in his volatile irresponsible fashion,
+'I have my text ready; the hour brings it to me unsought; a quip,
+a quip! I shall preach on the Pool of Bethesda: "While I am coming,
+another steppeth down before me." The verse seems as if it were
+made on purpose for me; what a pity nobody else will understand
+it!' And he smiled quietly at the conceit, as he got the scented
+sheets of sermon-paper out of his little sandalwood davenport.
+For Arthur Berkeley was one of those curiously compounded natures
+which can hardly ever be perfectly serious, and which can enjoy
+a quaintness or a neat literary allusion even at a moment of the
+bitterest personal disappointment. He could solace himself for
+a minute for the loss of Edie by choosing a text for his Sunday's
+sermon with a prettily-turned epigram on his own position.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY.
+
+
+At the very top of the winding footpath cut deeply into the
+sandstone side of the East Cliff Hill at Hastings, a wooden seat,
+set a little back from the road, invites the panting climber to rest
+for five minutes after his steep ascent from the primitive fisher
+village of Old Hastings, which nestles warmly in the narrow sun-smitten
+gulley at his feet. On this seat, one bright July morning, Herbert
+Le Breton lay at half length, basking in the brilliant open sunshine
+and evidently waiting for somebody whom he expected to arrive by the
+side path from the All Saints' Valley. Even the old coastguardsman,
+plodding his daily round over to Ecclesbourne, noticed the obvious
+expectation implied in his attentive attitude, and ventured to
+remark, in his cheery familiar fashion, 'She won't be long a-comin'
+now, sir, you may depend upon it: the gals is sure to be out
+early of a fine mornin' like this 'ere.' Herbert stuck his double
+eye-glass gingerly upon the tip of his nose, and surveyed the
+bluff old sailor through it with a stony British stare of mingled
+surprise and indignation, which drove the poor man hastily off, with
+a few muttered observations about some people being so confounded
+stuck up that they didn't even understand the point of a little
+good-natured seafarin' banter.
+
+As the coastguardsman disappeared round the corner of the flagstaff,
+a young girl came suddenly into sight by the jutting edge of
+sandstone bluff near the High Wickham; and Herbert, jumping up at
+once from his reclining posture, raised his bat to her with stately
+politeness, and moved forward in his courtly graceful manner
+to meet her as she approached. 'Well, Selah,' he said, taking her
+hand a little warmly (judged at least by Herbert Le Breton's usual
+standard), 'so you've come at last! I've been waiting here for you
+for fully half an hour. You see, I've come down to Hastings again
+as I promised, the very first moment I could possibly get away
+from my pressing duties at Oxford.'
+
+The girl withdrew her hand from his, blushing deeply, but looking
+into his face with evident pleasure and admiration. She was tall
+and handsome, with a certain dashing air of queenliness about her,
+too; and she was dressed in a brave, outspoken sort of finery,
+which, though cheap enough in its way, was neither common nor wholly
+wanting in a touch of native good taste and even bold refinement of
+contrast and harmony. 'It's very kind of you to come, Mr. Walters,'
+she answered in a firm but delicate voice. 'I'm so sorry I've
+kept you waiting. I got your letter, and tried to come in time; but
+father he's been more aggravating than usual, almost, this morning,
+and kept saying he'd like to know what on earth a young woman could
+want to go out walking for, instead of stopping at home at her work
+and minding her Bible like a proper Christian. In HIS time young
+women usen't to be allowed to go walking except on Sundays, and then
+only to chapel or Bible class. So I've not been able to get away
+till this very minute, with all this bundle of tracts, too, to give
+to the excursionists on the way. Father feels a most incomprehensible
+interest, somehow, in the future happiness of the Sunday excursionists.'
+
+'I wish he'd feel a little more interest in the present happiness
+of his own daughter,' Herbert said smiling. 'But it hasn't mattered
+your keeping me waiting here, Selah. Of course I'd have enjoyed it
+all far better in your society--I don't think I need tell you that
+now, dear--but the sunshine, and the sea breeze, and the song of
+the larks, and the plash of the waves below, and the shouts of the
+fishermen down there on the beach mending their nets and putting
+out their smacks, have all been so delightful after our humdrum
+round of daily life at Oxford, that I only wanted your presence
+here to make it all into a perfect paradise.--Why, Selah, how pretty
+you look in that sweet print! It suits your complexion admirably.
+I never saw you wear anything before so perfectly becoming.'
+
+Selah drew herself up with the conscious pride of an unaffected
+pretty girl. 'I'm so glad you think so, Mr. Walters,' she said,
+playing nervously with the handle of her dark-blue parasol. 'You
+always say such very flattering things.'
+
+'No, not flattering,' Herbert answered, smiling; 'not flattering,
+Selah, simply truthful. You always extort the truth from me with
+your sweet face, Selah. Nobody can look at it and not forget the
+stupid conventions of ordinary society. But please, dear, don't
+call me Mr. Walters. Call me Herbert. You always do, you know, when
+you write to me.'
+
+'But it's so much harder to do it to your face, Mr. Walters,' Selah
+said, again blushing. 'Every time you go away I say to myself, "I
+shall call him Herbert as soon as ever he comes back again;" and
+every time you come back, I feel too much afraid of you, the moment
+I see you, ever to do it. And yet of course I ought to, you know,
+for when we're married, why, naturally, then I shall have to learn
+to call you Herbert, shan't I?'
+
+'You will, I suppose,' Herbert answered, rather chillily: 'but
+that subject is one upon which we shall be able to form a better
+opinion when the time comes for actually deciding it. Meanwhile,
+I want you to call me Herbert, if you please, as a personal favour
+and a mark of confidence. Suppose I were to go on calling you Miss
+Briggs all the time! a pretty sort of thing that would be! what
+inference would you draw as to the depth of my affection? Well,
+now, Selah, how have these dreadful home authorities of yours been
+treating you, my dear girl, all the time since I last saw you?'
+
+'Much the same as usual, Mr. Walters--Herbert, I mean,' Selah
+answered, hastily correcting herself. 'The regular round. Prayers;
+clean the shop; breakfast, with a chapter; serve in the shop all
+morning; dinner, with a chapter; serve in the shop all afternoon;
+tea, with a chapter; prayer meeting in the evening; supper, with a
+chapter; exhortation; and go to bed, sick of it all, to get up next
+morning and repeat the entire performance da capo, as they always
+say in the music to the hymn-books. Occasional relaxations,--Sunday
+at chapel three times, and Wednesday evening Bible class; mothers'
+assembly, Dorcas society, missionary meeting, lecture on the Holy
+Land, dissolving views of Jerusalem, and Primitive Methodist
+district conference in the Mahanaim Jubilee meeting hall. Salvation
+privileges every day and all the year round, till I'm ready to drop
+with it, and begin to wish I'd only been lucky enough to have been
+born one of those happy benighted little pagans in a heathen land
+where they don't know the value of the precious Sabbath, and haven't
+yet been taught to build Primitive Methodist district chapels for
+crushing the lives out of their sons and daughters!'
+
+Herbert smiled a gentle smile of calm superiority at this vehement
+outburst of natural irreligion. 'You must certainly be bored
+to death with it all, Selah,' he said, laughingly. 'What a funny
+sort of creed it really is, after all, for rational beings! Who on
+earth could believe that the religion these people use to render
+your life so absolutely miserable is meant for the same thing as
+the one that makes my poor dear brother Ronald so perfectly and
+inexpressibly serene and happy? The formalism of lower natures, like
+your father's, has turned it into a machine for crushing all the
+spontaneity out of your existence. What a regime for a high-spirited
+girl like you to be compelled to live under, Selah!'
+
+'It is, it is!' Selah answered, vehemently. 'I wish you could only
+see the way father goes on at me all the time about chapel, and so
+on, Mr. Wal--Herbert, I mean. You wouldn't wonder, if you were to
+hear him, at my being anxious for the time to come when you can
+leave Oxford and we can get comfortably married. What between the
+drudgery of the shop and the drudgery of the chapel my life's
+positively getting almost worn out of me.'
+
+Herbert took her hand in his, quietly. It was not a very small hand,
+but it was prettily, though cheaply, gloved, and the plain silver
+bracelet that encircled the wrist, though simple and inexpensive,
+was not wanting in rough tastefulness. 'You're a bad philosopher,
+Selah,' he said, turning with her along the path towards Ecclesbourne;
+'you're always anxious to hurry on too fast the lagging wheels of
+an unknown future. After all, how do you know whether we should
+be any the happier if we were really and truly married? Don't you
+know what Swinburne says, in "Dolores"--you've read it in the Poems
+and Ballads I gave you--
+
+
+ Time turns the old days to derision,
+ Our loves into corpses or wives,
+ And marriage and death and division
+ Make barren our lives?'
+
+
+'I've read it,' Selah answered, carelessly, 'and I thought it all
+very pretty. Of course Swinburne always is very pretty: but I'm
+sure I never try to discover what on earth he means by it. I suppose
+father would say I don't read him tearfully and prayerfully--at
+any rate, I'm quite sure I never understand what he's driving at.'
+
+'And yet he's worth understanding,' Herbert answered in his clear
+musical voice--'well worth understanding, Selah, especially for
+you, dearest. If, in imitation of obsolete fashions, you wished
+to read a few verses of some improving volume every night and
+morning, as a sort of becoming religious exercise in the elements
+of self-culture, I don't know that I could recommend you a better
+book to begin upon than the Poems and Ballads. Don't you see the
+moral of those four lines I've just quoted to you? Why should we
+wish to change from anything so free and delightful and poetical
+as lovers into anything so fettered, and commonplace, and prosaic,
+and BANAL, as wives and husbands? Why should we wish to give up
+the fanciful paradise of fluttering hope and expectation for the
+dreary reality of housekeeping and cold mutton on Mondays? Why
+should we not be satisfied with the real pleasure of the passing
+moment, without for ever torturing our souls about the imaginary
+but delusive pleasure of the unrealisable, impossible future?'
+
+'But we MUST get married some time or other, Herbert,' Selah
+said, turning her big eyes full upon him with a doubtful look
+of interrogation. 'We can't go on courting in this way for ever
+and ever, without coming to any definite conclusion. We MUST get
+married by-and-by, now mustn't we?'
+
+'Je n'en vois pas la necessite, moi,' Herbert answered with just a
+trace of cynicism in his curling lip. 'I don't see any MUST about
+it, that is to say, in English, Selah. The fact is, you see, I'm
+above all things a philosopher; you're a philosopher, too, but only
+an instinctive one, and I want to make your instinctive philosophy
+assume a rather more rational and extrinsic shape. Why should we
+really be in any hurry to go and get married? Do the actual married
+people of our acquaintance, as a matter of fact, seem so very much
+more ethereally happy--with their eight children to be washed and
+dressed and schooled daily, for example--than the lovers, like you
+and me, who walk arm-in-arm out here in the sunshine, and haven't
+yet got over their delicious first illusions? Depend upon it, the
+longer you can keep your illusions the better. You haven't read
+Aristotle in all probability; but as Aristotle would put it, it
+isn't the end that is anything in love-making, it's the energy, the
+active pursuit, the momentary enjoyment of it. I suppose we shall
+have to get married some day, Selah, though I don't know when; but
+I confess to you I don't look forward to the day quite so rapturously
+as you do. Shall we feel more the thrill of possession, do you
+think, than I feel it now when I hold your hand in mine, so, and
+catch the beating of your pulse in your veins, even through the
+fingers of your pretty little glove? Shall we look deeper into
+one another's eyes and hearts than I look now into the very inmost
+depths of yours? Shall we drink in more fully the essence of love
+than when I touch your lips here--one moment, Selah, the gorse is
+very deep here--now don't be foolish--ah, there, what's the use
+of philosophising, tell me, by the side of that? Come over here to
+the bench, Selah, by the edge of the cliff; look down yonder into
+Ecclesbourne glen; hear the waves dashing on the shore below, and
+your own heart beating against your bosom within--and then ask
+yourself what's the good of living in any moment, in any moment
+but the present.'
+
+Selah turned her great eyes admiringly upon him once more. 'Oh,
+Herbert,' she said, looking at him with a clever uneducated girl's
+unfeigned and undisguised admiration for any cultivated gentleman
+who takes the trouble to draw out her higher self. 'Oh, Herbert, how
+can you talk so beautifully to me, and then ask me why it is I'm
+longing for the day to come when I can be really and truly married
+to you? Do you think I don't feel the difference between spending
+my life with such a man as you, and spending it for years and years
+together with a ranting, canting Primitive Methodist?'
+
+Herbert smiled to himself a quiet, unobtrusive, self-satisfied
+smile. 'She appreciates me,' he thought silently in his own heart,
+'she appreciates me at my true worth; and, after all, that's a great
+thing. Well, Selah,' he went on aloud, toying unreproved with her
+pretty little silver bracelet, 'let us be practical. You belong to
+a business family and you know the necessity for being practical.
+There's a great deal to be said in favour of my hanging on at Oxford
+a little longer. I must get a situation somewhere else as soon
+as possible, in which I can get married; but I can't give up my
+fellowship without having found something else to do which would
+enable me to put my wife in the position I should like her to
+occupy.'
+
+'A very small income would do for me, with you, Herbert,' Selah
+put in eagerly. 'You see, I've been brought up economically enough,
+heaven knows, and I could live extremely well on very little.'
+
+'But _I_ could not, Selah,' Herbert answered, in his colder tone.
+'Pardon me, but I could not. I've been accustomed to a certain
+amount of comfort, not to say luxury, which I couldn't readily
+do without. And then, you know, dear,' he added, seeing a certain
+cloud gathering dimly on Selah's forehead, 'I want to make my wife
+a real lady.'
+
+Selah looked at him tenderly, and gave the hand she hold in hers
+a faint pressure. And then Herbert began to talk about the waves,
+and the cliffs, and the sun, and the great red sails, and to quote
+Shelley and Swinburne; and the conversation glided off into more
+ordinary everyday topics.
+
+They sat for a couple of hours together on the edge of the cliff,
+talking to one another about such and other subjects, till, at last,
+Selah asked the time, hurriedly, and declared she must go off at
+once, or father'd be in a tearing passion. Herbert walked back
+with her through the green lanes in the golden mass of gorse, till
+he reached the brow of the hill by the fisher village. Then Selah
+said lightly, 'Not any nearer, Herbert--you see I can say Herbert
+quite naturally now--the neighbours will go talking about it
+if they see me standing here with a strange gentleman. Good-bye,
+good-bye, till Friday.' Herbert held her face up to his in his
+hands, and kissed her twice over in spite of a faint resistance.
+Then they each went their own way, Selah to the little green-grocer's
+shop in a back street of the red-brick fisher village, and Herbert
+to his big fashionable hotel on the Marine Parade in the noisy
+stuccoed modern watering place.
+
+'It's an awkward sort of muddle to have got oneself into.' he thought
+to himself as he walked along the asphalte pavement in front of
+the sea-wall: 'a most confoundedly awkward fix to have got oneself
+into with a pretty girl of the lower classes. She's beautiful
+certainly; that there's no denying; the handsomest woman on the
+whole I ever remember to have seen at any time anywhere; and when
+I'm actually by her side--though it's a weakness to confess it--I'm
+really not quite sure that I'm not positively quite in love with
+her! She'd make a grand sort of Messalina, without a doubt, a
+model for a painter, with her frank imperious face, and her splendid
+voluptuous figure; a Faustina, a Catherine of Russia, an Ann
+Boleyn--to be fitly painted only by a Rubens or a Gustave Courbet.
+Yet how I can ever have been such a particular fool as to go and
+get myself entangled with her I can't imagine. Heredity, heredity;
+it must run in the family, for certain. There's Ernest has gone and
+handed himself over bodily to this grocer person somewhere down in
+Devonshire; and I myself, who perfectly see the folly of his absurd
+proceeding, have independently put myself into this very similar
+awkward fix with Selah Briggs here. Selah Briggs, indeed! The very
+name reeks with commingled dissent, vulgarity, and greengrocery. Her
+father's deacon of his chapel, and goes out at night when there's
+no missionary meeting on, to wait at serious dinner parties! Or
+rather, I suppose he'd desert the most enticing missionary to earn
+a casual half-crown at even an ungodly champagne-drinking dinner!
+Then that's the difference between me and Ernest. Ernest's selfish,
+incurably and radically selfish. Because this Oswald girl happens
+to take his passing fancy, and to fit in with his impossible
+Schurzian notions, he'll actually go and marry her. Not only will
+he have no consideration for mother--who really is a very decent
+sort of body in her own fashion, if you don't rub her up the wrong
+way or expect too much from her--but he'll also interfere, without
+a thought, with MY prospects and my advancement. Now, THAT I call
+really selfish; and selfishness is a vulgar piggish vice that I
+thoroughly abominate. I don't deny that I'm a trifle selfish myself,
+of course, in a refined and cultivated manner--I flatter myself,
+in fact, that introspective analysis is one of my strong points;
+and I don't conceal my own failings from my own consciousness with
+any weak girlish prevarications. But after all, as Hobbes very well
+showed (though our shallow modern philosophers pretend to laugh at
+him), selfishness in one form or another is at the very base of
+all human motives; the difference really is between sympathetic
+and unsympathetic selfishness--between piggishness and cultivated
+feelings. Now _I_ will NOT give way to the foolish and selfish
+impulses which would lead me to marry Selah Briggs. I will put a
+curb upon my inclinations, and do what is really best in the end
+for all the persons concerned--and for myself especially.'
+
+He strolled down on to the beach, and began throwing pebbles
+carelessly into the plashing water. 'Yes,' he went on in his internal
+colloquy, 'I can only account for my incredible stupidity in this
+matter by supposing that it depends somehow upon some incomprehensible
+hereditary leaning in the Le Breton family idiosyncrasy. It's awfully
+unlike me, I will do myself the justice to say, to have got myself
+into such a silly dilemma all for nothing. It was all very well a
+few years ago, when I first met Selah. I was an undergraduate in
+those days, and even if somebody had caught me walking with a young
+lady of unknown antecedents and doubtful aspirates on the East
+Cliff at Hastings, it really wouldn't have much mattered. She was
+beautiful even then--though not so beautiful as now, for she grows
+handsomer every day; and it was natural enough I should have taken
+to going harmless walks about the place with her. She attracted me
+by her social rebelliousness--another family trait, in me passive
+not active, contemplative not personal; but she certainly attracted
+me. She attracts me still. A man must have some outlet for the
+natural and instinctive emotions of our common humanity; and if a
+monastic Oxford community imposes celibacy upon one with mediaeval
+absurdity--why, Selah Briggs is, for the time being, the only
+possible sort of outlet. One needn't marry her in the end; but for
+the moment it is certainly very excellent fooling. Not unsentimental
+either--for my part I could never care for mere coarse, commonplace,
+venal wretches. Indeed, when I spoke to her just now about my wishing
+to make my wife a lady, upon my word, at the time, I almost think
+I was just then quite in earnest. The idea flitted across my mind
+vaguely--"Why not send her for a year or two to be polished up
+at Paris or somewhere, and really marry her afterwards for good
+and always?" But on second thoughts, it won't hold water. She's
+magnificent, she's undeniable, she's admirable, but she isn't
+possible. The name alone's enough to condemn her. Fancy marrying
+somebody with a Christian name out of the hundred and somethingth
+psalm! It's too atrocious! I really couldn't inflict her for a
+moment on poor suffering innocent society.'
+
+He paused awhile, watching the great russet sails of the fishing
+vessels flapping idly in the breeze as the men raised them to catch
+the faint breath of wind, and then he thought once more, 'But how
+to get rid of her, that's the question. Every time I come here now
+she goes on more and more about the necessity of our getting soon
+married--and I don't wonder at it either, for she has a perfect
+purgatory of a life with that snivelling Methodistical father of
+hers, one may be sure of it. It would be awfully awkward if any
+Oxford people were to catch me here walking with her on the cliff over
+yonder--some sniggering fellow of Jesus or Worcester, for example,
+or, worse than all, some prying young Pecksniff of a third-year
+undergraduate! Somehow, she seems to fascinate me, and I can't get
+away from her; but I must really do it and be done with it. It's
+no use going on this way much longer. I must stop here for a few
+days more only, and then tell her that I'm called away on important
+college business, say to Yorkshire or Worcestershire, or somewhere.
+I needn't tell her in person, face to face: I can write hastily at
+the last moment to the usual name at the Post Office--to be left
+till called for. And as a matter of fact I won't go to Yorkshire
+either--very awkward and undignified, though, these petty
+prevarications; when a man once begins lowering himself by making
+love to a girl in an inferior position, he lets himself in for
+all kinds of disagreeable necessities afterwards;--I shall go to
+Switzerland. Yes, no place better after the bother of running away
+like a coward from Selah: in the Alps, one would forget all petty
+human degradations; I shall go to Switzerland. Of course I won't
+break off with her altogether--that would be cruel; and I really
+like her; upon my word, even when she isn't by, up to her own
+level, I really like her; but I'll let the thing die a natural
+death of inanition. As they always put it in the newspapers, with
+their stereotyped phraseology, a gradual coldness shall intervene
+between us. That'll be the best and only way out of it.
+
+'And if I go to Switzerland, why not ask Oswald of Oriel to go
+with me? That, I fancy, wouldn't be a bad stroke of social policy.
+Ernest WILL marry this Oswald girl; unfortunately he's as headstrong
+as an allegory on the banks of the Nile; and as he's going to drag
+her inevitably into the family, I may as well put the best possible
+face upon the disagreeable matter. Let's make a virtue of necessity.
+The father and mother are old: they'll die soon, and be gathered
+to their fathers (if they had any), and the world will straightway
+forget all about them. But Oswald will always be there en evidence,
+and the safest thing to do will be to take him as much as possible
+into the world, and let the sister rest upon HIS reputation for
+her place in society. It's quite one thing to say that Ernest has
+married the daughter of a country grocer down in Devonshire, and
+quite another thing to say that he has married the sister of Oswald
+of Oriel, the distinguished mathematician and fellow of the Royal
+Society. How beautifully that warm brown sail stands out in a
+curve against the cold grey line of the horizon--a bulging curve
+just like the swell of Selah's neck, when she throws her head
+back, so, and lets you see the contour of her throat, her beautiful
+rounded throat--ah, that's not giving her up now, is it?--What a
+confounded fool I am, to be sure! Anybody would say, if they could
+only have read my thoughts that moment, that I was really in love
+with this girl Selah!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA!
+
+
+The old Englischer Hof at Pontresina looked decidedly sleepy and
+misty at five o'clock on an August morning, when two sturdy British
+holiday-seekers, in knickerbockers and regular Alpine climbing rig,
+sat drinking their parting cup of coffee in the salle-a-manger,
+before starting to make the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, one of
+the tallest and by far the most difficult among the peaks of the
+Bernina range. There are few prettier villages in the Engadine than
+Pontresina, and few better hotels in all Switzerland than the old
+ivy-covered Englischer Hof. Yet on this particular morning, and
+at that particular hour, it certainly did look just a trifle cold
+and cheerless. 'He never makes very warm in the Engadine,' Carlo
+the waiter observed with a shudder, in his best English, to one
+of the two early risers: 'and he makes colder on an August morning
+here than he makes at Nice in full December.' For poor Carlo was
+one of those cosmopolitan waiters who follow the cosmopolitan
+tourist clientele round all the spas, health resorts, kurs and winter
+quarters of fashionable Europe. In January he and his brother, as
+Charles and Henri, handed round absinthes and cigarettes at the
+Cercle Nautique at Nice; in April, as Carlo and Enrico, they turned
+up again with water ices and wafer cakes in the Caffe Manzoni at
+Milan; and in August, the observant traveller might recognise them
+once more under the disguise of Karl and Heinrich, laying the table
+d'hote in the long and narrow old-fashioned dining-room of the
+Englischer Hof at Pontresina. Though their native tongue was the
+patois of the Canton Ticino, they spoke all the civilised languages
+of the world, 'and also German,' with perfect fluency, and without
+the slightest attempt at either grammar or idiomatic accuracy.
+And they both profoundly believed in their hearts that the rank,
+wealth, youth, beauty and fashion of all other nations were wisely
+ordained by the inscrutable designs of Providence for a single
+purpose, to enrich and reward the active, intelligent, and industrious
+natives of the Canton Ticino.
+
+'Are the guides come yet?' asked Harry Oswald of the waiter in
+somewhat feeble and hesitating German. He made it a point to speak
+German to the waiters, because he regarded it as the only proper
+and national language of the universal Teutonic Swiss people.
+
+'They await the gentlemans in the corridor,' answered Carlo, in
+his own peculiar and racy English; for he on his side resented the
+imputation that any traveller need ever converse with him in any
+but that traveller's own tongue, provided only it was one of the
+recognised and civilised languages of the world, or even German.
+They are a barbarous and disgusting race, those Tedeschi, look
+you well, Signor; they address you as though you were the dust in
+the piazza; yet even from them a polite and attentive person may
+confidently look for a modest, a very modest, but still a welcome
+trink-geld.
+
+'Then we'd better hurry up, Oswald,' said Herbert Le Breton, 'for
+guides are the most tyrannical set of people on the entire face
+of this planet. I shall have another cup of coffee before I go,
+though, if the guides swear at me roundly in the best Roumansch
+for it, anyhow.'
+
+'Your acquaintance with the Roumansch dialect being probably limited,'
+Harry Oswald answered, 'the difference between their swearing and
+their blessing would doubtless be reduced to a vanishing point.
+Though I've noticed that swearing is really a form of human speech
+everywhere readily understanded of the people in spite of all
+differences of race or language. One touch of nature, you see; and
+swearing, after all, is extremely natural.'
+
+'Are you ready?' asked Herbert, having tossed off his coffee.
+'Yes? Then come along at once. I can feel the guides frowning at
+us through the partition.'
+
+They turned out into the street, with its green-shuttered windows
+all still closed in the pale grey of early morning, and walked
+along with the three guides by the high road which leads through
+rocks and fir-trees up to the beginning of the steep path to the
+Piz Margatsch. Passing the clear emerald-green waterfall that rushes
+from under the lower melting end of the Morteratsch glacier, they
+took at once to the narrow track by the moraine along the edge
+of the ice, and then to the glacier itself, which is easy enough
+climbing, as glaciers go, for a good pedestrian. Herbert Le Breton,
+the older mountaineer of the two, got over the big blocks readily
+enough; but Harry, less accustomed to Swiss expeditions, lagged
+and loitered behind a little, and required more assistance from
+the guides every now and again than his sturdy companion.
+
+'I'm getting rather blown at starting,' Harry called out at last
+to Herbert, some yards in front of him. 'Do you think the despotic
+guide would let us sit down and rest a bit if we asked him very
+prettily?'
+
+'Offer him a cigar first,' Herbert shouted back, 'and then after a
+short and decent interval, prefer your request humbly in your politest
+French. The savage potentate always expects to be propitiated by
+gifts, as a preliminary to answering the petitions of his humble
+subjects.'
+
+'I see,' Harry said, laughing. 'Supply before grievances, not
+grievances before supply.' And he halted a moment to light a cigar,
+and to offer one to each of the two guides who were helping him
+along on either side.
+
+Thus mollified, the senior guide grudgingly allowed ten minutes'
+halt and a drink of water at the bend by the corner of the glacier.
+They sat down upon the great translucent sea-green blocks and began
+talking with the taciturn chief guide.
+
+'Is this glacier dangerous?' Harry asked.
+
+'Dangerous, monsieur? Oh no, not as one counts glaciers. It is very
+safe. There are seldom accidents.'
+
+'But there have been some?'
+
+'Some, naturally. You don't climb mountains always without accidents.
+There was one the first time anyone ever made the ascent of the Piz
+Margatsch. That was fifty years ago. My uncle was killed in it.'
+
+'Killed in it?' Harry echoed. 'How did it all happen, and where?'
+
+'Yonder, monsieur, in a crevasse that was then situated near the
+bend at the corner, just where the great crevasse you see before
+you now stands. That was fifty years ago; since then the glacier
+has moved much. Its substance, in effect, has changed entirely.'
+
+'Tell us all about it,' Herbert put in carelessly. He knew the
+guide wouldn't go on again till he had finished his whole story.
+
+'It's a strange tale,' the guide answered, taking a puff or two
+at his cigar pensively and then removing it altogether for his set
+narrative--he had told the tale before a hundred times, and he had
+the very words of it now regularly by heart. 'It was the first time
+anyone ever tried to climb the Piz Margatsch. At that time, nobody
+in the valley knew the best path; it is my father who afterwards
+discovered it. Two English gentlemen came to Pontresina one morning;
+one might say you two gentlemen; but in those days there were not
+many tourists in the Engadine; the exploitation of the tourist had
+not yet begun to be developed. My father and my uncle were then the
+only two guides at Pontresina. The English gentlemen asked them
+to try with them the scaling of the Piz Margatsch. My uncle was
+afraid of it, but my father laughed down his fears. So they started.
+My uncle was dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons, and a pair
+of brown velvet breeches. Ah, heaven, I can see him yet, his white
+corpse in the blue coat and the brown velvet breeches!'
+
+'But you can't be fifty yourself,' Harry said, looking at the tall
+long-limbed man attentively; 'no, nor forty, nor thirty either.'
+
+'No, monsieur, I am twenty-seven,' the chief guide answered, taking
+another puff at his cigar very deliberately; 'and this was fifty
+years ago: yet I have seen his corpse just as the accident happened.
+You shall hear all about it. It is a tale from the dead; it is
+worth hearing.'
+
+'This begins to grow mysterious,' said Herbert in English, hammering
+impatiently at the ice with the shod end of his alpenstock. 'Sounds
+for all the world just like the introduction to a Christmas number.'
+
+'A young girl in the village loved my uncle,' the guide went on
+imperturhably; 'and she begged him not to go on this expedition. She
+was betrothed to him. But he wouldn't listen: and they all started
+together for the top of the Piz Margatsch. After many trials, my
+father and my uncle and the two tourists reached the summit. "So
+you see, Andreas," said my father, "your fears were all folly."
+"Half-way through the forest," said my uncle, "one is not yet safe
+from the wolf." Then they began to descend again. They got down past
+all the dangerous places, and on to this glacier, so well known,
+so familiar. And then my uncle began indeed to get careless. He
+laughed at his own fears; "Cathrein was all wrong," he said to my
+father, "we shall get down again safely, with Our Lady's assistance."
+So they reached at last the great crevasse. My father and one of
+the Englishmen got over without difficulty; but the other Englishman
+slipped; his footing failed him; and he was sinking, sinking, down,
+down, down, slipping quickly into the deep dark green abyss below.
+My uncle stretched out his hand over the edge: the Englishman caught
+it; and then my uncle missed his foothold, they both fell together
+and were lost to sight at once completely, in the invisible depths
+of the great glacier!'
+
+'Well,' Herbert Le Breton said, as the man paused a moment. 'Is
+that all?'
+
+'No,' the guide answered, with a tone of deep solemnity. 'That is
+not all. The glacier went on moving, moving, slowly, slowly, but
+always downward, for years and years. Yet no one ever heard anything
+more of the two lost bodies. At last one day, when I was seven
+years old, I went out playing with my brother, among the pine-woods,
+near the waterfall that rushes below there, from under the glacier.
+We saw something lying in the ice-cold water, just beneath the
+bottom of the ice-sheet. We climbed over the moraine; and there,
+oh heaven! we could see two dead bodies. They were drowned, just
+drowned, we thought: it might have been yesterday. One of them
+was short and thick-set, with the face of an Englishman: he was
+close-shaven, and, what seemed odd to us, he had on clothes which,
+though we were but children, we knew at once for the clothes of
+a long past fashion--in fact, a suit of the Louis dix-huit style.
+Tha other was a tall and handsome man, dressed in the unchangeable
+blue coat and brown velvet breeches of our own canton, of the
+Graubunden. We were very frightened about it, and so we ran away
+trembling and told an old woman who lived close by; her name was
+Cathrein, and her grandchildren used to play with us, though she
+herself was about the age of my father, for my father married very
+late. Old Cathrein came out with us to look; and the moment she
+saw the bodies, she cried out with a great cry, "It is he! It is
+Andreas! It is my betrothed, who was lost on the very day week when
+I was to be married. I should know him at once among ten thousand.
+It is many, many years now, but I have not forgotten his face--ah,
+my God, that face; I know it well!" And she took his hand in hers,
+that fair white young hand in her own old brown withered one, and
+kissed it gently. "And yet," she said, "he is five years older than
+me, this fair young man here; five years older than me!" We were
+frightened to hear her talk so, for we said to ourselves, "She
+must be mad;" so we ran home and brought our father. He looked at
+the dead bodies and at old Cathrein, and he said, "It is indeed
+true. He is my brother." Ah, monsieur, you would not have forgotten
+it if you had seen those two old people standing there beside
+the fresh corpses they had not seen for all those winters! They
+themselves had meanwhile grown old and grey and wrinkled; but the
+ice of the glacier had kept those others young, and fresh, and
+fair, and beautiful as on the day they were first engulfed in it.
+It was terrible to look at!'
+
+'A most ghastly story, indeed,' Herbert Le Breton said, yawning;
+'and now I think we'd better be getting under way again, hadn't
+we, Oswald?'
+
+Harry Oswald rose from his seat on the block of ice unwillingly, and
+proceeded on his road up the mountain with a distinct and decided
+feeling of nervousness. Was it the guide's story that made his knees
+tremble slightly? was it his own inexperience in climbing? or was
+it the cold and the fatigue of the first ascent of the season to
+a man not yet in full pedestrian Alpine training? He did not feel
+at all sure about it in his own mind: but this much he knew with
+perfect certainty, that his footing was not nearly so secure under
+him as it had been during the earlier part of the climb over the
+lower end of the glacier.
+
+By-and-by they reached the long sheer snowy slope near the Three
+Brothers. This slope is liable to slip, and requires careful walking,
+so the guides began roping them together. 'The stout monsieur
+in front, next after me,' said the chief guide, knotting the rope
+soundly round Herbert Le Breton: 'then Kaspar; then you, monsieur,'
+to Harry Oswald, 'and finally Paolo, to bring up the rear. The
+thin monsieur is nervous, I think; it's best to place him most in
+the middle.'
+
+'If you really ARE nervous, Oswald,' Herbert said, not unkindly,
+'you'd better stop behind, I think, and let me go on with two of the
+guides. The really hard work, you know, has scarcely begun yet.'
+
+'Oh dear, no,' Harry answered lightly (he didn't care to confess
+his timidity before Herbert Le Breton of all men in the world): 'I
+do feel just a little groggy about the knees, I admit; but it's not
+nervousness, it's only want of training. I haven't got accustomed
+to glacier-work yet, and the best way to overcome it is by constant
+practice. "Solvitur ambulando," you know, as Aldrich says about
+Achilles and the tortoise.'
+
+'Very good,' Herbert answered drily; 'only mind, whatever you do,
+for Heaven's sake don't go and stumble and pull ME down on the top
+of you. It's the clear duty of a good citizen to respect the lives
+of the other men who are roped together with him on the side of a
+mountain.'
+
+They set to work again, in single file, with cautious steps planted
+firmly on the treacherous snow, to scale the great white slope that
+stretched so temptingly before them. Harry felt his knees becoming
+at every step more and more ungovernable, while Herbert didn't
+improve matters by calling out to him from time to time, 'Now, then,
+look out for a hard bit here,' or 'Mind that loose piece of ice
+there,' or 'Be very careful how you put your foot down by the yielding
+edge yonder,' and so forth. At last, they had almost reached the
+top of the slope, and were just above the bare gulley on the side,
+when Harry's insecure footing on a stray scrap of ice gave way
+suddenly, and he begain to slip rapidly down the sheer slope of
+the mountain. In a second he had knocked against Paolo, and Paolo
+had begun to slip too, so that both were pulling with all their
+weight against Kaspar and the others in front. 'For Heaven's sake,
+man,' Herbert cried hastily, 'dig your alpenstock deep into the
+snow.' At the same instant, the chief guide shouted in Roumansch
+to the same effect to Kaspar. But even as they spoke, Kaspar,
+pushing his feet hard against the snow, began to give way too; and
+the whole party seemed about to slip together down over the sheer
+rocky precipice of the great gulley on the right. It was a moment
+of supreme anxiety; but Herbert Le Breton, looking back with blood
+almost unstirred and calmly observant eye, saw at once the full
+scope of the threatening danger. 'There's only one chance,' he
+said to himself quietly. 'Oswald is lost already! Unless the rope
+breaks, we are all lost together!' At that very second, Harry Oswald,
+throwing his arms up wildly, had reached the edge of the terrible
+precipice; he went over with a piercing cry into the abyss, with
+the last guide beside him, and Kaspar following him close in mute
+terror. Then Herbert Le Breton felt the rope straining, straining,
+straining, upon the sharp frozen edge of the rock; for an inappreciable
+point of time it strained and crackled: one loud snap, and it was
+gone for ever. Herbert and the chief guide, almost upset by the
+sudden release from the heavy pull that was steadily dragging them
+over, threw themselves flat on their faces in the drifted snow,
+and checked their fall by a powerful muscular effort. The rope
+was broken and their lives were saved, but what had become of the
+three others?
+
+They crept cautiously on hands and knees to the most practicable
+spot at the edge of the precipice, and the guide peered over into
+the great white blank below with eager eyes of horrid premonition.
+As he did so, he recoiled with awe, and made a rapid gesture with
+his hands, half prayer, half speechless terror. 'What do you see?'
+asked Herbert, not daring himself to look down upon the blank
+beneath him, lest he should be tempted to throw himself over in a
+giddy moment.
+
+'Jesu, Maria,' cried the guide, crossing himself instinctively
+over and over again, 'they have all fallen to the very foot of the
+second precipice! They are lying, all three, huddled together on
+the ledge there just above the great glacier. They are dead, quite
+dead, dead before they reached the ground even. Great God, it is
+too terrible!'
+
+Herbert Le Breton looked at the white-faced guide with just the
+faintest suspicion of a sneering curl upon his handsome features.
+The excitement of the danger was over now, and he had at once
+recovered his usual philosophic equanimity. 'Quite dead,' he said,
+in French, 'quite dead, are they? Then we can't be of any further
+use to them. But I suppose we must go down again at once to help
+recover the dead bodies!'
+
+The guide gazed at him blankly with simple open-mouthed undisguised
+amazement. 'Naturally,' he said, in a very quiet voice of utter
+disgust and loathing. 'You wouldn't leave them lying there alone
+on the cold snow, would you?'
+
+'This is really most annoying,' thought Herbert Le Breton to himself,
+in his rational philosophic fashion: 'here we are, almost at the
+summit, and now we shall have to turn back again from the very
+threshold of our goal, without having seen the view for which we've
+climbed up, and risked our lives too--all for a purely sentimental
+reason, because we won't leave those three dead men alone on the
+snow for an hour or two longer! it's a very short climb to the
+top now, and I could manage it by myself in twenty minutes. If
+only the chief guide had slid over with the others, I should have
+gone on alone, and had the view at least for my trouble. I could
+have pretended the accident happened on the way down again. As it
+is, I shall have to turn back ingloriously, re infecta. The guide
+will tell everybody at Pontresina that I went on, in spite of the
+accident; and then it would get into the English papers, and all
+the world would say that I was so dreadfully cruel and heartless.
+People are always so irrational in their ethical judgments. Oswald's
+quite dead, that's certain; nobody could fall over such a precipice
+as that without being killed a dozen times over before he even
+reached the bottom. A very painless and easy death too; I couldn't
+myself wish for a better one. We can't do them the slightest good
+by picking up their lifeless bodies, and yet a foolishly sentimental
+public opinion positively compels one to do it. Poor Oswald! Upon
+my soul I'm sorry for him, and for that pretty little sister of his
+too; but what's the use of bothering about it? The thing's done,
+and nothing that I can do or say will ever make it any better.'
+
+So they turned once more in single file down by the great glacier,
+and retraced their way to Pontresina without exchanging another word.
+To say the truth, the chief guide felt appalled and frightened by
+the presence of this impassive, unemotional British traveller, and
+did not even care to conceal his feelings. But then he wasn't an
+educated philosopher and man of culture like Herbert Le Breton.
+
+Late that evening a party of twelve villagers brought back three
+stiff and mangled corpses on loose cattle hurdles into the village
+of Pontresina. Two of them were the bodies of two local Swiss guides,
+and the third, with its delicate face unscathed by the fall, and
+turned calmly upwards to the clear moonlight, was the body of Harry
+Oswald. Alas, alas, Gilboa! The beauty of Israel is slain upon thy
+high places.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+'WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS HERE?'
+
+
+From Calcombe Pomeroy Ernest had returned, not to Dunbude, but to
+meet the Exmoor party in London. There he had managed somehow--he
+hardly knew how himself--to live through a whole season without an
+explosion in his employer's family. That an explosion must come,
+sooner or later, he felt pretty sure in his own mind for several
+reasons: his whole existence there was a mistake and an anomaly,
+and he could no more mix in the end with the Exmoor family than oil
+can mix with vinegar, or vice versa. The round of dances and dinners
+to which he had to accompany his pupil was utterly distasteful to
+him. Lynmouth never learnt anything; so Ernest felt his own function
+in the household a perfectly useless one; and he was always on the
+eve of a declaration that he couldn't any longer put up with this,
+that, or the other 'gross immorality' in which Lynmouth was actively
+or passively encouraged by his father and mother. Still, there were
+two things which indefinitely postponed the smouldering outbreak.
+In the first place, Ernest wrote to, and heard from, Edie every
+day; and he believed he ought for Edie's sake to give the situation
+a fair trial, as long as he was able, or at least till he saw some
+other opening, which might make it possible within some reasonable
+period to marry her. In the second place, Lady Hilda had perceived
+with her intuitive quickness the probability that a cause of
+dispute might arise between her father and Ernest, and had made
+up her mind as far as in her lay to prevent its ever coming to a
+head. She didn't wish Ernest to leave his post in the household--so
+much originality was hardly again to be secured in a hurry--and
+therefore she laid herself out with all her ingenuity to smooth
+over all the possible openings for a difference of opinion whenever
+they occurred. If Ernest's scruples were getting the upper hand
+of his calmer judgment, Lady Hilda read the change in his face at
+once, and managed dexterously to draw off Lynmouth, or to talk over
+her mother quietly to acquiesce in Ernest's view of the question.
+If Lord Exmoor was beginning to think that this young man's confounded
+fads were really getting quite unbearable, Lady Hilda interposed
+some casual remark about how much better Lynmouth was kept out of
+the way now than he used to be in Mr. Walsh's time. Ernest himself
+never even suspected this unobtrusive diplomatist and peacemaker;
+but as a matter of fact it was mainly owing to Lady Hilda's constant
+interposition that he contrived to stop in Wilton Place through
+all that dreary and penitential London season.
+
+At last, to Ernest's intense joy, the season began to show premonitory
+symptoms of collapsing from inanition. The twelfth of August was
+drawing nigh, and the coming-of-age of grouse, that most important
+of annual events in the orthodox British social calendar, would
+soon set free Lord Exmoor and his brother hereditary legislators
+from their arduous duty of acting as constitutional drag on the
+general advance of a great, tolerant, and easy-going nation. Soon
+the family would be off again to Dunbude, or away to its other moors
+in Scotland; and among the rocks and the heather Ernest felt he
+could endure Lord Exmoor and Lord Lynmouth a little more resignedly
+than among the reiterated polite platitudes and monotonous gaieties
+of the vacuous London drawing-rooms.
+
+Lady Hilda, too, was longing in her own way for the season to be
+over. She had gone through another of them, thank goodness, she
+said to herself at times with a rare tinge of pensiveness, only to
+discover that the Hughs, and the Guys, and the Algies, and the Montys
+were just as fatuously inane as ever; and were just as anxious as
+before to make her share their fatuous inanity for a whole lifetime.
+Only fancy living with an unadulterated Monty from the time you
+were twenty to the time you were seventy-five--at which latter date
+he, being doubtless some five years older than one-self to begin
+with, would probably drop off quietly with suppressed gout, and
+leave you a mourning widow to deplore his untimely and lamented
+extinction for the rest of your existence! Why, long before that
+time you would have got to know his very thoughts by heart (if he
+had any, poor fellow!) and would be able to finish all his sentences
+and eke out all his stories for him, the moment he began them.
+Much better marry a respectable pork-butcher outright, and have
+at least the healthful exercise of chopping sausage-meat to fill
+up the stray gaps in the conversation. In that condition of life,
+they say, people are at any rate perfectly safe from the terrors
+of ennui. However, the season was over at last, thank Heaven; and
+in a week or so more they would be at dear old ugly Dunbude again
+for the whole winter. There Hilda would go sketching once more on
+the moorland, and if this time she didn't make that stupid fellow
+Ernest see what she was driving at, why, then her name certainly
+wasn't Hilda Tregellis.
+
+A day or two before the legal period fixed for the beginning of
+the general grouse-slaughter, Ernest was sitting reading in the
+breakfast room at Wilton Place, when Lynmouth burst unexpectedly
+into the room in his usual boisterous fashion.
+
+'Oh, I say, Mr. Le Breton,' he began, holding the door in his hand
+like one in a hurry, 'I want leave to miss work this morning. Gerald
+Talfourd has called for me in his dog-cart, and wants me to go out
+with him now immediately.'
+
+'Not to-day, Lynmouth,' Ernest answered quietly. 'You were out
+twice last week, you know, and you hardly ever get your full hours
+for work at all since we came to London.'
+
+'Oh, but look here, you know, Mr. Le Breton; I really MUST go
+to-day, because Talfourd has made an appointment for me. It's awful
+fun--he's going to have some pigeon-shooting.'
+
+Ernest's countenance fell a little, and he answered in a graver
+voice than before, 'If that's what you want to go for, Lynmouth, I
+certainly can't let you go. You shall never have leave from me to
+go pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Why not?' Lynmouth asked, still holding the door-handle at the
+most significant angle.
+
+'Because it's a cruel and brutal sport,' Ernest replied, looking
+him in the face steadily; 'and as long as you're under my charge
+I can't allow you to take part in it.'
+
+'Oh, you can't,' said Lynmouth mischievously, with a gentle touch
+of satire in his tone. 'You can't, can't you! Very well, then,
+never mind about it.' And he shut the door after him with a bang,
+and ran off upstairs without further remonstrance.
+
+'It's time for study, Lynmouth,' Ernest called out, opening the
+door and speaking to him as he retreated. 'Come down again at
+once, please, will you?'
+
+But Lynmouth made no answer, and went straight off upstairs to
+the drawing-room. In a few minutes more he came back, and said in
+a tone of suppressed triumph, 'Well, Mr. Le Breton, I'm going with
+Talfourd. I've been up to papa, and he says I may "if I like to."'
+
+Ernest bit his lip in a moment's hesitation. If it had been any
+ordinary question, he would have pocketed the contradiction of
+his authority--after all, if it didn't matter to them, it didn't
+matter to him--and let Lynmouth go wherever they allowed him. But
+the pigeon-shooting was a question of principle. As long as the
+boy was still nominally his pupil, he couldn't allow him to take
+any part in any such wicked and brutal amusement, as he thought it.
+So he answered back quietly, 'No, Lynmouth, you are not to go. I
+don't think your father can have understood that I had forbidden
+you.'
+
+'Oh!' Lynmouth said again, without a word of remonstrance, and
+went up a second time to the drawing-room.
+
+In a few minutes a servant came down and spoke to Ernest. 'My lord
+would like to see you upstairs for a few minutes, if you please,
+sir.'
+
+Ernest followed the man up with a vague foreboding that the deferred
+explosion was at last about to take place. Lord Exmoor was sitting
+on the sofa. 'Oh, I say, Le Breton,' he began in his good-humoured
+way, 'what's this that Lynmouth's been telling me about
+the pigeon-shooting? He says you won't let him go out with Gerald
+Talfourd.'
+
+'Yes,' Ernest answered; 'he wanted to miss his morning's work,
+and I told him I couldn't allow him to do so.'
+
+'But I said he might if he liked, Le Breton. Young Talfourd has
+called for him to go pigeon-shooting. And now Lynmouth tells me
+you refuse to let him go, after I've given him leave. Is that so?'
+
+'Certainly,' said Ernest. 'I said he couldn't go, because before he
+asked you I had refused him permission, and I supposed you didn't
+know he was asking you to reverse my decision.'
+
+'Oh, of course,' Lord Exmoor answered, for he was not an unreasonable
+man after his lights. 'You're quite right, Le Breton, quite right,
+certainly. Discipline's discipline, we all know, and must be kept
+up under any circumstances. You should have told me, Lynmouth, that
+Mr. Le Breton had forbidden you to go. However, as young Talfourd
+has made the engagement, I suppose you don't mind letting him have
+a holiday now, at my request, Le Breton, do you?'
+
+Here was a dilemma indeed for Ernest. He hardly knew what to
+answer. He looked by chance at Lady Hilda, seated on the ottoman
+in the corner; and Lady Hilda, catching his eye, pursed up her lips
+visibly into the one word, 'Do.' But Ernest was inexorable. If he
+could possibly prevent it, he would not let those innocent pigeons
+be mangled and slaughtered for a lazy boy's cruel gratification.
+That was the one clear duty before him; and whether he offended
+Lord Exmoor or not, he had no choice save to pursue it.
+
+'No, Lord Exmoor,' he said resolutely, after a long pause. 'I should
+have no objection to giving him a holiday, but I can't allow him
+to go pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Why not?' asked Lord Exmoor warmly.
+
+Ernest did not answer.
+
+'He says it's a cruel, brutal sport, papa,' Lynmouth put in
+parenthetically, in spite of an angry glance from Hilda; 'and he
+won't let me go while I'm his pupil.'
+
+Lord Exmoor's face grew very red indeed, and he rose from the sofa
+angrily. 'So that's it, Mr. Le Breton!' he said, in a short sharp
+fashion. 'You think pigeon-shooting cruel and brutal, do you? Will
+you have the goodness to tell me, sir, do you know that I myself
+am in the habit of shooting pigeons at matches?'
+
+'Yes,' Ernest answered, without flinching a muscle.
+
+'Yes!' cried Lord Exmoor, growing redder and redder. 'You knew
+that, Mr. Le Breton, and yet you told my son you considered the
+practice brutal and cruel! Is that the way you teach him to honour
+his parents? Who are you, sir, that you dare set yourself up
+as a judge of me and my conduct? How dare you speak to him of his
+father in that manner? How dare you stir him up to disobedience
+and insubordination against his elders? How dare you, sir; how dare
+you?'
+
+Ernest's face began to get red in return, and he answered with
+unwonted heat, 'How dare you address me so, yourself, Lord Exmoor?
+How dare you speak to me in that imperious manner? You're forgetting
+yourself, I think, and I had better leave you for the present, till
+you remember how to be more careful in your language. But Lynmouth
+is not to go pigeon-shooting. I object to his going, because the
+sport is a cruel and a brutal one, whoever may practise it. If
+I have any authority over him, I insist upon it that he shall not
+go. If he goes, I shall not stop here any longer. You can do as
+you like about it, of course, but you have my final word upon the
+matter. Lynmouth, go down to the study.'
+
+'Stop, Lynmouth,' cried his father, boiling over visibly with
+indignation: 'Stop. Never mind what Mr. Le Breton says to you; do
+you hear me? Go out if you choose with Gerald Talfourd.'
+
+Lynmouth didn't wait a moment for any further permission. He ran
+downstairs at once and banged the front door soundly after him
+with a resounding clatter. Lady Hilda looked imploringly at Ernest,
+and whispered half audibly, 'Now you've done it.' Ernest stood a
+second irresolute, while the Earl tramped angrily up and down the
+drawing-room, and then he said in a calmer voice, 'When would it
+be convenient, Lord Exmoor, that I should leave you?'
+
+'Whenever you like,' Lord Exmoor answered violently. 'To-day if
+you can manage to get your things together. This is intolerable,
+absolutely intolerable! Gross and palpable impertinence; in my
+own house, too! "Cruel and brutal," indeed! "Cruel and brutal."
+Fiddlesticks! Why, it's not a bit different from partridge-shooting!'
+And he went out, closely followed by Ernest, leaving Lady Hilda
+alone and frightened in the drawing-room.
+
+Ernest ran lightly upstairs to his own little study sitting-room.
+'I've done it this time, certainly, as Lady Hilda said,' he thought
+to himself; 'but I don't see how I could possibly have avoided it.
+Even now, when all's done, I haven't succeeded in saving the lives
+of the poor innocent tortured pigeons. They'll be mangled and hunted
+for their poor frightened lives, anyhow. Well, now I must look out
+for that imaginary schoolmastership, and see what I can do for dear
+Edie. I shan't be sorry to get out of this after all, for the place
+was an impossible one for me from the very beginning. I shall sit
+down this moment and write to Edie, and after that I shall take out
+my portmanteau and get the man to help me put my luggage up to go
+away this very evening. Another day in the house after this would
+be obviously impossible.'
+
+At that moment there came a knock at the door--a timid, tentative
+sort of knock, and somebody put her head inquiringly halfway through
+the doorway. Ernest looked up in sudden surprise. It was Lady Hilda.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she said, coming over towards the table where
+Ernest had just laid out his blotting-book and writing-paper: 'I
+couldn't prevent myself from coming up to tell you how much I admire
+your conduct in standing up so against papa for what you thought
+was right and proper. I can't say how greatly I admire it. I'm so
+glad you did as you did do. You have acted nobly.' And Hilda looked
+straight into his eyes with the most speaking and most melting
+of glances. 'Now,' she said to herself, 'according to all correct
+precedents, he ought to seize my hand fervently with a gentle
+pressure, and thank me with tears in his eyes for my kind sympathy.'
+
+But Ernest, only looking puzzled and astonished, answered in the
+quietest of voices, 'Thank you very much, Lady Hilda: but I assure
+you there was really nothing at all noble, nothing at all to admire,
+in what I said or did in any way. In fact, I'm rather afraid,
+now I come to think of it, that I lost my temper with your father
+dreadfully.'
+
+'Then you won't go away?' Hilda put in quickly. 'You think better
+of it now, do you? You'll apologise to papa, and go with us to
+Dunbude for the autumn? Do say you will, please, Mr. Le Breton.'
+
+'Oh dear, no,' Ernest answered, smiling quietly at the bare idea
+of his apologising to Lord Exmoor. 'I certainly won't do that,
+whatever I do. To tell you the truth, Lady Hilda, I have not been
+very anxious to stop with Lynmouth all along: I've found it a most
+unprofitable tutorship--no sense of any duty performed, or any
+work done for society: and I'm not at all sorry that this accident
+should have broken up the engagement unexpectedly. At the same time,
+it's very kind of you to come up and speak to me about it, though
+I'm really quite ashamed you should have thought there was anything
+particularly praiseworthy or commendable in my standing out against
+such an obviously cruel sport as pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Ah, but I do think so, whatever you may say, Mr. Le Breton,' Hilda
+went on eagerly. 'I do think so, and I think it was very good of
+you to fight it out so against papa for what you believe is right
+and proper. For my own part, you know, I don't see any particular
+harm in pigeon-shooting. Of course it's very dreadful that the
+poor dear little things should be shot and wounded and winged and
+so forth; but then everything, almost, gets shot, you see--rabbits,
+and grouse, and partridges, and everything; so that really it's
+hardly worth while, it seems to me, making a fuss about it. Still,
+that's not the real question. You think it's wrong; which is very
+original and nice and proper of you; and as you think it's wrong,
+you won't countenance it in any way. I don't care, myself, whether
+it's wrong or not--I'm not called upon, thank goodness, to decide
+the question; but I do care very much that you should suffer for
+what you think the right course of action.' And Lady Hilda in her
+earnestness almost laid her hand upon his arm, and looked up to
+him in the most unmistakable and appealing fashion.
+
+'You're very good, I'm sure, Lady Hilda,' Ernest replied, half
+hesitatingly, wondering much in his own mind what on earth she
+could be driving at.
+
+There was a moment's pause, and then Hilda said pensively, 'And
+so we shall never walk together at Dunbude on the Clatter any more,
+Mr. Le Breton! We shall never climb again among the big boulders
+on those Devonshire hillsides! We shall never watch the red deer
+from the big pool on top of the sheep-walk! I'm sorry for it, Mr.
+Le Breton, very sorry for it. Oh, I do wish you weren't going to
+leave us!'
+
+Ernest began to feel that this was really growing embarrassing. 'I
+dare say we shall often see one another,' he said evasively; for
+simple-minded as he was, a vague suspicion of what Lady Hilda wanted
+him to say had somehow forced itself timidly upon him. 'London's
+a very big place, no doubt; but still, people are always running
+together unexpectedly in it.'
+
+Hilda sighed and looked at him again intently without speaking.
+She stood so, face to face with him across the table for fully two
+minutes; and then, seeming suddenly to awake from a reverie, she
+started and sighed once more, and turned at last reluctantly to leave
+the little study. 'I must go,' she said hastily; 'mamma would be
+very angry indeed with me if she knew I'd come here; but I couldn't
+let you leave the house without coming up to tell you how greatly
+I admire your spirit, and how very, very much I shall always miss
+you, Mr. Le Breton. Will you take this, and keep it as a memento?'
+As she spoke, she laid an envelope upon the table, and glided
+quietly out of the room.
+
+Ernest took the envelope up with a smile, and opened it with some
+curiosity. It contained a photograph, with a brief inscription on
+the back, 'E. L. B., from Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+As he did so, Hilda Tregellis, red and pale by turns, had rushed
+into her own room, locked the door wildly, and flung herself in a
+perfect tempest of tears on her own bed, where she lay and tossed
+about in a burning agony of shame and self-pity for twenty minutes.
+'He doesn't love me,' she said to herself bitterly; 'he doesn't
+love me, and he doesn't care to love me, or want to marry me either!
+I'm sure he understood what I meant, this time; and there was no
+response in his eyes, no answer, no sympathy. He's like a block
+of wood--a cold, impassive, immovable, lifeless creature! And yet
+I could love him--oh, if only he would say a word to me in answer,
+how I could love him! I loved him when he stood up there and bearded
+papa in his own drawing-room, and asked him how dare he speak so,
+how dare he address him in such a manner; I KNEW then that I really
+loved him. If only he would let me! But he won't! To think that I
+could have half the Algies and Berties in London at my feet for the
+faintest encouragement, and I can't have this one poor penniless Ernest
+Le Breton, though I go down on my knees before him and absolutely
+ask him to marry me! That's the worst of it! I've humiliated myself
+before him by letting him see, oh, ever so much too plainly, that
+I wanted him to ask me; and I've been repulsed, rejected, positively
+refused and slighted by him! And yet I love him! I shall never love
+any other man as I love Ernest Le Breton.'
+
+Poor Lady Hilda Tregellis! Even she too had, at times, her sentimental
+moments! And there she lay till her eyes were red and swollen with
+crying, and till it was quite hopeless to expect she could ever
+manage to make herself presentable for the Cecil Faunthorpes'
+garden-party that afternoon at Twickenham.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+EVIL TIDINGS.
+
+
+Ernest had packed his portmanteau, and ordered a hansom, meaning
+to take temporary refuge at Number 28 Epsilon Terrace; and he went
+down again for a few minutes to wait in the breakfast-room, where
+he saw the 'Times' lying casually on the little table by the front
+window. He took it up, half dreamily, by way of having something to
+do, and was skimming the telegrams in an unconcerned manner, when
+his attention was suddenly arrested by the name Le Breton, printed
+in conspicuous type near the bottom of the third column. He looked
+closer at the paragraph, and saw that it was headed 'Accident
+to British Tourists in Switzerland.' A strange tremor seized him
+immediately. Could anything have happened, then, to Herbert? He
+read the telegram through at once, and found this bald and concise
+summary before him of the fatal Pontresina accident:--
+
+'As Mr. H. Oswald, F.R.S., of Oriel College, Oxford, and Mr.
+Le Breton, Fellow and Bursar of St. Aldate's College, along with
+three guides, were making the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, in the
+Bernina Alps, this morning, one of the party happened to slip near
+the great gulley known as the Gouffre. Mr. Oswald and two of the
+guides were precipitated over the edge of the cliff and killed
+immediately: the breaking of the rope at a critical moment alone
+saved the lives of Mr. Le Breton and the remaining guide. The bodies
+have been recovered this evening, and brought back to Pontresina.'
+
+Ernest laid down the paper with a thrill of horror. Poor Edie! How
+absolutely his own small difficulties with Lord Exmoor faded out
+of has memory at once in the face of that terrible, irretrievable
+calamity. Harry dead! The hope and mainstay of the family--the
+one great pride and glory of all the Oswalds, on whom their whole
+lives and affections centred, taken from them unexpectedly, without
+a chance of respite, without a moment's warning! Worst of all, they
+would probably learn it, as he did, for the first time by reading
+it accidentally in the curt language of the daily papers. Pray
+heaven the shock might not kill poor Edie!
+
+There was only a minute in which to make up his mind, but in that
+minute Ernest had fully decided what he ought to do, and how to
+do it. He must go at once down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and try to
+lighten this great affliction for poor little Edie. Nay, lighten
+it he could not, but at least he could sympathise with her in it,
+and that, though little, was still some faint shade better than
+nothing at all. How fortunate that his difference with the Exmoors
+allowed him to go that very evening without a moment's delay. When
+the hansom arrived at the door, Ernest told the cabman to drive
+at once to Paddington Station. Almost before he had had time to
+realise the full meaning of the situation, he had taken a third-class
+ticket for Calcombe Road, and was rushing out of London by the
+Plymouth express, in one of the convenient and commodious little
+wooden horse-boxes which the Great Western Railway Company provide
+as a wholesome deterrent for economical people minded to save half
+their fare by going third instead of first or second.
+
+Didcot, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Exeter, Newton Abbot, all followed
+one after another, and by the time Ernest had reached Calcombe
+Road Station he had begun to frame for himself a definite plan of
+future action. He would stop at the Red Lion Inn that evening, send
+a telegram from Exeter beforehand to Edie, to say he was coming
+next day, and find out as much as possible about the way the family
+had borne the shock before he ventured actually to see them.
+
+The Calcombe omnibus, drawn by two lean and weary horses, toiled
+its way slowly up the long steep incline for six miles to the
+Cross Foxes, and then rattled down the opposite slope, steaming and
+groaning, till it drew up at last with a sudden jerk and a general
+collapse in front of the old Red Lion Inn in the middle of the
+High Street. There Ernest put up for the present, having seen by
+the shutters at the grocer's shop on his way down that the Oswalds
+had already heard of Harry's accident. He had dinner by himself,
+with a sick heart, in the gloomy, close little coffee-room of the
+village inn, and after dinner he managed to draw in the landlord
+in person for a glass of sherry and half an hour's conversation.
+
+'Very sad thing, sir, this 'ere causality in Switzerland,' said
+the red-faced landlord, coming round at once to the topic of the
+day at Calcombe, after a few unimportant preliminary generalities.
+'Young Mr. Oswald, as has been killed, he lived here, sir;
+leastways his parents do. He was a very promising young gentleman
+up at Oxford, they do tell me--not much of a judge of horses, I
+should say, but still, I understand, quite the gentleman for all
+that. Very sad thing, the causality, sir, for all his family. 'Pears
+he was climbing up some of these 'ere Alps they have over there in
+them parts, covered with snow from head to foot in the manner of
+speaking, and there was another gentleman from Oxford with him, a
+Mr. Le Breton----'
+
+'My brother,' Ernest put in, interrupting him; for he thought it
+best to let the landlord know at once who he was talking to.
+
+'Oh, your brother, sir!' said the red-faced landlord, with a gleam
+of recognition, growing redder and hotter than ever; 'well, now you
+mention it, sir, I find I remember your face somehow. No offence,
+sir, but you're the young gentleman as come down in the spring to
+see young Mr. Oswald, aren't you?'
+
+Ernest nodded assent.
+
+'Ah, well, sir,' the landlord went on more freely--for of course
+all Calcombe had heard long since that Ernest was engaged to Edie
+Oswald--'you're one of the family like, in that case, if I may make
+bold to say so. Well, sir, this is a shocking trouble for poor old
+Mr. Oswald, and no mistake. The old gentleman was sort of centred
+on his son, you see, as the saying is: never thought of nobody else
+hardly, he didn't. Old Mr. Oswald, sir, was always a wonderful hand
+at figgers hisself, and powerful fond of measurements and such kinds
+of things. I've heard tell, indeed, as how he knew more mathematics,
+and trigononomy, and that, than the rector and the schoolmaster both
+put together. There's not one in fifty as knows as much mathematics
+as he do, I'll warrant. Well, you see, he brought up this son of
+his, little Harry as was--I can remember him now, running to and
+from the school, and figgerin' away on the slates, doin' the sums in
+algemer for the other boys when they went a-mitchin'--he brought
+him up like a gentleman, as you know very well, sir, and sent him to
+Oxford College: "to develop his mathematical talents, Mr. Legge,"
+his father says to me here in this very parlour. What's the
+consequence? He develops that boy's talent sure enough, sir, till
+he comes to be a Fellow of Oxford College, they tell me, and even
+admitted into the Royal Society up in London. But this is how he
+did it, sir: and as you're a friend of the family like, and want
+to know all about it, no doubt, I don't mind tellin' you on the
+strict confidential, in the manner of speakin'.' Here the landlord
+drew his chair closer, and sipped the last drop in his glass of sherry
+with a mysterious air of very private and important disclosures.
+Ernest listened to his roundabout story with painful attention.
+
+'Well, sir,' the landlord went on after a short and pensive pause,
+'old Mr. Oswald's business ain't never been a prosperous one--though
+he was such a clover hand at figgers, he never made it remunerative;
+a bare livin' for the family, I don't mind sayin'; and he always
+spent more'n he ought to 'a done on Mr. Harry, and on the young
+lady too, sir, savin' your presence. So when Mr. Harry was goin' to
+Oxford to college, he come to me, and he says to me, "Mr. Legge,"
+says he, "it's a very expensive thing sending my boy to the University,"
+says he, "and I'm going to borrow money to send him with." "Don't
+you go a-doin' that, Mr. Oswald," says I; "your business don't
+justify you in doin' it, sir," says I. For you see, I knowed all
+the ins and outs of that there business, and I knowed he hadn't
+never made more'n enough just to keep things goin' decent like, as
+you may say, without any money saved or put by against a emergence.
+"Yes, I will, Mr. Legge," says he; "I can trust confidentially in
+my son's abilities," says he; "and I feel confidential he'll be
+in a position to repay me before long." So he borrowed the money on
+an insurance of Mr. Harry's life. Mr. Harry he always acted very
+honourable, sir; he was a perfect gentleman in every way, as YOU
+know, sir; and he began repayin' his father the loan as fast as
+he was able, and I daresay doin' a great deal for the family, and
+especially for the young lady, sir, out of his own pocket besides.
+But he still owed his father a couple of hundred pound an' more
+when this causality happened, while the business, I know, had been
+a-goin' to rack and ruin for the last three year. To-day I seen the
+agent of the insurance, and he says to me, "Legge," says he, most
+private like, "this is a bad job about young Oswald, I'm afeard,
+worse'n they know for." "Why, sir?" says I. "Well, Legge," says
+he, "they'll never get a penny of that there insurance, and the
+old gentleman'll have to pay up the defissit on his own account,"
+says he. "How's that, Mr. Micklethwaite?" says I. "Because," says
+he, "there's a clause in the policy agin exceptional risks, in
+which is included naval and military services, furrin residences,
+topical voyages, and mountain-climbin'," says he; "and you mark my
+words," says he, "they'll never get a penny of it." In which case,
+sir, it's my opinion that old Mr. Oswald'll be clean broke, for he
+can't never make up the defissit out of his own business, can he
+now?'
+
+Ernest listened with sad forebodings to the red-faced landlord's
+pitiful story, and feared in his heart that it was a bad look-out
+for the poor Oswalds. He didn't sleep much that evening, and next
+day he went round early to see Edie. The telegram he found would
+be a useless precaution, for the gossip of Calcombe Pomeroy had
+recognised him at once, and news had reached the Oswalds almost
+as soon as he arrived that young Mr. Le Breton was stopping that
+evening at the Red Lion.
+
+Edie opened the door for him herself, pale of face and with eyes
+reddened by tears, yet looking beautiful even so in her simple black
+morning dress, her mourning of course hadn't yet come home--and
+her deep white linen collar. 'It's very good of you to have come
+so soon, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, taking his hand quietly--he
+respected her sorrow too deeply to think of kissing her; 'he will
+be back with us to-morrow. Your brother is bringing him back to us,
+to lay him in our little churchyard, and we are all so very very
+grateful to him for it.'
+
+Ernest was more than half surprised to hear it. It was an unusual
+act of kindly thoughtfulness on the part of Herbert.
+
+Next day the body came home as Edie had said, and Ernest helped
+to lay it reverently to rest in Calcombe churchyard. Poor old Mr.
+Oswald, standing bowed and broken-hearted by the open grave side,
+looked as though he could never outlive that solemn burial of all
+his hopes and aspirations in a single narrow coffin. Yet it was
+wonderful to Ernest to see how much comfort he took, even in this
+terrible grief, from the leader which appeared in the 'Times' that
+morning on the subject of the Pontresina accident. It contained
+only a few of the stock newspaper platitudes of regret at the loss
+of a distinguished and rising young light of science--the ordinary
+glib commonplaces of obituary notices which a practised journalist
+knows so well how to adapt almost mechanically to the passing event
+of the moment; but they seemed to afford the shattered old country
+grocer an amount of consolation and solemn relief that no mere
+spoken condolences could ever possibly have carried with them. 'See
+what a wonderful lot they thought of our boy up in London, Mr. Le
+Breton,' he said, looking up from the paper tearfully, and wiping
+his big gold spectacles, dim with moisture. 'See what the "Times"
+says about him: "One of the ablest among our young academical
+mathematicians, a man who, if his life had been spared to us, might
+probably have attained the highest distinction in his own department
+of pure science." That's our Harry, Mr. Le Breton; that's what
+the "Times" says about our dear, dead Harry! I wish he could have
+lived to read it himself, Edie--"a scholar of singularly profound
+attainments, whose abilities had recently secured him a place upon
+the historic roll of the Royal Society, and whom even the French
+Academy of Sciences had held worthy out of all the competitors
+of the civilised world, to be adjudged the highest mathematical
+honours of the present season." My poor boy! my poor, dear, lost
+boy! I wish you could have lived to hear it! We must keep the paper,
+Edie: we must keep all the papers; they'll show us at least what
+people who are real judges of these things thought about our dear,
+loved, lost Harry.'
+
+Ernest dared hardly glance towards poor Edie, with the tears trickling
+slowly down her face; but he felt thankful that the broken-hearted
+old father could derive so much incomprehensible consolation from
+those cold and stereotyped conventional phrases. Truly a wonderful
+power there is in mere printer's ink properly daubed on plain
+absorbent white paper. And truly the human heart, full to bursting
+and just ready to break will allow itself to be cheated and cajoled
+in marvellous fashions by extraordinary cordials and inexplicable
+little social palliatives. The concentrated hopes of that old man's
+life were blasted and blighted for ever; and he found a temporary
+relief from that stunning shock in the artificial and insincere
+condolences of a stock leader-writer on a daily paper!
+
+Walking back by himself in such sad meditations to the Red Lion,
+and sitting there by the open window, Ernest overheard a tremulous
+chattering voice mumbling out a few incoherent words at the Rector's
+doorway opposite. 'Oh, yes,' chirped out the voice in a tone of
+cheerful resignation, 'it's very sad indeed, very sad and shocking,
+and I'm naturally very sorry for it, of course. I always knew
+how it would be: I warned them of it; but they're a pig-headed,
+heedless, unmannerly family, and they wouldn't be guided by me. I
+said to him, "Now, Oswald, this is all very wrong and foolish of
+you. You go and put your son to Oxford, when he ought to be stopping
+at home, minding the shop and learning your business. You borrow
+money foolishly to send him there with. He'll go to Oxford; he'll
+fall in with a lot of wealthy young gentlemen--people above his
+own natural station--he'll take up expensive, extravagant ways, and
+in the end he'll completely ruin himself. He won't pay you back a
+penny, you may depend upon it--these boys never do, when you make
+fine gentlemen of them; they think only of their cigars and their
+horses, and their dog-carts and so forth, and neglect their poor
+old fathers and mothers, that brought them up and scraped and saved
+to make fine gentlemen of them. You just take my advice, Oswald, and
+don't send him to college." But Oswald was always a presumptuous,
+high-headed, independent sort of man, and instead of listening to
+me, what does he do but go and send this sharp boy of his up to
+Oxford. Well, now the boy's gone to Switzerland with one of the
+young Le Bretons--brother of the poor young man they've inveigled
+into what they call an engagement with Miss Edith, or Miss Jemima,
+or whatever the girl's name is--very well-connected people, the Le
+Bretons, and personal friends of the Archdeacon's--and there he's
+thrown himself over a precipice or something of the sort, no doubt
+to avoid his money-matters and debts and difficulties. At any
+rate, Micklethwaite tells me the poor old father'll have to pay
+up a couple of hundred pound to the insurance company: and how on
+earth he's ever to do it _I_ don't know, for to my certain knowledge
+the rent of the shop is in arrears half-a-year already. But it's
+no business of mine, thank goodness!--and I only hope that exposure
+will serve to open that poor young Le Breton's eyes, and to warn him
+against having anything further to say to Miss Jemima. A designing
+young minx, if ever there was one! Poor young Le Breton's come down
+here for the funeral, I hear, which I must say was very friendly
+and proper and honourable of him; but now it's over, I hope he'll
+go back again, and see Miss Jemima in her true colours.'
+
+Ernest turned back into the stuffy little coffee-room with his face
+on fire and his ears tingling with mingled shame and indignation.
+'Whatever happens,' he thought to himself, 'I can't permit Edie
+to be subjected any longer to such insolence as this! Poor, dear,
+guileless, sorrowing little maiden! One would have thought her
+childish innocence and her terrible loss would have softened the
+heart even of such a cantankerous, virulent old harridan as that,
+till a few weeks were over, at least. She spoke of the Archdeacon:
+it must be old Miss Luttrell! Whoever it is, though, Edie shan't
+much longer be left where she can possibly come in contact with
+such a loathsome mass of incredible and unprovoked malice. That
+Edie should lose her dearly-loved brother is terrible enough; but
+that she should be exposed afterwards to be triumphed over in her
+most sacred grief by that bad old woman's querulous "I told you
+so" is simply intolerable!' And he paced up and down the room with
+a boiling heart, unable to keep down his righteous anger.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+FLAT REBELLION.
+
+
+For the next fortnight Ernest remained at the Red Lion, though
+painfully conscious that he was sadly wasting his little reserve of
+funds from his late tutorship, in order to find out exactly what
+the Oswalds' position would be after the loss of poor Harry. Towards
+the end of that time he took Edie, pale and pretty in her simple
+new mourning, out once more into the Bourne Close for half an hour's
+quiet conversation. Very delicate and sweet and refined that tiny
+girlish face and figure looked in the plain unostentatious black
+and white of her great sorrow, and Ernest felt as he walked along
+by her side that she seemed to lean upon him naturally now; the
+loss of her main support and chief advisor in life seemed to draw
+her closer and closer every day to her one remaining prop and future
+husband.
+
+'Edie,' he said to her, as they rested once more beside the
+old wooden bridge across the little river, 'I think it's time now
+we should begin to talk definitely over our common plans for the
+future. I know you'd naturally rather wait a little longer before
+discussing them; I wish for both our sakes we could have deferred
+it; but time presses, and I'm afraid from what I hear in the village
+that things won't go on henceforth exactly as they used to do with
+your dear father and mother.'
+
+Edie coloured slightly as she answered, 'Then you've heard of all
+that already, Ernest'--she was learning to call him 'Ernest' now
+quite naturally. 'The Calcombe tattle has got round to you so soon!
+I'm glad of it, though, for it saves me the pain of having to tell
+you. Yes, it's quite true, and I'm afraid it will be a terrible,
+dreadful struggle for poor darling father and mother.' And the
+tears came up afresh, as she spoke, into her big black eyes--too
+familiar with them of late to make her even try to brush them away
+hastily from Ernest's sight with her little handkerchief.
+
+'I'm sorry to know it's true,' Ernest said, taking her hand gently;
+'very, very sorry. We must do what we can to lighten the trouble
+for them.'
+
+'Yes,' Edie replied, looking at him through her tears; 'I mean to
+try. At any rate, I won't be a burden to them myself any longer.
+I've written already up to an agency in London to see whether they
+can manage to get me a place as a nursery-governess.'
+
+'You a governess, Edie!' Ernest exclaimed hastily, with a gesture
+of deprecation. 'You a governess! Why, my own precious darling,
+you would never do for it!'
+
+'Oh yes, indeed,' Edie answered quickly, 'I really think I could,
+Ernest. Of course I don't know very much--not judged by a standard
+like yours or our dear Harry's. Harry used to say all a woman
+could ever know was to find out how ignorant she was. Dear fellow!
+he was so very learned himself he couldn't understand the complacency
+of little perky, half-educated schoolmistresses. But still, I know
+quite as much, I think, in my little way, as a great many girls
+who get good places in London as governesses. I can speak French
+fairly well, you know, and read German decently; and then dear
+Harry took such a lot of pains to make me get up books that he
+thought were good for me--history and so forth--and even to teach
+me a little, a very little, Latin. Of course I know I'm dreadfully
+ignorant; but not more so, I really believe, than a great many
+girls whom people consider quite well-educated enough to teach
+their daughters. After all, the daughters themselves are only women,
+too, you see, Ernest, and don't expect more than a smattering of
+book-knowledge, and a few showy fashionable accomplishments.'
+
+'My dear Edie,' Ernest answered, smiling at her gently in spite
+of her tearful earnestness; 'you quite misunderstand me. It wasn't
+THAT I was thinking of at all. There are very few governesses and
+very few women anywhere who have half the knowledge and accomplishments
+and literary taste and artistic culture that you have; very few
+who have had the advantage of associating daily with such a man as
+poor Harry; and if you really wanted to get a place of the sort,
+the mere fact that you're Harry's sister, and that he interested
+himself in superintending your education, ought, by itself, to
+ensure your getting a very good one. But what I meant was rather
+this--I couldn't endure to think that you should be put to all the
+petty slights and small humiliations that a governess has always
+to endure in rich families. You don't know what it is, Edie; you
+can't imagine the endless devices for making her feel her dependence
+and her artificial inferiority that these great people have devised
+in their cleverness and their Christian condescension. You don't
+know what it is, Edie, and I pray heaven you may never know; but
+_I_ do, for I've seen it--and, darling, I CAN'T let you expose
+yourself to it.'
+
+To say the truth, at that moment there rose very vividly before
+Ernest's eyes the picture of poor shy Miss Merivale, the governess
+at Dunbude to little Lady Sybil, Lynmouth's younger sister. Miss
+Merivale was a rector's daughter--an orphan, and a very nice girl
+in her way; and Ernest had often thought to himself while he lived
+at the Exmoors', 'With just the slightest turn of Fortune's wheel
+that might be my own Edie.' Now, for himself he had never felt any
+sense of social inferiority at all at Dunbude; he was an Oxford
+man, and by the ordinary courtesy of English society he was always
+treated accordingly in every way as an equal. But there were
+galling distinctions made in Miss Merivale's case which he could
+not think of even at the time without a blush of ingenuous shame,
+and which he did not like now even to mention to pretty, shrinking,
+eager little Edie. One thing alone was enough to make his cheeks burn
+whenever he thought of it--a little thing, and yet how unendurable!
+Miss Merivale lunched with the family and with her pupil in the
+middle of the day, but she did not dine with them in the evening.
+She had tea by herself instead in Lady Sybil's little school-room.
+Many a time when Ernest had been out walking with her on the
+terrace just before dinner, and the dressing-gong sounded, he had
+felt almost too ashamed to go in at the summons and leave the poor
+little governess out there alone with her social disabilities.
+The gong seemed to raise such a hideous artificial barrier between
+himself and that delicately-bred, sensitive, cultivated English
+lady. That Edie should be subjected to such a life of affronts as
+that was simply unendurable. True, there are social distinctions
+of the sort which even Ernest Le Breton, communist as he was,
+could not practically get over; but then they were distinctions
+familiarised to the sufferers from childhood upward, and so perhaps
+a little less insupportable. But that Harry Oswald's sister--that
+Edie, his own precious delicate little Edie, a dainty English
+wild-flower of the tenderest, should be transplanted from her own
+appreciative home to such a chilly and ungenial soil as that--the
+very idea of it was horribly unspeakable.
+
+'But, Ernest,' Edie answered, breaking in upon his bitter meditation,
+'I assure you I wouldn't mind it a bit. I know--it's very dreadful,
+but then,'--and here she blushed one of her pretty apologetic little
+blushes--'you know I'm used to it. People in business always are.
+They expect to be treated just like servant--now THAT, I know you'll
+say, is itself a piece of hubris, the expression of a horrid class
+prejudice. And so it is, no doubt. But they do, for all that. As
+dear Harry used to say, even the polypes in aristocratic useless
+sponges at the sea-bottom won't have anything to say to the sponges
+of commerce. I'm sure nobody I could meet in a governess's place
+could possibly be worse in that respect than poor old Miss Catherine
+Luttrell.'
+
+'That may be true, Edie darling,' Ernest answered, not caring
+to let her know that he had overheard a specimen of the Calcombe
+squirearchy, 'but in any case I don't want you to be troubled now,
+either with old Miss Luttrell or any other bitter old busybodies.
+I want to speak seriously to you about a very different project.
+Just look at this advertisement.'
+
+He took a scrap of paper from his pocket and handed it to Edie. It
+ran thus:--
+
+
+ 'WANTED at Pilbury Regis Grammar School, Dorset, a
+ Third Classical Master. Must be a Graduate of Oxford or
+ Cambridge; University Prizeman preferred. If unmarried,
+ to take house duty. Commence September 20th. Salary,
+ 200L a year. Apply, as above, to the Rev. J. Greatrex,
+ D.D., Head Master.'
+
+
+Edie read it through slowly. 'Well, Ernest?' she said, looking up
+from it into his face. 'Do you think of taking this mastership?'
+
+'If I can get it,' Ernest answered. 'You see, I'm not a University
+Prizeman, and that may be a difficulty in the way; but otherwise
+I'm not unlikely to suit the requirements. Herbert knows something
+of the school--he's been down there to examine; and Mrs. Greatrex
+had a sort of distant bowing acquaintance with my mother; so I hope
+their influence might help me into it.'
+
+'Well, Ernest?' Edie cried again, feeling pretty certain in her
+own heart what was coming next, and reddening accordingly.
+
+'Well, Edie, in that case, would you care to marry at once, and try
+the experiment of beginning life with me upon two hundred a year?
+I know it's very little, darling, for our wants and necessities,
+brought up as you and I have been: but Herr Max says, you know,
+it's as much as any one family ought ever to spend upon its own
+gratifications; and at any rate I dare say you and I could manage
+to be very happy upon it, at least for the present. In any case it
+wnuld be better than being a governess. Will you risk it, Edie?'
+
+'To me, Ernest,' Edie answered with her unaffected simplicity,
+'it really seems quite a magnificent income. I don't suppose any
+of our friends or neighbours in Calcombe spend nearly as much as
+two hundred a year upon their own families.'
+
+'Ah, yes, they do, darling. But that isn't the only thing. Two
+hundred a year is a very different matter in quiet, old-world,
+little Calcombe and in a fashionable modern watering-place like
+Pilbury Regis. We shall have to live in lodgings, Edie, and live
+very quietly indeed; but epen so I think it will be better than for
+you to go out and endure the humiliation of becoming a governess.
+Then I may understand that, if I can get this mastership, you'll
+consent to be married, Edie, before the end of September?'
+
+'Oh, Ernest, that's dreadfully soon!'
+
+'Yes, it is, darling; but you must have a very quiet wedding; and
+I can't bear to leave you here now any longer without Harry to
+cheer and protect you. Shall we look upon it as settled?'
+
+Edie blushed and looked down as she answered almost inaudibly,
+'As you think best, dear Ernest.'
+
+So that very evening Ernest sent off an application to Pilbury
+Regis, together with such testimonials as he had by him, mentioning
+at the same time his intention to marry, and his recent engagement
+at Lord Exmoor's. 'I hope they won't make a point about the
+University Prize, Edie,' he said timidly; 'but I rather think they
+don't mean to insist upon it. I'm afraid it may be put in to some
+extent mainly as a bait to attract parents. Advertisements are often
+so very dishonest. At any rate, we can only try; and if I get it,
+I shall be able to call you my little wife in September.'
+
+So soon after poor Harry's death he hardly liked to say much about
+how happy that consciousness would make him; but he sent off the
+letter with a beating heart, and waited anxiously for the head
+master's answer.
+
+'Maria,' said Dr. Greatrex to his wife next morning, turning over
+the pile of letters at the breakfast table, 'who do you think has
+applied for the third mastership? Very lucky, really, isn't it?'
+
+'Considering that there are some thirty millions of people
+in England, I believe, Dr. Greatrex,' said his wife with dignity,
+'that some seventy of those have answered your advertisement, and
+that you haven't yet given me an opportunity even of guessing which
+it is of them all, I'm sure I can't say so far whether it's lucky
+or otherwise.'
+
+'You're pleased to be satirical, my dear,' the doctor answered
+blandly; he was in too good a humour to pursue the opening further.
+'But no matter. Well, I'll tell you, then; it's young Le Breton.'
+
+'Not Lady Le Breton's son!' cried Mrs. Greatrex, forgetting her
+dignity in her surprise. 'Well, that certainly is very lucky. Now,
+if we could only get her to come down and stay with us for a week
+sometimes, after he's been here a little while, what a splendid
+advertisement it would be for the place, to be sure, Joseph!'
+
+'Capital!' the head master said, eyeing the letter complacently
+as he sipped his coffee. 'A perfect jewel of a master, I should
+say, from every possible point of view. Just the sort of person
+to attract parents and pupils. "Allow me to introduce you to our
+third master, Mr. Le Breton; I hope Lady Le Breton was quite well
+when you heard from her last, Le Breton?" and all that sort of
+thing. Depend upon it, Maria, there's nothing in the world that
+makes a middle-class parent--and our parents are unfortunately
+all middle-class--prick up his ears like the faintest suspicion or
+echo of a title. "Very good school," he goes back and says to his
+wife immediately; "we'll send Tommy there; they have a master who's
+an honourable or something of the sort; sure to give the boys a
+thoroughly high gentlemanly tone." It's snobbery, I admit, sheer
+snobbery: but between ourselves, Maria, most people are snobs,
+and we have to live, professionally, by accommodating ourselves
+to their foolish prejudices.'
+
+'At the same time, doctor,' said his wife severely, 'I don't think
+we ought to allow it too freely, at least with the door open.'
+
+'You're quite right, my dear,' the head master answered submissively,
+rising at the same time to shut the door. 'But what makes this
+particular application all the better is that young Le Breton would
+come here straight from the Earl of Exmoor's where he has been
+acting as tutor to the son and heir, Viscount Lynmouth. That's
+really admirable, now, isn't it? Just consider the advantages of
+the situation. A doubtful parent comes to inspect the arrangements;
+sniffs at the dormitories, takes the gauge of the studies, snorts
+over the playground, condescends to approve of the fives courts.
+Then, after doing the usual Christian principles business and
+working in the high moral tone a little, we invite him to lunch,
+and young Le Breton to meet him. You remark casually in the most
+unconscious and natural fashion--I admit, my dear, that you do these
+little things much better than I do--"Oh, talking of cricket, Mr.
+Le Breton, your old pupil, Lord Lynmouth, made a splendid score the
+other day at the Eton and Harrow." Fixes the wavering parent like
+a shot. "Third master something or other in the peerage, and has
+been tutor to a son of Lord Exmoor's. Place to send your boys to
+if you want to make perfect gentlemen of them." I think we'd better
+close at once with this young man's offer, Maria. He's got a very
+decent degree, too; a first in Mods and Greats; really very decent.'
+
+'But will he take a house-mastership do you think, doctor?' asked
+the careful lady.
+
+'No, he won't; he's married or soon going to be. We must let him
+off the house duty.'
+
+'Married!' said Mrs. Greatrex, turning it over cautiously. 'Who's
+he going to marry, I wonder? I hope somebody presentable.'
+
+'Why, of course!' Dr. Greatrex answered, as who should feel shocked
+at the bare suggestion that a young man of Ernest Le Breton's
+antecedents could conceivably marry otherwise.
+
+'His wife, or rather his wife that is to be, is a sister, he tells
+me, of that poor Mr. Oswald--the famous mathematician, you know,
+of Oriel--who got killed, you remember, by falling off the Matterhorn
+or somewhere, just the other day. You must have seen about it in
+the "Times."'
+
+'I remember,' Mrs. Greatrex answered, in placid contentment; 'and
+I should say you can't do better than take him immediately. It'd
+be an excellent thing for the school, certainly. As the third
+mastership's worth only two hundred a year, of course he can't
+intend to marry upon THAT; so he must have means of his own, which
+is always a good thing to encourage in an under-master: or if his
+wife has money, that comes in the end to the same thing. They'll take
+a house of their own, no doubt; and she'll probably entertain--very
+quietly, I daresay; still, a small dinner now and then gives a very
+excellent tone to the school in its own way. Social considerations,
+as I always say, Joseph, are all-important in school management;
+and I think we may take it for granted that Mr. Le Breton would be
+socially a real acquisition.'
+
+So it was shortly settled that Dr. Greatrex should write back
+accepting Ernest Le Breton as third master; and Mrs. Greatrex
+began immediately dropping stray allusions to 'Lady Le Breton, our
+new master's mother, you know,' among her various acquaintance,
+especially those with rising young families. The doctor and she
+thought a good deal of this catch they were making in the person of
+Ernest Le Breton. Poor souls, they little knew what sort of social
+qualities they were letting themselves in for. A firebrand or a
+bombshell would really have been a less remarkable guest to drop
+down straight into the prim and proper orthodox society of Pilbury
+Regis.
+
+When Ernest received the letter in which Dr. Greatrex informed him
+that he might have the third mastership, he hardly knew how to contain
+his joy. He kissed Edie a dozen times over in his excitement, and
+sat up late making plans with her which would have been delightful
+but for poor Edie's lasting sorrow. In a short time it was all duly
+arranged, and Ernest began to think that he must go back to London
+for a day or two, to let Lady Le Breton hear of his change of plans,
+and got everything in order for their quiet wedding. He grudged the
+journey sadly, for he was beginning to understand now that he must
+take care of the pence for Edie's sake as well as for humanity's--his
+abstraction was individualising itself in concrete form--but
+he felt so much at least was demanded of him by filial duty, and,
+besides, he had one or two little matters to settle at Epsilon
+Terrace which could not so well be managed in his absence even
+by his trusty deputy, Ronald. So he ran up to town once more in a
+hurry, and dropped in as if nothing had happened, at his mother's
+house. It was no unusual matter for him to pass a fortnight at
+Wilton Place without finding time to call round at Epsilon Terrace
+to see Ronald, and his mother had not heard at all as yet of his
+recent change of engagement.
+
+Lady Le Breton listened with severe displeasure to Ernest's account of
+his quarrel with Lord Exmoor. It was quite unnecessary and wrong,
+she said, to prevent Lynmnouth from his innocent boyish amusements.
+Pigeon-shooting was practised by the very best people, and she was
+quite sure, therefore, there could be no harm of any sort in it.
+She believed the sport was countenanced, not only by bishops, but
+even by princes. Pigeons, she supposed, had been specially created
+by Providence for our use and enjoyment--'their final cause
+being apparently the manufacture of pigeon-pie,' Ronald suggested
+parenthetically: but we couldn't use them without killing them,
+unfortunately; and shooting was probably as painless a form of
+killing as any other. Peter or somebody, she distinctly remembered,
+had been specially commanded to arise, kill, and eat. To object to
+pigeon-shooting indeed, in Lady Le Breton's opinion, was clearly
+flying in the face of Providence. Of Ronald's muttered reference
+to five sparrows being sold for two farthings, and yet not one of
+them being forgotten, she would not condescend to take any notice.
+However, thank goodness, the fault was none of hers; she could
+wash her hands entirely of all responsibility in the matter. She
+had done her best to secure Ernest a good place in a thoroughly
+nice family, and if he chose to throw it up at a moment's notice
+for one of his own absurd communistical fads, it was happily none
+of her business. She was glad, at any rate, that he'd got another
+berth, with a conscientious, earnest, Christian man like Dr.
+Greatrex. 'And indeed, Ernest,' she said, returning once more to
+the pigeon-shooting question, 'even your poor dear papa, who was
+full of such absurd religious fancies, didn't think that sport
+was unchristian, I'm certain; for I remember once, when we were
+quartered at Moozuffernugger in the North-West Provinces, he went
+out into a nullah near our compound one day, and with his own hand
+shot a man-eating tiger, which had carried off three little native
+children from the thanah; so that shows that he couldn't really
+object to sport; and I hope you don't mean to cast disrespect upon
+the memory of your own poor father!'. All of which profound moral
+and religious observations Ernest, as in duty bound, received with
+the most respectful and acquiescent silence.
+
+And now he had to approach the more difficult task of breaking
+to his mother his approaching marriage with Edie Oswald. He began
+the subject as delicately as he could, dwelling strongly upon poor
+Harry Oswald's excellent position as an Oxford tutor, and upon
+Herbert's visit with him to Switzerland--he knew his mother too
+well to suppose that the real merits of the Oswald family would
+impress her in any way, as compared with their accidental social
+status; and then he went on to speak as gently as possible about
+his engagement with little Edie. At this point, to his exceeding
+discomfiture, Lady Le Breton adopted the unusual tactics of bursting
+suddenly into a flood of tears.
+
+'Oh, Ernest,' she sobbed out inarticulately through her scented
+cambric handkerchief, 'for heaven's sake don't tell me that you've
+gone and engaged yourself to that designing girl! Oh, my poor,
+poor, misguided boy! Is there really no way to save you?'
+
+'No way to save me!' exclaimed Ernest, astonished and disconcerted
+by this unexpected outburst.
+
+'Yes, yes!' Lady Le Breton went on, almost passionately. 'Can't
+you manage somehow to get yourself out of it? I hope you haven't
+utterly compromised yourself! Couldn't dear Herbert go down
+to What's-his-name Pomeroy, and induce the father--a grocer, if
+I remember right--induce him, somehow or other, to compromise the
+matter?'
+
+'Compromise!' cried Ernest, uncertain whether to laugh or be angry.
+
+'Yes, compromise it!' Lady Le Breton answered, endeavouring to
+calm herself. 'Of course that Machiavellian girl has tried to drag
+you into it; and the family have aided and abetted her; and you've
+been weak and foolish--though not, I trust, wicked--and allowed them
+to get their net closed almost imperceptibly around you. But it
+isn't too late to withdraw even now, my poor, dear, deluded Ernest.
+It isn't too late to withdraw even now. Think of the disgrace and
+shame to the family! Think of your dear brothers and their blighted
+prospects! Don't allow this designing girl to draw you helplessly
+into such an ill-assorted marriage! Reflect upon your own future
+happiness! Consider what it will be to drag on years of your life
+with a woman, no longer perhaps externally attractive, whom you
+could never possibly respect or love for her own internal qualities!
+Don't go and wreck your own life, and your brothers' lives, for any
+mistaken and Quixotic notions of false honour! You mayn't like to
+throw her over, after you've once been inveigled into saying "Yes"
+(and the feeling, though foolish, does your heart credit); but
+reflect, my dear boy, such a promise, so obtained, can hardly be
+considered binding upon your conscience! I've no doubt dear Herbert,
+who's a capital man of business, would get them readily enough to
+agree to a compromise or a compensation.'
+
+'My dear mother,'said Ernest white with indignation, but speaking
+very quietly, as soon as he could edge in a word, 'you quite
+misunderstand the whole question. Edie Oswald is a lady by nature,
+with all a lady's best feelings--I hate the word because of its
+false implications, but I can't use any other that will convey to
+you my meaning--and I love and admire and respect and worship her
+with all my heart and with all my soul. She hasn't inveigled me or
+set her cap at me, as you call it, in any way; she's the sweetest,
+timidest, most shrinking little thing that ever existed; on the contrary,
+it is I who have humbly asked her to accept me, because I know no
+other woman to whom I could give my whole heart so unreservedly.
+To tell you the truth, mother, with my ideas and opinions, I could
+hardly be happy with any girl of the class that you would call
+distinctively ladies: their class prejudices and their social
+predilections would jar and grate upon me at every turn. But Edie
+Oswald's a girl whom I could worship and love without any reserve--whom
+I can reverence for her beautiful character, her goodness, and her
+delicacy of feeling. She has honoured me by accepting me, and I'm
+going to marry her at the end of this month, and I want, if possible,
+to get your consent to the marriage before I do so. She's a wife
+of whom I shall be proud in every way; I wish I could think she
+would have equal cause to be proud of her husband.'
+
+Lady Le Breton threw herself once more into a paroxysm of tears.
+'Oh, Ernest,' she cried, 'do spare me! do spare me! This is too
+wicked, too unfeeling, too cruel of you altogether! I knew already
+you were very selfish and heartless and headstrong, but I didn't
+know you were quite so unmanageable and so unkind as this. I appeal
+to your better nature--for you HAVE a better nature--I'm sure you
+have a better nature: you're MY son, and you can't be utterly devoid
+of good impulses. I appeal confidently to your better nature to
+throw off this unhappy, designing, wicked girl before it is too
+late! She has made you forget your duty to your mother, but not,
+I hope, irrevocably. Oh, my poor, dear, wandering boy, won't you
+listen to the voice of reason? won't you return once more like the
+prodigal son, to your neglected mother and your forgotten duty?'
+
+'My dear mother,' Ernest said, hardly knowing how to answer, 'you
+WILL persist in completely misunderstanding me. I love Edie Oswald
+with all my heart; I have promised to marry her, because she has
+done me the great and undeserved honour of accepting me as her
+future husband; and even if I wanted to break off the engagement
+(which it would break my own heart to do), I certainly couldn't
+break it off now without the most disgraceful and dishonourable
+wickedness. That is quite fixed and certain, and I can't go back
+upon it in any way.'
+
+'Then you insist, you unnatural boy,' said Lady Le Breton, wiping
+her eyes, and assuming the air of an injured parent, 'you insist,
+against my express wish, in marrying this girl Osborne, or whatever
+you call her?'
+
+'Yes, I do, mother,' Ernest answered quietly.
+
+'In that case,' said Lady Le Breton, coldly, 'I must beg of you
+that you won't bring this lady, whether as your wife or otherwise,
+under my roof. I haven't been accustomed to associate with the
+daughters of tradesmen, and I don't wish to associate with them
+now in any way.'
+
+'If so,' Ernest said, very softly, 'I can't remain under your roof
+myself any longer. I can go nowhere at all where my future wife
+will not be received on exactly the same terms that I am.'
+
+'Then you had bettor go,' said Lady Le Breton, in her chilliest
+manner. 'Ronald, do me the favour to ring ihe bell for a cab for
+your brother Ernest.'
+
+'I shall walk, thank you, mother,' said Ernest quietly. 'Good
+morning, dear Ronald.'
+
+Ronald rose solemnly and opened the door for him. 'Therefore shall
+a man leave his father and mother,' he said in his clear, soft
+voice, 'and shall cleave unto his wife; and they twain shall be
+one flesh. Amen.'
+
+Lady Le Breton darted a withering glance at her younger son as
+Ernest shut the door after him, and burst once more into a sudden
+flood of uncontrollable tears.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+'COME YE OUT AND BE YE SEPARATE.'
+
+
+Arthur Berkeley's London lodgings were wonderfully snug and
+comfortable for the second floor of a second-rate house in a small
+retired side street near the Embankment at Chelsea. He had made
+the most of the four modest little rooms, with his quick taste and
+his deft, cunning fingers:--four rooms, or rather boxes, one might
+almost call them; a bedroom each for himself and the Progenitor;
+a wee sitting-room for meals and music--the two Berkeleys would
+doubtless as soon have gone without the one as the other; and a tiny
+study where Arthur might work undisturbed at his own desk upon his
+new and original magnum opus, destined to form the great attraction
+of the coming season at the lately-opened Ambiguities Theatre. Things
+had prospered well with the former Oxford curate during the last
+twelve-month. His cantata at Leeds had proved a wonderful success,
+and had finally induced him to remove to London, and take to
+composing as a regular profession. He had his qualms about it, to
+be sure, as one who had put his hand to the plough and then turned
+back; he did not feel quite certain in his own mind how far he
+was justified in giving up the more spiritual for the more worldly
+calling; but natures like Arthur Berkeley's move rather upon passing
+feeling than upon deeper sentiment; and had he not ample ground, he
+asked himself, for this reconsideration of the monetary position?
+He had the Progenitor's happiness to insure before thinking of the
+possible injury to his non-existent parishioners. If he was doing
+Whippingham Parva or Norton-cum-Sutton out of an eloquent and
+valuable potential rector, if he was depriving the Church in the
+next half-century of a dignified and portly prospective archdeacon,
+he is at least making his father's last days brighter and more
+comfortable than his early ones had ever been. And then, was not
+music, too, in its own way, a service, a liturgy, a worship? Surely
+he could do higher good to men's souls--as they call them--to
+whatever little spark of nobler and better fire there might lurk
+within those dull clods of common clay he saw all around him--by
+writing such a work as his Leeds cantata, than by stringing together
+for ever those pretty centos of seventeenth-century conceits and
+nineteenth-century doubts or hesitations which he was accustomed
+to call his sermons! Whatever came of it, he must give up the
+miserable pittance of a curacy, and embrace the career open to the
+musical talents.
+
+So he fitted up his little Chelsea rooms in his own economically
+sumptuous fashion with some bits of wall paper, a few jugs and vases,
+and an etching or two after Meissonier; planted the Progenitor down
+comfortably in a large easy-chair, with a melodious fiddle before
+him; and set to work himself to do what he could towards elevating
+the British stage and pocketing a reasonable profit on his own
+account from that familiar and ever-rejuvenescent process. He was
+quite in earnest, now, about producing a totally new effect of his
+own; and believing in his work, as a good workman ought to do,
+he wrought at it indefatigably and well in the retirement of a
+second-pair back, overlooking a yardful of fluttering clothes, and
+a fine skyline vista of bare, yellowish brick chimneys.
+
+'What part are you working at to-day, Artie?' said the old shoemaker,
+looking over his son's shoulder at the blank music paper before
+him. 'Quartette of Biological Professors, eh?'
+
+'Yes, father,' Berkeley answered with a smile. 'How do you think
+it runs now?' and he hummed over a few lines of his own words, set
+with a quaint lilt to his own inimitable and irresistible music:--
+
+
+ And though in unanimous chorus
+ We mourn that from ages before us
+ No single enaliosaurus
+ To-day should survive,
+
+ Yet joyfully may we bethink us,
+ With the earliest mammal to link us,
+ We still have the ornithorhyncus
+ Extant and alive!
+
+
+'How do you think the score does for that, father, eh? Catching
+air rather, isn't it?'
+
+'Not a better air in the whole piece, Artie; but, my boy, who do
+you think will ever understand the meaning of the words. The gods
+themselves won't know what you're driving at.'
+
+'But I'm going to strike out a new line, Daddie dear. I'm not going
+to play to the gallery; I mean to play to the stalls and boxes.'
+
+'Was there ever such a born aristocrat as this young parson is!' cried
+the old man, lifting up both his hands with a playful gesture of
+mock-deprecation. 'He's hopeless! He's terrible! He's incorrigible!
+Why, you unworthy son of a respectable Paddington shoemaker, if even
+the intelligent British artizans in the gallery don't understand
+you, how the dickens do you suppose the oiled and curled Assyrian
+bulls in the stalls and boxes will have a glimmering idea of what
+you're driving at? The supposition's an insult to the popular
+intelligence--in other words, to me, sir, your Progenitor.'
+
+Berkeley laughed. 'I don't know about that, father,' he said, holding
+up the page of manuscript music at arm's length admiringly before
+him; 'but I do know one thing: this comic opera of mine is going
+to be a triumphant success.'
+
+'So I've thought ever since you began it, Artie. You see, my boy,
+there's a great many points in its favour. In the first place you
+can write your own libretto, or whatever you call it; and you know
+I've always held that though that Wagner man was wrong in practice--a
+most inflated thunder-bomb, his Lohengrin--yet he was right in
+theory, right in theory, Artie; every composer ought to be his own
+poet. Well, then, again, you've got a certain peculiar vein of
+humour of your own, a kind of delicate semi-serious burlesque turn
+about you that's quite original, both in writing and in composing;
+you're a humourist in verse and a humourist in music, that's the
+long and the short of it. Now, you've hit upon a fresh lode of
+dramatic ore in this opera of yours, and if my judgment goes for
+anything, it'll bring the house down the first evening. I'm a bit
+of a critic, Artie; by hook or by crook, you know, paper or money,
+I've heard every good opera, comic or serious, that's been given
+in London these last thirty years, and I flatter myself I know
+something by this time about operatic criticism.'
+
+'You're wrong about Wagner, father,' said Arthur, still glancing
+with paternal partiality at his sheet of manuscript: 'Lohengrin's
+a very fine work, a grand work, I assure you. I won't let you run
+it down. But, barring that, I think you're pretty nearly right in
+your main judgment. I'm not modest, and it strikes me somehow that
+I've invented a genre. That's about what it comes to.'
+
+'If you'd confine yourself to your native tongue, Mr. Parson,
+your ignorant old father might have some chance of agreeing or
+disagreeing with you; but as he doesn't even know what the thingumbob
+you say you've invented may happen to be, he can't profitably
+continue the discussion of that subject. However, my only fear is
+that you may perhaps be writing above the heads of the audience.
+Not in the music, Artie; they can't fail to catch that; it rings
+in one's head like the song of a hedge warbler--tirree, tirree,
+lu-lu-lu, la-la, tirree, tu-whit, tu-whoo, tra-la-la--but in the
+words and the action. I'm half afraid that'll be over their heads,
+even in the gallery. What do you think you'll finally call it?'
+
+'I'm hesitating, Daddy, between "Evolution" and "The Primate of
+Fiji." Which do you recommend--tell me?'
+
+'The Primate, by all means,' said the old man gaily. 'And you
+still mean to open with the debate in the Fijian Parliament on the
+Deceased Grandmother's Second Cousin Bill?'
+
+'No, I don't, Daddy. I've written a new first scene this week, in
+which the President of the Board of Trade remonstrates with the
+mermaids on their remissness in sending their little ones to the
+Fijian Board Schools, in order to receive primary instruction in the
+art of swimming. I've got a capital chorus of mermaids to balance
+the other chorus of Biological Professors on the Challenger Expedition.
+I consider it's a happy cross between Ariosto and Aristophanes.
+If you like, I'll give you the score, and read over the words to
+you.' 'Do,' said the old man, settling himself down in comfort in
+his son's easy-chair, and assuming the sternest air of an impartial
+critic. Arthur Berkeley read on dramatically, in his own clever
+airy fashion, suiting accent and gesture to the subject matter
+through the whole first three acts of that exquisitely humorous
+opera, the Primate of Fiji. Sometimes he hummed the tune over to
+himself as he went; sometimes he played a few notes upon his flute
+by way of striking the key-note; sometimes he rose from his seat in
+his animation, and half acted the part he was reading with almost
+unconscious and spontaneous mimicry. He read through the famous
+song of the President of the Local Government Board, that everybody
+has since heard played by every German band at the street corners;
+through the marvellously catching chorus of the superannuated
+tide-waiters; through the culminating dialogue between the London
+Missionary Society's Agent and the Hereditary Grand Sacrificer to
+the King of Fiji. Of course the recital lacked everything of the
+scenery and dresses that give it so much vogue upon the stage; but
+it had at least the charmingly suggestive music, the wonderful
+linking of sound to sense, the droll and inimitable intermixture
+of the plausible and the impossible which everybody has admired
+and laughed at in the acted piece.
+
+The old shoemaker listened in breathless silence, keeping his eye
+fixed steadily all the time upon the clean copy of the score. Only
+once he made a wry face to himself, and that was in the chorus to
+the debate in the Fijian Parliament on the proposal to leave off
+the practice of obligatory cannibalism. The conservative party
+were of opinion that if you began by burying instead of eating your
+deceased wife, you might end by the atrocious practice of marrying
+your deceased wife's sister; and they opposed the revolutionary
+measure in that well known refrain:--
+
+
+ Of change like this we're naturally chary,
+ Nolumus leges Fijiae mutari.
+
+
+That passage evidently gave the Progenitor deep pain.
+
+'Stick to your own language, my boy,' he murmured; 'stick to your
+own language. The Latin may be very fine, but the gallery wil never
+understand it.' However, when Arthur finished at last, he drew a
+long breath, and laid down the roll of manuscript with an involuntary
+little cry of half-stifled applause.
+
+'Artie,' he said rising from the chair slowly, 'Artie, that's not
+so bad for a parson, I can tell you. I hope the Archbishop won't
+be tempted to cite you for displaying an amount of originality
+unworthy of your cloth.'
+
+'Father,' said Arthur, suddenly, after a short pause, with a tinge
+of pensiveness in his tone that was not usual with him, in speaking
+at least; 'Father, I often think I ought never to have become a
+parson at all.'
+
+'Well, my boy,' said the old man, looking up at him sharply with
+his keen eyes, 'I knew that long ago. You've never really believed
+in the thing, and you oughtn't to have gone in for it from the very
+beginning. It was the music, and the dresses, and the decorations
+that enticed you, Artie, and not the doctrine.'
+
+Arthur turned towards him with a pained expression. 'Father,' he
+said, half reproachfully, 'Father, dear father, dou't talk to me
+like that. Don't think I'm so shallow or so dishonest as to subscribe
+to opinions I don't believe in. It's a curious thing to say, a
+curious thing in this unbelieving age, and I'm half ashamed to say
+it, even to you; but do you know, father, I really do believe it:
+in my very heart of hearts, I fancy I believe every word of it.'
+
+The old man listened to him compassionately and tenderly, as
+a woman listens to the fears and troubles of a little child. To
+him, that plain confession of faith was, in truth, a wonder and a
+stumbling-block. Good, simple-hearted, easy-going, logical-minded,
+sceptical shoemaker that he was, with his head all stuffed full of
+Malthus, and John Stuart Mill, and political economy, and the hard
+facts of life and science, how could he hope to understand the
+complex labyrinth of metaphysical thinking, and childlike faith,
+and aesthetic attraction, and historical authority, which made a
+sensitive man like Arthur Berkeley, in his wayward, half-serious,
+emotional fashion, turn back lovingly and regretfully to the fair
+old creed that his father had so long deserted? How strange that
+Artie, a full-grown male person, with all the learning of the schools
+behind him, should relapse at last into these childish and exploded
+mediaeval superstitions! How incredible that, after having been
+brought up from his babyhood upward on the strong meat of the agnostic
+philosophers, he should fall back in his manhood on the milk for
+babes administered to him by orthodox theology! The simple-minded
+old sceptic could hardly credit it, now that Arthur told him so
+with his own lips, though he had more than once suspected it when he
+heard him playing sacred music with that last touch of earnestness
+in his execution which only the sincerest conviction and most intimate
+realisation of its import can ever give. Ah well, ah well, good
+sceptical old shoemaker; there are perhaps more things in heaven
+and earth and in the deep soul of man than are dreamt of in your
+philosophy.
+
+Still, though the avowal shocked and disappointed him a little, the
+old man could not find it in his heart to say one word of sorrow
+or disapproval, far less of ridicule or banter, to his dearly loved
+boy. He felt instinctively, what Herbert Le Breton could not feel,
+that this sentimental tendency of his son's, as he thought it,
+lay far too deep and seemed far too sacred for mere argument or
+common discussion. 'Perhaps,' he said to himself softly, 'Artie's
+emotional side has got the better of his intellectual. I brought
+him up without telling him any thing of these things, except
+negatively, and by way of warning against superstitious tendencies;
+and when he went to Oxford, and saw the doctrines tricked out in
+all the authority of a great hierarchy, with its cathedrals, and
+chapels, and choirs, and altars, and robes, and fal-lal finery,
+it got the better of him; got the better of him, very naturally.
+Artie's a cleverer fellow than his old father--had more education,
+and so on; and I'm fond of him, very fond of him; but his logical
+faculty isn't quite straight, somehow: he lets his feelings have
+too much weight and prominence against his calmer reason! I can
+easily understand how, with his tastes and leanings, the clericals
+should have managed to get a hold over him. The clericals are such
+insinuating cunning fellows. A very impressionable boy Artie was,
+always; the poetical temperament and the artistic temperament
+always is impressionable, I suppose; but shoemaking certainly does
+develop the logical faculties. Seems as though the logical faculties
+were situated in the fore-part of the brain, as they mark them
+out on the phrenological heads; and the leaning forward that gives
+us the shoemaker's forehead must tend to enlarge them--give them
+plenty of room to expand and develop!' Saying which thing to himself
+musingly, the father took his son's hand gently in his, and only
+smoothed it quietly as he looked deep into Arthur's eyes, without
+uttering a single word.
+
+As for Arthur Berkeley, he sat silent, too, half averting his face
+from his father's gaze, and feeling a little blush of shame upon his
+cheek at having been surprised unexpectedly into such an unwonted
+avowal. How could he ever expect his father to understand the nature
+of his feelings! To him, good old man that he was, all these things
+were just matters of priestcraft and obscurantism--fables invented
+by the ecclesiastical mind as a means of getting fat livings and
+comfortable deaneries out of the public pocket. And, indeed, Arthur
+was well accustomed at Oxford to keeping his own opinions to himself
+on such subjects. What chance of sympathy or response was there for
+such a man as he in that coldly critical and calmly deliberative
+learned society? Not, of course, that all Oxford was wholly given
+over even then to extreme agnosticism. There were High Churchmen,
+and Low Churchmen, and Broad Churchmen enough, to be sure: men
+learned in the Fathers, and the Canons, and the Acts of the General
+Councils; men ready to argue on the intermediate state, or on the
+three witnesses, or on the heretical nature of the Old Catholic
+schism; men prepared with minute dogmatic opinions upon every
+conceivable or inconceivable point of abstract theology. There were
+people who could trace the Apostolic succession of the old Cornish
+bishops, and people who could pronounce authoritatively upon the
+exact distinction between justification and remission of sins. But
+for all these things Arthur Berkeley cared nothing. Where, then,
+among those learned exegetical theologians, was there room for one
+whose belief was a matter, not of reason and argument, but of feeling
+and of sympathy? He did not want to learn what the Council of Trent
+had said about such and such a dogma; he wanted to be conscious
+of an inner truth, to find the world permeated by an informing
+righteousness, to know himself at one with the inner essence of
+the entire universe. And though he could never feel sure whether
+it was all illusion or not, he had hungered and thirsted after
+believing it, till, as he told his father timidly that day, he
+actually did believe it somehow in his heart of hearts. Let us not
+seek to probe too deeply into those inner recesses, whose abysmal
+secrets are never perfectly clear even to the introspective eyes
+of the conscious self-dissector himself.
+
+After a pause Arthur spoke again. He spoke this time in a very low
+voice, as one afraid to open his soul too much, even to his father.
+'Dear, dear father,' he said, releasing his hand softly, 'you don't
+quite understand what I mean about it. It isn't because I don't
+believe, or try to believe, or hope I believe, that I think I ought
+never to have become a parson. In my way, as in a glass, darkly,
+I do strive my best to believe, though perhaps my belief is hardly
+more in its way than Ernest Le Breton's unbelieving. I do want to
+think that this great universe we see around us isn't all a mistake
+and an abortion. I want to find a mind and an order and a purpose
+in it; and, perhaps because I want it, I make myself believe that
+I have really found it. In that hope and belief, with the ultimate
+object of helping on whatever is best and truest in the world, I
+took orders. But I feel now that it was an error for me. I'm not
+the right man to make a parson. There are men who are born for that
+role; men who know how to conduct themselves in it decently and
+in seemly fashion; men who can quietly endure all its restraints,
+and can fairly rise to the height of all its duties. But I can't.
+I was intended for something lighter and less onerous than that.
+If I stop in the Church I shall do no good to myself or to it; if
+I come out of it, I shall make both parties freer, and shall be able
+to do more good in my own generation. And so, father, for the very
+same reasons that made me go into it, I mean to come out again. Not
+in any quarrel with it, nor as turning my back upon it, but just
+as the simple acknowledgment of a mistaken calling. It wouldn't
+be seemly, for example, for a parson to write comic operas. But
+I feel I can do more good by writing comic operas than by talking
+dogmatically about things I hardly understand to people who hardly
+understand me. So before I get this opera acted I mean to leave off
+my white tie, and be known in future, henceforth and for ever, as
+plain Arthur Berkeley.'
+
+The old shoemaker listened in respectful silence. 'It isn't for me,
+Artie,' he said, as his son finished, 'to stand between a man and
+his conscience. As John Stuart Mill says in his essay on "Liberty,"
+we must allow full play to every man's individuality. Wonderful
+man, John Stuart Mill; I understand his grandfather was a shoemaker.
+Well, I won't talk with you about the matter of conviction; but I
+never wanted you to be a parson, and I shall feel all the happier
+myself when you've ceased to be one.'
+
+'And I,' said Arthur, 'shall feel all the freer; but if I had been
+able to remain where I was, I should have felt all the worthier,
+for all that.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+A QUIET WEDDING.
+
+
+Fate was adverse for the moment to Arthur Berkeley's well meant
+designs for shuffling off the trammels of his ecclesiastical habit.
+He was destined to appear in public at least once more, not only in
+the black coat and white tie of his everyday professional costume,
+but even in the flowing snowy surplice of a solemn and decorous
+spiritual function. The very next morning's post brought him
+a little note from Ernest Le Breton specially begging him, in his
+own name and Edie's, to come down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and officiate
+as parson at their approaching wedding. The note had cost Ernest
+a conscientious struggle, for he would have personally preferred
+to be married at a Registry Office, as being more in accordance
+with the duties of a good citizen, and savouring less of effete
+ecclesiastical superstition; but he felt he couldn't even propose
+such a step to Edie; she wouldn't have considered herself married
+at all, unless she were married quite regularly by a duly qualified
+clerk in holy orders of the Church of England as by law established.
+Already, indeed, Ernest was beginning to recognise with a sigh
+that if he was going to live in the world at all, he must do so by
+making at least a partial sacrifice of political consistency. You
+may step out of your own century, if you choose, yourself, but you
+can't get all the men and women with whom you come in contact to
+step out of it also in unison just to please you.
+
+So Ernest had sat down reluctantly to his desk, and consented
+to ask Arthur Berkeley to assist at the important ceremony in his
+professional clerical capacity. If he was going to have a medicine
+man or a priest at all to marry him to the girl of his choice--a
+barbaric survival, at the best, he thought it--he would, at any
+rate, prefer having his friend Arthur--a good man and true--to
+having the fat, easy-going, purse-proud rector of the parish; the
+younger son of a wealthy family who had gone into the Church for
+the sake of the living, and who rolled sumptuously down the long
+hilly High Street every day in his comfortable carriage, leaning
+back with his fat hands folded complacently over his ample knees,
+and gazing abstractedly, with his little pigs'-eyes half buried
+in his cheek, at the beautiful prospect afforded him by the broad
+livery-covered backs of his coachman and his footman. Ernest could
+never have consented to lot that lazy, overfed, useless encumbrance
+on a long-suffering commonwealth, that idle gorger of dainty meats
+and choice wines from the tithes of the tolling, suffering people,
+bear any part in what was after all the most solemn and serious
+contract of his whole lifetime. And, to say the truth, Edie quite
+agreed with him on that point, too. Though her moral indignation
+against poor, useless, empty-headed old Mr. Walters didn't burn
+quite so fierce or so clear as Ernest's--she regarded the fat
+old parson, indeed, rather from the social point of view, as a
+ludicrously self-satisfied specimen of the lower stages of humanity,
+than from the political point of view, as a greedy swallower of
+large revenues for small work inefficiently performed--she would
+still have felt that his presence at her wedding jarred and grated
+on all the finer sensibilities of her nature, as out of accord
+with the solemn and tender associations of that supreme moment.
+To have been married by prosy old Mr. Walters, to have taken the
+final benediction on the greatest act of her life from those big
+white fat fingers, would have spoilt the reminiscence of the wedding
+day for her as long as she lived. But when Ernest suggested Arthur
+Berkeley's name to her, she acquiesced with all her heart in the
+happy selection. She liked Berkeley better than anybody else she
+had ever met, except Ernest; and she knew that his presence would
+rather add one more bright association to the day than detract from
+it in the coming years. Her poor little wedding would want all the
+additions that friends could make to its cheerfulness, to get over
+the lasting gloom and blank of dear Harry's absence.
+
+'You will come and help us, I know, Berkeley,' Ernest wrote to
+Arthur in his serious fashion. 'We feel there is nobody else we
+should so like to have present at our wedding as yourself. Come
+soon, too, for there are lots of things I want to talk over with
+you. It's a very solemn responsibility, getting married: you
+have to take upon yourself the duty of raising up future citizens
+for the state; and with our present knowledge of how nature works
+through the laws of heredity, you have to think whether you two
+who contemplate marriage are well fitted to act as parents to the
+generations that are to be. When I remember that all my own faults
+and failings may be handed on relentlessly to those that come after
+us--built up in the very fibre of their being--I am half appalled
+at my own temerity. Then, again, there is the inexorable question
+of money; is it prudent or is it wrong of us to marry on such
+an uncertainty? I'm afraid that Schurz and Malthas would tell us
+--very wrong. I have turned over these things by myself till I'm
+tired of arguing them out in my own head, and I want you to come
+down beforehand, so as to cheer me up a bit with your lighter and
+brighter philosophy. On the very eve of my marriage, I'm somehow
+getting dreadfully pessimistic.'
+
+Arthur read the letter through impatiently and crumpled it up in his
+hands with a gesture of despondency. 'Poor little Miss Butterfly,'
+he said to himself, pityingly, 'was there ever such an abstraction
+of an ethical unit as this good, solemn, self-torturing Ernest! How
+will she ever live with him? How will he ever live with her? Poor
+little soul! Harry is gone like the sunshine out of her life; and
+now this well-meaning, gloomy, conscientious cloud comes caressingly
+to overspread her with the shadowing pall of its endless serious
+doubts and hesitations. Fancy a man who has won little Miss
+Butterfly's heart--dear little Miss Butterfly's gay, laughing,
+tender little heart--writing such a letter as that to the friend
+who's going to marry them! Upon my word, I've half a mind to go
+into the concientious scruples business on my own account! Have I
+any right to be a party to fettering poor airy fairy little Miss
+Butterfly, with a heavy iron chain for life and always, to this
+great lumbering elephantine moral Ernest? Am I justified in tying
+the cable round her dainty little neck with a silken thread, and
+then fastening it round his big leg with rivets of hardened steel
+on the patent Bessemer process? If a couple of persons, duly called
+by banns in their own respective parishes, or furnished with the
+right reverend's perquisite, a licence, come to me, a clerk in holy
+orders, and ask me to marry them, I've a vague idea that unless I
+comply I lay myself open to the penalties of praemunire, or something
+else equally awful and mysterious. But if the couple write and
+ask me to come down into Devonshire and marry them, that's quite
+another matter. I can lawfully answer, 'Non possumus.' There's a
+fine ecclesiastical ring, by the way, about answering 'Non possumus;'
+it sums up the entire position of the Church in a nutshell! Well,
+I doubt whether I ought to go; but as a matter of friendship, I'll
+throw overboard my poor conscience. It's used to the process by
+this time, no doubt, like eels to skinning; and as Hudibras says,
+
+
+ However tender it may be,
+ 'Tis passing blind where 'twill not see.
+
+
+If she'd only have taken ME, now, who knows but I might in time
+have risen to be a Prebendary or even a Dean? 'They that have used
+the office of a deacon well, purchase to themselves a good degree,'
+Paul wrote to Timothy once; but it's not so now, it's not so now;
+preferment goes by favour, and the deacon must e'en shift as best
+he can on his own account.' So, in the end, Arthur packed up his
+surplice in his little handbag, and took his way peacefully down
+to Calcombe Pomeroy.
+
+It was a very quiet, almost a sombre wedding, for the poor Oswalds
+were still enveloped in the lasting gloom of their great loss,
+and not much outward show or preparation, such as the female heart
+naturally delights in, could possibly be made under these painful
+circumstances. Still, all the world of Calcombe came to see little
+Miss Oswald married to the grave gentleman from Oxford; and most
+of them gave her their hearty good wishes, for Edie was a general
+favourite with gentle and simple throughout the whole borough.
+Herbert was there, like a decorous gentleman, to represent the
+bridegroom's family, and so was Ronald, who had slipped away from
+London without telling Lady Le Breton, for fear of another distressful
+scone at the last moment. Arthur Berkeley read the service in
+his beautiful impressive manner, and looked his part well in his
+flowing white surplice. But as he uttered the solemn words, 'Whom
+God hath joined together, let no man put asunder,' the musical
+ring of his own voice sounded to his heart like the knell of his
+own one love--the funeral service over the only romance he could
+ever mix in throughout his whole lifetime. Poor fellow, he had
+taken the duty upon him with all friendly heartiness; but he felt
+an awful and lonely feeling steal over him when it was all finished,
+and when he knew that his little Miss Butterfly was now Ernest Le
+Breton's lawful wife for ever and ever.
+
+In the vestry, after signing the books, Herbert and Ronald and
+some of the others insisted on their ancient right of kissing the
+bride in good old English fashion. But Arthur did not. It would
+not have been loyal. He felt in his heart that he had loved little
+Miss Butterfly too deeply himself for that; to claim a kiss would
+be abusing the formal dues of his momentary position. Henceforth
+he would not even think of her to himself in that little pet name
+of his brief Oxford dream: he would call her nothing in his own
+mind but Mrs. Le Breton.
+
+Edie's simple little presents were all arranged in the tiny parlour
+behind the shop. Most of them were from her own personal friends:
+a few were from the gentry of the surrounding neighbourhood: but
+there were two handsomer than the rest: they came from outside the
+narrow little circle of Calcombe Pomeroy society. One was a plain
+gold bracelet from Arthur Berkeley; and on the gold of the inner
+face, though neither Edie nor Ernest noticed it, he had lightly
+cut with his knife on the soft metal the one word, 'Frustra.' The
+other was a dressing-case, with a little card inside, 'Miss Oswald,
+from Lady Hilda Tregellis.' Hilda had heard of Ernest's approaching
+wedding from Herbert (who took an early opportunity of casually
+lunching at Dunbude, in order to show that he mustn't be identified
+with his socialistic brother); and the news had strangely proved a
+slight salve to poor Hilda's wounded vanity--or, perhaps it would
+be fairer to say, to her slighted higher instincts. 'A country
+grocer's daughter!' she said to herself: 'the sister of a great
+mathematical scholar! How very original of him to think of marrying
+a grocer's daughter! Why, of course, he must have been engaged to
+her all along before he came here! And even if he hadn't been,
+one might have known at once that such a man as he is would never
+go and marry a girl whose name's in the peerage, when he could strike
+out a line for himself by marrying a grocer's daughter. I really
+like him better than ever for it. I must positively send her a
+little present. They'll be as poor as church mice, I've no doubt.
+I ought to send her something that'll be practically useful.' And
+by way of sending something practically useful, Lady Hilda chose
+at last a handsome silver-topped Russia leather dressing-case.
+
+It was not such a wedding as Edie had pictured to herself in her
+first sweet maidenly fancies; but still, when they drove away alone
+in the landau from the side-door of the Red Lion to Calcombe Road
+Station, she felt a quiet pride and security in her heart from the
+fact that she was now the wedded wife of a man she loved so dearly
+as Ernest Le Breton. And even Ernest so far conquered his social
+scruples that he took first-class tickets, for the first time in
+his life, to Ilfracombe, where they were to spend their brief and
+hasty fragment of a poor little honeymoon. It's so extremely hard
+to be a consistent socialist where women are concerned, especially
+on the very day of your own wedding!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+INTO THE FIRE.
+
+
+'Let me see, Le Breton,' Dr. Greatrex observed to the new master,
+'you've taken rooms for yourself in West Street for the present--you'll
+take a house on the parade by-and-by, no doubt. Now, which church
+do you mean to go to?'
+
+'Well, really,' Ernest answered, taken a little aback at the
+suddenness of the question, 'I haven't had time to think about it
+yet.'
+
+The doctor frowned slightly. 'Not had time to think about it,'
+he repeated, rather severely. 'Not had time to think about such
+a serious question as your particular place of worship! You quite
+surprise me. Well, if you'll allow me to make a suggestion in the
+matter it would be that you and Mrs. Le Breton should take seats,
+for the present at least, at St. Martha's. The parish church is high,
+decidedly high, and I wouldn't recommend you to go there; most of
+our parents don't approve of it. You're an Oxford man, I know, and
+so I suppose you're rather high yourself; but in this particular
+matter I would strongly advise you to subordinate your own personal
+feelings to the parents' wishes. Then there's St. Jude's; St.
+Jude's is distinctly low--quite Evangelical in fact: indeed, I may
+say, scarcely what I should consider sound church principles at
+all in any way; and I think you ought most certainly to avoid it
+sedulously. Evangelicism is on the decline at present in Pilbury
+Regis. As to St. Barnabas--Barabbas they call it generally, a most
+irreverent joke, but, of course, inevitable--Barabbas is absolutely
+Ritualistic. Many of our parents object to it most strongly. But
+St. Martha's is a quiet, moderate, inoffensive church in every
+respect--sound and sensible, and free from all extremes. You can
+give no umbrage to anybody, even the most cantankerous, by going
+to St. Martha's. The High Church people fraternise with it on the
+one hand, and the moderate church people fraternise with it on the
+other, while as to the Evangelicals and the dissenters, they hardly
+contribute any boys to the school, or if they do, they don't object
+to unobtrusive church principles. Indeed, my experience has been,
+Le Breton, that even the most rabid dissenters prefer to have their
+sons educated by a sound, moderate, high-principled, and, if I may
+say so, neutral-tinted church clergyman.' And the doctor complacently
+pulled his white tie straight before the big gilt-framed drawing-room
+mirror.
+
+'Then, again,' the doctor went on placidly in a bland tone of
+mild persuasion, 'there's the question of politics. Politics are
+a very ticklish matter, I can assure you, in Pilbury Regis. Have
+you any fixed political opinions of your own, Le Breton, or are
+you waiting to form them till you've had some little experience in
+your profession?'
+
+'My opinions,' Ernest answered timidly, 'so far as they can be
+classed under any of the existing political formulas at all, are
+decidedly Liberal--I may even say Radical.'
+
+The doctor bit his lip and frowned severely. 'Radical,' he said,
+slowly, with a certain delicate tinge of acerbity in his tone.
+'That's bad. If you will allow me to interpose in the matter, I
+should strongly advise you, for your own sake, to change them at
+once and entirely. I don't object to moderate Liberalism--perhaps
+as many as one-third of our parents are moderate Liberals;
+but decidedly the most desirable form of political belief for a
+successful schoolmaster is a quiet and gentlemanly, but unswerving
+Conservatism. I don't say you ought to be an uncompromising
+old-fashioned Tory--far from it: that alienates not only the
+dissenters, but even the respectable middle-class Liberals. What
+is above all things expected in a schoolmaster is a central position
+in politics, so to speak--a careful avoidance of all extremes--a
+readiness to welcome all reasonable progress, while opposing in
+a conciliatory spirit all revolutionary or excessive changes--in
+short, an attitude of studied moderation. That, if you will allow
+me to advise you, Le Breton, is the sort of thing, you may depend
+upon it, that most usually meets the wishes of the largest possible
+number of pupils' parents.'
+
+'I'm afraid,' Ernest answered, as respectfully as possible, 'my
+political convictions are too deeply seated to be subordinated to
+my professional interests.'
+
+'Eh! What!' the doctor cried sharply. 'Subordinate your principles
+to your personal interests! Oh, pray don't mistake me so utterly
+as that! Not at all, not at all, my dear Le Breton. I don't mean
+that for the shadow of a second. What I mean is rather this,' and
+here the doctor cleared his throat and pulled round his white tie
+a second time, 'that a schoolmaster, considering attentively what
+is best for his pupils, mark you--we all exist for our pupils, you
+know, my dear fellow, don't we?--a schoolmaster should avoid such
+action as may give any unnecessary scandal, you see, or seem to
+clash with the ordinary opinion of the pupils' parents. Of course, if
+your views are fully formed, and are of a mildly Liberal complexion
+(put it so, I beg of you, and don't use that distressful word
+Radical), I wouldn't for the world have you act contrary to them.
+But I wouldn't have you obtrude them too ostentatiously--for your
+own sake, Le Breton, for your own sake, I assure you. Remember,
+you're a very young man yet: you have plenty of time before you to
+modify your opinions in: as you go on, you'll modify them--moderate
+them--bring them into harmony with the average opinions of ordinary
+parents. Don't commit yourself at present--that's all I would
+say to you--don't commit yourself at present. When you're as old
+as I am, my dear fellow, you'll see through all these youthful
+extravagances.'
+
+'And as to the church, Mr. Le Breton,' said Mrs. Greatrex, with
+bland suggestiveness from the ottoman, 'of course, we regard the
+present very unsatisfactory arrangement as only temporary. The
+doctor hopes in time to get a chapel built, which is much nicer
+for the boys, and also more convenient for the masters and their
+families--they all have seats, of course, in the chancel. At Charlton
+College, where the doctor was an assistant for some years, before
+we came to Pilbury, there was one of the under-masters, a young man
+of very good family, who took such an interest in the place that
+he not only contributed a hundred pounds out of his own pocket
+towards building a chapel, but also got ever so many of his wealthy
+friends elsewhere to subscribe, first to that, and then to the organ
+and stained-glass window. We've got up a small building fund here
+ourselves already, of which the doctor's treasurer, and we hope
+before many years to have a really nice chapel, with good music
+and service well done--the kind of thing that'll be of use to the
+school, and have an excellent moral effect upon the boys in the
+way of religious training.'
+
+'No doubt,' Ernest answered evasively, 'you'll soon manage to raise
+the money in such a place as Pilbury.'
+
+'No doubt,' the doctor replied, looking at him with a searching
+glance, and evidently harbouring an uncomfortable suspicion,
+already, that this young man had not got the moral and religious
+welfare of the boys quite so deeply at heart as was desirable in
+a model junior assistant master. 'Well, well, we shall see you at
+school to-morrow morning, Le Breton: till then I hope you'll find
+yourselves quite comfortable in your new lodgings.'
+
+Ernest went back from this visit of ceremony with a doubtful heart,
+and left Dr. and Mrs. Greatrex alone to discuss their new acquisition.
+
+'Well, Maria,' said the doctor, in a dubious tone of voice, as soon
+as Ernest was fairly out of hearing, 'what do you think of him?'
+
+'Think!' answered Mrs. Greatrex, energetically. 'Why, I don't think
+at all. I feel sure he'll never, never, never make a schoolmaster!'
+
+'I'm afraid not,' the doctor responded, pensively. 'I'm afraid
+not, Maria. He's got ideas of his own, I regret to say; and, what's
+worse, they're not the right ones.'
+
+'Oh, he'll never do,' Mrs. Greatrex continued, scornfully. 'Nothing
+at all professional about him in any way. No interest or enthusiasm
+in the matter of the chapel; not a spark of responsiveness even
+about the stained-glass window; hardly a trace of moral or religious
+earnestness, of care for the welfare and happiness of the dear boys.
+He wouldn't in the least impress intending parents--or, rather, I
+feel sure he'd impress them most unfavourably. The best thing we
+can do, now we've got him, is to play off his name on relations in
+society, but to keep the young man himself as far as possible in
+the background. I confess he's a disappointment--a very great and
+distressing disappointment.'
+
+'He is, he is certainly,' the doctor acquiesced, with a sigh of
+regretfulness. 'I'm afraid we shall never be able to make much of
+him. But we must do our best--for his own sake, and the sake of the
+boys and parents, it's our duty, Maria, to do our best with him.'
+
+'Oh, of course,' Mrs. Greatrex replied, languidly: 'but I'm bound
+to say, I'm sure it'll prove a very thankless piece of duty. Young
+men of his sort have never any proper sense of gratitude.'
+
+Meanwhile, Edie, in the little lodgings in a side street near the
+school-house, had run out quickly to open the door for Ernest, and
+waited anxiously to hear his report upon their new employers.
+
+'Well, Ernest dear,' she asked, with something of the old childish
+brightness in her eager manner, 'and what do you think of them?'
+
+'Why, Edie,' Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead gently,
+'I don't want to judge them too hastily, but I'm inclined to
+fancy, on first sight, that both the doctor and his wife are most
+egregious and unmitigated humbugs.'
+
+'Humbugs, Ernest! why, how do you mean?'
+
+'Well, Edie, they've got the moral and religious welfare of the
+boys at their very finger ends; and, do you know--I don't want to
+be uncharitable--but I somehow imagine they haven't got it at heart
+as well. However, we must do our best, and try to fall in with
+them.'
+
+And for a whole year Ernest and Edie did try to fall in with them
+to the best of their ability. It was hard work, for though the
+doctor himself was really at bottom a kind-hearted man, with a mere
+thick veneer of professional humbug inseparable from his unhappy
+calling, Mrs. Greatrex was a veritable thorn in the flesh to poor
+little natural honest-hearted Edie. When she found that the Le
+Bretons didn't mean to take a house on the Parade or elsewhere,
+but were to live ingloriously in wee side street lodgings, her
+disappointment was severe and extreme; but when she incidentally
+discovered that Mrs. Le Breton was positively a grocer's daughter
+from a small country town, her moral indignation against the baseness
+of mankind rose almost to white heat. To think that young Le Breton
+should have insinuated himself into the position of third master
+under false pretences--should have held out as qualifications for
+the post his respectable connections, when he knew perfectly well
+all the time that he was going to marry somebody who was not in
+Society--it was really quite too awfully wicked and deceptive and
+unprincipled of him! A very bad, dishonest young man, she was very
+much afraid; a young man with no sense of truth or honour about
+him, though, of course, she wouldn't say so for the world before
+any of the parents, or do anything to injure the poor young fellow's
+future prospects if she could possibly help it. But Mrs. Greatrex
+felt sure that Ernest had come to Pilbury of malice prepense, as
+part of a deep-laid scheme to injure and ruin the doctor by his
+horrid revolutionary notions. 'He does it on purpose,' she used to
+say; 'he talks in that way because he knows it positively shocks
+and annoys us. He pretends to be very innocent all the time; but
+at heart he's a malignant, jealous, uncharitable creature. I'm sure
+I wish he had never come to Pilbury Regis! And to go quarrelling
+with his own mother, too--the unnatural man! The only respectable
+relation he had, and the only one at all likely to produce any good
+or salutary effect upon intending parents!'
+
+'My dear,' the doctor would answer apologetically, 'you're really
+quite too hard upon young Le Breton. As far as school-work goes, he's
+a capital master, I assure you--so conscientious, and hard-working,
+and systematic. He does his very best with the boys, even with that
+stupid lout, Blenkinsopp major; and he has managed to din something
+into them in mathematics somehow, so that I'm sure the fifth form
+will pass a better examination this term than any term since we
+first came here. Now that, you know, is really a great thing, even
+if he doesn't quite fall in with our preconceived social requirements.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't know about the mathematics or the fifth form,
+Joseph,' Mrs. Geatrex used to reply, with great dignity. 'That
+sort of thing falls under your department, I'm aware, not under
+mine. But I'm sure that for all social purposes, Mr. Le Breton
+is really a great deal worse than useless. A more unchristian,
+disagreeable, self-opinionated, wrong-headed, objectionable young
+man I never came across in the whole course of my experience. However,
+you wouldn't listen to my advice upon the subject, so it's no use
+talking any longer about it. I always advised you not to take him
+without further enquiry into his antecedents; and you overbore me:
+you said he was so well-connected, and so forth, and would hear
+nothing against him; so I wish you joy now of your precious bargain.
+The only thing left for us is to find some good opportunity of
+getting rid of him.'
+
+'I like the young man, as far as he goes,' Dr. Greatrex replied
+once, with unwonted spirit, 'and I won't get rid of him at all, my
+dear, unless he obliges me to. He's really well meaning, in spite
+of all his absurdities, and upon my word, Maria, I believe he's
+thoroughly honest in his opinions.'
+
+Mrs. Greatrex only met this flat rebellion by an indirect remark
+to the effect that some people seemed absolutely destitute of the
+very faintest glimmering power of judging human character.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE DRAMA.
+
+
+'The Primate of Fiji' was duly accepted and put into rehearsal by
+the astute and enterprising manager of the Ambiguities Theatre.
+'It's a risk,' he said candidly, when he read the manuscript over,
+'a decided risk, Mr. Berkeley; I acknowledge the riskiness, but I
+don't mind trying it for all that. You see, you've staked everything
+upon the doubtful supposition that the Public possesses a certain
+amount of elementary intelligence, and a certain appreciation
+of genuine original wit and humour. Your play's literature, good
+literature; and that's rather a speculative element to introduce
+into the regular theatre nowadays. Illegitimate, I should call it;
+decidedly illegitimate--but still, perhaps, worth trying. Do you
+know the story about old Simon Burbury, the horsedealer? Young Simon
+says to him one morning, "Father, don't you think we might manage
+to conduct this business of ours without always telling quite
+so many downright lies about it?" The old man looks back at him
+reproachfully, and says with a solemn shake of the head, "Ah, Simon,
+Simon, little did I ever think I should live to see a son of mine
+go in for speculation!" Well, my dear sir, that's pretty much how
+a modern manager feels about the literary element in the drama.
+The Public isn't accustomed to it, and there's no knowing how they
+may take it. Shakespeare, now, they stand readily enough, because
+he's an old-established and perfectly respectable family purveyor.
+Sheridan, too, of course, and one play of Goldsmith's, and a trifle
+or so of George Colman--all recognised and all tolerated because
+of their old prescriptive respectability. But for a new author to
+aim at being literary's rather presumptuous; now tell me yourself,
+isn't it? Seems as if he was setting himself up for a heaven-sent
+genius, and trying to sit upon the older dramatists of the present
+generation. Melodrama, sensation, burlesque--that's all right
+enough--perfectly legitimate; but a real literary comic opera, with
+good words and good music--it IS a little strong, for a beginner,
+Mr. Berkeley, you WILL acknowledge.'
+
+'But don't you think,' Arthur answered, smiling good-humouredly at
+his cynical frankness, 'an educated and cultured Public is beginning
+to grow up that may, perhaps, really prefer a little literature,
+provided it's made light enough and attractive enough for their
+rapid digestion? Don't you think intelligent people are beginning
+to get just a trifle sick of burlesque, and spectacle, and sensation,
+and melodrama?'
+
+'Why, my dear sir,' the manager answered promptly, 'that's the exact
+chance on which I'm calculating when I venture to accept your comic
+opera from an unknown beginner. It's clever, there's no denying
+that, and I hope the fact won't be allowed to tell against it: but
+the music's bright and lively; the songs are quaint and catching;
+the dialogue's brisk and not too witty; and there's plenty of
+business--plenty of business in it. I incline to think we can get
+together a house at the Ambiguities that'll enter into the humour
+of the thing, and see what your play's driving at. How did you learn
+all about stage requirements, though? I never saw a beginner's
+play with so little in it that was absolutely impossible.'
+
+'I was a Shooting Star at Oxford,' Berkeley answered simply,
+'so that I know something--like a despised amateur--about stage
+necessities; and I've written one or two little pieces before for
+private acting. Besides, Watkiss has helped me with all the technical
+arrangements of the little opera.'
+
+'It'll do,' the manager answered, more confidently; 'I won't predict
+a success, because you know a manager should never prophesy unless
+he knows; but I think there's a Public in London that'll take it
+in, just as they took in "Caste" and "Society," twenty years back,
+at the Prince of Wales's. Anyhow, I'm quite prepared to give it
+a fair trial.'
+
+On the first night, Arthur Berkeley and the Progenitor went down
+in fear and trembling to the stage door of the Ambiguities. There
+was a full house, and the critics were all present, in some surprise
+at the temerity of this new man; for it was noised abroad already
+by those who had seen the rehearsals that 'The Primate of Fiji' was
+a fresh departure, after its own fashion, in the matter of English
+comic opera. The curtain rose upon the chorus of mermaids, and
+the first song was a decided hit. Still the Public, as becomes a
+first night, maintained a dignified and critical reserve. When the
+President of the Board of Trade, in full court costume, appeared
+upon the scene, in the midst of the very realistic long-haired
+sea-ladies, the audience was half shocked for a moment by the
+utter incongruity of the situation; but after a while they began
+to discover that the incongruity was part of the joke, and they
+laughed quietly a sedate and moderate laugh of suspended judgment.
+As the Progenitor had predicted, the gods were the first to enter
+into the spirit of the fun, and to give a hand to the Primate's
+first sermon. The scuntific professors on the Challenger Expedition
+took the fancy of the house a little more decidedly; and even the
+stalls thawed visibly when the professor of biology delivered his
+famous exposition of the evolution hypothesis to the assembled
+chiefs of Raratouga. But it was the one feeble second-hand old joke
+of the piece that really brought pit and boxes down together in a
+sudden fit of inextinguishable laughter. The professor of political
+economy enquired diligently, with note book in hand, of the Princess
+of Fiji, whether she thought the influence of the missionaries
+beneficial or otherwise; whether she considered these preachers
+of a new religion really good or not; to which the unsophisticated
+child of nature responded naively, 'Good, very good--roasted; but
+not quite so good boiled,' and the professor gravely entered the
+answer in his philosophic note-book. It was a very ancient jest
+indeed, but it tickled the ribs of the house mightily, as ancient
+jests usually do, and they burst forthwith into a hearty roar of
+genuine approval. Then Arthur began to breathe more freely. After
+that the house toned down again quietly, and gave no decided token
+of approbation till the end of the piece. When the curtain dropped
+there was a lull of hushed expectation for poor Arthur Berkeley;
+and at its close the house broke out into a storm of applause, and
+'The Primate of Fiji' had firmly secured its position as the one
+great theatrical success of the present generation.
+
+There was a loud cry of 'Author! Author!' and Arthur Berkeley,
+hardly knowing how he got there, or what he was standing on, found
+himself pushed from behind by friendly hands, on to the narrow
+space between the curtain and the footlights. He became aware that
+a very hot and red body, presumably himself, was bowing mechanically
+to a seething and clapping mass of hands and faces over the whole
+theatre. Backing out again, in the same semi-conscious fashion,
+with the universe generally reeling on more than one distinct axis
+all around him, he was seized and hand-shaken violently, first
+by the Progenitor, then by the manager, and then by half a dozen
+other miscellaneous and unknown persons. At last, after a lot more
+revolutions of the universe, he found himself comfortably pitched
+into a convenient hansom, with the Progenitor by his side; and
+hardly knew anything further till he discovered his own quiet supper
+table at the Chelsea lodgings, and saw his father mixing a strong
+glass of brandy and seltzer for him. to counteract the strength of
+the excitement.
+
+Next morning Arthur Berkeley 'awoke, and found himself famous.'
+'The Primate of Fiji' was the rage of the moment. Everybody went to
+hear it--everybody played its tunes at their own pianos--everybody
+quoted it, and adapted it, and used its clever catchwords as the
+pet fashionable slang expressions of the next three seasons. Arthur
+Berkeley was the lion of the hour; and the mantelpiece of the
+quiet little Chelsea study was ranged three rows deep with cards
+of invitation from people whose very names Arthur had never heard
+of six months before, and whom the Progenitor declared it was a
+sin and shame for any respectable young man of sound economical
+education even to countenance. There were countesses, and marchionesses,
+too, among the senders of those coronetted parallelograms of waste
+pasteboard, as the Progenitor called them--nay, there was even one
+invitation on the mantelpiece that bore the three strawberry leaves
+and other insignia of Her Grace the Duchess of Leicestershire.
+
+'Can't you give us just ONE evening, Mr. Berkeley,' said Lady
+Hilda Tregellis, as she sat on the centre ottoman in Mrs. Campbell
+Moncrieff's drawing-room with Arthur Berkeley talking lightly
+to her about the nothings which constitute polite conversation in
+the nineteenth century. 'Just one evening, any day after the next
+fortnight? We should be so delighted if you could manage to favour
+us.'
+
+'No, I'm afraid I can't, Lady Hilda,' Arthur answered. 'My evenings
+are so dreadfully full just now; and besides, you know, I'm not
+accustomed to so much society, and it unsettles me for my daily work.
+After all, you see, I'm a journeyman playwright now, and I have to
+labour at my unholy calling just like the theatrical carpenter.'
+
+'How delightfully frank,' thought Lady Hilda. 'Really I like him
+quite immensely.--Not even the afternoon on Wednesday fortnight?'
+she went on aloud. 'You might come to our garden party on Wednesday
+fortnight.'
+
+'Quite impossible,' Arthur Berkeley answered. 'That's my regular
+day at Pilbury Regis.'
+
+'Pilbury Regis!' cried Lady Hilda, starting a little. 'You don't
+mean to say you have engagements, and in the thick of the season,
+too, at Pilbury Regis!'
+
+'Yes, I have, every Wednesday fortnight,' Berkeley answered, with
+a smile. 'I go there regularly. You see, Lady Hilda, Wednesday's
+a half-holiday at Pilbury Grammar School; so every second week I
+run down for the day to visit an old friend of mine, who's also an
+acquaintance of yours, I believe,--Ernest Le Breton. He's married
+now, you know, and has got a mastership at the Pilbury Grammar
+School.'
+
+'Then you know Mr. Le Breton!' cried Lady Hilda, charmed at this
+rapprochement of two delightfully original men. 'He is so nice.
+I like him immensely, and I'm so glad you're a friend of his. And
+Mrs. Le Breton, too; wasn't it nice of him? Tell me, Mr. Berkeley,
+was she really and truly a grocer's daughter?'
+
+Berkeley's voice grew a little stiffer and colder as he answered,
+'She was a sister of Oswald of Oriel, the great mathematician, who
+was killed last year by falling from the summit of a peak in the
+Bernina.'
+
+'Oh, yes, yes, I know all about that, of course,' said Lady Hilda,
+quickly and carelessly. 'I know her brother was very clever and
+all that sort of thing; but then there are so many men who are very
+clever, aren't there? The really original thing about it all, you
+know, was that he actually married a grocer's daughter. That was
+really quite too delightfully original. I was charmed when I heard
+about it: I thought it was so exactly like dear Mr. Le Breton.
+He's so deliciously unconventional in every way. He was Lynmouth's
+tutor for a while, as you've heard, of course; and then he went
+away from us, at a moment's notice, so nicely, because he wouldn't
+stand papa's abominable behaviour, and quite right, too, when it
+was a matter of conscience--I dare say he's told you all about it,
+that horrid pigeon-shooting business. Well, and so you know Mrs.
+Le Breton--do tell me, what sort of person is she?'
+
+'She's very nice, and very good, and very pretty, and very clever,'
+Arthur answered, a little constrainedly. 'I don't know that I can
+tell you anything more about her than that.'
+
+'Then you really like her?' said Lady Hilda, warmly. 'You think
+her a fit wife for Mr. Le Breton, do you?'
+
+'I think him a very lucky fellow indeed to have married such a
+charming and beautiful woman,' Arthur answered, quietly.
+
+Lady Hilda noticed his manner, and read through it at once with a
+woman's quickness. 'Aha!' she said to herself: 'the wind blows that
+way, does it? What a very remarkable girl she must be, really,
+to have attracted two such men as Mr. Berkeley and Mr. Le Breton.
+I've lost one of them to her; I can't very well lose the other,
+too: for after Ernest Le Breton, I've never seen any man I should
+care to marry so much as Mr. Arthur Berkeley.'
+
+'Lady Hilda,' said the hostess, coming up to her at that moment,
+'you'll play us something, won't you? You know you promised to
+bring your music.'
+
+Hilda rose at once with stately alacrity. Nothing could have pleased
+her better. She went to the piano, and, to the awe and astonishment
+of Mrs. Campbell Moncrieff, took out an arrangement of the Fijian
+war-dance from 'The Primate of Fiji.' It suited her brilliant
+slap-dash style of execution admirably; and she felt she had never
+played so well in her life before. The presence of the composer,
+which would have frightened and unnerved most girls of her age, only
+made Hilda Tregellis the bolder and the more ambitious. Here was
+somebody at least who knew something about it; none of your ordinary
+fashionable amateurs and mere soulless professional performers,
+but the very man who had made the music--the man in whose brain the
+notes had first gathered themselves together into speaking melody,
+and who could really judge the comparative merits of her rapid
+execution. She played with wonderful verve and spirit, so that
+Lady Exmoor, seated on the side sofa opposite, though shocked at
+first at Hilda's choice of a piece, glanced more than once at the
+wealthiest young commoner present (she had long since mentally
+resigned herself to the prospect of a commoner for that poor dear
+foolish Hilda), and closely watched his face to see what effect
+this unwonted outburst of musical talent might succeed in producing
+upon his latent susceptibilities. But Lady Hilda herself wasn't
+thinking of the wealthy commoner; she was playing straight at Arthur
+Berkeley: and when she saw that Arthur Berkeley's mouth had melted
+slowly into an approving smile, she played even more brilliantly
+and better than ever, after her bold, smart, vehement fashion. As
+she left the piano, Arthur said, 'Thank you; I have never heard
+the piece better rendered.' And Lady Hilda felt that that was a
+triumph which far outweighed any number of inane compliments from
+a whole regiment of simpering Algies, Monties, and Berties.
+
+'You can't say any evening, then, Mr. Berkeley?' she said once
+more, as she held out her hand to him to say 'Good-night' a little
+later: 'not any evening at all, or part of an evening? You might
+really reconsider your engagements.'
+
+Arthur hesitated visibly. 'Well, possibly I might manage it,' he
+said, wavering, 'though, I assure you, my evenings are very much
+more than full already.'
+
+'Then don't make it an evening,' said Lady Hilda, pressingly.
+'Make it lunch. After all, Mr. Berkeley, it's we ourselves who want
+to see you; not to show you off as a curiosity to all the rest of
+London. We have silly people enough in the evenings; but if you'll
+come to lunch with us alone one day, we shall have an opportunity
+of talking to you on our own account.'
+
+Lady Hilda was tall and beautiful, and Lady Hilda spoke. as she
+always used to speak, with manifest sincerity. Now, it is not in
+human nature not to feel flattered when a beautiful woman pays
+one genuine homage; and Arthur Berkeley was quite as human, after
+all, as most other people. 'You're very kind,' he said, smiling.
+'I must make it lunch, then, though I really ought to be working
+in the mornings instead of running about merely to amuse myself.
+What day will suit you best?'
+
+'Oh, not to amuse yourself, Mr. Berkeley,' Hilda answered pointedly,
+'but to gratify us. That, you know, is a work of benevolence. Say
+Monday next, then, at two o'clock. Will that do for you?'
+
+'Perfectly,' Berkeley answered, taking her proffered hand extended
+to him with just that indefinable air of frankness which Lady
+Hilda knew so well how to throw into all her actions. 'Good evening.
+Wilton Place, isn't it!--Gracious heavens!' he thought to himself,
+as he glanced after her satin train sweeping slowly down the grand
+staircase, 'what on earth would the dear old Progenitor say if only
+he saw me in the midst of these meaningless aristocratic orgies. I
+am positively half-wheedled, it seems, into making love to an earl's
+daughter! If this sort of thing continues, I shall find myself,
+before I know it, connected by marriage with two-thirds of the
+British peerage. A beautiful woman, really, and quite queen-like
+in her manner when she doesn't choose rather to be unaffectedly
+gracious. How she sat upon that tall young man with the brown
+moustaches over by the mantelpiece! I didn't hear what she said
+to him, but I could see he was utterly crushed by the way he slank
+away with his tail between his legs, like a whipped spaniel. A
+splendid woman--and no doubt about it; looks as if she'd stepped
+straight out of the canvas of Titian, with the pearls in her hair
+and everything else exactly as he painted them. The handsomest
+girl I ever saw in my life--but not like Edie Le Breton. They say
+a man can only fall in love once in a lifetime. I wonder whether
+there's any truth in it! Well, well, you won't often see a finer
+woman in her own style than Lady Hilda Tregellis. Monday next, at
+two precisely; I needn't make a note of it--no fear of my forgetting.'
+
+'I really do think,' Lady Hilda said to herself as she unrolled
+the pearls from her thick hair in her own room that winter evening,
+'I almost like him better than I did Ernest Le Breton. The very
+first night I saw him at Lady Mary's I fell quite in love with his
+appearance, before I knew even who he was; and now that I've found
+out all about him, I never did hear anything so absolutely and
+delightfully original. His father a common shoemaker! That, to
+begin with, throws Ernest Le Breton quite into the shade! HIS father
+was a general in the Indian army--nothing could be more BANAL.
+Then Mr. Berkeley began life as a clergyman; but now he's taken off
+his white choker, and wears a suit of grey tweed like any ordinary
+English gentleman. So delightfully unconventional, isn't it? At
+last, to crown it all, he not only composes delicious music, but
+goes and writes a comic opera--such a comic opera! And the best
+of it is, success hasn't turned his head one atom. He doesn't run
+with vulgar eagerness after the great people, like your ordinary
+everyday successful nobody. He took no more notice of me, myself,
+at first, because I was Lady Hilda Tregellis, than if I'd been a
+common milkmaid; and he wouldn't come to our garden party because
+he wanted to go down to Pilbury Regis to visit the Le Bretons at
+their charity school or something! It was only after I played the
+war-dance arrangement so well--I never played so brilliantly in my
+life before--that he began to alter and soften a little. Certainly,
+these pearls do thoroughly become me. I think he looked after me
+when I was leaving the room just a tiny bit, as if he was really
+pleased with me for my own sake, and not merely because I happen
+to be called Lady Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE.
+
+
+'It's really very annoying, this letter from Selah,' Herbert Le
+Breton murmured to himself, as he carefully burnt the compromising
+document, envelope and all, with a fusee from his oriental silver
+pocket match-case. 'I had hoped the thing had all been forgotten
+by this time, after her long silence, and my last two judiciously
+chilly letters--a sort of slow refrigerating process for poor
+shivering naked little Cupid. But here, just at the very moment
+when I fancied the affair had quite blown over, comes this most
+objectionable letter, telling me that Selah has actually betaken
+herself to London to meet me; and what makes it more annoying
+still, I wanted to go up myself this week to dine at home with
+Ethel Faucit. Mother's plan about Ethel Faucit is exceedingly
+commendable; a girl with eight hundred a year, cultivated tastes,
+and no father or other encumbrances dragging after her. I always
+said I should like to marry a poor orphan. A very desirable young
+woman to annex in every way! And now, here's Selah Briggs--ugh!
+how could I ever have gone and entangled myself in my foolish days
+with a young woman burdened by such a cognomen!--here's Selah
+Briggs must needs run away from Hastings, and try to hunt me up on
+her own account in London. If I dared, I wouldn't go up to see her
+at all, and would let the thing die a natural death of inanition--sine
+Cerere et Baccho, and so forth--(I'm afraid, poor girl, she'll be
+more likely to find Bacchus than Ceres if she sticks in London);
+but the plain fact is, I don't dare--that's the long and the short
+of it. If I did, Selah'd be tracking me to earth here in Oxford,
+and a nice mess that'd make of it! She doesn't know my name, to
+be sure; but as soon as she called at college and found nobody of
+the name of Walters was known there, she'd lie in wait for me about
+the gates, as sure as my name's Herbert Le Breton, and sooner or
+later she'd take it out of me, one way or the other. Selah has as
+many devils in her as the Gergesene who dwelt among the tombs, I'll
+be sworn to it; and if she's provoked, she'll let them all loose in
+a legion to crush me. I'd better see her and have it out quietly,
+once for all, than try to shirk it here in Oxford and let myself
+in at the end for the worse condemnation.'
+
+Under this impression, Herbert Le Breton, leaning back in his
+well-padded oak armchair, ordered his scout to pack his portmanteau,
+and set off by the very first fast train for Paddington station.
+He would get over his interview with Selah Briggs in the afternoon,
+and return to Epsilon Terrace in good time for Lady Le Breton's
+dinner. Say what you like of it, Ethel Faucit and eight hundred a
+year, certe redditum, was a thing in no wise to be sneezed at by
+a judicious and discriminating person.
+
+Herbert left his portmanteau in the cloakroom at Paddington, and
+drove off in a hansom to the queer address which Selah had given
+him. It was a fishy lodging of the commoner sort in a back street
+at Notting Hill, not far from the Portobello Road. At the top of the
+stairs, Selah stood waiting to meet him, and seemed much astonished
+when, instead of kissing her, as was his wont, he only shook her
+hand somewhat coolly. But she thought to herself that probably
+he didn't wish to be too demonstrative before the eyes of the
+lodging-house people, and so took no further notice of it.
+
+'Well, Selah,' Herbert said, as soon as he entered the room, and
+seated himself quietly on one of the straight-backed wooden chairs,
+'why on earth have you come to London?'
+
+'Goodness gracious, Herbert,' Selah answered, letting loose the
+floodgates of her rapid speech after a week's silence, 'don't you
+go and ask me why I've done it. Ask me rather why I didn't go and
+do it long ago. Father, he's got more and more aggravating every
+day for the last twelve-month, till at last I couldn't atand him any
+longer. Prayer meetings, missionary meetings, convention meetings,
+all that sort of thing I could put up with somehow; but when it
+came to private exhortations and prayer over me with three or four
+of the godliest neighbours, I made up my mind not to put up with
+it one day longer. So last week I packed up two or three little
+things hurriedly, and left a note behind to say I felt I was too
+unregenerate to live in such spiritual company any longer; and
+came straight up here to London, and took these lodgings. Emily
+Lucas, she wrote to me from Hastings--she's the daughter of the
+hairdresser in our street, you know, and I told her to write to me
+to the Post-office. Emily Lucas wrote to me that there was weeping
+and gnashing of teeth, and swearing almost, when they found out
+I'd really left them. And well there might be, indeed, for I did
+more work for them (mostly just to get away for a while from the
+privileges) than they'll ever get a hired servant to do for them in
+this world, Herbert.' Herbert moved uneasily on his chair, as he
+noticed how glibly she called him now by his Christian name instead
+of saying 'Mr. Walters.' 'And Emily says,' Selah went on, without
+stopping to take breath for a second, 'that father put an advertisement
+at once into the "Christian Mirror"--pah, as if it was likely
+I should go buying or reading the "Christian Mirror," indeed--to
+say that if "S. B." would return at once to her affectionate and
+injured parents, the whole past would be forgotten and forgiven.
+Forgotten and forgiven! I should think it would, indeed! But he
+didn't ask me whether their eternal bothering and plaguing of me
+about my precious soul for twenty years past would also be forgotten
+and forgiven! He didn't ask me whether all their meetings, and
+conventions, and prayers, and all the rest of it, would be forgotten
+and forgiven! My precious soul! In Turkey they say the women have
+no souls! I often wished it had been my happy lot to be born in
+Turkey, and then, perhaps, they wouldn't have worried me so much
+about it. I'm sure I often said to them, "Oh don't bother on account
+of my poor unfortunate misguided little soul any longer. It's lost
+altogether, I don't doubt, and it doesn't in the least trouble me.
+If it was somebody else's, I could understand your being in such
+a fearful state of mind about it; but as it's only mine, you know,
+I'm sure it really doesn't matter." And then they'd only go off
+worse than ever,--mother doing hysterics, and so forth--and say I
+was a wicked, bad, abominable scoffer, and that it made them horribly
+frightened even to listen to me. As if I wasn't more likely to
+know the real value of my own soul than anybody else was!'
+
+Herbert looked at her curiously and anxiously as she delivered
+this long harangue in a voluble stream, without a single pause
+or break; and then he said, in his quiet voice, 'How old are you,
+Selah?'
+
+'Twenty-two,' Selah answered, carelessly. 'Why, Herbert?'
+
+'Oh, nothing,' Herbert replied, turning away his eyes from her keen,
+searching gaze uncomfortably. He congratulated himself inwardly
+on the lucky fact that she was fully of age, for then at least he
+could only get into a row with her, and not with her parents. 'And
+now, Selah, do you know what I strongly advise you?'
+
+'To get married at once,' Selah put in promptly.
+
+Herbert drew himself up stiffly, and looked at her cautiously
+out of the corner of his eyes. 'No,' he said slowly, 'not to get
+married, but to go back again for the present to your people at
+Hastings. Consider, Selah, you've done a very foolish thing indeed
+by coming here alone in this way. You've compromised yourself,
+and you've compromised me. Indeed, if it weren't for the lasting
+affection I bear you'--he put this in awkwardly, but he felt it
+necessary to do so, for the flash of Selah's eyes fairly cowed him
+for the moment--'I wouldn't have come here at all this afternoon
+to see you. It might get us both into very serious trouble,
+and--and--and delay the prospect of our marriage. You see, everything
+depends upon my keeping my fellowship until I can get an appointment
+to marry on. Anything that risks loss of the fellowship is really
+a measurable danger for both of us.'
+
+Selah looked at him very steadily with her big eyes, and Herbert
+felt that he was quailing a little under their piercing, withering
+inquisition. By Jove, what a splendid woman she was, though, when
+she was angry! 'Herbert,' she said, rising from her chair and
+standing her full height imperiously before him, 'Herbert, you're
+deceiving me. I almost believe you're shilly-shallying with me.
+I almost believe you don't ever really mean to marry me.'
+
+Herbert moved uneasily upon his wooden seat. What was he to do?
+Should he make a clean breast of it forthwith, and answer boldly,
+'Well, Selah, you have exactly diagnosed my mental attitude'?
+Or should he try to put her off a little with some meaningless
+explanatory platitudes? Or should he--by Jove, she was a very
+splendid woman!--should he take her in his arms that moment, kiss
+her doubts and fears away like a donkey, and boldly and sincerely
+promise to marry her? Pooh! not such a fool as all that comes to!
+not even with Selah before him now; for he was no boy any longer,
+and not to be caught by the mere vulgar charms of a flashy,
+self-asserting greengrocer's daughter.
+
+'Selah,' he said at last, after a long pause, 'I strongly advise
+you once more to return to Hastings for the present. You'll find
+it better for you in the end. If your people are quite unendurable--as
+I don't doubt they are from what you tell me--you could look about
+meanwhile for a temporary appointment, say as'--he checked himself
+from uttering the word 'shop girl,' and substituted for it, 'draper's
+assistant.'
+
+Selah looked at him angrily. 'What fools you men are about such
+things!' she said in a voice of utter scorn. 'When do you suppose
+I ever learnt the drapery? Or who do you suppose would ever give me
+a place in a shop of that sort without having learnt the drapery?
+I dare say you think it takes ten years to make one of you fine
+gentlemen at college, with your Greek and your Latin, but that the
+drapery, or the millinery, or the confectionery, comes by nature!
+However, that's not the question now. The question's simply
+this--Herbert Walters, do you or don't you mean to marry me?'
+
+'I must temporise,' Herbert thought to himself, placidly. 'This
+girl's quite too unreservedly categorical! She eliminates modality
+with a vengeance!' 'Well, Selah,' he said in his calmest and most
+deliberate manner, 'we must take a great many points into consideration
+before deciding on that matter.' And then he went on to tell her
+what seemed to him the pros and cons of an immediate marriage.
+Couldn't she get a place meanwhile of some sort? Couldn't she let
+him have time to look about him? Couldn't she go back just for
+a few days to Hastings, until he could hear of something feasible
+for either of them? Selah interrupted him more than once with
+forcible interjectional observations such as 'bosh!' and 'rubbish!'
+and when he had finished she burst out once more into a long and
+voluble statement.
+
+For more than an hour Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs fenced
+with one another, each after their own fashion, in the little fishy
+lodgings; and at every fresh thrust, Herbert parried so much the
+worse that at last Selah lost patience utterly, and rose in the
+end to the dignity of the situation. 'Herbert Walters,' she said,
+looking at him with unspeakable contempt, 'I see through your
+flimsy excuses now, and I feel certain you don't mean to marry me!
+You never did mean to marry me! You wanted to amuse yourself by
+making love to a poor girl in a country town, and now you'd like
+to throw her overboard and leave her alone to her own devices.
+I knew you meant that when you didn't write to me; but I wouldn't
+condemn you unheard; I gave you a chance to clear yourself. I see
+now you were trying to drop the acquaintance quietly, and make it
+seem as if I had backed out of it as well as you.'
+
+Herbert felt the moment for breaking through all reserve had finally
+arrived. 'You admirably interpret my motives in the matter, Selah,'
+he said coldly. 'I don't think it would be just of me to interfere
+with your prospects in life any longer. I can't say how long it
+may be before I am able to afford marriage; and, meanwhile, I'm
+preventing you from forming a natural alliance with some respectable
+and estimable young man in your own station. I should be sorry to
+stand in your way any further; but if I could offer you any small
+pecuniary assistance at any time, either now or hereafter, you know
+I'd be very happy indeed to do so, Selah.'
+
+The angry girl turned upon him fiercely. 'Selah!' she cried in a
+tone of crushing contempt. 'What do you mean by calling me Selah,
+sir? How dare you speak to me by my Christian name in the same
+breath you tell me you don't mean to marry me? How dare you have
+the insolence and impertinence to offer me money! Never say another
+word to me as long as you live, Herbert Walters; and leave me now,
+for I don't want to have anything more to say to you or your money
+for ever.'
+
+Herbert took up his hat doubtfully. 'Selah!--Selah!--Miss Briggs,
+I mean,' he said, falteringly, for at that moment Selah's face was
+terrible to look at. 'I'm very sorry, I can assure you, that this
+interview--and our pleasant acquaintance--should unfortunately
+have had such a disagreeable termination. For my own part'--Herbert
+was always politic--'I should have wished to part with you in no
+unfriendly spirit. I should have wished to learn your plans for
+the future, and to aid you in forming a suitable settlement in life
+hereafter. May I venture to ask, before I go, whether you mean
+to remain in London or to return to Hastings? As one who has been
+your sincere friend, I should at least like to know what are your
+movements for the immediate present. How long do you mean to stop
+here, and when you leave these rooms where do you think you will
+next go to?'--'Confoundedly awkward,' he thought to himself, 'to
+have her prowling about and dogging one's footsteps here in London.'
+
+Selah read through his miserable transparent little pretences at
+once with a woman's quick instinctive insight. 'Ugh!' she cried,
+pushing him away from her, figuratively, with a gesture of disgust,
+'do you think, you poor suspicious creature, I want to go spying
+you or following you all over London? Are you afraid, in your sordid
+little respectable way, that I'll come up to Oxford to pry and peep
+into that snug comfortable fellowship of yours? Do you suppose I'm
+so much in love with you, Herbert Walters, that I can't let you go
+without wanting to fawn upon you and run after you ever afterwards!
+Pah! you miserable, pitiable, contemptible cur and coward, are you
+afraid even of a woman! Go away, and don't be frightened. I never
+want to see you or speak to you again as long as I live, you
+wretched, lying, shuffling hypocrite. I'd rather go back to my own
+people at Hastings a thousand times over than have anything more to
+do with you. They may be narrow-minded, and bigoted, and ignorant,
+and stupid, but at least they're honest--they're not liars and
+hypocrites. Go this minute, Herbert Walters, go away this minute,
+and don't stand there fiddling and quivering with your hat like
+a whipped schoolboy, but go at once, and take my eternal loathing
+and contempt for a parting present with you!'
+
+Herbert held the door gingerly ajar for half a second, trying to
+think of a neat and appropriate epigram, but at that particular
+moment, for the life of him, he couldn't hit on one. So he closed
+the door after him quietly, and walking out alone into the street,
+immediately nailed a passing hansom. 'I didn't come out of that
+dilemma very creditably to myself, I must admit,' he thought with
+a burning face, as he rolled along quickly in the hansom; 'but
+anyhow, now I'm well out of it. The coast's all clear at last for
+Ethel Faucit. It's well to be off with the old love before you're
+on with the new, as that horrid vulgar practical proverb justly
+though somewhat coarsely puts it. Still, she's a perfectly magnificent
+creature, is Selah; and by Jove, when she got into that towering
+rage (and no wonder, for I won't be unjust to her in that respect),
+her tone and attitude would have done credit to any theatre. I should
+think Mrs. Siddons must have looked like that, say as Constance.
+Poor girl, I'm really sorry for her; from the very bottom of my
+heart, I'm really sorry for her. If it rested with me alone, hang
+me if I don't think I would positively have married her. But after
+all, the environment, you know, the environment is always too strong
+for us!'
+
+Meanwhile, in the shabby lodgings near the Portobello Road, poor
+Selah, the excitement once over, was lying with her proud face
+buried in the pillows, and crying her very life out in great sobs
+of utter misery. The daydream of her whole existence was gone for
+ever: the bubble was burst; and nothing stood before her but a
+future of utter drudgery. 'The brute, the cur, the mean wretch,'
+she said aloud between her sobs; 'and yet I loved him. How beautifully
+he talked, and how he made me love him. If it had only been a common
+everyday Methodist sweetheart, now! but Herbert Walters! Oh, God,
+how I hate him, and how I did love him!'
+
+When Herbert reached his mother's house in Epsilon Terrace, Lady Le
+Breton met him anxiously at the door. 'Herbert,' she said, almost
+weeping, 'my dear boy, what on earth should I do if it were not
+for you! You're the one comfort I have in all my children. Would
+you believe it--no, you won't believe it--as I was walking back
+here this afternoon with Mrs. Faucit (Ethel's aunt, of all people
+in the world), what do you think I saw, in our own main street,
+too, but a young man, decently dressed, in his shirt sleeves. No
+coat, I assure you, but only his shirt sleeves. Imagine my horror
+when he came up to us--Mrs. Faucit, too, you know--and said to me
+out loud, in the most unconcerned voice, "Well, mother!" I couldn't
+believe my eyes. Herbert, but I solemnly declare to you it was
+positively Ronald! You really could have knocked me down with a
+feather. Disgraceful, wasn't it, perfectly disgraceful!'
+
+'How on earth did he come so?' asked Herbert, almost smiling in
+spite of himself.
+
+'Why, do you know, Herbert,' Lady Le Breton answered somewhat
+obliquely, 'a few days since, I met him wheeling along a barrow full
+of coals for a dirty, grimy, ragged little girl from some alley or
+gutter somewhere. I believe they call the place the Mews--at the
+back of the terrace, you remember. He pretended the child wasn't
+big enough to wheel the coals, which was absurd, of course, or else
+her parents wouldn't have sent her; but I'm sure he really did it
+on purpose to annoy me. He never does these things when I'm not by
+to see; or if he does, I never see him. Now, that was bad enough in
+all conscience, wasn't it? but to-day what he did was still more
+outrageous. He met a poor man, as he calls him, in Westbourne
+Grove, who was one of his Christian brethren (is that the right
+expression?) and who declared he was next door to starving. So
+what must Ronald do, but run into a pawnbroker's--I shouldn't have
+thought he could ever have heard of such a place--and sell his
+coat, or something of the sort, and give the man (who was doubtless
+an impostor) all the money. Then he positively walked home in his
+shirt sleeves. I call it a most unchristian thing to do--and to
+walk straight into my very arms, too, as I was coming along with
+Mrs. Faucit.'
+
+Herbert offered at once such condolences as were in his power. 'And
+are the Faucits coming to night?' he asked eagerly.
+
+Lady Le Breton kissed him again gently on the forehead. 'Oh,
+Herbert,' she said warmly, 'I can't tell you what a comfort you
+always are to me. Oh yes, the Faucits are coming; and do you know,
+Herbert, my dear boy, I'm quite sure that old Mr. Faucit, the uncle,
+wouldn't at all object to the match, and that Ethel's really very
+much disposed indeed to like you immensely. You've only to follow
+up the advantage, my dear boy, and I don't for a moment think she'd
+ever refuse you. And I've been talking to Sir Sydney Weatherhead
+about your future, too, and he tells me (quite privately, of course)
+that, with your position and honours at Oxford, he fully believes
+he can easily push you into the first good vacant post at the
+Education Office; only you must be careful to say nothing about it
+beforehand, or the others will say it's a job, as they call it.
+Oh, Herbert, I really and truly can't tell you what a joy and a
+comfort you always are to me!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH.
+
+
+'My dear,' said Dr. Greatrex, looking up in alarm from the lunch
+table one morning, in the third term of Ernest Le Breton's stay
+at Pilbury, 'what an awful apparition! Do you know, I positively
+see Mr. Blenkinsopp, father of that odious boy Blenkinsopp major,
+distinctly visible to the naked eye, walking across the front lawn--on
+the grass too--to our doorway. The pupil's parent is really the
+very greatest bane of all the banes that beset a poor harassed
+overdriven schoolmaster's unfortunate existence!'
+
+'Blenkinsopp?' Mrs. Greatrex said reflectively. 'Blenkinsopp? Who
+is he? Oh, I remember, a tobacco-pipe manufacturer somewhere in the
+midland counties, isn't he? Mr. Blenkinsopp, of Staffordshire, I
+always say to other parents--not Brosely--Brosely sounds decidedly
+commercial and unpresentable. No nice people would naturally
+like their sons to mix with miscellaneous boys from a place called
+Brosely. Now, what on earth can he be coming here for, I wonder,
+Joseph?'
+
+'Oh, _I_ know,' the doctor answered with a deep-drawn sigh. 'I
+know, Maria, only too well. It's the way of all parents. He's come
+to inquire after Blenkinsopp major's health and progress. They
+all do it. They seem to think the sole object of a head-master's
+existence is to look after the comfort and morals of their own
+particular Tommy, or Bobby, or Dicky, or Harry. For heaven's sake,
+what form is Blenkinsopp major in? For heaven's sake, what's his
+Christian name, and age last birthday, and place in French and
+mathematics, and general state of health for past quarter? Where's
+the prompt-book, with house-master's and form-master's report,
+Maria? Oh, here it is, thank goodness! Let me see; let me see--he's
+ringing at the door this very instant. "Blenkinsopp... major...
+Charles Warrington... fifteen... fifth form... average, twelfth boy
+of twelve... idle, inattentive, naturally stupid; bad disposition...
+health invariably excellent... second eleven... bats well." That'll
+do. Run my eye down once again, and I shall remember all about him.
+How about the other? "Blenkinsopp... minor... Cyril Anastasius
+Guy Waterbury Macfarlane"--heavens, what a name!... "thirteen...
+fourth form... average, seventh boy of eighteen... industrious and
+well-meaning, but heavy and ineffective... health good... fourth
+eleven... fields badly." Ah, that's the most important one. Now I'm
+primed. Blenkinsopp major I remember something about, for he's one
+of the worst and most hopelessly stupid boys in the whole school--I've
+caned him frequently this term, and that keeps a boy green in one's
+memory; but Blenkinsopp minor, Cyril Anastasius Guy Thingumbob
+Whatyoumaycallit,--I don't remember HIM a bit. I suppose he's one
+of those inoffensive, mildly mediocre sort of boys who fail to
+impress their individuality upon one in any way. My experience is
+that you can always bear in mind the three cleverest boys at the
+top of each form, and the three stupidest or most mischievous boys
+at the bottom; but the nine or a dozen meritorious nobodies in the
+middle of the class are all so like one another in every way that
+you might as well try to discriminate between every individual
+sheep of a flock in a pasture. And yet, such is the natural
+contradictiousness and vexatious disposition of the British parent,
+that you'll always find him coming to inquire after just one of
+those very particular Tommies or Bobbies. Charles Warrington:--Cyril
+Anastasius Guy Whatyoumay--call it: that'll do: I shall remember now
+all about them.' And the doctor arranged his hair before the looking
+glass into the most professional stiffness, as a preparatory step
+to facing Mr. Blenkinsopp's parental inquiries in the head-master's
+study.
+
+'What! Mr. Blenkinsopp! Yes, it is really. My dear sir, how DO you
+do? This is a most unexpected pleasure. We hadn't the least idea
+you were in Pilbury. When did you come here?'
+
+'I came last night, Dr. Greatrex,' answered the dreaded parent
+respectfully: 'we've come down from Staffordshire for a week at
+the seaside, and we thought we might as well be within hail of Guy
+and Charlie.'
+
+'Quite right, quite right, my dear sir,' said the doctor, mentally
+noting that Blenkinsopp minor was familiarly known as Guy, not
+Cyril; 'we're delighted to see you. And now you want to know all
+about our two young friends, don't you?'
+
+'Well, yes, Dr. Greatrex; I SHOULD like to know how they are getting
+on.'
+
+'Ah, of course, of course. Very right. It's such a pleasure to us
+when parents give us their active and hearty co-operation! You'd
+hardly believe, Mr. Blenkinsopp, how little interest some parents
+seem to feel in their boys' progress. To us, you know, who devote
+our whole time and energy assiduously to their ultimate welfare,
+it's sometimes quite discouraging to see how very little the
+parents themselves seem to care about it. But your boys are both
+doing capitally. The eldest--Blenkinsopp major, we call him; Charles
+Warrington, isn't it? (His home name's Charlie, if I recollect
+right. Ah, quite so.) Well, Charlie's the very picture of perfect
+health, as usual.' ('Health is his only strong point, it seems to
+me,' the doctor thought to himself instinctively. 'We must put that
+first and foremost.') 'In excellent health and very good spirits.
+He's in the second eleven now, and a capital batter: I've no doubt
+he'll go into the first eleven next term, if we lose Biddlecomb
+Tertius to the university. In work, as you know, he's not very
+great; doesn't do his abilities full justice, Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+through his dreadful inattention. He's generally near the bottom of
+the form, I'm sorry to say; generally near the bottom of the form.'
+
+'Well, I dare say there's no harm in that, sir,' said Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+senior, warmly. 'I was always at the bottom of the form at school
+myself, Doctor, but I've picked it up in after life; I've picked
+it up, sir, as you see, and I'm fully equal with most other people
+nowadays, as you'll find if you inquire of any town councilman or
+man of position down our way, at Brosely.'
+
+'Ah, I dare say you were, Mr. Blenkinsopp,' the doctor answered
+blandly, with just the faintest tinge of unconscious satire, peering
+at his square unintelligent features as a fancier peers at the
+face of a bull-dog; 'I dare say you were now. After all, however
+clever a set of boys may be, one of them MUST be at the bottom of
+the form, in the nature of things, mustn't he? And your Charlie,
+I think, is only fifteen. Ah, yes; well, well; he'll do better, no
+doubt, if we keep him here a year or two longer. So then there's
+the second: Guy, you call him, if I remember right--Cyril Anastasius
+Guy--our Blenkinsopp minor. Guy's a good boy; an excellent boy: to
+tell you the plain truth, Mr. Blenkinsopp, I don't know much of him
+personally myself, which is a fact that tells greatly in his favour.
+Charlie I must admit I have to call up some times for reproof: Guy,
+never. Charlie's in the fifth form: Guy's seventh in the fourth.
+A capital place for a boy of his age! He's very industrious, you
+know--what we call a plodder. They call it a plodder, you see,
+at thirteen, Mr. Blenkinsopp, but a man of ability at forty.' Dr.
+Greatrex delivered that last effective shot point-blank at the eyes
+of the inquiring parent, and felt in a moment that its delicate
+generalised flattery had gone home straight to the parent's
+susceptible heart.
+
+'But there's one thing, Doctor,' Mr. Blenkinsopp began, after a
+few minutes' further conversation on the merits and failings of Guy
+and Charlie, 'there's one other thing I feel I should like to speak
+to you about, and that's the teaching of your fifth form master,
+Mr. Le Breton. From what Charlie tells me, I don't quite like that
+young man's political ideas and opinions. It's said things to his
+form sometimes that are quite horrifying, I assure you; things
+about Property, and about our duty to the poor, and so on, that are
+positively enough to appal you. Now, for example, he told them--I
+don't quite like to repeat it, for it's sheer blasphemy I call
+it--but he told them in a Greek Testament lesson that the Apostles
+themselves were a sort of Republicans--Socialists, I think Charlie
+said, or else Chartists, or dynamiters. I'm not sure he didn't say
+St. Peter himself was a regular communist!'
+
+Dr. Greatrex drew a long breath. 'I should think, Mr. Blenkinsopp,'
+he suggested blandly, 'Charlie must really have misunderstood Mr.
+Le Breton. You see, they've been reading the Acts of the Apostles
+in their Greek Testament this term. Now, of course, you remember that,
+during the first days of the infant Church, while its necessities
+were yet so great, as many as were possessors of lands or houses
+sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold,
+and laid them down at the apostles' feet; and distribution was
+made unto every man according as he had need. You see, here's the
+passage, Mr. Blenkinsopp, in the authorised version. I won't trouble
+you with the original. You've forgotten most of your Greek, I dare
+say: ah, I thought go. It doesn't stick to us like the Latin, does
+it? Now, perhaps, in expounding that passage, Mr. Le Breton may have
+referred in passing--as an illustration merely--to the unhappily
+prevalent modern doctrines of socialism and communism. He may
+have warned his boys, for example, against confounding a Christian
+communism like this, if I may so style it, with the rapacious,
+aggressive, immoral forms of communism now proposed to us, which are
+based upon the forcible disregard of all Property and all vested
+interests of every sort. I don't say he did, you know, for I
+haven't conferred with him upon the subject: but he may have done
+so; and he may even have used, as I have used, the phrase "Christian
+communism," to define the temporary attitude of the apostles and
+the early Church in this matter. That, perhaps, my dear sir, may
+be the origin of the misapprehension.'
+
+Mr. Blenkinsopp looked hard at the three verses in the big Bible
+the doctor had handed him, with a somewhat suspicious glare. He
+was a self-made man, with land and houses of his own in plenty,
+and he didn't quite like this suggestive talk about selling them
+and laying the prices at the apostles' feet. It savoured to him both
+of communism and priestcraft. 'That's an awkward text, you know,'
+he said, looking up curiously from the Bible in his hand into the
+doctor's face, 'a very awkward text; and I should say it was rather
+a dangerous one to set too fully before young people. It seems
+to me to make too little altogether of Property. You know, Dr.
+Greatrex, at first sight it DOES look just a little like communism.'
+
+'Precisely what Mr. Le Breton probably said,' the doctor answered,
+following up his advantage quickly. 'At first sight, no doubt, but
+at first sight only, I assure you, Mr. Blenkinsopp. If you look
+on to the fourth verse of the next chapter, you'll see that St.
+Peter, at least, was no communist,--which is perhaps what Mr. Le
+Breton really said. St. Peter there argues in favour of purely
+voluntary beneficence, you observe; as when you, Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+contribute a guinea to our chapel window:--you see, we're grateful
+to our kind benefactors: we don't forget them. And if you'll look
+at the Thirty-eighth Article of the Church of England, my dear sir,
+you'll find that the riches and goods of Christians are not common,
+as touching the right, title, and possession of the same as certain
+Anabaptists--(Gracious heavens, is he a Baptist, I wonder?--if
+so, I've put my foot in it)--certain Anabaptists do falsely
+boast--referring, of course, to sundry German fanatics of the
+time--followers of one Kniperdoling, a crazy enthusiast, not to
+the respectable English Baptist denomination; but that nevertheless
+every man ought, of such things as he possesseth, liberally to
+give alms to the poor. That, you see, is the doctrine of the Church
+of England, and that, I've no doubt, is the doctrine that Mr. Le
+Breton pointed out to your boys as the true Christian communism of
+St. Peter and the apostles.'
+
+'Well, I hope so, Dr. Greatrex,' Mr. Blenkinsopp answered resignedly.
+'I'm sure I hope so, for his own sake, as well as for his pupils'.
+Still, in these days, you know, when infidelity and Radicalism
+are so rife, one ought to be on one's guard against atheism and
+revolution, and attacks on Property in every form; oughtn't one,
+Doctor? These opinions are getting so rampant all around us, Property
+itself isn't safe. One really hardly knows what people are coming
+to nowadays. Why, last night I came down here and stopped at the
+Royal Marine, on the Parade, and having nothing else to do, while
+my wife was looking after the little ones, I turned into a hall
+down in Combe Street, where I saw a lot of placards up about a
+Grand National Social Democratic meeting. Well, I turned in, Dr.
+Greatrex, and there I heard a German refugee fellow from London--a
+white-haired man of the name of Schurts, or something of the
+sort'--Mr. Blenkinsopp pronounced it to rhyme with 'hurts'--'who
+was declaiming away in a fashion to make your hair stand on end, and
+frighten you half out of your wits with his dreadful communistic
+notions. I assure you, he positively took my breath away. I ran out
+of the hall at last, while he was still speaking, for fear the roof
+should fall in upon our heads and crush us to pieces. I declare to
+you, sir, I quite expected a visible judgment!'
+
+'Did you really now?' said Dr. Greatrex, languidly. 'Well, I dare
+say, for I know there's a sad prevalence of revolutionary feeling
+among our workmen here, Mr, Blenkinsopp. Now, what was this man
+Schurz talking about?'
+
+'Why, sheer communism, sir,' said Mr. Blenkinsopp, severely: 'sheer
+communism, I can tell you. Co-operation of workmen to rob their
+employers of profits; gross denunciation of capital and capitalists;
+and regular inciting of them against the Property of the landlords,
+by quoting Scripture, too, Doctor, by quoting the very words
+of Scripture. They say the devil can quote Scripture to his own
+destruction, don't they, Doctor? Well, he quoted something out of
+the Bible about woe unto them that join field to field, or words
+to that effect, to make themselves a solitude in the midst of the
+earth. Do you know, it strikes me that it's a very dangerous book,
+the Bible--in the hands of these socialistic demagogues, I mean.
+Look now, at that passage, and at what Mr. Le Breton said about
+Christian communism!'
+
+'But, my dear Mr. Blenkinsopp,' the doctor cried, in a tone of
+gentle deprecation, 'I hope you don't confound a person like this
+man Schurz, a German refugee of the worst type, with our Mr. Le
+Breton, an Oxford graduate and an English gentleman of excellent
+family. I know Schurz by name through the papers: he's the author
+of a dreadful book called "Gold and the Proletariate," or something
+of that sort--a revolutionary work like Tom Paine's "Age of Reason,"
+I believe--and he goes about the country now and then, lecturing
+and agitating, to make money, no doubt, out of the poor, misguided,
+credulous workmen. You quite pain me when you mention him in the
+same breath with a hard-working, conscientious, able teacher like
+our Mr. Le Breton.'
+
+'Oh,' Mr. Blenkinsopp went on, a little mollified, 'then Mr. Le
+Breton's of a good family, is he? That's a great safeguard, at any
+rate, for you don't find people of good family running recklessly
+after these bloodthirsty doctrines, and disregarding the claims of
+Property.'
+
+'My dear sir,' the doctor continued, 'we know his mother, Lady
+Le Breton, personally. His father, Sir Owen, was a distinguished
+officer-general in the Indian army in fact; and all his people are
+extremely well connected with some of our best county families.
+Nothing wrong about him in any way, I can answer for it. He came
+here direct from Lord Exmoor's, where he'd been acting as tutor
+to Viscount Lynmouth, the eldest son of the Tregellis family: and
+you may be sure THEY wouldn't have anybody about them in any capacity
+who wasn't thoroughly and perfectly responsible, and free from
+any prejudice against the just rights of property.'
+
+At each successive step of this collective guarantee to Ernest
+Le Breton's perfect respectability, Mr. Blenkinsopp's square face
+beamed brighter and brighter, till at last when the name of Lord
+Exmour was finally reached, his mouth relaxed slowly into a broad
+smile, and he felt that he might implicitly trust the education
+of his boys to a person so intimately bound up with the best and
+highest interests of religion and Property in this kingdom. 'Of
+course,' he said placidly, 'that puts quite a different complexion
+upon the matter, Dr. Greatrex. I'm very glad to hear young Mr. Le
+Breton's such an excellent and trustworthy person. But the fact
+is, that Schurts man gave me quite a turn for the moment, with
+his sanguinary notions. I wish you could see the man, sir; a long
+white-haired, savage-bearded, fierce-eyed old revolutionist if ever
+there was one. It made me shudder to look at him, not raving and
+ranting like a madman--I shouldn't have minded so much if he'd a
+done that; but talking as cool and calm and collected, Doctor, about
+"eliminating the capitalist"--cutting off my head, in fact--as we
+two are talking here together at this moment. His very words were,
+sir, "we must eliminate the capitalist." Why, bless my soul,'--and
+here Mr. Blenkinsopp rushed to the window excitedly--'who on earth's
+this coming across your lawn, here, arm in arm with Mr. Le Breton,
+into the school-house? Man alive, Dr. Greatrex, whatever you choose
+to say, hanged if it isn't realty that German cut-throat fellow
+himself, and no mistake at all about it!'
+
+Dr. Greatrex rose from his magisterial chair and glanced with
+dignified composure out of the window. Yes, there was positively no
+denying it! Ernest Le Breton, in cap and gown, with Edie by his side,
+was walking arm in arm up to the school-house with a long-bearded,
+large-headed German-looking man, whose placid powerful face the Doctor
+immediately recognised as the one he had seen in the illustrated
+papers above the name of Max Schurz, the defendant in the coming state
+trial for unlawfully uttering a seditious libel! He could hardly
+believe his eyes. Though he knew Ernest's opinions were dreadfully
+advanced, he could not have suspected him of thus consorting with
+positive murderous political criminals. In spite of his natural and
+kindly desire to screen his own junior master, he felt that this
+public exhibition of irreconcilable views was quite unpardonable
+and irretrievable. 'Mr. Blenkinsopp,' he said gravely, turning to
+the awe-struck tobacco-pipe manufacturer with an expression of
+sympathetic dismay upon his practised face, 'I must retract all
+I have just been saying to you about our junior master. I was not
+aware of this. Mr. Le Breton must no longer retain his post as an
+assistant at Pilbury Regis Grammar School.'
+
+Mr. Blenkinsopp sank amazed into an easy-chair, and sat in dumb
+astonishment to see the end of this extraordinary and unprecedented
+adventure. The Doctor walked out severely to the school porch, and
+stood there in solemn state to await the approach of the unsuspecting
+offender.
+
+'It's so delightful, dear Herr Max,' Ernest was saying at that exact
+moment, 'to have you down here with us even for a single night.
+You can't imagine what an oasis your coming has been to us both.
+I'm sure Edie has enjoyed it just as much as I have, and is just
+as anxious you should stop a little time here with us as I myself
+could possibly be.
+
+'Oh, yes, Herr Schurz,' Edie put in persuasively with her sweet
+little pleading manner; 'do stay a little longer. I don't know
+when dear Ernest has enjoyed anything in the world so much as he
+has enjoyed seeing you. You've no idea how dull it is down here for
+him, and for me too, for that matter; everybody here is so borne,
+and narrow-minded and self-centred; nothing expansive or sympathetic
+about them, as there used to be about Ernest's set in dear, quiet,
+peaceable old Oxford. It's been such a pleasure to us to hear some
+conversation again that wasn't about the school, and the rector, and
+the Haigh Park people, and the flower show, and old Mrs. Jenkins's
+quarrel with the vicar of St. Barnabas. Except when Mr. Berkeley
+runs down sometimes for a Saturday to Monday trip to see us, and
+takes Ernest out for a good blow with him on the top of the breezy
+downs over yonder, we really never hear anything at all except the
+gossip and the small-talk of Pilbury Regis.'
+
+'And what makes it worse, Herr Max,' said Ernest, looking up in
+the old man's calm strong face with the same reverent almost filial
+love and respect as ever, 'is the fact that I can't feel any real
+interest and enthusiasm in the work that's set before me. I try
+to do it as well as I can, and I believe Dr. Greatrex, who's a
+kind-hearted good sort of man in his way, is perfectly satisfied
+with it; but my heart isn't in it, you see, and can't be in it.
+What sort of good is one doing the world by dinning the same foolish
+round of Horace and Livy and Latin elegiacs into the heads of all
+these useless, eat-all, do-nothing young fellows, who'll only be
+fit to fight or preach or idle as soon as we've finished cramming
+them with our indigestible unserviceable nostrums!'
+
+'Ah, Ernest, Ernest,' said Herr Max, nodding his heavy head gravely,
+'you always WILL look too seriously altogether at your social
+duties. I can't get other people to do it enough; and I can't get
+you not to do it too much entirely. Remember, my dear boy, my pet
+old saying about a little leaven. You're doing more good by just
+unobtrusively holding your own opinions here at Pilbury, and getting
+in the thin end of the wedge by slowly influencing the minds of
+a few middle-class boys in your form, than you could possibly be
+doing by making shoes or weaving clothes for the fractional benefit
+of general humanity. Don't be so abstract, Ernest; concrete yourself a
+little; isn't it enough that you're earning a livelihood for your
+dear little wife here, whom I'm glad to know at last and to receive
+as a worthy daughter? I may call you, Edie, mayn't I, my daughter?
+So this is your school, is it? A pleasant building! And that
+stern-looking old gentleman yonder, I suppose, is your head master?'
+
+'Dr. Greatrex,' said Edie innocently, stepping up to him in her bright
+elastic fashion, 'let me introduce you to our friend Herr Schurz,
+whose name I dare say you know--the German political economist.
+He's come down to Pilbury to deliver a lecture here, and we've been
+fortunate enough to put him up at our little lodging.'
+
+The doctor bowed very stiffly. 'I have heard of Herr Schurz's
+reputation already,' he said with as much diplomatic politeness
+as he could command, fortunately bethinking himself at the right
+moment of the exact phrase that would cover the situation without
+committing him to any further courtesy towards the terrible stranger.
+'Will you excuse my saying, Mrs. Le Breton, that we're very busy
+this afternoon, and I want to have a few words with your husband
+in private immediately? Perhaps you'd better take Herr Schurz on
+to the downs' ('safer there than on the Parade, at any rate,' he
+thought to himself quickly), 'and Le Breton will join you in the
+combe a little later in the afternoon. I'll take the fifth form
+myself, and let him have a holiday with his friend here if he'd
+like one. Le Breton, will you step this way please?' And lifting
+his square cap with stern solemnity to Edie, the doctor disappeared
+under the porch into the corridor, closely followed by poor frightened
+and wondering Ernest.
+
+Edie looked at Herr Max in dismay, for she saw clearly there was
+something serious the matter with the doctor. The old man shook
+his head sadly. 'It was very wrong of me,' he said bitterly: 'very
+wrong and very thoughtless. I ought to have remembered it and
+stopped away. I'm a caput lupinum, it seems, in Pilbury Regis, a
+sort of moral scarecrow or political leper, to be carefully avoided
+like some horrid contagion by a respectable, prosperous head-master.
+I might have known it, I might have known it, Edie; and now I'm
+afraid by my stupidity I've got dear Ernest unintentionally into
+a pack of troubles. Come on, my child, my poor dear child, come on
+to the downs, as he told us; I won't compromise you any longer by
+being seen with you in the streets, in the decent decorous whited
+sepulchres of Pilbury Regis.' And the grey old apostle, with two
+tears trickling unreproved down his wrinkled cheek, took Edie's arm
+tenderly in his, and led her like a father up to the green grassy
+slope that overlooks the little seaward combe by the nestling
+village of Nether Pilbury.
+
+Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex had taken Ernest into the breakfast-room--the
+study was already monopolised by Mr. Blenkinsopp--and had seated himself
+nervously, with his hands folded before him, on a straight-backed
+chair There was a long and awkward pause, for the doctor didn't
+care to begin the interview; but at last he sighed deeply and said
+in a tone of genuine disappointment and difficulty, 'My dear Le
+Breton, this is really very unpleasant.'
+
+Ernest looked at him, and said nothing.
+
+'Do you know,' the doctor went on kindly after a minute, 'I really
+do like you and sympathise with you. But what am I to do after
+this? I can't keep you at the school any longer, can I now? I put
+it to your own common-sense. I'm afraid, Le Breton--it gives me
+sincere pain to say so--but I'm afraid we must part at the end of
+the quarter.'
+
+Ernest only muttered that he was very sorry.
+
+'But what are we to do about it, Le Breton?' the doctor continued
+more kindly than ever. 'What are we ever to do about it? For my own
+sake, and for the boys' sake, and for respectability's pake, it's
+quite impossible to let you remain here any longer. The first thing
+you must do is to send away this Schurz creature'--Ernest started
+a little--'and then we must try to let it blow over as best we can.
+Everybody'll be talking about it; you know the man's become quite
+notorious lately; and it'll be quite necessary to say distinctly,
+Le Breton, before the whole of Pilbury, that we've been obliged to
+dismiss you summarily. So much we positively MUST do for our own
+protection. But what on earth are we to do for you, my poor fellow?
+I'm afraid you've cut your own throat, and I don't see any way on
+earth out of it.'
+
+'How so?' asked Ernest, half stunned by the suddenness of this
+unexpected dismissal.
+
+'Why, just look the thing in the face yourself, Le Breton. I can't
+very well give you a recommendation to any other head master without
+mentioning to him why I had to ask you for your resignation. And
+I'm afraid if I told them, nobody else would ever take you.'
+
+'Indeed?' said Ernest, very softly. 'Is it such a heinous offence
+to know so good a man as Herr Schurz--the best follower of the
+apostles I ever knew?'
+
+'My dear fellow,' said the doctor, confidentially, with an unusual
+burst of outspoken frankness, 'so far as my own private feelings
+are concerned, I don't in the least object to your knowing Herr
+Schurz or any other socialist whatsoever. To tell you the truth,
+I dare say he really is an excellent and most well-meaning person
+at bottom. Between ourselves, I've always thought that there was
+nothing very heterodox in socialism; in fact, I often think, Le
+Breton, the Bible's the most thoroughly democratic book that ever
+was written. But we haven't got to deal in practice with first
+principles; we have to deal with Society--with men and women as we
+find them. Now, Society doesn't like your Herr Schurz, objects to
+him, anathematises him, wants to imprison him. If you walk about
+with him in public, Society won't send its sons to your school.
+Therefore, you should disguise your affection, and if you want to
+visit him, you should visit him, like Nicodemus, by night only.'
+
+'I'm afraid,' said Ernest very fixedly, 'I shall never be able so
+far to accommodate myself to the wishes of Society.'
+
+'I'm afraid not, myself, Le Breton,' the doctor went on with
+imperturbable good temper. 'I'm afraid not, and I'm sorry for
+it. The fact is, you've chosen the wrong profession. You haven't
+pliability enough for a schoolmaster; you're too isolated, too much
+out of the common run; your ideas are too peculiar. Now, you've got
+me to-day into a dreadful pickle, and I might very easily be angry
+with you about it, and part with you in bad blood; but I really
+like you, Le Breton, and I don't want to do that; so I only tell
+you plainly, you've mistaken your natural calling. What it can be
+I don't know; but we must put our two heads together, and see what
+we can do for you before the end of the quarter. Now, go up to the
+combe to your wife, and try to get that terrible bugbear of a German
+out of Pilbury as quickly and as quietly as possible. Good-bye for
+to-day, Le Breton; no coolness between us, for this, I hope, my
+dear fellow.'
+
+Ernest grasped his hand warmly. 'You're very kind, Dr. Greatrex,'
+he said with genuine feeling. 'I see you mean well by me, and I'm
+very, very sorry if I've unintentionally caused you any embarrassment.'
+
+'Not at all, not at all, my dear fellow. Don't mention it. We'll
+tide it over somehow, and I'll see whether I can get you anything
+else to do that you're better fitted for.'
+
+As the door closed on Ernest, the doctor just gently wiped a certain
+unusual dew off his gold spectacles with a corner of his spotless
+handkerchief. 'He's a good fellow,' he murmured to himself,
+'an excellent fellow; but he doesn't manage to combine with the
+innocence of the dove the wisdom of the serpent. Poor boy, poor
+boy, I'm afraid he'll sink, but we must do what we can to keep his
+chin floating above the water. And now I must go back to the study
+to have out my explanation with that detestable thick-headed old
+pig of a Blenkinsopp! "Your views about young Le Breton," I must
+say to him, "are unfortunately only too well founded; and I have
+been compelled to dismiss him this very hour from Pilbury Grammar
+School." Ugh--how humiliating! the profession's really enough to
+give one a perfect sickening of life altogether!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+THE STREETS OF ASKELON.
+
+
+Before the end of the quarter, two things occurred which made
+almost as serious a difference to Ernest's and Edie's lives as the
+dismissal from Pilbury Regis Grammar School. It was about a week
+or ten days after Herr Max's unfortunate visit that Ernest awoke
+one morning with a very curious and unpleasant taste in his mouth,
+accompanied by a violent fit of coughing. He knew what the taste
+was well enough; and he mentioned the matter casually to Edie a
+little later in the morning. Edie was naturally frightened at the
+symptoms, and made him go to see the school doctor. The doctor felt
+his pulse attentively, listened with his stethoscope at the chest,
+punched and pummelled the patient all over in the most orthodox
+fashion, and asked the usual inquisitorial personal questions about
+all the other members of his family. When he heard about Ronald's
+predisposition, he shook his head seriously, and feared there was
+really something in it. Increased vocal resonance at the top of
+the left lung, he must admit. Some tendency to tubercular deposit
+there, and perhaps even a slight deep-seated cavity. Ernest must
+take care of himself for the present, and keep himself as free as
+possible from all kind of worry or anxiety.
+
+'Is it consumption, do you think, Dr. Sanders?' Edie asked
+breathlessly.
+
+'Well, consumption, Mrs. Le Breton, is a very vague and indefinite
+expression,' said the doctor, tapping his white shirtcuff with
+his nail in his slowest and most deliberate manner. 'It may mean
+a great deal, or it may mean very little. I don't want in any way
+to alarm you, or to alarm your husband; but there's certainly a
+marked incipient tendency towards tubercular deposit. Yes, tubercular
+deposit... Well, if you ask me the question point-blank, I should
+say so... certainly... I should say it was phthisis, very little
+doubt of it... In short, what some people would call consumption.'
+
+Ernest went home with Edie, comforting her all the way as well as
+he was able, and trying to make light of it, but feeling in his own
+heart that the look-out was decidedly beginning to gather blacker
+and darker than ever before them. Through the rest of that term
+he worked as well as he could; but Edie noticed every morning that
+the cough was getting worse and worse; and long before the time
+came for them to leave Pilbury he had begun to look distinctly
+delicate. Care for Edie and for the future was telling on him: his
+frame had never been very robust, and the anxieties of the last
+year had brought out the same latent hereditary tendency which had
+shown itself earlier and more markedly in the case of his brother
+Ronald.
+
+Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex was assiduous in looking about for something
+or other that Ernest could turn his hand to, and writing letters
+with indefatigable kindness to all his colleagues and correspondents:
+for though he was, as Ernest said, a most unmitigated humbug, that
+was really his only fault; and when his sympathies were once really
+aroused, as the Le Bretons had aroused them, there was no stone he
+would leave unturned if only his energy could be of any service to
+those whom he wished to benefit. But unfortunately in this case
+it couldn't. 'I'm at my wit's end what to do with you, Le Breton,'
+he said kindly one morning to Ernest: 'but how on earth I'm to
+manage anything, I can't imagine. For my own part, you know, though
+your conduct about that poor man Schurz (a well-meaning harmless
+fanatic, I dare say) was really a public scandal--from the point
+of view of parents I mean, my dear fellow, from the point of view
+of parents--I should almost be inclined to keep you on here in
+spite of it, and brave the public opinion of Pilbury Regis, if it
+depended entirely upon my own judgment. But in the management of
+a school, my dear boy, as you yourself must be aware, a head master
+isn't the sole and only authority; there are the governors, for
+example, Le Breton, and--and--and, ur, there's Mrs. Greatrex. Now,
+in all matters of social discipline and attitude, Mrs. Greatrex is
+justly of equal authority with me; and Mrs. Greatrex thinks it would
+never do to keep you at Pilbury. So, of course, that practically
+settles the question. I'm awfully sorry, Le Breton, dreadfully sorry,
+but I don't see my way out of it. The mischief's done already, to
+some extent, for all Pilbury knows now that Schurz came down here
+to stop with you at your lodgings: but if I were to keep you on
+they'd say I didn't disapprove of Schurz's opinions, and that would
+naturally be simple ruination for the school--simple ruination.'
+
+Ernest thanked him sincerely for the trouble he had taken, but
+wondered desperately in his own heart what sort of future could
+ever be in store for them.
+
+The second event was less unexpected, though quite equally
+embarrassing under existing circumstances. Hardly more than a month
+before the end of the quarter, a little black-eyed baby daughter
+came to add to the prospective burdens of the Le Breton family.
+She was a wee, fat, round-faced, dimpled Devonshire lass to look
+at, as far surpassing every previous baby in personal appearance
+as each of those previous babies, by universal admission, had
+surpassed all their earlier predecessors--a fact which, as Mr.
+Sanders remarked, ought to be of most gratifying import both to
+evolutionists and to philanthropists in general, as proving the
+continuous and progressive amelioration of the human race: and
+Edie was very proud of her indeed, as she lay placidly in her very
+plain little white robes on the pillow of her simple wickerwork
+cradle. But Ernest, though he learned to love the tiny intruder
+dearly afterwards, had no heart just then to bear the conventional
+congratulations of his friends and fellow-masters. Another mouth
+to feed, another life dependent upon him, and little enough,
+as it seemed, for him to feed it with. When Edie asked him what
+they should name the baby--he had just received an adverse answer
+to his application for a vacant secretaryship--he crumpled up the
+envelope bitterly in his hand, and cried out in his misery, 'Call
+her Pandora, Edie, call her Pandora; for we've got to the very
+bottom of the casket, and there is nothing at all left for us now
+but hope--and even of that very little!'
+
+So they duly registered her name as Pandora; but her mother shortened
+it familiarly into Dot; and as little Dot she was practically known
+ever after.
+
+Almost as soon as poor Edie was able to get about again, the time
+came when they would have to leave Pilbury Regis. The doctor's
+search had been quite ineffectual, and he had heard of absolutely
+nothing that was at all likely to suit Ernest Le Breton. He had
+tried Government offices, Members of Parliament, colonial friends,
+every body he knew in any way who miyht possibly know of vacant
+posts or appointments, but each answer was only a fresh disappointment
+for him and for Ernest. In the end, he was fain to advise his
+peccant under-master, since nothing else remained for it, that
+he had better go up to London for the present, take lodgings, and
+engage in the precarious occupation known as 'looking about for
+something to turn up.' On the morning when Edie and he were to
+leave the town, Dr. Greatrex saw Ernest privately in his own study.
+
+'I wish very much I could have gone to the station to see you off,
+Le Breton,' he said, pressing his hand warmly; 'but it wouldn't
+do, you know, it wouldn't do, and Mrs. Greatrex wouldn't like it.
+People would say I sympathised secretly with your political opinions,
+which might offend Sir Matthew Ogle and others of our governors.
+But I'm sorry to get rid of you, really and sincerely sorry, my dear
+fellow; and apart from personal feeling, I'm sure you'd have made
+a good master in most ways, if it weren't for your most unfortunate
+socialistic notions. Get rid of them, Le Breton, I beg of you: do
+get rid of them. Well, the only thing I can advise you now is to
+try your hand, for the present only--till something turns up, you
+know--at literature and journalism. I shall be on the look-out for
+you still, and shall tell you at once of anything I may happen to
+hear of. But meanwhile, you must try to be earning something. And
+if at any time, my dear friend, you should be temporarily in want
+of money,'--the doctor said this in a shame-faced, hesitating sort
+of way, with not a little humming and hawing--'in want of money
+for immediate necessities merely, if you'll only be so kind as to
+write and tell me, I should consider it a pleasure and a privilege
+to lend you a ten pound note, you know--just for a short time, till
+you saw your way clear before you. Don't hesitate to ask me now,
+be sure; and I may as well say, write to me at the school, Le
+Breton, not at the school-house, so that even Mrs. Greatrex need
+never know anything about it. In fact, if you'll excuse me, I've
+put a small sum into this envelope--only twenty pounds--which
+may be of service to you, as a loan, as a loan merely; if you'll
+take it--only till something turns up, you know--you'll really be
+conferring a great favour upon me. There, there, my dear boy; now
+don't be offended: I've borrowed money myself at times, when I was
+a young man like you, and I hadn't a wife and family then as an
+excuse for it either. Put it in your pocket, there's a good fellow;
+you'll need it for Mrs. Le Breton and the baby, you see; now do
+please put it in your pocket.'
+
+The tears rode fast and hot in Ernest's eyes, and he grasped the
+doctor's other hand with grateful fervour. 'Dear Dr. Greatrex,'
+he said as well as he was able, 'it's too kind of you, too kind of
+you altogether. But I really can't take the money. Even after the
+expenses of Edie's illness and of baby Dot's wardrobe, we have
+a little sum, a very little sum laid by, that'll help us to tide
+over the immediate present. It's too good of you, too good of you
+altogether. I shall remember your kindness for ever with the most
+sincere and heartfelt gratitude.'
+
+As Ernest looked into the doctor's half-averted eyes, swimming
+and glistening just a little with sympathetic moisture, his heart
+smote him when he thought that he had ever described that good,
+kindly, generous man as an unmitigated humbug. 'It shows how little
+one can trust the mere outside shell of human beings,' he said to
+Edie, self-reproachfully, as they sat together in their hare third-class
+carriage an hour later. 'The humbug's just the conventional mask
+of his profession--necessary enough, I suppose, for people who
+are really going to live successfully in the world as we find it:
+the heart within him's a thousand times warmer and truer and more
+unspoiled than one could ever have imagined from the outer covering.
+He offered me his twenty pounds so delicately and considerately that
+but for my father's blood in me, Edie, for your sake, I believe I
+could almost have taken it.'
+
+When they got to London, Ernest wished to leave Edie and Dot
+at Arthur Berkeley's rooms (he knew nowhere else to leave them),
+while he went out by himself to look about for cheap lodgings. Edie
+was still too weak, he said, to carry her baby about the streets
+of London in search of apartments. But Edie wouldn't hear of this
+arrangement; she didn't quite like going to Arthur's, and she felt
+sure she could bargain with the London landladies a great deal
+more effectually than a man like Ernest--which was an important
+matter in the present very reduced condition of the family finances.
+In the end it was agreed that they should both go out on the hunt
+together, but that Ernest should be permitted to relieve Edie by
+turns in taking care of the precious baby.
+
+'They're dreadful people, I believe, London landladies,' said Edie,
+in her most housewifely manner; 'regular cheats and skinflints,
+I've always heard, who try to take you in on every conceivable point
+and item. We must be very careful not to let them get the better
+of us, Ernest, and to make full inquiries about all extras, and so
+forth, beforehand.'
+
+They turned towards Holloway and the northern district, to look
+for cheap rooms, and they saw a great many, more or less dear, and
+more or less dirty and unsuitable, until their poor hearts really
+began to sink within them. At last, in despair, Edie turned up a
+small side street in Holloway, and stopped at a tiny house with a
+clean white curtain in its wee front bay window. 'This is awfully
+small, Ernest,' she said, despondently, 'but perhaps, after all,
+it might really suit us.'
+
+The door was opened for them by a tall, raw-boned, hard-faced woman,
+the very embodiment and personification of Edie's ideal skinflint
+London landlady. Might they see the lodgings, Edie asked dubiously.
+Yes, they might, indeed, mum, answered the hard-faced woman. Edie
+glanced at Ernest significantly, as who should say that these would
+really never do.
+
+The lodgings were very small, but they were as clean as a new pin.
+Edie began to relent, and thought, perhaps in spite of the landlady,
+they might somehow manage to put up with them. 'What was the rent?'
+
+The hard-faced landlady looked at Edie steadily, and then answered
+'Fifteen shillings, mum.'
+
+'Oh, that's too much for us, I'm afraid,' said Edie ruefully. 'We
+don't want to go as high as that. We're very poor and quiet people.'
+
+'Well, mum,' the landlady assented quickly, 'it is 'igh for the
+rooms, perhaps, mum, though I've 'ad more; but it IS 'igh, mum. I
+won't deny it. Still, for you, mum, and the baby, I wouldn't mind
+making it twelve and sixpence.'
+
+'Couldn't you say half-a-sovereign?' Edie asked timidly, emboldened
+by success.
+
+'Arf a suvveran, mum? Well, I 'ardly rightly know,' said the
+hard-faced landlady deliberately. 'I can't say without askin' of
+my 'usband whether he'll let me. Excuse me a minnit, mum; I'll just
+run down and ask 'im.'
+
+Edie glanced at Ernest, and whispered doubtfully, 'They'll do, but
+I'm afraid she's a dreadful person.'
+
+Meanwhile, the hard-faced landlady had run downstairs quickly,
+and called out in a pleasant voice of childish excitement to her
+husband. 'John, John,' she cried--'drat that man, where's he gone
+to. Oh, a smokin' of course, in the back kitching. Oh, John, there's
+the sweetest little lady you ever set eyes on, all in black, with
+a dear baby, a dear little speechless infant, and a invalid 'usband,
+I should say by the look of 'im, 'as come to ask the price of the
+ground floor lodgin's. And seein' she was so nice and kindlike, I
+told her fifteen shillings, instead of a suvveran; and she says,
+can't you let 'em for less? says she; and she was that pretty and
+engagin' that I says, well, for you I'll make it twelve and sixpence,
+mum, says I: and says she, you couldn't say 'arf a suvveran, could
+you? and says I, I'll ask my 'usband: and oh, John, I DO wish you'd
+let me take 'em at that, for a kinder, sweeter-lookin' dearer family
+I never did, an' that I tell you.'
+
+John drew his pipe slowly out of his mouth--he was a big, heavy,
+coachman-built sort of person, in waistcoat and shirt-sleeves--and
+answered with a kindly smile, 'Why, Martha, if you want to take 'em
+for 'arf a suvveran, in course you'd ought to do it. Got a baby,
+pore thing, 'ave she now? Well, there, there, you just go this very
+minnit, and tell 'em as you'll take 'em.'
+
+The hard-faced landlady went up the stairs again, only stopping a
+moment to observe parenthetically that a sweeter little lady she
+never did, and what was 'arf-a-crown a week to you and me, John?
+and then, holding the corner of her apron in her hand, she informed
+Edie that her 'usband was prepared to accept the ten shillings
+weekly.
+
+'I'll try to make you and the gentleman comfortable, mum,' she
+said, eagerly; 'the gentleman don't look strong, now do he? We must
+try to feed 'im up and keep 'im cheerful. And we've got plenty of
+flowers to make the room bright, you see: I'm very fond of flowers
+myself, mum: seems to me as if they was sort of company to one, like,
+and when you water 'em and tend 'em always, I feel as if they was
+alive, and got to know one again, I do, and that makes one love
+'em, now don't it, mum? To see 'em brighten up after you've watered
+'em, like that there maiden-'air fern there, why it's enough to
+make one love 'em the same as if they was Christians, mum.' There
+was a melting tenderness in her voice when she talked about the
+flowers that half won over Edie's heart, even in spite of her hard
+features.
+
+'I'm glad you're so fond of flowers, Mrs.----. Oh, you haven't
+told us your name yet,' Edie said, beginning vaguely to suspect that
+perhaps the hard-faced landlady wasn't quite as bad as she looked
+to a casual observer.
+
+'Alliss, mum,' the landlady answered, filling up Edie's interrogatory
+blank. 'My name is 'Alliss.'
+
+'Alice what?' Edie asked again.
+
+'Oh, no, mum, you don't rightly understand me,' the landlady replied,
+getting very red, and muddling up her aspirates more decidedly
+than ever, as people with her failing always do when they want to
+be specially deliberate and emphatic: 'not Halice, but 'Alliss;
+haitch, hay, hell, hell, hi, double hess--'Alliss: my full name's
+Martha 'Alliss, mum; my 'usband's John 'Alliss. When would you like
+to come in?'
+
+'At once,' Edie answered. 'We've left our luggage at the cloak-room
+at Waterloo, and my husband will go back and fetch it, while I stop
+here with the baby.'
+
+'Not that, he shan't, indeed, mum,' cried the hard-faced landlady,
+hastily; 'beggin' your pardon for sayin' so. Our John shall go--that's
+my 'usband, mum; and you shall give 'im the ticket. I wouldn't let
+your good gentleman there go, and 'im so tired, too, not for the
+world, I wouldn't. Just you give me the ticket, mum, and John
+shall go this very minnit and fetch it.'
+
+'But perhaps your husband's busy,' said Ernest, reflecting upon
+the probable cost of cab hire; 'and he'll want a cab to fetch it
+in.'
+
+'Bless your 'eart, sir,' said the landlady, busily arranging things
+all round the room meanwhile for the better accommodation of the
+baby, ''e ain't noways busy 'e ain't. 'E's a lazy man, nowadays, John
+is: retired from business, 'e says, sir, and ain't got nothink to
+do but clean the knives, and lay the fires, and split the firewood,
+and such like. John were a coachman, sir, in a gentleman's family
+for most of 'is life, man and boy, these forty year, come Christmas;
+and we've saved a bit o' money between us, so as we don't need for
+nothink: and 'e don't want the cab, puttin' you to expense, sir,
+onnecessary, to bring the luggage round in. 'E'll just borrer the
+hand-barrer from the livery in the mews, sir, and wheel it round
+'isself, in 'arf an hour, and make nothink of it. Just you give
+me the ticket, and set you right down there, and I'll make you and
+the lady a cup of tea at once, and John'll bring round the luggage
+by the time you've got your things off.'
+
+Ernest looked at Edie, and Edie looked at Ernest. Could they
+have judged too hastily once more, after their determination to
+be lenient in first judgments for the future? So Ernest gave Mrs.
+Halliss the cloak-room ticket, and Mrs. Halliss ran downstairs
+with it immediately. 'John,' the cried again, '--drat that man,
+where's 'e gone to? Oh, there you are, dearie! Just you put on
+your coat an' 'at as fast as ever you can, and borrer Tom Wood's
+barrer, and run down to Waterloo, and fetch up them two portmanteaus,
+will you? And you drop in on the way at the Waterfield. dairy--not
+Jenkins's: Jenkins's milk ain't good enough for them--and tell 'em
+to send round two penn'orth of fresh this very minnit, do y'ear,
+John, this very minnit, as it's extremely pertickler. And a good thing
+I didn't give you them two eggs for your dinner, as is fresh-laid
+by our own 'ens this mornin', and no others like 'em to be 'ad in
+London for love or money; and they shall 'ave 'em boiled light for
+their tea this very evenin'. And you look sharp, John,--drat the
+man, 'ow long 'e is--for I tell yon, these is reel gentlefolk, and
+them pore too, which makes it all the 'arder; and they've got to
+be treated the same in every respect as if they was paying a 'ole
+suvverin, bless their 'earts, the pore creechurs.'
+
+'Pore,' said John, vainly endeavouring to tear on his coat with
+becoming rapidity under the influence of Mrs. Halliss's voluble
+exhortations. 'Pore are they, pore things? and so they may be. I've
+knowed the sons of country gentlemen, and that baronights too,
+Martha, as 'ad kep' their 'ounds, redooced to be that pore as
+they couldn't have afforded to a took our lodgings, even 'umble as
+they may be. Pore ain't nothink to do with it noways, as respecks
+gentility. I've lived forty years in gentlemen's families, up an'
+down, Martha, and I think I'd ought to know somethink about the
+'abits and manners of the aristocracy. Pore ain't in the question
+at all, it ain't, as far as breedin' goes: and if they're pore, and
+got to be gentlefolks too all the same'--John spoke of this last
+serious disability in a tone of unfeigned pity--'why, Martha, wot
+I says is, we'd ought to do the very best we can for 'em any 'ow,
+now, oughtn't we?'
+
+'Drat the man!' cried Mrs. Halliss again, impatiently; 'don't stand
+talkin' and sermonin' about it there no longer like a poll parrot,
+but just you run along and send in the milk, like a dear, will you?
+or that dear little lady'll have to be waitin' for her tea--and her
+with a month-old baby, too, the pretty thing, just to think of it!'
+
+And indeed, long before John Halliss had got back again with the
+two wee portmanteaus--'I could 'a carried that lot on my 'ead,' he
+soliloquised when he saw them, 'without 'avin' troubled to wheel
+round a onnecessary encumbrance in the way of a barrer'--Mrs. Halliss
+had put the room tidy, and laid the baby carefully in a borrowed
+cradle in the corner, and brought up Edie and Ernest a big square
+tray covered by a snow-white napkin--'My own washin', mum'--and
+conveying a good cup of tea, a couple of crisp rolls, and two
+such delicious milky eggs as were never before known in the whole
+previous history of the county of Middlesex. And while they drank
+their tea, Mrs. Halliss insisted upon taking the baby down into
+the kitchen, so that they mightn't be bothered, pore things; for
+the pore lady must be tired with nursin' of it herself the livelong
+day, that she must: and when she got it into the kitchen, she was
+compelled to call over the back yard wall to Mrs. Bollond, the
+greengrocer's wife next door, with the ultimate view to getting a
+hare's brain for the dear baby to suck at through a handkerchief.
+And Mrs. Bollond, being specially so invited, came in by the area
+door, and inspected the dear baby; and both together arrived at
+the unanimous conclusion that little Dot was the very prettiest
+and sweetest child that ever sucked its fat little fingers, Lord
+bless her!
+
+And in the neat wee parlour upstairs, Edie, pouring out tea from
+the glittering tin teapot into one of the scrupulously clean small
+whitey-gold teacups, was saying meanwhile to Ernest, 'Well, after
+all, Ernest dear, perhaps London landladies aren't all quite as
+black as they're usually painted.' A conclusion which neither Edie
+nor Ernest had ever after any occasion for altering in any way.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK.
+
+
+And now, what were Ernest and Edie to do for a living! That was
+the practical difficulty that stared them at last plainly in the
+face--no mere abstract question of right and justice, of socialistic
+ideals or of political economy, but the stern, uncompromising,
+pressing domestic question of daily bread. They had come from
+Pilbury Regis with a very small reserve indeed in their poor lean
+little purses; and though Mrs. Halliss's lodgings might be cheap
+enough as London lodgings go, their means wouldn't allow them to
+stop there for many weeks together unless that hypothetical something
+of which they were in search should happen to turn up with most
+extraordinary and unprecedented rapidity. As soon as they were
+settled in at their tiny rooms, therefore, Ernest began a series
+of weary journeys into town, in search of work of some sort or
+another; and he hunted up all his old Oxford acquaintances in the
+Temple or elsewhere, to see if they could give him any suggestions
+towards a possible means of earning a livelihood. Most of them, he
+found to his surprise, though they had been great chums of his at
+college, seemed a little shy of him nowadays: one old Oxford friend,
+in particular, an impeccable man in close-cut frock coat and hat
+of shiny perfection, he overheard saying to another, he followed
+him accidentally up a long staircase in King's Bench Walk, 'Ah,
+yes, I met Le Breton in the Strand yesterday, when I was walking
+with a Q.C., too; he's married badly, got no employment, and looks
+awfully seedy. So very embarrassing, you know, now wasn't it?' And
+the other answered lightly, in the same unconcerned tone, 'Oh, of
+course, dreadfully embarrassing, really.' Ernest slank down the
+staircase again with a sinking heart, and tried to get no further
+hints from the respectabilities of King's Bench Walk, at least in
+this his utmost extremity.
+
+Night after night, as the dusk was beginning to throw its pall
+over the great lonely desert of London--one vast frigid expanse of
+living souls that knew and cared nothing about him--Ernest turned
+back, foot-sore and heart-sick, to the cheery little lodgings in
+the short side-street at Holloway. There good Mrs. Halliss, whose
+hard face seemed to grow softer the longer you looked at it, had
+a warm clip of tea always ready against his coming: and Edie, with
+wee Dot sleeping placidly on her arm, stood at the door to welcome
+him back again in wife-like fashion. The flowers in the window
+bloomed bright and gay in the tiny parlour: and Edie, with her
+motherly cares for little Dot, seemed more like herself than ever
+she had done before since poor Harry's death had clouded the morning
+of her happy lifetime. But to Ernest, even that pretty picture of
+the young mother and her sleeping baby looked only like one more
+reminder of the terrible burden he had unavoidably yet too lightly
+taken upon him. Those two dear lives depended wholly upon him for
+their daily bread, and where that daily bread was ever to come from
+he had absolutely not the slightest notion.
+
+There is no place in which it is more utterly dreary to be quite
+friendless than in teeming London. Still, they were not absolutely
+friendless even in that great lurid throng of jarring humanity,
+all eagerly intent on its own business, and none of it troubling
+its collective head about two such nonentities as Ernest and
+Edie. Ronald used to come round daily to see them and cheer them
+up with his quiet confidence in the Disposer of all things: and
+Arthur Berkeley, neglecting his West End invitations and his lady
+admirers, used to drop in often of an evening for a friendly chat
+and a rational suggestion or two.
+
+'Why don't you try journalism, Le Breton?' he said to Ernest one
+night, as they sat discussing possibilities for the future in the
+little parlour together. 'Literature in some form or other's clearly
+the best thing for a man like you to turn his hand to. It demands
+less compliance with conventional rules than any other profession.
+No editor or publisher would ever dream of dismissing you, for
+example, because you invited your firebrand friend Max Schurz to
+dinner. On the contrary, if it comes to that, he'd ask you what
+Herr Max thought about the future of trades unions and the socialist
+movement in Germany, and he'd advise you to turn it into a column
+and a half of copy, with a large type sensational heading, "A
+Communistic Leader Interviewed. From our Special Correspondent."'
+
+'But it's such a very useless, unsocialistic trade,' Ernest answered
+doubtfully. 'Do you think it would be quite right, Arthur, for
+a man to try and earn money by it? Of course it isn't much worse
+than school-mastering, I dare say; nobody can say he's performing
+a very useful function for the world by hammering a few lines of
+Ovid into the skull of poor stupid Blenkinsopp major, who after
+all will only use what he calls his education, if he uses it in
+any way at all, to enable him to make rather more money than any
+other tobacco-pipe manufacturer in the entire trade. Still, one
+does feel for all that, that mere writing of books and papers is a
+very unsatisfactory kind of work for an ethical being to perform for
+humanity. How much better, now, if one could only be a farm-labourer
+or a shoemaker!'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked across at him half angrily. 'My dear Ernest,'
+he said, in a severer voice than he often used, 'the time has gone
+by now for this economical puritanism of yours. It won't do any
+longer. You have to think of your child and of Mrs. Le Breton.
+Your first duty is to earn a livelihood for them and yourself;
+when you've done that satisfactorily, you may begin to think of the
+claims of humanity. Don't be vexed with me, my dear fellow, if I
+speak to you very plainly. You've lost your place at Pilbury because
+you wouldn't be practical. You might have known they wouldn't let
+you go hobnobbing publicly before the very eyes of boys and parents
+with a firebrand German Socialist. Mind, I don't say anything
+against Herr Schurz myself--what little I know about him is all in
+his favour--that he's a thorn in the side of those odious prigs,
+the political economists. I've often noticed that when a man wants
+to dogmatise to his heart's content without fear of contradiction,
+he invariably calls himself a political economist. Then if people
+differ from him, he smiles at them the benign smile of superior
+wisdom, and says superciliously, "Ah, I see you don't understand
+political economy!" Now, your Herr Schurz is a dissenter among
+economists, I believe--a sort of embryo Luther come to tilt with
+a German toy lance against their economical infallibilities; and
+I'm told he knows more about the subject than all the rest of them
+put together. Of course, if you like him and respect him--and I know
+you have one superstition left, my dear fellow--there's no reason
+on earth why you shouldn't do so; but you mustn't parade him too
+openly before the scandalised faces of respectable Pilbury. In
+future, you must be practical. Turn your hand to whatever you can
+get to do, and leave humanity at large to settle the debtor and
+creditor account with you hereafter.'
+
+'I'll do my best, Berkeley,' Ernest answered submissively; 'and if
+you like, I'll strangle my conscience and try my hand at journalism.'
+
+'Do, there's a good man,' Arthur Berkeley said, delighted at his
+late conversion. 'I know two or three editor fellows pretty well,
+and if you'll only turn off something, I'll ask them to have a look
+at it.'
+
+Next morning, at breakfast, Ernest discussed the possibilities
+of this new venture very seriously with sympathising Edie. 'It's
+a great risk,' he said, turning it over dubiously in his mind; 'a
+great risk, and a great expense too, for nothing certain. Let me
+see, there'll be a quire of white foolscap to start with; that'll
+be a shilling--a lot of money as things go at present, Edie, isn't
+it?'
+
+'Why not begin with half a quire, Ernest?' said his little wife,
+cautiously. 'That'd be only sixpence, you see.'
+
+'Do they halve quires at the stationer's, I wonder?' Ernest went
+on still mentally reckoning. 'Well, suppose we put it at sixpence.
+Then we've got pens already by us, but not any ink--that's a
+penny--and there's postage, say about twopence; total ninepence.
+That's a lot of money, isn't it, now, for a pure uncertainty?'
+
+'I'd try it, Ernest dear, if I were you,' Edie answered. 'We must
+do something, mustn't we, dear, to earn our living.'
+
+'We must,' Ernest said, sighing. 'I wish it were anything but
+that; but I suppose what must be must be. Well, I'll go out a walk
+by myself in the quietest streets I can find, and try if I can
+think of anything on earth a man can write about. Arthur Berkeley
+says I ought to begin with a social article for a paper; he knows
+the "Morning Intelligence" people, and he'll try to get them to
+take something if I can manage to write it. I wonder what on earth
+would do as a social article for the "Morning Intelligence"! If
+only they'd let me write about socialism now! but Arthur says they
+won't take that; the times aren't yet ripe for it. I wish they were,
+Edie, I wish they were; and then perhaps you and I would find some
+way to earn ourselves a decent living.'
+
+So Ernest went out, and ruminated quietly by himself, as well as he
+was able, in the least frequented streets of Holloway and Highgate.
+After about half an hour's excogitation, a brilliant idea at last
+flashed across him; he had found in a tobacconist's window something
+to write about! Your practised journalist doesn't need to think at
+all; he writes whatever comes uppermost without the unnecessarily
+troublesome preliminary of deliberate thinking. But Ernest Le
+Breton was only making his first experiment in the queer craft,
+and he looked upon himself as a veritable Watt or Columbus when he
+had actually discovered that hitherto unknown object, a thing to
+write about. He went straight back to good Mrs. Halliss's with his
+discovery whirling in his head, stopping only by the way at the
+stationer's, to invest in half a quire of white foolscap. 'The
+best's a shilling a quire, mister,' said the shopman; 'second best,
+tenpence.' Communist as he was, Ernest couldn't help noticing the
+unusual mode of address; but he took the cheaper quality quietly,
+and congratulated himself on his good luck in saving a penny upon
+the original estimate.
+
+When he got home, he sat down at the plain wooden table by the
+window, and began with nervous haste to write away rapidly at his
+first literary venture. Edie sat by in her little low chair and
+watched him closely with breathless interest. Would it be a success
+or a failure? That was the question they were both every moment
+intently asking themselves. It was not a very important piece
+of literary workmanship, to be sure; only a social leader for a
+newspaper, to be carelessly skimmed to-day and used to light the
+fire to-morrow, if even that; and yet had it been the greatest
+masterpiece ever produced by the human intellect Ernest could not
+have worked at it with more conscientious care, or Edie watched
+him with profounder admiration. When Shakespeare sat down to write
+'Hamlet,' it may be confidently asserted that neither Mistress Anne
+Shakespeare nor anybody else awaited the result of his literary
+labours with such unbounded and feverish anxiety. By the time
+Ernest had finished his second sheet of white foolscap--much erased
+and interlined with interminable additions and corrections--Edie
+ventured for a moment briefly to interrupt his creative efforts.
+'Don't you think you've written as much as makes an ordinary leader
+now, Ernest?' she asked, apologetically. 'I'm afraid you're making
+it a good deal longer than it ought to be by rights.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't know, Edie,' Ernest answered, gazing at the two
+laboured sheets with infinite dubitation and searching of spirit.
+'I suppose one ought properly to count the words in an average
+leader, and make it the same length as they always are in the
+"Morning Intelligence." I think they generally run to just a column.'
+
+'Of course you ought, dear,' Edie answered. 'Run out this minute
+and buy one before you go a single line further.'
+
+Ernest looked back at his two pages of foolscap somewhat ruefully.
+'That's a dreadful bore,' he said, with a sigh: 'it'll just run
+away with the whole penny I thought I'd managed to save in getting
+the second quality of foolscap for fivepence. However, I suppose
+it can't be helped, and after all, if the thing succeeds, one can
+look upon the penny in the light of an investment. It's throwing
+a sprat to catch a whale, as the proverb says: though I'm afraid
+Herr Max would say that that was a very immoral capitalist proverb.
+How horribly low we must be sinking, Edie, when we come to use the
+anti-social language of those dreadful capitalists!'
+
+'I don't think capitalists deal much in proverbs, dear,' said Edie,
+smiling in spite of herself; 'but you needn't go to the expense
+of buying a "Morning Intelligence," I dare say, for perhaps Mrs.
+Halliss may have an old one in the house; or if not, she might
+be able to borrow one from a neighbour. She has a perfect genius
+for borrowing, Mrs. Halliss; she borrows everything I want from
+somebody or other. I'll just run down to the kitchen this minute
+and ask her.'
+
+In a few seconds Edie returned in triumph with an old soiled and
+torn copy of the 'Morning Intelligence,' duly procured by the
+ingenious Mrs. Halliss from the dairy opposite. It was a decidedly
+antiquated copy, and it had only too obviously been employed by
+its late possessor to wrap up a couple of kippered herrings; but
+it was still entire, so far as regarded the leaders at least, and
+it was perfectly legible in spite of its ancient and fish-like
+smell. To ensure accuracy, Ernest and Edie took a leader apiece, and
+carefully counted up the number of words that went to the column.
+They came on an average to fifteen hundred. Then Ernest counted
+his own manuscript with equal care--no easy task when one took
+into consideration the interlined or erased passages--and, to his
+infinite disgust, discovered that it only extended to seven hundred
+and fifty words. 'Why, Edie,' he said, in a very disappointed
+tone, 'how little it prints into! I should certainly have thought
+I'd written at least a whole column. And the worst of it is, I
+believe I've really said all I have to say about the subject.'
+
+'What is it, Ernest dear?' asked Edie.
+
+'Italian organ-boys,' Ernest answered. 'I saw on a placard in
+the news shop that one of them had been taken to a hospital in a
+starving condition.' He hardly liked to tell even Edie that he had
+stood for ten minutes at a tobacconist's window and read the case
+in a sheet of 'Lloyd's News' conspicuously hung up there for public
+perusal.
+
+'Well, let me hear what you have written, Ernest dear, and then
+see if you couldn't expand it.'
+
+Ernest read it over most seriously and solemnly--it was only a
+social leader, of the ordinary commonplace talky-talky sort; but
+to those two poor young people it was a very serious and solemn
+matter indeed--no less a matter than their own two lives and little
+Dot's into the bargain. It began with the particular case of the
+particular organ-boy who formed the peg on which the whole article
+was to be hung; it went on to discourse on the lives and manners
+of organ-boys in general; it digressed into the natural history of
+the common guinea-pig, with an excursus on the scenery of the Lower
+Apennines; and. it finished off with sundry abstract observations
+on the musical aspect of the barrel-organ and the aesthetic value of
+hurdygurdy performances. Edie listened to it all with deep attention.
+
+'It's very good, Ernest dear,' she said, with wifely admiration,
+as soon as he had finished. 'Just like a real leader exactly; only,
+do you know, there aren't any anecdotes in it. I think a social
+leader of that sort ought always to have a lot of anecdotes. Couldn't
+you manage to bring in something about Fox and Sheridan, or about
+George IV. and Beau Brummel? They always do, you know, in most of
+the papers.'
+
+Ernest gazed at her in silent admiration. 'How clever of you, Edie,'
+he said, 'to think of that! Why, of course there ought to be some
+anecdotes. They're the very breath of life to this sort of meaningless
+writing. Only, somehow, George IV. and Beau Brummel don't seem
+exactly relevant to Italian organ-grinders, now do they?'
+
+'I thought,' said Edie, with hardly a touch of unintentional satire,
+'that the best thing about anecdotes of that kind in a newspaper
+was their utter irrelevancy. But if Beau Brummel won't do, couldn't
+you manage to work in Guicciardini and the galleys? That's strictly
+Italian, you know, and therefore relevant; and I'm sure the newspaper
+leaders are extremely fond of that story about Guiccardini.'
+
+'They are,' Ernest answered,'most undoubtedly; but perhaps for that
+very reason readers may be beginning to get just a little tired of
+it by this time.'
+
+'I don't think the readers matter much,' said Edie, with a
+brilliant, flash of practical common-sense; 'at least, not nearly
+half as much, Ernest, as the editor.'
+
+'Quite true,' Ernest replied, with another admiring look; 'but
+probably the editor more or less consults the taste and feelings
+of the readers. Well, I'll try to expand it a bit, and I'll manage
+to drag in an anecdote or two somehow--if not Guicciardini, at
+least something or other else Italian. You see Italy's a tolerably
+rich subject, because you can do any amount about Raffael, and Michael
+Angelo, and Leonardo, and so forth, not to mention Botticelli. The
+papers have made a dreadful run lately on Botticelli.'
+
+So Ernest sat down once more at the table by the window, and began
+to interlard the manuscript with such allusions to Italy and the
+Italians as could suggest themselves on the spur of the moment to
+his anxious imagination. At the end of half an hour--about the
+time a practised hand would have occupied in writing the whole
+article--he counted words once more, and found there were still
+two hundred wanting. Two hundred more words to say about Italian
+organ-boys! Alas for the untrained human fancy! A master leader
+writer at the office of the 'Morning Intelligence' could have run
+on for ever on so fertile and suggestive a theme--a theme pregnant
+with unlimited openings for all the cheap commonplaces of abstract
+journalistic philanthropy; but poor Ernest, a 'prentice hand at the
+trade, had yet to learn the fluent trick of the accomplished news
+purveyor; he absolutely could not write without thinking about
+it. A third time he was obliged to recommit his manuscript, and a
+third time to count the words over. This time, oh joy, the reckoning
+came out as close as possible to the even fifteen hundred. Ernest
+gave a sigh of relief, and turned to read it all over again,
+as finally enlarged and amended, to the critical ears of admiring
+Edie.
+
+There was anecdote enough now, in all conscience, in the article;
+and allusions enough to stock a whole week's numbers of the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' Edie listened to the whole tirade with an air of
+the most severe and impartial criticism. When Ernest had finished,
+she rose up and kissed him. 'I'm sure it'll do, Ernest,' she said
+confidently. 'It's exactly like a real leader. It's quite beautiful--a
+great deal more beautiful, in fact, than anything else I ever read
+in a newspaper: it's good enough to print in a volume.'
+
+'I hope the editor'll think so,' Ernest answered, dubiously. 'If
+not, what a lot of valuable tenpenny foolscap wasted all for nothing!
+Now I must write it all out again clean, Edie, on fresh pieces.'
+
+Newspaper men, it must be candidly admitted, do not usually write
+their articles twice over; indeed, to judge by the result, it may
+be charitably believed that they do not even, as a rule, read them
+through when written, to correct their frequent accidental slips
+of logic or English; but Ernest wrote out his organ-boy leader in
+his most legible and roundest hand, copperplate fashion, with as
+much care and precision as if it were his first copy for presentation
+to the stern writing-master of a Draconian board school. 'Editors
+are more likely to read your manuscript if it's legible, I should
+think, Edie,' he said, looking up at her with more of hope in his
+face than had often been seen in it of late. 'I wonder, now, whether
+they prefer it sent in a long envelope, folded in three; or in a
+square envelope, folded twice over; or in a paper cover, open like
+a pamphlet. There must be some recognised professional way of doing
+it, and I should think one's more likely to get it taken if one
+sends it in the regular professional fashion, than if one makes
+it look too amateurish. I shall go in for the long envelope; at
+any rate, if not journalistic, it's at least official.'
+
+The editor of the 'Morning Intelligence' is an important personage
+in contemporary politics, and a man of more real weight in the
+world than half-a-dozen Members of Parliament for obscure country
+boroughs; but even that mighty man himself would probably have been
+a little surprised as well as amused (if he could have seen it) at
+the way in which Ernest and Edie Le Breton anxiously endeavoured
+to conciliate beforehand his merest possible personal fads and
+fancies. As a matter of fact, the question of the particular paper
+on which the article was written mattered to him absolutely less
+than nothing, inasmuch as he never looked at anything whatsoever
+until it had been set up in type for him to pass off-hand judgment
+upon its faults or its merits. His time was far too valuable to be
+lightly wasted on the task of deciphering crabbed manuscript.
+
+In the afternoon, Berkeley called to see whether Ernest had followed
+his suggestion, and was agreeably surprised to find a whole article
+already finished. He glanced through the neatly written pages, and
+was still more pleased to discover that Ernest, with an unsuspected
+outburst of practicality and practicability, had really hit upon
+a possible subject. 'This may do, Ernest,' he said with a sigh of
+relief. 'I dare say it will. I know Lancaster wants leader writers,
+and I think this is quite good enough to serve his turn. I've
+spoken to him about you: come round with me now--he'll be at the
+office by four o'clock--and we'll see what we can do for you. It's
+absolutely useless sending anything to the editor of a daily paper
+without an introduction. You might write with the pen of the angel
+Gabriel, or turn out leaders which were a judicious mean between
+Gladstone, Burke, and Herbert Spencer, and it would profit you
+nothing, for the simple reason that he hasn't got the time to read
+them. He would toss Junius and Montesquieu into the waste paper
+basket, and accept copy on the shocking murder in the Borough
+Road from one of his regular contributors instead. He can't help
+himself: and what you must do, Ernest, is to become one of the
+regular ring, and combine to keep Junius and Montesquieu permanently
+outside.'
+
+'The struggle for existence gives no quarter,' Ernest said sadly
+with half a sigh.
+
+'And takes none,' Berkeley answered quickly. 'So for your wife's
+sake you must try your best to fight your way through it on your
+own account, for yourself and your family.'
+
+The editor of the 'Morning Intelligence,' Mr. Hugh Lancaster, was
+a short, thick-set, hard-headed sort of man, with a kindly twinkle
+in his keen grey eyes, and a harassed smile playing continually
+around the corners of his firm and dose mouth. He looked as though
+he was naturally a good-humoured benevolent person, overdriven
+at the journalistic mill till half the life was worn out of him,
+leaving the benevolence as a wearied remnant, without energy
+enough to express itself in any other fashion than by the perpetual
+harassed smile. He saw Arthur Berkeley and Ernest Le Breton at once
+in his own sanctum, and took the manuscript from their hands with
+a languid air of perfect resignation. 'This is the friend you
+spoke of, is it, Berkeley?' he said in a wearied way. 'Well, well,
+we'll see what we can do for him.' At the same time he rang a tiny
+hand-bell. A boy, rather the worse for printer's ink, appeared at
+the summons. Mr. Lancaster handed him Ernest's careful manuscript
+unopened, with the laconic order, 'Press. Proof immediately.' The
+boy took it without a word. 'I'm very busy now,' Mr. Lancaster went
+on in the same wearied dispirited manner: 'come again in thirty-five
+minutes. Jones, show these gentlemen into a room somewhere.' And
+the editor fell back forthwith into his easy-chair and his original
+attitude of listless indifference. Berkeley and Ernest followed
+the boy into a bare back room, furnished only with a deal table and
+two chairs, and there anxiously awaited the result of the editor's
+critical examination.
+
+'Don't be afraid of Lancaster, Ernest,' Arthur said kindly. 'His
+manner's awfully cold, I know, but he means well, and I really
+believe he'd go out of his way, rather than not, to do a kindness
+for anybody he thought actually in want of occupation. With most
+men, that's an excellent reason for not employing you: with Lancaster
+I do truly think it's a genuine recommendation.'
+
+At the end of thirty-five minutes the grimy-faced office-boy
+returned with a friendly nod. 'Editor'll see you,' he said, with
+the Spartan brevity of the journalistic world--nobody connected
+with newspapers ever writes or speaks a single word unnecessarily,
+if he isn't going to be paid for it at so much per thousand--and
+Ernest followed him, trembling from head to foot, into Mr.
+Lancaster's private study.
+
+The great editor took up the steaming hot proof that had just been
+brought him, and glanced down it carelessly with a rapid scrutiny.
+Then he turned to Ernest, and said in a dreamy fashion, 'This will
+do. We'll print this to-morrow. You may send us a middle very
+occasionally. Come here at four o'clock, when a subject suggests
+itself to you, and speak to me about it. My time's very fully
+occupied. Good morning, Mr. Le Breton. Berkeley, stop a minute, I
+want to talk with you.'
+
+It was all done in a moment, and almost before Ernest knew what
+had happened he was out in the street again, with tears filling his
+eyes, and joy his heart, for here at last was bread, bread, bread,
+for Edie and the baby! He ran without stopping all the way back
+to Holloway, rushed headlong into the house and fell into Edie's
+arms, calling out wildly, 'He's taken it! He's taken it!' Edie
+kissed him half-a-dozen times over, and answered bravely, 'I knew
+he would, Ernest. It was such a splendid article.' And yet thousands
+of readers of the 'Morning Intelligence' next day skimmed lightly
+over the leader on organ-boys in their ordinary casual fashion,
+without even thinking what hopes and fears and doubts and terrors
+had gone to the making of that very commonplace bit of newspaper
+rhetoric. For if the truth must be told, Edie's first admiring
+criticism was perfectly correct, and Ernest Le Breton's leader was
+just for all the world exactly the same as anybody else's.
+
+Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stayed behind as requested in Mr.
+Lancaster's study, and waited to hear what Mr. Lancaster had to say
+to him. The editor looked up at him wearily from his chair, passed
+his bread hand slowly across his bewildered forehead, and then said
+the one word, 'Poor?'
+
+'Nothing on earth to do,' Berkeley answered.
+
+'He might make a journalist, perhaps,' the editor gaid, sleepily.
+'This social's up to the average. At any rate, I'll do my very best
+for him. But he can't live upon socials. We have too many social
+men already. What can he do? That's the question. It won't do to
+say he can write pretty nearly as well about anything that turns
+up as any other man in England can do. I can get a hundred young
+fellows in the Temple to do that, any day. The real question's this:
+is there anything he can write about a great deal better than all
+the other men in all England put together?'
+
+'Yes, there is,' Berkeley answered with commendable promptitude,
+undismayed by Mr. Lancaster's excessive requirements. 'He knows
+more about communists, socialists, and political exiles generally,
+than anybody else in the whole of London.'
+
+'Good,' the editor answered, brightening up, and speaking for
+a moment a little less languidly. 'That's good. There's this man
+Schurz, now, the German agitator. He's going to be tried soon for
+a seditious libel it seems, and he'll be sent to prison, naturally.
+Now, does your friend know anything at all of this fellow?'
+
+'He knows him personally and intimately,' Berkeley replied,
+delighted to find that the card which had proved so bad a one at
+Pilbury Regis was turning up trumps in the more Bohemian neighbourhood
+of the Temple and Fleet Street. 'He can give you any information
+you want about Schurz or any of the rest of those people. He
+has associated with them all familiarly for the last six or seven
+years.'
+
+'Then he takes an interest in politics,' said Mr. Lancaster, almost
+waking up now. 'That's good again. It's so very difficult to find
+young men nowadays, able to write, who take a genuine interest in
+politics. They all go off after literature and science and aesthetics,
+and other dry uninteresting subjects. Now, what does your average
+intelligent daily paper reader care, I should like to know, about
+literature and science and aesthetics and so forth? Well, he'll do,
+I've very little doubt: at any rate, I'll give him a trial. Perhaps
+he might be able to undertake this Great Widgerly disenfranchising
+case. Stop! he's poor, isn't he? I daresay he'd just as soon not
+wait for his money for this social. In the ordinary course, he
+wouldn't get paid till the end of the quarter; but I'll give you a
+cheque to take back to him now; perhaps he wants it. Poor fellow,
+poor fellow! he really looks very delicate. Depend upon it, Berkeley,
+I'll do anything on earth for him, if only he'll write tolerably.'
+
+'You're awfully good,' Arthur said, taking the proffered cheque
+gratefully. 'I'm sure the money will be of great use to him: and
+it's very kind indeed of you to have thought of it.'
+
+'Not at all, not at all,'the editor answered, collapsing dreamily.
+'Good morning, good morning.'
+
+At Mrs. Halliss's lodgings in Holloway, Edie was just saying to
+Ernest over their simple tea, 'I wonder what they'll give you for
+it, Ernest.' And Ernest had just answered, big with hope, 'Well,
+I should think it would be quite ten shillings, but I shouldn't
+be surprised, Edie, if it was as much as a pound;' when the door
+opened, and in walked Arthur Berkeley, with a cheque in his hand,
+which he laid by Edie's teacup. Edie took it up and gave a little
+cry of delight and astonishment. Ernest caught it from her hand in
+his eagerness, and gazed upon it with dazed and swimming vision.
+Did he read the words aright, and could it be really, 'Pay E. Le
+Breton, Esq., or order, three guineas'? Three guineas! Three guineas!
+Three real actual positive gold and silver guineas! It was almost
+too much for either of them to believe, and all for a single
+morning's light labour! What a perfect Eldorado of wealth and
+happiness seemed now to be opening out unexpectedly before them!
+
+So much Arthur Berkeley, his own eyes glistening too with a sympathetic
+moisture, saw and heard before he went away in a happier mood and
+left them to their own domestic congratulations. But he did not see
+or know the reaction that came in the dead of night, after all that
+day's unwonted excitement, to poor, sickening, weary, over-burdened
+Ernest. Even Edie never knew it all, for Ernest was careful to
+hide it as much as possible from her knowledge. But he knew himself,
+though he would not even light the candle to see it, that he had
+got those three glorious guineas--the guineas they had so delighted
+in--with something more than a morning's labour. He had had to pay
+for them, not figuratively but literally, with some of his very
+life-blood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+HARD PRESSED.
+
+
+A week or two later, while 'The Primate of Fiji' was still running
+vigorously at the Ambiguities Theatre, Arthur Berkeley's second
+opera, 'The Duke of Bermondsey; or, the Bold Buccaneers of the Isle
+of Dogs,' was brought out with vast success and immense exultation
+at the Marlborough. There is always a strong tendency to criticise
+a little severely the second work of a successful beginner: people
+like to assume a knowing air, and to murmur self-complacently that
+they felt sure from the beginning he couldn't keep up permanently
+to his first level. But in spite of that natural tendency of the
+unregenerate human mind, and in spite, too, of a marked political
+bias on the author's part, 'The Duke of Bermondsey' took the town
+by storm almost as completely as 'The Primate of Fiji' had done before
+it. Everybody said that though the principles of the piece were
+really quite atrocious, when one came to think of them seriously,
+yet the music and the dialogue were crisp and brisk enough to float
+any amount of social or economical heresy that that clever young
+man, Mr. Arthur Berkeley, might choose to put into one of his
+amusing and original operas.
+
+The social and economical heresies, of course, were partly due
+to Ernest Le Breton's insidious influence. At the same time that
+Berkeley was engaged in partially converting Ernest, Ernest was
+engaged in the counter process of partially converting Berkeley.
+To say the truth, the conversion was not a very difficult matter
+to effect; the neophyte had in him implicitly already the chief
+saving doctrines of the socialistic faith, or, if one must put it
+conversely, the germs of the disease were constitutionally implanted
+in his system, and only needed a little external encouragement
+to cring the poison out fully in the most virulent form of the
+complaint. The great point of 'The Duke of Bermondsey' consisted in
+the ridiculous contrast it exhibited between the wealth, dignity,
+and self-importance of the duke himself, and the squalid, miserable,
+shrinking poverty of the East-end purlieus from which he drew his
+enormous revenues. Ernest knew a little about the East-end from
+practical experience; he had gone there often with Ronald, on his
+rounds of mercy, and had seen with his own eyes those dens of misery
+which most people have only heard or read about. It was Ernest who
+had suggested this light satirical treatment of the great social
+problem, whose more serious side he himself had learnt to look
+at in Max Schurz's revolutionary salon; and it was to Ernest that
+Arthur Berkeley owed the first hint of that famous scene where the
+young Countess of Coalbrookdale converses familiarly on the natural
+beauties of healthful labour with the chorus of intelligent colliery
+hands, in the most realistic of grimy costumes, from her father's
+estates in Staffordshire. The stalls hardly knew whether to laugh
+or frown when the intelligent colliers respectfully invited the
+countess, in her best Ascot flounces and furbelows, to enjoy the
+lauded delights of healthful mine labour in propria persona: but
+they quite recovered their good humour when the band of theatrical
+buccaneers, got up by the duke in Spanish costumes, with intent
+to deceive his lawless tenants in the East-end, came unexpectedly
+face to face with the genuine buccaneers of the Isle of Dogs,
+clothed in real costermonger caps and second-hand pilot-jackets
+of the marine-storedealers' fashionable pattern. It was all only
+the ridiculous incongruity of our actual society represented in the
+very faintest shades of caricature upon the stage; but it made the
+incongruities more incongruous still to see them crowded together
+so closely in a single concentrated tableau. Unthinking people
+laughed uproariously at the fun and nonsense of the piece; thinking
+people laughed too, but not without an uncomfortable side twinge of
+conscientious remorse at the pity of it all. Some wise heads even
+observed with a shrug that when this sort of thing was applauded
+upon the stage, the fine old institutions of England were getting
+into dangerous contact with these pernicious continental socialistic
+theories. And no doubt those good people were really wise in their
+generation. 'When Figaro came,' Arthur Berkeley said himself
+to Ernest, 'the French revolution wasn't many paces behind on the
+track of the ages.'
+
+'Better even than the Primate, Mr. Berkeley,' said Hilda Tregellis,
+as she met him in a London drawing-room a few days later. 'What
+a delightful scene, that of the Countess of Coalbrookdale! You're
+doing real good, I do believe, by making people think about
+these things more seriously, you know. As poor dear Mr. Le Breton
+would have said, you've got an ethical purpose--isn't that the
+word?--underlying even your comic operas. By the way, do you ever
+see the Le Bretons now? Poor souls, I hear they're doing very
+badly. The elder brother, Herbert Le Breton--horrid wretch!--he's
+here to-night; going to marry that pretty Miss Faucit, they say;
+daughter of old Mr. Faucit, the candle-maker--no, not candles,
+soap I think it is--but it doesn't matter twopence nowadays, does
+it? Well, as I was saying, you're doing a great deal of good
+with characters like this Countess of Coalbrookdale. We want more
+mixture of classes, don't we? more free intercourse between them;
+more familiarity of every sort. For my part, now, I should really
+very much like to know more of the inner life of the working classes.'
+'If only he'd ask me to go to lunch,' she thought, 'with his dear
+old father, the superannuated shoemaker! so very romantic, really!'
+
+But Arthur only smiled a sphinx-like smile, and answered lightly,
+'You would probably object to their treatment of you as much as the
+countess objected to the uupleasant griminess of the too-realistic
+coal galleries. Suppose you were to fall into the hands of a logical
+old radical workman, for example, who tore you to pieces, mentally
+speaking, with a shake or two of his big teeth, and calmly
+informed you that in his opinion you were nothing more than a very
+empty-headed, pretentious, ignorant young woman--perhaps even,
+after the plain-spoken vocabulary of hie kind, a regular downright
+minx and hussey?'
+
+'Charming,' Lady Hilda answered, with perfect candour; 'so very
+different from the senseless adulation of all the Hughs, and Guys,
+and Berties! What I do love in talking to clever men, Mr. Berkeley,
+is their delicious frankness and transparency. If they think one
+a fool, they tell one so plainly, or at least they let one see it
+without any reserve. Now that, you know, is really such a very
+delightful trait in clever people's characters!'
+
+'I don't know how you can have had the opportunity of judging, Lady
+Hilda,' Arthur answered, looking at her handsome open face with a
+momentary glance of passing admiration--Hilda Tregellis was improving
+visibly as she matured--'for no one can possibly ever have thought
+anything of the sort with you, I'm certain: and that I can say
+quite candidly, without the slightest tinge of flattery or adulation.'
+
+'What! YOU don't think me a fool, Mr. Berkeley,' cried Lady Hilda,
+delighted even with that very negative bit of favourable appreciation.
+'Now, that I call a real compliment, I assure you, because I know
+you clever people pitch your standard of intelligence so very,
+very high! You consider everybody fools, I'm sure, except the few
+people who are almost as clever as you yourselves are. However, to
+return to the countess: I do think there ought to be more mixture
+of classes in England, and somebody told me'--this was a violent
+effort to be literary on Hilda's part, by way of rising to the
+height of the occasion--'somebody told me that Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+who's so dreadfully satirical, and cultivated, and so forth,
+thinks exactly the same thing, you know. Why shouldn't the Countess
+of Coalbrookdale have really married the foreman of the colliers?
+I daresay she'd have been a great deal happier with a kind-hearted
+sensible man like him than with that lumbering, hunting,
+pheasant-shooting, horse-racing lout of a Lord Coalbrookdale, who
+would go to Norway on a fishing tour without her--now wouldn't
+she?'
+
+'Very probably,' Berkeley answered: 'but in these matters we don't
+regard happiness only,--that, you see, would be mere base, vulgar,
+commonplace utilitarianism:--we regard much more that grand
+impersonal overruling entity, that unseen code of social morals,
+which we commonly call the CONVENANCES. Proper people don't
+take happiness into consideration at all, comparatively: they act
+religiously after the fashion that the CONVENANCES impose upon
+them.'
+
+'Ah, but why, Mr. Berkeley,' Lady Hilda said, vehemently, 'why
+should the whole world always take it for granted that because
+a girl happens to be born the daughter of people whose name's in
+the peerage, she must necessarily be the slave of the proprieties,
+devoid of all higher or better instincts? Why should they take it
+for granted that she's destitute of any appreciation for any kind
+of greatness except the kind that's represented by a million and a
+quarter in the three per cents., or a great-great-grandfather who
+fought at the battle of Naseby? Why mayn't she have a spark of
+originality? Why mayn't she be as much attracted by literature,
+by science, by art, by... by... by beautiful music, as, say, the
+daughter of a lawyer, a doctor, or, or, or a country shopkeeper?
+What I want to know is just this, Mr. Berkeley: if people don't
+believe in distinctions of birth, why on earth should they suppose
+that Lady Mary, or Lady Betty, or Lady Winifred, must necessarily
+be more banale and vulgar-minded, and common-place than plain Miss
+Jones, or Miss Brown, or Miss Robinson? You admit that these other
+girls may possibly care for higher subjects: then why on earth
+shouldn't we, can you tell me?'
+
+'Certainly,' Arthur Berkeley answered, looking down into Lady
+Hilda's beautiful eyes after a dreamy fashion, 'certainly there's no
+inherent reason why one person shouldn't have just as high tastes
+by nature as another. Everything depends, I suppose, upon inherited
+qualities, variously mixed, and afterwards modified by society and
+education.--It's very hot here, to-night, Lady Hilda, isn't it?'
+
+'Very,' Lady Hilda echoed, taking his arm as she spoke. 'Shall we
+go into the conservatory?'
+
+'I was just going to propose it myself,' Berkeley said, with a faint
+tremor thrilling in his voice. She was a very beautiful woman,
+certainly, and her unfeigned appreciation of his plays and his
+music was undeniably very flattering to him.
+
+'Unless I bring him fairly to book this evening,' Hilda thought to
+herself as she swept with him gracefully into the conservatory, 'I
+shall have to fall back upon the red-haired hurlyburlying Scotch
+professor, after all--if I don't want to end by getting into the
+clutches of one of those horrid Monties or Algies!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+IRRECLAIMABLE.
+
+
+The occasional social articles for the 'Morning Intelligence' supplied
+Ernest with work enough for the time being to occupy part of his
+leisure, and income enough to keep the ship floating somehow, if
+not securely, at least in decent fair-weather fashion. His frequent
+trips with Ronald into the East-end gave him something comparatively
+fresh to write about, and though he was compelled to conceal his own
+sentiments upon many points, in order to conform to that impersonal
+conscience, 'the policy of the paper,' he was still able to deal
+with subjects that really interested him, and in which he fancied
+he might actually be doing a little good. A few days after he had
+taken seriously to the new occupation, good Mrs. Halliss made her
+appearance in the tiny sitting-room one morning, and with many
+apologies and much humming and hawing ventured to make a slight
+personal representation to wondering little Edie.
+
+'If you please, mum,' she said nervously, fumbling all the while with
+the corner of the table cloth she was folding on the breakfast-table,
+'if I might make so bold, mum, without offence, I should like to
+say as me an' John 'as been talkin' it hover, an' we think now as
+your good gentleman 'as so much writin' to do, at 'is littery work,
+mum, as I may make bold to call it, perhaps you wouldn't mind, so
+as not to disturb 'im with the blessed baby--not as that dear child
+couldn't never disturb nobody, bless 'er dear 'eart, the darling,
+not even when she's cryin', she's that sweet and gentle,--but we
+thought, mum, as littery gentlemen likes to 'ave the coast clear,
+in the manner of speakin', and perhaps you wouldn't mind bein' so
+good as to use the little front room upstairs, mum, for a sort o'
+nursery, as I may call it, for the dear baby. It was our bedroom,
+that was, where John an' me used to sleep; but we've been an'
+putt our things into the front hattic, mum, as is very nice and
+comfortable in every way, so as to make room for the dear baby. An'
+if you won't take it as a liberty, mum, me an' John 'ud be more'n
+glad if you'd kindly make use of that there room for a sort of
+occasional nursery for the dear baby.'
+
+Edie bit her lip hard in her momentary confusion. 'Oh, dear, Mrs.
+Halliss,' she said, almost crying at the kindly meant offer, 'I'm
+afraid we can't afford to have THREE rooms all for ourselves as
+things go at present. How much do you propose to charge us for the
+additional nursery?'
+
+'Charge you for it, mum,' Mrs. Halliss echoed, almost indignantly;
+'charge our lodgers for any little hextry accommodation like the
+small front room upstairs, mum--now, don't you go and say that to
+John, mum, I beg of you; for 'is temper's rather short at times,
+mum, thro' boin' asmatic and the rheumatiz, though you wouldn't
+think it to look at 'im, that you wouldn't; an' I'm reely afraid,
+mum, he might get angry if anybody was to holler 'im anythink for
+a little bit of hextry accommodation like that there. Lord bless
+your dear 'eart, mum, don't you say nothink more about that, I beg
+of you; for if John was to 'ear of it, he'd go off in a downright
+tearin' tantrum at the bare notion. An' about dinner, mum, you'll
+'ave the cold mutton an' potatoes, and a bit of biled beetroot; and
+I'll just run round to the greengrocer's this moment to order it
+for early dinner.' And before Edie had time to thank her, the good
+woman was out of tha room again, and down in the kitchen at her
+daily preparations, with tears trickling slowly down both her hard
+red cheeks in her own motherly fashion.
+
+So from that time forth, Ernest had the small sitting-room entirely
+to himself, whenever he was engaged in his literary labours, while
+Edie and Dot turned the front bedroom on the first floor into
+a neat and commodious nursery. As other work did not turn up so
+rapidly as might have been expected, and as Ernest grew tired after
+a while of writing magazine articles on 'The Great Social Problem,'
+which were invariably 'declined with thanks' so promptly as to lead
+to a well-founded suspicion that they had never even been opened by
+the editor, he determined to employ his spare time in the production
+of an important economical volume, a treatise on the ultimate ethics
+of a labouring community, to be entitled 'The Final Rule of Social
+Right Living.' This valuable economical work he continued to toil
+at for many months in the intervals of his other occupations; and
+when at last it was duly completed, he read it over at full length
+to dear little Edie, who considered it one of the most profoundly
+logical and convincing political treatises ever written. The various
+leading firms, however, to whom it was afterwards submitted with
+a view to publication, would appear, oddly enough, to have doubted
+its complete suitability to the tastes and demands of the reading
+public in the present century; for they invariably replied to Ernest's
+inquiries that they would be happy to undertake its production
+for the trilling sum of one hundred guineas, payable in advance;
+but that they did not see their way to accepting the risk and
+responsibility of floating so speculative a volume on their own
+account. In the end, the unhappy manuscript, after many refusals,
+was converted into cock-boats, hats, and paper dollies for little
+Dot; and its various intermediate reverses need enter no further
+into the main thread of this history. It kept Ernest busy in the
+spare hours of several months, and prevented him from thinking too
+much of his own immediate prospects, in his dreams for the golden
+future of humanity; and insomuch it did actually subserve some
+indirectly useful function; but on the other hand it wasted a
+considerable quantity of valuable tenpenny foolscap, and provided
+him after all with one more severe disappointment, to put on top of
+all the others to which he was just then being subjected. Clearly,
+the reading public took no paying interest in political economy; or
+if they did, then the article practically affected by the eternal
+laws of supply and demand was at least not the one meted out to
+them from the enthusiastic Schurzian pen of Ernest Le Breton.
+
+One afternoon, not long after Ernest and Edie had taken rooms at
+Mrs. Halliss's, they were somewhat surprised at receiving the honour
+of a casual visit from a very unexpected and unusual quarter. Ronald
+was with them, talking earnestly over the prospects of the situation,
+when a knock came at the door, and to their great astonishment
+the knock was quickly followed by the entrance of Herbert. He had
+never been there before, and Ernest felt sure he had come now for
+some very definite and sufficient purpose. And so he had indeed:
+it was a strange one for him; but Herbert Le Breton was actually
+bound upon a mission of charity. We have all of us our feelings,
+no doubt, and Herbert Le Breton, too, in his own fashion, had his.
+Ernest was after all a good fellow enough at bottom, and his own
+brother: (a man can't for very rospectability's sake let his own
+brother go utterly to the dogs if he can possibly help it); and so
+Herbert had made up his mind, much against his natural inclination,
+to warn Ernest of the danger he incurred in having anything more
+to do or say with this insane, disreputable old Schurz fellow. For
+his own part, he hated giving advice; people never took it; and that
+was a deadly offence against his amour propre and a gross insult to
+his personal dignity; but still, in this case, for Ernest's sake,
+he determined after an inward struggle to swallow his own private
+scruples, and make an effort to check his brother on the edge of
+the abyss. Not that he would come to the point at once; Herbert
+was a careful diplomatic agent, and he didn't spoil his hand
+by displaying all his cards too openly at the outset; he would
+begin upon comparatively indifferent subjects, and lead round the
+conversation gradually to the perils and errors of pure Schurzianism.
+So he set out by admiring his niece's fat arms--a remarkable stretch
+of kindliness on Herbert's part, for of course other people's babies
+are well known to be really the most uninteresting objects in the
+whole animate universe--and then he passed on by natural transitions
+to Ernest's housekeeping arrangements, and to the prospects of
+journalism as a trade, and finally to the necessity for a journalist
+to consult the tastes of his reading public. 'And by the way,
+Ernest,' he said quietly at last, 'of course after this row at
+Pilbury, you'll drop the acquaintance of your very problematical
+German socialist.'
+
+Edie started in surprise. 'What? Herr Schurz?' she said eagerly.
+'Dear simple, kindly old Herr Schurz! Oh no, Herbert, that I'm sure
+he won't; Ernest will never drop HIS acquaintance, whatever happens.'
+
+Herbert coughed drily. 'Then there are two of them for me to contend
+against,' he said to himself with an inward smile. 'I should really
+hardly have expected that, now. One would have said a priori
+that the sound common-sense and practical regard for the dominant
+feelings of society, which is so justly strong in most women,
+would have kept HER at any rate--with her own social disabilities,
+too--from aiding and abetting her husband in such a piece of
+egregious folly'--'I'm sorry to hear it, Mrs. Le Breton,' he went
+on aloud,--he never called her by her Christian name, and Edie was
+somehow rather pleased that he didn't: 'for you know Herr Schurz
+is far from being a desirable acquaintance. Quite apart from his
+own personal worth, of course--which is a question that I for my part
+am not called upon to decide--he's a snare and a stumbling-block
+in the eyes of society, and very likely indeed to injure Ernest's
+future prospects, as he has certainly injured his career in the
+past. You know he's going to be tried in a few weeks for a seditious
+libel and for inciting to murder the Emperor of Russia. Now, you
+will yourself admit, Mrs. Le Breton, that it's an awkward thing
+to be mixed up with people who are tried on a criminal charge for
+inciting to murder. Of course, we all allow that the Czar's a very
+despotic and autocratic sovereign, that his existence is an anomaly,
+and that the desire to blow him up is a very natural desire for
+every intelligent Russian to harbour privately in the solitude of
+his own bosom. If we were Russians ourselves, no doubt we'd try to
+blow him up too, if we could conveniently do so without detection.
+So much, every rational Englishman, who isn't blinded by prejudice
+or frightened by the mere sound of words, must at once frankly
+acknowledge. But unfortunately, you see, the mass of Englishmen
+ARE blinded by prejudice, and ARE frightened by the mere sound
+of words. To them, blowing up a Czar is murder (though of course
+blowing up any number of our own black people isn't); and inciting
+to blow up the Czar, or doing what seems to most Englishmen
+equivalent to such incitement, as for example, saying in print
+that the Czar's government isn't quite ideally perfect and ought
+gradually and tentatively to be abolished--why, that, I say,
+is a criminal offence, and is naturally punishable by a term of
+imprisonment. Now, is it worth while to mix oneself up with people
+like that, Ernest, when you can just as easily do without having
+anything on earth to say to them?'
+
+Edie's face burnt scarlet as she listened, but Ernest only answered
+more quietly--he never allowed anything that Herbert said to disturb
+his equanimity--'We don't think alike upon this subject, you know,
+Herbert; and I'm afraid the disagreement is fundamental. It doesn't
+matter so much to us what the world thinks as what is abstractly
+right; and Edie would prefer to cling to Herr Schurz, through good
+report and evil report, rather than to be applauded by your mass
+of Englishmen for having nothing to do with inciting to murder. We
+know that Herr Max never did anything of the kind; that he is the
+gentlest and best of men; and that in Russian affairs he has always
+been on the side of the more merciful methods, as against those
+who would have meted out to the Czar the harsher measure of pure
+justice.'
+
+'Well,' Herbert answered bravely, with a virtuous determination not
+to be angry at this open insult to his own opinion, but to persevere
+in his friendly efforts for his brother's sake, 'we won't take Herr
+Max into consideration at all, but will look merely at the general
+question. The fact is, Ernest, you've chosen the wrong side. The
+environment is too strong for you; and if you set yourself up against
+it, it'll crush you between the upper and the nether mill-stone.
+It isn't your business to reform the world; it's your business to
+live in it; and if you go on as you're doing now, it strikes me that
+you'll fail at the outset in that very necessary first particular.'
+
+'If I fail,' Ernest answered with a heavy heart, 'I can only die
+once; and after all every man can do no more than till to the best
+of his ability the niche in nature that he finds already cut out
+for him by circumstances.'
+
+'My dear Ernest,' Herbert continued quietly, twisting himself
+a cigarette with placid deliberateness, as a preliminary to his
+departure; 'your great mistake in life is that you WILL persist in
+considering the universe as a cosmos. Now the fact is, it isn't
+a cosmos; it's a chaos, and a very poor one at that.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' Ernest answered gravely; 'nobody recognises that fact
+more absolutely than I do; but surely it's the duty of man to try
+as far as in him lies to cosmise his own particular little corner
+of it.'
+
+'In the abstract, certainly: as a race, most distinctly so; but as
+individuals, why, the thing's clearly impossible. There was one
+man who once tried to do it, and his name was Don Quixote.'
+
+'There was another, I always thought,' Ernest replied more solemnly,
+'and after his name we've all been taught as children to call
+ourselves Christians. At bottom, my ideal is only the Christian
+ideal.'
+
+'But, my dear fellow, don't you see that the survival of the fittest
+must succeed in elbowing your ideal, for the present at least, out
+of existence? Look here, Ernest, you're going the wrong way to work
+altogether for your own happiness and comfort. It doesn't matter
+to me, of course; you can do as you like with yourself, and I oughtn't
+to interfere with you; but I do it because I'm your brother, and
+because I take a certain amount of interest in you accordingly.
+Now, I quite grant with you that the world's in a very unjust social
+condition at present. I'm not a fool, and I can't help seeing that
+wealth is very badly distributed, and that happiness is very unequally
+meted. But I don't feel called upon to make myself the martyr of
+the cause of readjustment for all that. If I were a working man,
+I should take up the side that you're taking up now; I should have
+everything to gain, and nothing to lose by it. But your mistake
+is just this, that when you might identify your own interests with
+the side of the "haves," as I do, you go out of your way to identify
+them with the side of the "have-nots," out of pure idealistic Utopian
+philanthropy. You belong by birth to the small and intrinsically
+weak minority of persons specially gifted by nature and by fortune;
+and why do you lay yourself out with all your might to hound on the
+mass of your inferiors till they trample down and destroy whatever
+gives any special importance, interest, or value to intellectual
+superiority, vigour of character, political knowledge, or even
+wealth? I can understand that the others should wish to do this;
+I can understand that they will inevitably do it in the long run;
+but why on earth do you, of all men, want to help them in pulling
+down a platform on which you yourself might, if you chose, stand
+well above their heads and shoulders?'
+
+'Because I feel the platform's an unjust one,' Ernest answered,
+warmly.
+
+'An excellent answer for them,' Herbert chimed in, in his coldest
+and calmest tone, 'but a very insufficient one for you. The injustice,
+if any, tells all in your own favour. As long as the mob doesn't
+rise up and tear the platform down (as it will one day), why on
+earth should you be more anxious about it than they are?'
+
+'Because, Herbert, if there must be injustice, I would rather suffer
+it than do it.'
+
+'Well, go your own way,' Herbert answered, with a calm smile
+of superior wisdom; 'go your own way and let it land you where it
+will. For my part, I back the environment. But it's no business
+of mine; I have done my best to warn you. Liberavi animam meam. You
+won't take my advice, and I must leave you to your own devices.'
+And with just a touch of the hand to Edie, and a careless nod to
+his two brothers, he sauntered out of the room without another
+word. 'As usual,' he thought to himself as he walked down the stairs,
+'I go out of my way to give good advice to a fellow-creature, and
+I get only the black ingratitude of a snubbing in return. This is
+really almost enough to make even me turn utterly and completely
+selfish!'
+
+'I wonder, Ernest,' said Ronald, looking up as Herbert shut the
+door gently behind him, 'how you and I ever came to have such a
+brother as Herbert!'
+
+'I think it's easy enough to understand, Ronald, on plain hereditary
+principles.'
+
+Ronald sighed. 'I see what you mean,' he said; 'it's poor mother's
+strain--the Whitaker strain--coming out in him.'
+
+'I often fancy, Ronald, I can see the same two strains in varying
+intensity, running through all three of us alike. In Herbert the
+Whitaker strain is uppermost, and the Le Breton comparatively in
+abeyance; in me, they're both more or less blended; in you, the
+Le Breton strain comes out almost unadulterated. Yet even Herbert
+has more of a Le Breton in him than one might imagine, for he's with
+us intellectually; it's the emotional side only that's wanting to
+him. Even when members of a family are externally very much unlike
+one another in the mere surface features of their characters,
+I believe you can generally see the family likeness underlying it
+for all that.'
+
+'Only you must know how to analyse the character to see it,' said
+Edie. 'I don't think it ever struck me before that there was anything
+in common between you and Herbert, Ernest, and yet now you point
+it out I believe there really is something after all. I'm sorry
+you told me, for I can't bear to think that you're like Herbert.'
+
+'Oh, no,' Ronald put in hastily; 'it isn't Ernest who has something
+in him like Herbert; it's Herbert who has something in him like
+Ernest. There's a great deal of difference between the one thing
+and the other. Besides, he hasn't got enough of it, Edie, and Ernest
+has.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+RONALD COMES OF AGE.
+
+
+'Strange,' Ronald Le Breton thought to himself, as he walked
+along the Embankment between Westminster and Waterloo, some weeks
+later--the day of Herr Max's trial,--'I had a sort of impulse
+to come down here alone this afternoon: I felt as if there was an
+unseen Hand somehow impelling me. Depend upon it, one doesn't have
+instincts of that sort utterly for nothing. The Finger that guides
+us guides us always aright for its own wise and unfathomable
+purposes. What a blessing and a comfort it is to feel that one's
+steps are continually directed from above, and that even an
+afternoon stroll through the great dreary town is appointed to us
+for some fit and sufficient reason! Look at that poor girl over
+there now, at the edge of the Embankment! I wonder what on earth
+she can have come here for. Why...how pale and excited she looks.
+What's she going so near the edge for? Gracious heavens! it can't
+be...yes...it is... no, no, but still it must be...that's what the
+Finger was guiding me here for this afternoon. There's no denying
+it. The poor creature's tempted to destroy herself. My instinct
+tells me so at once, and it never tells me wrong. Oh, Inscrutable
+Wisdom, help me, help me: give me light to act rightly! I must go
+up this very moment and speak to her!'
+
+The girl was walking moodily along the edge of the bank, and looking
+in a dreamy fashion over the parapet into the sullen fast-flowing
+brown water below. An eye less keen than Ronald's might have seen
+in a moment, from her harassed weary face and her quick glance
+to right and left after the disappearing policeman, that she was
+turning over in her own mind something more desperate than any
+common everyday venture. Ronald stepped up to her hastily, and,
+firm in his conviction that the Finger was guiding him aright,
+spoke out at once with boldness on the mere strength of his rapid
+instinctive conjecture.
+
+'Stop, stop,' he said, laying his hand gently on her shoulder: 'not
+for a moment, I beg of you, not for a moment. Not till you've at
+least told me what is your trouble.'
+
+Selah turned round sharply and looked up in his face with a vague
+feeling of indefinable wonder. 'What do you mean?' she asked, in
+a husky voice. 'Don't do what? How do you know I was going to do
+anything?'
+
+'You were going to throw yourself into the river,'Ronald answered
+confidently; 'or at least you were debating about it in your own
+soul. I know you were, because a sure Guide tells me so.'
+
+Selah's lip curled a little at the sound of that familiar language.
+'And suppose I was,' she replied, defiantly, in her reckless
+fashion; 'suppose I was: what's that to you or anybody, I should
+like to know? Are you your brother's keeper, as your own Bible puts
+it? Well, yes, then, perhaps I WAS going to drown myself: and if I
+choose, as soon as your back's turned, I shall go and do it still;
+so there; and that's all I have to say about it.'
+
+Ronald turned his face towards her with an expression of the
+intensest interest, but before he could put in a single word, Selah
+interrupted him.
+
+'I know what you're going to say,' she went on, looking up at him
+rebelliously. 'I know what you're going to say every bit as well
+as if you'd said it. You're one of these city missionary sort of
+people, you are; and you're going to tell me it's awfully wicked
+of me to try and destroy myself, and ain't I afraid of a terrible
+hereafter! Ugh! I hate and detest all that mummery.'
+
+Ronald looked down upon her in return with a sort of silent
+wondering pity. 'Awfully wicked,' he said slowly, 'awfully wicked!
+How meaningless! How incomprehensible! Awfully wicked to be
+friendless, or poor, or wretched, or unhappy! Awfully wicked to be
+driven by despair, or by heartlessness, to such a pitch of misery
+or frenzy that you want to fling yourself wildly into the river,
+only to be out of it all, anywhere, in a minute! Why you poor,
+unhappy girl, how on earth can you possibly help it?'
+
+There was something in the tone of his earnest voice that melted
+for a moment even Selah Briggs's pride and vehemence. It was very
+impertinent of him to try and interfere with her purely personal
+business, no doubt, but he seemed to do so in a genuinely
+kindly rather than in a fussy interfering spirit. At any rate he
+didn't begin by talking to her that horrid cant about the attempt
+to commit suicide being so extremely wicked! If he had done that,
+Selah would have felt it was not only an unwarrantable intrusion
+upon her liberty of action, but a grotesque insult to her natural
+intelligence as well.
+
+'I've a right to drown myself if I choose,' she faltered out,
+leaning faintly as she spoke against the parapet, 'and nobody else
+has any possible right to hinder or prevent me. If you people make
+laws against my rights in that matter, I shall set your laws aside
+whenever and wherever it happens to suit my personal convenience.'
+
+'Exactly so,' Ronald answered, in the same tone of gentle and
+acquiescent persuasion. 'I quite agree with you. It's as clear
+as daylight that every individual human being has a perfect right
+to put an end to his own life whenever it becomes irksome or
+unpleasant to him; and nobody else has any right whatever to interfere
+with him. The prohibitions that law puts upon our freedom in that
+respect are only of a piece with the other absurd restrictions of
+our existing unchristian legislation--as opposed to the spirit of
+the Word as the old rule that made us bury a suicide at four cross
+roads with a hideously barbarous and brutal ceremonial. They're
+all mere temporary survivals from a primitive paganism: the truth
+shall make us free. But though we mayn't rightly interfere, we may
+surely inquire in a brotherly spirit of interest, whether it isn't
+possible for us to make life less irksome for those who, unhappily,
+want to get rid of it. After all, the causes of our discontent are
+often quite removable. Tell me, at least, what yours are, and let
+me see whether I'm able to do anything towards removing them.'
+
+Selah hung back a little sullenly. This was a wonderful mixture of
+tongues that the strange young man was talking in! When he spoke
+about the right and wrong of suicide, ethically considered, it
+might have been Herbert Walters himself who was addressing her:
+when he glided off sideways to the truth and the Word, it might
+have been her Primitive Methodist friends at Hastings, in full
+meeting assembled. And, by the way, he reminded her strangely,
+somehow, of Herbert Walters! What manner of man could he be, she
+wondered, and what strange sort of new Gospel was this that he was
+preaching to her?
+
+'How do I know who you are?' she asked him, carelessly. 'How do
+I know what you want to know my story for? Perhaps you're only
+trying to get something out of me.'
+
+'Trust me,' Ronald said simply. 'By faith we live, you know. Only
+trust me.'
+
+Selah answered nothing.
+
+'Come over here to the bench by the garden,' Ronald went on earnestly.
+'We can talk there more at our leisure. I don't like to see you
+leaning so close to the parapet. It's a temptation; I know it's a
+temptation.'
+
+Seiah looked at him again inquiringly. She had never before met
+anybody so curious, she fancied. 'Aren't you afraid of being seen
+sitting with me like this,' she said, 'on the Embankment benches?
+Some of your fine friends might come by and wonder who on earth you
+had got here with you.' And, indeed, Selah's dress had grown vory
+shabby and poor-looking during a long and often fruitless search
+for casual work or employment in London.
+
+But Ronald only surveyed her gently from head to foot with a quiet
+smile, and answered softly, 'Oh, no; there's no reason on earth why
+we shouldn't sit down and talk together; and even if there were,
+my friends all know me far too well by this time to be surprised
+at anything I may do, when the Hand guides me. If you will only sit
+down and tell me your story, I should like to see whether I could
+possibly do anything to help you.'
+
+Selah let him lead her in his gentle half-womanly fashion to the
+bench, and sat down beside him mechanically. Still, she made no
+attempt to begin her pitiful story. Ronald suspected for a second
+some special cause for her embarrassment, and ventured to suggest
+a possible way out of it. 'Perhaps,' he said timidly, 'you would
+rather speak to some older and more fatherly man about it, or to
+some kind lady. If so, I have many good friends in London who would
+listen to you with as much interest and attention as I should.'
+
+The old spirit flared up in Selah for a second, as she answered
+quickly, 'No, no, sir, it's nothing of that sort. I can tell YOU
+as well as I can tell anybody. If I've been unfortunate, it's been
+through no fault of my own, thank goodness, but only through the
+hard-heartedness and unkindness of other people. I'd rather speak
+to you than to anyone else, because I feel somehow--why, I don't
+know--as if you had something or other really good in you.'
+
+'I beg your pardon,' Ronald said hastily, 'for even suggesting it
+but you see, I often have to meet a great many people who've been
+unhappy through a great many different causes, and that leads one
+occasionally for a time into mistaken inferences. Let me hear all
+your history, please, and I firmly believe, through the aid that
+never forsakes us, I shall be able to do something or other to help
+you in your difficulties.'
+
+Thus adjured, Selah began and told her whole unhappy history
+through, without pause or break, into Ronald's quietly sympathetic
+ear. She told him quite frankly and fully how she had picked up
+the acquaintance of a young Mr. Walters from Oxford at Hastings:
+how this Mr. Walters had led her to believe he would marry her:
+how she had left her home hurriedly, under the belief that he would
+be induced to keep his promise: how he had thrown her over to her
+own devices: and how she had ever since been trying to pick up a
+precarious livelihood for herself in stray ways as a sempstress,
+work for which she wag naturally very ill-fitted, and for which
+she had no introductions. She slurred over nothing on either side
+of the story; and especially she did not forget to describe the
+full measure of her troubles and trials from her Methodist friends
+at Hastings. Ronald shook his head sympathetically at this stage
+of the story. 'Ah, I know, I know,' he muttered, half under his
+breath; 'nasty pious people! Very well meaning, very devout, very
+earnest, one may be sure of it--but oh! what terrible soul-killing
+people to live among! I can understand all about it, for I've met
+them often--Sabbath-keeping folks; preaching and praying folks;
+worrying, bothering, fussy-religious folks: formalists, Pharisees,
+mint-anise and-cummin Christians: awfully anxious about your soul,
+and so forth, and doing their very best to make you as miserable
+all the time as a slave at the torture! I don't wonder you ran away
+from them.'
+
+'And I wasn't really going to drown myself, you know, when you
+spoke to me.' Selah said, quite apologetically. 'I was only just
+looking over into the beautiful brown water, and thinking how
+delicious it would be to fling oneself in there, and be carried
+off down to the sea, and rolled about for ever into pebbles on
+the shingle, and there would be an end of one altogether--oh, how
+lovely!'
+
+'Very natural,' Ronald answered calmly. 'Very natural. Of course
+it would. I've often thought the same thing myself. Still, one
+oughtn't, if possible, to give way to these impulses: one ought to
+do all that's in one's power to prevent such a miserable termination
+to one's divinely allotted existence. After all, it is His will,
+you see, that we should be happy.'
+
+When Selah had quite finished all her story, Ronald began drawing
+circles in the road with the end of his stick, and perpending
+within himself what had better be done about it, now that all was
+told him. 'No work,' he said, half to himself; 'no money; no food.
+Why, why, I suppose you must be hungry.'
+
+Selah nodded assent.
+
+'Will you allow me to offer you a little lunch?' he asked, hesitatingly,
+with something of Herbert's stately politeness. Even in this last
+extremity, Ronald felt instinctively what was due to Selah Briggs's
+natural sentiments of pride and delicacy. He must speak to her
+deferentially as if she were a lady, not give her alms as if she
+were a beggar.
+
+Then for the first time that day Selah burst suddenly into tears.
+'Oh, sir,' she said, sobbing, 'you are very kind to me.'
+
+Ronald waited a moment or two till her eyes were dry, and then took
+her across the gardens and into Gatti's. Any other man might have
+chosen some other place of entertainment under the circumstances,
+but Ronald, in his perfect simplicity of heart, looked only for
+the first shop where he could get Selah the food she needed. He
+ordered something hot hastily, and, when it came, though he had had
+his own lunch already, he played a little with a knife and fork
+himself for show's sake, in order not to seem as if he were merely
+looking on while Selah was eating. These little touches of feeling
+were not lost upon Selah: she noticed them at once, and recognised
+in what Ernest would have called her aboriginal unregenerate
+vocabulary that she was dealing with a true gentleman.
+
+'Walters,' Ronald said, pausing a second with a bit of chop poised
+lightly on the end of his fork; 'let me see--Walters. I don't know
+any man of that name, myself, but I've had two brothers at Oxford,
+and perhaps one of them could tell me who he is. Walters--Walters.
+You said your own name was Miss Briggs, I think, didn't you? My
+name's Ronald Le Breton.'
+
+'How curious,' Selah said, colouring up. 'I'm sure I remember Mr.
+Walters talking more than once to me about his brother Ronald.'
+
+'Indeed,' Ronald answered, without even a passing tinge of suspicion.
+That any man should give a false name to other people with intent
+to deceive was a thing that would never have entered into his simple
+head--far less that his own brother Herbert should be guilty of
+such a piece of disgraceful meanness.
+
+'I think,' Ronald went on, as soon as Selah had finished her lunch,
+'you'd better come with me back to my mother's house for the present.
+I suppose, now you've talked it over a little, you won't think of
+throwing yourself into the river any more for to-day. You'll postpone
+your intention for the present, won't you? Adjourn it sine die till
+we can see what can be done for you.'
+
+Selah smiled faintly. Even with the slight fresh spring of hope
+that this chance rencontre had roused anew within her, it seemed
+rather absurd and childish of her to have meditated suicide only
+an hour ago. Besides, she had eaten and drunk since then, and the
+profoundest philosophers have always frankly admitted that the
+pessimistic side of human nature is greatly mitigated after a good
+dinner.
+
+Ronald called a hansom, and drove up rapidly to Epsilon Terrace.
+When he got there, he took Selah into the little back breakfast
+room, regardless of the proprieties, and began once more to consider
+the prospects of the future.
+
+'Is Lady Le Breton in?' he asked the servant: and Selah noticed
+with surprise and wonder that this strange young man's mother was
+actually 'a lady of title,' as she called it to herself in her
+curious ordinary language.
+
+'No, sir,' the girl answered; 'she have been gone out about an
+hour.'
+
+'Then I must leave you here while I go out and get you lodgings for
+the present,' Ronald said, quietly; 'you won't object to my doing
+that, of course: you can easily pay me back from your salary as
+soon as we succeed in finding you some suitable occupation. Let
+me see, where can I put you for the next fortnight? Naturally you
+wouldn't like to live with religious people, would you?'
+
+'I hate them,' Selah answered vigorously.
+
+'Of course, of course,' Ronald went on, as if to himself. 'Perfectly
+natural. She hates them! So should I if I'd been bothered and worried
+out of my life by them in the way she has. I hate them myself--that
+kind: or, rather, it's wrong to say that of them, poor creatures,
+for they mean well, they really mean well at bottom, in their
+blundering, formal, pettifogging way. They think they can take the
+kingdom of Heaven, not by storm, but by petty compliances, like
+servile servants who have to deal with a capricious, exacting
+master. Poor souls, they know no better. They measure the universe
+by the reflection in their muddy mill-pond. Nasty pious people is
+what I always call them; nasty pious people: little narrow souls,
+trying hard to be Christians after their lights, and only attaining,
+after all, to a sort of second-hand diluted Judaism, a religion
+of cup-washing, and phylacteries, and new moons, and sabbaths, and
+daily sacrifices. However, that's neither here nor there. I won't
+hand you over, Miss Briggs, to any of those poor benighted people.
+No, nor to any religious people at all. It wouldn't suit you: you
+want to be well out of it. I know the very place for you. There
+are the Baumanns: they'd be glad to let a room: Baumann's a German
+refugee, and a friend of Ernest's: a good man, but a secularist.
+THEY wouldn't bother you with any religion: poor things, they
+haven't got any. Mrs. Baumann's an excellent woman--educated, too;
+no objection at all in any way to the Baumanns. They're people I
+like and respect immensely--every good quality they have; and I'm
+often grieved to think such excellent people should be deprived of
+the comfort and pleasure of believing. But, then, so's my dear brother
+Ernest; and you know, they're none the worse for it, apparently,
+any of them: indeed, I don't know that there's anybody with whom
+I can talk more sympathetically on spiritual matters than dear
+Ernest. Depend upon it, most of the most spiritually-minded people
+nowadays are outside all the churches altogether.'
+
+Selah listened in blank amazement to this singular avowal of
+heterodox opinion from an obviously religious person. What Ronald
+Le Breton could be she couldn't imagine; and she thought with
+an inward smile of the very different way in which her friends at
+Hastings would have discussed the spiritual character of a wicked
+secularist.
+
+Just at that moment a latch-key turned lightly in the street door,
+and two sets of footsteps came down the passage to Lady Le Breton's
+little back breakfast-room. One set turned up the staircase, the
+other halted for a second at the breakfast-room doorway. Then the
+door opened gently, and Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs stood
+face to face again in blank astonishment.
+
+There was a moment's pause, as Selah rose with burning cheeks from
+the chair where she was sitting; and neither spoke a word as they
+looked with eyes of mutual suspicion and dislike into each other's
+faces. At last Herbert Le Breton turned with some acerbity to his
+brother Ronald, and asked in a voice of affected contempt, 'Who is
+this woman?'
+
+'This LADY'S name is Miss Briggs,' Ronald answered, pointedly, but,
+of course, quite innocently.
+
+'I needn't ask you who this man is,' Selah said, with bitter
+emphasis. 'It's Herbert Walters.'
+
+A horrible light burst in upon Ronald instantaneously as she uttered
+the name; but he could not believe it; he would not believe it: it
+was too terrible, too incredible. 'No, no,' he said falteringly,
+turning to Selah; 'you must be mistaken. This is not Mr. Walters.
+This is my brother, Herbert Le Breton.'
+
+Selah gazed into Herbert's slinking eyes with a concentrated
+expression of scorn and disgust. 'Then he gave me a false name,'
+she said, slowly, fronting him like a tigress. 'He gave me a false
+name, it seems, from the very beginning. All through, the false
+wretch, all through, he actually meant to deceive me. He laid his
+vile scheme for it beforehand. I never wish to see you again,
+you miserable cur, Herbert Le Breton, if that's your real name at
+last. I never wish to see you again: but I'm glad I've done it now
+by accident, if it were only to inflict upon you the humiliation
+of knowing that I have measured the utmost depth of your infamy!
+You mean, common, false scoundrel, I have measured to the bottom
+the depth of your infamy!'
+
+'Oh, don't,' Ronald said imploringly, laying his hand upon her arm.
+'He deserves it, no doubt; but don't glory over his humiliation.'
+He had no need to ask whether she spoke the truth; his brother's
+livid and scarlet face was evidence enough against him.
+
+Herbert, however, answered nothing. He merely turned angrily
+to Ronald. 'I won't bandy words,' he said constrainedly in his
+coldest tone, 'with this infamous woman whom you have brought here
+on purpose to insult me; but I must request you to ask her to leave
+the house immediately. Your mother's home is no place to which to
+bring people of such a character.'
+
+As he spoke, the door opened again, and Lady Le Breton, attracted
+by the sound of angry voices, entered unexpectedly. 'What does all
+this riot mean, Herbert?' she asked, imperiously. 'Who on earth
+is this young woman that Ronald has brought into my own house,
+actually without my permission?'
+
+Herbert whispered a few words quietly into her ear, and then left
+the room hurriedly with a stiff and formal bow to his brother
+Ronald. Lady Le Breton turned round to the culprit severely.
+
+'Disgraceful, Ronald!' she cried in her sternest and most angry
+voice; 'perfectly disgraceful! You aid and abet this wretched
+creature--whose object is only to extort money by false pretences
+out of your brother Herbert--you aid and abet her in her abominable
+stratagems, and you even venture to introduce her clandestinely
+into my own breakfast-room. I wonder you're not ashamed of yourself.
+What on earth can you mean by such extraordinary, such unChristian
+conduct? Go to your own room this moment, sir, and ask this young
+woman to leave the house immediately.'
+
+'I shall go without being asked,' Selah said, proudly, her big eyes
+flashing defiance haughtily into Lady Le Breton's. 'I don't know
+who you all may be, or what this gentleman who brought me here may
+have to do with you: but if you are in any way connected with that
+wretch Herbert Le Breton, who called himself Herbert Walters for
+the sake of deceiving me, I don't want to have anything further to
+say to any of the whole pack of you. Please stand out of my way,'
+she went on to Ronald, 'and I shall have done with you all together
+this very instant. I wish to God I had never seen a single one of
+you.'
+
+'No, no, not just yet, please,' Ronald put in hastily. 'You mustn't
+go just yet, I implore you, I beg of you, till I have explained to
+my mother, before you, how this all happened; and then, when you
+go, I shall go with you. Though I have the misfortune to be the
+brother of the man who gave you a false name in order to deceive
+you, I trust you will still allow me to help you as far as I am
+able, and to take you to my German friends of whom I spoke to you.'
+
+'Ronald,' Lady Le Breton cried, in her most commanding tone, 'you
+must have taken leave of your senses. How dare you keep this person
+a moment longer in my house against my wish, when even she herself
+is anxious to quit it? Let her go at once, let her go at once,
+sir.'
+
+'No, mother,' Ronald answered firmly. 'We are commanded in the Word
+to obey our parents in all things, "in the Lord." I think you've
+forgotten that proviso, mother, "in the Lord." Now, mother, I will
+tell you all about it.' And then, in a rapid sketch, Ronald, with
+his back planted solidly against the door, told his mother briefly
+all he knew about Selah Briggs, how he had found her, how he had
+brought her home not knowing who she was, and how she had recognised
+Herbert as her unfaithful lover. Lady Le Breton, when she saw
+that escape was practically impossible, flung herself back in an
+easy-chair, where she swayed herself backward and forward gently
+all the while, without once lifting her eyes towards Ronald, and
+sighed impatiently from time to time audibly, as if the story merely
+bored her. As for poor Selah, she stood upright in front of Ronald
+without a word, looking neither to the right nor to the left, and
+waiting eagerly for the story to be finished.
+
+When Ronald had said his say, Lady Le Breton looked up at last and
+said simply, with a pretended yawn, 'Now, Ronald, will you go to
+your own room?'
+
+'I will not,' Ronald answered, in a soft whisper. 'I will go with
+this lady to the rooms of which I have spoken to her.'
+
+'Then,' Lady Le Breton said coldly, 'you shall not return here.
+It seems I'm to lose all my children, one after another, by their
+extraordinary rebelliousness!'
+
+'By your own act--yes,' Ronald answered, very calmly. 'You
+forgot that last Thursday was my birthday, I daresay, mother; but
+I didn't forget it; it was; and I came of age then. I'm my own
+master now. I've stopped here as long as I could, mother, because
+of the commandment: but I can't stop here any longer. I shall go
+to Ernest's for to-night as soon as I've got rooms for this lady.'
+
+'Good evening,' Lady Le Breton said, bowing frigidly, without
+another word.
+
+'Good evening, mother,' Ronald replied, in his natural voice. 'Miss
+Briggs, will you come with me? I'm very sorry that this unhappy
+scene should have been inflicted upon you against my will; but I
+hope and pray that you won't have lost all confidence in my wish
+to help you, in spite of these unfortunate accidents.'
+
+Selah followed him blindly, in a dazzled fashion, out on to the
+flagstones of Epsilon Terrace.
+
+'Dear me, dear me,' moaned Lady Le Breton, sinking back vacantly
+once more, with an air of resignation after her efforts, into the
+easy-chair: 'was there ever a mother so plagued and burdened with
+unnatural and undutiful sons as I am? If it weren't for dear Herbert,
+I'm sure I don't know what I should ever do between them. Ronald,
+too, who always pretended to be so very, very religious! To think
+that he should go and uphold the word of a miserable, abandoned,
+improper adventuress against his own brother Herbert! Atrocious,
+perfectly atrocious! Where on earth he can have picked up such a
+woman I'm positively at a loss to imagine. But it's exactly like
+his poor dear father: I remember once when we were stationed at
+Moozuffernugger, in the North-West Provinces, with the 14th Bengal,
+poor Owen absolutely insisted on taking up the case of some Eurasian
+waman, who pretended she'd been badly treated by young Walker of
+our regiment! I call it quite improper--almost unseemly--to meddle
+in the affairs of such people. I daresay Herbert has had something
+or other to say to this horrid girl; young men will be young men,
+and in the army we know how to make allowances for that sort of
+thing: but that Ronald should positively think of bringing such a
+person into my breakfast-room is not to be heard of. Ronald's a pure
+Le Breton--that's undeniable, thank goodness; not a single one of
+the good Whitaker points to be found in all his nature. However,
+poor dear Sir Owen, in spite of all his nonsense, was at least
+an officer and a gentleman; whereas the nonsense these boys have
+picked up at Oxford and among their German refugee people is both
+irreligious, and, I may even say, indecent, or, to put it in the
+mildest way, indecorous. I wish with all my heart I'd never sent
+them to Oxford. I've always thought that if only Ernest had gone
+in for a direct commission, he'd soon have got all that absurd
+revolutionary rubbish knocked out of him in a mess-room! But it's
+a great comfort to me to think I have one real blessing in dear
+Herbert, who's just such a son as any mother might well be thoroughly
+proud of in every way!'
+
+While Lady Le Breton was thus communing with herself in the
+breakfast-room, and while Herbert was trying to patch up a hollow
+truce with his own much-bruised self-respect in his own bedroom,
+Ronald was taking poor dazed and wearied Selah round to the refuge
+of the Baumanns' hospitable roof. As soon as that matter was
+temporarily arranged to the mutual satisfaction of all the parties
+concerned, Ronald walked over alone to Ernest's little lodgings at
+Holloway. He would sleep there that night, and send round a letter
+to Amelia, the housemaid, in the morning, asking her to pack up his
+things and forward them at once to Mrs. Halliss's. For himself,
+he did not propose, unless circumstances compelled it, again to
+enter his mother's rooms, except by her own express invitation.
+After all, he thought, even his little income, if clubbed with Edie
+and Ernest's, would probably help them all to live now in tolerable
+comfort.
+
+So he told Edie all his story, and Edie listened to it with an
+approving smile. 'I think, dear Ronald,' she said, taking his hand
+in hers, 'you did quite right--quite as Ernest himself would have
+done under the circumstances.'
+
+'Where's Ernest?' asked Ronald, half smiling at that naive wifely
+standard of right conduct.
+
+'Gone with Mr. Berkeley to the trial,' Edie answered.
+
+'The trial! What trial?'
+
+'Oh, don't you know? Herr Max's. They're trying him to-day for
+littering a seditious libel and inciting to murder the chief of
+the Third Section at St. Petersburg.'
+
+'But he said nothing at all,' Ronald cried in astonishment. 'I read
+the article myself. He said nothing that any Englishman mightn't
+have said under the same circumstances. Why, I could have written
+the libel, as they call it, myself, even, and I'm not much of a
+politician either! They can't ever be trying him in a country like
+England for anything so ridiculously little as that!'
+
+'But they are,' Edie answered quietly; 'and dear Ernest's dreadfully
+afraid the verdict will go against him.'
+
+'Nonsense,' Ronald answered with natural confidence. 'No English
+jury would ever convict a man for speaking up like that against
+an odious and abominable tyranny.'
+
+Very late in the afternoon, Ernest and Berkeley returned to the
+lodgings. Ernest's face was white with excitement, and his lips
+were trembling violently with suppressed emotion. His eyes were red
+and swollen. Edie hardly needed to ask in a breathless whisper of
+Arthur Berkeley, 'What verdict?'
+
+'Guilty,' Arthur Berkeley answered with a look of unfeigned horror
+and indignation. He had learnt by this time quite to take the
+communistic view of such questions.
+
+'Guilty,' Ronald cried, jumping up from his chair in astonishment.
+'Impossible! And what sentence?'
+
+'Twelve months' hard labour,' Berkeley answered, slowly and
+remorsefully.
+
+'An atrocious sentence!' Ronald exclaimed, turning red with excitement.
+'An abominable sentence! A most malignant and vindictive sentence!
+Who was the judge, Arthur?'
+
+'Bassenthwaite,' Berkeley replied half under his breath.
+
+'And may the Lord have mercy upon his soul!' said Ronald solemnly,
+
+But Ernest never said a single word. He only sat down and ate his
+supper in silence, like one stunned and dazzled. He didn't even
+notice Ronald's coming. And Edie knew by his quick breath and his
+face alternately flushed and pallid that there would be another
+crisis in his gathering complaint before the next morning.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+TELL IT NOT IN OATH.
+
+
+As they sat silent in that little sitting-room after supper, a double
+knock at the door suddenly announced the arrival of a telegram
+for Ernest. He opened it with trembling lingers. It was from
+Lancaster:--'Come down to the office at once. Schurz has been
+sentenced to a year's imprisonment, and we want a leader about
+him for to-morrow.' The telegram roused Ernest at once from his
+stupefied lethargy. Here was a chance at last of doing something
+for Max Schurz and for the cause of freedom! Here was a chance
+of waking up all England to a sense of the horrible crime it had
+just committed through the voice of its duly accredited judicial
+mouthpiece! The country was trembling on the brink of an abyss, and
+he, Ernest Le Breton, might just be in time to save it. The Home
+Secretary must be compelled by the unanimous clamour of thirty
+millions of free working people to redress the gross injustice of
+the law in sending Max Sohurz, the greatest, noblest, and purest-minded
+of mankind, to a common felon's prison! Nothing else on earth could
+have moved Ernest, jaded and dispirited as he was at that moment,
+to the painful exertion of writing a newspaper leader after the
+day's fatigues and excitements, except the thought that by doing so
+he might not only blot out this national disgrace, as he considered
+it, but might also help to release the martyr of the people's rights
+from his incredible, unspeakable punishment. Flushed and feverish
+though he was, he rose straight up from the table, handed the
+telegram to Edie without a word, and started off alone to hail a
+hansom cab and drive down immediately to the office. Arthur Berkeley,
+fearful of what might happen to him in his present excited state,
+stole out after him quietly, and followed him unperceived in another
+hansom at a little distance.
+
+When Ernest got to the 'Morning Intelligence' buildings, he was
+shown up at once into the editorial room. He expected to find Mr.
+Lancaster at the same white heat of indignation as himself; but
+to his immense surprise he actually found him in the usual sleepy
+languid condition of apathetic impartiality. 'I wired for you, Le
+Breton,' the impassive editor said calmly, 'because I understand
+you know all about this man Schurz, who has just got his twelve
+months' imprisonment this evening. I suppose, of course, you've
+heard already all about it.'
+
+'I've been at the trial all day,' Ernest answered, 'and myself
+heard the verdict and sentence.'
+
+'Good,' Mr. Lancaster said, with a dreamy touch of approval in his
+tone. 'That's good journalism, certainly, and very smart of you.
+Helps you to give local colour and realistic touches to the matter.
+But you ought to have called in here to see me immediately. We
+shall have a regular reporter's report of the trial, of course;
+but reporters' reports are fearfully and wonderfully lifeless. If
+you like, besides the leader, you might work up a striking headed
+article on the Scene in Court. This is an important case, and we
+want something more about it than mere writing, you know; a little
+about the man himself and his personal history, which Berkeley tells
+me you're well acquainted with. He's written something called "Gold
+and the Proletariate," or whatever it is; just tell our readers
+all about it. As to the leader, say what you like in it--of course
+I shall look over the proof, and tone it down a bit to suit the
+taste of our public--we appeal mainly to the mercantile middle class,
+I need hardly say; but you know the general policy of the paper,
+and you can just write what you think best, subject to subsequent
+editorial revision. Get to work at once, please, as the articles
+are wanted immediately, and send down slips as fast as they're
+written to the printers.'
+
+Ernest could hardly contain his surprise at Mr. Lancaster's calmness
+under such unheard-of circumstances, when the whole laborious
+fabric of British liberties was tottering visibly to its base--but
+he wisely concluded to himself that the editor had to see articles
+written about every possible subject every evening--from a European
+convulsion to a fire at a theatre,--and that use must have made
+it in him a property of easiness. When a man's obliged to work
+himself up perpetually into a state of artificial excitement about
+every railway accident, explosion, shipwreck, earthquake, or volcanic
+eruption, in Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and the islands of the
+Pacific Ocean, why then, Ernest charitably said to himself, his
+sympathies must naturally end by getting a trifle callous, especially
+when he's such a very apathetic person to start with as this laconic
+editorial Lancaster. So he turned into the little bare box devoted
+to his temporary use, and began writing with perfectly unexampled
+and extraordinary rapidity at his leader and his article about the
+injured and martyred apostle of the slighted communistic religion.
+
+It was only a few months since Ernest had, with vast toil and
+forethought, spun slowly out his maiden newspaper article on the
+Italian organ-boy, and now he found himself, to his own immense
+surprise, covering sheet after sheet of paper in feverish haste
+with a long account of Max Schurz's splendid life and labours, and
+with a really fervid and eloquent appeal to the English people not
+to suffer such a man as he to go helplessly and hopelessly to an
+English prison, at the bare bidding of a foreign despot. He never
+stopped for one moment to take thought, or to correct what he had
+written; in the excitement of the moment his pen travelled along
+over the paper as if inspired, and he found the words and thoughts
+thronging his brain almost faster than his lagging hand could
+suffice to give them visible embodiment. As each page was thrown
+off hurriedly, he sent it down, still pale and wet, to the printers
+in the office; and before two o'clock in the morning, he had full
+proofs of all he had written sent up to him for final correction. It
+was a stirring and vigorous leader, he felt quite certain himself
+as he read it over; and he thought with a swelling breast that
+it would appear next day, with all the impersonal authority of
+the 'Morning Intelligence' stamped upon its face, at ten thousand
+English breakfast tables, where it might rouse the people in their
+millions to protest sternly before it was too late against this
+horrid violation of our cherished and boasted national hospitality.
+
+Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stopped at the office, and run in
+hastily for five minutes' talk with the terrible editor. 'Don't
+say anything to shock Le Breton, I beg of you, Lancaster,' he said,
+'about this poor man Schurz who has just been sent for a year to
+prison. It's a very hard case, and I'm awfully sorry for the man
+myself, though that's neither here nor there. I can see from your
+face that you, for your part, don't sympathise with him; but at
+any rate, don't say anything about it to hurt Le Breton's feelings.
+He's in a dreadfully feverish and excited condition this evening;
+Max Schurz has always been to him almost like a father, and he
+naturally takes his sentence very bitterly to heart. To tell you
+the truth, I regret it a great deal myself, I know a little of
+Schurz, through Le Breton, and I know what a well-meaning, ardent,
+enthusiastic person he really is, and how much good actually
+underlies all his chaotic socialistic notions. But at any rate, I
+do beg of you, don't say anything to further excite and hurt poor
+Le Breton.'
+
+'Certainly not,' the editor answered, smoothing his large hands
+softly one over the other. 'Certainly not; though I confess, as a
+practical man, I don't sympathise in the least with this preposterous
+German refugee fellow. So far as I can learn, he's been at the
+bottom of half the revolutionary and insurrectionary movements of
+the last twenty years--a regular out-and-out professional socialistic
+incendiary.'
+
+'You wouldn't say so,' Berkeley replied quietly, 'if you'd seen
+more of him, Lancaster.' But being a man of the world, and having
+come mainly on Ernest's account, he didn't care to press the abstract
+question of Herr Max's political sincerity any further.
+
+'Well,' the editor went on, a little testily, 'be that as it may, I
+won't discuss the subject with your friend Le Breton, who's really
+a nice, enthusiastic young fellow, I think, as far as I've seen
+him. I'll simply let him write to-night whatever he pleases, and
+make the necessary alterations in proof afterwards, without talking
+it over with him personally at all. That'll avoid any needless
+discussion and ruffling of his supersensitive communistic feelings.
+Poor fellow, he looks very ill indeed to-night. I'm really extremely
+sorry for him.'
+
+'When will he be finished?' asked Arthur.
+
+'At two,' the editor answered.
+
+'I'll send a cab for him,' Arthur said; 'there'll be none about
+at that hour, probably. Will you kindly tell him it's waiting for
+him?'
+
+At two o'clock or a little after, Ernest drove home with his heart
+on fire, full of eagerness and swelling hope for to-morrow morning.
+He found Edie waiting for him, late as it was, with a little bottle
+of wine--an unknown luxury at Mrs. Halliss's lodgings--and such
+light supper as she thought he could manage to swallow in his
+excitement. Ernest drank a glass of the wine, but left the supper
+untasted. Then he went to bed, and tossed about uneasily till
+morning. He couldn't sleep through his anxiety to see his great
+leader appear in all the added dignity of printer's ink and rouse
+the slumbering world of England up to a due sense of Max Schurz's
+wrongs and the law's incomprehensible iniquity.
+
+Before seven, he rose very quietly, dressed himself without
+saying a word, and stole out to buy an early copy of the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' He got one at the small tobacconist's shop round the
+corner, where he had taken his first hint for the Italian organ-boy
+leader. It was with difficulty that he could contain himself till
+he was back in Mrs. Halliss's little front parlour; and there
+he tore open the paper eagerly, and turned to the well-remembered
+words at the beginning of his desperate appealing article. He could
+recollect the very run of every clause and word he had written: 'No
+Englishman can read without a thrill of righteous indignation,' it
+began,'the sentence passed last night upon Max Schurz, the author
+of that remarkable economical work, "Gold and the Proletariate."
+Herr Schurz is one of those numerous refugees from German despotism
+who have taken advantage of the hospitable welcome usually afforded
+by England to the oppressed of all creeds or nations'--and so forth,
+and so forth. Where was it now? Yes, that was it, in the place of
+honour, of course--the first leader under the clock in the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' His eye caught at once the opening key-words, 'No
+Englishman.' Sinking down into the easy-chair by the flowers in the
+window he prepared to run it through at his leisure with breathless
+anxiety.
+
+'No Englishman can read without a feeling of the highest approval
+the sentence passed last night upon Max Schurz, the author of that
+misguided economical work, "Gold and the Proletariate." Herr Schurz
+is one of those numerous refugees from German authority, who have
+taken advantage of the hospitable welcome usually afforded by England
+to the oppressed of all creeds or nations, in order to hatch plots
+in security against the peace of sovereigns or governments with
+which we desire always to maintain the most amicable and cordial
+relations.' Ernest's eyes seemed to fail him. The type on the paper
+swam wildly before his bewildered vision. What on earth could
+this mean? It was his own leader, indeed, with the very rhythm and
+cadence of the sentences accurately preserved, but with all the
+adjectives and epithets so ingeniously altered that it was turned
+into a crushing condemnation of Max Schurz, his principles,
+his conduct, and his ethical theories. From beginning to end, the
+article appealed to the common-sense of intelligent Englishmen to
+admire the dignity of the law in thus vindicating itself against
+the atrocious schemes of a dangerous and ungrateful political exile
+who had abused the hospitality of a great fres country to concoct
+vile plots against the persons of friendly sovereigns and innocent
+ministers on the European continent.
+
+Ernest laid down the paper dreamily, and leant back for a moment
+in his chair, to let his brain recover a little from the reeling
+dizziness of that crushing disappointment. Then he turned in a
+giddy mechanical fashion to the headed article on the fourth page.
+There the self-same style of treatment met once more his astonished
+gaze. All the minute facts as to Max Schurz's history and personality
+were carefully preserved; the description of his simple artisan
+life, his modest household, his Sunday evening receptions, his great
+following of earnest and enthusiastic refugees--every word of all
+this, which hardly anyone else could have equally well supplied,
+was retained intact in the published copy; yet the whole spirit
+of the thing had utterly evaporated, or rather had been perverted
+into the exact opposite unsympathetic channel. Where Ernest had
+written 'enthusiasm,' Lancaster had simply altered the word to
+'fanaticism;' where Ernest had spoken of Herr Max's 'single-hearted
+devotion,' Lancaster had merely changed the phrase into 'undisguised
+revolutionary ardour.' The whole paper was one long sermon against
+Max Schurz's Utopian schemes, imputing to him not only folly but
+even positive criminality as well. We all know how we all in England
+look upon the foreign political refugee--a man to be hit again with
+impunity, because he has no friends; but to Ernest, who had lived
+so long in his own little socialistic set, the discovery that people
+could openly say such things against his chosen apostle at the very
+moment of his martyrdom, was a hideous and blinding disillusionment.
+He put the paper down upon the table once more, and buried his face
+helplessly between his burning hands.
+
+The worst of it all was this: if Herr Max ever saw those articles
+he would naturally conclude that Ernest had been guilty of the
+basest treachery, and that too on the very day when he most needed
+the aid and sympathy of all his followers. With a thrill of horror
+he thought in his own soul that the great leader might suspect him
+for an hour of being the venal Judas of the little sect.
+
+How Ernest ever got through that weary day he did not know himself;
+nothing kept him up through it except his burning indignation
+against Lancaster's abominable conduct. About eleven o'clock,
+Arthur Berkeley called in to see him. 'I'm afraid you've been a
+little disappointed,' he said, 'about the turn Lancaster has given
+to your two articles. He told me he meant to alter the tone so
+as to suit the policy of the paper, and I see he's done so very
+thoroughly. You can't look for much sympathy from commonplace,
+cold, calculating Englishmen for enthusiastic natures like Herr
+Max's.'
+
+Ernest turned to him in blank amazement. He had expected Berkeley
+to be as angry as himself at Lancaster's shameful mutilation of his
+appealing leader; and he found now that even Berkeley accepted it
+as an ordinary incident in the course of journalistic business. His
+heart sank within him as he thought how little hope there could be
+of Herr Max's liberation, when even his own familiar friend Berkeley
+looked upon the matter in such a casual careless fashion.
+
+'I shall never write another word for the "Morning Intelligence,"'
+he cried vehemently, after a moment's pause. 'If we starve for
+it, I shall never write another word in that wicked, abominable,
+dishonourable paper. I can die easily enough, heaven knows, without
+a murmur: but I can't be disloyal to dear Herr Max, and to all my
+innate ingrained principles.'
+
+'Don't say that, Ernest,' Berkeley answered gently. 'Think of
+Mrs. Le Breton and the baby. The luxury of starvation for the sake
+of a cause is one you might venture to allow yourself if you were
+alone in the world as I am, but not one which you ought to force
+unwillingly upon your wife and children. You've been getting a
+trifle more practical of late under the spur of necessity; don't go
+and turn impossible again at the supreme moment. Whatever happens,
+it's your plain duty to go on writing for the "Morning Intelligence."
+You say with your own hand only what you think and believe yourself:
+the editor alone is responsible for the final policy of the paper.'
+
+Ernest only muttered slowly to himself,--'Never, never, never!'
+
+Still, though the first attempt had failed, Ernest did not wholly
+give up his hopes of doing something towards the release of Herr Max
+from that unutterable imprisonment. He drew up a form of petition
+to the Home Secretary, in which he pointed out the reasons for
+setting aside the course of the law in the case of this particular
+political prisoner. With feverish anxiety he ran about London
+for the next two days, trying to get influential signatures to his
+petition, and to rouse the people in their millions to demand the
+release of the popular martyr. Alas for the stolid indifference of
+the British public! The people in their millions sat down to eat
+and drink, and rose up to play, exactly as if nothing unusual in
+any way had happened. Most of them had never heard at all of Herr
+Max, or of 'Gold and the Proletariate,' and those who had heard
+understood for the most part that he was a bad lot who was imprisoned
+for trying nefariously to blow up the Emperor of Rooshia. Crowds
+of people nightly besieged the doors of the Ambiguities and the
+Marlborough, to hear the fate of 'The Primate of Fiji' and 'The Duke
+of Bermondsey;' but very few among the millions took the trouble to
+sign their names to Ernest Le Breton's despairing petition. Even
+the advanced radicals of the market-place, the men who figured
+largely at Trafalgar Square meetings and Agricultural Labourers'
+Unions, feared to damage their reputation for moderation and sobriety
+by getting themselves mixed up with a continental agitator like
+this man Schurz that people were talking about. The Irish members
+expressed a pious horror of the very word dynamite: the working-man
+leaders hemmed and hawed, and regretted their inability, in their
+very delicate position, to do anything which might seem like
+countenancing Russian nihilism. In the end, Ernest sent, in his
+petition with only half a dozen unknown signatures; and the Home
+Secretary's private prompter threw it into the waste-paper basket
+entire, without even taking the trouble to mention its existence
+to his harassed and overburdened chief. Just a Marylebone communist
+refugee in prison! How could a statesman with half the bores and
+faddists of England on his troubled hands, find time to look at
+uninfluential petitions about an insignificant worthless nobody
+like that?
+
+So gentle, noble-natured, learned Herr Max went to prison and served
+his year there uncomplainingly, like any other social malefactor;
+and Society talked about his case with languid interest for nearly
+a fortnight, and then straightway found a new sensation, and forgot
+all about him. But there are three hundred and sixty-five days of
+twenty-four hours each in every year; and for every one of those days
+Herr Max and Herr Max's friends never forgot for an hour together
+that he was in prison.
+
+And at the end of the week Ernest got a letter from Lancaster,
+enclosing a cheque for eight guineas. That is a vast sum of money,
+eight guineas: just think of all the bread, and meat, and tea,
+and clothing one can buy with it for a small family! 'My dear Le
+Breton,' the editor wrote--in his own hand, too; a rare honour;
+for he was a kindly man, and he had learned, much to his surprise,
+from Arthur Berkeley, that Ernest was angry at his treatment of the
+Schurzian leader: 'My dear Le Breton, I enclose cheque for eight
+guineas, for your two articles. I hope you didn't mind the way
+I was obliged to cut them up in some unessential details, so as
+to suit the policy of the paper. I kept whatever was really most
+distinctive as embodying special information in them. You know
+we are above all things strictly moderate. Please send us another
+social shortly.'
+
+It was a kind letter, undoubtedly a kind and kindly-meant letter:
+but Ernest flung it from him as though he had been stung by a
+serpent or a scorpion. Then he handed the cheque to Edie in solemn
+silence, to see what she would do with it. He merely wanted to try
+her constancy. For himself, he would have felt like a Judas indeed
+if he had taken and used their thirty pieces of silver.
+
+Edie looked at the cheque intently and sighed a deep sigh of regret.
+How could she do otherwise? They were so very poor, and it was
+such an immense sum of money! Then she rose quietly without saying
+a word, and lighted a match from the box on the mantelpiece. She
+held the cheque firmly between her finger and thumb till it was
+nearly burnt, end let it drop slowly at last into the empty fireplace.
+Ernest rose up and kissed her tenderly. The leaden weight of the
+thirty pieces of silver was fairly off their united conscience. They
+had made what reparation they could for the evil of that unhappy,
+undesigned leader. After all Ernest had wasted the last remnant of
+his energy on one eventful evening, all for nothing.
+
+As Edie sat looking wistfully at the smouldering fragments of the
+burnt cheque, Ernest roused her again by saying quietly, 'To-day's
+Saturday. Have we got anything for to-morrow's dinner, Edie?'
+
+'Nothing,' Edie answered, simply. 'How much money have you left,
+Ernest?'
+
+'Sixpence,' Ernest said, without needing to consult his empty
+purse for confirmation--he had counted the pence, as they went, too
+carefully for that already. 'Edie, I'm afraid we must go at last
+to the poor man's banker till I can get some more money.'
+
+'Oh, Ernest--not--not--not the pawnbroker!'
+
+'Yes, Edie, the pawnbroker.'
+
+The tears came quickly into Edie's eyes, but she answered nothing.
+They must have food, and there was no other way open before them.
+They rose together and went quietly into the bedroom. There they
+gathered together the few little trinkets and other things that might
+be of use to them, and Ernest took down his hat from the stand to
+go out with them to the pawnbroker's.
+
+As he turned out he was met energetically on the landing by a
+stout barricade from good Mrs. Halliss. 'No, sir, not you, sir,'
+the landlady said firmly, trying to take the parcel from him as he
+went towards the door. 'I beg your pardon, sir, for 'avin' over'eard
+what wasn't meant for me to 'ear, no doubt, but I couldn't 'elp it,
+sir, and John an' me can't allow nothink of this sort, we can't.
+We're used to this sort o' things, sir, John and me is; but you
+and the dear lady isn't used to 'em, sir, and didn't nought to be
+neither, and John an' me can't allow it, not anyhow.'
+
+Ernest turned scarlet with shame, but could say nothing. Edie only
+whispered softly, 'Dear, dear Mrs. Halliss, we're so sorry, but we
+can't help it.'
+
+''Elp it, ma'am,' said Mrs. Halliss, herself almost crying, 'nor
+there ain't no reason why you should try to 'elp it neither. As I
+says to John, "John," says I, "there ain't no 'arm in it, noways,"
+says I, "but I can't stand by," says I, "and see them two poor dear
+young creechurs," meanin' no offence, ma'am, "a-pawning of their
+own jewelry and things to go and pay for their Sunday's dinner."
+And John, 'e says, says 'e, "Quite right, Martha," says 'e; "don't
+let 'em, my dear," says 'e. "The Lord has prospered us a bit in our
+'umble way, Martha," says 'e, "and we ain't got no cause to want,
+we ain't; and if the dear lady and the good gentleman wouldn't
+take it as a liberty," says 'e, "it 'ud be better they should just
+borrer a pound or two for a week from us," says 'e, beggin' your
+pardon, ma'am, for 'intin' of it, "than that there Mr. Le Breting,
+as ain't accustomed to such places nohow, should go a-makin'
+acquaintance, for the fust time of his life, as you may say, with
+the inside of a pawnbroker's shop," says 'e. "John," says I, "it's
+my belief the lady and gentleman 'ud be insulted," says I, "though
+they ARE the sweetest unassoomin'est young gentlefolk I ever did
+see," says I, "if we were to go as tin' them to accept the loan
+of money from the likes of you and me, John, as is no better, by
+the side of them, nor old servants, in the manner o' speakin'."
+"Insulted," says 'e; "not a bit of it, they needn't, Martha,"
+says 'e, "for I knows the ways of the aristocracy," says 'e, "and
+I knows as there's many a gentleman as owns 'is own 'osses and
+'is own 'ounds as isn't afraid to borrer a pound or so from 'is own
+coachman, or even from 'is own groom--not but what to borrer from
+a groom is lowerin'," says 'e, "in a tempory emergency. Mind you,
+Martha," says 'e, "a tempory emergency is a thing as may 'appen
+to landed gentlefolks any day," says 'e. "It's like a 'ole in your
+coat made by a tear," says 'e; "a haccident as may 'appen to-morrer
+to the Prince of Wales 'isself upon the 'untin' field," 'e says.
+"Well, then, John," says I, "I'll just go an' speak to 'em about
+it, this very minnit," says I, and if I might make so bold, ma'am,
+without seemin' too presumptious, I should be very glad if you'd
+kindly allow me, ma'am, to lend Mr. Le Breting a few suvverins till
+'e gets 'is next remittances, ma'am.'
+
+Edie looked at Ernest, and Ernest looked at Edie and the landlady;
+and then they all three burst out crying together without further
+apology. Perhaps it was the old Adam left in Ernest a little;
+but though he could stand kindness from Dr. Greatrex or from Mr.
+Lancaster stoically enough, he couldn't watch the humble devotion
+of those two honest-hearted simple old servants without a mingled
+thrill of shame and tenderness. 'Mrs. Halliss,' he said, catching
+up the landlady's hard red hand gratefully in his own, 'you are too
+good and too kind, and too considerate for us altogether. I feel
+we have done nothing to deserve such great kindness from you. But
+I really don't think it would be right of us to borrow from you when
+we don't even know how long it may be before we're able to return
+your money or whether we shall ever be able to return it at all.
+We're so much obliged to you, so very very much obliged to you,
+dear Mrs. Halliss, but I think we ought as a matter of duty to pawn
+these few little things rather than run into debt which we've no
+fair prospect at present of ever redeeming.'
+
+'HAS you please, sir,' Mrs. Halliss said gently, wiping her eyes
+with her snow-white apron, for she saw at once that Ernest really
+meant what he said. 'Not that John an' me would think of it for a
+minnit, sir, so long as you wouldn't mind our takin' the liberty;
+but any'ow, sir, we can't allow you to go out yourself and go to
+the pawnbroker's. It ain't no fit place for the likes of you, sir,
+a pawnbroker's ain't, in all that low company; and I don't suppose
+you'd rightly know 'ow much to hask on the articles, neither.
+John, 'e ain't afeard of goin'; an' 'e says, 'e insists upon it as
+'e's to go, for 'e don't think, sir, for the honour of the 'ouse,
+'e says, sir, as a lodger of ours ought to be seen a-goin' to the
+pawnbroker's. Just you give them things right over to John, sir,
+and 'e'll get you a better price on 'em by a long way nor they'd
+ever think of giving a gentleman like you, sir.'
+
+Ernest fought off the question in a half-hearted fashion for a
+little while, but Mrs. Halliss insisted upon it, and after a short
+time Ernest gave way, for to say the truth he had very vague ideas
+himself as to how he ought to proceed in a pawnbroking expedition.
+Mrs. Halliss ran down the kitchen stairs quickly, for fear he
+should change his mind as soon as her back was turned, and called
+out gaily to her husband in the first delight of her unexpected
+triumph.
+
+'John,' she cried, '--drat that man, where is 'e? John, dear, you
+just putt your 'at on, and purtend to run round the corner a bit
+to Aston's the pawnbroker's. The Lord have mercy upon me for the
+stories I've been a-tellin' of 'em, but I couldn't bear to see them
+two pore things a-pawnin' their little bits of jewelry and sich,
+and Mr. Le Breting, too, 'im as ain't fit to go knockin' together
+with underbred folks like pawnbrokers. So I told 'im as you'd take
+'em round and pawn 'em for 'im yourself; not as I don't suppose
+you've never pawned nothink in your 'ole life, John, leastways not
+since ever you an' me kep' company, for afore that I suppose you
+was purty much like other young men is, John, for all you shakes
+your 'ead at it now so innocent like. But you just run round,
+there's a dear, and make as if you was goin' to the pawnbroker's,
+and then you come straight 'ome again unbeknown to 'em. I ain't
+a goin' to let them two pore dears go pawnin' their things for a
+dinner nohow. You take them two suvverins out of your box, John,
+and putt away these 'ere little things for the present time till
+the pore souls is able to pay us, and if they never don't, small
+matter neither. Now you go fast, John, there's a dear, and come
+back, and mind you give them two suvverins to Mr. Le Breting as
+natural like as ever you're able.'
+
+'Pawn 'em,' John said in a pitying voice, 'no indeed, it ain't
+come to that yet, I should 'ope, that they need go a-pawnin' their
+effects while we've got a suvverin or two laid by in our box,
+Martha. Not as anybody need be ashamed of pawnin' on occasions, for
+that matter,--I don't say as a reg'lar thing, but now an' then on
+occasions, as you may call it; for even in the best dookal families,
+I've 'eard tell they DO sometimes 'ave to pawn the dimonds, so
+that pawnin' ain't in the runnin' noways, bless you, as respects
+gentility. Not as I'd like to go into a pawnshop myself, Martha,
+as I've always been brought up respectable; but when you send for
+Mr. Hattenborough to your own ressydence and say quite commandin'
+like, "'Er Grace 'ud be obleeged if you'd wait upon 'er in Belgrave
+Square to hinspeck 'er dimonds as I want to raise the wind on 'em,"
+why, that's quite another matter nat'rally.'
+
+When honest John came back in a few minutes and handed the
+two sovereigns over to Ernest, he did it with such an unblushing
+face as might have won him applause on any stage for its perfect
+naturalness. 'Lor' bless your 'eart, sir,' he said in answer to
+Ernest's shamefaced thanks, touching the place where his hat ought
+to be mechanically, 'it ain't nothing, sir, that ain't. If it
+weren't for the dookal families of England, sir, it's my belief the
+pawnbrokin' business wouldn't be worth mentioning in the manner o'
+speakin'.'
+
+That evening, Ernest paced up and down the little parlour rather
+moodily for half an hour with three words ringing perpetually in his
+dizzy ears-the 'Never, never, never,' he had used so short a tune
+since about the 'Morning Intelligence.' He must get money somehow
+for Dot and Edie! he must get money somehow to pay good Mrs. Halliss
+for their board and lodging! There was only one way possible.
+Fight against it as he would, in the end he must come back to that
+inevitable conclusion. At last he sat down with a gloomy face at
+the centre table, and pulled out a sheet of blank foolscap.
+
+'What are you going to do, Ernest?' Edie asked him.
+
+Ernest groaned. 'I'm writing a social for the "Morning Intelligence,"
+Edie,' he answered bitterly.
+
+'Oh, Ernest!' Edie said with a face of horror and surprise. 'Not
+after the shameful way they've treated poor Max Schurz!'
+
+Ernest groaned again. 'There's nothing else to be done, Edie,' he
+said, looking up at her despondently. 'I must earn money somehow
+to keep the house going.'
+
+It is the business of the truthful historian to narrate facts, not
+to palliate or extenuate the conduct of the various actors. Whether
+Ernest did right or wrong, at least he did it; he wrote a playful
+social for Monday's 'Morning Intelligence,' and carried it into
+the office on Sunday afternoon himself, beause there was no postal
+delivery in the London district.
+
+That night, he lay awake once more for hours together, tossing
+and turning, and reflecting bitterly on his own baseness and his
+final moral downfall. Herbert was right, after all. The environment
+was beginning to conquer. He could hold out no longer. Herr Max
+was in prison; the world was profoundly indifferent; he himself
+had fallen away like Peter; and there was nothing left for him now
+but to look about and find himself a dishonourable grave.
+
+And Dot? And Edie? What was to become of them after? Ah me, for
+the pity of it when a man cannot even crawl quietly into a corner
+and die in peace like a dog, without being tortured by fears
+and terrors beforehand as to what will come to those he loves far
+better than life when he himself is quietly dead and buried out of
+the turmoil!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+A MAN AND A MAID.
+
+
+IF Ernest and Edie had permitted it, Ronald Le Breton would have
+gone at once, after his coming of age, to club income and expenditure
+with his brother's household. But, as Edie justly remarked, when
+he proposed it, such a course would pretty nearly have amounted to
+clubbing HIS income with THEIR expenditure; and even in their last
+extreme of poverty that was an injustice which neither she nor her
+husband could possibly permit. Ronald needed all his little fortune
+for his own simple wants, and though they themselves starved,
+they couldn't bear to deprive him of the small luxuries which had
+grown into absolute necessaries for one so feeble and weak. Indeed,
+ill as Ernest himself now was, he had never outgrown the fixed
+habit of regarding Ronald as the invalid of the family; and to have
+taken anything, though in the direst straits, from him, would have
+seemed like robbing the helpless poor of their bare necessities.
+So Ronald was fain at last to take lodgings for himself with
+a neighbour of good Mrs. Halliss's, and only to share in Ernest's
+troubles to the small extent of an occasional loan, which Edie
+would have repaid to time if she had to go without their own poor
+little dinner for the sake of the repayment.
+
+Meanwhile, Ronald had another interest on hand which to his
+enthusiastic nature seemed directly imposed upon him by the finger
+of Providence--to provide a home and occupation for poor Selah,
+whom Herbert had cast aside as a legacy to him. As soon as he
+had got settled down to his own new mode of life in the Holloway
+lodgings, he began to look about for a fit place for the homeless
+girl--a place, he thought to himself, which must combine several
+special advantages; plenty of work--she wanted that to take her
+mind off brooding; good, honest, upright people; and above all, no
+religion. Ronald recognised that last undoubted requirement as of
+absolutely paramount importance. 'She'll stand any amount of talk
+or anything else from me,' he said to himself often, 'because she
+knows I'm really in earnest; but she wouldn't stand it for a moment
+from those well-meaning, undiscriminating, religious busy-bodies,
+who are so awfully anxious about other people's souls, though
+they never seem for a single minute to consider in any way other
+people's feelings.' After a little careful hunting among his
+various acquaintances, however, he found at last a place that would
+exactly suit Selah at a stationer's in Netting Hill; and there he
+put her--with full confidence that Selah would do the work entrusted
+to her well and ably, if not from conscientiousness, at least from
+personal pride, 'which, after all,' Roland soliloquised dreamily,
+'is as good a substitute for the genuine article as one can
+reasonably expect to find in poor fallen human nature.'
+
+'I wish, Mr. Le Breton,' Selah said, quite timidly for her (maidenly
+reserve, it must be admitted, was not one of Selah Briggs's strong
+points), 'that I wasn't going to be quite so far from you as Notting
+Hill. If I could see you sometimes, you know, I should feel that
+it might keep me more straight--keep me away from the river in
+future, I mean. I can't stand most people's preaching, but somehow,
+your preaching seems to do me more good than harm, really, which is
+just the exact opposite way, it seems to me, from everybody else's.'
+
+Ronald smiled sedately. 'I'm glad you want to see me sometimes,'
+he said, with a touch of something very like gallantry in his tone
+that was wholly unusual with him. 'I shall walk over every now and
+then, and look you up at your lodgings over yonder; and besides,
+you can come on Sundays to dear Edie's, and I shall be able to
+meet you there once a fortnight or thereabouts. But I'm not going
+to let you call me Mr. Le Breton any longer; it isn't friendly:
+and, what's more, it isn't Christian. Why should there be these
+artificial barriers between soul and soul, eh, Selah? I shall
+call you Selah in future: it seems more genuine and heartfelt, and
+unencumbered with needless conventions, than your misters and
+misses. After all, why should we keep up such idle formalities
+between brethren and fellow-workers?'
+
+Selah started a little--she knew better than Ronald himself did
+what such first advances really led to. 'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' she
+said quickly, 'I really can't call you Ronald. I can never call
+any other man by his Christian name as long as I live, after--your
+brother.'
+
+'You mistake me, Selah,' Ronald put in hastily, with his quaint
+gravity. 'I mean it merely as a sign of confidence and a mark of
+Christian friendship. Sisters call their brothers by their Christian
+names, don't they? So there can be no harm in that, surely. It seems
+to me that if you call me Mr. Le Breton, you're putting me on the
+footing of a man merely; if you call me Ronald, you're putting me
+on the footing of a brother, which is really a much more harmless
+and unequivocal position for me to stand in. Do, please, Selah,
+call me Ronald.'
+
+'I'm afraid I can't,' Selah answered. 'I daren't. I mustn't.' But
+she faltered a little for a moment, notwithstanding.
+
+'You must, Selah,' Ronald said, with all the force of his enthusiastic
+nature, fixing his piercing eyes full upon her. 'You must, I tell
+you. Call me Ronald.'
+
+'Very well--Ronald,' Selah said at last, after a long pause.
+'Good-bye, now. I must be going. Good-bye, and thank you. Thank
+you. Thank you.' There was a tear quivering even in Selah Briggs's
+eye, as she held his hand lingeringly a moment in hers before
+releasing it. He was a very good fellow, really, and he had been
+so very kind, too, in interesting himself about her future.
+
+'What a marvellous thread of sameness,' Ronald thought to himself,
+as he walked back rapidly to his solitary lodgings, 'runs through
+the warp and woof of a single family, after all! What an underlying
+unity of texture there must be throughout, in all its members,
+however outwardly dissimilar they may seem to be from one another!
+One would say at first sight there was very little, if anything,
+in common between me and Herbert. And yet this girl interests me
+wonderfully. Of course I'm not in love with her--the notion of
+MY falling in love with anybody is clearly too ridiculous. But I'm
+attracted by her, drawn towards her, fascinated as it were; I feel
+a sort of curious spell upon me whenever I look into her deep big
+eyes, flashing out upon one with their strange luminousness. It
+isn't merely that the Hand has thrown her in my way: that counts
+for something, no doubt, but not for everything. Besides, the
+Hand doesn't act blindly--nay, rather, acts with supreme wisdom,
+surpassing the powers or the comprehension of man. When it threw
+Selah Briggs in my way, depend upon it, it was because the Infinite
+saw in me something that was specially adapted to her, and in her
+something that was specially adapted to me. The instrument is duly
+shaped by inscrutable Wisdom for its own proper work. Now, whatever
+interests ME in her, must have also interested Herbert in her
+equally and for the same reason. We're drawn towards her, clearly;
+she exercises over both of us some curious electric power that she
+doesn't exercise, presumably, over other people. For Herbert must
+have been really in love with her--not that I'm in love with her,
+of course; but still, the phenomena are analogous, even if on
+a slightly different plane--Herbert must have been really in love
+with her, I'm sure, or such a prudent man as he is would never have
+let himself get into what he would consider such a dangerous and
+difficult entanglement. Yes, clearly, there's something in Selah
+Briggs that seems to possess a singular polarity, as Ernest would
+call it, for the Le Breton character and individuality!
+
+'And then, it cuts both ways, too, for Selah was once desperately
+in love with Herbert: of that I'm certain. She must have been, to
+judge from the mere strength of the final revulsion. She's a girl
+of intensely deep passions--I like people to have some depth to
+their character, even if it's only in the way of passion--and she'd
+never have loved him at all without loving him fervently and almost
+wildly: hers is a fervent, wild, indomitable nature. Yes, she was
+certainly in love with Herbert; and now, though of course I don't
+mean to say she's in love with me (I hope it isn't wrong to think
+in this way about an unmarried girl), still I can't help seeing
+that I have a certain influence over her in return--that she pays
+much attention to what I say and think, considers me a person
+worth considering, which she doesn't do, I'm sure, with most other
+people. Ah, well, there's a vast deal of truth, no doubt, in these
+new hereditary doctrines of Darwin's and Galton's that Herbert
+and Ernest talk about so much; a family's a family, that's certain,
+not a mere stray collection of casual acquaintances. How the
+likeness runs through the very inmost structure of our hearts and
+natures! I see in Selah very much what Herbert saw in Selah: Selah
+sees in me very much what she saw in Herbert. Extraordinary insight
+into human nature men like Darwin and Galton have, to be sure? And
+David, too, what a marvellous thinker he was, really! What unfathomed
+depths of meaning lie unexpected in that simple sentence of his,
+"I am fearfully and wonderfully made." Fearfully and wonderfully,
+indeed, when one remembers that from one father and mother Herbert
+and I have both been compounded, so unlike in some things that we
+scarcely seem to be comparable with one another (look at Herbert's
+splendid intellect beside mine!), so like in others that Selah
+Briggs--goodness gracious, what am I thinking of? I was just going
+to say that Selah Briggs falls in love first with one of us and
+then with the other. I do hope and trust it isn't wrong of me to
+fill my poor distracted head so much with these odd thoughts about
+that unfortunate girl, Selah!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY TRIUMPHS.
+
+
+Winter had come, and on a bitter cold winter's night, Ernest
+Le Breton once more received an unexpected telegram asking him to
+hurry down without a moment's delay on important business to the
+'Morning Intelligence' office. The telegram didn't state at all
+what the business was; it merely said it was urgent and immediate
+without in any way specifying its nature. Ernest sallied forth
+in some perturbation, for his memories of the last occasion when
+the 'Morning Intelligence' required his aid on important business
+were far from pleasant ones; but for Edie's sake he felt he must
+go, and so he went without a murmur.
+
+'Sit down, Le Breton,' Mr. Lancaster said slowly when Ernest
+entered. 'The matter I want to see you about's a very peculiar one.
+I understand from some of my friends that you're a son of Sir Owen
+Le Breton, the Indian general.'
+
+'Yes, I am,' Ernest answered, wondering within himself to what
+end this curious preamble could possibly be leading up. If there's
+any one profession, he thought, which is absolutely free from the
+slightest genealogical interest in the persons of its professors,
+surely that particular calling ought to be the profession of
+journalism.
+
+'Well, so I hear, Le Breton. Now, I believe I'm right in saying,
+am I not, that it was your father who first subdued and organised
+a certain refractory hill-tribe on the Tibetan frontier, known as
+the Bodahls, wasn't it?'
+
+'Quite right,' Ernest replied, with a glimmering idea slowly rising
+in his mind as to what Mr. Lancaster was now driving at.
+
+'Ah, that's good, very good indeed, certainly. Well, tell me,
+Le Breton, do you yourself happen to know anything on earth about
+these precious insignificant people?'
+
+'I know all about them,' Ernest answered quickly. 'I've read all
+my father's papers and despatches, and seen his maps and plans and
+reports in our house at home from my boyhood upward. I know as much
+about the Bodahls, in fact, as I know about Bayswater, or Holborn,
+or Fleet Street.'
+
+'Capital, capital,' the editor said, fondling his big hands softly;
+'that'll exactly suit us. And could you get at these plans and papers
+now, this very evening, just to refresh the gaps in your memory?'
+
+'I could have them all down here,' Ernest answered, 'at an hour's
+notice.'
+
+'Good,' the editor said again. 'I'll send a boy for them with a
+cab. Meanwhile, you'd better be perpending this telegram from our
+Simla correspondent, just received. It's going to be the question
+of the moment, and we should very much like you to give us a leader
+of a full column about the matter.'
+
+Ernest took the telegram and read it over carefully. It ran in the
+usual very abbreviated newspaper fashion: 'Russian agents revolted
+Bodahls Tibetan frontier. Advices Peshawur state Russian army
+marching on Merv. Bodahls attacked Commissioner, declared independence
+British raj.'
+
+'Will you write us a leader?' the editor asked, simply.
+
+Ernest drew a long breath. Three guineas! Edie, Dot, an empty
+exchequer! If he could only have five minutes to make his mind up!
+But he couldn't. After all, what did it matter what he said about
+these poor unknown Bodahls? If HE didn't write the leader, somebody
+else who knew far less about the subject than he did would be sure
+to do it. He wasn't responsible for that impalpable entity 'the
+policy of the paper.' Beside the great social power of the 'Morning
+Intelligence,' of the united English people, what was he, Ernest
+Le Breton, but a miserable solitary misplaced unit? One way or the
+other, he could do very little indeed, for good or for evil. After
+half a minute's internal struggle, he answered back the editor
+faintly, 'Yes, I will.' 'For Edie,' he muttered half audibly to
+himself; 'I must do it for dear Edie.'
+
+'And you'll allow me to make whatever alterations I think necessary
+in the article to suit the policy of the paper?' the editor asked
+once more, looking through him with his sleepy keen grey eyes.
+'You see, Le Breton, I don't want to annoy you, and I know your
+own principles are rather peculiar; but of course all we want you
+for is just to give us the correct statement of facts about these
+outlandish people. All that concerns our own attitude towards them
+as a nation falls naturally under the head of editorial matter.
+You must see yourself that it's quite impossible for us to let any
+one single contributor dictate from his own standpoint the policy
+of the paper.'
+
+Ernest bent his head slowly. 'You're very kind to argue out the
+matter with me so, Mr. Lancaster,' he said, trembling with excitement.
+'Yes, I suppose I must bury my scruples. I'll write a leader about
+these Bodahls, and let you deal with it afterwards as you think
+proper.'
+
+They showed him into the bare little back room, and sent a boy
+up with a hastily written note to Ronald for the maps and papers.
+There Ernest sat for an hour or two, writing away for very life,
+and putting on paper everything that he knew about the poor Bodahls.
+By two o'clock, the proofs had all come up to him, and he took
+his hat in a shamefaced manner to sally out into the cold street,
+where he hoped to hide his rising remorse and agony under cover of
+the solitary night. He knew too well what 'the policy of the paper'
+would be, to venture upon asking any questions about it. As he
+left the office, a boy brought him down a sealed envelope from Mr.
+Lancaster. With his usual kindly thoughtfulness the editor had sent
+him at once the customary cheque for three guineas. Ernest folded
+it up with quivering fingers, and felt the blood burn in his cheeks
+as he put it away in his waistcoat pocket. That accursed money!
+For it he had that night sold his dearest principles! And yet, not
+for it, not for it, not for it--oh, no, not for it, but for Dot
+and Edie!
+
+The boy had a duplicate proof in his other hand, and Ernest saw at
+once that it was his own leader, as altered and corrected by Mr.
+Lancaster. He asked the boy whether he might see it; and the boy,
+knowing it was Ernest's own writing, handed it to him at once
+without further question. Ernest did not dare to look at it then
+and there for fear he should break down utterly before the boy; he
+put it for the moment into his inner pocket, and buttoned his thin
+overcoat tightly around him. It was colder still in the frosty air
+of early morning, and the contrast to the heated atmosphere of the
+printing house struck him with ominous chill as he issued slowly
+forth into the silent precincts of unpeopled Fleet Street.
+
+It was a terrible memorable night, that awful Tuesday; the coldest
+night known for many years in any English winter. Snow lay deep upon
+the ground, and a few flakes were falling still from the cloudy
+sky, for it was in the second week of January. The wind was drifting
+it in gusty eddies down the long streets, and driving the drifts
+before it like whirling dust in an August storm. Not a cab was to
+be seen anywhere, not even a stray hansom crawling home from clubs
+or theatres; and Ernest set out with a rueful countenance to walk
+as best he might alone through the snow all the way to Holloway.
+It is a long and dreary trudge at any time; it seemed very long
+and dreary indeed to Ernest Le Breton, with his delicate frame and
+weak chest, battling against the fierce wind on a dark and snowy
+winter's night, and with the fever of a great anxiety and a great
+remorse silently torturing his distracted bosom. At each step he
+took through the snow, he almost fancied himself a hunted Bodahl.
+Would British soldiers drive those poor savage women and children
+to die so of cold and hunger on their snowy hilltops? Would English
+fathers and mothers, at home at their ease, applaud the act with
+careless thoughtlessness as a piece of our famous spirited foreign
+policy? And would his own article, written with his own poor thin
+cold fingers in that day's 'Morning Intelligence,' help to spur
+them on upon that wicked and unnecessary war? What right had we to
+conquer the Bodahls? What right had we to hold them in subjection
+or to punish them for revolting? And above all, what right had
+he, Ernest Le Breton, upon whose head the hereditary guilt of the
+first conquest ought properly to have weighed with such personal
+heaviness--what right had he, of all men, directly or indirectly,
+to aid or abet the English people in their immoral and inhuman
+resolve? Oh, God, his sin was worse than theirs; for they sinned,
+thinking they did justly; but as for him, he sinned against the
+light; he knew the better, and, bribed by gold, he did the worse.
+At that moment, the little slip of printed paper in his waistcoat
+pocket seemed to burn through all the frosts of that awful evening
+like a chain of molten steel into his very marrow!
+
+Trudging on slowly through the white stainless snow, step by
+step,--snow that cast a sheet of pure white even over the narrow
+lanes behind the Farringdon Road,--cold at foot and hot at heart,
+he reached at last the wide corner by the Angel at Islington. The
+lights in the windows were all out long ago, of course, but the
+lamps outside were still flaring brightly, and a solitary policeman
+was standing under one of them, trying to warm his frozen hands by
+breathing rapidly on the curved and distorted fingers. Ernest was
+very tired of his tramp by that time, and emboldened by companionship
+he stopped awhile to rest himself in the snow and wind under the
+opposite lamplight. Putting his back against the post, he drew the
+altered proof of his article slowly out of his inner pocket. It
+had a strange fascination for him, and yet he dreaded to look at
+it. With an effort, he unfolded it in his stiff fingers, and held
+the paper up to the light, regardless of the fact that the policeman
+was watching his proceedings with the interest naturally due from
+a man of his profession to a suspicious-looking character who
+was probably a convicted pickpocket. The first sentence once more
+told him the worst. There was no doubt at all about it. The three
+guineas in his pocket were the price of blood!
+
+'The insult to British prestige in the East,' ran that terrible
+opening paragraph, 'implied in the brief telegram which we publish
+this morning from our own Correspondent at Simla, calls for a speedy
+and a severe retribution. It must be washed out in blood.' Blood,
+blood, blood! The letters swam before his eyes. It was this, then,
+that he, the disciple of peace-loving Max Schurz, the hater of war
+and conquest, the foe of unjust British domination over inferior
+races--it was this that he had helped to make plausible with his
+special knowledge and his ready pen! Oh, heaven, what reparation
+could he make for this horrid crime he had knowingly and wilfully
+committed? What could he do to avoid the guilt of those poor
+savages' blood upon his devoted head? In one moment he thought out
+a hundred scenes of massacre and pillage--scenes such as he knew
+only too well always precede and accompany the blessings of British
+rule in distant dependencies. The temptation had been strong--the
+money had been sorely wanted--there was very little food in
+the house; but how could he ever have yielded to such a depth of
+premeditated wickedness! He folded the piece of paper into his
+pocket once more, and buried his face in his hands for a whole
+minute. The policeman now began to suspect that he was not so much
+a pickpocket as an escaped lunatic.
+
+And so he was, no doubt. Of course we who are practical men of
+the world know very well that all this foolish feeling on Ernest
+Le Breton's part was very womanish and weak and overwrought; that
+he ought to have done the work that was set before him, asking no
+questions for conscience' sake; and that he might honestly have
+pocketed the three guineas, letting his supposed duty to a few
+naked brown people somewhere up in the Indian hill-country take
+care of itself, as all the rest of us always do. But some allowance
+must naturally be made for his peculiar temperament and for his
+particular state of health. Consumptive people are apt to take a
+somewhat hectic view of life in every way; they lack the common-sense
+ballast that makes most of us able to value the lives of a few
+hundred poor distant savages at their proper infinitesimal figure.
+At any rate, Ernest Le Breton, as a matter of fact, rightly or
+wrongly, did take this curious standpoint about things in general;
+and did then and there turn back through the deep snow, all his
+soul burning within him, fired with dire remorse, and filled only
+with one idea--how to prevent this wicked article to which he had
+contributed so many facts and opinions from getting printed in
+to-morrow's paper. True, it was not he who had put in the usual
+newspaper platitudes about the might of England, and the insult to
+the British flag, and the immediate necessity for a stern retaliation;
+but all that vapouring wicked talk (as he thought it) would go
+forth to the world fortified by the value of his special facts and
+his obviously intimate acquaintance with the whole past history of
+the Bodahl people. So he turned back and battled once more with the
+wind and snow as far as Fleet Street; and then he rushed excitedly
+into the 'Morning Intelligence' office, and asked with the wildness
+of despair to see the editor.
+
+Mr. Lancaster had gone home an hour since, the porter said; but
+Mr. Wilks, the sub-editor, was still there, superintending the
+printing of the paper, and if Ernest liked, Mr. Wilks would see
+him immediately.
+
+Ernest nodded assent at once, and was forthwith ushered up into Mr.
+Wilks's private sanctum. The sub-editor was a dry, grizzly-bearded
+man, with a prevailing wolfish greyness of demeanour about his whole
+person; and he shook Ernest's proffered hand solemnly, in the dreary
+fashion that is always begotten of the systematic transposition of
+night and day.
+
+'For heaven's sake, Mr. Wilks,' Ernest cried imploringly, 'I want
+to know whether you can possibly suppress or at least alter my
+leader on the Bodahl insurrection!'
+
+Mr. Wilks looked at him curiously, as one might look at a person
+who had suddenly developed violent symptoms of dangerous insanity.
+'Suppress the Bodahl leader,' he said slowly like one dreaming.
+'Suppress the Bodahl leader! Impossible! Why, it's the largest type
+heading in the whole of to-day's paper, is this Bodahl business.
+"Shocking Outrage upon a British Commissioner on the Indian
+Frontier. Revolt of the Entire Bodahl Tribe. Russian Intrigue
+in Central Asia. Dangerous Position of the Viceroy at Simla." Oh,
+dear me, no; not to have a leader upon THAT, my dear sir, would be
+simply suicidal!'
+
+'But can't you cut out my part of it, at least,' Ernest said
+anxiously. 'Oh, Mr. Wilks, you don't know what I've suffered to-night
+on account of this dreadful unmerited leader. It's wicked, it's
+unjust, it's abominable, and I can't bear to think that I have had
+anything to do with sending it out into the world to inflame the
+passions of unthinking people! Do please try to let my part of it
+be left out, and only Mr. Lancaster's, at least, be printed.'
+
+Mr. Wilks looked at him again with the intensest suspicion.
+
+'A sub-editor,' he answered evasively, 'has nothing at all to do with
+the politics of a paper. The editor alone manages that department
+on his own responsibility. But what on earth would you have me do?
+I can't stop the machines for half an hour, can I, just to let you
+have the chance of doctoring your leader? If you thought it wrong
+to write it, you ought never to have written it; now it's written
+it must certainly stand.'
+
+Ernest sank into a chair, and said nothing; but he turned so deadly
+pale that Mr. Wilks was fain to have recourse to a little brown
+flask he kept stowed away in a corner of his desk, and to administer
+a prompt dose of brandy and water.
+
+'There, there,' he said, in the kindest manner of which he was
+capable, 'what are you going to do now? You can't be going out
+again in this state and in this weather, can you?'
+
+'Yes, I am,' Ernest answered feebly. 'I'm going to walk home at
+once to Holloway.'
+
+'To Holloway!' the sub-editor said in a tone of comparative
+horror. 'Oh! no, I can't allow that. Wait here an hour or two till
+the workmen's trains begin running. Or, stay; Lancaster left his
+brougham here for me to-night, as I have to be off early to-morrow
+on business; I'll send you home in that, and let Hawkins get me a
+cab from the mews by order.'
+
+Ernest made no resistance; and so the sub-editor sent him home at
+once in Lancaster's brougham.
+
+When he got home in the early grey of morning, he found Edie still
+sitting up for him in her chair, and wondering what could be
+detaining him so long at the newspaper office. He threw himself
+wildly at her feet, and, in such broken sentences as he was able
+to command, he told her all the pitiful story. Edie soothed him
+and kissed him as he went along, but never said a word for good or
+evil till he had finished.
+
+'It was a terrible temptation, darling,' she said softly: 'a terrible
+temptation, indeed, and I don't wonder you gave way to it; but we
+mustn't touch the three guineas. As you say rightly, it's blood-money.'
+
+Ernest drew the cheque slowly from his pocket, and held it hesitatingly
+a moment in his hand. Edie looked at him curiously.
+
+'What are you going to do with it, darling?' she asked in a low
+voice, as he gazed vacantly at the last dying embers in the little
+smouldering fireplace.
+
+'Nothing, Edie dearest,' Ernest answered huskily, folding it
+up and putting it away in the drawer by the window. They neither
+of them dared to look the other in the face, but they bad not the
+heart to burn it boldly. It was blood-money, to be sure; but three
+guineas are really so very useful!
+
+Four days later, little Dot was taken with a sudden illness. Ernest
+and Edie sat watching by her little cradle throughout the night,
+and saw with heavy hearts that she was rapidly growing feebler. Poor
+wee soul, they had nothing to keep her for: it would be better,
+perhaps, if she were gone; and yet, the human heart cannot be stifled
+by such calm deliverances of practical reason; it WILL let its hot
+emotions overcome the cold calculations of better and worse supplied
+it by the unbiassed intellect.
+
+All night long they sat there tearfully, fearing she would not
+live till morning; and in the early dawn they sent round hastily
+for a neighbouring doctor. They had no money to pay him with, to
+be sure; but that didn't much matter; they could leave it over for
+the present, and perhaps some day before long Ernest might write
+another social, and earn an honest three guineas. Anyhow, it was
+a question of life and death, and they could not help sending for
+the doctor, whatever difficulty they might afterwards find in paying
+him.
+
+The doctor came, and looked with the usual professional seriousness
+at the baby patient. Did they feed her entirely on London milk? he
+asked doubtfully. Yes, entirely. Ah! then that was the sole root
+of the entire mischief. She was very dangerously ill, no doubt,
+and he didn't know whether he could pull her through anyhow; but
+if anything would do it, it was a change to goat's milk. There was
+a man who sold goat's milk round the corner. He would show Ernest
+where to find him.
+
+Ernest looked doubtfully at Edie, and Edie looked back again
+at Ernest. One thought rose at once in both their minds. They had
+no money to pay for it with, except--except that dreadful cheque.
+For four days it had lain, burning a hole in Ernest's heart from
+its drawer by the window, and he had not dared to change it. Now
+he rose without saying a word, and opened the drawer in a solemn,
+hesitating fashion. He looked once more at Edie inquiringly; Edie
+nodded a faint approval. Ernest, pale as death, put on his hat,
+and went out totteringly with the doctor. He stopped on the way
+to change the cheque at the baker's where they usually dealt, and
+then went on to the goat's milk shop. How that sovereign he flung
+upon the counter seemed to ring the knell of his seif-respect! The
+man who changed it noticed the strangeness of Ernest's look, and
+knew at once he had not come by the money honestly. He rang it twice
+to make sure it was good, and then gave the change to Ernest. But
+Dot, at least, was saved; that was a great thing. The milk arrived
+duly every morning for some weeks, and, after a severe struggle,
+Dot grew gradually better. While the danger lasted, neither of
+them dared think much of the cheque; but when Dot had got quite
+well again, Ernest was concious of a certain unwonted awkwardness
+of manner in talking to Edie. He knew perfectly well what it meant;
+they were both accomplices in crime together.
+
+When Ernest wrote his 'social' after Max Schurz's affair, he felt
+he had already touched the lowest depths of degradation. He knew
+now that he had touched a still lower one. Oh! horrible abyss of
+self-abasement!--he had taken the blood-money. And yet, it was to
+save Dot's life! Herbert was right, after all: quite right. Yes,
+yes, all hope was gone: the environment had finally triumphed.
+
+In the awful self-reproach of that deadly remorse for the acceptance
+of the blood-money, Ernest Le Breton felt at last in his heart
+that surely the bitterness of death was past. It would be better
+for them all to die together than to live on through such a life of
+shame and misery. Ah, Peter, Peter, you are not the only one that
+has denied his Lord and Master!
+
+And yet, Ernest Le Breton had only written part of a newspaper
+leader about a small revolt of the Bodahls. And he suffered more
+agony for it than many a sensitive man, even, has suffered for the
+commission of some obvious crime.
+
+'I say, Berkeley,' Lancaster droned out in the lobby of their club
+one afternoon shortly afterwards, 'what on earth am I ever to do
+about that socialistic friend of yours, Le Breton? I can't ever
+give him any political work again, you know. Just fancy! first, you
+remember, I set him upon the Schurz imprisonment business, and he
+nearly went mad then because I didn't back up Schurz for wanting to
+murder the Emperor of Russia. After that, just now the other day,
+I tried him on the Bodahl business, and hang me if he didn't have
+qualms of conscience about it afterwards, and trudge back through
+all the snow that awful Tuesday, to see if he couldn't induce Wilks
+to stop the press, and let him cut it all out at the last moment!
+He's as mad as a March hare, you know, and if it weren't that I'm
+really sorry for him I wouldn't go on taking socials from him any
+longer. But I will; I'll give him work as long as he'll do it for
+me on any terms; though, of course, it's obviously impossible under
+the circumstances to let him have another go at politics, isn't
+it?'
+
+'You're really awfully kind, Lancaster,' Berkeley answered warmly.
+'No other fellow would do as much for Le Breton as you do. I admit
+he's absolutely impracticable, but I would give more than I can
+tell you if only I thought he could be made to pull through somehow.'
+
+'Impracticable!' the editor said shortly, 'I believe you, indeed.
+Why, do you remember that ridiculous Schurz business? Well, I sent
+Le Breton a cheque for eight guineas for that lot, and can you
+credit it, it's remained uncashed from that day to this. I really
+think he must have destroyed it.'
+
+'No doubt,' Arthur answered, with a smile. 'And the Bodahls? What
+about them?'
+
+'Oh! he kept that cheque for a few days uncashed--though I'm sure
+he wanted money at the time; but in the end, I'm happy to say, he
+cashed it.'
+
+Arthur's countenance fell ominously.
+
+'He did!' he said gloomily. 'He cashed it! That's bad news indeed,
+then. I must go and see them to-morrow morning early. I'm afraid
+they must be at the last pitch of poverty before they'd consent to
+do that. And yet, Solomon says, men do not despise a thief if he
+steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry. And Le Breton, after
+all, has a wife and child to think of.'
+
+Lancaster stared at him blankly, and turned aside to glance at
+the telegrams, saying to himself meanwhile, that all these young
+fellows of the new school alike were really quite too incomprehensible
+for a sensible, practical man like himself to deal with comfortably.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+DE PROFUNDIS.
+
+
+After all Ernest didn't get many more socials to write for the
+'Morning Intelligence,' as it happened; for the war that came on
+shortly after crowded such trifles as socials fairly out of all the
+papers, and he had harder work than ever to pick up a precarious
+living somehow by the most casual possible contributions. Of course
+he tried many other channels; but he had few introductions, and then
+his views were really so absurdly ultra that no reasonable editor
+could ever be expected to put up with them. He got tired at last of
+seeing his well-meant papers return to him, morning after morning,
+with the unvarying legend, 'Declined with thanks;' and he might have
+gone to the wall utterly but for the kindly interest which Arthur
+Berkeley still took in his and Edie's future. On the very day
+after his conversation with Lancaster at the club Arthur dropped
+round casually at Holloway, and brought with him a proposal which
+he said had just been made him by a colonial newsagent. It was a
+transparent little ruse enough; but Ernest and Edie were not learned
+in the ways of the world and did not suspect it so readily as older
+and wiser heads might probably have done. Would Ernest supply a
+fortnightly letter, to go by the Australian mail, to the Paramatta
+'Chronicle and News,' containing London political and social gossip
+of a commonplace kind--just the petty chit-chat he could pick up
+easily out of 'Truth' and the 'World'--for the small sum of thirty
+shillings a letter?
+
+Yes, Ernest thought he could manage that.
+
+Very well, then. The letter must be sent on alternate Wednesdays
+to the colonial newsagent's address, and it would be duly forwarded
+by mail to the office of the Paramatta 'Chronicle.' A little
+suspicious, that item, Berkeley thought, but Ernest swallowed it
+like a child and made no comment. It must be addressed to 'Paramatta,
+care of Lane & Co.,' and the payments would be made fortnightly
+through the same agency. Arthur watched his friend's face narrowly
+at this point again; but Ernest in his simple-minded, unsuspecting
+wasy, never noticed the obvious meaning of this little deception.
+He thanked Arthur over and over again for his kindness, but he
+never guessed how far it extended. The letters kept him employed
+for two days a week, or thereabouts, and though they never got
+to Paramatta, nor any farther than Arthur Berkeley's own study in
+the little house he had taken for himself at Chelsea, they were
+regularly paid for through the colonial newsagents, by means of
+a cheque which really owed its ultimate origin to Arthur Berkeley
+himsslf. Fifteen shillings a week is not a large fortune, certainly;
+but still it is considerably better than nothing, when you come to
+try both methods of living by practical experience.
+
+Even so, however, Ernest and Edie had a hard struggle, with their
+habits of life and Ernest's delicate health, to make both ends meet
+upon that modest income. They found the necessity for recourse to
+the imaginary pawnbroker growing upon them with alarming rapidity;
+and though the few small articles that they sent out for that purpose
+never really went beyond kind Mrs. Halliss's kitchen dresser, yet
+so far as Ernest and Edie were concerned, the effect was much the
+same as if they had been really pledged to the licensed broker.
+The good woman hid them away carefully in the back drawers of the
+dresser, sending up as much money for the poor little trinkets as
+she thought it at all credible that any man in his senses could
+possibly advance--if she had given altogether too much, she thought
+it probable that even the unsuspicious Le Bretons would detect the
+kindly deception--at the time remarking to John that 'if ever them
+pore dear young creechurs was able to redeem 'em again, why, well
+an' good; an' if not, why, they could just find some excuse to
+give 'em back to the dear lady after pore Mr. Le Breting was dead
+an' gone, as he must be, no doubt, afore many months was over.'
+What wretched stuff that is that some narrow-minded cynics love
+to talk, after their cheap moralising fashion, about the coldness
+and cruelty of the world! The world is not cold and cruel; it is
+brimming over everywhere with kindliness and warmth of heart; and
+you have only got to put yourself into the proper circumstances
+in order to call forth at once on every hand, and in all classes,
+its tenderest and truest sympathies. None but selfish, unsympathetic
+people themselves ever find it otherwise in the day of trouble. It
+is not the world that is cold and heartless--it is not the individual
+members of the world that are cruel and unkind--it is the relentless
+march of circumstances--the faulty organisation which none of us
+can control, and for which none of us is personally responsible,
+that grinds us to powder under its Juggernaut wheels. Private
+kindliness is for ever trying, feebly and unsuccessfully, but with
+its best efforts, to undo the evil that general mismanagement is
+for ever perpetrating in its fateful course.
+
+One day, a few weeks later, Arthur Berkeley called in again, and on
+the stairs he met a child playing--a neighbour's child whom good
+Mrs. Halliss allowed to come in and amuse herself while the mother
+went out charing. The girl had a bright gold object in her hand;
+and Arthur, wondering how she came by it, took it from her and
+looked at it curiously. He recognised it in a moment for what it
+was--a gold bracelet, a well remembered gold bracelet--the very
+one that he himself had given as a wedding present to poor Edie.
+He turned it over and looked closely at the inside: cut into the
+soft gold he saw the one word 'Frustra,' that he himself had carved
+into it with his penknife the night before the memorable wedding.
+
+'Where did you get this?' he asked the child.
+
+'Mrs. 'Alliss give it me,' the little one answered, beginning to
+cry.
+
+Arthur ran lightly down the steps again, and knocked at the door of
+Mrs. Halliss's kitchen, with the tell-tale bracelet in his hand.
+Mrs. Halliss opened the dcor to him respectfully, and after a faint
+attempt at innocent prevarication, felt bound to let out all the
+pitiful little secret without further preamble. So Arthur, good,
+kind-hearted, delicate-souled Arthur, took his seat sadly upon one
+of the hard wooden kitchen chairs, and waited patiently while Mrs.
+Halliss and honest John, in their roundabout inarticulate fashion,
+slowly unfolded the story how them two pore young creechurs upstairs
+had been druv that low through want of funs that Mrs. Le Breting,
+God bless 'er 'eart, 'ad 'ad to pawn her poor little bits of
+jewelry and such like: and how they 'adn't 'ad the face to go an'
+pawn it for her, and so 'ad locked it up in their drawers, and
+waited hopefully for better times. Arthur listened to all this with
+an aching heart, and went home alone to ponder on the best way of
+still further assisting them.
+
+The only thing that occurred to him was a plan for giving Edie,
+too, a little relief, in the way of what she might suppose to be
+money-getting occupation. She used to paint a little in water-colours,
+he remembered, in the old days; so he put an advertisement in a
+morning paper, which he got Mrs. Halliss to show Edie, asking for
+drawings of orchids, the flowers to be supplied and accurately copied
+by an amateur at a reasonable price. Edie fell into the harmless
+friendly trap readily enough, and was duly supplied with orchids by
+a florist in Regent Street, who professed to receive his instructions
+from the advertiser. The pictures were all produced in due time,
+and were sent to a fixed address, where a gentleman in a hansom used
+to call for them at regular intervals. Arthur Berkeley kept those
+poor little water-colours long afterwards locked up in a certain
+drawer all by themselves: they were sacred mementoes to him of that
+old hopeless love for the little Miss Butterfly of his Oxford days.
+
+With the very first three guineas that Edie earned, carefully
+saved and hoarded out of her payments for the water-colours, she
+insisted in the pride of her heart that Ernest should go and visit
+a great London consulting physician. Sir Antony Wraxall was the
+best specialist in town on the subject of consumption, she had heard,
+and she was quite sure so clever a man must do Ernest a great deal
+of good, if he didn't even permanently cure him.
+
+'It's no use, Edie darling,' Ernest said to her imploringly. 'You'll
+only be wasting your hard-earned money. What I want is not advice
+or medicine; I want what no doctor on earth can possibly give
+me--relief from this terrible crushing responsibility.'
+
+But Edie would bear no refusal. It was HER money, she said, the
+first she had ever earned in her whole life, and she should certainly
+do as she herself liked with it. Sir Antony Wraxall, she was quite
+confident, would soon be able to make him better.
+
+So Ernest, overborne by her intreaties, yielded at last, and made
+an appointment with Sir Antony Wraxall. He took his quarter-hour in
+due form, and told the great physician all his symptoms as though
+he believed in the foolish farce. Sir Antony held his head solemnly
+on one side, weighed him with puritanical scrupulosity to a quarter
+of an ounce on his delicate balance, listened attentively at the
+chest with his silver-mounted stethoscope, and perpended the net
+result of his investigation with professional gravity; then he gave
+Edie his full advice and opinion to the maximum extent of five
+minutes.
+
+'Your husband's case is not a hopeful one, Mrs. Le Breton,' he said
+solemnly, 'but still, a great deal may be done for him.' Edie's face
+brightened visibly. 'With care, his life may be prolonged for many
+years,--I may even say, indeed, quite indefinitely.' Edie smiled
+with joy and gratitude. 'But you must strictly observe my rules
+and directions--the same that I've just given in a similar case to
+the Crown Prince of Servia who was here before you. In the first
+place, your husband must give up work altogether. He must be
+content to live perfectly and absolutely idle. Then, secondly, he
+must live quite away from England. I should recommend the Engadine
+in summer, and Algeria or the Nile trip every winter; but, if that's
+beyond your means--and I understand from Mr. Le Breton that you're
+in somewhat straitened circumstances--I don't object to Catania,
+or Malaga, or even Mentone and the Riviera. You can rent furnished
+villas for very little on the Riviera. But he must in no case come
+farther north, even in summer, than the Lake of Geneva. That, I
+assure you, is quite indispensable, if he wishes to live another
+twelvemonth. Take him south at once, in a coupe-lit of course, and
+break the journey once or twice at Lyons and Marseilles. Next, as
+to diet, he must live generously--very generously. Don't let him
+drink claret; claret's poor sour stuff; a pint of good champagne
+daily, or a good, full-bodied, genial vintage Burgundy would be
+far better and more digestible for him. Oysters, game, sweetbreads,
+red mullet, any little delicacy of that sort as much as possible.
+Don't let him walk; let him have carriage exercise daily; you can
+hire carriages for a mere trifle monthly at Cannes and Mentone.
+Above all things, give him perfect freedom from anxiety. Allow him
+to concentrate his whole attention on the act of getting well,
+and you'll find he'll improve astonishingly in no time. But if you
+keep him here in England and feed him badly and neglect my directions,
+I can't answer for his getting through another winter....Don't
+disturb yourself, I beg of you; don't, pray, give way to tears;
+there is really no occasion for it, my dear madam, no occasion for
+it at all, if you'll only do as I tell you....Quite right, thank
+you. Good morning.--Next case, McFarlane.--Good morning. Good
+morning.'
+
+So that was the end of weeping little Edie's poor hardly-spared
+three guineas.
+
+The very next day Arthur Berkeley happened to mount the stairs
+quietly, at an earlier hour than usual, and knocked at the door
+of Ernest's lodging. There was no answer, so he turned the handle,
+and entered by himself. The remains of breakfast lay upon the
+table. Arthur did not want to spy, but he couldn't help remarking
+that these remains were extremely meagre and scanty. Half a loaf
+of bread stood upon a solitary plate in the centre; a teapot and
+two cups occupied one side; and--that was all. In spite of himself,
+he couldn't restrain his curiosity, and he looked more closely at
+the knives and plates. Not a mark of anything but crumbs upon them,
+not even butter! He looked into the cups. Nothing but milkless
+tea at the bottom! Yes, the truth was only too evident; they had
+had no meat for breakfast, no butter, no milk, no sugar; it was
+quite clear that the meal had consisted entirely of dry bread with
+plain tea--call it hot water--and that for a dying man and a delicate
+over-worked lady! Arthur looked at that pitiable breakfast-table with
+a twinge of remorse, and the tears rose sharply and involuntarily
+into his eyes. He had not done enough for them, then; he had not
+done enough for them.
+
+Poor little Miss Butterfly! and had it really come to this! You,
+so bright, so light, so airy, in want, in positive want, in hunger
+even, with your good, impossible, impracticable Ernest! Had it
+come to this! Bread and water; dry bread and water! Down tears,
+down; a man must be a man; but, oh, what a bitter sight for Arthur
+Berkeley! And yet, what could he do to mend it? Money they would
+not take; he dare not even offer it; and he was at his wit's end
+for any other contrivance for serving them without their knowledge.
+He must do what he could; but how he was to do it, he couldn't
+imagine.
+
+As he stood there, ruminating bitterly over that poor bare table,
+he thought he heard sounds above, as of Edie coming downstairs
+with Dot on her shoulder. He knew she would not like to know that
+he had surprised the secret of their dire poverty; and he turned
+silently and cautiously to descend the stair. There was only just
+time enough to get away, for Edie was even then opening the door
+of the nursery. Noiselessly, with cat-like tread, he crept down
+the steps once more, and heard Edie descending, and singing as she
+came down to Dot. It was a plaintive little song, in a sad key--a
+plaintive little song of his own--but not wholly distressful,
+Arthur thought; she could still sing, then, to her baby! With the
+hot tears rising a second time to his eyes, he groped his way to
+the foot of the staircase. There he brushed them hurriedly aside
+with his hand, and turned out into the open street. The children
+were playing and tumbling in the sun, and a languid young man
+in a faultless frock coat and smooth silk hat was buying a showy
+button-hole flower from the little suburban florist's opposite.
+
+With a heavy heart Arthur Berkeley turned homeward to his own cosy
+little cottage; that modest palace of art which he had once hoped
+little Miss Butterfly might have shared with him. He went up the
+steps, and turned quickly into his own small study. The Progenitor
+was there, sitting reading in an easy-chair. 'At least,' Arthur
+thought to himself, 'I have made HIS old age happy. If I could only
+do as much for little Miss Butterfly! for little Miss Butterfly!
+for little Miss Butterfly! If I could only do as much for her, oh,
+how happy and contented I should be!'
+
+He flung himself down on his own sofa, and brushed big eyes nervously
+with his handkerchief before he dared lookup again towards the
+Progenitor. 'Father,' he said, clutching his watchchain hard and
+playing with it nervously to keep down his emotion, 'I'm afraid
+those poor Le Bretons are in an awfully bad way. I'm afraid, do you
+know, that they actually haven't enough to eat! I went into their
+rooms just now, and, would you believe it, I found nothing on the
+table for breakfast but dry bread and tea!'
+
+The Progenitor looked up quietly from the volume of Morley's 'Voltaire'
+which he was at that moment placidly engaged in devouring. 'Nothing
+but dry bread and tea,' he said, in what seemed to Arthur a horribly
+unconcerned tone. 'Really, hadn't they? Well, I dare say they ARE
+very badly off, poor people. But after all, you know, Artie, they
+can't be really poor, for Le Breton told me himself he was generally
+earning fifteen shillings or a pound a week, and that, you see, is
+really for three people a very good income, now isn't it?'
+
+Arthur, delicate-minded, gentle, chivalrous Arthur, gazed in surprise
+and sudden distress at that dear, good, unselfish old father of
+his. How extraordinary that the kindly old man couldn't grasp the
+full horror of the situation! How strange that he, who would himself
+have been so tender, so considerate, so womanly in his care and
+sympathy towards anything that seemed to him like real poverty
+or real suffering, should have been so blinded by his long hard
+workingman life towards the peculiar difficulties and trials of
+classes other than his own as not to recognise the true meaning of
+that dreadful disclosure! Arthur was not angry with him--he felt
+too fully at that moment what depths of genuine silent hardship
+uncomplainingly endured were implied in the stoically calm frame
+of mind which could treat Edie Le Breton's penury of luxuries as
+a comparatively slight matter: after all, his father was right at
+bottom; such mere sentimental middle-class poverty is as nothing
+to the privations of the really poor; yet he could not help feeling
+a little disappointed for all that. He wanted sympathy in his
+pity, and he could clearly expect none here. 'Why, father,' he
+cried bitterly, 'you don't throw yourself into the position as you
+ought to do. A pound a week, paid regularly, would be a splendid
+income of course for people brought up like you or me. But just
+consider how those two young people have been brought up! Consider
+their wants and their habits! Consider the luxury they have been
+accustomed to! And then think of their being obliged to want now
+almost for food in their last extremity!'
+
+His father answered in the same quiet tone--not hardly, but calmly,
+as though he were discussing a problem in political economy instead
+of the problem of Edie Le Breton's happiness--'Well, you see, it's
+all a matter of the standard of comfort. These two friends of yours
+have been brought up above their future; and now that they're got
+to come down to their natural level, why, of course, they feel it,
+depend upon it, they feel it. Their parents, of course, shouldn't
+have accustomed them to a style of life above their station. Good
+dry bread, not too stale, does nobody any harm: still, I dare say
+they don't like coming down to it. But bless your heart, Artie,
+if you'd seen the real want and poverty that I've seen, my boy--the
+actual hunger and cold and nakedness that I've known honest working
+people brought down to by no work, and nothing but the House open
+before them, or not that even, you wouldn't think so much of the
+sentimental grievances of people who are earning fifteen shillings
+a week in ease and comfort.'
+
+'But, Father,' Arthur went on, scarcely able to keep down the
+rising tone of indignation at such seeming heartlessness, 'Ernest
+doesn't earn even that always. Sometimes he earns nothing, or next
+to nothing; and it's the uncertainty and insecurity that tells
+upon them even more than the poverty itself. Oh, Father, Father,
+you who have always been so good and kind, I never heard you speak
+so cruelly about anyone before as you're speaking now about that
+poor, friendless, helpless, penniless, heart-broken little woman!'
+
+The old shoemaker caught at the word suddenly, and looking him
+through and through with an unexpected gleam of discovery, laid
+down the life of Voltaire on the table with a bang, and sat straight
+upright in his chair, nodding his head, and muttering slowly to
+himself, 'Little woman--he said "little woman!" Poor Artie, Poor
+Artie!' in a tone of inexpressible pity. At last he turned to Arthur
+and cried with a voice of womanly tenderness, 'My boy, my boy, I
+didn't know before it was the lassie you were thinking of; I thought
+it was only poor young Le Breton. I see it all now; I've surprised
+your secret; you've let it out to me without knowing it. Oh, Artie,
+if that's She, I'm sorry for her, and I'm sorry for you, my boy,
+from the bottom of my heart. If that's She, Artie, we'll put our
+heads together, and see what plan we can manage to save her from
+what she has never been accustomed to. Don't think too hardly of
+your old Progenitor, Artie; he hasn't mixed with these people all
+his life, and learned to sympathise with them as you've done, my
+son; he doesn't understand them or know their troubles as you do:
+but if that's her that you told me about one day, we shall find the
+means to make her happy and comfortable yet, if we have to starve
+for it. Dear Arthur, do not think I could be harsh or unfeeling
+for a moment to the woman that you ever once in passing fixed your
+heart upon. Let's talk it over and think it over, and sooner or
+later we'll surely find the way to accomplish it.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE.
+
+
+Whether Ronald Le Breton's abstruse speculations on the theory of
+heredity were well founded or not, it certainly did happen, at any
+rate, that the more he saw of Selah Briggs the better he liked her;
+and the more Selah saw of him the better she liked him in return.
+Curiously enough, too, Selah did actually recognise in him what
+he fancied he recognised in himself, that part of his brother's
+nature (not all wholly assumed) which was just what Selah had
+first been drawn to admire in Herbert himself. It wasn't merely
+the originality of his general point of view: it was something more
+deep-seated and undefinable than that--in a word, his idiosyncrasy.
+Selah Briggs, with her peculiar fiery soul and rebellious nature,
+found in both the Le Bretons something that seemed at once to satisfy
+her wants, to fulfil her desires, to saturate her affinities: and
+with Ronald, as with Herbert before, she was conscious of a certain
+awe and respect which was all the more pleasant to her because
+her untamed spirit had never felt anything like it with any other
+human being. She didn't understand them, and she didn't want to
+understand them: that constituted just the very charm of their
+whole personality to her peculiar fancy. All the other people she
+had ever met were as transparent as glass, for good or for evil;
+she could see through all their faults and virtues as easily as
+one sees through a window: the Le Bretons were to her inscrutable,
+novel, incomprehensible, inexplicable, and she prized them for
+their very inscrutability. And so it came to pass, that almost by
+a process of natural and imperceptible transference, she passed on
+at last to Ronald's account very much the same intensity of feeling
+that she had formerly felt towards his brother Herbert.
+
+But at the same time, Selah never for a moment let him see it. She
+was too proud to confess now that she could ever love another man:
+the Mr. Walters she had once believed in had never, never, never
+existed: and she would raise no other idol in future to take the
+place of that vanished ideal. She was grateful to Ronald, and even
+fond of him: but that was all-outwardly at least. She never let him
+see, by word or act, that in her heart of hearts she was beginning
+to love him. And yet Ronald instinctively knew it. He himself
+could not have told you why; but he knew it. Even a woman cannot
+hide a secret from a man with that peculiarly penetrating intuitive
+temperament which belongs to sensitive, delicate types like Ronald
+Le Breton's.
+
+One Sunday evening, when Selah had been spending a few hours at
+Edie's lodgings (Ronald always made it an excuse for finding them
+a supper, on the ground that Selah was really his guest, though he
+could not conveniently ask her to his own rooms), he walked home
+towards Notting Hill with Selah; and as they crossed the Regent's
+Park, he took the opportunity to say something to her that he had
+had upon his mind for a few weeks past, in some vague, indefinite,
+half-unconscious fashion.
+
+'Selah,' he began, a little timidly, 'don't you think it's very
+probable we shan't have Ernest here much longer with us?'
+
+'I'm afraid it is, Ronald,' Selah answered. She had got quite
+accustomed now to calling him Ronald. With such a poor, weak, sickly
+fellow as that, why really, after all, it did not much matter.
+
+'Well, Selah,' Ronald went on, gravely, his eyes filling with
+tears as he spoke, 'in that case, you know, I can't think what's
+to become of poor Edie. It's a dreadful contingency to talk about,
+Selah, and I can't bear talking about it; but we MUST face these
+things, however terrible, mustn't we? and in this case one's
+absolutely bound to face it for poor Edie's sake as well as for
+Ernest's. Selah, she must have a home to go to, when dear Ernest's
+taken from us.'
+
+'I'm very sorry for her, Ronald,' Selah answered, with unusual
+softness of manner, 'but I really don't see how a home can possibly
+be provided for her.'
+
+'I do,' Ronald answered, more calmly; 'and for their sakes, Selah,
+I want you to help me in trying to provide it.'
+
+'How?' Selah asked, looking up in his face curiously, as they passed
+into a ray of lamplight.
+
+'Listen, Selah, and I'll tell you. Why, by marrying me.'
+
+'Never?' Selah answered, firmly, and with a decided tinge of the old
+Adam in her trembling voice. 'Never, Ronald! Never, never, never!'
+
+'Wait a minute, Selah,' Ronald pleaded, 'till you've heard the
+end of what I have to say to you. Consider that when dear Ernest's
+gone (oh! Selah, you must excuse me; it makes me cry so to think
+of it), there'll be nowhere on earth for poor little Edie and Dot
+to go to.'
+
+'Did ever a man propose to a girl so extraordinarily in all this
+world,' Selah thought to herself, angrily. 'He actually expects me
+to marry him in order to provide a home for his precious sister-in-law.
+That's really carrying unselfishness a step too far, I call it.'
+
+'Edie couldn't come and live with me, of course,' Ronald went on,
+quickly, 'if I were a bachelor; but if I were married, why then,
+naturally, she and Dot could come and live with us; and she could
+earn a little money somehow, no doubt; and, at any rate, it'd be
+better for her than starvation.'
+
+Selah stopped a minute, and tapped the hard ground two or three
+times angrily with the point of her umbrella. 'And me, Ronald?'
+she said in a curious defiant voice. 'And ME? I suppose you've
+forgotten all about ME. You don't ask me to marry you because
+you love me; you don't ask me whether I love you or not; you only
+propose to me that I should quietly turn domestic housekeeper for
+Mrs. Ernest Le Breton. And for my part, I answer you plainly, once
+for all, that I'm not going to do it--no, never, never, never!'
+
+She spoke haughtily, flashing her eyes at him in the fierce old
+fashion, and Ronald was almost frightened at the angry intensity
+of her contemptuous gestures. 'Selah,' he cried, trying to take
+her hand, which she tore away from him hurriedly: 'Selah, you
+misunderstand me. I only approached the subject that way because
+I didn't want to seem overweening and presumptuous. It's a very
+great piece of vanity, it seems to me, for any man to ask a woman
+whether she loves him. I'm too conscious of all my own faults and
+failings, Selah, to venture upon asking you ever to love me; but
+I do love you, Selah, I'm sure I do love you; and I hoped, I somehow
+fancied--it may have been mere fancy, but I DID imagine--that I
+detected, I can't say how, that you did really love me, too, just
+a very very little. Oh, Selah, it's because I really love you that
+I ask you whether you'll marry me, such as I am; I know I'm a poor
+sort of person to marry, but I ventured to hope you might love me
+just a little for all that.'
+
+He looked so frail and gentle as he stood there pleading in the
+pale moonlight, that Selah could have taken him to her bosom then
+and there and fondled him as one would pet a sick child, for pure
+womanliness; but the devil in her blood kept her from doing it, and
+she answered haughtily, instead: 'Ronald, if you wanted to marry
+me, you ought to have asked me for my own sake. Now that you've
+asked me for another's, you can't expect me to give you an answer.
+Keep your money, my poor boy; you'll want it all for you and her
+hereafter; don't go sharing it and spending it on perfect strangers
+such as me. And don't go talking to me again about this business
+as long as your sister-in-law is unprovided for. I'm not going to
+take the bread out of her mouth, and I'm not going to marry a man
+who doesn't utterly and entirely love me.'
+
+'But I do,' Ronald answered, earnestly; 'I do, Selah; I love you
+truly and faithfully from the very bottom of my heart.'
+
+'Leave off, Roland,' Selah said in the same angry tone. 'If you
+ever talk to me of this again, I give you my word of honour about
+it, I'll never speak another word to you.'
+
+And Ronald, who deeply respected the sanctity of a promise, were
+it only a threat, bided his time, and said no more about it for
+the present.
+
+Next day, as Ronald sat reading in his own rooms, he was much
+surprised at hearing a well-known voice at the door, inquiring
+with some asperity whether Mr. Le Breton was at home. He listened
+to the voice in intense astonishment. It was his mother's.
+
+'Ronald,' Lady Le Breton began, the moment she had been shown into
+his little sitting-room, 'I didn't think, after your undutiful,
+ungrateful conduct--with that abominable woman, too--that I should
+ever have come to see you, unless you came first, as you ought
+clearly to do, and begged my pardon penitently for your disgraceful
+behaviour. It's hard, I know, to acknowledge oneself in the wrong,
+but every Christian ought to be above vindictiveness and obstinate
+self-will; and I expect you, therefore, sooner or later, to come
+and ask forgiveness for your dreadful unkindness to me. Till then,
+as I said, I didn't expect to call upon you in any way. But I've
+felt compelled to-day to come and speak to you about a matter
+of duty, and as a matter of duty strictly I regard it, not as any
+relaxation of my just attitude of indignant expectancy towards
+yourself; no parent ought rightly to overlook such conduct as
+yours on the part of a son.' Ronald inclined his head respectfully.
+'Well, what I've come to speak to you about to-day, Ronald, is
+about your poor misguided brother Ernest. He, too, as you know,
+has behaved very badly to me.'
+
+'No,' Ronald answered stoutly, without further note or comment.
+Where the matter touched himself only he could maintain a decent
+silence, but where it touched poor dying Ernest he couldn't possibly
+restrain himself, even from a sense of filial obligation.
+
+'Very badly to me,' Lady Le Breton went on sternly, without in any
+way noticing the brief interruption, 'and I can't, of course, go
+to see him either, especially not as I should by so doing expose
+myself to meeting the person whom he has chosen to make his wife.
+Still, as I hear that Ernest a in a very serious or even dangerous
+condition----'
+
+'He's dying,' Ronald answered, the quick tears once more finding
+the easy road to his eyes as usual.
+
+'I considered, as a mother, it was my duty to warn him to take a
+little thought about his soul.'
+
+'His soul!' Ronald exclaimed in astonishment. 'Ernest's soul! Why,
+mother, dear Ernest has no need to look after his soul. He doesn't
+take that sordid, petty, limited view of our relations with
+eternity, and of our relations with the Infinite, which makes them
+all consist of the miserable, selfish, squalid desire to save our
+own poor personal little souls at all hazards. Ernest has something
+better and nobler to think of, I can assure you, than such a mere
+self-centred idea as that.'
+
+'Ronald!' Lady Breton exclaimed, drawing herself up with much
+dignity; 'how on earth you, who have always pretended to be a
+religious person, can utter such a shocking and wicked sentiment
+as that, really passes my comprehension. What in the world is
+religion for, I should like to know, if it isn't to teach us how
+to save our own souls? But the particular thing I want to speak
+to you about is just this: couldn't you manage to induce Ernest to
+see the Archdeacon a little, and let the Archdeacon speak to him
+about his deplorable spiritual condition? I thought about you both
+so much at church yesterday, when the dear Archdeacon was preaching
+such a beautiful sermon; his text was like this, as far as I can
+remember it. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but
+the end thereof are the ways of death." I couldn't help thinking
+all the time of my own two poor rebellious boys, and of the path
+that their misguided notions were leading them on. For I believe
+Ernest does really somehow persuade himself that he's in the
+right--it's inconceivable, but it's the fact; and I'm afraid the end
+thereof will be the ways of death; and then, as the dear Archdeacon
+said, "After death the judgment." Oh, Ronald, when I think of your
+poor dear brother Ernest's open unbelief, it makes me tremble for
+his future, so that I couldn't rest upon my bed until I'd been to
+see you and urged you to go and try to save him.'
+
+'Mother,' Ronald said with that tone in which he was well accustomed
+to answering Lady Le Breton's religious harangues; 'I don't think
+you need feel any uneasiness whatever on dear Ernest's account,
+so far as all that's concerned. What does HE want with saving
+his soul, mother? "Whosoever will save his life shall lose it."
+Remember what is written: "Not every one that saith unto me, Lord,
+Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven."'
+
+'But, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton continued, half angrily, 'consider
+his unbelief, his dreadful opinions, his errors of doctrine! How
+on earth can we be happy about him when we think of those?'
+
+'I don't think, Mother,' Ronald answered gently, 'that Infinite
+Justice and Infinite Love take much account of a man's opinions.
+They take account of his life and soul only, not of the correctness
+of his propositions in dogmatic theology; "Other sheep have I which
+are not of this fold--them also must I bring."'
+
+'It seems to me, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton rejoined coldly, 'that
+you don't in the least care for whatever is most distinctive and
+characteristic in the whole of Christian doctrine. You talk so
+very very differently on religious subjects from that dear, good,
+excellent Archdeacon.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE.
+
+
+Lady Hilda Tregellis rang the bell resolutely. 'I shall have no
+more nonsense about it,' she said to herself in her most decisive
+and determined manner. 'Whether mamma wishes it or not, I shall go
+and see them this very day without another word upon the subject.'
+
+The servant answered the bell and stood waiting for his orders by
+the doorway.
+
+'Harris, will you tell Jenkins at once that I shall want
+the carriage at half-past eleven?'
+
+'Yes, my lady.'
+
+'All right then. That'll do. Don't stand staring at me there like
+an image, but go this minute and do as I tell you.'
+
+'Beg pardon, my lady, but her ladyship said she wanted the carriage
+herself at twelve puncshual.'
+
+'She can't have it, then, Harris. That's all. Go and give my message
+to Jenkins at once, and I'll settle about the carriage with my lady
+myself.'
+
+'She's the rummest young lady ever I come across,' the man murmured
+to himself in a dissatisfied fashion, as he went down the stairs
+again: 'but there, it's none of my business, thank goodness. The
+places and the people she does go and hunt up when she's got the
+fit on are truly ridic'lous: blest if she didn't acshally make Mr.
+Jenkins drive her down into Camberwell the other mornin', to see
+'ow the poor lived, she said; as if it mattered tuppence to us in
+our circles of society 'ow the poor live. I wonder what little game
+she's up to now? Well, well, what the aristocracy is coming to in
+these days is more'n I can fathom, as sure as my name's William
+'Arris.'
+
+The little game that Lady Hilda was up to that morning was one that
+a gentleman in Mr. Harris's position was certainly hardly like to
+appreciate or sympathise with.
+
+The evening before, she had met Arthur Berkeley once more at a small
+At Home, and had learned from him full particulars as to the dire
+straits into which the poor Le Bretons had finally fallen. Now,
+Hilda Tregellis was a kind-hearted girl at bottom, and when she
+heard all about it, she said at once to Arthur, 'I shall go and
+see them myself to-morrow, Mr. Berkeley, whether mamma allows me
+or not.'
+
+'What good will it do?' Arthur had answered her quickly. 'You
+can't find work for poor Le Breton, can you? and of course if you
+can't do that you can be of no earthly use in any way to the poor
+creatures.'
+
+'I don't know about that,' Hilda responded warmly. 'Sympathy's
+always something, isn't it, Mr. Berkeley? Nobody ought to know that
+better than you do. Besides, there's no saying when one may happen
+to turn up useful. Of course, I've never been of the slightest use
+to anybody in all my life, myself, I know, and I dare say I never
+shall be, but at least there's no harm in trying, is there? I'm on
+speaking terms with such an awful lot of people, all of them rich
+and many of them influential--Parliament, and Government offices,
+and all that sort of nonsense, you know--people who have no end
+of things to give away, and can't tell who on earth they'd better
+give them to, for fear of offending all the others, that I might
+possibly hear of something or other.'
+
+'I'm afraid, Lady Hilda,' Berkeley answered smiling, 'none of those
+people would have anything to offer that could possibly be of the
+slightest use to poor Le Breton. If he's to be saved at all, he
+must be saved in his own time and by his own methods. For my own
+part, I don't see what conceivable chance of success in life there
+is left for him. You can't imagine a man like him making money
+and living comfortably. It's a tragedy--all the dramas of real life
+always ARE tragedies; but I'm terribly afraid there's no conceivable
+way out of it.'
+
+Lady Hilda only looked at him with bold good humour. 'Nonsense,'
+she said bravely. 'All pure rubbishing pessimistic nonsense. (I
+hope pessimistic's the right word--it's a very good word, anyhow,
+even if it isn't in the proper place.) Well, I don't agree with you
+at all about this question, Mr. Berkeley. I'm very fond of Mr. Le
+Breton, really very fond of him; and I believe there's a corner
+somewhere for every man if only he can jog down properly into his
+own corner instead of being squeezed forcibly into somebody else's.
+The worst of it is, all the holes are round, and Mr. Le Breton's
+a square man, I allow: he wants all the angles cutting down off
+him.'
+
+'But you can't cut them off; that's the very trouble,' Arthur answered,
+with just a faint rising suspicion that he was half jealous of the
+interest Hilda showed even in poor lonely Ernest Le Breton. Gracious
+heavens! could he be playing false at last to the long-cherished
+memory of little Miss Butterfly? could he be really beginning to
+fall just a little in love, after all, with this bold beautiful
+Lady Hilda Tregellis? He didn't know, and yet he somehow hardly
+liked himself to think it. And while Edie was still so poor too!
+
+'No, you can't cut them off; I know that perfectly well,' Hilda
+rejoined quickly. 'I wouldn't care twopence for him if I thought
+you could. It's the angles that give him all his charming delicious
+originality. But you can look out a square hole for him somewhere,
+you know, and that of course would be a great deal better. Depend
+upon it, Mr. Berkeley, there are square holes up and down in the
+world, if only we knew where to look for them; and the mistake
+that everybody has made in poor Mr. Le Breton's case has been that
+instead of finding one to suit him, they've gone on trying to poke
+him down anyhow by main force into one of the round ones. That
+goes against the grain, you know; besides which I call it a clear
+waste of the very valuable solid mahogany corners.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked at her silently for a moment, as if a gleam
+of light had burst suddenly in upon him. Then he said to her slowly
+and deliberately, 'Perhaps you're right, Lady Hilda, though I never
+thought of it quite in that light before. But one thing certainly
+strikes me now, and that is that you're a great deal cleverer after
+all than I ever thought you.'
+
+Lady Hilda made a little mock curtsey. 'It's very good of you to
+say so,' she answered, half-saucily. 'Only the compliment is rather
+double-edged, you must confess, because it implies that up to now
+you've had a dreadfully low opinion of my poor little intelligence.'
+
+So after that conversation Lady Hilda made up her mind that she
+would certainly go the very next day and call as soon as possible
+upon Edie Le Breton. Nobody could tell what good might possibly
+come of it; but at least there could come no harm. And so, when the
+carriage drew up it the door at half-past eleven, Hilda Tregellis
+stepped into it with a vague consciousness of an important mission,
+and ordered Jenkins to drive at once to the side street in Holloway,
+whose address Arthur Berkeley had last night given her. Jenkins
+touched his hat with mechanical respect, but inwardly wondered what
+the dickens my lady would think if only she came to know of these
+'ere extrornary goin's on.
+
+At the door of the lodgings Hilda alighted and rang the bell herself.
+Good Mrs. Halliss opened the door, and answered quickly that Mrs.
+Le Breton was at home. Her woman's eye detected at once the coronet
+on the carriage, and she was ready to burst with delight when the
+tall visitor handed her a card for Edie, bearing the name of Lady
+Hilda Tregellis. It was almost the first time that Edie had had
+any lady callers; certainly the first time she had had any of such
+social distinction; and Mrs. Halliss made haste to usher her up in
+due form, and then ran down hastily to communicate the good news
+to honest John, who in his capacity of past coachman was already
+gazing out of the area window with deep interest at the carriage
+and horses.
+
+'There, John dear,' she cried, with tears of joy in her eyes,
+forgetting in her excitement to drat the man for not being in the
+back kitchen, 'to think that we should see a carriage an' pair like
+that there a-drawin' up in front of out own very 'ouse, and Lady
+'Ilder Tergellis, or summat o' the sort, a-comin' 'ere to see that
+dear little lady in the parlour, why, it's enough to make one's
+'eart burst, nearly, just you see now if it reelly isn't. You could
+a' knocked me down with a feather, a'most, when that there Lady
+'Ilder 'anded me 'er curd, and asked so sweet-like if Mrs. Le
+Breting was at 'ome. Mr. Le Breting's people is comin' round, you
+may be sure of it; 'is mother's a lady of title, that much we know
+for certing; and she wouldn't go and let 'er own flesh an' blood
+die 'ere of downright poverty, as they're like to do and won't let
+us 'elp it, pore dears, without sendin' round to inquire and assist
+'em. Married against 'er will, I understand, from what that dear
+Mr. Berkeley, bless 'is kind 'eart, do tell me; not as I can believe
+'e married beneath 'im, no, not no ways; for a sweeter, dearer,
+nicer little lady than our Mrs. Le Breting I never did, an' that
+I tell you. Sweeter manners you never did see yourself, John, for
+all you've lived among the aristocracy: an' I always knew 'is people
+'ud come round at last, and do what was right by 'im. An' you may
+depend upon it, John, this 'ere Lady 'Ilder's one of his relations,
+an' she's come round on a message from Lady Le Breting, to begin
+a reconciliation. And though we should be sorry to lose 'em, as
+'as stood by 'em through all their troubles, I'm glad to 'ear it,
+John, that I am, for I can't a-bear to see that dear young fellow
+a-eatin' 'is life out with care and anxiety.' And Mrs. Halliss, who
+had always felt convinced in her own mind that Ernest must really
+be the unacknowledged heir to a splendid fortune, began to wipe
+her eyes violently in her delight at this evident realisation of
+her wildest fancies and wishes.
+
+Meanwhile, upstairs in the little parlour, Edie had risen in some
+trepidation as Mrs. Halliss placed in her hands Lady Hilda Tregellis's
+card. Ernest was out, gone to walk feebly around the streets of
+Holloway, and she hardly knew at first what to say to so unexpected
+a visitor. But Lady Hilda put her almost at her ease at once
+by coming up to her with both her arms outstretched, as to an old
+friend, and saying, with one of her pleasantest smiles:
+
+'You must forgive me, Mrs. Le Breton, for never having come to
+call on you before; but I have been long meaning to, and doubting
+whether you would care to see me or not. You know, I'm a very old
+friend of your husband's--he was SO kind to me always when he was
+down at our place in dear old Devonshire. (You're a Devonshire girl
+yourself, aren't you? just as I am. I thought so. I'm so glad of
+it. I always get on so well with the dear old Devonshire folk.)
+Well, I've been meaning to come for ever so long, and putting
+it off, and putting it off, and putting it off, as one WILL put
+things off, you know, when you're not quite sure about them, until
+last evening. And then our friend, Mr. Arthur Berkeley, who knows
+everybody, talked to me about your husband and you, and told me
+he thought you wouldn't mind my coming to see you, for he fancied
+you hadn't much society up here that you cared for or sympathised
+with: though, of course, I'm dreadfully afraid of coming to call
+upon you, because I know you're the sister of that very clever Mr.
+Oswald, whose sad death we were all so sorry to hear about in the
+papers; and naturally, as you've lived so much with him and with
+Mr. Le Breton, you must be so awfully learned and all that sort of
+thing, and no doubt despise ignorant people like myself dreadfully.
+But you really mustn't despise me, Mrs. Le Breton, because, you
+see, I haven't had all the advantages that you've had; indeed, the
+only clever people I've ever met in all my life are your husband
+and Mr. Arthur Berkeley, except, of course, Cabinet ministers and
+so forth, and they don't count, because they're political, and so
+very old, and solemn, and grand, and won't take any notice of us
+girls, except to sit upon us. So that's what's made me rather afraid
+to call upon you, because I thought you'd be quite too much in
+the higher education way for a girl like me; and I haven't got any
+education at all, except in rubbish, as your husband used always
+to tell me. And now I want you to tell me all about Mr. Le Breton,
+and the baby--Dot, you call her, Mr. Berkeley told me--and yourself,
+too; for, though I've never seen you before, I feel, of course,
+like an old friend of the family, having known your husband so very
+intimately.'
+
+Lady Hilda designedly delivered all this long harangue straight
+off without a break, in her go-ahead, breathless, voluble fashion,
+because she felt sure Edie wouldn't feel perfectly at her ease at
+first, and she wanted to give her time to recover from the first
+foolish awe of that meaningless prefix, Lady. Moreover, Lady Hilda,
+in spite of her offhand manner was a good psychologist, and a true
+woman: and she had concocted her little speech on the spur of the
+moment with some cleverness, so as just to suit her instinctive
+reading of Edie's small personal peculiarities. She saw in a moment
+that that slight, pale, delicate girl was lost in London, far from
+her own home and surroundings; and that the passing allusion to
+their common Devonshire origin would please and conciliate her, as
+it always does with the clannish, warm-hearted, simple-minded West
+Country folk. Then again, the deft hints as to their friendship
+with Arthur Berkeley, as to Ernest's stay at Dunbude, and as to
+her own fear lest Edie should be too learned for her, all tended
+to bring out whatever points of interest they had together: while
+the casual touch about poor Harry's reputation, and the final
+mention of little Dot by name, completed the conquest of Edie's
+simple, gentle little woman's heart. So this was the great Lady
+Hilda Tregellis, she thought, of whom she had heard so much, and
+whom she had dreaded so greatly as a grand rival! Why, after all,
+she was exactly like any other Devonshire girl in Calcombe Pomeroy,
+except, perhaps, that she was easier to get on with, and smiled a
+great deal more pleasantly than ten out of a dozen.
+
+'It's very kind indeed of you to come,' Edie answered, smiling back
+as well as she was able the first moment that Lady Hilda allowed
+her a chance to edge in a word sideways. 'Ernest will be so very
+very sorry that he's missed you when he comes in. He's spoken to
+me a great deal about you ever so many times.'
+
+'No, has he really?' Lady Hilda asked quickly, with unmistakable
+interest and pleasure. 'Well, now, I'm so glad of that, for to tell
+you the truth, Mrs. Le Breton, though he was really always very
+kind to me, and so patient with all my stupidity, I more than
+half fancied he didn't exactly like me. In fact, I was dreadfully
+afraid he thought me a perfect nuisance. I'm so sorry he isn't in,
+because the truth is, I came partly to see him as well as to see
+you, and I should be awfully disappointed if I had to miss him.
+Where's he gone, if I may ask? Perhaps I may be able to wait and
+see him.'
+
+'Oh, he's only out walking somewhere--ur--somewhere about Holloway,'
+Edie answered, half blushing at the nature of their neighbourhood,
+and glancing round the little room to see how it was likely to
+strike so grand a person as Lady Hilda Tregellis.
+
+Hilda noticed the glance, and made as if she did not notice it. Her
+heart had begun to warm at once to this poor, pale, eager-looking
+little woman, who had had the doubtful happiness of winning Ernest
+Le Breton's love. 'Then I shall certainly wait and see him, Mrs. Le
+Breton.' she said cordially. 'What a dear cosy little room you've
+got here, to be sure. I do so love those nice bright little
+cottage parlours, with their pretty pots of flowers and cheerful
+furniture--so much warmer and more comfortable, you know, than the
+great dreary empty barns that most people go and do penance by
+living in. If ever I marry--which I don't suppose I ever shall do,
+for nobody'll have me, I'm sorry to say: at least, nobody but stupid
+people in the peerage, Algies and Berties and Monties I always call
+them--well, if I ever do marry, I shall have a cosy little house
+just like this one, with no unnecessary space to walk over every
+time you come in or out, and with a chance of keeping yourself
+warm without having to crone over the fire in order to get safely
+out of the horrid draughts. And Dot, now let me see, how old is
+she by this time? I ought to remember, I'm sure, for Mr. Berkeley
+told me all about her at the time; and I said should I write and
+ask if I might stand as godmother; and Mr. Berkeley laughed at
+me, and said what could I be dreaming of, and did I think you were
+going to make your baby liable to fine and imprisonment if it ever
+published works hereafter on philosophy or something of the sort.
+So delightfully original of all of you, really.'
+
+Once started on that fertile theme of female conversation, Edie and
+Hilda got on well enough in all conscience to satisfy the most
+exacting mind. Dot was duly brought in and exhibited by Mrs. Halliss;
+and was pronounced to be the very sweetest, dearest, darlingest
+little duck ever seen on earth since the beginning of all things.
+Her various points of likeness to all her relations were duly
+discussed; and Hilda took particular pains to observe that she
+didn't in the very faintest degree resemble that old horror, Lady
+Le Breton. Then her whole past history was fully related, she had
+been fed on, and what illnesses she had had, and how many teeth
+she had got, and all the other delightful nothings so perennially
+interesting to the maternal heart. Hilda listened to the whole
+account with unfeigned attention, and begged leave to be allowed
+to dance Dot in her own strong arms, and tickled her fat cheek with
+her slender forefinger, and laughed with genuine delight when the
+baby smiled again at her and turned her face to be tickled a second
+time. Gradually Hilda brought the conversation round to Ernest's
+journalistic experiences, and at last she said very quietly, 'I'm
+sorry to learn from Mr. Berkeley, dear, that your husband doesn't
+get quite as much work to do as he would like to have.'
+
+Edie's tender eyes filled at once with swimming tears. That one
+word 'dear,' said so naturally and simply, touched her heart at
+once with its genuine half unspoken sympathy. 'Oh, Lady Hilda,'
+she answered falteringly, 'please don't make me talk about that.
+We are so very, very, very poor. I can't bear to talk about it to
+you. Please, please don't make me.'
+
+Hilda looked at her with the moisture welling up in her own eyes
+too, and said softly, 'I'm SO sorry: dear, dear little Mrs. Le
+Breton, I'm so very, very, very sorry for you! from the bottom of
+my heart I'm sorry for you.'
+
+'It isn't for myself, you know,' Edie answered quickly: 'for
+myself, of course, I could stand anything; but it's the trouble
+and privations for darling Ernest. Oh, Lady Hilda, I can't bear to
+say it, but he's dying, he's dying.'
+
+Hilda took the pretty small hand affectionately in hers. 'Don't,
+dear, don't,' she said, brushing away a tear from her own eyes at
+the same time. 'He isn't, believe me, he isn't. And don't call
+me by that horrid stiff name, dear, please don't. Call me Hilda.
+I should be so pleased and flattered if you would call me Hilda.
+And may I call you Edie? I know your husband calls you Edie, because
+Mr. Ronald Le Breton told me so. I want to be a friend of yours;
+and I feel sure, if only you will let me, that we might be very
+good and helpful friends indeed together.'
+
+Edie pressed her hand softly. How very different from the imaginary
+Lady Hilda she had. pictured to herself in her timid, girlish fancy!
+How much even dear Ernest had been mistaken as to what there was
+of womanly really in her. 'Oh, don't speak so kindly to me,' she
+said imploringly; 'don't speak so kindly, or else you'll make me
+cry. I can't bear to hear you speak so kindly.'
+
+'Cry, dear,' Lady Hilda whispered in a gentle tone, kissing her
+forehead delicately as she spoke: 'cry and relieve yourself. There'a
+nothing gives one so much comfort when one's heart is bursting as a
+regular good downright cry.' And, suiting the action to the word,
+forthwith Lady Hilda laid her own statuesque head down beside Edie's,
+and so those two weeping women, rivals once in a vague way, and
+now bound to one another by a new-found tie, mingled their tears
+silently together for ten minutes in unuttered sympathy.
+
+As they sat there, both tearful and speechless, with Lady Hilda
+soothing Edie's wan hand tenderly in hers, and leaning above her,
+and stroking her hair softly with a sister's fondness, the door
+opened very quietly, and Arthur Berkeley stood for a moment pausing
+in the passage, and looking in without a word upon the unexpected
+sight that greeted his wondering vision. He had come to call upon
+Ernest about some possible opening for a new writer on a paper lately
+started; and hearing the sound of sobs within had opened the door
+quietly and tentatively. He could hardly believe his own eyes when
+he actually saw Lady Hilda Tregellis sitting there side by side
+with Edie Le Breton, kissing her pale forehead a dozen times in
+a minute, and crying over her like a child with unwonted tears of
+unmistakable sympathy. For ten seconds Arthur held the door ajar
+in his hands, and gazed silently with the awe of chivalrous respect
+upon the tearful, beautiful picture. Then he shut the door again
+noiselessly and unperceived, and stole softly out into the street
+to wait alone for Ernest's return. It was not for him to intrude
+his unbidden presence upon the sacred sorrow of those two weeping
+sister-women.
+
+He lighted a cigar outside, and walked up and down a neighbouring
+street feverishly till he thought it likely the call would be
+finished. 'Dear little Mrs. Le Breton,' he said to himself softly,
+'dear little Miss Butterfly of the days that are dead; softened
+and sweetened still more by suffering, with the beauty of holiness
+glowing in your face, how I wish some good for you could unexpectedly
+come out of this curious visit. Though I don't see how it's
+possible: I don't see how it's possible. The stream carries us all
+down unresistingly before its senseless flood, and sweeps us at
+last, sooner or later, like helpless logs, into the unknown sea.
+Poor Ernest is drifting fast thitherwards before the current, and
+nothing on earth, it seems to me, can conceivably stop him!'
+
+He paced up and down a little, with a quick, unsteady tread, and
+took a puff or two again at his cigar abstractedly. Then he held
+it thoughtfully between his fingers for a while and began to hum
+a few bars from his own new opera then in course of composition--a
+stately long-drawn air, it was. something like the rustle of Hilda
+Tregellis's satin train as she swept queenlike down the broad marble
+staircase of some great Elizabethan country palace. 'And dear Lady
+Hilda too,' he went on, musingly: 'dear, kind, sympathising Lady
+Hilda. Who on earth would ever have thought she had it in her to
+comfort that poor, weeping, sorrowing girl as I just now saw her
+doing? Dear Lady Hilda! Kind Lady Hilda! I have undervalued you
+and overlooked you, because of the mere accident of your titled
+birth, but I could have kissed you myself, for pure gratitude,
+that very minute, Hilda Tregellis, when I saw you stooping down and
+kissing that dear white forehead that looked so pale and womanly
+and beautiful. Yes, Hilda, I could have kissed you. I could have
+kissed your own grand, smooth, white marble forehead. And no very
+great trial of endurance, either, Arthur Berkeley, if it comes to
+that; for say what you will of her, she's a beautiful, stately,
+queenlike woman indeed; and it somehow strikes me she's a truer
+and better woman, too, than you have ever yet in your shallow
+superficiality imagined. Not like little Miss Butterfly! Oh, no,
+not like little Miss Butterfly! But still, there are keys and keys
+in music; and if every tune was pitched to the self-same key, even
+the tenderest, what a monotonous, dreary world it would be to live
+and sing in after all. Perhaps a man might make himself a little
+shrine not wholly without sweet savour of pure incense for beautiful,
+stately, queenlike Hilda Tregellis too! But no; I mustn't think
+of it. I have no other duty or prospect in life possible as yet
+while dear little Miss Butterfly still remains practically unprovided
+for!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+HOPE.
+
+
+From Edie Le Breton's lodgings, Hilda Tregellis drove straight,
+without stopping all the way, to Arthur Berkeley's house at Chelsea;
+for Arthur had long since risen to the dignity of an enfranchised
+householder, and had bought himself a pretty cottage near the
+Embankment, with room enough for himself and the Progenitor, and
+even for any possible future domestic contingency in the way of
+wife and children. It was a very unconventional thing for her to
+do, no doubt; but Lady Hilda was certainly not the person to be
+deterred from doing anything she contemplated on the bare ground
+of its extreme unconventionally; and so far was she from objecting
+personally to her visit on this score, that before she rang the
+Berkeleys' bell she looked quietly at her little bijou watch, and
+said with a bland smile to the suspicious Mr. Jenkins, 'Let me see,
+Jenkins; it's one o'clock. I shall lunch with my friends here this
+morning; so you may take the carriage home now for my lady, and I
+shall cab it back, or come round by Metropolitan.' Jenkins was too
+much accustcmed to Lady Hilda's unaccountable vagaries to express
+any surprise at her wildest resolutions, even if she had proposed
+to go home on a costermonger's barrow; so he only touched his hat
+respectfully, in his marionette fashion, and drove away at once
+without further colloquy.
+
+'Is Mr. Berkeley at home?' Hilda asked of the pretty servant girl
+who opened the door to her, mentally taking note at the same time
+that Arthur's aesthetic tendencies evidently extended even to his
+human surroundings.
+
+'Which Mr. Berkeley?' the girl asked in reply. 'Mr. Berkeley
+senerer, 'e's at 'ome, but Mr. Arthur, 'e's gone up this mornin'
+to 'Olloway.'
+
+Hilda seized with avidity upon this unexpected and almost providential
+opening. 'No, is he?' she said, delighted. 'Then I'll go in and see
+Mr. Berkeley senior. No card, thank you: no name: tell him merely
+a lady would like to see him. I dare say Mr. Arthur'll be back
+before long from Holloway.'
+
+The girl hesitated a moment as if in doubt, and surveyed Lady Hilda
+from head to foot. Hilda, whose eyes were still red from crying,
+couldn't help laughing outright at the obvious cause of the girl's
+hesitation. 'Do as I tell you,' she said in her imperious way. 'Who
+on earth do you take me for, my good girl? That's my card, see: but
+you needn't give it to Mr. Berkeley senior. Now go and tell him at
+once that a lady is waiting to see him.'
+
+The innate respect of the English working classes for the kind of
+nobility that is supposed to be represented by the British peerage
+made the girl drop an instinctive curtsey as she looked at the card,
+and answer in a voice of hushed surprise, 'Yes, my lady.' She had
+heard Lady Hilda Tregellis spoken of more than once at her master's
+table, and she knew, of course, that so great a personage as that
+could do no wrong. So she merely ushered her visitor at once into
+Arthur Berkeley's beautiful little study, with its delicate grey
+pomegranate wall paper and its exquisite unpolished oak fittings,
+and said simply, in an overawed manner, 'A lady wishes to speak to
+you, sir.'
+
+The old shoemaker looked up from the English translation of Ribot's
+'Psychologie Anglaise Contemporaine,' with whose intricacies he
+was manfully struggling, and rose with native politeness to welcome
+Hilda.
+
+'Good morning,' Hilda said, extending her hand to him with one of
+her beaming disarming smiles, and annihilating all that was most
+obtrusively democratic in him at once by her pleasant manner. 'I'm
+a friend of your son's, Mr. Berkeley, and I've come here to see
+him about very particular private business--in short, on an errand
+of charity. Will he be long gone, do you know?'
+
+'Not very,' the Progenitor answered, in a somewhat embarrassed
+manner, surveying her curiously. 'At least, I should think not.
+He's gone to Holloway for an hour or two, but I fancy he'll be back
+for two o'clock luncheon, Miss----ur, I don't think I caught your
+name, did I?'
+
+'To Holloway,' Hilda echoed, taking no notice of his suggested
+query. 'Oh, then he's gone to see the poor dear Le Bretons, of
+course. Why, that's just what I wanted to see him about. If you'll
+allow me then, I'll just stop and have lunch with you.'
+
+'The dickens you will,' the Progenitor thought to himself in speechless
+astonishment. 'That's really awfully cool of you. However, I dare
+say it's usual to invite oneself in the state of life that that boy
+Artie has gone and hoisted himself into, most unnaturally. A fine
+lady, no doubt, of their modern pattern; but in my day, up in
+Paddington, we should have called her a brazen hussey.--Certainly,
+if you will,' he added aloud. 'If you've come on any errand that
+will do any good to the Le Bretons, I'm sure my son'll be delighted
+to see you. He's greatly grieved at their unhappy condition.'
+
+'I'm afraid I've nothing much to suggest of any very practical
+sort,' Hilda answered, with a slight sigh; 'but at least I should
+like to talk with him about the matter. Something must be done
+for these two poor young people, you know, Mr. Berkeley. Something
+must really be done to help them.'
+
+'Then you're interested in them, Miss--ur--ur--ah, yes--are you?'
+
+'Look at my eyes,' Hilda said plumply. 'Are they very red, Mr.
+Berkeley?'
+
+'Well....ur...yes, if I may venture to say so to a lady,' the old
+shoemaker answered hesitatingly, with unwonted gallantry. 'I should
+say they were a trifle, ur, just a trifle roseate, you know.'
+
+'Quite so,' Hilda went on, seriously. 'That's it. They're red with
+crying. I've been crying like a baby all the morning with that
+poor, dear, sweet little angel of a Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+'Then you're a great friend of hers, I suppose,' the Progenitor
+suggested mildly.
+
+'Never set eyes on her in my life before this morning, on the
+contrary,' Hilda continued in her garrulous fashion. 'But, oh, Mr.
+Berkeley, if you'd only seen that dear little woman, crying as if
+her heart would break, and telling me that dear Ernest was dying,
+actually dying; why--there--excuse me--I can't help it, you know;
+we women are always crying about something or other, aren't we?'
+
+The old man laid his hand on hers quietly. 'Don't mind ME, my
+dear,' he said with genuine tenderness. 'Don't mind me a bit; I'm
+only an old shoemaker, as I dare say you've heard before now; but
+I know you'll be the better for crying--women always are--and tears
+shed on somebody else's account are never thrown away, my dear,
+are they?'
+
+Hilda took his hand between hers, and wiping her eyes once more
+whispered softly, 'No, Mr. Berkeley, no; perhaps they're not; but
+oh, they're so useless; so very, very, very useless. Do you know,
+I never felt my own powerlessness and helplessness in all my life
+so much as I did at that dear, patient little Mrs. Le Breton's
+this very morning. There I sat, knowing she was in dire need of
+money for her poor husband, and wanting sufficient food and drink,
+perhaps, for herself, and him, and the dear darling baby; and in
+my hand in my muff I had my purse there with five tenners--Bank of
+England ten-pound uotes, you know--fifty pounds altogether, rolled
+up inside it; and I would have given anything if only I could have
+pulled them out and made them a present to her then and there; and
+I couldn't, you see: and, oh, Mr. Berkeley, isn't it terrible to
+look at them? And then, before I left, poor Mr. Le Breton himself
+came in, and I was quite shocked to see him. I used to know him a
+few years ago, and even then he wasn't what you'd call robust by
+any means; but now, oh, dear me, he does look so awfully ill and
+haggard and miserable that it quite made me break down again, and I
+cried about him before his very face; and the moment I got away, I
+said to the coachman, "Jenkins, drive straight off to the Embankment
+at Chelsea;" and here I am, you see, waiting to talk with your
+clever son about it; for, really, Mr. Berkeley, the poor Le Bretons
+haven't got a single friend anywhere like your son Arthur.'
+
+And then Lady Hilda went on to praise Arthur's music to the
+Progenitor, and to speak of how much admired he was everywhere,
+and to hint that so much genius and musical power must of course be
+largely hereditary. Whereat the old man, not unmoved by her gentle
+insinuating flattery, at last confessed to his own lifelong musical
+tastes, and even casually acknowledged that the motive for one or
+two of the minor songs in the famous operas was not entirely of
+Arthur's own unaided invention. And so, from one subject to another,
+they passed on so quickly, and hit it off with one another so exactly
+(for Hilda had a wonderful knack of leading up to everybody's strong
+points), that long before lunch was ready, the Progenitor had been
+quite won over by the fascinations of the brazen hussey, and was
+prepared to admit that she was really a very nice, kind, tender-hearted,
+intelligent, appreciative, and discriminating young lady. True,
+she had not read Mill or Fawcett, and was ignorant of the very name
+of Herbert Spencer; but she had a vast admiration for his dear boy
+Artie, and she saw that he himself knew a thing or two in his own
+modest way, though he was only what the grand world she moved in
+would doubtless call an old superannuated journeyman shoemaker.
+
+'Ah, yes, a shoemaker! so I've heard somewhere, I fancy,' Lady
+Hilda remarked brightly, when for the third time in the course of
+their conversation he informed her with great dignity of the interesting
+fact; 'how very delightful and charming that is, really, now isn't
+it? So original, you know, to make shoes instead of going into some
+useless profession, especially when you're such a great reader
+and student and thinker as you are--for I see you're a philosopher
+and a psychologist already, Mr. Berkeley'--Hilda considered it rather
+a bold effort on her part to pronounce the word 'psychologist' at
+the very first trial without stumbling; but though she was a little
+doubtful about the exact pronunciation of that fearful vocable,
+she felt quite at her ease about the fact at least, because
+she carefully noticed him lay down Ribot on the table beside him,
+name upward; 'one can't help finding that much out on a very short
+acquaintance, can one? Though, indeed, now I come to think of it,
+I believe I've heard often that men of your calling generally ARE
+very fond of reading, and are very philosophical, and clever, and
+political, and all that sort of thing; and they say that's the
+reason, of course, why Northampton's such an exceptionally intelligent
+constituency, and always returns such thoroughgoing able logical
+Radicals.'
+
+The old man's eyes beamed, as she spoke, with inexpressible pride
+and pleasure. 'I'm very glad indeed to hear you say so,' he answered
+promptly with a complacent self-satisfied smile, 'and I believe
+you're right too, Miss, ur--ur--ur--quite so. The practice of
+shoemaking undoubtedly tends to develop a very high and exceptional
+level of general intelligence and logical power.'
+
+'I'm sure of it,' Hilda answered demurely, in a tone of the deepest
+and sincerest conviction; 'and when I heard somebody say somewhere,
+that your son was...--well, WAS your son, I said to myself at once,
+"Ah, well, there now, that quite accounts, of course, for young
+Mr. Berkeley's very extraordinary and unusual abilities!"'
+
+'She's really a most sensible, well-informed young woman, whoever
+she is,' the Progenitor thought to himself silently; 'and it's
+certainly a pity that dear Artie couldn't take a fancy to some nice,
+appreciative, kind-hearted, practical girl like that now, instead
+of wearing away all the best days of his life in useless regret
+for that poor slender, unsubstantial nonentity of a watery little
+Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+By two o'clock lunch was ready, and just as it had been announced,
+Arthur Berkeley ran up the front steps, and let himself in with
+his proprietory latch-key. Turning straight into the dining-room,
+he was just in time to see his own father walking into lunch arm
+in arm with Lady Hilda Tregellis. As Mrs. Hallis had graphically
+expressed it, he felt as if you might have knocked him down with
+a feather! Was she absolutely ubiquitous, then, this pervasive
+Lady Hilda? and was he destined wherever he went to come upon her
+suddenly in the most unexpected and incomprehensible situations?
+
+'Will you sit down here, my dear,' the Progenitor was saying to
+Hilda at the exact moment he entered, 'or would you prefer your
+back to the fire?'
+
+Arthur Berkeley opened his eyes wide with unspeakable amazement.
+'What, YOU here,' he exclaimed, coming forward suddenly to shake
+hands with Hilda; 'why, I saw you only a couple of hours since at
+the Le Bretons' at Holloway.'
+
+'You did!' Hilda cried with almost equal astonishment, 'Why, how
+was that? I never saw YOU.'
+
+Arthur sighed quietly. 'No,' he answered, with a curious look at
+the Progenitor; 'you were engaged when I opened the door, and I
+didn't like to disturb you. You were--you were speaking with poor
+little Mrs. Le Breton. But I'm so much obliged to you for your
+kindness to them, Lady Hilda; so very much obliged to you for your
+great kindness to them.'
+
+It was the Progenitor's turn now to start in surprise. 'What! Lady
+Hilda!' he cried with a bewildered look. 'Lady Hilda! Did I hear
+you say "Lady Hilda"? Is this Lady Hilda Tregellis, then, that I've
+heard you talk about so often, Artie?'
+
+'Why, of course, Father. You didn't know who it was, then, didn't
+you? Lady Hilda, I'm afraid you've been stealing a march upon the
+poor unsuspecting hostile Progenitor.'
+
+'Not quite that, Mr. Berkeley,' Hilda replied, laughing; 'only
+after the very truculent character I had heard of your father as
+a regular red-hot militant Radical, I thought I'd better not send
+in my name to him at once for fear it might prejudice him against
+me before first acquaintance.'
+
+The Progenitor looked at her steadfastly from head to foot, standing
+before him there in her queenly beauty, as if she were some strange
+wild beast that he had been requested to inspect and report upon
+for a scientific purpose. 'Lady Hilda Tregellis!' he said slowly
+and deliberately; 'Lady Hilda Tregellis! So this is Lady Hilda
+Tregellis, is it? Well, all I can say is this, then, that as far as
+I can judge her, Lady Hilda Tregellis is a very sensible, modest,
+intelligent, well-conducted young woman, which is more than I
+could possibly have expected from a person of her unfortunate and
+distressing hereditary antecedents. But you know, my dear, it was
+a very mean trick of you to go and take an old man's heart by guile
+and stratagem in that way!'
+
+Hilda laughed a little uneasily. The Progenitor's manner was perhaps
+a trifle too open and unconventional even for her. 'It wasn't for
+that I came, Mr. Berkeley,' she said again with one of her sunny
+smiles, which brought the Progenitor metaphorically to her feet
+again, 'but to talk over this matter of the poor Le Bretons with
+your son. Oh, Mr. Arthur, something must really be done to help
+them. I know you say there's nothing to be done; but there must be;
+we must find it out; we must invent it; we must compel it. When
+I sat there this morning with that dear little woman and saw
+her breaking her full heart over her husband's trouble, I said to
+myself, somehow, Hilda Tregellis, if you can't find a way out of
+this, you're not worth your salt in this world, and you'd better
+make haste and take a rapid through-ticket at once to the next, if
+there is one.'
+
+'Which is more than doubtful, really,' the Progenitor muttered
+softly half under his breath; 'which, as Strauss has conclusively
+shown, is certainly a good deal more than doubtful.'
+
+Arthur took no notice of the interruption, but merely answered
+imploringly, with a despairing gesture of his hands, 'What are we
+to do, Lady Hilda? What can we possibly do?'
+
+'Why, sit down and have some lunch first,' Hilda rejoined with
+practical common-sense, 'and then talk it over rationally afterwards,
+instead of wringing our hands helplessly like a pair of Frenchmen
+in a street difficulty.' (Hilda had a fine old crusted English
+contempt, by the way, for those vastly inferior and foolish creatures
+known as foreigners.)
+
+Thus adjured, Berkeley sat down promptly, and they proceeded to take
+counsel together in this hard matter over the cutlets and claret
+provided before them. 'Ernest and Mrs. Le Breton told me all about
+your visit,' Arthur went on, soon after; 'and they're so much obliged
+to you for having taken the trouble to look them up in their sore
+distress. Do you know, Lady Hilda, I think you've quite made a
+conquest of our dear little friend, Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+'I don't know about that,' Hilda responded with a smile, 'but I'm
+sure, at any rate, that the sweet little woman quite made a conquest
+of me, Mr. Berkeley. In fact, I can't say what you think, but for
+my part I'm determined an effort must be made one way or another
+to save them.'
+
+'It's no use,' Arthur answered, shaking his head sadly; 'it can't
+be done. There's nothing for it but to let them float down helplessly
+with the tide, wherever it may bear them.'
+
+'Stuff and nonsense,' Hilda replied energetically. 'All rubbish,
+utter rubbish, and if I were a man as you are, Mr. Berkeley, I
+should be ashamed to take such a desponding view of the situation.
+If we say it's got to be done, it will be done, and that's an end
+of it. Work must and can be found for him somehow or somewhere.'
+
+'But the man's dying,' Arthur interrupted with a vehement gesture.
+'There's no more work left in him. The only thing that's any use
+is to send him off to Madeira, or Egypt, or Catania, or somewhere
+of that sort, and let him die quietly among the palms and cactuses
+and aloes. That's Sir Antony Wraxall's opinion, and surely nobody
+in London can know half as well as he does about the matter.'
+
+'Sir Antony's a fool,' Hilda responded with refreshing bluntness.
+'He knows nothing on earth at all about it. He's accustomed to
+prescribing for a lot of us idle good-for-nothing rich people'--('Very
+true,' the Progenitor assented parenthetically;) 'and he's got
+into a fixed habit of prescribing a Nile voyage, just as he's got
+into a fixed habit of prescribing old wine, and carriage exercise,
+and ten thousand a year to all his patients. What Mr. Le Breton
+really wants is not Egypt, or old wine, or Sir Antony, or anything
+of the sort, but relief from this pressing load of anxiety and
+responsibility. Put him in my hands for six months, and I'll back
+myself at a hundred to six against Sir Antony to cure him for a
+monkey.'
+
+'For a what!' the Progenitor asked with a puzzled expression of
+countenance.
+
+'Back myself for a monkey, you know,' Hilda answered, without
+perceiving the cause of the old man's innocent confusion.
+
+The Progenitor was evidently none the wiser still for Hilda's
+answer, though he forbore to pursue the subject any farther, lest
+he should betray his obvious ignorance of aristocratic manners and
+dialect.
+
+But Arthur looked up at Lady Hilda with something like the gleam of
+a new-born hope on his distressed features. 'Lady Hilda,' he said
+almost cheerfully, 'you really speak as if you had some practicable
+plan actually in prospect. It seems to me, if anybody can pull
+them through, you can, because you've got such a grand reserve of
+faith and energy. What is it, now, you think of doing?'
+
+'Well,' Hilda answered, taken a little aback at this practical
+question, 'I've hardly got my plan matured yet; but I've got a
+plan; and I thought it all out as far as it went as I came along
+here just now in the carriage. The great thing is, we must inspire
+Mr. Le Breton with a new confidence; we must begin by showing him
+we believe in him, and letting him see that he may still manage
+in some way or other to retrieve himself. He has lost all hope: we
+must begin with him over again. I've got an idea, but it'll take
+money. Now, I can give up half my allowance for the next year--the
+Le Bretons need never know anything about it--that'll be something:
+you're a rich man now, I believe, Mr. Berkeley; will you make up
+as much as I do, if my plan seems a feasible one to you for retrieving
+the position?'
+
+The Progenitor answered quickly for him: 'Miss Tregellis,' he
+said, with a little tremor in his voice, '--you'll excuse me, my
+dear, but it's against my principles to call anybody my lady:--he
+will, I know he will; and if he wouldn't, why, my dear, I'd go
+back to my cobbling and earn it myself rather than that you or your
+friends should go without it for a single minute.'
+
+Arthur said nothing, but he bowed his head silently. What a lot of
+good there was really in that splendid woman, and what a commanding,
+energetic, masterful way she had about her! To a feckless, undecided,
+faltering man like Arthur Berkeley there was something wonderfully
+attractive and magnificent, after all, in such an imperious resolute
+woman as Lady Hilda.
+
+'Then this is my plan,' Hilda went on hastily. 'We must do
+something that'll take Mr. Le Breton out of himself for a short
+time entirely--that'll give him occupation of a kind he thinks
+right, and at the same time put money in his pocket. Now, he's
+always talking about this socialistic business of his; but why
+doesn't he tell us what he has actually seen about the life and
+habits of the really poor? Mrs. Le Breton tells me he knows the
+East End well: why doesn't he sit down and give us a good rattling,
+rousing, frightening description of all that's in it? Of course,
+I don't care twopence about the poor myself--not in the lump, I
+mean--I beg your pardon, Mr. Berkeley,'--for the Progenitor gave
+a start of surprise and astonishment--'you know we women are nothing
+if not concrete; we never care for anything in the abstract, Mr. Le
+Breton used to tell me; we want the particular case brought home
+to our sympathies before we can interest ourselves about it. After
+all, even YOU who are men don't feel very much for all the miserable
+wretched people there are in China, you know; they're too far away
+for even you to bother your heads about. But I DO care about the
+Le Bretons, and it strikes me we might help them a little in this
+way. I know a lot of artists, Mr. Berkeley; and I know one who
+I think would just do for the very work I want to set him. (He's
+poor, too, by the way, and I don't mind giving him a lift at the
+same time and killing two birds with one stone.) Very well, then;
+I go to him, and say, "Mr. Verney," I say,--there now, I didn't mean
+to tell you his name, but no matter; "Mr. Verney," I shall say, "a
+friend of mine in the writing line is going to pay some visits to
+the very poor quarters in the East End, and write about it, which
+will make a great noise in the world as sure as midday."'
+
+'But how do you know it will?' asked the Progenitor, simply.
+
+Hilda turned round upon him with an unfeigned look of startled
+astonishment. 'How do I know it will?' she said confidently. 'Why,
+because I mean it to, Mr. Berkeley. Because I say it shall. Because
+I choose to make it. Two Cabinet ministers shall quote it in the
+House, and a duke shall write letters to the "Times" denouncing it
+as an intensely wicked and revolutionary publication. If I choose
+to float it, I WILL float it.--Well, "Mr. Verney," I say for example,
+"will you undertake to accompany him and make sketches? It'll be
+unpleasant work, I know, because I've been there myself to see,
+and the places don't smell nice at all--worse than Genoa or the
+old town at Nice even, I can tell you: but it'll make you a name;
+and in any case the publisher who's getting it up'll pay you well
+for it." Of course, Mr. Verney says "Yes." Then we go on to Mr.
+Le Breton and say, "A young artist of my acquaintance is making a
+pilgrimage into the East End to see for himself how the people live,
+and to make pictures of them to stir up the sluggish consciences of
+the lazy aristocrats"--that's me and my people, of course: that'll
+be the way to work it. Play upon Mr. Le Breton's tenderest feelings.
+Make him feel he's fighting for the Cause; and he'll be ready to
+throw himself, heart and soul, into the spirit of the project. I
+don't care twopence about the Cause myself, of course, so that's
+flat, and I don't pretend to, either, Mr. Berkeley; but I care a
+great deal for the misery of that poor, dear, pale little woman,
+sitting there with me this morning and regularly sobbing her heart
+out; and if I can do anything to help her, why, I shall be only
+too delighted.'
+
+'Le Breton's a well-meaning young fellow, certainly,' the Progenitor
+murmured gently in a voice of graceful concession; 'and I believe
+his heart's really in the Cause, as you call it; but you know, my
+dear, he's very far from being sound in his economical views as to
+the relations of capital and labour. Far from sound, as John Stuart
+Mill would have judged the question, I can solemnly assure you.'
+
+'Very well,' Hilda went on, almost without noticing the interruption.
+'We shall say to him, or rather we shall get our publisher to say
+to him, that as he's interested in the matter, and knows the East
+End well, he has been selected--shall we put it on somebody's
+recommendation?--to accompany the artist, and to supply the reading
+matter, the letter-press I think you call it; in fact, to write up
+to our illustrator's pictures; and that he is to be decently paid
+for his trouble. He must do something graphic, something stirring,
+something to wake up lazy people in the West End to a passing
+sense of what he calls their responsibilities. That'll seem like
+real work to Mr. Le Breton. It'll put new heart into him; he'll take
+up the matter vigorously; he'll do it well; he'll write a splendid
+book; and I shall guarantee its making a stir in the world this
+very dull season. What's the use of knowing half the odiously
+commonplace bores and prigs in all London if you can't float a
+single little heterodox pamphlet for a particular purpose? What do
+you think of it, Mr. Berkeley?'
+
+Arthur sighed again. 'It seems to me, Lady Hilda,' he said, regretfully,
+'a very slender straw indeed to hang Ernest Le Breton's life on:
+but any straw is better than nothing to a drowning man. And you
+have so much faith yourself, and mean to fling yourself into it so
+earnestly, that I shouldn't be wholly surprised if you were somehow
+to pull it through. If you do, Lady Hilda--if you manage to save
+these two poor young people from the verge of starvation--you'll
+have done a very great good work in your day, and you'll have made
+me personally eternally your debtor.'
+
+Was it mere fancy, the Progenitor wondered, or did Hilda cast her
+eyes down a little and half blush as she answered in a lower and
+more tremulous tone than usual, 'I hope I shall, Mr. Berkeley;
+for their sakes, I hope I shall.' The Progenitor didn't feel quite
+certain about it, but somehow, more than once that evening, as he
+sat reading Spencer's 'Data of Ethics' in his easy-chair, a curious
+vision of Lady Hilda as a future daughter-in-law floated vaguely
+with singular persistence before the old shoemaker's bewildered
+eyes. 'It'd be a shocking falling away on Artie's part from his
+father's principles,' he muttered inarticulately to himself several
+times over; 'and yet, on the other hand, I can't deny that this bit
+of a Tregellis girl is really a very tidy, good-looking, respectable,
+well-meaning, intelligent, and appreciative sort of a young woman,
+who'd, maybe, make Artie as good a wife as anybody else he'd be
+likely to pitch on.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+THE TIDE TURNS.
+
+
+When Ernest Le Breton got a letter from the business house of a
+well-known publishing firm, asking him whether he would consent to
+supply appropriate letterpress for an illustrated work on the poor
+of London, then in course of preparation, his delight and relief
+were positively unbounded. That anyone should come and ask him for
+work, instead of his asking them, was in itself a singular matter
+for surprise and congratulation; that the request should be based
+on the avowed ground of his known political and social opinions
+was almost incredible. Ernest felt that it was a triumph, not only
+for him, but for his dearly-loved principles and beliefs as well.
+For the first time in his life, he was going to undertake a piece
+of work which he not only thought not wrong, but even considered
+hopeful and praise-worthy. Arthur Berkeley, who called round as if
+by accident the same morning, saw with delight that Lady Hilda's
+prognostication seemed likely to be fulfilled, and that if only
+Ernest could be given some congenial occupation there was still
+a chance, after all, for his permanent recovery; for it was clear
+enough that as there was hope, there must be a little life yet left
+in him.
+
+It was Lady Hilda who, as she herself expressively phrased it,
+had squared the publishers. She had called upon the head of the
+well-known house in person, and had told him fully and frankly
+exactly what was the nature of the interest she took in the poor
+of London. At first the publisher was scandalised and obdurate: the
+thing was not regular, he said--not in the ordinary way of business;
+his firm couldn't go writing letters of that sort to unknown young
+authors and artists. If she wanted the work done, she must let them
+give her own name as the promoter of the undertaking. But Hilda
+persevered, as she always did; she smiled, pleaded, cajoled,
+threatened, and made desperate love to the publisher to gain his
+acquiescence in her benevolent scheme. After all, even publishers
+are only human (though authors have been frequently known to deny
+the fact); and human nature, especially in England, is apt to
+be very little proof against the entreaties of a pretty girl who
+happens also to be an earl's daughter. So in the end, when Lady Hilda
+said most bewitchingly, 'I put it upon the grounds of a personal
+favour, Mr. Percival,' the obdurate publisher gave way at last,
+and consented to do her bidding gladly.
+
+For six weeks Ernest went daily with Ronald and the young artist into
+the familiar slums of Bethnal Green, and Bermondsey, and Lambeth,
+whose ins and outs he was beginning to know with painful accuracy;
+and every night he came back, and wrote down with a glowing pen all
+that he had seen and heard of distressing and terrible during his
+day's peregrination. It was an awful task from one point of view,
+for the scenes he had to visit and describe were often heart-rending;
+and Arthur feared more than once that the air of so many loathsome
+and noxious dens might still further accelerate the progress of
+Ernest's disease; but Lady Hilda said emphatically, No; and somehow
+Arthur was beginning now to conceive an immense respect for the
+practical value of Lady Hilda's vehement opinions. As a matter of
+fact, indeed, Ernest did not visibly suffer at all either from the
+unwonted hard work or from the strain upon mind and body to which
+he had been so little accustomed. Distressing as it all was, it
+was change, it was variety, it was occupation, it was relief from
+that terrible killing round of perpetual personal responsibility.
+Above all, Ernest really believed that here at last was an
+opportunity of doing some practical good in his generation, and he
+threw himself into it with all the passionate ardour of a naturally
+eager and vivid nature. The enthusiasm of humanity was upon him, and
+it kept him going at high-pressure rate, with no apparent loss of
+strength and vigour throughout the whole ordeal. To Arthur Berkeley's
+intense delight, he was even visibly fatter to the naked eye at the
+end of his six weeks' exploration of the most dreary and desolate
+slums in all London.
+
+The book was written at white heat, as the best of such books always
+are, and it was engraved and printed at the very shortest possible
+notice. Terrible and ghastly it certainly was at last--instinct
+with all the grim local colouring of those narrow, squalid,
+fever-stricken dens, where misfortune and crime huddle together
+indiscriminately in dirt and misery--a book to make one's blood run
+cold with awe and disgust, and to stir up even the callous apathy
+of the great rich capitalist West End to a passing moment's
+ineffective remorse; but very clever and very graphic after its
+own sort beyond the shadow of a question, for all its horror. When
+Arthur Berkeley turned over the first proof-sheets of 'London's
+Shame,' with its simple yet thrilling recital of true tales taken
+down from the very lips of outcast children or stranded women, with
+its awful woodcuts and still more awful descriptions--word-pictures
+reeking with the vice and filth and degradation of the most
+pestilent, overcrowded, undrained tenements--he felt instinctively
+that Ernest Le Breton's book would not need the artificial aid of
+Lady Hilda's influential friends in order to make it successful
+and even famous. The Cabinet ministers might be as silent as they
+chose, the indignant duke might confine his denunciations to the
+attentive and sympathetic ear of his friend Lord Connemara; but
+nothing on earth could prevent Ernest Le Breton's fiery and scathing
+diatribe from immediately enthralling the public attention. Lady
+Hilda had hit upon the exact subject which best suited his peculiar
+character and temperament, and he had done himself full justice in
+it. Not that Ernest had ever thought of himself, or even of his
+style, or the effect he was producing by his narrative; it was just
+the very non-self-consciousness of the thing that gave it its power.
+He wrote down the simple thoughts that came up into his own eager
+mind at the sight of so much inequality and injustice; and the
+motto that Arthur prefixed upon the title-page, 'Facit indignatio
+versum,' aptly described the key-note of that fierce and angry
+final denunciation. 'Yes, Lady Hilda had certainly hit the right
+nail on the head,' Arthur Berkeley said to himself more than once:
+'A wonderful woman, truly, that beautiful, stately, uncompromising,
+brilliant, and still really tender Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+Hilda, on her part, worked hard and well for the success of Ernest's
+book as soon as it appeared. Nay, she even condescended (not being
+what Ernest himself would have described as an ethical unit) to
+practise a little gentle hypocrisy in suiting her recommendations
+of 'London's Shame' to the tastes and feelings of her various
+acquaintances. To her Radical Cabinet minister friend, she openly
+praised its outspoken zeal for the cause of the people, and its
+value as a wonderful storehouse of useful facts at first hand for
+political purposes in the increasingly important outlying Metropolitan
+boroughs. 'Just think, Sir Edmund,' she said, persuasively, 'how
+you could crush any Conservative candidate for Hackney or the Tower
+Hamlets out of that awful chapter on the East End match-makers;'
+while with the Duke, to whom she presented a marked copy as a
+sample of what our revolutionary thinkers were really coming to,
+she insisted rather upon its wicked interference with the natural
+rights of landlords, and its abominable insinuation (so subversive
+of all truly English ideas as to liberty and property) that they
+were bound not to poison their tenants by total neglect of sanitary
+precautions. 'If I were you, now,' she said to the Duke in the
+most seemingly simple-minded manner possible, 'I'd just quote those
+passages I've marked in pencil in the House to-night on the Small
+Urban Holdings Bill, and point out how the wave of Continental
+Socialism is at last invading England with its devastating flood.'
+And the Duke, who was a complacent, thick-headed, obstinate old
+gentleman, congenitally incapable of looking at any question from
+any other point of view whatsoever except that of his own order,
+fell headlong passively into Lady Hilda's cruel little trap, and
+murmured to himself as he rolled down luxuriously to the august
+society of his peers that evening, 'Tremendous clever girl, Hilda
+Tregellis, really. "Wave of Continental Socialism at last invading
+England with its what-you-may-call-it flood," she said, if I remember
+rightly. Capital sentence to end off one's speech with, I declare.
+Devizes'll positively wonder where I got it from. I'd no idea before
+that girl took such an intelligent interest in political questions.
+So they want their cottages whitewashed, do they? What'll they ask
+for next, I wonder? Do they think we're to be content at last with
+one and a-half per cent, upon the fee-simple value of our estates,
+I should like to know? Why, some of the places this writer-fellow
+talks about are on my own property in The Rookery--"one of the most
+noisome court-yards in all London," he actually calls it. Whitewash
+their cottages, indeed! The lazy improvident creatures! They'll
+be asking us to put down encaustic tiles upon the floors next, and
+to paper their walls with Japanese leather or fashionable dados.
+Really, the general ignorance that prevails among the working classes
+as to the clearest principles of political economy is something
+absolutely appalling, absolutely appalling.' And his Grace scribbled
+a note in his memorandum-book of Hilda's ready-made peroration, for
+fear he should forget its precise wording before he began to give
+the House the benefit of his views that night upon the political
+economy of Small Urban Holdings.
+
+Next morning, all London was talking of the curious coincidence
+by which a book from the pen of an unknown author, published only
+one day previously, had been quoted and debated upon simultaneously
+in both Houses of Parliament on a single evening. In the Commons,
+Sir Edmund Calverley, the distinguished Radical minister, had read
+a dozen pages from the unknown work in his declamatory theatrical
+fashion, and had so electrified the House with its graphic and
+horrible details that even Mr. Fitzgerald-Grenville, the well-known
+member for the Baroness Drummond-Lloyd (whose rotten or at least
+decomposing borough of Cherbury Minor he faithfully represented in
+three successive Parliaments), had mumbled out a few half-inaudible
+apologetic sentences about this state of things being truly
+deplorable, and about the necessity for meeting such a distressing
+social crisis by the prompt and vigorous application of that excellent
+specific and familiar panacea, a spirited foreign policy. In the
+Lords, the Duke himself, by some untoward coincidence, had been
+moved to make a few quotations, accompanied by a running fire of
+essentially ducal criticism, from the very selfsame obscure author;
+and to his immense surprise, even the members of his own party
+moved uneasily in their seats during the course of his speech; while
+later in the evening, Lord Devizes muttered to him angrily in the
+robing-room, 'Look here, Duke, you've been and put your foot in it,
+I assure you, about that Radical book you were ill-advised enough
+to quote from. You ought never to have treated the Small Urban
+Holdings Bill in the way you did; and just you mark my words,
+the papers'll all be down upon you to-morrow morning, as sure as
+daylight. You've given the "Bystander" such an opening against
+you as you'll never forget till your dying day, I can tell you.'
+And as the Duke drove back again after his arduous legislative
+efforts that evening, he said to himself between the puffs at his
+Havana, 'This comes, now, of allowing oneself to be made a fool
+of by a handsome woman. How the dooce I could ever have gone and
+taken Hilda Tregellis's advice on a political question is really
+more than I can fathom:--and at my time of life too! And yet, all
+the same, there's no denying that she's a devilish fine woman, by
+Jove, if ever there was one.'
+
+Of course, everybody asked themselves next day what this book
+'London's Shame' was like, and who on earth its author could be;
+so much so, indeed, that a large edition was completely exhausted
+within a fortnight. It was the great sensational success of that
+London season. Everybody read it, discussed it, dissected it,
+corroborated it, refuted it, fought over it, and wrote lengthy
+letters to all the daily papers about its faults and its merits.
+Imitators added their sincerest flattery: rivals proclaimed themselves
+the original discoverers of 'London's Shame': one enterprising author
+even thought of going to law about it as a question of copyright.
+Owners of noisome lanes in the East End trembled in their shoes,
+and sent their agents to inquire into the precise degree of squalor
+to be found in the filthy courts and alleys where they didn't care
+to trust their own sensitive aristocratic noses. It even seemed as
+if a little real good was going to come at last out of Ernest Le
+Breton's impassioned pleading--as if the sensation were going to
+fall not quite flat at the end of its short run in the clubs and
+drawing-rooms of London as a nine days' wonder.
+
+And Ernest Le Breton? and Edie? In the little lodgings at Holloway,
+they sat first trembling for the result, and ready to burst with
+excitement when Lady Hilda, up at the unwonted hour of six in the
+morning, tore into their rooms with an early copy of the 'Times'
+to show them the Duke's speech, and Sir Edmund's quotations, and
+the editorial leader in which even that most dignified and reticent
+of British journals condescended to speak with studiously moderated
+praise of the immense collection of facts so ably strung together
+by Mr. Ernest Le Breton (in all the legible glory of small capitals,
+too,) as to the undoubtedly disgraceful condition of some at
+least among our London alleys. How Edie clung around Lady Hilda
+and kissed her! and how Lady Hilda kissed her back and cried over
+her with tears of happier augury! and how they both kissed and
+cried over unconscious wondering little Dot! And how Lady Hilda
+could almost have fallen upon Ernest, too, as he sat gazing in
+blank astonishment and delight at his own name in the magnificent
+small capitals of a 'Times' leader. Between crying and laughing,
+with much efficient aid in both from good Mrs. Halliss, they hardly
+knew how they ever got through the long delightful hours of that
+memorable epoch-making morning.
+
+And then there came the gradual awakening to the fact that this
+was really fame--fame, and perhaps also competence. First in the
+field, of course, was the editor of the 'Cosmopolitan Review,'
+with a polite request that Ernest would give the readers of that
+intensely hot-and-hot and thoughtful periodical the opportunity of
+reading his valuable views on the East End outcast question, before
+they had had time to be worth nothing for journalistic purposes,
+through the natural and inevitable cooling of the public interest
+in this new sensation. Then his old friends of the 'Morning
+Intelligence' once more begged that he would be good enough to
+contribute a series of signed and headed articles to their columns,
+on the slums and fever dens of poverty-stricken London. Next,
+an illustrated weekly asked him to join with his artist friend in
+getting up another pilgrimage into yet undiscovered metropolitan
+plague-spots. And so, before the end of a month, Ernest Le Breton,
+for the first time in his life, had really got more work to do
+than he could easily manage, and work, too, that he felt he could
+throw his whole life and soul into with perfect honesty.
+
+When the first edition of 'London's Shame' was exhausted, there
+was already a handsome balance to go to Ernest and his artist
+coadjutor, who, by the terms of the agreement, were to divide
+between them half the profits. The other half, for appearance'
+sake, Lady Hilda and Arthur had been naturally compelled to reserve
+for themselves: for of course it would not have been probable that
+any publisher would have undertaken the work without any hope of
+profit in any way. Arthur called upon Hilda at Lord Exmoor's house
+in Wilton Place to show her the first balance-sheet and accompanying
+cheque. 'What on earth can we do with it?' he asked seriously. 'We
+can't divide it between us: and yet we can't give it to the poor
+Le Bretons. I don't see how we're to manage.'
+
+'Why, of course,' Hilda answered promptly. 'Put it into the Consols
+or whatever you call it, for the benefit of little Dot.'
+
+'The very thing!' Arthur answered in a tone of obvious admiration.
+'What a wonderfully practical person you really are, Lady Hilda.'
+
+As to Ernest and Edie, when they got their own cheque for their
+quarter of the proceeds, they gazed in awe and astonishment at the
+bigness of the figure; and then they sat down and cried together
+like two children, with their hands locked in one another's.
+
+'And you'll get well, now, Ernest dear,' Edie whispered gently.
+'Why, you're ever so much fatter, darling, already. I'm sure you'll
+get well in no time, now, Ernest.'
+
+'Upon my word, Edie,' Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead
+tenderly, 'I really and truly believe I shall. It's my opinion
+that Sir Antony Wraxall's an unmitigated ignorant humbug.'
+
+A few weeks later, when Ernest's remarkable article on 'How to Improve
+the Homes of the Poor' appeared in one of the leading magazines,
+Mr. Herbert Le Breton of the Education Office looked up from his
+cup of post-prandial coffee in his comfortable dining-room at South
+Kensington, and said musingly to his young wife, 'Do you know,
+Ethel, it seems to me that my brother Ernest's going to score a
+success at last with this slum-hunting business that he's lately
+invented. There's an awful lot about it now in all the papers
+and reviews. Perhaps it might be as well, after all, to scrape an
+acquaintance with him again, especially as he's my own brother.
+There's no knowing, really, when a man of his peculiar ill-regulated
+mercurial temperament may be going to turn out famous. Don't you
+think you'd better find out where they're living now--they've left
+Holloway, no doubt, since this turn of the tide--and go and call
+upon Mrs. Ernest?'
+
+Whereto Mrs. Herbert Le Breton, raising her eyes for a moment from
+the pages of her last new novel, answered languidly: 'Don't you
+think, Herbert, it'd be better to wait a little while and see how
+things turn out with them in the long run, you know, before we
+commit ourselves by going to call upon them? One swallow, you see,
+doesn't make a summer, does it, dear, ever?' Whence the acute and
+intelligent reader will doubtless conclude that Mrs. Herbert Le
+Breton was a very prudent sensible young woman, and that perhaps
+even Herbert himself had met at last with his fitting Nemesis. For
+what worse purgatory could his bitterest foe wish for a selfishly
+prudent and cold-hearted man, than that he should pass his whole
+lifetime in congenial intercourse with a selfishly prudent and
+cold-hearted wife, exactly after his own pattern?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+OUT OF THE HAND OP THE PHILISTINES.
+
+
+Ernest's unexpected success with 'London's Shame' was not, as Arthur
+Berkeley at first feared it might be, the mere last dying flicker
+of a weak and failing life. Arthur was quite right, indeed, when
+he said one day to Lady Hilda that its very brilliancy and fervour
+had the hectic glow about it, as of a man who was burning himself
+out too fiercely and rapidly; you could read the feverish eagerness
+of the writer in every line; but still, Lady Hilda answered with
+her ordinary calm assurance that it was all going well, and that
+Ernest only needed the sense of security to pull him round again;
+and as usual, Lady Hilda's practical sagacity was not at fault.
+The big pamphlet--for it was hardly more than that--soon proved
+an opening for further work, in procuring which Hilda and Arthur
+were again partially instrumental. An advanced Radical member
+of Parliament, famous for his declamations against the capitalist
+faction, and his enormous holding of English railway stock, was
+induced to come forward as the founder of a new weekly paper,
+'in the interest of social reform.' Of course the thing was got
+up solely with an idea to utilising Ernest as editor, for, said
+the great anti-capitalist with his usual charming frankness, 'the
+young fellow has a positive money-value, now, if he's taken in hand
+at once before the sensation's over, and there can be no harm in
+turning an honest penny by exploiting him, you know, and starting
+a popular paper.' When Ernest was offered the post of editor to
+the new periodical, at a salary which almost alarmed him by its
+plutocratic magnificence (for it was positively no less than six
+hundred a year), he felt for a moment some conscientious scruples
+about accepting so splendid a post. And when Lady Hilda in her
+emphatic fashion promptly over-ruled these nascent scruples by the
+application of the very simple solvent formula, 'Bosh!' he felt
+bound at least to stipulate that he should be at perfect liberty
+to say whatever he liked in the new paper, without interference or
+supervision from the capitalist proprietor. To which the Radical
+member, in his business capacity, immediately responded, 'Why,
+certainly. What we want to pay you for is just your power of startling
+people, which, in its proper place, is a very useful marketable
+commodity. Every pig has its value--if only you sell it in the
+best market.'
+
+'The Social Reformer, a Weekly Advocate of the New Economy,' achieved
+at once an immense success among the working classes, and grew
+before long to be one of the most popular journals of the second
+rank in all London. The interest that Ernest had aroused by his big
+pamphlet was carried on to his new venture, which soon managed to
+gain many readers by its own intrinsic merits. 'Seen your brother's
+revolutionary broadsheet, Le Breton?' asked a friend at the club
+of Herbert not many weeks later--he was the same person who had
+found it 'so very embarrassing' to recognise Ernest--in his shabby
+days when walking with a Q.C.--'It's a dreadful tissue of the
+reddest French communism, I believe, but still, it's scored the
+biggest success of its sort in journalism, I'm told, since the
+days of Kenealy's "Englishman." Bradbury, who's found the money to
+start it--deuced clever fellow in his way, Bradbury!--is making an
+awful lot out of the speculation, they say. What do you think of
+the paper, eh?'
+
+Herbert drew himself up grimly. 'To tell you the truth,' he said
+in his stiffest style, 'I haven't yet had time to look at a copy.
+Ernest Le Breton's not a man in whose affairs I feel called upon to
+take any special interest; and I haven't put myself to the trouble
+of reading his second-hand political lucubrations. Faint echoes of
+Max Schurz, all of it, no doubt; and having read and disposed of
+Schurz himself long ago, I don't feel inclined now to go in for a
+second supplementary course of Schurz and water.'
+
+'Well, well, that may be so,' the friend answered, turning over the
+pages of the peccant periodical carelessly; 'but all the same I'm
+afraid your brother's really going to do an awful lot of mischief
+in the way of setting class against class, and stirring up the
+dangerous orders to recognise their own power. You see, Le Breton,
+the real danger of this sort of thing lies in the fact that your
+brother Ernest's a more or less educated and cultivated person. I
+don't say he's really got any genuine depth of culture--would you
+believe it, he told me once he'd never read Rabelais, and didn't
+want to?--and of course a man of true culture in the grain, like
+you and me now, my dear fellow, would never dream of going and
+mistaking these will-o'-the-wisps of socialism for the real guiding
+light of regenerated humanity--of course not. But the dangerous
+symptom at the present day lies just in the fact that while the
+papers written for the mob used to be written by vulgar, noisy,
+self-made, half-educated demagogues, they're sent out now with all
+the authority and specious respectability of decently instructed
+and comparatively literary English gentlemen. Now, nobody can
+deny that that's a thing very seriously to be regretted; and for my
+part I'm extremely sorry your brother has been ill-advised enough
+to join the mob that's trying to pull down our comfortably built
+and after all eminently respectable, even if somewhat patched up,
+old British constitution.'
+
+'The subject's one,' Herbert answered curtly, 'in which I for my
+part cannot pretend to feel the remotest personal interest.'
+
+Ernest and Edie, howerer, in the little lodgings up at Holloway,
+which they couldn't bear to desert even now in this sudden burst
+of incredible prosperity, went their own way as self-containedly
+as usual, wholly unconcerned by the non-arrival of Mrs. Herbert
+on a visit of ceremony, or the failure of the 'Social Reformer' to
+pierce the lofty ethereal regions of abstract contemplation where
+Herbert himself sat throned like an Epicurean god in the pure halo
+of cultivated pococurantism. Every day, as that eminent medical
+authority, Hilda Tregellis, had truly prophesied, Ernest's cheeks
+grew less and less sunken, and a little colour returned slowly
+to their midst; while Edie's face was less pale than of old, and
+her smile began to recover something of its old-fashioned girlish
+joyousness. She danced about once more as of old, and Arthur Berkeley,
+when he dropped in of a Sunday afternoon for a chat with Ernest,
+noticed with pleasure that little Miss Butterfly was beginning to
+flit round again almost as naturally as in the old days when he
+first saw her light little form among the grey old pillars of Magdalen
+Cloisters. Yet he couldn't help observing, too, that his feeling
+towards her was more one of mere benevolence now, and less of tender
+regret, than it used to be even a few short months before, in the
+darkest days of Edie's troubles. Could it be, he asked himself
+more than once, that the tall stately picture of Hilda Tregellis
+was overshadowing in his heart the natural photograph of that
+unwedded Edie Oswald that he once imagined was so firmly imprinted
+there? Ah well, ah well, it may be true that a man can love really
+but once in his whole lifetime; and yet, the second spurious
+imitation is positively sometimes a very good facsimile of the
+genuine first impression, for all that.
+
+As the months went slowly round, too, the time came in the end for
+good Herr Max to be released at last from his long imprisonment.
+On the day that he came out, there was a public banquet at the
+Marylebone dancing saloon; and all the socialists and communards
+were there, and all the Russian nihilists, and all the other
+wicked revolutionary plotters in all London: and in the chair sat
+Ernest Le Breton, now the editor of an important social paper, while
+at his left hand, to balance the guest of the evening, sat Arthur
+Berkeley, the well-known dramatic author, who was himself more than
+suspected of being the timid Nicodemus of the new faith. And when
+Ernest announced that Herr Schurz had consented to aid him on the
+'Social Reformer,' and to add the wisdom of age to the impetuosity
+of youth in conducting its future, the simple enthusiasm of the wicked
+revolutionists knew no bounds. And they cried 'Hoch!' and 'Viva!'
+and 'Hooray!' and many other like inarticulate shouts in many
+varieties of interjectional dialect all the evening; and everybody
+agreed that after all Herr Max was VERY little grayer than before
+the trial, in spite of his long and terrible term of imprisonment.
+
+He WAS a little embittered by his troubles, no doubt;--what can
+you expect if you clap men in prison for the expression of their
+honest political convictions?--but Ernest tried to keep his eye
+steadily rather on the future than on the past; and with greater
+ease and unwonted comforts the old man's cheerfulness as well as
+his enthusiasm gradually returned. 'I'm too old now to do anything
+more worth doing myself before I die,' he used to say, holding
+Ernest's arm tightly in his vice-like grip: 'but I have great hopes
+in spite of everything for friend Ernest; I have very great hopes
+indeed for friend Ernest here. There's no knowing yet what he may
+accomplish.'
+
+Ernest only smiled a trifle sadly, and murmured half to himself that
+this was a hard world, and he began himself to fear there was no
+fitting feeling for a social reformer except one of a brave despair.
+'We can do little or nothing, after all,' he said slowly; 'and
+our only consolation must be that even that little is perhaps just
+worth doing.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT LAND?
+
+
+Long before the 'Social Reformer' had fully made its mark in the
+world, another event had happened of no less importance to some
+of the chief actors in the little drama whose natural termination
+it seemed to form. While the pamphlet and the paper were in course
+of maturation, Arthur Berkeley had been running daily in and out
+of the house in Wilton Place in what Lady Exmoor several times
+described as a positively disgraceful and unseemly manner. ('What
+Hilda can mean,' her ladyship observed to her husband more than
+once, 'by encouraging that odd young man's extraordinary advances
+in the way she does is really more than I can understand even in
+her.') But when the Le Bretons were fairly launched at last on the
+favourable flood of full prosperity, both Hilda and Arthur began to
+feel as though they had suddenly been deprived of a very pleasant
+common interest. After all, benevolent counsel on behalf of other
+people is not so entirely innocent and impersonal in certain cases
+as it seems to be at first sight. 'Do you know, Lady Hilda,'
+Berkeley said one afternoon, when he had come to pay, as it were,
+a sort of farewell visit, on the final completion of their joint
+schemes for restoring happiness to the home of the Le Bretons,
+'our intercourse together has been very delightful, and I'm quite
+sorry to think that in future we must see so much less of one another
+than we've been in the habit of doing for the last month or so.'
+
+Hilda looked at him straight and said in her own frank unaffected
+fashion, 'So am I, Mr. Berkeley, very sorry, very sorry indeed.'
+
+Arthur looked back at her once more, and their eyes met. His
+look was full of admiration, and Hilda saw it. She moved a little
+uneasily upon the ottoman, waiting apparently as though she expected
+Arthur to say something else. But Arthur looked at her long and
+steadfastly, and said nothing.
+
+At last he seemed to wake from his reverie, and make up his mind
+for a desperate venture. Could he be mistaken? Could he have read
+either record wrong--his own heart, or Hilda's eyes? No, no, both
+of them spoke to him too plainly and evidently. His heart was
+fluttering like a wind-shaken aspen-leaf; and Hilda's eyes were
+dimming visibly with a tender moisture. Yes, yes, yes, there was
+no misreading possible. He knew he loved her! he knew she loved
+him!
+
+Bending over towards where Hilda sat, he took her hand in
+his dreamily: and Hilda let him take it without a movement. Then
+he looked deeply into her eyes, and felt a curious speechlessness
+coming over him, deep down in the ball of his throat.
+
+'Lady Hilda,' he began at last with an effort, in a low voice, not
+wholly untinged with natural timidity, 'Lady Hilda, is a working
+man's son----'
+
+Hilda looked back at him with a sudden look of earnest deprecation.
+'Not that way, Mr. Berkeley,' she said quietly: 'not that way,
+please: you'll hurt me if you do: you know that's not the way _I_
+look at the matter. Why not simply "Hilda"?'
+
+Berkeley clasped her hand eagerly and raised it to his lips. 'Hilda,
+then,' he said, kissing it twice over. 'It SHALL be Hilda.'
+
+Hilda rose and stood before him erect in all her queenlike beauty.
+'So now that's settled,' she said, with a vain endeavour to control
+her tears of joy. 'Don't let's talk about it any more, now; I can't
+bear to talk about it: there's nothing to arrange, Arthur. Whenever
+you like will suit me. But, oh, I'm so happy, so happy, so happy--I
+never thought I could be so happy.'
+
+'Nor I,' Arthur answered, holding her hand a moment in his tenderly.
+
+'How strange,' Hilda said again, after a minute's delicious silence;
+'it's the poor Le Bretons who have brought us two thus together.
+And yet, they were both once our dearest rivals. YOU were in love
+with Edie Le Breton: _I_ was half in love with Ernest Le Breton:
+and now--why, now, Arthur, I DO believe we're both utterly in love
+with one another. What a curious little comedy of errors!'
+
+'And yet only a few months ago it came very near being a tragedy,
+rather,' Arthur put in softly.
+
+'Never mind!' Hilda answered in her brightest and most joyous tone,
+as she wiped the joyful tears from her eyes. 'It isn't a tragedy,
+now, after all, Arthur, and all's well that ends well!'
+
+When the Countess heard of Hilda's determination--Hilda didn't
+pretend to go through the domestic farce of asking her mother's
+consent to her approaching marriage--she said that so far as she
+was concerned a more shocking or un-Christian piece of conduct on
+the part of a well-brought-up girl had never yet been brought to
+her knowledge. To refuse Lord Connemara, and then go and marry the
+son of a common cobbler! But the Earl only puffed away vigorously
+at his cheroot, and observed philosophically that for his part he
+just considered himself jolly well out of it. This young fellow
+Berkeley mightn't be a man of the sort of family Hilda would
+naturally expect to marry into, but he was decently educated and
+in good society, and above all, a gentleman, you know, don't you
+know: and, hang it all, in these days that's really everything.
+Besides, Berkeley was making a pot of money out of these operas
+of his, the Earl understood, and as he had always expected that
+Hilda'd marry some penniless painter or somebody of that sort, and
+be a perpetual drag upon the family exchequer, he really didn't see
+why they need trouble their heads very much about it. By George,
+if it came to that, he rather congratulated himself that the girl
+hadn't taken it into her nonsensical head to run away with the groom
+or the stable-boy! As to Lynmouth, he merely remarked succinctly in
+his own dialect, 'Go it, Hilda, go it, my beauty! You always were
+a one-er, you know, and it's my belief you always will be.'
+
+It was somewhere about the same time that Ronald Le Breton, coming
+back gladdened in soul from a cheerful talk with Ernest, called
+round of an evening in somewhat unwonted exultation at Selah's
+lodgings. 'Selah,' he said to her calmly, as she met him at the door
+to let him in herself, 'I want to have a little talk with you.'
+
+'What is it about, Ronald?' Selah asked, with a perfect consciousness
+in her own mind of what the subject he wished to discourse about
+was likely to be.
+
+'Why, Selah,' Ronald went on in his quiet, matter-of-fact, unobtrusive
+manner, 'do you know, I think we may fairly consider Ernest and
+Edie out of danger now.'
+
+'I hope so, Ronald,' Selah answered imperturbably. 'I've no doubt
+your brother'll get along all right in future, and I'm sure at least
+that he's getting stronger, for he looks ten per cent. better than
+he did three months ago.'
+
+'Well, Selah!'
+
+'Well, Ronald!'
+
+'Why, in that case, you see, your objection falls to the ground.
+There can be no possible reason on either side why you should any
+longer put off marrying me. We needn't consider Edie now; and you
+can't have any reasonable doubt that I want to marry you for your
+own sake this time.'
+
+'What a nuisance the man is!' Selah cried impetuously. 'Always
+bothering a body out of her nine senses to go and marry him. Have
+you never read what Paul says, that it's good for the unmarried
+and widows to abide? He was always dead against the advisability
+of marriage, Paul was.'
+
+'Brother Paul was an able and earnest preacher,' Ronald murmured
+gravely, 'from whose authority I should be sorry to dissent except
+for sufficient and weighty reason; but you must admit that on this
+particular question he was prejudiced, Selah, decidedly prejudiced,
+and that the balance of the best opinion goes distinctly the other
+way.'
+
+Selah laughed lightly. 'Oh, does it?' she said, in her provoking,
+mocking manner. 'Then you propose to marry me, I suppose, on the
+balance of the best Scriptural opinion.'
+
+'Not at all, Selah,' Ronald replied without a touch of anything
+but grave earnestness in his tone--it must be admitted Ronald was
+distinctly lacking in the sense of humour. 'Not at all, I assure
+you. I propose to marry you because I love you, and I believe in
+your heart of hearts you love me, too, you provoking girl, though
+you're too proud or too incomprehensible ever to acknowledge it.'
+
+'And even if I do?' Selah asked. 'What then?'
+
+'Why, then, Selah,' Ronald answered confidently, taking her hand
+boldly in his own and actually kissing her--yes, kissing her; 'why,
+then, Selah, suppose we say Monday fortnight?'
+
+'It's awfully soon,' Selah replied, half grumbling. 'You don't give
+a body time to think it over.'
+
+'Certainly not,' Ronald responded, quickly, taking the handsome
+face firmly between his two spare hands, and kissing her lips half
+a dozen times over in rapid succession.
+
+'Let me go, Ronald,' Selah cried, struggling to be free, and trying
+in vain to tear down his thin wiry arms with her own strong shapely
+hands. 'Let me go at once,--there's a good boy, and I'll marry you
+on Monday fortnight, or do anything else you like, just to keep
+you quiet. After all, you're a kind-hearted fellow enough, and you
+want looking after and taking care of, and if you insist upon it,
+I don't mind giving way to you in this small matter.'
+
+Ronald stepped back a pace or two, and stood looking at her a little
+sadly with his hands folded. 'Oh, Selah,' he cried in a tone of
+bitter disappointment, 'don't speak like that to me, don't, please.
+Don't, don't tell me that you don't really love me--that you're
+going to marry me for nothing else but out of mere compassion for
+my weakness and helplessness!'
+
+Selah burst at once into a wild flood of uncontrollable tears: 'Oh,
+Ronald,' she cried in her old almost fiercely passionate manner,
+flinging her arms around his neck and covering him with kisses;
+'Oh, Ronald, how can you ever ask me whether I really really love
+you! You know I love you! You know I love you! You've given me back
+life and everything that's dear in it, and I never want to live
+for anything any longer except to love you, and wait upon you,
+and make you happy. I'm stronger than you, Ronald, and I shall be
+able to do a little to make you happy, I do believe. My ways are
+not your ways, nor my thoughts your thoughts, my darling; but I
+love you all the better for that, Ronald, I love you all the better
+for that; and if you were to kick me, beat me, trample on me now,
+Ronald, I should love you, love you, love you for ever still.'
+
+So they two were quietly married, with no audience save Ernest and
+Edie, on that very Monday fortnight.
+
+When Herbert Le Breton heard of it from his mother a few days later,
+he went home at once to his own eminently cultured home and told
+Mrs. Le Breton the news, of course without much detailed allusion
+to Selah's earlier antecedents. 'And do you know, Ethel,' he added
+significantly, 'I think it was an excellent thing that you decided
+not to call after all upon Ernest's wife, for I'm sure it'll be
+a great deal safer for you and me to have nothing to say in any
+way to the whole faction of them. A greengrocer's daughter, you
+know--quite unpresentable. They'll be all mixed up together in
+future, which'll make it quite impossible to know the one without
+at the same time knowing the other. Now, it'd be just practicable
+for you to call upon Mrs. Ernest, I must admit, but to call upon
+Mrs. Ronald would be really and truly too inconceivable.'
+
+At the end of the first year of the 'Social Reformer,' the annual
+balance was duly audited, and it showed a very considerable and
+solid surplus to go into the pocket of the enterprising Radical
+proprietor. Ernest and Herr Max scanned it closely together, and
+even Ernest could not refrain from a smile of pleasure when he saw
+how thoroughly successful the doubtful venture had finally turned
+out. 'And yet,' he said regretfully, as he looked at the heavy
+balance-sheet, 'what a strange occupation after all for the author
+of "Gold and the Proletariate," to be looking carefully over the
+sum-total of a capitalist's final balance! To think, too, that all
+that money has come out of the hard-earned scraped-up pennies of
+the toiling poor! I often wish, Herr Max, that even so I had been
+brought up an honest shoemaker! But whether I'm really earning my
+salt at the hands of humanity now or not is a deep problem I often
+have many an uncomfortable internal sigh over to this day.'
+
+'There is work and work, friend Ernest,' Herr Max answered, as gently
+as had been his wont in older years; 'and for my part it seems to
+me you are better here writing your Social Reformers than making
+shoes for a single generation. One man builds for to-day, another
+man builds for to-morrow; and he that plants a fruit tree for his
+children to eat of is doing as much good work in the world as he
+that sows the corn in spring to be reaped and eaten at this autumn's
+harvest.'
+
+'Perhaps so,' Ernest answered softly. 'I wish I could think so.
+But after all I'm not quite sure whether, if we had all starved
+eighteen months ago together, as seemed so likely then, it wouldn't
+have been the most right thing in the end that could possibly have
+happened to all of us. As things are constituted now, there seems
+only one life that's really worth living for an honest man, and
+that's a martyr's. A martyr's or else a worker's. And I, I greatly
+fear, have managed somehow to miss being either. The wind carries
+us this way and that, and when we would do that which is right, it
+drifts us away incontinently into that which is only profitable.'
+
+'Dear Ernest,' Edie cried in her bright old-fashioned manner from
+the ofice door, 'Dot has come in her new frock to bring Daddy home
+for her birthday dinner as she was promised. Come quick, or your
+little daughter'll be very angry with you. And Lady Hilda Berkeley
+has come, too, to drive us back in her own brougham. Now don't
+be a silly, there's a dear, or say that you can't drive away from
+the office of the "Social Reformer" in Lady Hilda's brougham!'
+
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Philistia, by Grant Allen
+(#8 in our series by Grant Allen)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Philistia
+
+Author: Grant Allen
+
+Release Date: July, 2004 [EBook #6060]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 30, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, PHILISTIA ***
+
+
+
+
+Charles Aldarondo, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading
+Team
+
+
+
+PHILISTIA
+
+BY
+
+GRANT ALLEN
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. CHILDREN OF LIGHT
+ II. THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES
+ III. MAGDALEN QUAD
+ IV. A LITTLE MUSIC
+ V. ASKELON VILLA, GATH
+ VI. DOWN THE RIVER
+ VII. GHOSTLY COUNSEL
+ VIII. IN THE CAMP OF THE PHILISTINES
+ IX. THE WOMEN OF THE LAND
+ X. THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN
+ XI. CULTURE AND CULTURE
+ XII. THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY
+ XIII. YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA
+ XIV. WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS HERE
+ XV. EVIL TIDINGS
+ XVI. FLAT REBELLION
+ XVII. COME YE OUT AND BE YE SEPARATE!
+ XVIII. A QUIET WEDDING
+ XIX. INTO THE FIRE
+ XX. LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE DRAMA
+ XXI. OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE
+ XXII. THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH
+ XXIII. THE STREETS OF ASKELON
+ XXIV. THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK
+ XXV. HARD PRESSED
+ XXVI. IRRECLAIMABLE
+ XXVII. RONALD COMES OF AGE
+XXVIII. TELL IT NOT IN GATH
+ XXIX. A MAN AND A MAID
+ XXX. THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY TRIUMPHS
+ XXXI. DE PROFUNDIS
+ XXXII. PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE
+XXXIII. A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE
+ XXXIV. HOPE
+ XXXV. THE TIDE TURNS
+ XXXVI. OUT OF THE HAND OF THE PHILISTINES
+XXXVII. LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT LAND?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+CHILDREN OF LIGHT.
+
+
+It was Sunday evening, and on Sundays Max Schurz, the chief of the
+London Socialists, always held his weekly receptions. That night
+his cosmopolitan refugee friends were all at liberty; his French
+disciples could pour in from the little lanes and courts in Soho,
+where, since the Commune, they had plied their peaceful trades as
+engravers, picture-framers, artists'-colourmen, models, pointers,
+and so forth--for most of them were hangers-on in one way or another
+of the artistic world; his German adherents could stroll round,
+pipe in mouth, from their printing-houses, their ham-and-beef shops,
+or their naturalists' chambers, where they stuffed birds or set up
+exotic butterflies in little cabinets--for most of them were more
+or less literary or scientific in their pursuits; and his few English
+sympathisers, chiefly dissatisfied philosophical Radicals of the
+upper classes, could drop in casually for a chat and a smoke, on
+their way home from the churches to which they had been dutifully
+escorting their un-emancipated wives and sisters. Max Schurz kept
+open house for all on Sunday evenings, and there was not a drawing-room
+in London better filled than his with the very advanced and not
+undistinguished set who alone had the much-prized entrée of his
+exclusive salon.
+
+The salon itself did not form any component part of Max Schurz's
+own private residence in any way. The great Socialist, the man whose
+mandates shook the thrones of Russia and Austria, whose movements
+spread terror in Paris and Berlin, whose dictates were even obeyed
+in Kerry and in Chicago, occupied for his own use two small rooms
+at the top of a shabby composite tenement in a doubtful district
+of Marylebone. The little parlour where he carried on his trade of
+a microscope-lens grinder would not have sufficed to hold one-tenth
+of the eager half-washed crowd that pressed itself enthusiastically
+upon him every Sunday. But a large room on the ground floor of the
+tenement, opening towards the main street, was used during the
+week by one of his French refugee friends as a dancing-saloon;
+and in this room on every Sunday evening the uncrowned king of the
+proletariate Socialists was permitted to hold his royal levees.
+Thither all that was best and truest in the socially rebellions
+classes domiciled in London used to make its way; and there men
+calmly talked over the ultimate chances of social revolutions which
+would have made the hair of respectable Philistine Marylebone stand
+stiffly on end, had it only known the rank political heresies that
+were quietly hatching in its unconscious midst.
+
+While Max Schurz's hall was rapidly filling with the polyglot crowd
+of democratic solidarists, Ernest Le Breton and his brother were
+waiting in the chilly little drawing-room at Epsilon Terrrace,
+Bayswater, for the expected arrival of Harry Oswald. Ernest had
+promised to introduce Oswald to Max Schurz's reception; and it
+was now past eight o'clock, getting rather a late hour for those
+simple-minded, early-rising Communists. 'I'm afraid, Herbert,'
+said Ernest to his brother, 'he forgets that Max is a working-man
+who has to be at his trade again punctually by seven o'clock
+to-morrow. He thinks he's going out to a regular society At Home,
+where ten o'clock's considered just the beginning of the evening. Max
+won't at all like his turning up so late; it smells of non-productivity.'
+
+'If Herr Schurz wants to convert the world,' Herbert answered
+chillily, rolling himself a tiny cigarette, 'he must convince the
+unproductive as well as the proletariate before he can set things
+fairly on the roll for better arrangement. The proletariate's
+all very well in its way, no doubt, but the unproductive happen to
+hold the key of the situation. One convert like you or me is worth
+a thousand ignorant East-end labourers, with nothing but their
+hands and their votes to count upon.'
+
+'But you are not a convert, Herbert.'
+
+'I didn't say I was. I'm a critic. There's no necessity to throw
+oneself open-armed into the embrace of either party. The wise man
+can wait and watch the progress of the game, backing the winner
+for the time being at all the critical moments, and hedging if
+necessary when the chances turn momentarily against the favourite.
+There's a ring at the bell: that's Oswald; let's go down to the
+door to meet him.'
+
+Ernest ran down the stairs rapidly, as was his wont; Herbert
+followed in a more leisurely fashion, still rolling the cigarette
+between his delicate finger and thumb. 'Goodness gracious, Oswald!'
+Ernest exclaimed as his friend stepped in, 'why, you've actually
+come in evening dress! A white tie and all! What on earth will
+Max say? He'll be perfectly scandalised at such a shocking and
+unprecedented outrage. This will never do; you must dissemble
+somehow or other.'
+
+Oswald laughed. 'I had no idea,' he said, 'Herr Schurz was such
+a truculent sans-culotte as that comes to. As it was an evening
+reception I thought, of course, one ought to turn up in evening
+clothes.'
+
+'Evening clothes! My dear fellow, how on earth do you suppose a
+set of poor Leicester Square outlaws are going to get themselves
+correctly set up in black broadcloth coats and trousers? They might
+wash their white ties themselves, to be sure; they mostly do their
+own washing, I believe, in their own basins.' ('And not much at
+that either,' put in Herbert, parenthetically.) 'But as to evening
+clothes, why, they'd as soon think of arraying themselves for dinner
+in full court dress as of putting on an obscurantist swallow-tail.
+It's the badge of a class, a distinct aristocratic outrage; we must
+alter it at once, I assure you, Oswald.'
+
+'At any rate,' said Oswald laughing, 'I've had the pleasure of finding
+myself accused for the first time in the course of my existence of
+being aristocratic. It's quite worth while going to Max Schurz's
+once in one's life, if it were only for the sake of that single
+new sensation.'
+
+'Well, my dear fellow, we must rectify you, anyhow, before you go.
+Let me see; luckily you've got your dust-coat on, and you needn't
+take that off; it'll do splendidly to hide your coat and waistcoat.
+I'll lend you a blue tie, which will at once transform your upper
+man entirely. But you show the cloven hoof below; the trousers
+will surely betray you. They're absolutely inadmissible under any
+circumstances whatsoever, as the Court Circular says, and you must
+positively wear a coloured pair of Herbert's instead of them. Run
+upstairs quickly, there's a good fellow, and get rid of the mark
+of the Beast as fast as you can.'
+
+Oswald did as he was told without demur, and in about a minute more
+presented himself again, with the mark of the Beast certainly most
+effectually obliterated, at least so far as outer appearance went.
+His blue tie, light dust-coat, and borrowed grey trousers, made up
+an ensemble much more like an omnibus conductor out for a holiday
+than a gentleman of the period in correct evening dress. 'Now
+mind,' Ernest said seriously, as he opened the door, 'whatever you
+do, Oswald, if you stew to death for it--and Schurz's rooms are
+often very close and hot, I can assure you--don't for heaven's sake
+go and unbutton your dust-coat. If you do they'll see at once you're
+a wolf in sheep's clothing, and I shouldn't be at all surprised
+if they were to turn and rend you. At least, I'm sure Max would be
+very much annoyed with me for unsocially introducing a plutocratic
+traitor into the bosom of the fold.'
+
+They walked along briskly in the direction of Marylebone, and
+stopped at last at a dull, yellow-washed house, which bore on
+its door a very dingy brass plate, inscribed in red letters, 'M.
+et Mdlle. Tirard. Salon de Danse.' Ernest opened the door without
+ringing, and turned down the passage towards the salon. 'Remember,'
+he said, turning to Harry Oswald by way of a last warning, with his
+hand on the inner door-handle, 'coûte que coûte, my dear fellow,
+don't on any account open your dust-coat. No anti-social opinions;
+and please bear in mind that Max is, in his own way, a potentate.'
+
+The big hall, badly lighted by a few contribution candles (for the
+whole colony subscribed to the best of its ability for the support
+of the weekly entertainment), was all alive with eager figures and
+the mingled busy hum of earnest conversation. A few chairs ranged
+round the wall were mostly occupied by Mdlle. Tirard and the other
+ladies of the Socialist party; but the mass of the guests were
+men, and they were almost all smoking, in utter indifference to the
+scanty presence of the fair sex. Not that they were intentionally
+rude or boorish; that they never were; except where an emperor or an
+aristocrat is concerned, there is no being on earth more courteous,
+kindly, and considerate for the feelings of others than your
+exiled Socialist. He has suffered much himself in his own time, and
+so miseris succurrere discit. Emperors he mentally classes with
+cobras, tarantulas, and scorpions, as outside the pale of humanitarian
+sympathies altogether; but, with this slight political exception,
+he is the broadest and tenderest and most catholic in his feelings
+of all living breathing creatures. However, the ladies of his party
+have all been brought up from their childhood onward in a mingled
+atmosphere of smoke and democracy; so that he no more thinks
+of abstaining from tobacco in their presence than he thinks of
+commiserating the poor fish for being so dreadfully wet, or the
+unfortunate mole for his unpleasantly slimy diet of live earthworms.
+
+'Herr Schurz,' said Ernest, singling out the great leader in the
+gloom immediately, 'I've brought my brother Herbert here, whom
+you know already, to see you, as well as another Oxford friend of
+mind, Mr. Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel. He's almost
+one of us at heart, I'm happy to say, and at any rate I'm sure
+you'll be glad to make his acquaintance.'
+
+The little spare wizened-up grey man, in the threadbare brown velveteen
+jacket, who stood in the middle of the hall, caught Ernest's hand
+warmly, and held it for a moment fettered in his iron grip. There
+was an honesty in that grip and in those hazy blue-spectacled eyes
+that nobody could for a second misunderstand. If an emperor had
+been introduced to Max Schurz he might have felt a little abashed
+one minute at the old Socialist's royal disdain, but he could not
+have failed to say to himself as he looked at him from head to
+foot, 'Here, at least, is a true man.' So Harry Oswald felt, as
+the spare grey thinker took his hand in his, and grasped it firmly
+with a kindly pressure, but less friendly than that with which he
+had greeted his known admirer, Ernest Le Breton. As for Herbert, he
+merely bowed to him politely from a little distance; and Herbert,
+who had picked up at once with a Polish exile in a corner, returned
+the bow frigidly without coming up to the host himself at all for
+a moment's welcome.
+
+'I'm always pleased to meet friends of the cause from Oxford,'
+Herr Schurz said, in almost perfect English. 'We want recruits most
+of all among the thinking classes. If we are ever to make headway
+against the banded monopolies--against the place-holders, the
+land-grabbers, the labour-taxers, the robbers of the poor--we must
+first secure the perfect undivided confidence of the brain-workers,
+the thinkers, and the writers. At present everything is against us;
+we are but a little leaven, trying vainly in our helpless fashion
+to leaven the whole lump. The capitalist journals carry off all
+the writing talent in the world; they are timid, as capital must
+always be; they tremble for their tens of thousands a year, and
+their vast circulations among the propertied classes. We cannot
+get at the heart of the people, save by the Archimedean lever of
+the thinking world. For that reason, my dear Le Breton, I am always
+glad to muster here your Oxford neophytes.'
+
+'And yet, Herr Schurz,' said Ernest gently, 'you know we must not
+after all despair. Look at the history of your own people! When
+the cause of Jehovah seemed most hopeless, there were still seven
+thousand left in Israel who had not bowed the knee to Baal. We are
+gaining strength every day, while they are losing it.'
+
+'Ah yes, my friend. I know that too,' the old man answered, with a
+solemn shake of the head; 'but the wheels move slowly, they move
+slowly--very surely, but oh, so slowly. You are young, friend
+Ernest, and I am growing old. You look forward to the future with
+hope; I look back to the past with regret: so many years gone, so
+little, so very little done. It will come, it will come as surely
+as the next glacial period, but I shall not live to see it. I stand
+like Moses on Pisgah; I see the promised land before me; I look
+down upon the equally allotted vineyards, and the glebe flowing
+with milk and honey in the distance; but I shall not lead you into
+it; I shall not even lead you against the Canaanites; another than
+I must lead you in. But I am an old man, Mr. Oswald, an old man
+now, and I am talking all about myself--an anti-social trick we have
+inherited from our fathers. What is your friend's special line at
+Oxford, did you say, Ernest?'
+
+'Oswald is a mathematician, sir,' said Ernest, 'perhaps the greatest
+mathematician among the younger men in the whole University.'
+
+'Ah! that is well. We want exact science. We want clear and definite
+thinking. Biologists and physicists and mathematicians, those are
+our best recruits, you may depend upon it. We need logic, not mere
+gas. Our French friends and our Irish friends--I have nothing in
+the world to say against them; they are useful men, ardent men,
+full of fire, full of enthusiasm, ready to do and dare anything--but
+they lack ballast. You can't take the kingdom of heaven by storm.
+The social revolution is not to be accomplished by violence, it is
+not even to be carried by the most vivid eloquence; the victory
+will be in the end to the clearest brain and the subtlest intellect.
+The orthodox political economists are clever sophists; they mask
+and confuse the truth very speciously; we must have keen eyes and
+sharp noses to spy out and scent out their tortuous fallacies. I'm
+glad you're a mathematician, Mr. Oswald. And so you have thought
+on social problems?'
+
+'I have read "Gold and the Proletariate,"' Oswald answered modestly,
+'and I learned much from it, and thought more. I won't say you have
+quite converted me, Herr Schurz, but you have given me plenty of
+food for future reflection.'
+
+'That is well, said the old man, passing one skinny brown hand
+gently up and down over the other. 'That is well. There's no hurry.
+Don't make up your mind too fast. Don't jump at conclusions. It's
+intellectual dishonesty to do that. Wait till you have convinced
+yourself. Spell out your problems slowly; they are not easy ones;
+try to see how the present complex system works; try to probe
+its inequalities and injustices; try to compare it with the ideal
+commonwealth: and you'll find the light in the end, you'll find
+the light.'
+
+As he spoke, Herbert Le Breton lounged up quietly from his farther
+corner towards the little group. 'Ah, your brother, Ernest!' said
+Max Schurz, drawing himself up a little more stiffly; 'he has found
+the light already, I believe, but he neglects it; still he is not
+with us, and he that is not with us is against us. You hold aloof
+always, Mr. Herbert, is it not so?'
+
+'Well, not quite aloof, Herr Schurz, I'm certain, but not on
+your side exactly either. I like to look on and hold the balance
+evenly, not to throw my own weight too lightly into either stale.
+The objective attitude of the mere spectator is after all the right
+one for an impartial philosopher to take up.'
+
+'Ah, Mr. Herbert, this philosophy of your Oxford contemplative
+Radicals is only another name for a kind of social selfishness,
+I fancy,' said the old man solemnly. 'It seems to me your head is
+with us, but your heart, your heart is elsewhere.'
+
+Herbert Le Breton played a moment quietly with the Roman aureus of
+Domitian on his watch-chain; then he said slowly in his clear cold
+voice, 'There may be something in that, no doubt, Herr Schurz, for
+each of us has his own game to play, and while the world remains
+unreformed, he must play it on his own gambit to a great extent,
+without reference to the independent game of others. We all agree
+that the board is too full of counters, and as each counter is not
+responsible for its own presence and position on the board, having
+been put there without previous consultation by the players, we
+must each do the best we can for ourselves in our own fashion. My
+sympathies, as you say, are on your side, but perhaps my interests
+lie the other way, and after all, till you start your millennium,
+we must all rattle along as well as we can in the box together,
+jarring against one another in our old ugly round of competition,
+and supply and demand, and survival of the fittest, and mutual
+accommodation, and all the rest of it, to the end of the chapter.
+Every man for himself and God for us all, you know. You have the
+logic, to be sure, Herr Schurz, but the monopolists have the law
+and the money.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' said the old Socialist grimly; 'Demas, Demas; he and his
+silver mine; you remember your Bunyan, don't you? Well, all faiths
+and systems have their Demases. The cares of this world and the
+deceitfulness of riches. He's bursar of his college, isn't he, Ernest?
+I thought so. "He had the bag, and bare what was put therein." A
+dangerous office, isn't it, Mr. Oswald? A very dangerous office.
+You can't touch pitch or property without being defiled.'
+
+'You at least, sir, said Ernest, reverentially, 'have kept yourself
+unspotted from the world.'
+
+The old man sighed, and turned for a moment to speak in French to
+a tall, big-bearded new-comer who advanced to meet him. 'Impossible!'
+he said quickly; 'I am truly distressed to hear it. It is very
+imprudent, very unnecessary.'
+
+'What is the news?' asked Ernest, also in French.
+
+The new-comer answered him with a marked South Russian accent.
+'There has been another attempt on the life of Alexander Nicolaiovitch.'
+
+'You don't mean to say so!' cried Ernest in surprise.
+
+'Yes, I do,' replied the Russian, 'and it has nearly succeeded
+too.'
+
+'An attempt on whom?' asked Oswald, who was new to the peculiar
+vocabulary of the Socialists, and not particularly accustomed to
+following spoken French.
+
+'On Alexander Nicolaiovitch,' answered the red-bearded stranger.
+
+'Not the Czar?' Oswald inquired of Ernest.
+
+'Yes, the one whom you call Czar,' said the stranger, quickly, in
+tolerable English. The confusion of tongues seemed to be treated as
+a small matter at Max Schurz's receptions, for everybody appeared
+to speak all languages at once, in the true spirit of solidarity,
+as though Babel had never been.
+
+Oswald did not attempt to conceal a slight gesture of horror. The
+tall Russian looked down upon him commiseratingly. 'He is of the
+Few?' he asked of Ernest, that being the slang of the initiated
+for a member of the aristocratic and capitalist oligarchy.
+
+'Not exactly,' Ernest answered with a smile; 'but he has not entirely
+learned the way we here regard these penal measures. His sympathies
+are one-sided as to Alexander, no doubt. He thinks merely of the
+hunted, wretched life the man bears about with him, and he forgets
+poor bleeding, groaning, down-trodden, long-suffering Russia. It
+is the common way of Englishmen. They do not realise Siberia and
+Poland and the Third Section, and all the rest of it; they think
+only of Alexander as of the benevolent despot who freed the serf
+and befriended the Bulgarian. They never remember that they have
+all the freedom and privileges themselves which you poor Russians
+ask for in vain; they do not bear in mind that he has only to sign
+his name to a constitution, a very little constitution, and he
+might walk abroad as light-hearted in St. Petersburg to-morrow as
+you and I walk in Regent Street to-day. We are mostly lopsided,
+we English, but you must bear with us in our obliquity; we have
+had freedom ourselves so long that we hardly know how to make due
+allowance for those unfortunate folks who are still in search of
+it.'
+
+'If you had an Alexander yourselves for half a day,' the Russian
+said fiercely, turning to Oswald, 'you would soon see the difference.
+You would forget your virtuous indignation against Nihilist assassins
+in the white heat of your anger against unendurable tyranny. You
+had a King Charles in England once--the mere shadow of a Russian
+Czar--and you were not so very ceremonious with him, you order-loving
+English, after all.'
+
+'It is a foolish thing, Borodinsky,' said Max Schurz, looking up
+from the long telegram the other had handed him, 'and I told Toroloff
+as much a fortnight ago, when he spoke to me about the matter. You
+can do no good by these constant attacks, and you only rouse the
+minds of the oligarchy against you by your importunity. Bloodshed
+will avail us nothing; the world cannot be regenerated by a baptism
+like that. Every peasant won over, every student enrolled, every
+mother engaged to feed her little ones on the gospel of Socialism
+together with her own milk, is worth a thousand times more to
+us and to the people than a dead Czar. If your friends had really
+blown him up, what then? You would have had another Czar, and
+another Third Section, and another reign of terror, and another
+raid and massacre; and we should have lost twenty good men from our
+poor little side for ever. We must not waste the salt of the earth
+in that reckless fashion. Besides, I don't like this dynamite. It's
+a bad argument, it smacks too much of the old royal and repressive
+method. You know the motto Louis Quatorze used to cast on his
+bronze cannon--"Ultima ratio regum." Well, we Socialists ought to
+be able to find better logic for our opponents than that, oughtn't
+we?'
+
+'But in Russia,' cried the bearded man hotly, 'in poor stricken-down
+groaning Russia, what other argument have they left us? Are we to
+be hunted to death without real law or trial, tortured into sham
+confessions, deluded with mock pardons, arraigned before hypocritical
+tribunals, ensnared by all the chicanery, and lying, and treachery,
+and ferreting of the false bureaucracy, with its spies, and its
+bloodhounds, and its knout-bearing police-agents; and then are we
+not to make war the only way we can--open war, mind you, with fair
+declaration, and due formalities, and proper warning beforehand--against
+the irresponsible autocrat and his wire-pulled office-puppets who
+kill us off mercilessly? You are too hard upon us, Herr Schurz;
+even you yourself have no sympathy at all for unhappy Russia.'
+
+The old man looked up at him tenderly and regretfully. 'My poor
+Borodinsky,' he said in a gentle tremulous voice, 'I have indeed
+sympathy and pity in abundance for you. I do not blame you; you
+will have enough and to spare to do that, even here in free England;
+I would not say a harsh word against you or your terrible methods
+for all the world. You have been hard-driven, and you stand at
+bay like tigers. But I think you are going to work the wrong way,
+not using your energies to the best possible advantage for the
+proletariate. What we have really got to do is to gain over every
+man, woman, and child of the working-classes individually, and to
+array on our side all the learning and intellect and economical
+science of the thinking classes individually; and then we can present
+such a grand united front to the banded monopolists that for very
+shame they will not dare to gainsay us. Indeed, if it comes to
+that, we can leave them quietly alone, till for pure hunger they
+will come and beg our assistance. When we have enticed away all
+the workmen from their masters to our co-operative factories, the
+masters may keep their rusty empty mills and looms and engines to
+themselves as long as they like, but they must come to us in the
+end, and ask us to give them the bread they used to refuse us. For
+my part, I would kill no man and rob no man; but I would let no
+man kill or rob another either.'
+
+'And how about Alexander Nicolaiovitch, then?' persisted the
+Russian, eagerly. 'Has he killed none in his loathsome prisons and
+in his Siberian quicksilver mines? Has he robbed none of their own
+hardly got earnings by his poisoned vodki and his autocratically
+imposed taxes and imposts? Who gave him an absolute hereditary right
+to put us to death, to throw us in prison, to take our money from
+us against our will and without our leave, to treat us as if we
+existed, body and soul, and wives and children, only as chattels
+for the greater glory of his own orthodox imperial majesty? If we
+may justly slay the highway robber who meets us, arms in hand, in
+the outskirts of the city, and demands of us our money or our life,
+may we not justly slay Alexander Nicolaiovitch, who comes to our
+homes in the person of his tax-gatherers to take the bread out of
+our children's mouths and to help himself to whatever he chooses by
+the divine right of his Romanoff heirship? I tell you, Herr Max,
+we may blamelessly lie in wait for him wherever we find him, and
+whoso says us nay is siding with the wolf against the lambs, with
+the robber and the slayer against the honest representative of
+right and justice.'
+
+'I never met a Nihilist before,' said Oswald to Ernest, in a
+half-undertone,' and it never struck me to think what they might
+have to say for themselves from their own side of the question.'
+
+'That's one of the uses of coming here to Herr Schurz's,' Ernest
+answered quickly. 'You may not agree with all you hear, but at
+least you learn to see others as they see themselves; whereas if
+you mix always in English society, and read only English papers,
+you will see them only as we English see them.'
+
+'But just fancy,' Oswald went on, as they both stood back a little
+to make way for others who wished for interviews with the great
+man, 'just fancy that this Borodinsky, or whatever his name may be,
+has himself very likely helped in dynamite plots, or manufactured
+nitro-glycerine cartridges to blow up the Czar; and yet we stand
+here talking with him as coolly as if he were an ordinary respectable
+innocent Englishman.'
+
+'What of that?' Ernest answered, smiling. 'Didn't we meet Prince
+Strelinoffsky at Oriel last term, and didn't we talk with him too,
+as if he was an honest, hard-working, bread-earning Christian? and
+yet we knew he was a member of the St. Petersburg office clique,
+and at the bottom of half the trouble in Poland for the last ten
+years or so. Grant even that Borodinsky is quite wrong in his way
+of dealing with noxious autocrats, and yet which do you think is
+the worst criminal of the two--he with his little honest glazier's
+shop in a back slum of Paddington, or Strelinoffsky with his jewelled
+fingers calmly signing accursed warrants to send childing Polish
+women to die of cold and hunger and ill-treatment on the way to
+Siberia?'
+
+'Well, really, Le Breton, you know I'm a passably good Radical,
+but you're positively just one stage too Radical even for me.'
+
+'Come here oftener,' answered Ernest; 'and perhaps you'll begin to
+think a little differently about some things.'
+
+An hour later in the evening Max Schurz found Ernest alone in a
+quiet corner. 'One moment, my dear Le Breton,' he said; 'you know
+I always like to find out all about people's political antecedents;
+it helps one to fathom the potentialities of their characters. From
+what social stratum, now, do we get your clever friend, Mr. Oswald?'
+
+'His father's a petty tradesman in a country town in Devonshire,
+I believe,' Ernest answered; 'and he himself is a good general
+democrat, without any very pronounced socialistic colouring.'
+
+'A petty tradesman! Hum, I thought so. He has rather the mental
+bearing and equipment of a man from the petite bourgeoisie. I have
+been talking to him, and drawing him out. Clever, very, and with
+good instincts, but not wholly and entirely sound. A fibre wrong
+somewhere, socially speaking, a false note suspected in his ideas
+of life; too much acquiescence in the thing that is, and too little
+faith or enthusiasm for the thing that ought to be. But we shall
+make something of him yet. He has read "Gold" and understands it.
+That is already a beginning. Bring him again. I shall always be
+glad to see him here.'
+
+'I will,' said Ernest, 'and I believe the more you know him, Herr
+Max, the better you will like him.'
+
+'And what did you think of the sons of the prophets?' asked Herbert
+Le Breton of Oswald as they left the salon at the close of the
+reception.
+
+'Frankly speaking,' answered Oswald, looking half aside at Ernest,
+'I didn't quite care for all of them--the Nihilists and Communards
+took my breath away at first; but as to Max Schurz himself I think
+there can be only one opinion possible about him.'
+
+'And that is----?'
+
+'That he's a magnificent old man, with a genuine apostolic
+inspiration. I don't care twopence whether he is right or wrong,
+but he's a perfectly splendid old fellow, as honest and transparent
+as the day's long. He believes in it all, and would give his life
+for it freely, if he thought he could forward the cause a single
+inch by doing it.'
+
+'You're quite right,' said Herbert calmly. 'He's an Elijah thrown
+blankly upon these prosaic latter days; and what's more, his
+gospel's all true; but it doesn't matter a sou to you or me, for
+it will never come about in our time, no nor for a century after.
+"Post nos millennium." So what on earth's the good of our troubling
+our poor overworked heads about it?'
+
+'He's the only really great man I ever knew,' said Ernest
+enthusiastically, 'and I consider that his friendship's the one
+thing in my life that has been really and truly worth living for.
+If a pessimist were to ask me what was the use of human existence,
+I should give him a card of introduction to go to Max Schurz's.'
+
+'Excuse my interrupting your rhapsody, Ernest,' Herbert put in
+blandly, 'but will you have your own trousers tonight, Oswald, or
+will you wear mine back to your lodgings now, and I'll send one of
+the servants round with yours for them in the morning?'
+
+'Thanks,' said Harry Oswald, slapping the sides of the unopened
+dust-coat; 'I think I'll go home as I am at present, and I'll recover
+the marks of the Beast again to-morrow. You see, I didn't betray
+my evening waistcoat after all, now did I?'
+
+And they parted at the corner, each of them going his own way in
+his own mood and manner.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE COASTS OF THE GENTILES.
+
+
+The decayed and disfranchised borough of Calcombe Pomeroy, or
+Calcombe-on-the-Sea, is one of the prettiest and quietest little
+out-of-the-way watering-places in the whole smiling southern slope
+of the county of Devon. Thank heaven, the Great Western Railway,
+when planning its organised devastations along the beautiful rural
+region of the South Hams, left poor little Calcombe out in the cold;
+and the consequence is that those few people who still love to
+linger in the uncontaminated rustic England of our wiser forefathers
+can here find a beach unspoiled by goat-carriages or black-faced
+minstrels, a tiny parade uninvaded by stucco terraces or German
+brass bands, and an ancient stone pier off which swimmers may take
+a header direct, in the early morning, before the sumptuary edicts
+of his worship the Mayor compel them to resort to the use of
+bathing-machines and the decent covering of an approved costume,
+between the hours of eight and eight. A board beside the mouth of
+the harbour, signed by a Secretary of State to his late Majesty
+King William the Fourth, still announces to a heedless world the
+tolls to be paid for entry by the ships that never arrive; and a
+superannuated official in a wooden leg and a gold cap-band retains
+the honourable sinecure of a harbour-mastership, with a hypothetical
+salary nominally payable from the non-existent fees and port dues.
+The little river Cale, at the bottom of whose combe the wee town
+nestles snugly, has cut itself a deep valley in the soft sandstone
+hills; and the gap in the cliffs formed by its mouth gives room
+for the few hundred yards of level on which the antiquated little
+parade is warmly ensconced. On either hand tall bluffs of brilliant
+red marl raise their honeycombed faces fronting the sea; and in the
+distance the sheeny grey rocks of the harder Devonian promontories
+gleam like watered satin in the slant rays of the afternoon sun.
+Altogether a very sleepy little old-world place is Calcombe Pomeroy,
+specially reserved by the overruling chance of the universe to be
+a summer retreat for quiet, peace-loving, old-world people.
+
+The Londoner who escapes for a while from the great teeming human
+ant-hill, with its dark foggy lanes and solid firmament of hanging
+smoke, to draw in a little unadulterated atmosphere at Calcombe
+Pomeroy, finds himself landed by the Plymouth slow train at Calcombe
+Road Station, twelve miles by cross-country highway from his final
+destination. The little grey box, described in the time-tables
+as a commodious omnibus, which takes him on for the rest of his
+journey, crawls slowly up the first six miles to the summit of
+the intervening range at the Cross Foxes Inn, and jolts swiftly
+down the other six miles, with red hot drag creaking and groaning
+lugubriously, till it seems to topple over sheer into the sea
+at the clambering High Street of the old borough. As you turn to
+descend the seaward slope at the Cross Foxes, you appear to leave
+modern industrial England and the nineteenth century well behind
+you on the north, and you go down into a little isolated primaeval
+dale, cut off from all the outer world by the high ridge that girds
+it round on every side, and turned only on the southern front
+towards the open Channel and the backing sun. Half-way down the
+steep cobble-paved High Street, just after you pass the big dull
+russet church, a small shop on the left-hand side bears a signboard
+with the painted legend, 'Oswald, Family Grocer and Provision
+Dealer.' In the front bay window of that red-brick house, built
+out just over the shop, Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel
+College, Oxford, kept his big oak writing-desk; and at that desk
+he might be seen reading or writing on most mornings during the
+long vacation, after the end of his three weeks' stay at a London
+West-end lodging-house, from which he had paid his first visit to
+Max Schurz's Sunday evening receptions.
+
+'Two pounds of best black tea, good quality--yours is generally
+atrocious, Mrs. Oswald--that's the next thing on the list,' said
+poor trembling, shaky Miss Luttrell, the Squire's sister, a palsied
+old lady with a quavering, querulous, rasping voice. 'Two pounds
+of best black tea, and mind you don't send it all dust, as you usually
+do. No good tea to be got nowadays, since they took the duties off
+and ruined the country. And I see a tall young man lounging about
+the place sometimes, and never touching his hat to me as he ought
+to do. Young people have no manners in these times, Mrs. Oswald, as
+they used to have when you and I were young. Your son, I suppose,
+come home from sea or something? He's in the fish-curing line,
+isn't he, I think I've heard you say?'
+
+'I don't rightly know who 'ee may mean, Miss Luttrell,' replied
+the mother proudly, 'by a young man lounging about the place; but
+my son's at home from Oxford at present for his vacations, and he
+isn't in the fish-curing line at all, ma'am, but he's a Fellow of
+his college, as I've told 'ee more than once already; but you're
+getting old, I see, Miss Luttrell, and your memory isn't just what
+it had used to be, dost know.'
+
+'Oh, at Oxford, is he?' Miss Luttrell chimed on vacantly, wagging
+her wrinkled old head in solemn deprecation of tke evil omen. She
+knew it as well as Mrs. Oswald herself did, having heard the fact
+at least a thousand times before; but she made it a matter of
+principle never to encourage these upstart pretensions on the part
+of the lower orders, and just to keep them rigorously at their
+proper level she always made a feint of forgetting any steps in
+advance which they might have been bold enough to take, without
+humbly obtaining her previous permission, out of their original
+and natural obscurity. 'Fellow of his college is he, really? Fellow
+of a college! Dear me, how completely Oxford is going to the dogs.
+Admitting all kinds of odd people into the University, I understand.
+Why, my second brother--the Archdeacon, you know--was a Fellow of
+Magdalen for some time in his younger days. You surprise me, quite.
+Fellow of a college! You're perfectly sure he isn't a National
+schoolmaster at Oxford instead, and that you and his father haven't
+got the two things mixed up together in your heads, Mrs. Oswald?'
+
+'No, ma'am, we'in perfectly sure of it, and we haven't got the
+things mixed up in our heads at all, no more nor you have, Miss
+Luttrell. He was a scholar of Trinity first, and now he's got
+a Fellowship at Oriel. You must mind hearing all about it at the
+time, only you're getting so forgetful like now, with years and
+such like.' Mrs. Oswald knew there was nothing that annoyed the old
+lady so much as any allusion to her increasing age or infirmities,
+and she took her revenge out of her in that simple retributive
+fashion.
+
+'A scholar of Trinity, was he? Ah, yes, patronage will do a great
+deal in these days, for certain. The Rector took a wonderful
+interest in your boy, I think, Mrs. Oswald. He went to Plymouth
+Grammar School, I remember now, with a nomination no doubt; and
+there, I dare say, he attracted some attention, being a decent,
+hard-working lad, and got sent to Oxford with a sizarship, or
+something of the sort; there are all kinds of arrangements like
+that at the Universities, I believe, to encourage poor young men
+of respectable character. They become missionaries or ushers in
+the end, and often get very good salaries, considering everything,
+I'm told.'
+
+'There you're wrong, again, ma'am,' put in Mrs. Oswald, stoutly.
+'My husband, he sent Harry to Plymouth School at our own expense;
+and after that he got an exhibition from the school, and an open
+scholarship, I think they call it, at the college; and he's been no
+more beholden to patronage, ma'am, than your brother the Archdeacon
+was, nor for the matter o' that not so much neither; for I've a'ways
+understood the old Squire sent him first to the Charterhouse, and
+afterwards he got a living through Lord Modbury's influence, as
+the Squire voted regular with the Modbury people for the borough
+and county. But George was always independent, Miss Luttrell, and
+beholden to neither Luttrells nor Modburies, and that I tell 'ee
+to your face, ma'am, and no shame of it either.'
+
+'Well, well, Mrs. Oswald,' said the old lady, shaking her head more
+violently than ever at this direct discomfiture, 'I don't want to
+argue with you about the matter. I dare say your son's a very worthy
+young man, and has worked his way up into a position he wasn't
+intended for by Providence. But it's no business of mine, thank
+heaven, it's no business of mine, for I'm not responsible for all
+the vagaries of all the tradespeople on my brother's estate, nor
+don't want to be. There's Mrs. Figgins, now, the baker's wife; her
+daughter has just chosen to get married to a bank clerk in London;
+and I said to her this morning, "Well, Mrs. Figgins, so you've let
+your Polly go and pick up with some young fellow from town that
+you've never seen before, haven't you? And that's the way of all you
+people. You marry your girls to bank clerks without a reference, for
+the sake of getting 'em off your hands, and what's the consequence?
+They rob their employers to keep up a pretty household for their
+wives, as if they were fine ladies; and then at last the thing's
+discovered, there comes a smash, they run away to America, and you
+have your daughters and their children thrown back again penniless
+upon your hands." That's what I said to her, Mrs. Oswald. And how's
+YOUR daughter, by the way--Jemima I think you call her; how's she,
+eh, tell me?'
+
+'I beg your pardon, Miss Luttrell, but her name's not Jemima; it's
+Edith.'
+
+'Oh, Edith, is it? Well to be sure! The grand names girls have
+dangling about with them nowadays! My name's plain Catherine, and
+it's good enough for me, thank goodness. But these young ladies
+of the new style must be Ediths and Eleanors and Ophelias, and all
+that heathenish kind of thing, as if they were princesses of the
+blood or play-actresses, instead of being good Christian Susans
+and Janes and Betties, like their grandmothers were before them.
+And Miss Edith, now, what is SHE doing?'
+
+'She's doing nothing in particular at this moment, Miss Luttrell,
+leastways not so far as I know of; but she's going up to Oxford
+part of this term on a visit to her brother.'
+
+'Going up to Oxford, my good woman! Why, heaven bless the girl,
+she'd much better stop at home and learn her catechism. She should
+try to do her duty in that station of life to which it has pleased
+Providence to call her, instead of running after young gentlemen
+above her own rank and place in society at Oxford. Tell her so
+from me, Mrs. Oswald, and mind you don't send the tea dusty. Two
+pounds of your best, if you please, as soon as you can send it.
+Good-morning.' And Miss Luttrell, having discovered the absolute
+truth of the shocking rumour which had reached her about Edith's
+projected visit, the confirmation of which was the sole object of
+her colloquy, wagged her way out of the shop again successfully,
+and was duly assisted by the page-boy into her shambling little
+palsied donkey-chair.
+
+'That was all the old cat came about, you warr'nt you,' muttered
+Mr. Oswald himself from behind his biscuit-boxes. 'Must have heard
+it from the Rector's wife, and wanted to find out if it was true,
+to go and tell Mrs. Walters o' such a bit o' turble presumptiousness.'
+
+Meanwhile, in the little study with the bow-window over the shop,
+Harry and Edie Oswald were busily discussing the necessary preparations
+for Edie's long-promised visit to the University.
+
+'I hope you've got everything nice in the way of dress, you know,
+Edie,' said Harry. 'You'll want a decent dinner dress, of course,
+for you'll be asked out to dine at least once or twice; and I want
+you to have everything exceedingly proper and pretty.'
+
+'I think I've got all I need in that way, Harry; I've my dark poplin,
+cut square in the bodice, for one dinner dress, and my high black
+silk to fall back upon for another. Worn open in front, with a lace
+handkerchief and a locket, it does really very nicely. Then I've
+got three afternoon dresses, the grey you gave me, the sage-greeny
+aesthetic one, and the peacock-blue with the satin box-pleats. It's
+a charming dress, the peacock-blue; it looks as if it might have
+stepped straight out of a genuine Titian. It came home from Miss
+Wells's this morning. Wait five minutes, like a dear boy, and I'll
+run and put it on and let you see me in it.'
+
+'That's a good girl, do. I'm so anxious you should have all your
+clothes the exact pink of perfection, Popsy. Though I'm afraid I'm
+a very poor critic in that matter--if you were only a problem in
+space of four dimensions, now! Yet, after all, every man or woman
+is more of a problem than anything in x square plus y square you
+can possibly set yourself.'
+
+Edie ran lightly up into her own room, and soon reappeared clad
+resplendent in the new peacock-blue dress, with hat and parasol
+to match, and a little creamy lamb's-wool scarf thrown with artful
+carelessness around her pretty neck and shoulders. Harry looked at
+her with unfeigned admiration. Indeed, you would not easily find
+many lighter or more fairly-like little girls than Edie Oswald,
+even in the beautiful half-Celtic South Hams of Devon. In figure
+she was rather small than short, for though she was but a wee thing,
+her form was so exactly and delicately modelled that she might have
+looked tall if she stood alone at a little distance. She never
+walked, but seemed to dance about from place to place, so buoyant
+and light, that Harry doubted whether in her case gravitation could
+really vary as the square of the distance--it seemed, in fact,
+to be almost diminished in the proportions of the cube. Her hair
+and eyes--such big bright eyes!--were dark; but her complexion
+was scarcely brunette, and the colour in her cheeks was rich and
+peach-like, after the true Devonian type. She was dimpled whenever
+she smiled, and she smiled often; her full lips giving a peculiar
+ripe look to her laughing mouth that suited admirably with her
+light and delicate style of beauty. Perhaps some people might have
+thought them too full; certainly they irresistibly suggested to
+a critical eye the distinct notion of kissability. As she stood
+there, faintly blushing, waiting to be admired by her brother, in
+her neatly fitting dainty blue dress, her lips half parted, and her
+arms held carelessly at her side, she looked about as much like a
+fairy picture as it is given to mere human flesh and blood to look.
+
+'It's delicious, Edie,' said Harry, surveying her from, head
+to foot with a smile of satisfaction which made her blush deepen;
+'it's simply delicious. Where on earth did you get the idea of it?'
+
+'Well, it's partly the present style,' said Edie; 'but I took the
+notion of the bodice partly too from that Vandyck, you know, in
+the Palazzo Bossi at Genoa.'
+
+'I remember, I remember,' Harry answered, contemplating her with
+an admiring eye. 'Now just turn round and show me how it sits
+behind, Edie. You recollect Théophile Gautier says the one great
+advantage which a beautiful woman possesses over a beautiful statue
+is this, that while a man has to walk round the beautiful statue
+in order to see it from every side, he can ask the beautiful woman
+to turn herself round and let him see her, without requiring to
+take that trouble.'
+
+'Théophile Gautier was a horrid man, and if anybody but my brother
+quoted such a thing as that to me I should be very angry with him
+indeed.'
+
+'Théophile Gautier was quite as horrid as you consider him to be,
+and if you were anybody but my sister it isn't probable I should
+have quoted him to you. But if there is any statue on earth prettier
+or more graceful than you are in that dress at this moment, Edie,
+then the Venus of Milo ought immediately to be pulverised to ultimate
+atoms for a rank artistic impostor.'
+
+'Thank you, Harry, for the compliment. What pretty things you must
+be capable of saying to somebody else's sister, when you're so
+polite and courtly to your own.'
+
+'On the contrary, Popsy, when it comes to somebody else's sister
+I'm much too nervous and funky to say anything of the kind. But
+you must at least do Gautier the justice to observe that if I had
+described a circle round you, instead of allowing you to revolve
+once on your own axis, I shouldn't have been able to get the gloss
+on the satin in the sunlight as I do now that you turn the panniers
+toward the window. That, you must admit, is a very important
+aesthetic consideration.'
+
+'Oh, of course it's essentially a sunshiny dress,' said Edie,
+smiling. 'It's meant to be worn out of doors, on a fine afternoon,
+when the light is falling slantwise, you know, just as it does now
+through the low window. That's the light painters always choose
+for doing satin in.'
+
+'It's certainly very pretty,' Harry went on, musing; 'but I'm afraid
+Le Breton would say it was a serious piece of economic hubris.'
+
+'Piece of what?' asked Edie quickly.
+
+'Piece of hubris--an economical outrage, don't you see; a gross
+anti-social and individualist demonstration. Hubris, you know, is
+Greek for insolence; at least, not quite insolence, but a sort
+of pride and overweening rebelliousness against the gods, the kind
+of arrogance that brings Nemesis after it, you understand. It was
+hubris in Agamemnon and Xerxes to go swelling about and ruffling
+themselves like turkey-cocks, because they were great conquerors
+and all that sort of thing; and it was their Nemesis to get murdered
+by Clytemnestra, or jolly well beaten by the Athenians at Salamis.
+Well, Le Breton always uses the word for anything that he thinks
+socially wrong--and he thinks a good many things socially wrong,
+I can tell you--anything that partakes of the nature of a class
+distinction, or a mere vulgar ostentation of wealth, or a useless
+waste of good, serviceable, labour-gotten material. He would call
+it hubris to have silver spoons when electroplate would do just as
+well; or to keep a valet for your own personal attendant, making
+one man into the mere bodily appanage of another; or to buy anything
+you didn't really need, causing somebody else to do work for you
+which might otherwise have been avoided.'
+
+'Which Mr. Le Breton--the elder or the younger one?'
+
+'Oh, the younger--Ernest. As for Herbert, the Fellow of St. Aldate's,
+he's not troubled with any such scruples; he takes the world as he
+finds it.'
+
+'They've both gone in for their degrees, haven't they?'
+
+'Yes, Herbert has got a fellowship; Ernest's up in residence still
+looking about for one.'
+
+
+'It's Ernest that would think my dress a piece of what-you-may-call-it?'
+
+'Yes, Ernest.'
+
+'Then I'm sure I shan't like him. I should insist upon every woman's
+natural right to wear the dress or hat or bonnet that suits her
+complexion best.'
+
+'You can't tell, Edie, till you've met him. He's a very good
+fellow; and of one thing I'm certain, whatever he thinks right he
+does, and sticks to it.'
+
+'But do YOU think, Harry, I oughtn't to wear a new peacock-blue
+camel-hair dress on my first visit up to Oxford?'
+
+'Well, Edie dear, I don't quite know what my own opinions are
+exactly upon that matter. I'm not an economist, you see, I'm a man
+of science. When I look at you, standing there so pretty in that
+pretty dress, I feel inclined to say to myself, "Every woman ought
+to do her best to make herself look as beautiful as she can for the
+common delectation of all humanity." Your beauty, a Greek would
+have said, is a gift from the gods to us all, and we ought all
+gratefully to make the most of it. I'm sure _I_ do.'
+
+'Thank you, Harry, again. You're in your politest humour this
+afternoon.'
+
+'But then, on the other hand, I know if Le Breton were here he'd
+soon argue me over to the other side. He has the enthusiasm of
+humanity so strong upon him that you can't help agreeing with him
+as long as he's talking to you.'
+
+'Then if he were here you'd probably make me put away the peacock-blue,
+for fear of hubris and Nemesis and so forth, and go up to Oxford
+a perfect fright in my shabby old Indian tussore!'
+
+'I don't know that I should do that, even then, Edie. In the first
+place, nothing on earth could make you look a perfect fright, or
+anything like one, Popsy dear; and in the second place, I don't
+know that I'm Socialist enough myself ever to have the courage of
+my opinions as Le Breton has. Certainly, I should never attempt to
+force them unwillingly upon others. You must remember, Edie, it's
+one thing for Le Breton to be so communistic as all that comes to,
+and quite another thing for you and me. Le Breton's father was a
+general and a knight, you see; and people will never forget that
+his mother's Lady Le Breton still, whatever he does. He may do
+what he likes in the way of social eccentricities, and the world
+will only say he's such a very strange advanced young fellow. But
+if I were to take you up to Oxford badly dressed, or out of the
+fashion, or looking peculiar in any way, the world wouldn't put it
+down to our political beliefs, but would say we were mere country
+tradespeople by birth, and didn't know any better. That makes a
+lot of difference, you know.'
+
+'You're quite right, Harry; and yet, do you know, I think there must
+be something, too, in sticking to one's own opinions, like Mr. Le
+Breton. I should stick to mine, I'm sure, and wear whatever dress
+I liked, in spite of anybody. It's a sweet thing, really, isn't
+it?' And she turned herself round, craning over her shoulder to look
+at the effect, in a vain attempt to assume an objective attitude
+towards her own back.
+
+'I'm glad I'm going to Oxford at last, Harry,' she said, after a
+short pause. 'I HAVE so longed to go all these years while you were
+an undergraduate; and I'm dying to have got there, now the chance
+has really come at last, after all. I shall glory in the place,
+I'm certain; and it'll be so nice to make the acquaintance of all
+your clever friends.'
+
+'Well, Edie,' said her brother, smiling gently at the light, joyous,
+tremulous little figure, 'I think I've done right in putting it
+off till now. It's just as well you haven't gone up to Oxford till
+after your trip on the Continent with me. That three months in
+Paris, and Switzerland, and Venice, and Florence, did you a lot of
+good, you see; improved you, and gave you tone, and supplied you
+with things to talk about.'
+
+'Why, you oughtn't to think I needed any improvement at all, sir,'
+Edie answered, pouting; 'and as to talking, I'm not aware I had ever
+any dearth of subjects for conversation even before I went on the
+Continent. There are things enough to be said about heaven and earth
+in England, surely, without one having to hurry through France and
+Italy, like Cook's excursionists, just to hunt up something fresh
+to chatter about. It's my belief that a person who can't find
+anything new to say about the every-day world around her won't
+discover much suggestive matter for conversation in a Continental
+Bradshaw. It's like that feeble watery lady I met at the table
+d'hote at Geneva. From something she said I gathered she'd been
+in India, and I asked her how she liked it. "Oh," she said, "it's
+very hot." I told her I had heard so before. Presently she said
+something casually about having been in Brazil. I asked her what
+sort of place Brazil was. "Oh." she said, "it's dreadfully hot."
+I told her I'd heard that too. By-and-by she began to talk again
+about Barbadoes. "What did you think of the West Indies?" I said.
+"Oh," said she, "they're terribly hot, really." I told her I had
+gathered as much from previous travellers. And that was positively
+all in the end I ever got out of her, for all her travels.'
+
+'My dear Edie, I've always admitted that you were simply perfect,'
+Harry said, glancing at her with visible admiration, 'and I
+don't think anything on earth could possibly improve you--except
+perhaps a judicious course of differential and integral calculus,
+which might possibly serve to tone down slightly your exuberant
+and excessive vitality. Still, you know, from the point of view
+of society, which is a force we have always to reckon with--a
+constant, in fact, that we may call Pi--there can be no doubt in
+the world that to have been on the Continent is a differentiating
+factor in one's social position. It doesn't matter in the least
+what your own private evaluation of Pi may be; if you don't happen
+to know the particular things and places that Pi knows, Pi's evaluation
+of you will be approximately a minimum, of that you may be certain.'
+
+'Well, for my part, I don't care twopence about Pi as you call it,'
+said Edie, tossing her pretty little head contemptuously; 'but
+I'm very glad indeed to have been on the Continent for my own sake,
+because of the pictures, and palaces, and mountains, and waterfalls
+we've seen, and not because of Pi's opinion of me for having seen
+them. I would have been the same person really whether I'd seen
+them or not; but I'm so much the richer myself for that view from
+the top of the Col de Balme, and for that Murillo--oh, do you
+remember the flood of light on that Murillo?--in the far corner
+of that delicious gallery at Bologna. Why, mother darling, what on
+earth has been vexing you?'
+
+'Nothing at all, Edie dear; leastways, that is, nothing to speak
+of,' said her mother, coming up from the shop hot and flurried from
+her desperate encounter with the redoubtable Miss Luttrell.
+
+'Oh, I know just what it is, darling,' cried the girl, putting her
+arm around her mother's waist caressingly, and drawing her down to
+kiss her face half a dozen times over in her outburst of sympathy.
+'That horrid old Miss Catherine has been here again, I'm sure, for
+I saw her going out of the shop just now, and she's been saying
+something or other spiteful, as she always does, to vex my dearie.
+What did she say to you to-day, now do tell us, duckie mother?'
+
+'Well, there,' said Mrs. Oswald, half laughing and half crying, 'I
+can't tell 'ee exactly what she did say, but it was just the kind
+of thing that she mostly does, impudent like, just to hurt a body's
+feelings. She said you'd better not go to Oxford, Edie, but stop
+at home and learn your catechism.'
+
+'You might have pointed out to her, mother dear,' said the young
+man, smoothing her hair softly with his hand, and kissing her
+forehead, 'that in the most advanced intellectual centres the Church
+catechism is perhaps no longer regarded as the absolute ultimatum
+of the highest and deepest economical wisdom.'
+
+'Bless your heart, Harry, what'd be the good of talking that way
+to the likes of she? She wouldn't understand a single word of what
+you were driving at. It must be all plain sailing with her, without
+it's in the way of spite, and then she sees her chance to tack round
+the hardest corner with half a wind in her sails only, as soon as
+look at it. Her sharpness goes all off toward ill-nature, that it
+do. Why, she said you'd got on at Oxford by good patronage!'
+
+'There, you see, Edie,' cried Harry demonstratively, 'that's
+an infinitesimal fraction of Pi; that's a minute decimal of this
+great, sneering, ugly aggregate "society" that we have to deal with
+whether we will or no, and that rends us and grinds us to powder
+if only it can once get in the thin end of a chance. Take shaky
+bitter old Miss Catherine for your unit, multiply her to the nth,
+and there you see the irreducible power we have to fight against.
+All one's political economy is very well in its way; but the
+practical master of the situation is Pi, sitting autocratically in
+many-headed judgment on our poor solitary little individualities,
+and crushing us irretrievably with the dead weight of its inexorable
+cumulative nothingness. And to think that that quivering old mass of
+perambulating jealousy--that living incarnation of envy, hatred,
+malice, and all uncharitableness--should be able to make you
+uncomfortable for a single moment, mother darling, with her petty,
+dribbling, doddering venom, why, it's simply unendurable.'
+
+'There now, Harry,' said Mrs. Oswald, relenting, 'you mustn't be
+too hard, neither, on poor old Miss Catherine. She's a bit soured,
+you see, by disappointments and one thing and another. She doesn't
+mean it, really, but it's just her nature. Folks can't be blamed
+for their nature, now, can they?'
+
+'It occurs to me,' said Harry quietly, 'that vipers only sting because
+it's their nature; and Dr. Watts has made a similar observation
+with regard to the growling and fighting of bears and lions. But
+I'm not aware that anybody has yet proposed to get up a Society
+for the protection of those much-misunderstood creatures, on the
+ground that they are not really responsible for their own inherited
+dispositions. Mr. William Sikes had a nature (no doubt congenital)
+which impelled him to beat his wife--I'm not sure that she was
+even his wife at all, now I come to think of it, but that's a mere
+detail--and to kick his familiar acquaintances casually about the
+head. We, on the other hand, have natures which impel us, when we
+catch Mr. William Sikes indulging in these innate idiosyncrasies
+by way of recreation, to clap him promptly into prison, and even,
+under certain aggravating conditions, to cause him to be hanged
+by the neck till he be dead. This may be a regrettable incident of
+our own peculiar dispositions, mother dear, but it has at least
+the same justification as Mr. Sikes's or the bears' and lions',
+that 'tis our nature to. And I feel pretty much the same way about
+old Miss Luttrell.'
+
+'Well, there,' said his mother, kissing him gently, 'you're a bad
+rebellious boy to be calling names, like a chatter-mag, and I won't
+listen to you any longer. How pretty Edie do look in her new dress,
+to be sure, Harry. I'll warr'nt there won't be a prettier girl
+in Oxford next week than what she is; no, nor a better one and a
+sweeter one neither.'
+
+Harry put his arms round both their waists at once, with an
+affectionate pressure; and they went down to their old-fashioned
+tea together in the little parlour behind the shop, looking out over
+the garden, and the beach, and the great cliffs beyond on either
+hand, to the very farthest edge of the distant clear-cut blue
+horizon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+MAGDALEN QUAD.
+
+
+The Reverend Arthur Collingham Berkeley, curate of St. Fredegond's,
+lounged lazily in his own neatly padded wickerwork easy-chair,
+opposite the large lattice-paned windows of his pretty little
+first-floor rooms in the front quad of Magdalen.
+
+'There's a great deal to be said, Le Breton, in favour of October
+term,' he observed, in his soft, musical voice, as he gazed pensively
+across the central grass-plot to the crimson drapery of the Founder's
+Tower. 'Just look at that magnificent Virginia creeper over there,
+now; just look at the way the red on it melts imperceptibly into
+Tyrian purple and cloth of gold! Isn't that in itself argument
+enough to fling at Hartmann's head, if he ventured to come here
+sprinkling about his heresies, with his affected little spray-shooter,
+in the midst of a drowsy Oxford autumn? The Cardinal never saw
+Virginia creeper, I suppose; a man of his taste wouldn't have been
+guilty of committing such a gross practical anachronism as that,
+any more than he would have smoked a cigarette before tobacco was
+invented; but if only he could have seen the October effect on that
+tower yonder, he'd have acknowledged that his own hat and robe were
+positively nowhere in the running, for colour, wouldn't he?'
+
+'Well,' answered Herbert, putting down the Venetian glass goblet
+he had been examining closely with due care into its niche in the
+over-mantel, 'I've no doubt Wolsey had too much historical sense
+ever to step entirely out of his own century, like my brother Ernest,
+for instance; but I've never heard his opinion on the subject of
+colour-harmonies, and I should suspect it of having been distinctly
+tinged with nascent symptoms of renaissance vulgarity. This is a
+lovely bit of Venetian, really, Berkeley. How the dickens do you
+manage to pick up all these pretty things, I wonder? Why can't I
+afford them, now?'
+
+'What a question for the endowed and established to put to a poor
+starving devil of a curate like me!' said Berkeley lightly. 'You,
+an incarnate sinecure and vested interest, a creature revelling in
+an unearned income of fabulous Oriental magnificence--I dare say,
+putting one thing with another, fully as much as five hundred a
+year--to ask me, the unbeneficed and insignificant, with my wretched
+pittance of eighty pounds per annum and my three pass-men a term
+for classical mods, how I scrape together the few miserable, hoarded
+ha'pence which I grudgingly invest in my pots and pipkins! I save
+them from my dinner, Mr. Bursar--I save them. If the Church only
+recognised modest merit as it ought to do!--if the bishops only
+listened with due attention to the sound and scholarly exegesis of
+my Sunday evening discourses at St. Fredegond's!--then, indeed, I
+might be disposed to regard things through a more satisfied medium
+--the medium of a nice, fat, juicy country living. But for you,
+Le Breton--you, sir, a pluralist and a sanguisorb of the deepest
+dye--to reproach me with my Franciscan poverty--oh, it's too
+cruel!'
+
+'I'm an abuse, I know,' Herbert answered, smiling and waving his
+hand gracefully. 'I at once admit it. Abuses exist, unhappily; and
+while they continue do so, isn't it better they should envisage
+themselves as me than as some other and probably less deserving
+fellow?'
+
+'No, it's not, decidedly. I should much prefer that one of them
+envisaged itself as me.'
+
+'Ah, of course. From your own strictly subjective point of view
+that's very natural. I also look at the question abstractly from
+the side of the empirical ego, and correctly deduce a corresponding
+conclusion. Only then, you see, the terms of the minor premiss are
+luckily reversed.'
+
+'Well, my dear fellow,' said the curate, 'the fact about the
+tea-things is this. You eat up your income, devour your substance
+in riotous living; I prefer to feast my eyes and ears to my grosser
+senses. You dine at high table, and fare sumptuously every day;
+I take a commons of cold beef for lunch, and have tea off an egg
+and roll in my own rooms at seven. You drink St. Emilion or still
+hock; I drink water from the well or the cup that cheers but
+not obfuscates. The difference goes to pay for the crockery. Do
+likewise, and with your untold wealth you might play Aunt Sally at
+Oriental blue, and take cock-shots with a boot-jack at hawthorn-pattern
+vases.'
+
+'At any rate, Berkeley, you always manage to get your money's worth
+of amusement out of your money.'
+
+'Of course, because I lay myself out to do it. Buy a bottle of
+champagne, drink it off, and there you have to show for your total
+permanent investment on the transaction the memory of a noisy evening
+and a headache the next morning. Buy a flute, or a book of poems,
+or a little picture, or a Palissy platter, and you have something
+to turn to with delight and admiration for half a lifetime.'
+
+'Ah, but it isn't everybody who can isolate himself so utterly
+from the workaday world and live so completely in his own little
+paradise of art as you can, my dear fellow. Non omnia possumus
+omnes. You seem to be always up in the aesthetic clouds, with your
+own music automatically laid on, and no need of cherubim or seraphim
+to chant continually for your gratification. Play me something of
+your own on your flute now, like a good fellow.'
+
+'No, I won't; because the spirit doesn't move me. It's treachery
+to the divine gift to play when you don't want to. Besides, what's
+the use of playing before YOU when you're not the dean of a musical
+cathedral? David was wiser; he played only before Saul, who had
+of course all the livings in his own gift, no doubt. I've got a
+new thing running in my head this very minute that you shall hear
+though, all the same, as soon as I've hammered it into shape--a
+sort of villanette in music, a little whiff of country freshness,
+suggested by the new ethereal acquisition, little Miss Butterfly.
+Have you seen Miss Butterfly yet?'
+
+'Not by that name, at any rate. Who is she?'
+
+'Oh, the name's my own invention. Mademoiselle Volauvent, I
+mean--the little bit of whirligig thistledown from Devonshire,
+Oswald's sister, you know, of Oriel.'
+
+'Ah, that one! Yes; just caught a glimpse of her in the High on
+Thursday. Very pretty, certainly, and as airy as a humming-bird.'
+
+'That's her! She's coming here to lunch this morning. If you're
+a good boy, and will promise not to say anything naughty, you may
+stop and meet her. She's a nice little thing, but rather timid at
+seeing so many fresh faces. You mustn't frighten her by discussing
+the Absolute and the Unconditioned, or bore her by talking about
+Aristotle's Politics, or the revolutions in Corcyra. For you know,
+my dear Le Breton, if you HAVE a fault, it is that you're such a
+consummate and irrepressible prig; now aren't you really?'
+
+'I'm hardly a fair judge on that subject, I suppose, Berkeley; but
+if YOU have a rudimentary glimmering of a virtue, it is that you're
+such a deliciously frank and yet considerate critic. I'll pocket
+your rudeness though, and eat your lunch, in spite of it. Is Miss
+Butterfly, as you call her, as stand-off as her brother?'
+
+'Not at all. She's accueillante to the last degree.'
+
+'Very restricted, I suppose--a country girl of the first water?
+Horizon absolutely bounded by the high hedges of her native parish?'
+
+'Oh dear no! Anything but that. She's like her brother, naturally
+quick and adaptive.'
+
+'Oswald's an excellent fellow in his way,' said Herbert, button-holing
+his own waistcoat; 'but he's spoilt by two bad traits. In the first
+place, he's so dreadfully conscious of the fact that he has risen
+from a lower position; and then, again, he's so engrossingly and
+pervadingly mathematical. X square seems to have seized upon him
+bodily, and to have wormed its fatal way into his very marrow.'
+
+'Ah, you must remember, he's true to his first love. Culture came
+to him first, while yet he abode in Philistia, under the playful
+disguise of a conic section. He scaled his way out of Gath by means
+of a treatise on elementary trigonometry, and evaded Askelon on
+the wings of an undulatory theory of light. It is different with
+us, you know, who have emerged from the land of darkness by the
+regular classical and literary highway. We feed upon Rabelais and
+Burton; he flits carelessly from flower to flower of the theory of
+Quantics. If he were an idealist painter, like Rossetti, he would
+paint great allegorical pictures for us, representing an asymptotic
+curve appearing to him in a dream, and introducing that blushing
+maiden, Hyperbola, to his affectionate consideration.'
+
+As Berkeley spoke, a rap sounded on the oak, and Ernest Le Breton
+entered the room.
+
+'What, you here, Herbert?' he said with a shade of displeasure in
+his tone. 'Are you, too, of the bidden?'
+
+'Berkeley has asked me to stop and lunch with him, if that's what
+you mean.'
+
+'We shall be quite a party,' said Ernest, seating himself, and looking
+abstractedly round the room. 'Why, Berkeley,' as his eye fell upon
+the Venetian vase, 'you've positively got some more gew-gaws here.
+This one's new, isn't it? Eh!'
+
+'Yes. I picked it up for a song, this long, at a stranded village
+in the Apennines. Literally for a song, for it cost me just what
+I got from Fradelli for that last little piece of mine. It's very
+pretty, isn't it?'
+
+'Very; exquisite, really; the blending of the tones is so perfect.
+I wish I knew what to think about these things. I can't make up
+my mind about them. Sometimes I think it's all right to make them
+and buy them; sometimes I think it's all wrong.'
+
+'Oh, if that's your difficulty,' said Berkeley, pulling his white
+tie straight at the tiny round looking-glass, 'I can easily reassure
+you. Do you think a hundred and eighty pounds a year an excessive
+sum for one person to spend upon his own entire living?'
+
+'It doesn't seem so, as expenses go amongst US,' said Ernest, seriously,
+'though I dare say it would look like shocking extravagance to a
+working man with a wife and family.'
+
+'Very well, that's the very outside I ever spend upon myself in
+any one year, for the excellent reason that it's all I ever get to
+spend in any way. Now, why shouldn't I spend it on the things that
+please me best and are joys for ever, instead of on the things that
+disappear at once and perish in the using?'
+
+'Ah, but that's not the whole question,' Ernest answered, looking
+at the curate fixedly. 'What right have you and I to spend so much
+when others are wanting for bread? And what right have you or I
+to make other people work at producing these useless trinkets for
+our sole selfish gratification?'
+
+'Well now, Le Breton,' said the parson, assuming a more serious tone,
+'you know you're a reasonable creature, so I don't mind discussing
+this question with you. You've got an ethical foundation to
+your nature, and you want to see things done on decent grounds of
+distributive justice. There I am one with you. But you've also got
+an aesthetic side to your nature, which makes you worth arguing
+with upon the matter. I won't argue with your vulgar materialised
+socialist, who would break up the frieze of the Parthenon for road
+metal, or pull down Giotto's frescoes because they represent scenes
+in the fabulous lives of saints and martyrs. You know what a work
+of art is when you see it; and therefore you're worth arguing
+with, which your vulgar Continental socialist really isn't. The
+one cogent argument for him is the whiff of grape-shot.'
+
+'I recognise,' said Ernest, 'that the works of art, of poetry, or
+of music, which we possess are a grand inheritance from the past;
+and I would do all I could to preserve them intact for those that
+come after us.'
+
+'I'm sure you would. No restoration or tinkering in you, I'm
+certain. Well, then, would you give anything for a world which
+hadn't got this aesthetic side to its corporate existence? Would
+you give anything for a world which didn't care at all for painting,
+sculpture, music, poetry? I wouldn't. I don't want such a world.
+I won't countenance such a world. I'll do nothing to further or
+advance such a world. It's utterly repugnant to me, and I banish
+it, as Themistocles banished the Athenians.'
+
+'But consider,' said Ernest, 'we live in a world where men and women
+are actually starving. How can we reconcile to our consciences the
+spending of one penny on one useless thing when others are dying
+of sheer want, and cold, and nakedness? That's the great question
+that's always oppressing my poor dissatisfied conscience.'
+
+'So it does everybody's--except Herbert's: he explains it all on
+biological grounds as the beautiful discriminative action of natural
+selection. Simple, but not consolatory. Still, look at the other
+side of the question. Suppose you and everybody else were to give
+up all superfluities, and confine all your energies to the unlimited
+production of bare necessaries. Suppose you occupy every acre
+of land with your corn-fields, or your piggeries; and sweep away
+all the parks, and woods, and heaths, and moorlands in England.
+Suppose you keep on letting your population multiply as fast as it
+chooses--and it WILL multiply, you know, in that ugly, reckless,
+anti-Malthusian fashion of its own--till every rood of ground
+maintains its man, and only just maintains him; and what will you
+have got then?'
+
+'A dead level of abject pauperism,' put in Herbert blandly; 'a
+reductio ad absurdum of all your visionary Schurzian philosophy,
+my dear Ernest. Look at it another way, now, and just consider.
+Which really and truly matters most to you and me, a great work
+of art or a highly respectable horny-handed son of toil, whose
+acquaintance we have never had the pleasure of personally making?
+Suppose you read in the Times that the respectable horny-handed
+one has fallen off a scaffolding and broken his neck; and that the
+Dresden Madonna has been burnt by an unexpected accident; which
+of the two items of intelligence affects you the most acutely? My
+dear fellow, you may push your humanitarian enthusiasm as far as
+ever you like; but in your heart of hearts you know as well as I
+do that you'll deeply regret the loss of the Madonna, and you'll
+never think again about the fate of the respectable horny-handed,
+his wife or children.'
+
+Ernest's answer, if he had any to make, was effectually nipped in
+the bud by the entrance of the scout, who came in to announce Mr.
+and Miss Oswald and Mrs. Martindale. Edie wore the grey dress,
+her brother's present, and flitted into the room after her joyous
+fashion, full of her first fresh delight at the cloistered quad of
+Magdalen.
+
+'What a delicious college, Mr. Berkeley!' she said, holding out
+her hand to him brightly. 'Good-morning, Mr. Le Breton; this is
+your brother, I know by the likeness. I thought New College very
+beautiful, but nothing I've seen is quite as beautiful as Magdalen.
+What a privilege to live always in such a place! And what an
+exquisite view from your window here!'
+
+'Yes,' said Berkeley, moving a few music-books from the seat in the
+window-sill; 'come and sit by it, Miss Oswald. Mrs. Martindale,
+won't you put your shawl down? How's the Professor to-day? So sorry
+he couldn't come.'
+
+'Ah, he had to go to sit on one of his Boards,' said the old lady,
+seating herself. 'But you know I'm quite accustomed to going out
+without him.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley knew as much; indeed, being a person of minute
+strategical intellect, he had purposely looked out a day on which
+the Professor had to attend a meeting of the delegates of something
+or other, so as to secure Mrs. Martindale's services without the
+supplementary drawback of that prodigious bore. Not that he was
+particularly anxious for Mrs. Martindale's own society, which was
+of the most strictly negative character; but he didn't wish Edie
+to be the one lady in a party of four men, and he invited the
+Professor's wife as an excellent neutral figure-head, to keep her
+in countenance. Ladies were scarcer then in Oxford than they are
+nowadays. The married fellow was still a tentative problematical
+experiment in those years, and the invasion of the Parks by young
+couples had hardly yet begun in earnest. So female society was
+still at a considerable local premium, and Berkeley was glad enough
+to secure even colourless old Mrs. Martindale to square his party
+at any price.
+
+'And how do you like Oxford, Miss Oswald?' asked Ernest, making
+his way towards the window.
+
+'My dear Le Breton, what a question to put to her!' said Berkeley,
+smiling. 'As if Oxford were a place to be appraised offhand, on
+three days' acquaintance. You remind me of the American who went
+to look at Niagara, and made an approving note in his memorandum
+book to say that he found it really a very elegant cataract.'
+
+'Oh, but you MUST form some opinion of it at least, at first sight,'
+cried Edie; 'you can't help having an impression of a place from
+the first moment, even if you haven't a judgment on it, can you
+now? I think it really surpasses my expectations, Mr. Le Breton,
+which is always a pleasant surprise. Venice fell below them; Florence
+just came up to them; but Oxford, I think, really surpasses them.'
+
+'We have three beautiful towns in Britain,' Berkeley said. ('As if
+he were a Welsh Triad,' suggested Herbert Le Breton, parenthetically.)
+'Torquay, Oxford, Edinburgh. Torquay is all nature, spoilt by what
+I won't call art; Oxford is all art, superimposed on a swamp that
+I won't call nature; Edinburgh is both nature and art, working pretty
+harmoniously together, to make up a unique and exquisite picture.'
+
+'Just like Naples, Venice, and Heidelberg,' said Edie, half to
+herself; but Berkeley caught at the words quickly as she said them.
+'Yes,' he answered; 'a very good parallel, only Oxford has a trifle
+more nature about it than Venice. The lagoon, without the palaces,
+would be simply hideous; the Oseney flats, without the colleges,
+would be nothing worse than merely dull.'
+
+'We owe a great deal,' said Ernest, gazing out towards the quadrangle,
+'to the forgotten mass of labouring humanity who piled all those
+blocks of shapeless stone into beautiful forms for us who come after
+to admire and worship. I often wonder, when I sit here in Berkeley's
+window-seat, and look across the quad to the carved pinnacles on
+the Founder's Tower there, whether any of us can ever hope to leave
+behind to our successors any legacy at all comparable to the one
+left us by those nameless old mediaeval masons. It's a very saddening
+thought that we for whom all these beautiful things have been put
+together--we whom labouring humanity has pampered and petted from
+our cradles upward, feeding us on its whitest bread, and toiling
+for us with all its weary sinews--that we probably will never do
+anything at all for it and for the world in return, but will simply
+eat our way through life aimlessly, and die forgotten in the end like
+the beasts that perish. It ought to make us, as a class, terribly
+ashamed of our own utter and abject inutility.'
+
+Edie looked at him with a sort of hushed surprise; she was accustomed
+to hear Harry talk radical talk enough after his own fashion, but
+radicalism of this particular pensive tinge she was not accustomed
+to. It interested her, and made her wonder what sort of man Mr. Le
+Breton might really be.
+
+'Well, you know, Mr. Le Breton,' said old Mrs. Martindale,
+complacently, 'we must remember that Providence has wisely ordained
+that we shouldn't all of us be masons or carpenters. Some of us are
+clergymen, now, and look what a useful, valuable life a clergyman's
+is, after all, isn't it, Mr. Berkeley?' Berkeley smiled a faint
+smile of amusement, but said nothing. 'Others are squires and
+landed gentry; and I'm sure the landed gentry are very desirable
+in keeping up the tone of the country districts, and setting a
+pattern of virtue and refinement to their poorer neighbours. What
+would the country villages be, for example, if it weren't for the
+centres of culture afforded by the rectory and the hall, eh, Miss
+Oswald.' Edith thought of quavering old Miss Catherine Luttrell
+gossiping with the rector's wife, and held her peace. 'You may depend
+upon it Providence has ordained these distinctions of classes for
+its own wise purposes, and we needn't trouble our heads at all
+about trying to alter them.'
+
+'I've always observed,' said Harry Oswald, 'that Providence is
+supposed to have ordained the existing order for the time being,
+whatever it may be, but not the order that is at that exact moment
+endeavouring to supplant it. If I were to visit Central Africa,
+I should confidently expect to be told by the rain-doctors that
+Providence had ordained the absolute power of the chief, and the
+custom of massacring his wives and slaves at his open grave side.
+I believe in Russia it's usually allowed that Providence has placed
+the orthodox Czar at the head of the nation, and that any attempt
+to obtain a constitution from him is simply flat rebellion and
+flying in the face of Providence. In England we had a King John
+once, and we extracted a constitution out of him and sundry other
+kings by main force; and here, it's acquiescence in the present
+limited aristocratic government that makes up obedience to
+the Providential arrangement of things apparently. But how about
+America? eh, Mrs. Martindale? Did Providence ordain that George
+Washington was to rebel against his most sacred majesty King George
+III., or did it not? And did it ordain that George Washington was
+to knock his most sacred majesty's troops into a cocked hat, or
+did it not? And did it ordain that Abraham Lincoln was to free the
+slaves, or did it not? What I want to know is this: can it be said
+that Providence has ordained every class distinction in the whole
+world, from Dahomey to San Francisco? And has it ordained every
+Government, past and present, from the Chinese Empire to the French
+Convention? Did it ordain, for example, the revolution of '89?
+That's the question I should like to have answered.'
+
+'Dear me, Mr. Oswald,' said the old lady meekly, taken aback by
+Harry's voluble vehemence: 'I suppose Providence permits some things
+and ordains others.'
+
+'And does it permit American democracy or ordain it?' asked the
+merciless Harry.
+
+'Don't you see, Mrs. Martindale,' put in Berkeley, coming gently
+to her rescue, 'your principle amounts in effect to saying that
+whatever is, is right.'
+
+'Exactly,' said the old lady, forgetting at once all about Dahomey
+or the Convention, and coming back mentally to her squires and
+rectors. 'The existing order is wisely arranged by Providence, and
+we mustn't try to set ourselves up against it.'
+
+'But if whatever is, is right,' Edie said, laughing, 'then Mr. Le
+Breton's socialism must be right too, you see, because it exists
+in him no doubt for some wise purpose of Providence; and if he and
+those who think with him can succeed in changing things generally
+according to their own pattern, then the new system that they
+introduce will be the one that Providence has shown by the result
+to be the favoured one.'
+
+'In short,' said Ernest, musingly, 'Mrs. Martindale's principle
+sanctifies success. It's the old theory of "treason never
+prospers--what's the reason? Because whene'er it prospers 'tis not
+treason." If we could only introduce a socialist republic, then it
+would be the reactionaries who would be setting themselves up against
+constituted authority, and so flying in the face of Providence.'
+
+'Fancy lecturing a recalcitrant archbishop and a remonstrant
+ci-devant duchess,' cried Berkeley, lightly, 'upon the moral guilt
+and religious sinfulness of rebellion against the constituted
+authority of a communist phalanstery. It would be simply charming.
+I can imagine myself composing a dignified exhortation to deliver
+to his grace, entirely compiled out of his own printed pastorals, on
+the duty of submission and the danger of harbouring an insubordinate
+spirit. Do make me chaplain-in-ordinary to your house of correction
+for irreclaimable aristocrats, Le Breton, as soon as you once get
+your coming socialist republic fairly under way.'
+
+'Luncheon is on the table, sir,' said the scout, breaking in
+unceremoniously upon their discussion.
+
+If Arthur Berkeley lunched by himself upon a solitary commons of
+cold beef, he certainly did not treat his friends and guests in
+corresponding fashion. His little entertainment was of the daintiest
+and airiest character, so airy that, as Edie herself observed
+afterwards to Harry, it took away all the sense of meat and drink
+altogether, and left one only a pleased consciousness of full
+artistic gratification. Even Ernest, though he had his scruples
+about the aspic jelly, might eat the famous Magdalen chicken cutlets,
+his brother said, 'with a distinct feeling of exalted gratitude to
+the arduous culinary evolution of collective humanity.'
+
+'Consider,' said Herbert, balancing neatly a little pyramid of
+whip cream and apricot jam upon his fork, 'consider what ages of
+slow endeavour must have gone to the development of such a complex
+mixture as this, Ernest, and thank your stars that you were born
+in this nineteenth century of Soyer and Francatelli, instead of
+being condemned to devour a Homeric feast with the unsophisticated
+aid of your own five fingers.'
+
+'But do tell me, Mr. Le Breton,' asked Edie, with one of her pretty
+smiles, 'what will this socialist republic of yours be like when
+it actually comes about? I'm dying to know all about it.'
+
+'Really, Miss Oswald,' Ernest answered, in a half-embarrassed tone,
+'I don't quite know how to reply to such a very wide and indefinite
+question. I haven't got any cut-and-dried constitutional scheme of
+my own for reorganising the whole system of society, any distinct
+panacea to cure all the ills that collective flesh is heir to. I
+leave the details of the future order to your brother Harry. The
+thing that troubles me is not so much how to reform the world at
+large as how to shape one's own individual course aright in the
+actual midst of it. As a single unit of the whole, I want rather
+guidance for my private conduct than a scheme for redressing the
+universal dislocation of things in general. It seems to me, every
+man's first duty is to see that he himself is in the right attitude
+towards society, and afterwards he may proceed to enquire whether
+society is in the right attitude towards him and all its other
+members. But if we were all to begin by redressing ourselves,
+there would be nothing left to redress, I imagine, when we turned
+to attack the second half of our problem. The great difficulty I
+myself experience is this, that _I_ can't discover any adequate
+social justification for my own personal existence. But I really
+oughtn't to bore other people with my private embarrassments upon
+that head.'
+
+'You see,' said Herbert Le Breton, carelessly, 'my brother represents
+the ethical element in the socialist movement, Miss Oswald, while
+Harry represents the political element. Each is valuable in its
+way; but Oswald's is the more practical. You can move great masses
+into demanding their rights; you can't so easily move them into
+cordially recognising their duties. Hammer, hammer, hammer at the
+most obvious abuses; that's the way all the political victories
+are finally won. If I were a radical at all, I should go with you,
+Oswald. But happily I'm not one; I prefer the calm philosophic
+attitude of perfectly objective neutrality.'
+
+'And if I were a radical,' said Berkeley, with a tinge of sadness
+in his voice as he poured himself out a glass of hock, 'I should
+go with Le Breton. But unfortunately I'm not one, Miss Oswald, I'm
+only a parson.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A LITTLE MUSIC.
+
+
+After lunch, Herbert Le Breton went off for his afternoon ride--a
+grave social misdemeanour, Ernest thought it--and Arthur Berkeley
+took Edie round to show her about the college and the shady gardens.
+Ernest would have liked to walk with her himself, for there was
+something in her that began to interest him somewhat; and besides,
+she was so pretty, and so graceful, and so sympathetic: but he
+felt he must not take her away from her host for the time being,
+who had a sort of proprietary right in the pleasing duty of acting
+as showman to her over his own college. So he dropped behind with
+Harry Oswald and old Mrs. Martindale, and endeavoured to simulate
+a polite interest in the old lady's scraps of conversation upon
+the heads of houses, their wives and families.
+
+'This is Addison's Walk, Miss Oswald,' said Berkeley, taking her
+through the gate into the wooded path beside the Cherwell; 'so
+called because the ingenious Mr. Addison is said to have specially
+patronised it. As he was an undergraduate of this college, and a
+singularly lazy person, it's very probable that he really did so;
+every other undergraduate certainly does, for it's the nearest walk
+an idle man can get without ever taking the trouble to go outside
+the grounds of Magdalen.'
+
+'The ingenious Mr. Addison was quite right then,' Edie answered,
+smiling; 'for he couldn't have chosen a lovelier place on earth to
+stroll in. How exquisite it looks just now, with the mellow light
+falling down upon the path through this beautiful autumnal foliage!
+It's just a natural cathedral aisle, with a lot of pale straw-coloured
+glass in the painted windows, like that splendid one we went to
+see the other day at Merton Chapel.'
+
+'Yes, there are certainly tones in that window I never saw in any
+other,' Berkeley said, 'and the walk to-day is very much the same
+in its delicate colouring. You're fond of colour, I should think,
+Miss Oswald, from what you say.'
+
+'Oh, nobody could help being struck by the autumn colouring of the
+Thames valley, I should fancy,' said Edie, blushing. 'We noticed
+it all the way up as we came in the train from Reading, a perfect
+glow of crimson and orange at Pangbourne, Goring, Mapledurham, and
+Nuneham. I always thought the Dart in October the loveliest blaze
+of warm reds and yellows I had ever seen anywhere in nature, but
+the Thames valley beats it hollow, as Harry says. This walk to-day
+is just one's ideal picture of Milton's Vallombrosa.'
+
+'Ah, yes, I always look forward to the first days of October term,'
+said Berkeley, slowly, 'as one of the greatest and purest treats
+in the whole round workaday twelvemonth. When the creeper on the
+Founder's Tower first begins to redden and crimson in the autumn,
+I could sit all day long by my open window, and just look at that
+glorious sight alone instead of having my dinner. But I'm very fond
+of these walks in full summer time too. I often stop up alone all
+through the long (being tied to my curacy here permanently, you
+know), and then I have the run of the place entirely to myself.
+Sometimes I take my flute out, and sit under the shade here and
+compose some of my little pieces.'
+
+'I can easily understand that they were composed here,' said Edie
+quickly. 'They've caught exactly the flavour of the place--especially
+your exquisite little Penseroso.'
+
+'Ah, you know my music, then, Miss Oswald?'
+
+'Oh yes, Harry always brings me home all your pieces whenever he
+comes back at the end of term. I can play every one of them without
+the notes. But the Penseroso is my special favourite.'
+
+'It's mine, too. I'm so glad you like it. But I'm working away at
+a little thing now which you shall hear as soon as I've finished
+it; something lighter and daintier than anything else I've ever
+attempted. I shall call it the Butterfly Canzonet.'
+
+'Why don't you publish your music under your own name, Mr. Berkeley?'
+
+'Oh, because it would never do. I'm a parson now, and I must
+keep up the dignity of the cloth by fighting shy of any aesthetic
+heterodoxies. It would be professional suicide for me to be suspected
+of artistic leanings. All very well in an archdeacon, you know,
+to cultivate his tastes for chants and anthems, but for a simple
+curate!--and secular songs too!--why, it would be sheer contumacy.
+His chances of a living would shrink at once to what your brother
+would call a vanishing quantity.'
+
+'Well, you can't imagine how much I admire your songs and airs,
+Mr. Berkeley. I was so pleased when you invited us, to think I was
+going to lunch with a real composer. There's no music I love so
+much as yours.'
+
+'I'm very glad to hear it, Miss Oswald, I assure you. But I'm only
+a beginner and a trifler yet. Some day I mean to produce something
+that will be worth listening to. Only, do you remember what some
+French novelist once said?--"A poet's sweetest poem is always
+the one he has never been able to compose." I often think that's
+true of music, too. Away up in the higher stories of one's brain
+somewhere, there's a tune floating about, or rather a whole oratorio
+full of them, that one can never catch and fix upon ruled paper.
+The idea's there, such a beautiful and vague idea, so familiar to
+one, but so utterly unrealisable on any known instrument--a sort
+of musical Ariel, flitting before one and tantalising one for
+ever, but never allowing one to come up with it and see its real
+features. I'm always dissatisfied with what I've actually written,
+and longing to crystallise into a score the imaginary airs I can
+never catch. Except in this last piece of mine; that's the only
+thing I've ever done that thoroughly and completely pleases me.
+Come and see me next week, and I'll play it over to you.'
+
+They walked all round the meadows, and back again beside the arches
+of the beautiful bridge, and then returned to Berkeley's rooms once
+more for a cup of afternoon tea, and an air or two of Berkeley's
+own composing. Edie enjoyed the walk and the talk immensely; she
+enjoyed the music even more. In a way, it was all so new to her.
+For though she had always seen much of Harry, and though Harry, who
+was the kindest and proudest of brothers, had always instinctively
+kept her up to his own level of thought and conversation, still,
+she wasn't used to seeing so many intelligent and educated young
+men together, and the novelty of their society was delightfully
+exhilarating to her eager little mind. To a bright girl of nineteen,
+wherever she may come from, the atmosphere of Oxford has a wonderfully
+cheering and stimulating effect; to a country tradesman's daughter
+from a tiny west-country village it is like a little paradise on
+earth with a ceaseless round of intensely enjoyable breakfasts,
+luncheons, dinners, and water-parties.
+
+Ernest, for his part, was not so well pleased. He wanted to have a
+little conversation with Oswald's sister; and he was compelled by
+politeness to give her up in favour of Arthur Berkeley. However, he
+made up for it when he returned, and monopolised the pretty little
+visitor himself for almost the entire tea-hour.
+
+As soon as they had gone, Arthur Berkeley sported his oak, and sat
+down by himself in his comfortable crimson-covered basket chair.
+'I won't let anybody come and disturb me this evening,' he said to
+himself moodily. 'I won't let any of these noisy Magdalen men come
+with their racket and riot to cut off the memory of that bright little
+dream. No desecration after she has gone. Little Miss Butterfly!
+What a pretty, airy, dainty, delicate little morsel it is! How she
+flits, and sips, and natters about every possible subject, just
+touching the tip of it so gracefully with her tiny white fingers,
+and blushing so unfeignedly when she thinks she's paid you a
+compliment, or you've paid her one. How she blushed when she said
+she liked my music! How she blushed when I said she had a splendid
+ear for minute discrimination! Somehow, if I were a falling-in-love
+sort of fellow, I half fancy I could manage to fall in love with her
+on the spot. Or rather, if I were a good analytical psychologist,
+perhaps I ought more correctly to say I AM in love with her already.'
+
+He sat down idly at the piano and played a few bars softly
+to himself--a beautiful, airy sort of melody, as it shaped itself
+vaguely in his head at the moment, with a little of the new wine of
+first love running like a trill through the midst of its fast-flowing
+quavers and dainty undulations. 'That will do,' he said to himself
+approvingly. 'That will do very well; that's little Miss Butterfly.
+Here she flits, flits, flits, flickers, sip, sip, sip, at her
+honeyed flowers; twirl away, whirl away, off in the sunshine--there
+you go, Miss Butterfly, eddying and circling with your painted
+mate. Flirt, flirt, flirt, coquetting and curvetting, in your
+pretty rhythmical aërial quadrille. Down again, down to the hare-bell
+on the hill side; sip at it, sip at it, sip at it, sweet little
+honey-drops, clear little honey-drops, bright little honey-drops;
+oh, for a song to be set to the melody! Tra-la-la, tro-lo-lo, up
+again, Butterfly. Little silk handkerchief, little lace neckerchief,
+fluttering, fluttering! Feathery wings of her, bright little eyes
+of her, flit, flit, flicker! Now, she blushes, blushes, blushes;
+deep crimson; oh, what a colour! Paint it, painter! Now she speaks.
+Oh, what laughter! Silvery, silvery, treble, treble, treble; trill
+away, trill away, silvery treble. Musical, beautiful; beautiful,
+musical; little Miss Butterfly--fly--fly--fly away!' And he brought
+his fingers down upon the gamut at last, with a hasty, flickering
+touch that seemed really as delicate as Edie's own.
+
+'I can never get words for it in English,' he said again, half
+speaking with his parted lips; 'it's too dactylic in rhythm for
+English verse to go to it. Béranger might have written a lilt for
+it, as far as mere syllables go, but Béranger to write about Miss
+Butterfly!--pho, no Frenchman could possibly catch it. Swinburne
+could fit the metres, I dare say, but he couldn't fit the feeling.
+It shall be a song without words, unless I write some Italian lines
+for it myself. Animula, blandula vagula--that's the sort of ring
+for it, but Latin's mostly too heavy. Io, Hymen, Hymenae, Io; Io,
+Hymen, Hymenae! What's that? A wedding song of Catullus--absit omen.
+I must be in love with her indeed.' He got up from the piano, and
+paced quickly and feverishly up and down the room.
+
+'And yet,' he went on, 'if only I weren't bound down so by this
+unprofitable trade of parson! A curate on eighty pounds a year,
+and a few pupils! The presumptuousness of the man in venturing to
+think of falling in love, as if he were actually one of the beneficed
+clergy! What are deacons coming to, I wonder! And yet, hath not a
+deacon eyes; hath not a deacon hands, organs, dimensions, senses,
+affections, passions? If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle
+us, do we not laugh? And if you show us a little Miss Butterfly,
+beautiful to the finger-ends, do we not fall in love with her at
+least as unaffectedly as if we were canons residentiary or rural
+deans? Fancy little Miss Butterfly a rural deaness! the notion's
+too ridiculous. Fly away, little Miss Butterfly; fly away, sweet
+little frolicsome, laughsome creature. I won't try to tie you down
+to a man in a black clerical coat with a very distant hypothetical
+reversionary prospect of a dull and dingy country parsonage. Flit
+elsewhere, little Miss Butterfly, flit elsewhere, and find yourself
+a gayer, gaudier-coloured mate!'
+
+He sat down again, and strummed a few more bars of his half-composed,
+half-extemporised melody. Then he leant back on the music-stool,
+and said gently to himself once more: 'Still, if it were possible,
+how happy I should try to make her! Bright little Miss Butterfly,
+I would try never to let a cold cloud pass chillily over your
+sunshiny head! I would live for you, and work for you, and write
+songs for your sake, all full of you, you, you, and so all full of
+life and grace and thrilling music. What's my life good for, to me
+or to the world? "A clergyman's life is such a useful one," that
+amiable old conventionality gurgled out this morning; what's the
+good of mine, as it stands now, to its owner or to anybody else,
+I should like to know, except the dear old Progenitor? A mere bit
+of cracked blue china, a fanciful air from a comic opera, masquerading
+in black and white as a piece of sacred music! What good am I to
+anyone on earth but the Progenitor (God bless him!), and when he's
+gone, dear old fellow, what on earth shall I have left to live
+for. A selfish blank, that's all. But with HER, ah, how different!
+With her to live for and to cherish, with an object to set before
+oneself as worth one's consideration, what mightn't I do at last?
+Make her happy--after all, that's the great thing. Make her fond
+of my music, that music that floats and evades me now, but would
+harden into scores as if by magic with her to help one to spell it
+out--I know it would, at last, I know it would. Ah, well, perhaps
+some day I may be able; perhaps some day the dream will realise
+itself; till then, work, work, work; let me try to work towards
+making it possible, a living or a livelihood, no matter which. But
+not a breath of it to you meanwhile, Miss Butterfly; flit about
+freely and joyously while you may; I would not spoil your untrammelled
+flight for worlds by trying to tether it too soon around the fixed
+centre of my own poor doubtful diaconal destinies.'
+
+At the same moment while Arthur Berkeley was thus garrulously conversing
+with his heated fancy, Harry and Edie Oswald were strolling lazily
+down the High, to Edie's lodgings.
+
+'Well, what do you think now of Berkeley and Le Breton, Edie?'
+asked her brother. 'Which of them do you like the best?'
+
+'I like them both immensely, Harry; I really can't choose between
+them. When Mr. Berkeley plays, he almost makes me fall in love with
+him; and when Mr. Le Breton talks, he almost makes me transfer my
+affections to him instead... But Mr. Berkeley plays divinely... And
+Mr. Le Breton talks beautifully... You know, I've never seen such
+clever men before--except you, of course, Harry dear, for you're
+cleverer and nicer than anybody. Oh, do let me look at those lovely
+silks over there?' And she danced across the road before he could
+answer her, like a tripping sylph in a painter's dreamland.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton's very nice,' she went on, after she had duly examined
+and classified the silks, 'but I don't exactly understand what it
+is he's got on his conscience.'
+
+'Nothing whatsoever, except the fact of his own existence,' Harry
+answered with a laugh. 'He has conscientious scruples against the
+existence of idle people in the community--do-nothings and eat-alls--and
+therefore he has conscientious scruples against himself for not
+immediately committing suicide. I believe, if he did exactly what
+he thought was abstractly right, he'd go away and cut his own throat
+incontinently for an unprofitable, unproductive, useless citizen.'
+
+'Oh, dear, I hope he'll do nothing of the sort,' cried Edie hastily.
+'I think I shall really ask him not to for my sake, if not for
+anybody else's.'
+
+'He'd be very much flattered indeed by your interposition on his
+behalf, no doubt, Popsy; but I'm afraid it wouldn't produce much
+effect upon his ultimate decision.'
+
+'Tell me, Harry, is Mr. Berkeley High Church?'
+
+'Oh dear no, I shouldn't say so. I don't suppose he ever gave the
+subject a single moment's consideration.'
+
+'But St. Fredegond's is very High Church, I'm told.'
+
+'Ah, yes; but Berkeley's curate of St. Fredegond's, not in virtue
+of his theology--I never heard he'd got any to speak of--but in
+virtue of his musical talents. He went into the Church, I suppose,
+on purely aesthetic grounds. He liked a musical service, and it
+seemed natural to him to take part in one, just as it seemed natural
+to a mediaeval Italian with artistic tendencies to paint Madonnas
+and St. Sebastians. There's nothing more in his clerical coat than
+that, I fancy, Edie. He probably never thought twice about it on
+theological grounds.'
+
+'Oh, but that's very wrong of him, Harry. I don't mean having
+no particular theological beliefs, of course; one expects that
+nowadays; but going into the Church without them.'
+
+'Well, you see, Edie, you mustn't judge Berkeley in quite the same
+way as you'd judge other people. In his mind, the aesthetic side
+is always uppermost; the logical side is comparatively in abeyance.
+Questions of creed, questions of philosophical belief, questions
+of science don't interest him at all; he looks at all of them from
+the point of view of the impression alone. What he sees in the
+Church is not a body of dogmas, like the High Churchmen, nor a set
+of opinions, like the Low Churchmen, but a close corporation of
+educated and cultivated gentlemen, charged with the duty of caring
+for a number of beautiful mediaeval architectural monuments,
+and of carrying on a set of grand and impressive musical or oral
+services. To him, a cathedral is a magnificent historical heritage;
+a sermon is a sort of ingenious literary exercise; and a hymn is
+a capital vehicle for very solemn emotional music. That's all; and
+we can hardly blame him for not seeing these things as we should
+see them.'
+
+'Well, Harry, I don't know. I like them both immensely. Mr.
+Berkeley's very nice, but perhaps I like Mr. Le Breton the best
+of the two.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ASKELON VILLA, GATH.
+
+
+Number, 28, Epsilon Terrace, Bayswater, was one of the very smallest
+houses that a person with any pretensions to move in that Society
+which habitually spells itself with a capital initial could ever
+possibly have dreamt of condescending to inhabit. Indeed, if
+Dame Eleanor, relict of the late Sir Owen Le Breton, Knight, had
+consulted merely the length of her purse and the interests of her
+personal comfort, she would doubtless have found for the same rental
+a far more convenient and roomy cottage in Upper Clapton or Stoke
+Newington. But Lady Le Breton was a thoroughly and conscientiously
+religious woman, who in all things consulted first and foremost
+the esoteric interests of her ingrained creed. It was a prime
+article of this cherished social faith that nobody with any shadow
+of personal self-respect could endure to live under any other
+postal letter than W. or S.W. Better not to be at all than to drag
+out a miserable existence in the painful obscurity of N. or S.E.
+Happily for people situated like Lady Le Breton, the metropolitan
+house-contractor (it would be gross flattery to describe him
+as a builder) has divined, with his usual practical sagacity, the
+necessity for supplying this felt want for eligible family residences
+at once comparatively cheap and relatively fashionable. By driving
+little culs-de-sac and re-entrant alleys at the back of his larger
+rows of shoddy mansions, he is enabled to run up a smaller terrace,
+or crescent, or place, as the case may be, composed of tiny shallow
+cottages with the narrowest possible frontage, and the tallest
+possible elevation, which will yet entitle their occupiers to feel
+themselves within the sacred pale of social salvation, in the blest
+security of the mystic W. Narrowest, shallowest, and tallest of
+these marginal Society residences is the little block of blank-faced,
+stucco-fronted, porticoed rabbit-hutches, which blazons itself
+forth in the Court Guide under the imposing designation of Epsilon
+Terrace, Bayswater.
+
+The interior of No. 28 in this eminently respectable back alley was
+quite of a piece, it must be confessed, with the vacant Philistinism
+of its naked exterior. 'Mother has really an immense amount of
+taste,' Herbert Le Breton used to say, blandly, 'and all of it of
+the most atrocious description; she picked it up, I believe, when
+my poor father was quartered at Lahore, a station absolutely fatal
+to the aesthetic faculties; and she will never get rid of it again
+as long as she lives.' Indeed, when once Lady Le Breton got anything
+whatsoever into her head, it was not easy for anybody else to get
+it out again; you might much more readily expect to draw one of her
+double teeth than to eliminate one of her pet opinions. Not that
+she was a stupid or a near-sighted woman--the mother of clever
+sons never is--but she was a perfectly immovable rock of social
+and political orthodoxy. The three Le Breton boys--for there was
+a third at home--would gladly have reformed the terrors of that
+awful drawing-room if they had dared; but they knew it was as much
+as their places were worth, Herbert said, to attempt a remonstrance,
+and they wisely left it alone, and said nothing.
+
+Of course the house was not vulgarly furnished, at least in the
+conventional sense of the word; Lady Le Breton was far too rigid
+in her social orthodoxy to have admitted into her rooms anything
+that savoured of what she considered bad form, according to her
+lights. It was only vulgar with the underlying vulgarity of mere
+tasteless fashionable uniformity. There was nothing in it that any
+well-bred footman could object to; nothing that anybody with one
+grain of genuine originality could possibly tolerate. The little
+occasional chairs and tables set casually about the room were of
+the strictest négligé Belgravian type, a sort of studied protest
+against the formal stiffness of the ordinary unused middle-class
+drawing-room. The portrait of the late Sir Owen in the wee library,
+presented by his brother-officers, was painted by that distinguished
+R. A., Sir Francis Thomson, a light of the middle of this century;
+and an excellent work of art it was too, in its own solemn academic
+kind. The dining-room, tiny as it was, possessed that inevitable
+Canaletti without which no gentleman's dining-room in England
+is ever considered to be complete. Everything spoke at once the
+stereotyped Society style of a dozen years ago (before Mr. Morris
+had reformed the outer aspect of the West End), entirely free from
+anything so startling or indecorous as a gleam of spontaneity in
+the possessor's mind. To be sure, it was very far indeed from the
+centre round-table and brilliant-flowered-table-cover style of the
+utter unregenerate Philistine household; but it was further still
+from the simple natural taste acd graceful fancy of Edie Oswald's
+cosy little back parlour behind the village grocer's shop at
+Calcombe-Pomeroy.
+
+The portrait and the Canaletti were relics of Lady Le Breton's best
+days, when Sir Owen was alive, and the boys were still in their
+first babyhood. Sir Owen was an Indian officer of the old school,
+a simple-minded, gentle, brave man, very religious after his
+own fashion, and an excellent soldier, with the true Anglo-Indian
+faculty for administration and organisation. It was partly from
+him, no doubt, that the boys inherited their marked intelligence;
+and it was wholly from him, beyond any doubt at all, that Ernest
+and his younger brother Ronald inherited their moral or religious
+sincerity--for that was an element in which poor formally orthodox
+Lady Le Breton was wholly deficient. The good General had been
+brought up in the strictest doctrines of the Clapham sect; he had
+gone to India young, as a cadet from Haileybury; and he had applied
+his intellect all his life long rather to the arduous task of
+extending 'the blessings of British rule' to Sikhs and Ghoorkas, than
+to those abstract ethical or theological questions which agitated
+the souls of a later generation. If a new district had to be
+assimilated in settlement to the established model of the British
+raj, if a tribe of hill-savages had to be conciliated by gentler
+means than rifles or bayonets, if a difficult bit of diplomatic
+duty had to be performed on the debateable frontiers, Sir Owen Le
+Breton was always the person chosen to undertake it. An earnest,
+honest, God-fearing man he remained to the end, impressed by a
+profound sense of duty as he understood it, and a firm conviction
+that his true business in life consisted in serving his Queen and
+country, and in bringing more and more of the native populations
+within the pale of the Company's empire, and the future evangelisation
+that was ultimately to follow. But during the great upheaval of
+the Mutiny, he fell at the head of his own unrevolted regiment in
+one of the hottest battles of that terrible time, and my Lady Le
+Breton found herself left alone with three young children, on little
+more than the scanty pension of a general officer's widow on the
+late Company's establishment.
+
+Happily, enough remained to bring up the boys, with the aid
+of their terminable annuities (which fell in on their attaining
+their majority), in decent respect for the feelings and demands of
+exacting Society; and as the two elder were decidedly clever boys,
+they managed to get scholarships at Oxford, which enabled them
+to tide over the dangerous intermediate period as far as their
+degree. Herbert then stepped at once into a fellowship and sundry
+other good things of like sort; and Ernest was even now trying to
+follow in his brother's steps, in this particular. Only the youngest
+boy, Ronald, still remained quite unprovided for. Ronald was a
+tall, pale, gentle, weakly, enthusiastic young fellow of nineteen,
+with so marked a predisposition to lung disease that it had not been
+thought well to let him run the chance of over-reading himself; and
+so he had to be content with remaining at home in the uncongenial
+atmosphere of Epsilon Terrace, instead of joining his two elder
+brothers at the university. Uncongenial, because Ronald alone
+followed Sir Owen in the religious half of his nature, and found
+the 'worldliness' and conventionality of his unflinching mother a
+serious bar to his enjoyment of home society.
+
+'Ronald,' said my lady, at the breakfast-table on the very morning
+of Arthur Berkeley's little luncheon party, 'here's a letter for
+you from Mackenzie and Anderson. No doubt your Aunt Sarah's will
+has been recovered and proved at last, and I hope it'll turn out
+satisfactory, as we wish it.'
+
+'For my part, I really almost hope it won't, mother,' said Ronald,
+turning it over; 'for I don't want to be compelled to profit by
+Ernest's excessive generosity. He's too good to me, just because he
+thinks me the weaker vessel; but though we must bear one another's
+burdens, you know, we should each bear his own cross as well,
+shouldn't we, mother?'
+
+'Well, it can't be much in any case,' said his mother, a little
+testily, 'whoever gets it. Open the envelope at once, my boy, and
+don't stand looking at it like a goose in that abstracted way.'
+
+'Oh, mother, she was my father's only sister, and I'm not in such
+a hurry to find out how she has disposed of her mere perishing
+worldly goods,' answered Ronald, gravely. 'It seems to me a terrible
+thing that before poor dear good Aunt Sarah is cold in her grave
+almost, we should be speculating and conjecturing as to what she
+has done with her poor little trifle of earthly riches.'
+
+'It's always usual to read the will immediately after the funeral,'
+said Lady Le Breton, firmly, to whom the ordinary usage of society
+formed an absolutely unanswerable argument; 'and how you, Ronald,
+who haven't even the common decency to wear a bit of crape around
+your arm for her--a thing that Ernest himself, with all his
+nonsensical theories, consents to do--can talk in that absurd way
+about what's quite right and proper to be done, I for my part,
+really can't imagine.'
+
+'Ah, but you know, mother, I object to wearing crape on the ground
+that it isn't allowable for us to sorrow as them that have no hope:
+and I'm sure I'm paying no disrespect to dear Aunt Sarah's memory
+in this matter, for she was always the first herself, you remember,
+to wish that I should follow the dictates of my own conscience.'
+
+'I remember she always upheld you in acts of opposition to your own
+mother, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton said coldly, 'and I suppose you're
+going to do honour to her religious precepts now by not opening
+that letter when your mother tells you to do so. In MY Bible, sir,
+I find a place for the Fourth Commandment.'
+
+Ronald looked at her gently and unreprovingly; but though a quiet
+smile played involuntarily around the corners of his mouth, he
+resisted the natural inclination to correct her mistake, and to
+suggest blandly that she probably alluded to the fifth. He knew
+he must turn his left cheek also--a Christian virtue which he had
+abundant opportunities of practising in that household; and he felt
+that to score off his mother for such a verbal mistake as the one
+she had just made would not be in keeping with the spirit of the
+commandment to which, no doubt, she meant to refer him. So without
+another word he opened the envelope and glanced rapidly at the
+contents of the letter it enclosed.
+
+'They've found the second will,' he said, after a moment, with a
+rather husky voice, 'and they're taking steps to get it confirmed,
+whatever that may be.'
+
+'Broad Scotch for getting probate, I believe,' said Lady Le Breton,
+in a slight tone of irony; for to her mind any departure from the
+laws or language she was herself accustomed to use, assumed at once
+the guise of a rank and offensive provincialism. 'Your poor Aunt
+WOULD go and marry a Scotchman, and he a Scotch business man too;
+so of course we must expect to put up with all kinds of ridiculous
+technicalities and Edinburgh jargon accordingly. All law's bad
+enough in the way of odd words, but commend me to Scotch law for
+utter and meaningless incomprehensibility. Well, and what does
+the second will say, Ronald?'
+
+'There, mother,' cried Ronald, flinging the letter down hurriedly
+with a burst of tears. 'Read it yourself, if you will, for I can't.
+Poor dear Aunt Sarah, and dear, good unselfish Ernest! It makes me
+cry even to think of them.'
+
+Lady Le Breton took the paper up from the table without a word and
+read it carefully through. 'I am very glad to hear it,' she said,
+'very glad indeed to hear it. "And in order to guard against any
+misinterpretation of my reasons for making this disposition of my
+property," your Aunt says, "I wish to put it on record that I had
+previously drawn up another will, bequeathing my effects to be divided
+between my two nephews Ernest and Ronald Le Breton equally; that I
+communicated the contents of that will"--a horrid Scotticism--"to
+my nephew Ernest; and that at his express desire I have now revoked
+it, and drawn up this present testament, leaving the share intended
+for him to his brother Ronald." Why, she never even mentions dear
+Herbert!'
+
+'She knew that Herbert had provided for himself,' Ronald answered,
+raising his head from his hands, 'while Ernest and I were unprovided
+for. But Ernest said he could fight the world for himself, while
+I couldn't; and that unearned wealth ought only to be accepted
+in trust for those who were incapacitated by nature or misfortune
+from earning their own bread. I don't always quite agree with
+all Ernest's theories any more than you do, but we must both admit
+that at least he always conscientiously acts up to them himself,
+mother, mustn't we?'
+
+'It's a very extraordinary thing,' Lady Le Breton went on, 'that Aunt
+Sarah invariably encouraged both you boys in all your absurdities
+and Quixotisms. She was Quixotic herself at heart, that's the truth
+of it, just like your poor dear father. I remember once, when we
+were quartered at Meean Meer in the Punjaub, poor dear Sir Owen
+nearly got into disgrace with the colonel--he was only a sub. in
+those days--because he wanted to go trying to convert his syces,
+which was a most imprudent thing to do, and directly opposed to
+the Company's orders. Aunt Sarah was just the same. Herbert's the
+only one of you three who has never given me one moment's anxiety,
+and of course poor Herbert must be passed over in absolute silence.
+However, I'm very glad she's left the money to you, Ronald, as
+you need it the most, and Mackenzie and Anderson say it'll come to
+about a hundred and sixty a year.'
+
+'One can do a great deal of good with that much money,' said Ronald
+meditatively. 'I mean, after arranging with you, mother, for the
+expenses of my maintenance at home, which of course I shall do, as
+soon as the pension ceases, and after meeting one's own necessary
+expenditure in the way of clothing and so forth. It's more than
+any one Christian man ought to spend upon himself, I'm sure.'
+
+'It's not at all too much for a young man in your position in
+society, Ronald; but there--I know you'll want to spend half of
+it on indiscriminate charity. However, there'll be time enough to
+talk about that when you've actually got it, thank goodness.'
+
+Ronald murmured a few words softly to himself, of which Lady Le
+Breton only caught the last echo--'laid them down at the apostles'
+feet; and distribution was made unto every man according as he had
+need.'
+
+'Just like Ernest's communistic notions,' she murmured in return,
+half audibly. 'I do declare, between them both, a plain woman hardly
+knows whether she's standing on her head or on her heels. I live
+in daily fear that one or other of them will be taken up by the
+police, for being implicated in some dynamite plot or other, to blow
+up the Queen or destroy the Houses of Parliament.' Ronald smiled
+again, gently, but answered nothing. 'There's another letter for
+you there, though, with the Exmoor coronet upon it. Why don't you
+open it? I hope it's an invitation for you to go down and stop at
+Dunbude for a week or two. Nothing on earth would do you so much
+good as to get away for a while from your ranters and canters, and
+mix occasionally in a little decent and rational society.'
+
+Ronald took up the second letter with a sigh. He feared as much
+himself, and had doleful visions of a painful fortnight to be
+spent in a big country house, where the conversation would be all
+concerning the slaughter of pheasants and the torture of foxes,
+which his soul loathed to listen to. 'It's from Lady Hilda,' he
+said, glancing through it, 'and it ISN'T an invitation after all.'
+He could hardly keep down a faint tone of gratification as he
+discovered this reprieve. 'Here's what she says:--
+
+'"DEAR MR. LE BRETON,--Mamma wishes me to write and tell you that
+Lynmouth's tutor, Mr. Walsh, is going to leave us at Christmas,
+and she thinks it just possible that one of your two brothers at
+Oxford might like to come down to Dunbude and give us their kind
+aid in taking charge of Lynmouth. He's a dreadful pickle, as you
+know; but we are very anxious to get somebody to look after him in
+whom mamma can have perfect confidence. We don't know your brothers'
+addresses or we would have written to them direct about it. Perhaps
+you will kindly let them hear this suggestion; and if they think
+the matter worth while, we might afterwards arrange details as to
+business and so forth. With kind regards to Lady Le Breton, believe
+me,
+
+'"Yours very sincerely,
+
+'"HILDA TREGELLIS."'
+
+'My dear Ronald,' said Lady Le Breton, much more warmly than before,
+'this is really quite providential. Are they at Dunbude now?'
+
+'No, mother. She writes from Wilton Place. They're up in town for
+Lord Exmoor's gout, I know. I heard they were on Sunday.'
+
+'Then I shall go and see Lady Exmoor this very morning about it.
+It's exactly the right place for Ernest. A little good society
+will get rid of all his nonsensical notions in a month or two. He's
+lived too exclusively among his radical set at Oxford. And then
+it'll be such a capital thing for him to be in the house continually
+with Hilda; she's a girl of such excellent tone. I fancy--I'm not
+quite sure, but I fancy--that Ernest has a decided taste for the
+company of people, and even of young girls, who are not in Society.
+He's so fond of that young man Oswald, who Herbert tells me is
+positively the son of a grocer--yes, I'm sure he said a grocer!--and
+it seems, from what Herbert writes me, that this Oswald has brought
+a sister of his up this term from behind the counter, on purpose
+to set her cap at Ernest. Now you boys have, unfortunately, no
+sisters, and therefore you haven't seen as much of girls of a good
+stamp--not daily and domestically I mean--as is desirable for you,
+from the point of view of Society. But if Ernest can only be induced
+to take this tutorship at the Exmoors', he'll have an opportunity
+of meeting daily with a really nice girl, like Hilda; and though
+of course it isn't likely that Hilda would take a fancy to her
+brother's tutor--the Exmoors are such VERY conservative people
+in matters of rank and wealth and family and so forth--quite
+un-Christianly so, I consider--yet it can't fail to improve Ernest's
+tone a great deal, and raise his standard of female society generally.
+It's really a very distressing thought to me, Ronald, that all my
+boys, except dear Herbert, should show such a marked preference for
+low and vulgar companionship. It seems to me, you both positively
+prefer as far as possible the society of your natural inferiors.
+There's Ernest must go and take up with the friendship of that
+snuffy old German Socialist glass-cutter; while you are always
+running after your Plymouth Brethren and your Bible Christians,
+and your other ignorant fanatical people, instead of going with
+me respectably to St. Alphege's to hear the dear Archdeacon! It's
+very discouraging to a mother, really, very discouraging.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+DOWN THE RIVER.
+
+
+'Berkeley couldn't come to-day, Le Breton: it's Thursday, of
+course: I forgot about it altogether,' Oswald said, on the barge
+at Salter's. 'You know he pays a mysterious flying visit to town
+every Thursday afternoon--to see an imprisoned lady-love, I always
+tell him.'
+
+'It's very late in the season for taking ladies on the water, Miss
+Oswald,' said Ernest, putting his oar into the rowlock, and secretly
+congratulating himself on the deliverance; 'but better go now than
+not see Iffley church and Nuneham woods at all. You ought to have
+come up in summer term, and let us have the pleasure of showing you
+over the place when it was in its full leafy glory. May's decidedly
+the time to see Oxford to the greatest advantage.'
+
+'So Harry tells me, and he wanted me to come up then, but it wasn't
+convenient for them at home to spare me just at that moment, so I
+was obliged to put it off till late in the autumn. I have to help
+my mother a good deal in the house, you know, and I can't always
+go dancing about the world whenever I should like to. Which string
+must I pull, Harry, to make her turn into the middle of the river?
+She always seems to twist round the exact way I don't want her to.'
+
+'Right, right, hard right,' cried Harry irom the bow--they were in
+a tub pair bound down the river for Iffley. 'Keep to the Oxfordshire
+shore as far as the willows; then cross over to the Berkshire. Le
+Breton'll tell you when and where to change sides; he knows the
+river as well as I do.'
+
+'That'll do splendidly for the present,' Ernest said, looking
+ahead over his shoulder. 'Mind the flags there; don't go too near
+the corner. You certainly ought to see these meadows in early
+spring, when the fritillaries are all out over the spongy places,
+Miss Oswald. Has your brother ever sent you any of the fritillaries?'
+
+'What? snake-heads? Oh, boxes full of them. They're lovely flowers,
+but not lovelier than our own Devonshire daffodils. You should see
+a Devonshire water-meadow in April! Why don't you come down some
+time to Calcombe Pomeroy? It's the dearest little peaceful seaside
+corner in all England.'
+
+Harry bit his lip, for he was not over-fond of bringing people down
+to spy out his domestic sanctities; but Ernest answered cordially,
+'I should like it above everything in the world, Miss Oswald. If
+you will let me, I certainly shall as soon as possible. Mind, quick,
+get out of the way of that practising eight, or we shall foul her!
+Left, as hard as you can! That'll do. The cox was getting as red
+as a salamander, till he saw it was a lady steering. When coxes
+catch a man fouling them, their language is apt to be highly
+unparliamentary.--Yes, I shall try to get away to Calcombe as soon
+as ever I can manage to leave Oxford. It wouldn't surprise me if
+I were to run down and spend Christmas there.'
+
+'You'd find it as dull as ditch-water at Christmas, Le Breton,'
+said Harry. 'Much better wait till next summer.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't think so, Harry dear,' Edie interrupted, with that
+tell-tale blush of hers. 'If Mr. Le Breton wants to come then, I
+believe he'd really find it quite delightful. Of course he wouldn't
+expect theatres, or dances, or anything like that, in a country
+village; and we're dreadfully busy just about Christmas day itself,
+sending out orders, and all that sort of thing,'--Harry bit his
+lip again:--'but if you don't mind a very quiet place and a very
+quiet time, Mr. Le Breton, I don't think myself our cliffs ever look
+grander, or our sea more impressive, than in stormy winter weather.'
+
+'I wish to goodness she wasn't so transparently candid and guileless,'
+thought Harry to himself. 'I never CAN teach her duly to respect
+the prejudices of Pi. Not that it matters twopence to Le Breton,
+of course: but if she talks that way to any of the other men here,
+they'll be laughing in every common-room in Oxford over my Christmas
+raisins and pounds of sugar--commonplace cynics that they are.
+I must tell her about it the moment we get home again, and adjure
+her by all that's holy not to repeat the indiscretion.'
+
+'A penny for your thoughts, Harry,' cried Edie, seeing by his look
+that she had somehow vexed him. 'What are you thinking of?'
+
+'Thinking that all Oxford men are horrid cynics,' said Harry, boldly
+shaming the devil.
+
+'Why are they?' Edie asked.
+
+'I suppose because it's an inexpensive substitute for wit or
+intellect,' Harry answered. 'Indeed, I'm a bit of a cynic myself,
+I believe, for the same reason and on strictly economical principles.
+It saves one the trouble of having any intelligible or original
+opinion of one's own upon any subject.'
+
+Below Iffley Lock they landed for half an hour, in order to give
+Edie time for a pencil sketch of the famous old Norman church-tower,
+with its quaint variations on the dog-tooth ornament, and its
+ancient cross and mouldering yew-tree behind. Harry sat below in
+the boat, propped on the cushions, reading the last number of the
+'Nineteenth Century;' Ernest and Edie took their seat upon the
+bank above, and had a first chance of an unbroken tête-à-tête.
+
+'How delicious to live in Oxford always!' said Edie, sketching in
+the first outline of the great round arches. 'I would give anything
+to have the opportunity of settling here for life. Some day I shall
+make Harry set up house, and bring me up here as his housekeeper:--I
+mean,' she added with a blush, thinking of Harry's warning look
+just before, 'as soon as they can spare me from home.' She purposely
+avoided saying 'when they retire from business,' the first phrase
+that sprang naturally to her simple little lips. 'Let me see, Mr.
+Le Breton; you haven't got any permanent appointment here yourself,
+have you?'
+
+'Oh no,' Ernest answered: 'no appointment of any sort at all, Miss
+Oswald. I'm loitering up casually on the look-out for a fellowship.
+I've been in for two or three already, but haven't got them.'
+
+'Why didn't you?' asked Edie, with a look of candid surprise.
+
+'I suppose I wasn't clever enough,' Ernest answered simply. 'Not
+so clever, I mean, as the men who actually got them.'
+
+'Oh, but you MUST be,' Edie replied confidently; 'and a great deal
+cleverer, too, I'm sure. I know you must, because Harry told me
+you were one of the very cleverest men in the whole 'Varsity. And
+besides, I see you are, myself. And Harry says most of the men who
+get fellowships are really great donkeys.'
+
+'Harry must have been talking in one of those cynical moods he
+told us about,' said Ernest, laughing. 'At any rate, the examiners
+didn't feel satisfied with my papers, and I've never got a fellowship
+yet. Perhaps they thought my political economy just a trifle too
+advanced for them.'
+
+'You may depend upon it, that's it,' said Edie, jumping at the
+conclusion with the easy omniscience of a girl of nineteen. 'Next
+time, make your political economy a little more moderate, you
+know, without any sacrifice of principle, just to suit them. What
+fellowship are you going in for now?'
+
+'Pembroke, in November.'
+
+'Oh, I do hope you'll get it.'
+
+'Thank you very much. So do I. It would be very nice to have one.'
+
+'But of course it won't matter so much to you as it did to Harry.
+Your family are such very great people, aren't they?'
+
+Ernest smiled a broad smile at her delicious simplicity. 'If by
+very great people you mean rich,' he said, 'we couldn't very well
+be poorer--for people of our sort, I mean. My mother lives almost
+entirely on her pension; and we boys have only been able to come
+up to Oxford, just as Harry was, by the aid of our scholarships. If
+we hadn't saved in our first two years, while we had our government
+allowances, we shouldn't have been able to stop up for our degrees
+at all. So if I don't get a fellowship I shall have to take
+to school-mastering or something of the sort, for a livelihood.
+Indeed, this at Pembroke will be my very last chance, for I can't
+hold on much longer.'
+
+'And if you got a fellowship you could never marry, could you?'
+asked Edie, going on with her work.
+
+'Not, while I held it, certainly. But I wouldn't hold it long. I
+regard it only as a makeshift for a time. Unhappily, I don't know
+how to earn my own bread by the labour of my hands, as I think we
+ought all to do in a well-constituted society; so unless I choose
+to starve (about the rightfulness of which I don't feel quite certain),
+I MUST manage somehow to get over the interval. But as soon as I
+could I would try to find some useful work to do, in which I could
+repay society the debt I owe it for my bringing up. You see, I've
+been fed and educated by a Government grant, which of course came
+out of the taxes--your people have had to help, whether they would
+or not, in paying for my board and lodging--and I feel that I owe
+it as a duty to the world to look out some employment in which I
+could really repay it for the cost of my maintenance.'
+
+'How funnily you do look at everything, Mr. Le Breton,' said Edie.
+'It would never have struck me to think of a pension from the army
+in that light. And yet of course it's the right light; only we don't
+most of us take the trouble to go to the bottom of things, as you
+do. But what will you do if you don't get the fellowship?'
+
+'In that case, I've just heard from my mother that she would like
+me to take a tutorship at Lord Exmoor's,' Ernest answered. 'Lynmouth,
+their eldest son, was my junior at school by six or seven years,
+and now he's going to prepare for Christ Church. I don't quite know
+whether it's a right place for me to accept or not; but I shall ask
+Max Schurz about it, if I don't get Pembroke. I always take Herr
+Max's advice in all questions of conscience, for I'm quite sure
+whatever he approves of is the thing one ought to do for the greatest
+good of humanity.'
+
+'Harry told me about Herr Schurz,' Edie said, filling in the details
+of the doorway. 'He thinks him a very earnest, self-convinced,
+good old man, but a terrible revolutionist. For my part, I believe
+I rather like revolutionists, provided, of course, they don't cut
+off people's heads. Harry made me read Carlyle, and I positively
+fell in love with Camille Desmoulins; only I don't really think he
+ought to have approved of QUITE so much guillotining, do you? But
+why shouldn't you take the tutorship at the Exmoors'?'
+
+'Oh, because it isn't a very useful work in the world to prepare a
+young hereditary loafer like Lynmouth for going to Christ Church.
+Lynmouth will be just like his father when he grows up--an amiable
+wholesale partridge-slayer; and I don't see that the world at large
+will be any the better or the worse off for his being able to grope
+his way somehow through two plays of Sophocles and the first six
+books of Euclid. If only one were a shoemaker now! What a delightful
+thing to sit down at the end of a day and say to oneself, "I have
+made two pairs of good, honest boots for a fellow-mortal this
+week, and now I deserve to have my supper!" Still, it'll be better,
+anyway, than doing nothing at all, and living off my mother.'
+
+'If you went to Dunbude, when would you go?'
+
+'After the Christmas vacation, I suppose, from what Lady Hilda
+says.'
+
+'Lady Hilda? Oh, so there's a sister, is there?'
+
+'Yes. A very pretty girl, about twenty, I should say, and rather
+clever too, I believe. My mother knows them a little.'
+
+Poor little Edie! What made her heart jump so at the mere mention
+of Lady Hilda? and what made the last few strokes at the top
+of the broken yew-tree look so very weak and shaky? How absurd of
+herself, she thought, to feel so much moved at hearing that there
+was another girl in the world whom Ernest might possibly fall in
+love with! And yet she had never even seen Ernest only ten days
+ago! Lady Hilda! What a grand name, to be sure, and what a grand
+person she must be. And then Ernest himself belonged by birth to
+the same class! For in poor little Edie's mind, innocent as she was
+of the nice distinctions of the peerage, Lady So-and-So was Lady
+So-and-So still, whoever she might be, from the wife of a premier
+marquis to the wife of the latest created knight bachelor. To
+her, Lady Hilda Tregellis and Lady Le Breton were both 'ladies of
+title'; and the difference between their positions, which seemed
+so immense to Ernest, seemed nothing at all to the merry little
+country girl who sat sketching beside him. After all, how could
+she ever have even vaguely fancied that such a young man as Ernest,
+in spite of all his socialistic whims, would ever dream of caring
+for a girl of the people like her? No doubt he would go to the
+Exmoors', fall naturally in love with Lady Hilda, and marry decorously
+in what Edie considered his own proper sphere of life! She went
+on with the finishing touches of her little picture in silence, and
+folded it up into the tiny portfolio at last with a half-uttered
+sigh. So her poor wee castle in the air was knocked down before
+she had begun to build it up in any real seriousness, and she turned
+to join Harry in the boat almost without speaking.
+
+'I hope you'll get the Pembroke fellowship,' she said again, a
+little later, as they rowed onward down the river to Nuneham. 'But
+in any case, Mr. Le Breton, you mustn't forget you've half promised
+to come and look us up at Calcombe Pomeroy in the Christmas vacation.'
+
+Ernest smiled, and nodded acquiescence.
+
+Meanwhile, on that same Thursday afternoon, Arthur Berkeley had
+gone up from Oxford by the fast train to Paddington, as was his
+weekly wont, and had dived quickly down one of the small lanes that
+open out from the left-hand side of Praed Street. He walked along
+it for a little way, humming an air to himself as he went, and
+then stopped at last in front of a small, decent brick house, with
+a clean muslin blind across the window (clean muslin forms a notable
+object in most London back streets), and a printed card hanging from
+the central pane, bearing the inscription, 'G. Berkeley, Working
+Shoemaker.--The Trade supplied with Ready-closed Uppers.' At the
+window a beaming face was watching for his appearance, and Arthur
+said to himself as he saw it through the curtain, 'The dear old
+Progenitor's looking better again this week, God bless him!' In a
+moment he had opened the door, and greeted his father in the old
+boyish fashion, with an honest kiss on either cheek. They had kissed
+one another so whenever they met from Arthur's childhood upward;
+and the Oxford curate had never felt himself grown too much of a
+man to keep up a habit which seemed to him by far the most sacred
+thing in his whole existence.
+
+'Well, father dear, I needn't ask you how you are to-day,' said
+Arthur, seating himself comfortably in the second easy-chair of
+the trim little workshop parlour. 'I can see at once you're a good
+deal better. Any more pain in the head and eyes, eh, or any trouble
+about the forehead?'
+
+The old shoemaker passed his hand over his big, bulging brow, bent
+outward as it is so often in men of his trade by the constant habit
+of stooping over their work, and said briskly, 'No, Artie, my boy,
+not a sign of it this week--not a single sign of it. I've been
+taking a bit of holiday, you see, and it's done me a lot of good,
+I can tell you;--made me feel another man entirely. I've been
+playing my violin till the neighbours began to complain of it; and
+if I hadn't asked them to come and hear me tune up a bit, I really
+believe they'd have been having me up before the magistrate for a
+public nuisance.'
+
+'That's right, Daddy dear; I'm always glad when you've been having
+a little music. It does you more good than anything. And the jelly--I
+hope you've eaten the jelly?'
+
+'Oh, I've eaten it right enough, Artie, thank your dear heart;
+and the soup too, dearie. Came by a boy from Walters's every day,
+addressed to "Berkeley, Esquire, 42 Whalley Street;" and the boy
+wouldn't leave it the first day, because he thought there must
+have been a mistake about the address. His contention was that a
+journeyman shoemaker wasn't an esquire; and my contention was that
+the "Berkeley" was essential, and the "Esquire" accidental, which
+was beyond his logic, bless you, Artie; for I've often noticed, my
+son, that your errand-boy is a naturally illogical and contradictory
+creature. Now, shoemakers aren't, you know. I've always taken a just
+pride in the profession, and I've always asserted that it develops
+logic; it develops logic, Artie, or else why are all cobblers good
+Liberals, I should like to know? Eh, can you tell me that; with
+all your Oxford training, sir, can you tell me that?'
+
+'It develops logic beyond the possibility of a doubt. Daddy;
+and it develops a good kind heart as well,' said Arthur, smiling.
+'And it develops musical taste, and literary talent, and a marked
+predilection for the beautiful in art and nature. In fact, whenever
+I meet a good man of any sort, anywhere, I always begin now by
+inquiring which of his immediate ancestors can have been a journeyman
+shoemaker. Depend upon it, Daddy, there's nothing like leather.'
+
+'There you are, poking fun at your poor old Progenitor again,' said
+the old cobbler, with a merry twinkle in the corner of his eye.
+'If it weren't for the jelly, and the natural affections always
+engendered by shoemaking, I think I should almost feel inclined to
+cut you off with a shilling, Artie, my boy--to cut you off with a
+shilling. Well, Artie, I'm quite convalescent now (don't you call
+it? I'm afraid of my long shoemaker's words before you, nowadays,
+you've grown so literary; for I suppose parsons are more literary
+than even shoemakers). I'm quite convalescent now, and I think, my
+boy, I must get to work again this week, and have no more of your
+expensive soups and jellies. If I didn't keep a sharp look-out
+upon you, Artie, lad, I believe you'd starve yourself outright up
+there at Oxford to pamper your poor old useless father here with
+luxuries he's never been accustomed to in his whole life.'
+
+'My dear simple old Progenitor, you don't know how utterly you're
+mistaken,' cried Arthur, eagerly. 'I believe I'm really the most
+selfish and unnatural son in all Christendom. I'm positively
+rolling in wealth up there at Magdalen; I've had my room papered
+again since you saw it last long vacation; and I live like a prince,
+absolutely like a Russian prince, upon my present income. I assure
+you on my solemn word of honour, Father, that I eat meat for
+lunch--that's my dinner--every day; and an egg for tea as regular
+as clockwork. I often think when I look around my palatial rooms
+in college, what a shame it is that I should let you, who are worth
+ten of me, any day, live any longer in a back street up here in
+London; and I won't allow it, Daddy, I really won't allow it from
+this day forth, I'm determined. I've come up especially to speak
+to you about it this afternoon, for I've made up my mind that
+this abnormal state of things can't continue.'--'Very good word,
+abnormal,' murmured his father.--'And I've also made up my mind,'
+Arthur said, almost firmly, for him, 'that you shall come up and
+live at Oxford. I can't bear having you so far away from me, now
+that you're weaker than you used to be, Father dear, and so often
+ailing.'
+
+The old shoemaker laughed aloud. 'Oh no, Artie, my boy,' he
+said cheerily, shaking his head with a continuous series of merry
+chuckles. 'It won't do at all, it won't do, I assure you. I may be
+a terrible free-thinker and all that kind of thing, as the neighbours
+say I am--poor bodies, they never read a word of modern criticism
+in their lives, heaven bless 'em--stragglers from the march of
+intellect, mere stragglers--but I've too much respect for the cloth
+to bring a curate of St. Fredegond's into such disgrace as that
+would mean for you, Artie. You shan't have your career at Oxford
+spoiled by its being said of you that your father was a working
+shoemaker. What with the ready-closed uppers, and what with your
+ten shillings a week, and what with all the presents you give me,
+and what with the hire of the piano, I'm as comfortable as ever I
+want to be, growing into a gentleman in my old age, Artie, and I
+even begin to have my doubts as to whether it's quite consistent
+in me as a good Radical to continue my own acquaintance with
+myself--I'm getting to be such a regular idle do-nothing aristocrat!
+Go to Oxford and mend shoes, indeed, with you living there as a
+full-fledged parson in your own rooms at Magdalen! No, no, I won't
+hear of it. I'll come up for a day or two in long vacation, my boy,
+as I've always done hitherto, and take a room in Holywell, and look
+in upon you a bit, accidentally, so as not to shame you before the
+scouts (who are a servile set of flunkeys, incapable of understanding
+the elevated feelings of a journeyman shoemaker); but I wouldn't
+dream of going to live in the place, any more than I'd dream of
+asking to be presented at court on the occasion of my receiving a
+commission for a pair of evening shoes for the Queen's head footman.'
+
+'Father,' said Arthur, smiling, 'you're absolutely incorrigible. Such
+a dreadful old rebel against all constituted authority, human and
+divine, I never did meet in the course of my existence, I believe
+you're really capable of arguing a point of theology against an
+archbishop. But I don't want you to come up to Oxford as a shoemaker;
+I mean you to come up and live with me in rooms of our own, out
+of college. Whenever I think of you, dear Father--you, who are
+so infinitely nobler, and better, and truer, and more really a
+gentleman than any other than I ever knew in my life--whenever I
+think of you, coming secretly up to Oxford as if you were ashamed
+of yourself, and visiting your own son by stealth in his rooms in
+college as if you were a dun coming to ask him for money, instead
+of the person whom he delights to honour--whenever I think of it,
+Father, it makes my cheeks burn with shame, and I loathe myself for
+ever allowing you so to bemean your own frank, true, noble nature.
+I oughtn't to permit it, Father, I oughtn't to permit it; and I
+won't permit it any longer.'
+
+'Well, you never would have permitted it, Artie, if I hadn't compelled
+you; for I've got all the prudence and common sense of the family
+bottled up here in my own forehead,' said the old man, tapping
+his bulging brow significantly. 'I don't deny that Oxford may be
+an excellent school for Greek and Latin, and philosophy, and so
+forth; but if you want prudence and sagacity and common-sense it's
+a well-known fact that there's nothing like the practice of making
+ready-closed uppers, sir, to develop 'em. If I'd taken your advice,
+my boy, I'd have come up to visit you when you were an undergraduate,
+and ruined your prospects at the very outset. No, no, Artie, I shall
+stop here, and stick to my last, my dear boy, stick to my last, to
+the end of all things.'
+
+'You shall do nothing of the sort, Daddy; that I'm determined upon,'
+Arthur cried vehemently. 'I'm not going to let you do any more
+shoemaking. The time has come when you must retire, and devote all
+your undivided energies to the constant study of modern criticism.
+Whether you come to Oxford or stop in London, I've made up my mind
+that you shan't do another stroke of work as long as you live. Look
+here, dear old Daddy, I'm getting to be a perfect millionaire, I
+assure you. Do you see this fiver? well, I got that for knocking
+out that last trashy little song for Fradelli; and it cost me no
+more trouble to compose it than to sit down and write the score out
+on a sheet of ruled paper. I'm as rich as Croesus--made a hundred
+and eighty pounds last year, and expect to make over two hundred
+this one. Now, if a man with that perfectly prodigious fortune
+can't afford to keep his own father in comfort and affluence, what
+an absolute Sybarite and gourmand of a fellow he must be himself.'
+
+'It's a lot of money, certainly, Artie,' said the old shoemaker,
+turning it over thoughtfully: 'two hundred pounds is a lot of money;
+but I doubt very much whether it's more than enough to keep you up
+to the standard of your own society, up there at Oxford. As John
+Stuart Mill says, these things are all comparative to the standard
+of comfort of your class. Now, Artie, I believe you have to stint
+yourself of things that everybody else about you has at Oxford, to
+keep me in luxuries I was never used to.'
+
+'My dear Dad, it's only of the nature of a repayment,' cried Arthur,
+earnestly. 'You slaved and sacrificed and denied yourself when I
+was a boy to send me to school, without which I would never have
+got to Oxford at all; and you taught me music in your spare hours
+(when you had any); and I owe everything I have or am or ever will
+be to your unceasing and indefatigable kindness. So now you've
+got to take repayment whether you will or not, for I insist upon
+it. And if you won't come up to Oxford, which perhaps would be an
+uncongenial place for you in many ways, I'll tell you what I'll do,
+Daddy; I'll look out for a curacy somewhere in London, and we'll
+take a little house together, and I'll furnish it nicely, and there
+we shall live, sir, whatever you say, so not another word about
+it. And now I want you to listen to the very best thing I've ever
+composed, and tell me what you think of it.'
+
+He sat down to the little hired cottage piano that occupied the
+corner of the neat small room, and began to run his deft fingers
+lightly over the keys. It was the Butterfly fantasia. The father
+sat back in his red easy-chair, listening with all his ears, first
+critically, then admiringly, at last enthusiastically. As Arthur's
+closing notes died away softly towards the end, the old shoemaker's
+delight could be restrained no longer. 'Artie,' he cried, gloating
+over it, 'that's music! That's real music! You're quite right, my
+boy; that's far and away the best thing you've ever written. It's
+exquisite--so light, so airy, so unearthlike. But, Artie, there's
+more than that in it. There's soul in it; and I know what it means.
+You don't deceive your poor old Progenitor in a matter of musical
+inspiration, I can tell you. I know where you got that fantasia
+from as well as if I'd seen you getting it. You got it out of your
+own heart, my boy, out of your own heart. And the thing it says to me
+as plain as language is just this--you're in love! You're in love,
+Artie, and there's no good denying it. If any man ever wrote that fantasia
+without being in love at the time--first love--ecstasy--tremor--tiptoe
+of expectation--why, then, I tell you, music hasn't got such a
+thing as a tongue or a meaning in it.'
+
+Arthur looked at him gently and smiled, but said nothing.
+
+'Will you tell me about her, Artie?' asked the old man, caressingly,
+laying his hand upon his son's arm.
+
+'Not now, Father; not just now, please. Some other time, perhaps,
+but not now. I hardly know about it myself, yet. It may be
+something--it may be nothing; but, at any rate, it was peg enough
+to hang a fantasia upon. You've surprised my little secret, Father,
+and I dare say it's no real secret at all, but just a passing whiff
+of fancy. If it ever comes to anything, you shall know first of
+all the world about it. Now take out your violin, there's a dear
+old Dad, and give me a tune upon it.'
+
+The father took the precious instrument from its carefully covered
+case with a sort of loving reverence, and began to play a piece
+of Arthur's own composition. From the moment the bow touched the
+chords it was easy enough to see whence the son got his musical
+instincts. Old George Berkeley was a born musician, and he could
+make his violin discourse to him with rare power of execution.
+There they sat, playing and talking at intervals, till nearly eight,
+when Arthur went out hurriedly to catch the last train to Oxford,
+and left the old shoemaker once more to his week's solitude. 'Not
+for much longer,' the curate whispered to himself, as he got into
+his third-class carriage quickly; 'not for much longer, if I can
+help it. A curacy in or near London's the only right thing for me
+to look out for!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+GHOSTLY COUNSEL.
+
+
+November came, and with it came the Pembroke fellowship examination.
+Ernest went in manfully, and tried hard to do his best; for
+somehow, in spite of the immorality of fellowships, he had a sort
+of floating notion in his head that he would like to get one,
+because he was beginning to paint himself a little fancy picture
+of a home that was to be, with a little fairy Edie flitting through
+it, and brightening it all delightfully with her dainty airy
+presence. So he even went so far as to mitigate considerably the
+native truculence of his political economy paper, after Edie's
+advice--not, of course, by making any suggestion of opinions he did
+not hold, but by suppressing the too-prominent expression of those
+he actually believed in. Max Schurz's name was not once mentioned
+throughout the whole ten or twelve pages of closely written foolscap;
+'Gold and the Proletariate' was utterly ignored; and in place of
+the strong meat served out for men by the apostles of socialism in
+the Marylebone dancing-saloon, Ernest dished up for his examiner's
+edification merely such watery milk for babes as he had extracted
+from the eminently orthodox economical pages of Fawcett, Mill, and
+Thorold Rogers. He went back to his rooms, satisfied that he had
+done himself full justice, and anxiously waited for the result to
+be duly announced on the Saturday morning.
+
+Was it that piece of Latin prose, too obviously modelled upon the
+Annals of Tacitus, while the senior tutor was a confirmed Ciceronian,
+with the Second Philippic constitutionally on the brain? Was
+it the Greek verse, containing one senarius with a long syllable
+before the caesura in the fifth foot, as Herbert pointed out to
+his brother on the very evening when that hideous oversight--say
+rather crime--had been openly perpetrated in plain black and white
+on a virgin sheet of innocent paper? Was it some faint ineffaceable
+savour of the Schurzian economics, peeping through in spite of all
+disguises, like the garlic in an Italian ragout, from under the
+sedulous cloak of Ricardo's theory of rent? Was it some flying
+rumour, extra-official, and unconnected with the examination in
+any way, to the effect that young Le Breton was a person of very
+dubious religious, political, and social orthodoxy? Or was it merely
+that fortunate dispensation of Providence whereby Oxford almost
+invariably manages to let her best men slip unobserved through her
+fingers, and so insures a decent crop of them to fill up her share
+of the passing vacancies in politics, literature, science, and art?
+Heaven or the Pembroke examiners alone can answer these abstruse
+and difficult questions; but this much at least is certain, that
+when Ernest Le Breton went into the Pembroke porter's lodge on the
+predestined Saturday, he found another name than his placarded upon
+the notice board, and turned back, sick at heart and disappointed,
+to his lonely lodgings. There he spent an unhappy hour or two, hewing
+down what remained of his little aerial castle off-hand; and then
+he went out for a solitary row upon the upper river, endeavouring
+to work off his disappointment like a man, with a good hard spell
+of muscular labour.
+
+Edie had already returned to Calcombe-Pomeroy, so in the evening
+he went to tell his misfortune to Harry Oswald. Harry was really
+sorry to hear it, for Ernest was his best friend in Oxford, and
+he had hoped to have him settled close by. 'You'll stop up and
+try again for Christ Church in February, won't you, Le Breton?' he
+asked.
+
+'No,' said Ernest, shaking his head a little gloomily; 'I don't
+think I will. It's clear I'm not up to the Oxford standard for a
+fellowship, and I couldn't spend another term in residence without
+coming down upon my mother to pay my expenses--a thing she can't
+easily afford to do. So I suppose I must fall back for the present
+upon the Exmoor tutorship. That'll give me time to look about me,
+till I can get something else to do; and after all, it isn't a bit
+more immoral than a fellowship, when one comes to look it fairly
+in the face. However, I shall go first and ask Herr Max's opinion
+upon the matter.'
+
+'I'm going to spend a fortnight in town in the Christmas vac,'
+said Oswald, 'and I should like to go with you to Max's again, if
+I may.'
+
+Ernest coloured up a little, for he would have liked to invite Oswald
+to his mother's house; and yet he felt there were two reasons why
+he should not do so; he must himself be dependent this time upon
+his mother's hospitality, and he didn't think Lady Le Breton would
+be perfectly cordial in her welcome to Harry Oswald.
+
+In the end, however, it was arranged that Harry should engage rooms
+at his former lodgings in London, and that Ernest should take him
+once more to call upon the old socialist when he went to consult
+him on the question of conscience.
+
+'For my part, Ernest,' said Lady Le Breton to her son, the morning
+after his return from Oxford, 'I'm not altogether sorry you didn't
+get this Pembroke fellowship. It would have kept you among the
+same set you are at present mixing in for an indefinite period.
+Of course now you'll accept Lady Exmoor's kind proposal. I saw her
+about it the same morning we got Hilda's letter; and she offers
+200L. a year, which, of course, is mere pocket money, as your board
+and lodging are all found for you, so to speak, and you'll have
+nothing to do but to dress and amuse yourself.'
+
+'Well, mother, I shall see about it. I'm going to consult Herr
+Schurz upon the subject this morning.'
+
+'Herr Schurz!' said Lady Le Breton, in her bitterest tone of irony.
+'It appears to me you make that snuffy old German microscope man
+your father confessor. It's very disagreeable to a mother to find
+that her sons, instead of taking her advice about what is most
+material to their own interests, should invariably go to confer
+with communist refugees and ignorant ranters. Ronald, what is your
+programme, if you please, for this morning's annoyance?'
+
+Ronald, with the fear of the fifth commandment steadily before
+his eyes, took no notice of the last word, and answered calmly,
+'You know, mother, this is the regular day for the mission-house
+prayer-meeting.'
+
+'The mission-house prayer-meeting! I know nothing of the sort, I
+assure you. I don't keep a perfect calendar in my mind of all your
+meetings and your religious engagements. Then I suppose I must go
+alone to the Waltons' to see Mr. Walton's water-colours?'
+
+'I'll give up the prayer-meeting, if you wish it,' Ronald answered,
+with his unvarying meekness. 'Only, I'm afraid I must walk very
+slowly. My cough's rather bad this morning.'
+
+'No, no,' Ernest put in, 'you mustn't dream of going, Ronald;
+I couldn't allow you to walk so far on any account. I'll put off
+my engagement with Oswald, who was going with me to Herr Schurz's,
+and I'll take you round to the Waltons', mother, whenever you like.'
+
+'Dear me, dear me,' moaned Lady Le Breton, piteously, pretending
+to wring her hands in lady-like and mitigated despair; 'I can't
+do anything without its being made the opportunity for a scene, it
+seems. I shall NOT go to the Waltons'; and I shall leave you both
+to follow your own particular devices to your heart's content. I'm
+sorry I proposed anything whatsoever, I'm sure, and I shall take
+care never to do such an imprudent thing again.' And her ladyship
+walked in her stateliest and most chilly manner out of the freezing
+little dining-room.
+
+'It's a great cross, living always with poor mother, Ernest,' said
+Ronald, his eyes filling with tears as he spoke; 'but we must try
+to bear with her, you know, for after all she leads a very lonely
+life herself, because she's so very unsympathetic.' Ernest took
+the spare white hand in his and smoothed it compassionately. 'My
+dear, dear Ronald,' he said, 'I know it's hard for you. I must try
+the best I can to make it a little easier!'
+
+They walked together as far as the mission-house, arm in arm, for
+though in some things the two young Le Bretons were wide apart
+as the poles, in others they were fundamentally at one in inmost
+spirit; and even Ronald, in spite of his occasional little narrow
+sectarianisms, felt the underlying unity of purpose no less than
+Ernest. He was one of those enthusiastic ethereal natures which
+care little for outer forms or ceremonies, and nothing at all for
+churches and organisations, but love to commune as pure spirit
+with pure spirit, living every day a life of ecstatic spirituality,
+and never troubling themselves one whit about theological controversy
+or established religious constitutions. As long as Ronald Le Breton
+could read his Greek Testament every morning, and talk face to
+face in their own tongue with the Paul of First Corinthians or the
+John of the Epistles, in the solitude of his own bedroom, he was
+supremely indifferent about the serious question, of free-will
+and fore-knowledge, or about the important question of apostolical
+succession, or even about that other burning question of eternal
+punishment, which was just then setting his own little sect of
+Apostolic Christian Missioners roundly by the ears. These things
+seemed to his enthusiastic mind mere fading echoes of an alien
+language; all that he himself really cared for in religion was the
+constant sense of essential personal communion with that higher
+Power which spoke directly to his soul all day long and always; or
+the equally constant sense of moral exaltation which he drew from
+the reading of the written Word in its own original language. He
+had never BECOME an Apostolic Christian; he had grown up to be one,
+unconsciously to himself. 'Your son Ronald's religion, my dear
+Lady Le Breton,' Archdeacon Luttrell used often to say, 'is, I
+fear, too purely emotional. He cannot be made to feel sufficiently
+the necessity for a sound practical grasp of doctrinal Christianity.'
+To Ronald himself, he might as well have talked about the necessity
+for a sound practical grasp of doctrinal Buddhism. And if Ronald
+had really met a devout Buddhist, he would doubtless have found,
+after half an hour's conversation, that they were at one in everything
+save the petty matter of dialect and vocabulary.
+
+At Oswald's lodging, Ernest found his friend ready and waiting for
+him. They went on together to the same street in Marylebone as
+before, and mounted the stair till they reached Herr Schurz's gloomy
+little work-room on the third floor. The old apostle was seated
+at his small table by the half-open window, grinding the edges of
+a lens to fit the brass mounting at his side; while his daughter
+Uta, a still good-looking, quiet, broad-faced South German woman,
+about forty or a little more, sat close by, busily translating a
+scientific book into English by alternate reading and consultation
+with her father. Harry saw the title on her page was 'Researches
+into the Embryology of the Isopodal Crustaceans,' and conceived
+at once an immense respect for the learning and wisdom of the
+communist exile's daughter. Herr Schurz hardly stopped a moment
+from his work--he never allowed his numerous visitors to interfere
+in any way with his daily duties--but motioned them both to seats
+on the bare bench beside him, and waited to bear the nature of
+their particular business. It was an understood thing that no one
+came to see the Socialist leader on week days except for a good
+and sufficient reason.
+
+The talk at first was general and desultory; but after a little time
+Ernest brought conversation round to its proper focus, and placed
+his case of conscience fairly before his father confessor. Was it
+allowable for a consistent socialist to accept the place of tutor
+to the son of a peer and a landowner?
+
+'For my part, Herr Schurz,' Oswald said confidently, 'I don't see
+any reason on earth, from the point of view of any political economy
+whatsoever, why Ernest shouldn't take the position. The question
+isn't how the Exmoors have come by their money, even allowing that
+private property in land is in itself utterly indefensible; which
+is a proposition I don't myself feel inclined unreservedly to admit,
+though I know you and Le Breton do: the real question's this,--since
+they've got this money into their hands to distribute, and since
+in any case they will have the distribution of it, isn't it better
+that some of it should go into Le Breton's pocket than that it
+should go into any other person's? That's the way I for my part
+look at the matter.'
+
+'What do you say to that, friend Ernest?' asked the old German,
+smiling and waiting to see whether Ernest would detect what from
+their own standpoint he regarded as the ethical fallacy of Harry
+Oswald's argument.
+
+'Well, to tell you the truth, Herr Schurz,' answered Ernest, in his
+deliberate, quiet way, 'I don't think I've envisaged the subject
+to myself from quite the same point of view as Oswald has done. I
+have rather asked myself whether it was right of a man to accept
+a function in which he would really be doing nothing worthy for
+humanity in return for his daily board and lodging. It isn't so much
+a question who exactly is to get certain sums out of the Exmoors'
+pockets, which ought no doubt never to have been in them; it's more
+a question whether a man has any right to live off the collective
+labour of the world, and do nothing of any good to the world on
+his own part by way of repayment.'
+
+'That's it, friend Ernest,' cried the old man, with a pleased nod
+of his big grey head; 'the socialistic Iliad in a nutshell! That's
+the very root of the question. Don't be deceived by capitalist
+sophisms. So long as we go on each of us trying to get as much as
+we can individually out of the world, instead of asking what the
+world is getting out of us, in return, there will be no revolution
+and no millennium. We must make sure that we're doing some good
+ourselves, instead of sponging upon the people perpetually to feed
+us for nothing. What's the first gospel given to man at the creation
+in your popular cosmogonies? Why, that in the sweat of his face
+shall he eat bread, and till the ground from which he was taken.
+That's the native gospel of the toiling many, always; your doctrines
+of fair exchange, and honest livelihoods, and free contract, and
+all the rest of it, are only the artificial gospel of the political
+economists, and of the bourgeoisie and the aristocrats into whose
+hands they play--the rascals!'
+
+'Then you think I oughtn't to take the post?' asked Ernest, a little
+ruefully.
+
+'I don't say that, Le Breton--I don't say that,' said Herr Schurz,
+more quietly than before, still grinding away at his lens. 'The
+question's a broad one, and it has many aspects. The best work
+a man can do is undoubtedly the most useful work--the work that
+conduces most to the general happiness. But we of the proletariate
+can't take our choice always: as your English proverb plainly puts
+it, with your true English bluntness, "beggars mustn't be choosers."
+We must, each in his place, do the work that's set before us by the
+privileged classes. It's impossible for us to go nicely discriminating
+between work that's useful for the community, work that's merely
+harmless, and work that's positively detrimental. How can we insure
+it? A man's a printer, say. There's a generally useful trade, in
+which, on the whole, he labours for the good and enlightenment of
+the world--for he may print scientific books, good books, useful
+books; and most printing, on the average, is useful. But how's he
+to know what sort of thing he's printing? He may be printing "Gold
+and the Proletariate," or he may be printing obscurantist and
+retrogressive treatises by the enemies of humanity. Look at my own
+trade, again. You'd say at first sight, Mr. Oswald, that to make
+microscopes must be a good thing in the end for the world at large:
+and so it is, no doubt; but half of them--ay, more than half of
+them--are thrown away: mere wasted labour, a good workman's time
+and skill lavished needlessly on some foolish rich man's caprices
+and amusement. Often enough, now, I make a good instrument--an
+instrument, with all its fittings, worth fifty or a hundred pounds.
+That takes a long time to make, and I'm a skilled workman; and
+the instrument may fall into the hands of a scientific man who'll
+use it in discovery, in verification, in promoting knowledge, in
+lessening disease and mitigating human suffering. That's the good
+side of my trade. But, mark you, now,' and the old man wiped his
+forehead rapidly with his sleeve, 'it has its bad side too. As often
+as not, I know, some rich man will buy that machine, that cost me
+so much time and trouble to make, and will buy a few dozen stock
+slides with it, and will bring it out once in a moon to show his
+children or a few idle visitors the scales on a butterfly's wing,
+or the hairs on the leg of a common flea. Uta sets those things
+up by the thousand for the dealers to sell to indolent dilettanti.
+The appetite of the world at large for the common flea is simply
+insatiable. And it's for that, perhaps, that I'm spoiling my
+eyesight now, grinding and grinding and grinding at this very lens,
+and fitting the thing to an accurate fraction of a millimetre, as
+we always fit these things--we who are careful and honest workmen--to
+show an idle man's friends the hairs on a flea's fore-leg. If that
+isn't enough to make a man ashamed of our present wasteful and
+chaotic organisation, I should think he must be a survival from
+the preglacial epoch--as, indeed, most of us actually are!'
+
+'But, after all, Herr Schurz,' said Harry, expostulating, 'you get
+paid for your labour, and the rich man is doing better by encouraging
+your skill than by encouraging the less useful skill of other
+workmen.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' cried Herr Schurz, warmly, 'that's the doctrine of the
+one-eyed economists; that's the capitalist way of looking at it;
+but it isn't our way--it isn't ours. Is it nothing, think you,
+that all that toil of mine--of a sensible man's--goes to waste,
+to gratify the senseless passing whim of a wealthy nobody? Is it
+nothing that he uselessly monopolises the valuable product of my
+labour, which in other and abler hands might be bringing forth good
+fruit for the bettering and furthering of universal humanity? I
+tell you, Mr. Oswald, half the best books, half the best apparatus,
+half the best appliances in all Europe, are locked up idle in
+rich men's cabinets, effecting no good, begetting no discoveries,
+bringing forth no interest, doing nothing but foster the anti-social
+pride of their wealthy possessors. But that isn't what friend
+Ernest wants to ask me about to-day. He wants to know about his own
+course in a difficult case; and instead of answering him, here am
+I, maundering away, like an old man that I am, into the generalised
+platitudes of "Gold and the Proletariate." Well, Le Breton, what
+I should say in your particular instance is this. A man with the
+fear of right before his eyes may, under existing circumstances,
+lawfully accept any work that will keep him alive, provided he sees
+no better and more useful work equally open to him. He may take
+the job the capitalists impose, if he can get nothing worthier to
+do elsewhere. Now, if you don't teach this young Tregellis, what
+alternative have you? Why, to become a master in a school--Eton,
+perhaps, or Rugby, or Marlborough--and teach other equally useless
+members of prospective aristocratic society. That being so, I think
+you ought to do what's best for yourself and your family for the
+present--for the present--till the time of deliverance comes. You
+see, there is one member of your family to whom the matter is of
+immediate importance.'
+
+'Ronald,' said Ernest, interrupting him.
+
+'Yes, Ronald. A good boy; a socialist, too, though he doesn't know
+it--one of us, born of us, and only apart from us in bare externals.
+Well, would it be most comfortable for poor Ronald that you should
+go to these Exmoor people, or that you should take a mastership,
+get rooms somewhere, and let him live with you? He's not very happy
+with your mother, you say. Wouldn't he be happier with you? What
+think you? Charity begins at home, you know: a good proverb--a
+good, sound, sensible, narrow-minded, practical English proverb!'
+
+'I've thought of that,' Ernest said, 'and I'll ask him about it.
+Whichever he prefers, then, I'd better decide upon, had I?'
+
+'Do so,' Herr Max answered, with a nod. 'Other things equal, our
+first duty is to those nearest to us.'
+
+What Herr Max said was law to his disciples, and Ernest went his
+way contented.
+
+'Mr. Oswald seems a very nice young man,' Uta Schurz said, looking
+up from the microscope slides she had begun to mount at the moment
+her regular translating work was interrupted by their sudden entry.
+She had been taking quiet glances at Harry all the while, in her
+unobtrusive fashion; for Uta had learned always to be personally
+unobtrusive--'the prophet's donkey,' those irreverent French exiles
+used to call her--and she had come to the conclusion that he was
+a decidedly handsome and manly fellow.
+
+'Which do you like best, Uta--Oswald or Le Breton?' asked her
+father.
+
+'Personally,' Uta answered, 'I should prefer Mr. Oswald. To live
+always with Mr. Le Breton would be like living with an abstraction.
+No woman would ever care for him; she might just as well marry
+Spinoza's Ethics or the Ten Commandments. He's a perfect model of
+a socialist, and nothing else. Mr. Oswald has some human nature in
+him as well.'
+
+'There are two kinds of socialists,' said Herr Max, bending once
+more over his glasses; 'the one kind is always thinking most of
+its rights; the other kind is always thinking most of its duties.
+Oswald belongs to the first, Le Breton to the second. I've often
+observed it so among men of their two sorts. The best socialists
+never come from the bourgeoisie, nor even from the proletariate;
+they come from among the voluntarily déclassés aristocrats. Your
+workman or your bourgeois who has risen, and who interests himself
+in social or political questions, is always thinking, "Why shouldn't
+I have as many rights and privileges as these other people have?"
+The aristocrat who descends is always thinking, "Why shouldn't
+these other people have as many rights and privileges as I have?"
+The one type begets aggressive self-assertion, the other type
+begets a certain gentle spirit of self-effacement. You don't often
+find men of the aristocratic class with any ethical element in
+them--their hereditary antecedents, their breeding, their environment,
+are all hostile to it; but when you do find them, mark my words,
+Uta, they make the truest and most earnest friends of the popular
+cause of any. Their sympathy and interest in it is all unselfish.'
+
+'And yet,' Uta answered firmly, 'I still prefer Mr. Oswald. And
+if you care for my opinion, I should say that the aristocrat does
+all the dreaming, but the bourgeois does all the fighting; and
+that's the most important thing practically, after all.'
+
+An hour later, Ernest was talking his future plans over with his
+brother Ronald. Would it be best for Ronald that he should take
+a mastership, and both should live together, or that he should go
+for the present to the Exmoors', and leave the question of Ronald's
+home arrangements still unsettled?
+
+'It's so good of you to think of me in the matter, Ernest,' Ronald
+said, pressing his hand gently; 'but I don't think I ought to
+go away from mother before I'm twenty-one. To tell you the truth,
+Ernest, I hardly flatter myself she'd be really sorry to get rid
+of me; I'm afraid I'm a dreadful thorn in her side at present; she
+doesn't understand my ways, and perhaps I don't sympathise enough
+with hers; but still, if I were to propose to go, I feel sure
+she'd be very much annoyed, and treat it as a serious act of
+insubordination on my part. While I'm a minor, at least, I ought
+to remain with her; the Apostle tells us to obey our parents, in
+the Lord; and as long as she requires nothing from me that doesn't
+involve a dereliction of principle I think I must bear with it,
+though I acknowledge it's a cross, a heavy cross. Thank you so much
+for thinking of it, dearest Ernest.' And his eyes filled once more
+with tears as he spoke.
+
+So it was finally arranged that for the present at least Ernest
+should accept Lady Exmoor's offer, and that as soon as Ronald
+was twenty-one he should look about for a suitable mastership, in
+order for the two brothers to go immediately into rooms together.
+Lady Le Breton was surprised at the decision; but as it was in her
+favour, she wisely abstained from gratifying her natural desire to
+make some more uncomplimentary references to the snuffy old German
+socialist. Sufficient unto the day was the triumph thereof; and she
+had no doubt in her own mind that if once Ernest could be induced
+to live for a while in really good society the well-known charms
+and graces of that society must finally tame his rugged breast,
+and wean him away from his unaccountable devotion to those horrid
+continental communists.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+IN THE CAMP OF THE PHILISTINES.
+
+
+Dunbude Castle, Lord Exmoor's family seat, stands on the last spurs
+of the great North Devon uplands, overlooking the steep glen of a
+little boulder-encumbered stream, and commanding a distant view of
+the Severn Sea and the dim outlines of the blue Welsh hills beyond
+it. Behind the house, a castle only by courtesy (on the same
+principle as that by which every bishop lives in a palace), rises
+the jagged summit of the Cleave, a great weather-worn granite hill,
+sculptured on top by wind and rain into those fantastic lichen-covered
+pillars and tora and logans in which antiquarian fancy used so long
+to find the visible monuments of Druidical worship. All around, a
+wide brown waste of heather undulates and tosses wildly to the sky;
+and on the summit of the rolling moor where it rises and swells in
+one of its many rounded bosses, the antlered heads and shoulders
+of the red deer may often be seen etched in bold relief against
+the clear sky-line to the west, on sunny autumn evenings. But the
+castle itself and the surrounding grounds are not planned to harmonise
+with the rough moorland English scenery into whose midst they were
+unceremoniously pitchforked by the second earl. That distinguished
+man of taste, a light of the artistic world in his own day,
+had brought back from his Grand Tour his own ideal of a strictly
+classical domestic building, formed by impartially compounding a
+Palladian palace, a Doric temple, and a square redbrick English
+manor-house. After pulling down the original fourteenth-century
+castle, he had induced an eminent architect of the time to conspire
+with him in giving solid and permanent reality to this his awful
+imagining; and when he had completed it all, from portico to attic,
+he had extorted even the critical praise of Horace Walpole, who
+described it in one of his letters as a 'singular triumph of classical
+taste and architectural ingenuity.' It still remains unrivalled in
+its kind, the ugliest great country-seat in the county of Devon--some
+respectable authorities even say in the whole of England.
+
+In front of the house an Italian garden, with balustrades of very
+doubtful marble, leads down by successive terraces and broad flights
+of steps to an artificial octagonal pool, formed by carefully
+destroying the whole natural beauty of the wild and rocky little
+English glen beneath. To feed it by fitting a conduit, the moss-grown
+boulders that strew the bed of the torrent above and below have
+been carefully removed, and the unwilling stream, as it runs into
+the pool, has been coerced into a long straight channel, bordered
+on either side by bedded turf, and planed off at measured intervals
+so as to produce a series of eminently regular and classical
+cascades. Even Lord Exmoor himself, who was a hunting man, without
+any pretence to that stupid rubbish about taste, did not care for
+the hopeless exterior of Dunbude Castle: he frankly admitted that
+the place was altogether too doosid artificial for the line of
+country. If they'd only left it alone, he said, in its own native
+condition, it would have been really pretty; but as they'd doctored
+it and spoilt it, why, there was nothing on earth to be done but
+just put up with it and whistle over it. What with the hounds, and
+the mortgages, and the settlements, and the red deer, and Goodwood,
+the estate couldn't possibly afford any money for making alterations
+down in the gardens.
+
+The dog-cart was in waiting at the station to carry Ernest up to
+the castle; and as he reached the front door, Lady Hilda Tregellis
+strolled up the broad flight of steps from the garden to meet him.
+Lady Hilda was tall and decidedly handsome, as Ernest had rightly
+told Edie, but not pretty, and she was also just twenty. There was
+a free, careless, bold look in her face, that showed her at once
+a girl of spirit; indeed, if she had not been born a Tregellis, it
+was quite clear that she would have been predestined to turn out
+a strong-minded woman. There was nothing particularly delicate in
+Lady Hilda's features; they were well-modelled, but neither regular
+nor cold, nor with that peculiar stamp of artificial breeding which
+is so often found in the faces of English ladies. On the contrary,
+she looked like a perfectly self-confident handsome actress, too
+self-confident to be self-conscious, and accustomed to admiration
+wherever she turned. As Ernest jumped down from the dog-cart she
+advanced quickly to shake hands with him, and look him over critically
+from head to foot like a schoolboy taking stock of a new fellow.
+
+'I'm so glad you've come, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, with an open
+smile upon her frank face. 'I was dreadfully afraid you wouldn't
+care for our proposition. Dunbude's the dullest hole in England,
+and we want somebody here to brighten it up, sadly. Did you ever
+see such an ugly monstrosity before, anywhere?'
+
+'The country about's lovely,' Ernest answered, 'but the house itself
+is certainly rather ugly.'
+
+'Ugly! It's hideous. And it's as dull as it's big,' said Hilda
+vehemently. 'You can't think what a time we have of it here half
+the year! I'm always longing for the season to come. Papa fills
+the house here with hunting men and shooting men--people without
+two ideas in their heads, you know, just like himself; and even THEY
+go out all day, and leave us women from morning till night to the
+society of their wives and daughters, who are exactly like them.
+Mr. Walsh--that's Lynmouth's last tutor--he was a perfect stick,
+a Cambridge man; Cambridge men always ARE sticks, I believe; you're
+Oxford, of course, aren't you? I thought so. Still, even Mr. Walsh
+was a little society, for I assure you, if it hadn't been for him,
+I should never have seen anybody, to talk to, from year's end to
+year's end. So when Mr. Walsh was going to leave us, I said to
+mamma, "Why not ask one of the Mr. Le Bretons?" I wanted to have
+somebody sensible here, and so I got her to let me write to your
+brother Ronald about the tutorship. Did he send you the letter? I
+hope you didn't think it was mine. Mamma dictated it, for I don't
+write such formal letters as that on my own account, I can tell
+you. I hate conventionality of any sort. At Dunbude we're all
+conventional, except me; but I won't be. Come up into the billiard-room,
+here, and sit down awhile; William will see about your portmanteau
+and things. Papa's out, of course, and so's Lynmouth; and mamma's
+somewhere or other, I don't know where; and so there's nobody in
+particular at home for you to report yourself to. You may as well
+come in here while I ring for them to get you some lunch ready.
+Nobody ever gets anything ready beforehand in this house. We
+lunched ourselves an hour ago.'
+
+Ernest smiled at her volubility, and followed her quickly into the
+big bare billiard-room. He walked over to the fire and began to
+warm himself, while Hilda took down a cue and made stray shots in
+extraordinary angles at impossible cannons, all the time, as she
+went on talking to him. 'Was it very cold on the way down?' she
+asked.
+
+'Yes, fairly. I'm not sorry to see the fire again. Why, you're
+quite an accomplished player.'
+
+'There's nothing else to do at Dunbude, that's why. I practise
+about half my lifetime. So I wrote to your brother Ronald, as I
+was telling you, from mamma's dictation; and when I heard you were
+really coming, I was quite delighted about it. Do you remember, I
+met you twice last year, once at the Dolburys', and once somewhere
+else; and I thought you'd be a very good sort of person for Dunbude,
+you know, and about as much use to Lynmouth as anybody could be,
+which isn't saying much, of course, for he's a dreadful pickle.
+I insisted on putting in my letter that he was a dreadful pickle
+(that's a good stroke off the red; just enough side on), though
+mamma didn't want me to; because I thought you ought to know about
+it beforehand. But you remember him at Marlborough, of course; he
+was only a little fellow then, but still a pickle. He always was and
+he always will be. He's out shooting, now, with papa; and you'll
+never get him to settle down to anything, as long as there's a
+snipe or a plover banging about on the moor anywhere. He's quite
+incorrigible. Do you play at all? Won't you take a cue till your
+lunch's ready?'
+
+'No, I don't play,' Ernest answered, half hesitating, 'or at least
+very little.'
+
+'Oh, then you'll learn here, because you'll find nothing else to
+do. Do you shoot?'
+
+'Oh no, never. I don't think it right.'
+
+'Ah, yes, I remember. How delightful! Lady Le Breton told me all
+about it. You've got notions, haven't you? You're a Nihilist or
+a Fenian or something of that sort, and you don't shoot anything
+but czars and grand dukes, do you? I believe you want to cut all
+our heads off and have a red republic. Well, I'm sure that's very
+refreshing; for down here we're all as dull as sticks together;
+Tories, every one of us to a man; perfect unanimity; no differences
+of opinion; all as conventional and proper as the vicar's sermons.
+Now, to have somebody who wants to cut your head off, in the house,
+is really delightful. I love originality. Not that I've ever seen
+anybody original in all my life, for I haven't, but I'm sure it
+would be delightful if I did. One reads about original people in
+novels, you know, Dickens and that sort of thing; and I often think
+I should like to meet some of them (good stroke again; legs, legs,
+legs, if you please--no, it hasn't legs enough); but here, or for
+the matter of that, in town either, we never see anybody but the same
+eternal round of Algies, and Monties, and Berties, and Hughs--all
+very nice young men, no doubt; exceedingly proper, nothing against
+them; good shots, capital partners, excellent families, everything on
+earth that anybody could desire, except a single atom of personal
+originality. I assure you, if they were all shaken up in a bag
+together and well mixed, in evening clothes (so as not to tell them
+apart by the tweeds, you know), their own mothers wouldn't be able
+to separate them afterwards. But if you don't shoot and don't play
+billiards, I'm sure I don't know what you'll ever find to do with
+yourself here at Dunbude.'
+
+'Don't you think,' Ernest said quietly, taking down a, cue, 'one
+ought to have something better to do with one's time than shooting
+and playing billiards? In a world where so many labouring people
+are toiling and slaving in poverty and misery on our behalf, don't
+you think we should be trying to do something or other in return
+for universal humanity, to whom we owe so much for our board and
+lodging and clothing and amusement?'
+
+'Well, now, that's just what I mean,' said Hilda ecstatically, with
+a neat shot off the cushion against the red and into the middle
+pocket; 'that's such a delightfully original way of looking at
+things, you see. We all of us here talk always about the partridges,
+and the red deer, and the turnips, and the Church, and dear Lady
+This, and that odious Lady That, and the growing insolence of the
+farmers, and the shocking insubordination of the lower classes, and
+the difficulty of getting really good servants, and the dreadful
+way those horrid Irish are shooting their kind-hearted indulgent
+landlords; or else we talk--the women especially--about how awfully
+bored we are. Lawn-tennis, you know, and dinners, and what a bad
+match Ethel Thingumbob has made. But you talk another kind of slang;
+I dare say it doesn't mean much; you know you're not working at
+anything very much more serious than we are; still it's a novelty.
+When we go to a coursing meeting, we're all on the hounds; but
+you're on the hare, and that's so delightfully original. I haven't
+the least doubt that if we were to talk about the Irish, you'd say
+you thought they ought to shoot their landlords. I remember you
+shocked mamma by saying something like it at the Dolburys'. Now, of
+course, it doesn't matter to me a bit which is right; you say the
+poor tenants are starving, and papa says the poor landlords can't
+get in their rents, and actually have to give up their hounds, poor
+fellows; and I don't know which of you is the most to be believed;
+only, what papa says is just the same thing that everybody says,
+and what you say has a certain charming freshness and variety
+about it. It's so funny to be told that one ought really to take
+the tenants into consideration. Exactly like your brother Ronald's
+notions about servants!'
+
+'Your lunch is ready in the dining-room, sir,' said a voice at the
+door.
+
+'Come back here when you've finished, Mr. Le Breton,' Hilda called
+after him. 'I'll teach you how to make that cannon you missed
+just now. If you mean to exist at Dunbude at all, it's absolutely
+necessary for you to learn billiards.'
+
+Ernest turned in to lunch with an uncomfortable misgiving on his
+mind already that Dunbude was not exactly the right place for such
+a man as he to live in.
+
+During the afternoon he saw nothing more of the family, save Lady
+Hilda; and it was not till the party assembled in the drawing-room
+before dinner that he met Lord and Lady Exmoor and his future pupil.
+Lynmouth had grown into a tall, handsome, manly-looking boy since
+Ernest last saw him; but he certainly looked exactly what Hilda
+had called him--a pickle. A few minutes' introductory conversation
+sufficed to show Ernest that whatever mind he possessed was wholly
+given over to horses, dogs, and partridges, and that the post of
+tutor at Dunbude Castle was not likely to prove a bed of roses.
+
+'Seen the paper, Connemara?' Lord Exmoor asked of one of his
+guests, as they sat down to dinner. 'I haven't had a moment myself
+to snatch a look at the "Times" yet this evening; I'm really too
+busy almost even to read the daily papers. Anything fresh from
+Ireland?'
+
+'Haven't seen it either,' Lord Connemara answered, glancing towards
+Lady Hilda. 'Perhaps somebody else has looked at the papers'?'
+
+Nobody answered, so Ernest ventured to remark that the Irish news
+was rather worse again. Two bailiffs had been murdered near Castlebar.
+
+'That's bad,' Lord Exmoor said, turning towards Ernest. 'I'm afraid
+there's a deal of distress in the West.'
+
+'A great deal,' Ernest answered; 'positive starvation, I believe,
+in some parts of County Galway.'
+
+'Well, not quite so bad as that,' Lord Exmoor replied, a little
+startled. 'I don't think any of the landlords are actually starving
+yet, though I've no doubt many of them are put to very great straits
+indeed by their inability to get in their rents.'
+
+Ernest couldn't forbear gently smiling to himself at the misapprehension.
+'Oh, I didn't mean the landlords,' he said quickly: 'I meant among
+the poor people.' As he spoke he was aware that Lady Hilda's eyes
+were fixed keenly upon him, and that she was immensely delighted
+at the temerity and originality displayed in the notion of his
+publicly taking Irish tenants into consideration at her father's
+table.
+
+'Ah, the poor people,' Lord Exmoor answered with a slight sigh of
+relief, as who should say that THEIR condition didn't much matter
+to a philosophic mind. 'Yes, to be sure; I've no doubt some of
+them are very badly off, poor souls. But then they're such an idle
+improvident lot. Why don't they emigrate now, I should like to
+know?'
+
+Ernest reflected silently that the inmates of Dunbude Castle did
+not exactly set them a model of patient industry; and that Lady
+Hilda's numerous allusions during the afternoon to the fact that
+the Dunbude estates were 'mortgaged up to the eyelids' (a condition
+of affairs to which she always alluded as though it were rather a
+subject of pride and congratulation than otherwise) did not speak
+very highly for their provident economy either. But even Ernest Le
+Breton had a solitary grain of worldly wisdom laid up somewhere
+in a corner of his brain, and he didn't think it advisable to give
+them the benefit of his own views upon the subject.
+
+'There's a great deal of rubbish talked in England about Irish
+affairs, you know, Exmoor,' said Lord Connemara confidently. 'People
+never understand Ireland, I'm sure, until they've actually lived
+there. Would you believe it now, the correspondent of one of the
+London papers was quite indignant the other day because my agent
+had to evict a man for three years' rent at Ballynamara, and the
+man unfortunately went and died a week later on the public roadside.
+We produced medical evidence to show that he had suffered for years
+from heart disease, and would have died in any case, wherever he
+had been; but the editor fellow wanted to make political capital
+out of it, and kicked up quite a fuss about my agent's shocking
+inhumanity. As if we could possibly help ourselves in the matter!
+People must get their rents in somehow, mustn't they?'
+
+'People must get their rents in somehow, of course,' Lord Exmoor
+assented, sympathetically; 'and I know all you men who are unlucky
+enough to own property in Ireland have a lot of trouble about it
+nowadays. Upon my word, what with Fenians, and what with Nihilists,
+and what with Communards, I really don't know what the world is
+coming to.'
+
+'Most unchristian conduct, I call it,' said Lady Exmoor, who went
+in for being mildly and decorously religious. 'I really can't
+understand how people can believe such wicked doctrines as these
+communistic notions that are coming over people in these latter
+days.'
+
+'No better than downright robbery,' Lord Connemara answered.
+'Shaking the very foundations of society, I think it. All done so
+recklessly, too, without any care or any consideration.'
+
+Ernest thought of old Max Schurz, with his lifelong economical
+studies, and wondered when Lord Connemara had found time to turn
+his own attention from foxes and fishing to economical problems;
+but, by a perfect miracle, he said nothing.
+
+'You wouldn't believe the straits we're put to, Lady Exmoor,' the
+Irish Earl went on, 'through this horrid no-rent business. Absolute
+poverty, I assure you--absolute downright poverty. I've had to
+sell the Maid of Garunda this week, you know, and three others of
+the best horses in my stable, just to raise money for immediate
+necessities. Wanted to buy a most interesting missal, quite
+unique in its way, offered me by Menotti and Cicolari, dirt cheap,
+for three thousand guineas. It's quite a gem of late miniaturist
+art--vellum folio, with borders and head-pieces by Giulio Clovio.
+A marvellous bargain!'
+
+'Giulio Clovio,' said Lord Exmoor, doubtfully. 'Who was he? Never
+heard of him in my life before.'
+
+'Never heard of Giulio Clovio!' cried Lord Connemara, seizing the
+opportunity with well-affected surprise. 'You really astonish me.
+He was a Croatian, I believe, or an Illyrian--I forget which--and
+he studied at Rome under Giulio Romano. Wonderful draughtsman in
+the nude, and fine colourist; took hints from Raphael and Michael
+Angelo.' So much he had picked up from Menotti and Cicolari, and,
+being a distinguished connoisseur, had made a mental note of the
+facts at once, for future reproduction upon a fitting occasion.
+'Well, this missal was executed for Cardinal Farnese, as a companion
+volume to the famous Vita Christi in the Towneley collection. You
+know it, of course, Lady Exmoor?'
+
+'Of course,' Lady Exmoor answered faintly, with a devout hope that
+Lord Connemara wouldn't question her any further upon the subject;
+in which case she thought it would probably be the safest guess to
+say that she had seen it at the British Museum or in the Hamilton
+Library.
+
+But Lord Connemara luckily didn't care to press his advantage.
+'The Towneley volume, you see,' he went on fluently--he was primed
+to the muzzle with information on that subject--'was given by
+the Cardinal to the Pope of that time--Paul the Third, wasn't it,
+Mr. Le Breton?--and so got into the possession of old Christopher
+Towneley, the antiquary. But this companion folio, it seems, the
+Cardinal wouldn't let go out of his own possession; and so it's
+been handed down in his own family (with a bar sinister, of course,
+Exmoor--you remember the story of Beatrice Malatesta?) to the present
+time. It's very existence wasn't suspected till Cicolari--wonderfully
+smart fellow, Cicolari--unearthed it the other day from a descendant
+of the Malatestas, in a little village in the Campagna. He offered it
+to me, quite as an act of friendship, for three thousand guineas;
+indeed, he begged me not to let Menotti know how cheap he was
+selling it. for fear he might interfere and ask a higher price for
+it. Well, I naturally couldn't let such a chance slip me--for the
+credit of the family, it ought to be in the collection--and the
+consequence was, though I was awfully sorry to part with her, I was
+absolutely obliged to sell the Maid for pocket-money, Lady Hilda--I
+assure you, for pocket-money. My tenants won't pay up, and nothing
+will make them. They've got the cash actually in the bank; but they
+keep it there, waiting for a set of sentimentalists in the House
+of Commons to interfere between us, and make them a present of
+my property. Rolling in money, some of them are, I can tell you.
+One man, I know as a positive fact, sold a pig last week, and yet
+pretends he can't pay me. All the fault of these horrid communists
+that you were speaking of, Lady Exmoor--all the fault of these
+horrid communists.'
+
+'You're rather a communist yourself, aren't you, Mr. Le Breton?'
+asked Lady Hilda boldly from across the table. 'I remember you told
+me something once about cutting the throats of all the landlords.'
+
+Lady Exmoor looked as though a bomb-shell had dropped into the
+drawing-room. 'My dear Hilda,' she said, 'I'm sure you must have
+misunderstood Mr. Le Breton. You can't have meant anything so
+dreadful as that, Mr. Le Breton, can you?'
+
+'Certainly not,' Ernest answered, with a clear conscience. 'Lady
+Hilda has put her own interpretation upon my casual words. I haven't
+the least desire to cut anybody's throat, even metaphorically.'
+
+Hilda looked a little disappointed; she had hoped for a good rattling
+discussion, in which Ernest was to shock the whole table--it does
+people such a lot of good, you know, to have a nice round shocking;
+but Ernest was evidently not inclined to show fight for her sole
+gratification, and so she proceeded to her alternative amusement
+of getting Lord Connemara to display the full force of his own
+inanity. This was an easy and unending source of innocent enjoyment
+to Lady Hilda, enhanced by the fact that she knew her father and
+mother were anxious to see her Countess of Connemara, and that they
+would be annoyed by her public exposition of that eligible young
+man's intense selfishness and empty-headedness.
+
+Altogether, Ernest did not enjoy his first week at the Exmoors'.
+Nor did he enjoy the second, or the third, or the fourth week much
+better. The society was profoundly distasteful to him: the world
+was not his world, nor the talk his talk; and he grew so sick of
+the perpetual discussion of horses, dogs, pheasants, dances, and
+lawn tennis, with occasional digressions on Giulio Clovio and the
+Connemara gallery, that he found even a chat with Lady Hilda (who
+knew and cared for nothing, but liked to chat with him because
+he was 'so original') a pleasant relief, by comparison, from the
+eternal round of Lord Exmoor's anecdotes about famous racers or
+celebrated actresses. But worst of all he did not like his work;
+he felt that, useless as he considered it, he was not successfully
+performing even the useless function he was paid to fulfil. Lynmouth
+couldn't learn, wouldn't learn, and wasn't going to learn. Ernest
+might as well have tried to din the necessary three plays of Euripides
+into the nearest lamp-post. Nobody encouraged him to learn in any
+way, indeed Lord Exmoor remembered that he himself had scraped
+through somehow at Christ Church, with the aid of a private tutor
+and the magic of his title, and he hadn't the least doubt that
+Lynmouth would scrape through in his turn in like manner. And so,
+though most young men would have found the Dunbude tutorship the
+very acme of their wishes--plenty of amusements and nothing to do
+for them--Ernest Le Breton found it to the last degree irksome and
+unsatisfactory. Not that he had ever to complain of any unkindliness
+on the part of the Exmoor family; they were really in their own
+way very kind-hearted, friendly sort of people--that is to say,
+towards all members of their own circle; and as they considered
+Ernest one of themselves, in virtue of their acquaintance with
+his mother, they really did their best to make him as happy and
+comfortable as was in their power. But then he was such a very
+strange young man! 'For what on earth can you do,' as Lord Exmoor
+justly asked, 'with a young fellow who won't shoot, and who won't
+fish, and who won't hunt, and who won't even play lansquenet?'
+Such a case was clearly hopeless. He would have liked to see more
+of Miss Merivale, little Lady Sybil's governess (for there were three
+children in the family); but Miss Merivale was a timid, sensitive
+girl, and she did not often encourage his advances, lest my lady
+should say she was setting her cap at the tutor. The consequence
+was that he was necessarily thrown much upon Lady Hilda's society;
+and as Lady Hilda was laudably eager to instruct him in billiards,
+lawn tennis, and sketching, he rapidly grew to be quite an adept at
+those relatively moral and innocuous amusements, under her constant
+instruction and supervision.
+
+'It seems to me,' said that acute observer, Lord Lynmouth, to his
+special friend and confidante, the lady's-maid, 'that Hilda makes
+a doocid sight too free with that fellow Le Breton. Don't you think
+so, Euphemia?'
+
+'I should hope, my lord,' Euphemia answered demurely, 'that Lady
+Hilda would know her own place too well to demean herself with such
+as your lordship's tutor. If I didn't feel sure of that, I should
+have to mention the matter seriously to my lady.'
+
+Nevertheless, the lady's-maid immediately stored up a mental note
+on the subject in the lasting tablets of her memory, and did not fail
+gently to insinuate her views upon the question to Lady Exmoor, as
+she arranged the pearls in the false plaits for dinner that very
+evening.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE WOMEN OF THE LAND.
+
+
+'Mr. Le Breton! Mr. Le Breton! Papa says Lynmouth may go
+out trout-fishing with him this afternoon. Come up with me to the
+Clatter. I'm going to sketch there.'
+
+'Very well, Lady Hilda; if you want my criticism, I don't mind if
+I do. Let me carry your things; it's rather a pull up, even for
+you, with your box and easel!'
+
+Hilda gave him her sketch-book and colours, and they turned together
+up the Cleave behind the Castle.
+
+A Clatter is a peculiar Devonshire feature, composed of long loose
+tumbled granite blocks piled in wild disorder along the narrow summit
+of a saddle-backed hill. It differs from a tor in being less high
+and castellated, as well as in its longer and narrower contour.
+Ernest and Hilda followed the rough path up through the gorse
+and heather to the top of the ridge, and then scrambled over the
+grey lichen-covered rooks together to the big logan-stone whose
+evenly-poised and tilted mass crowned the actual summit. The granite
+blocks were very high and rather slippery in places, for it was
+rainy April weather, so that Ernest had to take his companion's
+hand more than once in his to help her over the tallest boulders.
+It was a small delicate hand, though Hilda was a tall well-grown
+woman; ungloved, too, for the sake of the sketching; and Hilda
+didn't seem by any means unwilling to accept Ernest's proffered help,
+though if it had been Lord Connemara who was with her instead, she
+would have scorned assistance, and scaled the great mossy masses
+by herself like a mountain antelope. Light-footed and lithe of
+limb was Lady Hilda, as befitted a Devonshire lass accustomed to
+following the Exmoor stag-hounds across their wild country on her
+own hunter. Yet she seemed to find a great deal of difficulty in
+clambering up the Clatter on that particular April morning, and
+move than once Ernest half fancied to himself that she leaned on his
+arm longer than was absolutely necessary for support or assistance
+over the stiffest places.
+
+'Here, by the logan, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, motioning him where
+to put her camp-stool and papers. 'That's a good point of view
+for the rocks yonder. You can lie down on the rug and give me the
+benefit of your advice and assistance.'
+
+'My advice is not worth taking,' said Ernest. 'I'm a regular duffer
+at painting and sketching. You should ask Lord Connemara. He knows
+all about art and that sort of thing.'
+
+'Lord Connemara!' echoed Hilda contemptuously. 'He has a lot of
+pictures in his gallery at home, and he's been told by sensible men
+what's the right thing for him to say about them; but he knows no
+more about art, really, than he knows about fiddlesticks.'
+
+'Doesn't he, indeed?' Ernest answered languidly, not feeling any
+burning desire to discuss Lord Connemara's artistic attainments or
+deficiencies.
+
+'No, he doesn't,' Hilda went on, rather defiantly, as though Ernest
+had been Lady Exmoor; 'and most of these people that come here
+don't either. They have galleries, and they get artists and people
+who understand about pictures to talk with them, and so they learn
+what's considered the proper thing to say of each of them. But
+as to saying anything spontaneous or original of their own about a
+picture or any other earthly thing--why, you know, Mr. Le Breton,
+they couldn't possibly do it to save their lives.'
+
+'Well, there I should think you do them, as a class, a great
+injustice,' said Ernest, quietly; 'you're evidently prejudiced
+against your own people. I should think that if there's any subject
+on which our old families really do know anything, it's art. Look
+at their great advantages.'
+
+'Nonsense,' Hilda answered, decisively. 'Fiddlesticks for their
+advantages. What's the good of advantages without a head on your
+shoulders, I should like to know. And they haven't got heads on
+their shoulders, Mr. Le Breton; you know they haven't.'
+
+'Why, surely,' said Ernest, in his simple fashion, looking the
+question straight in the face as a matter of abstract truth, 'there
+must be a great deal of ability among peers and peers' sons. All
+history shows it; and it would be absurd if it weren't so; for the
+mass of peers have got their peerages by conspicuous abilities of
+one sort or another, as barristers, or soldiers, or politicians,
+or diplomatists, and they would naturally hand on their powers to
+their different descendants.'
+
+'Oh, yes, there are some of them with brains, I suppose,' Hilda
+answered, as one who makes a great concession. 'There's Herbert
+Alderney, who's member for somewhere or other--Church Stretton, I
+think--and makes speeches in the House; he's clever, they say, but
+such a conceited fellow to talk to. And there's Wilfrid Faunthorp,
+who writes poems, and gets them printed in the magazines, too,
+because he knows the editors. And there's Randolph Hastings, who
+goes in for painting, and has little red and blue daubs at the
+Grosvenor by special invitation of the director. But somehow they
+none of them strike me as being really original. Whenever I meet
+anybody worth talking to anywhere--in a railway train or so on--I
+feel sure at once he's an ordinary commoner, not even Honourable;
+and he is invariably, you may depend upon it.'
+
+'That would naturally happen on the average of instances,' Ernest
+put in, smiling, 'considering the relative frequency of peers
+and commoners in this realm of England. Peers, you know, or even
+Honourables are not common objects of the country, numerically
+speaking.'
+
+'They are to me, unfortunately,' Hilda replied, looking at him
+inquiringly. 'I hardly ever meet anybody else, you know, and I'm
+positively bored to death by them, and that's the truth, really.
+It's most unlucky, under the circumstances, that I should happen
+to be the daughter of one peer, and be offered promiscuously as
+wife to the highest bidder among half a dozen others, if only I
+would have them. But I won't, Mr. Le Breton, I really won't. I'm
+not going to marry a fool, just to please my mother. Nothing on
+earth would induce me to marry Lord Connemara, for example.'
+
+Ernest looked at her and smiled, but said nothing.
+
+Lady Hilda put in a stroke or two more to her pencil outline, and
+then continued her unsolicited confidences. 'Do you know, Mr. Le
+Breton,' she went on, 'there's a conspiracy--the usual conspiracy,
+but still a regular conspiracy I call it--between Papa and Mamma
+to make me marry that stick of a Connemara. What is there in him,
+I should like to know, to make any girl admire or love him? And
+yet half the girls in London would be glad to get him, for all his
+absurdity. It's monstrous, it's incomprehensible, it's abominable;
+but it's the fact. For my part, I must say I do like a little
+originality. And whenever I hear Papa, and Uncle Sussex, and Lord
+Connemara talking at dinner, it does seem to me too ridiculously
+absurd that they should each have a separate voice in Parliament,
+and that you shouldn't even have a fraction of a vote for a county
+member. What sort of superiority has Lord Connemara over you, I
+wonder?' And she looked at Ernest again with a searching glance,
+to see whether he was to be moved by such a personal and emphatic
+way of putting the matter.
+
+Ernest looked back at her curiously in his serious simplicity,
+and only answered, 'There are a great many queer inequalities and
+absurdities in all our existing political systems, Lady Hilda.'
+
+Hilda smiled to herself--a quiet smile, half of disappointment,
+half of complacent feminine superiority. What a stupid fellow he
+was in some ways, after all! Even that silly Lord Connemara would
+have guessed what she was driving at, with only a quarter as much
+encouragement. But Ernest must be too much afraid of the social
+barrier clearly; so she began again, this time upon a slightly
+different but equally obvious tack.
+
+'Yes, there are; absurd inequalities really, Mr. Le Breton; very
+absurd inequalities. You'd get rid of them all, I know. You told me
+that about cutting all the landlords' heads off, I'm sure, though
+you said when I spoke about it before Mamma, the night you first
+came here, that you didn't mean it. I remember it perfectly well,
+because I recollect thinking at the time the idea was so charmingly
+and deliciously original.'
+
+'You must be quite mistaken, Lady Hilda,' Ernest answered calmly. 'You
+misunderstood my meaning. I said I would get rid of landlords--by
+which I meant to say, get rid of them as landlords, not as individuals.
+I don't even know that I'd take away the land from them all at once,
+you know (though I don't think it's justly theirs); I'd deprive
+them of it tentatively and gradually.'
+
+'Well, I can't see the justice of that, I'm sure,' Hilda answered
+carelessly. 'Either the land's ours by right, or it isn't ours. If
+it's ours, you ought to leave it to us for ever; and if it isn't
+ours, you ought to take it away from us at once, and make it over
+to the people to whom it properly belongs. Why on earth should you
+keep them a day longer out of their own?'
+
+Ernest laughed heartily at this vehement and uncompromising
+sans-culottism. 'You're a vigorous convert, anyhow,' he said, with
+some amusement; 'I see you've profited by my instruction. You've
+put the question very plump and straightforward. But in practice it
+would be better, no doubt, gradually to educate out the landlords,
+rather than to dispossess them at one blow of what they honestly,
+though wrongly, imagine to be their own. Let all existing holders
+keep the land during their own lifetime and their heirs', and resume
+it for the nation after their lives, allowing for the rights of
+all children born of marriages between people now living.'
+
+'Not at all,' Hilda answered in a tone of supreme conviction. 'I'm
+in favour of simply cutting our heads off once for all, and making
+our families pay all arrears of rent from the very beginning.
+That or nothing. Put the case another way. Suppose, Mr. Le Breton,
+there was somebody who had got a grant from a king a long time ago,
+allowing him to hang any three persons he chose annually. Well,
+suppose this person and his descendants went on for a great many
+generations extorting money out of other people by threatening to
+kill them and letting them off on payment of a ransom. Suppose,
+too, they always killed three a year, some time or other, pour
+encourager les autres--just to show that they really meant it.
+Well, then, if one day the people grew wise enough to inquire into
+the right of these licensed extortioners to their black mail, would
+you say, "Don't deprive them of it too unexpectedly. Let them keep
+it during their own lifetime. Let their children hang three of us
+annually after them. But let us get rid of this fine old national
+custom in the third generation." Would that be fair to the people
+who would be hanged for the sake of old prescription in the interval,
+do you think?'
+
+Ernest laughed again at the serious sincerity with which ehe
+was ready to acquiesce in his economical heresies. 'You're quite
+right,' he said: 'the land is the people's, and there's no reason
+on earth why they should starve a minute longer in order to let
+Lord Connemara pay three thousand guineas for spurious copies of
+early Italian manuscripts. And yet it would be difficult to get
+most people to see it. I fancy, Lady Hilda, you must really be
+rather cleverer than most people.'
+
+'I score one,' thought Hilda to herself, 'and whatever happens,
+whether I marry a peer or a revolutionist, I certainly won't marry
+a fool.' 'I'm glad you think so,' she went on aloud, 'because I
+know your opinion's worth having. I should like to be clever, Mr.
+Le Breton, and I should like to know all about everything, but
+what chance has one at Dunbude? Do you know, till you came here, I
+never got any sensible conversation with anybody.' And she sighed
+gently as she put her head on one side to take a good view of her
+sketchy little picture. Lady Hilda's profile was certainly very
+handsome, and she showed it to excellent advantage when she put her
+head on one side. Ernest looked at her and thought so to himself;
+and Lady Hilda's quick eye, glancing sideways for a second from
+the paper, noted immediately that he thought so.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she began again, more confidentially than ever,
+'one thing I've quite made up my mind to; I won't be tied for life
+to a stick like Lord Connemara. In fact, I won't marry a man in
+that position at all. I shall choose for myself, and marry a man
+for the worth that's in him, I assure you it's a positive fact, I've
+been proposed to by no fewer than six assorted Algies and Berties
+and Monties in a single season; besides which some of them follow
+me even down here to Dunbude. Papa and mamma are dreadfully angry
+because I won't have any of them: but I won't. I mean to wait, and
+marry whoever I choose, as soon as I find a man I can really love
+and honour.'
+
+She paused and looked hard at Ernest. 'I can't speak much plainer
+than that,' she thought to herself, 'and really he must be stupider
+than the Algies and the Monties themselves if he doesn't see I want
+him to propose to me. I suppose all women would say it's awfully
+unwomanly of me to lead up to his cards in this way--throwing myself
+at his head they'd call it; but what does that matter? I WON'T
+marry a fool, and I WILL marry a man of some originality. That's
+the only thing in the world worth troubling one's head about. Why
+on earth doesn't he take my hand, I wonder? What further can he
+be waiting for?' Lady Hilda was perfectly accustomed to the usual
+preliminaries of a declaration, and only awaited Ernest's first
+step to proceed in due order to the second. Strange to say, her
+heart was actually beating a little by anticipation. It never even
+occurred to her--the belle of three seasons--that possibly Ernest
+mightn't wish to marry her. So she sat looking pensively at her
+picture, and sighed again quietly.
+
+But Ernest, wholly unsuspicious, only answered, 'You will do quite
+right, Lady Hilda, to marry the man of your own choice, irrespective
+of wealth or station.'
+
+Hilda glanced up at him curiously, with a half-disdainful smile,
+and was just on the point of saying, 'But suppose the man of my
+own choice won't propose to me?' However, as the words rose to her
+lips, she felt there was a point at which even she should yield
+to convention: and there were plenty of opportunities still before
+her, without displaying her whole hand too boldly and immediately.
+So she merely turned with another sigh, this time a genuine one, to
+her half-sketched outline. 'I shall bring him round in time,' she
+said to herself, blushing a little at her unexpected discomfiture.
+'I shall bring him round in time; I shall make him propose to me!
+I don't care if I have to live in a lodging with him, and wash up
+my own tea-things; I shall marry him; that I'm resolved upon. He's
+as mad as a March hare about his Communism and his theories and
+things; but I don't care for that; I could live with him in comfort,
+and I couldn't live in comfort with the Algies and Monties. In fact,
+I believe--in a sort of way--I believe I'm almost in love with him.
+I have a kind of jumpy feeling in my heart when I'm talking with
+him that I never feel when I'm talking with other young men, even
+the nicest of them. He's not nice; he's a bear; and yet, somehow,
+I should like to marry him.'
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she said aloud, 'the sun's all wrong for sketching
+to-day, and besides it's too chilly. I must run about a bit among
+the rocks.' ('At least I shall take his hand to help me,' she
+thought, blushing.) 'Come and walk with me? It's no use trying to
+draw with one's hands freezing.' And she crumpled up the unfinished
+sketch hastily between her fingers. Ernest jumped up to follow her;
+and they spent the next hour scrambling up and down the Clatter,
+and talking on less dangerous subjects than Lady Hilda's matrimonial
+aspirations.
+
+'Still I shall make him ask me yet,' Lady Hilda thought to herself,
+as she parted from him to go up and dress for dinner. 'I shall
+manage to marry him, somehow; or if I don't marry him, at any rate
+I'll marry somebody like him.' For it was really the principle,
+not the person, that Lady Hilda specially insisted upon.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+THE DAUGHTERS OF CANAAN.
+
+
+May, beautiful May, had brought the golden flowers, and the trees
+in the valley behind the sleepy old town of Calcombe Pomeroy were
+decking themselves in the first wan green of their early spring
+foliage. The ragged robins were hanging out, pinky red, from the
+hedgerows; the cuckoo was calling from the copse beside the mill
+stream; and the merry wee hedge-warblers were singing lustily from
+the topmost sprays of hawthorn, with their full throats bursting
+tremulously in the broad sunshine. And Ernest Le Breton, too,
+filled with the season, had come down from Dunbude for a fortnight's
+holiday, on his premised visit to his friend Oswald, or, to say
+the truth more plainly, to Oswald's pretty little sister Edie. For
+Ernest had fully made up his mind by this time what it was he had
+come for, and he took the earliest possible opportunity of taking
+a walk with Edie alone, through the tiny glen behind the town, where
+the wee stream tumbles lazily upon the big slow-turning vanes of
+the overshot mill-wheel.
+
+'Let us sit down a bit on the bank here, Miss Oswald,' he said to
+his airy little companion, as they reached the old stone bridge that
+crosses the stream just below the mill-house; 'it's such a lovely
+day one feels loath to miss any of it, and the scenery here looks
+so bright and cheerful after the endless brown heather and russet
+bracken about Dunbude. Not that Exmoor isn't beautiful in its way,
+too--all Devonshire is beautiful alike for that matter; but then
+it's more sombre and woody in the north, and much less spring-like
+than this lovely quiet South Devon country.'
+
+'I'm so glad you like Calcombe,' Edie said, with one of her unfailing
+blushes at the indirect flattery to herself implied in praise of
+her native county; 'and you think it prettier than Dunbude, then,
+do you?'
+
+'Prettier in its own way, yes, though not so grand of course;
+everything here is on a smaller scale. Dunbude, you know, is almost
+mountainous.'
+
+'And the Castle?' Edie asked, bringing round the conversation to
+her own quarter, 'is that very fine? At all like Warwick, or our
+dear old Arlingford?'
+
+'Oh, it isn't a castle at all, really,' Ernest answered; 'only
+a very big and ugly house. As architecture it's atrocious, though
+it's comfortable enough inside for a place of the sort.'
+
+'And the Exmoors, are they nice people? What kind of girl is Lady
+Hilda, now?' Poor little Edie? she asked the question shyly, but
+with a certain deep beating in her heart, for she had often canvassed
+with herself the vague possibility that Ernest might actually fall
+in love with Lady Hilda. Had he fallen in love with her already,
+or had he not? She knew she would be able to guess the truth by his
+voice and manner the moment he answered her. No man can hide that
+secret from a woman who loves him. Yet it was not without a thrill
+and a flutter that she asked him, for she thought to herself, what
+must she seem to him after all the grand people he had been mixing
+with so lately at Dunbude? Was it possible he could see anything
+in her, a little country village girl, coming to her fresh from
+the great ladies of that unknown and vaguely terrible society?
+
+'Lady Hilda!' Ernest answered, laughing--and as he said the words
+Edie knew in her heart that her question was answered, and blushed
+once more in her bewitching fashion. 'Lady Hilda! Oh, she's a
+very queer girl, indeed; she's not at all clever, really, but she
+has the one virtue of girls of her class--their perfect frankness.
+She's frank all over--no reserve or reticence at all about her.
+Whatever she thinks she says, without the slightest idea that you'll
+see anything to laugh at or to find fault with in it. In matters
+of knowledge, she's frankly ignorant. In matters of taste, she's
+frankly barbaric. In matters of religion, she's frankly heathen. And
+in matters of ethics, she's frankly immoral--or rather extra-moral,'
+he added, quickly correcting himself for the misleading expression.
+
+'I shouldn't think from your description she can be a very
+nice person,' Edie said, greatly relieved, and pulling a few tall
+grasses at her side by way of hiding her interest in the subject.
+'She can't be a really nice girl if she's extra-moral, as you call
+it.'
+
+'Oh, I don't mean she'd cut one's throat or pick one's pocket,
+you know,' Ernest went on quickly, with a gentle smile. 'She's got
+a due respect for the ordinary conventional moralities like other
+people, no doubt; but in her case they're only social prejudices,
+not genuine ethical principles. I don't suppose she ever seriously
+asked herself whether anything was right or wrong or not in her
+whole lifetime. In fact, I'm sure she never did; and if anybody
+else were to do so, she'd be immensely surprised and delighted at
+the startling originality and novelty of thought displayed in such
+a view of the question.'
+
+'But she's very handsome, isn't she?' Edie asked, following up
+her inquiry with due diligence.
+
+'Handsome? oh, yes, in a bold sort of actress fashion. Very handsome,
+but not, to me at least, pleasing. I believe most men admire her a
+great deal; but she lacks a feminine touch dreadfully. She dashes
+away through everything as if she was hunting; and she DOES hunt
+too, which I think bad enough in anybody, and horrible in a woman.'
+
+'Then you haven't fallen in love with her, Mr. Le Breton? I half
+imagined you would, you know, as I'm told she's so very attractive.'
+
+'Fallen in love with HER, Miss Oswald! Fallen in love with Hilda
+Tregellis! What an absurd notion! Heaven forbid it!'
+
+'Why so, please?'
+
+'Why, in the first place, what would be the use of it? Fancy Lady
+Exmoor's horror at the bare idea of her son's tutor falling in love
+with Lady Hilda! I assure you, Miss Oswald, she would evaporate at
+the very mention of such an unheard-of enormity. A man must be, if
+not an earl, at least a baronet with five thousand a year, before
+he dare face the inexpressible indignation of Lady Exmoor with an
+offer of marriage for Lady Hilda.'
+
+'But people don't always fall in love by tables of precedence,'
+Edie put in simply. 'It's quite possible, I suppose, for a man
+who isn't a duke himself to fall in love with a duke's daughter,
+even though the duke her papa mayn't personally happen to approve
+of the match. However, you don't seem to think Lady Hilda herself
+a pleasant girl, even apart from the question of Lady Exmoor's
+requirements?'
+
+'Miss Oswald,' Ernest said, looking at her suddenly, as she sat
+half hiding her face with her parasol, and twitching more violently
+than ever at the tall grasses; 'Miss Oswald, to tell you the truth,
+I haven't been thinking much about Hilda Tregellis or any of the
+other girls I've met at Dunbude, and for a very sufficient reason,
+because I've had my mind too much preoccupied by somebody else
+elsewhere.'
+
+Edie blushed even more prettily than before, and held her peace,
+half raising her eyes for a second in an enquiring glance at his,
+and then dropping them hastily as they met, in modest trepidation.
+At that moment Ernest had never seen anything so beautiful or so
+engaging as Edie Oswald.
+
+'Edie,' he said, beginning again more boldly, and taking her little
+gloved hand almost unresistingly in his; 'Edie, you know my secret.
+I love you. Can you love me?'
+
+Edie looked up at him shyly, the tears glistening and trembling a
+little in the corner of her big bright eyes, and for a moment she
+answered nothing. Then she drew away her hand hastily and said with
+a sigh, 'Mr. Le Breton, we oughtn't to be talking so. We mustn't.
+Don't let us. Take me home, please, at once, and don't say anything
+more about it.' But her heart beat within her bosom with a violence
+that was not all unpleasing, and her looks half belied her words
+to Ernest's keen glance even as she spoke them.
+
+'Why not, Edie?' he said, drawing her down again gently by her
+little hand as she tried to rise hesitatingly. 'Why not? tell me.
+I've looked into your face, and though I can hardly dare to hope
+it or believe it, I do believe I read in it that you really might
+love me.'
+
+'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie answered, a tear now quivering visibly
+on either eyelash, 'don't ask me, please don't ask me. I wish you
+wouldn't. Take me home, won't you?'
+
+Ernest dropped her hand quietly, with a little show of despondency
+that was hardly quite genuine, for his eyes had already told him
+better. 'Then you can't love me, Miss Oswald,' he said, looking at
+her closely. 'I'm sorry for it, very sorry for it; but I'm grieved
+if I have seemed presumptuous in asking you.'
+
+This time the two tears trickled slowly down Edie's cheek--not very
+sad tears either--and she answered hurriedly, 'Oh, I don't mean
+that, Mr. Le Breton, I don't mean that. You misunderstand me, I'm
+sure you misunderstand me.'
+
+Ernest caught up the trembling little hand again. 'Then you CAN
+love me, Edie?' he said eagerly, 'you can love me?'
+
+Edie answered never a word, but bowed her head and cried a little,
+silently. Ernest took the dainty wee gloved hand between his own two
+hands and pressed it tenderly. He felt in return a faint pressure.
+
+'Then why won't you let me love you, Edie?' he asked, looking at
+the blushing girl once more.
+
+'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie said, rising and moving away from
+the path a little under the shade of the big elm-tree, 'it's very
+wrong of me to let you talk so. I mustn't think of marrying you,
+and you mustn't think of marrying me. Consider the difference in
+our positions.'
+
+'Is that all?' Ernest answered gaily. 'Oh, Edie, if that's all,
+it isn't a very difficult matter to settle. My position's exactly
+nothing, for I've got no money and no prospects; and if I ask you
+to marry me, it must be in the most strictly speculative fashion,
+with no date and no certainty. The only question is, will you
+consent to wait for me till I'm able to offer you a home to live
+in? It's asking you a great deal, I know; and you've made me only
+too happy and too grateful already; but if you'll wait for me till
+we can marry, I shall live all my life through to repay you for
+your sacrifice.'
+
+'But, Mr. Le Breton,' Edie said, turning towards the path and
+drying her eyes quickly, 'I really don't think you ought to marry
+me. The difference in station is so great--even Harry would allow
+the difference in station. Your father was a great man, and a general
+and a knight, you know; and though my dear father is the best and
+kindest of men, he isn't anything of that sort, of course.'
+
+A slight shade of pain passed across Ernest's face. 'Edie,' he said,
+'please don't talk about that--please don't. My father was a just
+and good man, whom I loved and honoured deeply; if there's anything
+good in any of us boys, it comes to us from my dear father. But
+please don't speak to me about his profession. It's one of the
+griefs and troubles of my life. He was a soldier, and an Indian
+soldier too; and if there's anything more certain to me than the
+principle that all fighting is very wrong and indefensible, it's
+the principle that our rule in India is utterly unjust and wicked.
+So instead of being proud of my father's profession, much as
+I respected him, I'm profoundly ashamed of it; and it has been a
+great question to me always how far I was justified at all in living
+upon the pension given me for his Indian services.'
+
+Edie looked at him half surprised and half puzzled. It was to her
+such an odd and unexpected point of view. But she felt instinctively
+that Ernest really and deeply meant what he said, and she knew she
+must not allude to the subject again. 'I beg your pardon,' she said
+simply, 'if I've put it wrong; yet you know I can't help feeling
+the great disparity in our two situations.'
+
+'Edie,' said Ernest, looking at her again with all his eyes--'I'm
+going to call you "Edie" always now, so that's understood between
+us. Well, I shall tell you exactly how I feel about this matter.
+From the first moment I saw you I felt drawn towards you, I felt that
+I couldn't help admiring you and sympathising with you and loving
+you. If I dared I would have spoken to you that day at Iffley; but
+I said to myself "She will not care for me; and besides, it would
+be wrong of me to ask her just yet." I had nothing to live upon,
+and I oughtn't to ask you to wait for me--you who are so pretty,
+and sweet and good, and clever--I ought to leave you free to your
+natural prospect of marrying some better man, who would make you
+happier than I can ever hope to do. So I tried to put the impulse
+aside; I waited, saying to myself that if you really cared for me
+a little bit, you would still care for me when I came to Calcombe
+Pomeroy. But then my natural selfishness overcame me--you
+can forgive me for it, Edie; how could I help it when I had once
+seen you? I began to be afraid some other man would be beforehand
+with you; and I liked you so much I couldn't bear to think of the
+chance that you might be taken away from me before I asked you.
+All day long, as I've been walking alone on those high grey moors
+at Dunbude, I've been thinking of you; and at last I made up my
+mind that I MUST come and ask you to be my wife--some time--whenever
+we could afford to marry. I know I'm asking you to make a great
+sacrifice for me; it's more than I have any right to ask you; I'm
+ashamed of myself for asking it; I can only make you a poor man's
+wife, and how long I may have to wait even for that I can't say;
+but if you'll only consent to wait for me, Edie, I'll do the best
+that lies in me to make you as happy and to love you as well as
+any man on earth could ever do.'
+
+Edie turned her face towards his, and said softly, 'Mr. Le Breton,
+I will wait for you as long as ever you wish; and I'm so happy, oh
+so happy.'
+
+There was a pause for a few moments, and then, as they walked
+homeward down the green glen, Edie said, with something more of
+her usual archness, 'So after all you haven't fallen in love with
+Lady Hilda! Do you know, Mr. Le Breton, I rather fancied at Oxford
+you liked me just a little tiny bit; but when I heard you were
+going to Dunbude I said to myself, "Ah, now he'll never care for a
+quiet country girl like me!" And when I knew you were coming down
+here to Calcombe, straight from all those grand ladies at Dunbude,
+I felt sure you'd be disenchanted as soon as you saw me, and never
+think anything more about me.'
+
+'Then you liked me, Edie?' Ernest asked eagerly. 'You wanted me
+really to come to Calcombe to see you?'
+
+'Of course I did, Mr. Le Breton. I've liked you from the first
+moment I saw you.'
+
+'I'm so glad,' Ernest went on quickly. 'I believe all real love
+is love at first sight. I wouldn't care myself to be loved in any
+other way. And you thought I might fall in love with Lady Hilda?'
+
+'Well, you know, she is sure to be so handsome, and so accomplished,
+and to have had so many advantages that I have never had. I was
+afraid I should seem so very simple to you after Lady Hilda.'
+
+'Oh, Edie!' cried Ernest, stopping a moment, and gazing at the
+little light airy figure. 'I only wish you could know the difference.
+Coming from Dunbude to Calcombe is like coming from darkness into
+light. Up there one meets with nobody but essentially vulgar-minded
+selfish people--people whose whole life is passed in thinking and
+talking about nothing but dogs, and horses, and partridges, and
+salmon; racing, and hunting, and billiards, and wines; amusements,
+amusements, amusements, all of them coarse and most of them cruel,
+all day long. Their talk is just like the talk of grooms and
+gamekeepers in a public-house parlour, only a little improved by
+better English and more money. Will So-and-so win the Derby? What
+a splendid run we had with the West Somerset on Wednesday! Were
+you in at the death of that big fox at Coulson's Corner? Ought the
+new vintages of Madeira to be bottled direct or sent round the Cape
+like the old ones? Capital burlesque at the Gaiety, but very slow
+at the Lyceum. Who will go to the Duchess of Dorsetshire's dance
+on the twentieth:--and so forth for ever. Their own petty round
+of selfish pleasures from week's end to week's end--no thought of
+anybody else, no thought of the world at large, no thought even
+of any higher interest in their own personalities. Their politics
+are just a selfish calculation of their own prospects--land, Church,
+capital, privilege. Their religion (when they have any) is just
+a selfish regard for their own personal future welfare. From the
+time I went to Dunbude to this day, I've never heard a single word
+about any higher thought of any sort--I don't mean only about the
+troubles or the aspirations of other people, but even about books,
+about science, about art, about natural beauty. They live in a world
+of amusing oneself and of amusing oneself in vulgar fashions--as a
+born clown would do if he came suddenly into a large fortune. The
+women are just as bad as the men, only in a different way--not
+always even that; for most of them think only of the Four-in-hand
+Club and the pigeon-shooting at Hurlingham--things to sicken one.
+Now, I've known selfish people before, but not selfish people
+utterly without any tincture of culture. I come away from Dunbude,
+and come down here to Calcombe: and the difference in the atmosphere
+makes one's very breath come and go freer. And I look at you, Edie,
+and think of you beside Lady Hilda Tregellis, and I laugh in my
+heart at the difference that artificial rules have made between
+you. I wish you knew how immeasurably her superior you are in
+every way. The fact is, it's a comfort to escape from Dunbude for
+a while and get down here to feel oneself once more, in the only
+true sense of the word, in a little good society.'
+
+While these things were happening in the Bourne Close, palsied old
+Miss Luttrell, mumbling and grumbling inarticulately to herself,
+was slowly tottering down the steep High Street of Calcombe Pomeroy,
+on her way to the village grocer's. She shambled in tremulously
+to Mrs. Oswald's counter, and seating herself on a high stool, as
+was her wont, laid herself out distinctly for a list of purchases
+and a good deliberate ill-natured gossip.
+
+'Two pounds of coffee, if you please, Mrs. Oswald,' she began with
+a quaver; 'coffee, mind, I say, not chicory; your stuff always has
+the smallest possible amount of flavour in it, it seems to me, for
+the largest possible amount of quantity; all chicory, all chicory--no
+decent coffee to be had now in Calcombe Pomeroy. So your son's at
+home this week, is he? Out of work, I suppose? I saw him lounging
+about on the beach, idling away his time, yesterday; pity he wasn't
+at some decent trade, instead of hanging about and doing nothing,
+as if he was a gentleman. Five pounds of lump sugar, too; good lump
+sugar, though I expect I shall get nothing but beetroot; it's all
+beetroot now, my brother tells me; they've ruined the West Indies
+with their emancipation fads and their differential duties and
+the Lord knows what--we had estates in the West Indies ourselves,
+all given up to our negroes nowadays--and now I believe they have
+to pay the French a bounty or something of the sort to induce
+them to make sugar out of beetroot, because the negroes won't work
+without whipping, so I understand; that's what comes in the end of
+your Radical fal-lal notions. Well, five pounds of lump, and five
+pounds of moist, though the one's as bad as the other, really. A
+great pity about your son. I hope he'll get a place again soon. It
+must be a trial to you to have him so idle!'
+
+'Well, no, ma'am, it's not,' Mrs. Oswald answered, with such
+self-restraint as she could command. 'It's not much of a trial to
+his father and me, for we're glad to let him have a little rest
+after working so hard at Oxford. He works too hard, ma'am, but he
+gets compensation for it, don't 'ee see, Miss Luttrell, for he's
+just been made a Fellow of the Royal Society--"for his mathematical
+eminence," the "Times" says--a Fellow of the Royal Society.'
+
+Even this staggering blow did not completely crush old Miss Luttrell.
+'Fellow of the Royal Society,' she muttered feebly through her
+remaining teeth. 'Must be some mistake somewhere, Mrs. Oswald--quite
+impossible. A very meritorious young man, your son, doubtless;
+but a National schoolmaster's hardly likely to be made a Fellow of
+the Royal Society. Oh, I remember you told me he's not a National
+schoolmaster, but has something to do at one of the Oxford colleges.
+Yes, yes; I see what it is--Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.
+You subscribe a guinea, and get made a Fellow by subscription,
+just for the sake of writing F.R.G.S. after your name; it gives a
+young man a look of importance.'
+
+'No, Miss Luttrell, it isn't that; it's THE Royal Society; and if
+you'll wait a moment, ma'am, I'll fetch you the president's letter,
+and the diploma, to let you see it.'
+
+'Oh, no occasion to trouble yourself, Mrs. Oswald!' the old lady put
+in, almost with alacrity, for she had herself seen the announcement
+of Harry Oswald's election in the 'Times' a few days before. 'No
+occasion to trouble yourself, I'm sure; I daresay you may be right,
+and at any rate it's no business of mine, thank heaven. I never
+want to poke my nose into anybody else's business. Well, talking
+of Oxford, Mrs. Oswald, there's a very nice young man down here
+at present; I wonder if you know where he's lodging? I want to ask
+him to dinner. He's a young Mr. Le Breton--one of the Cheshire Le
+Bretons, you know. His father was Sir Owen Le Breton, a general in
+the Indian army--brother officer of Major Standish Luttrell's and
+very nice people in every way. Lady Le Breton's a great friend of
+the Archdeacon's, so I should like to show her son some little
+attention. He's had a very distinguished career at Oxford--your
+boy may have heard his name, perhaps--and now he's acting as tutor
+to Lord Lynmouth, the eldest son of Lord Exmoor, you know; Lady
+Exmoor was a second cousin of my brother's wife; very nice people,
+all of them. The Le Bretons are a really good family, you see; and
+the Archdeacon's exceedingly fond of them. So I thought if you could
+tell me where this young man is lodging--you shop-people pick up
+all the gossip in the place, always--I'd ask him to dinner to meet
+the Rector and Colonel Turnbull and my nephew, who would probably
+be able to offer him a little shooting.'
+
+'There's no partridges about in May, Miss Luttrell,' said Mrs.
+Oswald, quietly smiling to herself at the fancy picture of Ernest
+seated in congenial converse with the Rector, Colonel Turnbull,
+and young Luttrell; 'but as to Mr. Le Breton, I DO happen to know
+where he's stopping, though it's not often that I know any Calcombe
+gossip, save and except what you're good enough to tell me when you
+drop in, ma'am; for Mr. Le Breton's stopping here, in this house,
+with us, ma'am, this very minute.'
+
+'In this house, Mrs. Oswald!' the old lady cried with a start,
+wagging her unsteady old head this time in genuine surprise; 'why,
+I didn't know you let lodgings. I thought you and your daughter
+were too much of fine ladies for THAT, really. I'm glad to hear
+it. I'll leave a note for him.'
+
+'No, Miss Luttrell, we don't let lodgings, ma'am, and we don't need
+to,' Mrs. Oswald answered, proudly. 'Mr. Le Breton's stopping here
+as my son's guest. They were friends at Oxford together: and now
+that Mr. Le Breton has got his holiday, like, Harry's asked him
+down to spend a fortnight at Calcombe Pomeroy. And if you'll leave
+a note I'll be very happy to give it to him as soon as he comes
+in, for he's out walking now with Harry and Edith.'
+
+Old Miss Luttrell sat for half a minute in unwonted silence,
+revolving in her poor puzzled head what line of tactics she ought
+to adopt under such a very singular and annoying combination of
+circumstances. Stopping at the village grocer's!--this was really
+too atrocious! The Le Bretons were all as mad as hatters, that she
+knew well; all except the mother, who was a sensible person, and
+quite rational. But old Sir Owen was a man with the most absurd
+religious fancies--took an interest in the souls of the soldiers;
+quite right and proper, of course, in a chaplain, but really too
+ridiculous in a regular field officer. No doubt Ernest Le Breton
+had taken up some equally extraordinary notions--liberty, equality,
+fraternity, and a general massacre, probably; and he had picked up
+Harry Oswald as a suitable companion in his revolutionary schemes
+and fancies. There was no knowing what stone wall one of those
+mad Le Bretons might choose to run his head against. Still, the
+practical difficulty remained--how could she extricate herself from
+this awkward dilemma in such a way as to cover herself with glory,
+and inflict another bitter humiliation on poor Mrs. Oswald? If only
+she had known sooner that Ernest was stopping at the Oswalds, she
+wouldn't have been so loud in praise of the Le Breton family; she
+would in that case have dexterously insinuated that Lady Le Breton
+was only a half-pay officer's widow, living on her pension; and
+that her boys had got promotion at Oxford as poor scholars, through
+the Archdeacon's benevolent influence. It was too late now, however,
+to adopt that line of defence; and she fell back accordingly upon
+the secondary position afforded her by the chance of taking down
+Mrs. Oswald's intolerable insolence in another fashion.
+
+'Oh, he's out walking with your daughter, is he?' she said, maliciously.
+'Out walking with your daughter, Mrs. Oswald, NOT with your son.
+I saw her passing down the meadows half an hour ago with a strange
+young man; and her brother stopped behind near the millpond. A
+strange young man; yes, I noticed particularly that he looked like
+a gentleman, and I was quite surprised that you should let her walk
+out with him in that extraordinary manner. Depend upon it, Mrs.
+Oswald, when young gentlemen in Mr. Le Breton's position go out
+walking with young women in your daughter's position, they mean no
+good by it--they mean no good by it. Take my advice, Mrs. Oswald,
+and don't permit it. Mr. Le Breton's a very nice young man, and well
+brought up no doubt--I know his mother's a woman of principle--still,
+young men will be young men; and if your son goes bringing down
+his fine Oxford acquaintances to Calcombe Pomeroy, and you and your
+husband go flinging Miss Jemima--her name's Jemima, I think--at
+the young men's heads, why, then, of course, you must take
+the consequences--you must take the consequences!' And with this
+telling Parthian shot discharged carefully from the shadow of the
+doorway, accompanied by a running comment of shrugs, nods, and
+facial distortions, old Miss Luttrell successfully shuffled herself
+out of the shop, her list unfinished, leaving poor Mrs. Oswald
+alone and absolutely speechless with indignation. Ernest Le Breton
+never got a note of invitation from the Squire's sister: but before
+nightfall all that was visitable in Calcombe Pomeroy had heard at
+full length of the horrid conspiracy by which those pushing upstart
+Oswalds had inveigled a son of poor Lady Le Breton's down to stop
+with them, and were now trying to ruin his prospects by getting
+him to marry their brazen-faced hussey, Jemima Edith.
+
+When Edie returned from her walk that afternoon, Mrs. Oswald went
+up into her bedroom to see her daughter. She knew at once from
+Edie's radiant blushing face and moist eyes what had taken place,
+and she kissed the pretty shrinking girl tenderly on her forehead.
+'Edie darling, I hope you will be happy,' she whispered significantly.
+
+'Then you guess it all, mother dear?' asked Edie, relieved that
+she need not tell her story in set words.
+
+'Yes, darling,' said the mother, kissing her again. 'And you said
+"yes."'
+
+Edie coloured once more. 'I said "yes," mother, for I love him
+dearly.'
+
+'He's a dear fellow,' the mother answered gently; 'and I'm sure
+he'll do his best to make you happy.'
+
+Later on in the day, Harry came up and knocked at Edie's door. His
+mother had told him all about it, and so had Ernest. 'Popsy,' he
+said, kissing her also, 'I congratulate you. I'm so glad about
+it. Le Breton's the best fellow I know, and I couldn't wish you a
+better or a kinder husband. You'll have to wait for him, but he's
+worth waiting for. He's a good fellow and a clever fellow, and an
+affectionate fellow; and his family are everything that could be
+desired. It'll be a splendid thing for you to be able to talk in
+future about "my mother-in law, Lady Le Breton." Depend upon it,
+Edie dear, that always counts for something in society.'
+
+Edie blushed again, but this time with a certain tinge of shame
+and disappointment. She had never thought of that herself, and she
+was hurt that Harry should think and speak of it at such a moment.
+She felt with a sigh it was unworthy of him and unworthy of the
+occasion. Truly the iron of Pi and its evaluations had entered
+deeply into his soul!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+CULTURE AND CULTURE.
+
+
+'I wonder, Berkeley,' said Herbert Le Breton, examining a coin
+curiously, 'what on earth can ever have induced you, with your
+ideas and feelings, to become a parson!'
+
+'My dear Le Breton, your taste, like good wine, improves with
+age,' answered Berkeley, coldly. 'There are many reasons, any one
+of which may easily induce a sensible man to go into the Church.
+For example, he may feel a disinterested desire to minister to
+the souls of his poorer neighbours; or he may be first cousin to a
+bishop; or he may be attracted by an ancient and honourable national
+institution; or he may possess a marked inclination for albs and
+chasubles; or he may reflect upon the distinct social advantages
+of a good living; or he may have nothing else in particular to do;
+or he may simply desire to rouse the impertinent curiosity of all
+the indolent quidnuncs of his acquaintance, without the remotest
+intention of ever gratifying their underbred Paul Pry proclivities.'
+
+Herbert Le Breton winced a little--he felt he had fairly laid himself
+open to this unmitigated rebuff--but he did not retire immediately
+from his untenable position. 'I suppose,' he said quietly, 'there
+are still people who really do take a practical interest in other
+people's souls--my brother Ronald does for one--but the idea
+is positively too ridiculous. Whenever I read any argument upon
+immortality it always seems to me remarkably cogent, if the souls
+in question were your soul and my soul; but just consider the
+transparent absurdity of supposing that every Hodge Chawbacon, and
+every rheumatic old Betty Martin, has got a soul, too, that must
+go on enduring for all eternity! The notion's absolutely ludicrous.
+What an infinite monotony of existence for the poor old creatures
+to endure for ever--being bored by their own inane personalities
+for a million aeons! It's simply appalling to think of!'
+
+But Berkeley wasn't going to be drawn into a theological discussion--that
+was a field which he always sedulously and successfully avoided.
+'The immortality of the soul,' he said quietly, 'is a Platonic dogma
+too frequently confounded, even by moderately instructed persons
+like yourself, Le Breton, with the Church's very different doctrine
+of the resurrection of the body. Upon this latter subject, my dear
+fellow, about which you don't seem to be quite clear or perfectly
+sound in your views, you'll find some excellent remarks in Bishop
+Pearson on the Creed--a valuable work which I had the pleasure of
+studying intimately for my ordination examination.'
+
+'Really, Berkeley, you're the most incomprehensible and mysterious
+person I ever met in my whole lifetime!' said Herbert, dryly. 'I
+believe you take a positive delight in deceiving and mystifying
+one. Do you seriously mean to tell me you feel any interest at the
+present time of day in books written by bishops?'
+
+'A modern bishop,' Berkeley answered calmly, 'is an unpicturesque
+but otherwise estimable member of a very distinguished ecclesiastical
+order, who ought not lightly to be brought into ridicule by lewd
+or lay persons. On that ground, I have always been in favour myself
+of gradually reforming his hat, his apron, and even his gaiters,
+which doubtless serve to render him at least conspicuous if not
+positively absurd in the irreverent eyes of a ribald generation.
+But as to criticising his literary or theological productions, my
+dear fellow, that would be conduct eminently unbecoming in a simple
+curate, and savouring of insubordination even in the person of an
+elderly archdeacon. I decline, therefore, to discuss the subject,
+especially with a layman on whose orthodoxy I have painful
+doubts.--Where's Oswald? Is he up yet?'
+
+'No; he's down in Devonshire, my brother Ernest writes me.'
+
+'What, at Dunbude? What's Oswald doing there?'
+
+'Oh dear no; not at Dunbude: the peerage hasn't yet adopted him--at
+a place called Calcombe Pomeroy, where it seems he lives. Ernest
+has gone down there from Exmoor for a fortnight's holiday. You
+remember, Oswald has a pretty sister--I met her here in your rooms
+last October, in fact--and I apprehend she may possibly form a
+measurable portion of the local attractions. A pretty face goes a
+long way with some people.'
+
+Berkeley drew a deep breath, and looked uneasily out of the window.
+This was dangerous news, indeed! What, little Miss Butterfly, has
+the boy with the gauze net caught sight of you already? Will he
+trap you and imprison you so soon in his little gilded matrimonial
+cage, enticing you thereinto with soft words and, sugared compliments
+to suit your dainty, delicate palate? and must I, who have meant to
+chase you for the chief ornament of my own small cabinet, be only
+in time to see you pinioned and cabined in your white lace veils
+and other pretty disguised entanglements, for his special and
+particular delectation? This must be looked into, Miss Butterfly;
+this must be prevented. Off to Calcombe Pomeroy, then, or other
+parts unknown, this very next to-morrow; and let us fight out the
+possession of little Miss Butterfly with our two gauze nets in
+opposition--mine tricked as prettily as I can trick it with tags
+and ends of art-allurements and hummed to in a delicate tune--before
+this interloping anticipating Le Breton has had time to secure you
+absolutely for himself. Too austere for you, little Miss Butterfly;
+good in his way, and kindly meaning, but too austere. Better come
+and sun yourself in the modest wee palace of art that I mean to
+build myself some day in some green, sunny, sloping valley, where
+your flittings will not be rudely disturbed by breath of poverty,
+nor your pretty feathery wings ruthlessly clipped with a pair
+of doctrinaire, ethico-socialistic scissors. To Calcombe, then,
+to Calcombe--and not a day's delay before I get there. So much of
+thought, in his own quaint indefinite fashion, flitted like lightning
+through Arthur Berkeley's perturbed mind, as he stood gazing
+wistfully for one second out of his pretty latticed creeper-clad
+window. Then he remembered himself quickly with a short little
+sigh, and turned to answer Herbert Le Breton's last half-sneering
+innuendo.
+
+'Something more than a pretty face merely,' he said, surveying
+Herbert coldly from head to foot; 'a heart too, and a mind, for
+all her flitting, not wholly unfurnished with good, sensible, solid
+mahogany English furniture. You may be sure Harry Oswald's sister
+isn't likely to be wanting in wits, at any rate.'
+
+'Oswald's a curious fellow,' Herbert went on, changing the venue,
+as he always did when he saw Berkeley was really in earnest; 'he's
+very clever, certainly, but he can never outlive his bourgeois
+origin. The smell of tea sticks about him somehow to the end of
+the chapter. Don't you know, Berkeley, there are some fellows whose
+clothes seem to have been born with them, they fit so perfectly
+and impede their movement so little; while there are other fellows
+whose clothes look at once as if they'd been made for them by a
+highly respectable but imperfectly successful tailor. That's just
+what I always think about Harry Oswald in the matter of culture.
+He's got a great deal of culture, the very best culture, from the
+very best shop--Oxford, in fact--dressed himself up in the finest
+suit of clothes from the most fashionable mental tailor; but it
+doesn't seem to fit him naturally. He moves about in it uneasily,
+like a man unaccustomed to be clothed by a good workman. He looks
+in his mental upholstery like a greengrocer in evening dress. Now
+there's all the difference in the world between that sort of put-on
+culture and culture in the grain, isn't there? You may train up a
+grocer's son to read Dante, and to play Mendelssohn's Lieder, and
+to admire Fra Angelico; but you can't train him up to wear these
+things lightly and gracefully upon him as you and I do, who come
+by them naturally. WE are born to the sphere; HE rises to it.'
+
+'You think so, Le Breton?' asked the curate with a quiet and
+suppressed smile, as he thought silently of the placid old shoemaker.
+
+'Think so! my dear fellow, I'm sure of it. I can spot a man of
+birth from a man of mere exterior polish any day, anywhere. Talk
+as much nonsense as you like about all men being born free and
+equal--they're not. They're born with natural inequalities in their
+very nerve and muscle. When I was an undergraduate, I startled
+one of the tutors of that time by beginning my English essay once,
+"All men are by nature born free and unequal." I stick to it still;
+it's the truth. They say it takes three generations to make a
+gentleman; nonsense utterly; it takes at least a dozen. You can't
+work out the common fibre in such a ridiculous hurry. That results
+as a simple piece of deductive reasoning from all modern theories
+of heredity and variation.'
+
+'I agree with you in part, Le Breton,' the parson said, eyeing him
+closely; 'in part but not altogether. What you say about Oswald's
+very largely true. His culture sits upon him like a suit made to
+order, not like a skin in which he was born. But don't you think
+that's due more to the individual man than to the class he happens
+to belong to? It seems to me there are other men who come from the
+same class as Oswald, or even from lower classes, but whose culture
+is just as much ingrained as, say, my dear fellow, yours is. They
+were born, no doubt, of naturally cultivated parents. And that's how
+your rule about the dozen generations that go to make a gentleman
+comes really true. I believe myself it takes a good many generations;
+but then none of them need have been gentlemen, in the ordinary sense
+of the word, before him. A gentleman, if I'm to use the expression
+as implying the good qualities conventionally supposed to be associated
+with it, a gentleman may be the final outcome and efflorescence of
+many past generations of quiet, unobtrusive, working-man culture--don't
+you think so?'
+
+Herbert Le Breton smiled incredulously. 'I don't know that I do,
+quite,' he answered languidly. 'I confess I attach more importance
+than you do to the mere question of race and family. A thoroughbred
+differs from a cart-horse, and a greyhound from a vulgar mongrel,
+in mind and character as well as in body. Oswald seems to me in
+all essentials a bourgeois at heart even now.'
+
+'But remember,' Berkeley said, rather warmly for him, 'the bourgeois
+class in England is just the class which must necessarily find
+it hardest to throw off the ingrained traces of its early origin.
+It has intermarried for a long time--long enough to have produced
+a distinct racial type like those you speak of among dogs and
+horses--the Philistine type, in fact--and when it tries to emerge,
+it must necessarily fight hard against the innate Philistinism of
+which it is conscious in its own constitution. No class has had
+its inequality with others, its natural inferiority, so constantly
+and cruelly thrust in its face; certainly the working-man has not.
+The working-man who makes efforts to improve himself is encouraged;
+the working-man who rises is taken by the hand; the working-man,
+whatever he does, is never sneered at. But it's very different with
+the shopkeeper. Naturally a little prone to servility--that comes
+from the very necessities of the situation--and laudably anxious
+to attain the level of those he considers his superiors, he gets
+laughed at on every hand. Being the next class below society,
+society is always engaged in trying to keep him out and keep him
+down. On the other hand, he naturally forms his ideal of what is
+fine and worth imitating from the example of the class above him;
+and therefore, considering what that class is, he has unworthy aims
+and snobbish desires. Either in his own person, or in the persons
+of his near relations, the wholesale merchant and the manufacturer--all
+bourgeois alike--he supplies the mass of nouveaux riches who are
+the pet laughing-stock of all our playwrights, and novelists, and
+comic papers. So the bourgeois who really knows he has something
+in him, like Harry Oswald, feels from the beginning painfully
+conscious of the instability of his position, and of the fact that
+men like you are cutting jokes behind his back about the smell of
+tea that still clings to him. That's a horrible drag to hold a man
+back--the sense that he must always be criticised as one of his
+own class--and that a class with many recognised failings. It makes
+him self-conscious, and I believe self-consciousness is really at
+the root of that slight social awkwardness you think you notice
+in Harry Oswald. A working-man's son need never feel that. I feel
+sure there are working-men's sons who go through the world as
+gentlemen mixing with gentlemen, and never give the matter of their
+birth one moment's serious consideration. Their position never
+troubles them, and it never need trouble them. Put it to yourself,
+now, Le Breton. Suppose I were to tell you my father was a working
+shoemaker, for example, or a working carpenter, you'd never think
+anything more about it; but if I were to tell you he was a grocer,
+or a baker, or a confectioner, or an ironmonger, you'd feel a certain
+indefinable class barrier set up between us two immediately and
+ever after. Isn't it so, now?'
+
+'Perhaps it is,' Herbert answered dubitatively. 'But as he's
+probably neither the one nor the other, the hypothesis isn't worth
+seriously discussing. I must go off now; I've got a lecture at
+twelve. Good-bye. Don't forget the tickets for Thursday's concert.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked after him with a contemptuous smile. 'The
+outcome of a race himself,' he thought, 'and not the best side
+of that race either. I was half tempted, in the heat of argument,
+to blurt out to him the whole truth about the dear gentle old
+Progenitor; but I'm glad I didn't now. After all, it's no use to
+cast your pearls before swine. For Herbert's essentially a pig--a
+selfish self-centred pig; no doubt a very refined and cultivated
+specimen of pigdom--the best breed; but still a most emphatic and
+consummate pig for all that. Not the same stuff in him that there is
+in Ernest--a fibre or two wanting somewhere. But I mustn't praise
+Ernest--a rival! a rival! It's war to the death between us two
+now, and no quarter. He's a good fellow, and I like him dearly;
+but all's fair in love and war; and I must go down to Calcombe
+to-morrow morning and forestall him immediately. Dear little Miss
+Butterfly, 'tis for your sake; you shall not be pinched and cramped
+to suit the Procrustean measure of Ernest Le Breton's communistic
+fancies. You shall fly free in the open air, and flash your bright
+silken wings, decked out bravely in scales of many hues, not toned
+down to too sober and quaker-like a suit of drab and dove-colour.
+You were meant by nature for the sunshine and the summer; you
+shall not be worried and chilled and killed with doses of heterodox
+political economy and controversial ethics. Better even a country
+rectory (though with a bad Late Perpendicular church), and flowers,
+and picnics, and lawn-tennis, and village small-talk, and the
+squire's dinner-parties, than bread and cheese and virtuous poverty
+in a London lodging with Ernest Le Breton. Romance lives again. The
+beautiful maiden is about to be devoured by a goggle-eyed monster,
+labelled on the back "Experimental Socialism"; the red cross knight
+flies to her aid, and drives away the monster by his magic music.
+Lance in rest! lyre at side! third class railway ticket in pocket!
+A Berkeley to the rescue! and there you have it.' And as he spoke,
+he tilted with his pen at an imaginary dragon supposed to be seated
+in the crimson rocking-chair by the wainscotted fireplace.
+
+'Yes, I must certainly go down to Calcombe. No use putting it off
+any longer. I've arranged to go next summer to London, to keep
+house for the dear old Progenitor; the music is getting asked for,
+two requests for more this very morning; trade is looking up. I
+shall throw the curacy business overboard (what chance for modest
+merit that ISN'T first cousin to a Bishop in the Church as at present
+constituted?) and take to composing entirely for a livelihood. I
+wouldn't ask Miss Butterfly before, because I didn't wish to tie
+her pretty wings prematurely; but a rival! that's quite a different
+matter. What right has he to go poaching on my preserves, I should
+like to know, and trying to catch the little gold fish I want to
+entice for my own private and particular fish-pond! An interloper, to
+be turned out unmercifully. So off to Calcombe, and that quickly.'
+
+He sat down to his desk, and taking out some sheets of blank
+music-paper, began writing down the score of a little song at which
+he had been working. So he continued till lunch-time, and then,
+turning to the table when the scout called him, took his solitary
+lunch of bread and butter, with a volume of Petrarch set open
+before him as he eat. He was lazily Englishing the soft lines of
+the original into such verse as suited his fastidious ear, when the
+scout came in suddenly once more, bringing in his hand the mid-day
+letters. One of them bore the Calcombe postmark. 'Strange,'
+Berkeley said to himself; 'at the very moment when I was thinking
+of going there. An invitation perhaps; the age of miracles is not
+yet past--don't they see spirits in a conjuror's room in Regent
+Street?--from Oswald, too; by Jove, it must be an invitation.'
+And he ran his eye down the page rapidly, to see if there was any
+mention of little Miss Butterfly. Yes; there was her name on the
+second sheet; what could her brother have to say to him about her?
+
+'We have Ernest Le Breton down here now,' Oswald wrote, 'on a
+holiday from the Exmoors', and you may be surprised to hear that
+I shall probably have him sooner or later for a brother-in-law. He
+has proposed to and been accepted by my sister Edith; and though
+it is likely, as things stand at present, to be a rather long
+engagement (for Le Breton has nothing to marry upon), we are all
+very much pleased about it here at Calcombe. He is just the exact
+man I should wish my sister to marry; so pleasant and good and
+clever, and so very well connected. Felicitate us, my dear Berkeley!'
+
+Arthur Berkeley laid the letter down with a quiet sigh, and folded
+his hands despondently before him. He hadn't seen very much of
+Edie, yet the disappointment was to him a very bitter one. It had
+been a pleasant day-dream, truly, and he was both to part with it
+so unexpectedly. 'Poor little Miss Butterfly,' he said to himself,
+tenderly and compassionately; 'poor, airy, flitting, bright-eyed
+little Miss Butterfly. I must give you up, must I, and Ernest Le
+Breton must take you for better, for worse, must he? La reyne le
+veult, it seems, and her word is law. I'm afraid he's hardly the
+man to make you happy, little lady; kind-hearted, well-meaning,
+but too much in earnest, too much absorbed in his ideas of right
+for a world where right's impossible, and every man for himself
+is the wretched sordid rule of existence. He will overshadow and
+darken your bright little life, I fear me; not intentionally--he
+couldn't do that--but by his Quixotic fads and fancies; good fads,
+honest fads, but fads wholly impracticable in this jarring universe
+of clashing interests, where he who would swim must keep his own
+head steadily above water, and he who minds his neighbour must sink
+like lead to the unfathomable bottom. He will sink, I doubt not,
+poor little Miss Butterfly; he will sink inevitably, and drag you
+down with him, down, down, down to immeasurable depths of poverty
+and despair. Oh, my poor little butterfly, I'm sorry for you, and
+sorry for myself. It was a pretty dream, and I loved it dearly.
+I had made you a queen in my fancy, and throned you in my heart,
+and now I have to dethrone you again, me miserable, and have my
+poor lonely heart bare and queenless!'
+
+The piano was open, and he went over to it instinctively, strumming
+a few wild bars out of his own head, made up hastily on the spur
+of the moment. 'No, not dethrone you,' he went on, leaning back
+on the music-stool, and letting his hand wander aimlessly over the
+keys; 'not dethrone you; I shall never, never be able to do that.
+Little Miss Butterfly, your image is stamped there too deep for
+dethronement, stamped there for ever, indelibly, ineffaceably, not
+to be washed out by tears or laughter. Ernest Le Breton may take
+you and keep you; you are his; you have chosen him, and you have
+chosen in most things not unwisely, for he's a good fellow and
+true (let me be generous in the hour of disappointment even to the
+rival, the goggle-eyed impracticable dragon monstrosity), but you
+are mine, too, for I won't give you up; I can't give you up; I must
+live for you still, even if you know it not. Little woman, I will
+work for you and I will watch over you; I will be your earthly
+Providence; I will try to extricate you from the quagmires into
+which the well-meaning, short-sighted dragon will infallibly lead
+you. Dear little bright soul, my heart aches for you; I know the
+trouble you are bringing upon yourself; but la reyne le veult, and
+it is not your humble servitor's business to interfere with your
+royal pleasure. Still, you are mine, for I am yours; yours, body
+and soul; what else have I to live for? The dear old Progenitor
+can't be with us many years longer; and when he is gone there will
+be nothing left me but to watch over little Miss Butterfly and her
+Don Quixote of a future husband. A man can't work and slave and
+compose sonatas for himself alone--the idea's disgusting, piggish,
+worthy only of Herbert Le Breton; I must do what I can for the
+little queen, and for her balloon-navigating Utopian Ernest. Thank
+heaven, no law prevents you from loving in your own heart the one
+woman whom you have once loved, no matter who may chance to marry
+her. Go, day-dream, fly, vanish, evaporate; the solid core remains
+still--my heart, and little Miss Butterfly. I have loved her once,
+and I shall love her, I shall love her for ever!'
+
+He crumpled the letter up in his fingers, and flung it half angrily
+into the waste-paper basket, as though it were the embodied day-dream
+he was mentally apostrophising. It was sermon-day, and he had to
+write his discourse that very afternoon. A quaint idea seized him.
+'Aha,' he said, almost gaily, in his volatile irresponsible fashion,
+'I have my text ready; the hour brings it to me unsought; a quip,
+a quip! I shall preach on the Pool of Bethesda: "While I am coming,
+another steppeth down before me." The verse seems as if it were
+made on purpose for me; what a pity nobody else will understand
+it!' And he smiled quietly at the conceit, as he got the scented
+sheets of sermon-paper out of his little sandalwood davenport.
+For Arthur Berkeley was one of those curiously compounded natures
+which can hardly ever be perfectly serious, and which can enjoy
+a quaintness or a neat literary allusion even at a moment of the
+bitterest personal disappointment. He could solace himself for
+a minute for the loss of Edie by choosing a text for his Sunday's
+sermon with a prettily-turned epigram on his own position.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE MORE EXCELLENT WAY.
+
+
+At the very top of the winding footpath cut deeply into the
+sandstone side of the East Cliff Hill at Hastings, a wooden seat,
+set a little back from the road, invites the panting climber to rest
+for five minutes after his steep ascent from the primitive fisher
+village of Old Hastings, which nestles warmly in the narrow sun-smitten
+gulley at his feet. On this seat, one bright July morning, Herbert
+Le Breton lay at half length, basking in the brilliant open sunshine
+and evidently waiting for somebody whom he expected to arrive by the
+side path from the All Saints' Valley. Even the old coastguardsman,
+plodding his daily round over to Ecclesbourne, noticed the obvious
+expectation implied in his attentive attitude, and ventured to
+remark, in his cheery familiar fashion, 'She won't be long a-comin'
+now, sir, you may depend upon it: the gals is sure to be out
+early of a fine mornin' like this 'ere.' Herbert stuck his double
+eye-glass gingerly upon the tip of his nose, and surveyed the
+bluff old sailor through it with a stony British stare of mingled
+surprise and indignation, which drove the poor man hastily off, with
+a few muttered observations about some people being so confounded
+stuck up that they didn't even understand the point of a little
+good-natured seafarin' banter.
+
+As the coastguardsman disappeared round the corner of the flagstaff,
+a young girl came suddenly into sight by the jutting edge of
+sandstone bluff near the High Wickham; and Herbert, jumping up at
+once from his reclining posture, raised his bat to her with stately
+politeness, and moved forward in his courtly graceful manner
+to meet her as she approached. 'Well, Selah,' he said, taking her
+hand a little warmly (judged at least by Herbert Le Breton's usual
+standard), 'so you've come at last! I've been waiting here for you
+for fully half an hour. You see, I've come down to Hastings again
+as I promised, the very first moment I could possibly get away
+from my pressing duties at Oxford.'
+
+The girl withdrew her hand from his, blushing deeply, but looking
+into his face with evident pleasure and admiration. She was tall
+and handsome, with a certain dashing air of queenliness about her,
+too; and she was dressed in a brave, outspoken sort of finery,
+which, though cheap enough in its way, was neither common nor wholly
+wanting in a touch of native good taste and even bold refinement of
+contrast and harmony. 'It's very kind of you to come, Mr. Walters,'
+she answered in a firm but delicate voice. 'I'm so sorry I've
+kept you waiting. I got your letter, and tried to come in time; but
+father he's been more aggravating than usual, almost, this morning,
+and kept saying he'd like to know what on earth a young woman could
+want to go out walking for, instead of stopping at home at her work
+and minding her Bible like a proper Christian. In HIS time young
+women usen't to be allowed to go walking except on Sundays, and then
+only to chapel or Bible class. So I've not been able to get away
+till this very minute, with all this bundle of tracts, too, to give
+to the excursionists on the way. Father feels a most incomprehensible
+interest, somehow, in the future happiness of the Sunday excursionists.'
+
+'I wish he'd feel a little more interest in the present happiness
+of his own daughter,' Herbert said smiling. 'But it hasn't mattered
+your keeping me waiting here, Selah. Of course I'd have enjoyed it
+all far better in your society--I don't think I need tell you that
+now, dear--but the sunshine, and the sea breeze, and the song of
+the larks, and the plash of the waves below, and the shouts of the
+fishermen down there on the beach mending their nets and putting
+out their smacks, have all been so delightful after our humdrum
+round of daily life at Oxford, that I only wanted your presence
+here to make it all into a perfect paradise.--Why, Selah, how pretty
+you look in that sweet print! It suits your complexion admirably.
+I never saw you wear anything before so perfectly becoming.'
+
+Selah drew herself up with the conscious pride of an unaffected
+pretty girl. 'I'm so glad you think so, Mr. Walters,' she said,
+playing nervously with the handle of her dark-blue parasol. 'You
+always say such very flattering things.'
+
+'No, not flattering,' Herbert answered, smiling; 'not flattering,
+Selah, simply truthful. You always extort the truth from me with
+your sweet face, Selah. Nobody can look at it and not forget the
+stupid conventions of ordinary society. But please, dear, don't
+call me Mr. Walters. Call me Herbert. You always do, you know, when
+you write to me.'
+
+'But it's so much harder to do it to your face, Mr. Walters,' Selah
+said, again blushing. 'Every time you go away I say to myself, "I
+shall call him Herbert as soon as ever he comes back again;" and
+every time you come back, I feel too much afraid of you, the moment
+I see you, ever to do it. And yet of course I ought to, you know,
+for when we're married, why, naturally, then I shall have to learn
+to call you Herbert, shan't I?'
+
+'You will, I suppose,' Herbert answered, rather chillily: 'but
+that subject is one upon which we shall be able to form a better
+opinion when the time comes for actually deciding it. Meanwhile,
+I want you to call me Herbert, if you please, as a personal favour
+and a mark of confidence. Suppose I were to go on calling you Miss
+Briggs all the time! a pretty sort of thing that would be! what
+inference would you draw as to the depth of my affection? Well,
+now, Selah, how have these dreadful home authorities of yours been
+treating you, my dear girl, all the time since I last saw you?'
+
+'Much the same as usual, Mr. Walters--Herbert, I mean,' Selah
+answered, hastily correcting herself. 'The regular round. Prayers;
+clean the shop; breakfast, with a chapter; serve in the shop all
+morning; dinner, with a chapter; serve in the shop all afternoon;
+tea, with a chapter; prayer meeting in the evening; supper, with a
+chapter; exhortation; and go to bed, sick of it all, to get up next
+morning and repeat the entire performance da capo, as they always
+say in the music to the hymn-books. Occasional relaxations,--Sunday
+at chapel three times, and Wednesday evening Bible class; mothers'
+assembly, Dorcas society, missionary meeting, lecture on the Holy
+Land, dissolving views of Jerusalem, and Primitive Methodist
+district conference in the Mahanaim Jubilee meeting hall. Salvation
+privileges every day and all the year round, till I'm ready to drop
+with it, and begin to wish I'd only been lucky enough to have been
+born one of those happy benighted little pagans in a heathen land
+where they don't know the value of the precious Sabbath, and haven't
+yet been taught to build Primitive Methodist district chapels for
+crushing the lives out of their sons and daughters!'
+
+Herbert smiled a gentle smile of calm superiority at this vehement
+outburst of natural irreligion. 'You must certainly be bored
+to death with it all, Selah,' he said, laughingly. 'What a funny
+sort of creed it really is, after all, for rational beings! Who on
+earth could believe that the religion these people use to render
+your life so absolutely miserable is meant for the same thing as
+the one that makes my poor dear brother Ronald so perfectly and
+inexpressibly serene and happy? The formalism of lower natures, like
+your father's, has turned it into a machine for crushing all the
+spontaneity out of your existence. What a régime for a high-spirited
+girl like you to be compelled to live under, Selah!'
+
+'It is, it is!' Selah answered, vehemently. 'I wish you could only
+see the way father goes on at me all the time about chapel, and so
+on, Mr. Wal--Herbert, I mean. You wouldn't wonder, if you were to
+hear him, at my being anxious for the time to come when you can
+leave Oxford and we can get comfortably married. What between the
+drudgery of the shop and the drudgery of the chapel my life's
+positively getting almost worn out of me.'
+
+Herbert took her hand in his, quietly. It was not a very small hand,
+but it was prettily, though cheaply, gloved, and the plain silver
+bracelet that encircled the wrist, though simple and inexpensive,
+was not wanting in rough tastefulness. 'You're a bad philosopher,
+Selah,' he said, turning with her along the path towards Ecclesbourne;
+'you're always anxious to hurry on too fast the lagging wheels of
+an unknown future. After all, how do you know whether we should
+be any the happier if we were really and truly married? Don't you
+know what Swinburne says, in "Dolores"--you've read it in the Poems
+and Ballads I gave you--
+
+
+ Time turns the old days to derision,
+ Our loves into corpses or wives,
+ And marriage and death and division
+ Make barren our lives?'
+
+
+'I've read it,' Selah answered, carelessly, 'and I thought it all
+very pretty. Of course Swinburne always is very pretty: but I'm
+sure I never try to discover what on earth he means by it. I suppose
+father would say I don't read him tearfully and prayerfully--at
+any rate, I'm quite sure I never understand what he's driving at.'
+
+'And yet he's worth understanding,' Herbert answered in his clear
+musical voice--'well worth understanding, Selah, especially for
+you, dearest. If, in imitation of obsolete fashions, you wished
+to read a few verses of some improving volume every night and
+morning, as a sort of becoming religious exercise in the elements
+of self-culture, I don't know that I could recommend you a better
+book to begin upon than the Poems and Ballads. Don't you see the
+moral of those four lines I've just quoted to you? Why should we
+wish to change from anything so free and delightful and poetical
+as lovers into anything so fettered, and commonplace, and prosaic,
+and BANAL, as wives and husbands? Why should we wish to give up
+the fanciful paradise of fluttering hope and expectation for the
+dreary reality of housekeeping and cold mutton on Mondays? Why
+should we not be satisfied with the real pleasure of the passing
+moment, without for ever torturing our souls about the imaginary
+but delusive pleasure of the unrealisable, impossible future?'
+
+'But we MUST get married some time or other, Herbert,' Selah
+said, turning her big eyes full upon him with a doubtful look
+of interrogation. 'We can't go on courting in this way for ever
+and ever, without coming to any definite conclusion. We MUST get
+married by-and-by, now mustn't we?'
+
+'Je n'en vois pas la nécessité, moi,' Herbert answered with just a
+trace of cynicism in his curling lip. 'I don't see any MUST about
+it, that is to say, in English, Selah. The fact is, you see, I'm
+above all things a philosopher; you're a philosopher, too, but only
+an instinctive one, and I want to make your instinctive philosophy
+assume a rather more rational and extrinsic shape. Why should we
+really be in any hurry to go and get married? Do the actual married
+people of our acquaintance, as a matter of fact, seem so very much
+more ethereally happy--with their eight children to be washed and
+dressed and schooled daily, for example--than the lovers, like you
+and me, who walk arm-in-arm out here in the sunshine, and haven't
+yet got over their delicious first illusions? Depend upon it, the
+longer you can keep your illusions the better. You haven't read
+Aristotle in all probability; but as Aristotle would put it, it
+isn't the end that is anything in love-making, it's the energy, the
+active pursuit, the momentary enjoyment of it. I suppose we shall
+have to get married some day, Selah, though I don't know when; but
+I confess to you I don't look forward to the day quite so rapturously
+as you do. Shall we feel more the thrill of possession, do you
+think, than I feel it now when I hold your hand in mine, so, and
+catch the beating of your pulse in your veins, even through the
+fingers of your pretty little glove? Shall we look deeper into
+one another's eyes and hearts than I look now into the very inmost
+depths of yours? Shall we drink in more fully the essence of love
+than when I touch your lips here--one moment, Selah, the gorse is
+very deep here--now don't be foolish--ah, there, what's the use
+of philosophising, tell me, by the side of that? Come over here to
+the bench, Selah, by the edge of the cliff; look down yonder into
+Ecclesbourne glen; hear the waves dashing on the shore below, and
+your own heart beating against your bosom within--and then ask
+yourself what's the good of living in any moment, in any moment
+but the present.'
+
+Selah turned her great eyes admiringly upon him once more. 'Oh,
+Herbert,' she said, looking at him with a clever uneducated girl's
+unfeigned and undisguised admiration for any cultivated gentleman
+who takes the trouble to draw out her higher self. 'Oh, Herbert, how
+can you talk so beautifully to me, and then ask me why it is I'm
+longing for the day to come when I can be really and truly married
+to you? Do you think I don't feel the difference between spending
+my life with such a man as you, and spending it for years and years
+together with a ranting, canting Primitive Methodist?'
+
+Herbert smiled to himself a quiet, unobtrusive, self-satisfied
+smile. 'She appreciates me,' he thought silently in his own heart,
+'she appreciates me at my true worth; and, after all, that's a great
+thing. Well, Selah,' he went on aloud, toying unreproved with her
+pretty little silver bracelet, 'let us be practical. You belong to
+a business family and you know the necessity for being practical.
+There's a great deal to be said in favour of my hanging on at Oxford
+a little longer. I must get a situation somewhere else as soon
+as possible, in which I can get married; but I can't give up my
+fellowship without having found something else to do which would
+enable me to put my wife in the position I should like her to
+occupy.'
+
+'A very small income would do for me, with you, Herbert,' Selah
+put in eagerly. 'You see, I've been brought up economically enough,
+heaven knows, and I could live extremely well on very little.'
+
+'But _I_ could not, Selah,' Herbert answered, in his colder tone.
+'Pardon me, but I could not. I've been accustomed to a certain
+amount of comfort, not to say luxury, which I couldn't readily
+do without. And then, you know, dear,' he added, seeing a certain
+cloud gathering dimly on Selah's forehead, 'I want to make my wife
+a real lady.'
+
+Selah looked at him tenderly, and gave the hand she hold in hers
+a faint pressure. And then Herbert began to talk about the waves,
+and the cliffs, and the sun, and the great red sails, and to quote
+Shelley and Swinburne; and the conversation glided off into more
+ordinary everyday topics.
+
+They sat for a couple of hours together on the edge of the cliff,
+talking to one another about such and other subjects, till, at last,
+Selah asked the time, hurriedly, and declared she must go off at
+once, or father'd be in a tearing passion. Herbert walked back
+with her through the green lanes in the golden mass of gorse, till
+he reached the brow of the hill by the fisher village. Then Selah
+said lightly, 'Not any nearer, Herbert--you see I can say Herbert
+quite naturally now--the neighbours will go talking about it
+if they see me standing here with a strange gentleman. Good-bye,
+good-bye, till Friday.' Herbert held her face up to his in his
+hands, and kissed her twice over in spite of a faint resistance.
+Then they each went their own way, Selah to the little green-grocer's
+shop in a back street of the red-brick fisher village, and Herbert
+to his big fashionable hotel on the Marine Parade in the noisy
+stuccoed modern watering place.
+
+'It's an awkward sort of muddle to have got oneself into.' he thought
+to himself as he walked along the asphalte pavement in front of
+the sea-wall: 'a most confoundedly awkward fix to have got oneself
+into with a pretty girl of the lower classes. She's beautiful
+certainly; that there's no denying; the handsomest woman on the
+whole I ever remember to have seen at any time anywhere; and when
+I'm actually by her side--though it's a weakness to confess it--I'm
+really not quite sure that I'm not positively quite in love with
+her! She'd make a grand sort of Messalina, without a doubt, a
+model for a painter, with her frank imperious face, and her splendid
+voluptuous figure; a Faustina, a Catherine of Russia, an Ann
+Boleyn--to be fitly painted only by a Rubens or a Gustave Courbet.
+Yet how I can ever have been such a particular fool as to go and
+get myself entangled with her I can't imagine. Heredity, heredity;
+it must run in the family, for certain. There's Ernest has gone and
+handed himself over bodily to this grocer person somewhere down in
+Devonshire; and I myself, who perfectly see the folly of his absurd
+proceeding, have independently put myself into this very similar
+awkward fix with Selah Briggs here. Selah Briggs, indeed! The very
+name reeks with commingled dissent, vulgarity, and greengrocery. Her
+father's deacon of his chapel, and goes out at night when there's
+no missionary meeting on, to wait at serious dinner parties! Or
+rather, I suppose he'd desert the most enticing missionary to earn
+a casual half-crown at even an ungodly champagne-drinking dinner!
+Then that's the difference between me and Ernest. Ernest's selfish,
+incurably and radically selfish. Because this Oswald girl happens
+to take his passing fancy, and to fit in with his impossible
+Schurzian notions, he'll actually go and marry her. Not only will
+he have no consideration for mother--who really is a very decent
+sort of body in her own fashion, if you don't rub her up the wrong
+way or expect too much from her--but he'll also interfere, without
+a thought, with MY prospects and my advancement. Now, THAT I call
+really selfish; and selfishness is a vulgar piggish vice that I
+thoroughly abominate. I don't deny that I'm a trifle selfish myself,
+of course, in a refined and cultivated manner--I flatter myself,
+in fact, that introspective analysis is one of my strong points;
+and I don't conceal my own failings from my own consciousness with
+any weak girlish prevarications. But after all, as Hobbes very well
+showed (though our shallow modern philosophers pretend to laugh at
+him), selfishness in one form or another is at the very base of
+all human motives; the difference really is between sympathetic
+and unsympathetic selfishness--between piggishness and cultivated
+feelings. Now _I_ will NOT give way to the foolish and selfish
+impulses which would lead me to marry Selah Briggs. I will put a
+curb upon my inclinations, and do what is really best in the end
+for all the persons concerned--and for myself especially.'
+
+He strolled down on to the beach, and began throwing pebbles
+carelessly into the plashing water. 'Yes,' he went on in his internal
+colloquy, 'I can only account for my incredible stupidity in this
+matter by supposing that it depends somehow upon some incomprehensible
+hereditary leaning in the Le Breton family idiosyncrasy. It's awfully
+unlike me, I will do myself the justice to say, to have got myself
+into such a silly dilemma all for nothing. It was all very well a
+few years ago, when I first met Selah. I was an undergraduate in
+those days, and even if somebody had caught me walking with a young
+lady of unknown antecedents and doubtful aspirates on the East
+Cliff at Hastings, it really wouldn't have much mattered. She was
+beautiful even then--though not so beautiful as now, for she grows
+handsomer every day; and it was natural enough I should have taken
+to going harmless walks about the place with her. She attracted me
+by her social rebelliousness--another family trait, in me passive
+not active, contemplative not personal; but she certainly attracted
+me. She attracts me still. A man must have some outlet for the
+natural and instinctive emotions of our common humanity; and if a
+monastic Oxford community imposes celibacy upon one with mediaeval
+absurdity--why, Selah Briggs is, for the time being, the only
+possible sort of outlet. One needn't marry her in the end; but for
+the moment it is certainly very excellent fooling. Not unsentimental
+either--for my part I could never care for mere coarse, commonplace,
+venal wretches. Indeed, when I spoke to her just now about my wishing
+to make my wife a lady, upon my word, at the time, I almost think
+I was just then quite in earnest. The idea flitted across my mind
+vaguely--"Why not send her for a year or two to be polished up
+at Paris or somewhere, and really marry her afterwards for good
+and always?" But on second thoughts, it won't hold water. She's
+magnificent, she's undeniable, she's admirable, but she isn't
+possible. The name alone's enough to condemn her. Fancy marrying
+somebody with a Christian name out of the hundred and somethingth
+psalm! It's too atrocious! I really couldn't inflict her for a
+moment on poor suffering innocent society.'
+
+He paused awhile, watching the great russet sails of the fishing
+vessels flapping idly in the breeze as the men raised them to catch
+the faint breath of wind, and then he thought once more, 'But how
+to get rid of her, that's the question. Every time I come here now
+she goes on more and more about the necessity of our getting soon
+married--and I don't wonder at it either, for she has a perfect
+purgatory of a life with that snivelling Methodistical father of
+hers, one may be sure of it. It would be awfully awkward if any
+Oxford people were to catch me here walking with her on the cliff over
+yonder--some sniggering fellow of Jesus or Worcester, for example,
+or, worse than all, some prying young Pecksniff of a third-year
+undergraduate! Somehow, she seems to fascinate me, and I can't get
+away from her; but I must really do it and be done with it. It's
+no use going on this way much longer. I must stop here for a few
+days more only, and then tell her that I'm called away on important
+college business, say to Yorkshire or Worcestershire, or somewhere.
+I needn't tell her in person, face to face: I can write hastily at
+the last moment to the usual name at the Post Office--to be left
+till called for. And as a matter of fact I won't go to Yorkshire
+either--very awkward and undignified, though, these petty
+prevarications; when a man once begins lowering himself by making
+love to a girl in an inferior position, he lets himself in for
+all kinds of disagreeable necessities afterwards;--I shall go to
+Switzerland. Yes, no place better after the bother of running away
+like a coward from Selah: in the Alps, one would forget all petty
+human degradations; I shall go to Switzerland. Of course I won't
+break off with her altogether--that would be cruel; and I really
+like her; upon my word, even when she isn't by, up to her own
+level, I really like her; but I'll let the thing die a natural
+death of inanition. As they always put it in the newspapers, with
+their stereotyped phraseology, a gradual coldness shall intervene
+between us. That'll be the best and only way out of it.
+
+'And if I go to Switzerland, why not ask Oswald of Oriel to go
+with me? That, I fancy, wouldn't be a bad stroke of social policy.
+Ernest WILL marry this Oswald girl; unfortunately he's as headstrong
+as an allegory on the banks of the Nile; and as he's going to drag
+her inevitably into the family, I may as well put the best possible
+face upon the disagreeable matter. Let's make a virtue of necessity.
+The father and mother are old: they'll die soon, and be gathered
+to their fathers (if they had any), and the world will straightway
+forget all about them. But Oswald will always be there en évidence,
+and the safest thing to do will be to take him as much as possible
+into the world, and let the sister rest upon HIS reputation for
+her place in society. It's quite one thing to say that Ernest has
+married the daughter of a country grocer down in Devonshire, and
+quite another thing to say that he has married the sister of Oswald
+of Oriel, the distinguished mathematician and fellow of the Royal
+Society. How beautifully that warm brown sail stands out in a
+curve against the cold grey line of the horizon--a bulging curve
+just like the swell of Selah's neck, when she throws her head
+back, so, and lets you see the contour of her throat, her beautiful
+rounded throat--ah, that's not giving her up now, is it?--What a
+confounded fool I am, to be sure! Anybody would say, if they could
+only have read my thoughts that moment, that I was really in love
+with this girl Selah!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+YE MOUNTAINS OF GILBOA!
+
+
+The old Englischer Hof at Pontresina looked decidedly sleepy and
+misty at five o'clock on an August morning, when two sturdy British
+holiday-seekers, in knickerbockers and regular Alpine climbing rig,
+sat drinking their parting cup of coffee in the salle-à-manger,
+before starting to make the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, one of
+the tallest and by far the most difficult among the peaks of the
+Bernina range. There are few prettier villages in the Engadine than
+Pontresina, and few better hotels in all Switzerland than the old
+ivy-covered Englischer Hof. Yet on this particular morning, and
+at that particular hour, it certainly did look just a trifle cold
+and cheerless. 'He never makes very warm in the Engadine,' Carlo
+the waiter observed with a shudder, in his best English, to one
+of the two early risers: 'and he makes colder on an August morning
+here than he makes at Nice in full December.' For poor Carlo was
+one of those cosmopolitan waiters who follow the cosmopolitan
+tourist clientèle round all the spas, health resorts, kurs and winter
+quarters of fashionable Europe. In January he and his brother, as
+Charles and Henri, handed round absinthes and cigarettes at the
+Cercle Nautique at Nice; in April, as Carlo and Enrico, they turned
+up again with water ices and wafer cakes in the Caffè Manzoni at
+Milan; and in August, the observant traveller might recognise them
+once more under the disguise of Karl and Heinrich, laying the table
+d'hôte in the long and narrow old-fashioned dining-room of the
+Englischer Hof at Pontresina. Though their native tongue was the
+patois of the Canton Ticino, they spoke all the civilised languages
+of the world, 'and also German,' with perfect fluency, and without
+the slightest attempt at either grammar or idiomatic accuracy.
+And they both profoundly believed in their hearts that the rank,
+wealth, youth, beauty and fashion of all other nations were wisely
+ordained by the inscrutable designs of Providence for a single
+purpose, to enrich and reward the active, intelligent, and industrious
+natives of the Canton Ticino.
+
+'Are the guides come yet?' asked Harry Oswald of the waiter in
+somewhat feeble and hesitating German. He made it a point to speak
+German to the waiters, because he regarded it as the only proper
+and national language of the universal Teutonic Swiss people.
+
+'They await the gentlemans in the corridor,' answered Carlo, in
+his own peculiar and racy English; for he on his side resented the
+imputation that any traveller need ever converse with him in any
+but that traveller's own tongue, provided only it was one of the
+recognised and civilised languages of the world, or even German.
+They are a barbarous and disgusting race, those Tedeschi, look
+you well, Signor; they address you as though you were the dust in
+the piazza; yet even from them a polite and attentive person may
+confidently look for a modest, a very modest, but still a welcome
+trink-geld.
+
+'Then we'd better hurry up, Oswald,' said Herbert Le Breton, 'for
+guides are the most tyrannical set of people on the entire face
+of this planet. I shall have another cup of coffee before I go,
+though, if the guides swear at me roundly in the best Roumansch
+for it, anyhow.'
+
+'Your acquaintance with the Roumansch dialect being probably limited,'
+Harry Oswald answered, 'the difference between their swearing and
+their blessing would doubtless be reduced to a vanishing point.
+Though I've noticed that swearing is really a form of human speech
+everywhere readily understanded of the people in spite of all
+differences of race or language. One touch of nature, you see; and
+swearing, after all, is extremely natural.'
+
+'Are you ready?' asked Herbert, having tossed off his coffee.
+'Yes? Then come along at once. I can feel the guides frowning at
+us through the partition.'
+
+They turned out into the street, with its green-shuttered windows
+all still closed in the pale grey of early morning, and walked
+along with the three guides by the high road which leads through
+rocks and fir-trees up to the beginning of the steep path to the
+Piz Margatsch. Passing the clear emerald-green waterfall that rushes
+from under the lower melting end of the Morteratsch glacier, they
+took at once to the narrow track by the moraine along the edge
+of the ice, and then to the glacier itself, which is easy enough
+climbing, as glaciers go, for a good pedestrian. Herbert Le Breton,
+the older mountaineer of the two, got over the big blocks readily
+enough; but Harry, less accustomed to Swiss expeditions, lagged
+and loitered behind a little, and required more assistance from
+the guides every now and again than his sturdy companion.
+
+'I'm getting rather blown at starting,' Harry called out at last
+to Herbert, some yards in front of him. 'Do you think the despotic
+guide would let us sit down and rest a bit if we asked him very
+prettily?'
+
+'Offer him a cigar first,' Herbert shouted back, 'and then after a
+short and decent interval, prefer your request humbly in your politest
+French. The savage potentate always expects to be propitiated by
+gifts, as a preliminary to answering the petitions of his humble
+subjects.'
+
+'I see,' Harry said, laughing. 'Supply before grievances, not
+grievances before supply.' And he halted a moment to light a cigar,
+and to offer one to each of the two guides who were helping him
+along on either side.
+
+Thus mollified, the senior guide grudgingly allowed ten minutes'
+halt and a drink of water at the bend by the corner of the glacier.
+They sat down upon the great translucent sea-green blocks and began
+talking with the taciturn chief guide.
+
+'Is this glacier dangerous?' Harry asked.
+
+'Dangerous, monsieur? Oh no, not as one counts glaciers. It is very
+safe. There are seldom accidents.'
+
+'But there have been some?'
+
+'Some, naturally. You don't climb mountains always without accidents.
+There was one the first time anyone ever made the ascent of the Piz
+Margatsch. That was fifty years ago. My uncle was killed in it.'
+
+'Killed in it?' Harry echoed. 'How did it all happen, and where?'
+
+'Yonder, monsieur, in a crevasse that was then situated near the
+bend at the corner, just where the great crevasse you see before
+you now stands. That was fifty years ago; since then the glacier
+has moved much. Its substance, in effect, has changed entirely.'
+
+'Tell us all about it,' Herbert put in carelessly. He knew the
+guide wouldn't go on again till he had finished his whole story.
+
+'It's a strange tale,' the guide answered, taking a puff or two
+at his cigar pensively and then removing it altogether for his set
+narrative--he had told the tale before a hundred times, and he had
+the very words of it now regularly by heart. 'It was the first time
+anyone ever tried to climb the Piz Margatsch. At that time, nobody
+in the valley knew the best path; it is my father who afterwards
+discovered it. Two English gentlemen came to Pontresina one morning;
+one might say you two gentlemen; but in those days there were not
+many tourists in the Engadine; the exploitation of the tourist had
+not yet begun to be developed. My father and my uncle were then the
+only two guides at Pontresina. The English gentlemen asked them
+to try with them the scaling of the Piz Margatsch. My uncle was
+afraid of it, but my father laughed down his fears. So they started.
+My uncle was dressed in a blue coat with brass buttons, and a pair
+of brown velvet breeches. Ah, heaven, I can see him yet, his white
+corpse in the blue coat and the brown velvet breeches!'
+
+'But you can't be fifty yourself,' Harry said, looking at the tall
+long-limbed man attentively; 'no, nor forty, nor thirty either.'
+
+'No, monsieur, I am twenty-seven,' the chief guide answered, taking
+another puff at his cigar very deliberately; 'and this was fifty
+years ago: yet I have seen his corpse just as the accident happened.
+You shall hear all about it. It is a tale from the dead; it is
+worth hearing.'
+
+'This begins to grow mysterious,' said Herbert in English, hammering
+impatiently at the ice with the shod end of his alpenstock. 'Sounds
+for all the world just like the introduction to a Christmas number.'
+
+'A young girl in the village loved my uncle,' the guide went on
+imperturhably; 'and she begged him not to go on this expedition. She
+was betrothed to him. But he wouldn't listen: and they all started
+together for the top of the Piz Margatsch. After many trials, my
+father and my uncle and the two tourists reached the summit. "So
+you see, Andreas," said my father, "your fears were all folly."
+"Half-way through the forest," said my uncle, "one is not yet safe
+from the wolf." Then they began to descend again. They got down past
+all the dangerous places, and on to this glacier, so well known,
+so familiar. And then my uncle began indeed to get careless. He
+laughed at his own fears; "Cathrein was all wrong," he said to my
+father, "we shall get down again safely, with Our Lady's assistance."
+So they reached at last the great crevasse. My father and one of
+the Englishmen got over without difficulty; but the other Englishman
+slipped; his footing failed him; and he was sinking, sinking, down,
+down, down, slipping quickly into the deep dark green abyss below.
+My uncle stretched out his hand over the edge: the Englishman caught
+it; and then my uncle missed his foothold, they both fell together
+and were lost to sight at once completely, in the invisible depths
+of the great glacier!'
+
+'Well,' Herbert Le Breton said, as the man paused a moment. 'Is
+that all?'
+
+'No,' the guide answered, with a tone of deep solemnity. 'That is
+not all. The glacier went on moving, moving, slowly, slowly, but
+always downward, for years and years. Yet no one ever heard anything
+more of the two lost bodies. At last one day, when I was seven
+years old, I went out playing with my brother, among the pine-woods,
+near the waterfall that rushes below there, from under the glacier.
+We saw something lying in the ice-cold water, just beneath the
+bottom of the ice-sheet. We climbed over the moraine; and there,
+oh heaven! we could see two dead bodies. They were drowned, just
+drowned, we thought: it might have been yesterday. One of them
+was short and thick-set, with the face of an Englishman: he was
+close-shaven, and, what seemed odd to us, he had on clothes which,
+though we were but children, we knew at once for the clothes of
+a long past fashion--in fact, a suit of the Louis dix-huit style.
+Tha other was a tall and handsome man, dressed in the unchangeable
+blue coat and brown velvet breeches of our own canton, of the
+Graubunden. We were very frightened about it, and so we ran away
+trembling and told an old woman who lived close by; her name was
+Cathrein, and her grandchildren used to play with us, though she
+herself was about the age of my father, for my father married very
+late. Old Cathrein came out with us to look; and the moment she
+saw the bodies, she cried out with a great cry, "It is he! It is
+Andreas! It is my betrothed, who was lost on the very day week when
+I was to be married. I should know him at once among ten thousand.
+It is many, many years now, but I have not forgotten his face--ah,
+my God, that face; I know it well!" And she took his hand in hers,
+that fair white young hand in her own old brown withered one, and
+kissed it gently. "And yet," she said, "he is five years older than
+me, this fair young man here; five years older than me!" We were
+frightened to hear her talk so, for we said to ourselves, "She
+must be mad;" so we ran home and brought our father. He looked at
+the dead bodies and at old Cathrein, and he said, "It is indeed
+true. He is my brother." Ah, monsieur, you would not have forgotten
+it if you had seen those two old people standing there beside
+the fresh corpses they had not seen for all those winters! They
+themselves had meanwhile grown old and grey and wrinkled; but the
+ice of the glacier had kept those others young, and fresh, and
+fair, and beautiful as on the day they were first engulfed in it.
+It was terrible to look at!'
+
+'A most ghastly story, indeed,' Herbert Le Breton said, yawning;
+'and now I think we'd better be getting under way again, hadn't
+we, Oswald?'
+
+Harry Oswald rose from his seat on the block of ice unwillingly, and
+proceeded on his road up the mountain with a distinct and decided
+feeling of nervousness. Was it the guide's story that made his knees
+tremble slightly? was it his own inexperience in climbing? or was
+it the cold and the fatigue of the first ascent of the season to
+a man not yet in full pedestrian Alpine training? He did not feel
+at all sure about it in his own mind: but this much he knew with
+perfect certainty, that his footing was not nearly so secure under
+him as it had been during the earlier part of the climb over the
+lower end of the glacier.
+
+By-and-by they reached the long sheer snowy slope near the Three
+Brothers. This slope is liable to slip, and requires careful walking,
+so the guides began roping them together. 'The stout monsieur
+in front, next after me,' said the chief guide, knotting the rope
+soundly round Herbert Le Breton: 'then Kaspar; then you, monsieur,'
+to Harry Oswald, 'and finally Paolo, to bring up the rear. The
+thin monsieur is nervous, I think; it's best to place him most in
+the middle.'
+
+'If you really ARE nervous, Oswald,' Herbert said, not unkindly,
+'you'd better stop behind, I think, and let me go on with two of the
+guides. The really hard work, you know, has scarcely begun yet.'
+
+'Oh dear, no,' Harry answered lightly (he didn't care to confess
+his timidity before Herbert Le Breton of all men in the world): 'I
+do feel just a little groggy about the knees, I admit; but it's not
+nervousness, it's only want of training. I haven't got accustomed
+to glacier-work yet, and the best way to overcome it is by constant
+practice. "Solvitur ambulando," you know, as Aldrich says about
+Achilles and the tortoise.'
+
+'Very good,' Herbert answered drily; 'only mind, whatever you do,
+for Heaven's sake don't go and stumble and pull ME down on the top
+of you. It's the clear duty of a good citizen to respect the lives
+of the other men who are roped together with him on the side of a
+mountain.'
+
+They set to work again, in single file, with cautious steps planted
+firmly on the treacherous snow, to scale the great white slope that
+stretched so temptingly before them. Harry felt his knees becoming
+at every step more and more ungovernable, while Herbert didn't
+improve matters by calling out to him from time to time, 'Now, then,
+look out for a hard bit here,' or 'Mind that loose piece of ice
+there,' or 'Be very careful how you put your foot down by the yielding
+edge yonder,' and so forth. At last, they had almost reached the
+top of the slope, and were just above the bare gulley on the side,
+when Harry's insecure footing on a stray scrap of ice gave way
+suddenly, and he begain to slip rapidly down the sheer slope of
+the mountain. In a second he had knocked against Paolo, and Paolo
+had begun to slip too, so that both were pulling with all their
+weight against Kaspar and the others in front. 'For Heaven's sake,
+man,' Herbert cried hastily, 'dig your alpenstock deep into the
+snow.' At the same instant, the chief guide shouted in Roumansch
+to the same effect to Kaspar. But even as they spoke, Kaspar,
+pushing his feet hard against the snow, began to give way too; and
+the whole party seemed about to slip together down over the sheer
+rocky precipice of the great gulley on the right. It was a moment
+of supreme anxiety; but Herbert Le Breton, looking back with blood
+almost unstirred and calmly observant eye, saw at once the full
+scope of the threatening danger. 'There's only one chance,' he
+said to himself quietly. 'Oswald is lost already! Unless the rope
+breaks, we are all lost together!' At that very second, Harry Oswald,
+throwing his arms up wildly, had reached the edge of the terrible
+precipice; he went over with a piercing cry into the abyss, with
+the last guide beside him, and Kaspar following him close in mute
+terror. Then Herbert Le Breton felt the rope straining, straining,
+straining, upon the sharp frozen edge of the rock; for an inappreciable
+point of time it strained and crackled: one loud snap, and it was
+gone for ever. Herbert and the chief guide, almost upset by the
+sudden release from the heavy pull that was steadily dragging them
+over, threw themselves flat on their faces in the drifted snow,
+and checked their fall by a powerful muscular effort. The rope
+was broken and their lives were saved, but what had become of the
+three others?
+
+They crept cautiously on hands and knees to the most practicable
+spot at the edge of the precipice, and the guide peered over into
+the great white blank below with eager eyes of horrid premonition.
+As he did so, he recoiled with awe, and made a rapid gesture with
+his hands, half prayer, half speechless terror. 'What do you see?'
+asked Herbert, not daring himself to look down upon the blank
+beneath him, lest he should be tempted to throw himself over in a
+giddy moment.
+
+'Jesu, Maria,' cried the guide, crossing himself instinctively
+over and over again, 'they have all fallen to the very foot of the
+second precipice! They are lying, all three, huddled together on
+the ledge there just above the great glacier. They are dead, quite
+dead, dead before they reached the ground even. Great God, it is
+too terrible!'
+
+Herbert Le Breton looked at the white-faced guide with just the
+faintest suspicion of a sneering curl upon his handsome features.
+The excitement of the danger was over now, and he had at once
+recovered his usual philosophic equanimity. 'Quite dead,' he said,
+in French, 'quite dead, are they? Then we can't be of any further
+use to them. But I suppose we must go down again at once to help
+recover the dead bodies!'
+
+The guide gazed at him blankly with simple open-mouthed undisguised
+amazement. 'Naturally,' he said, in a very quiet voice of utter
+disgust and loathing. 'You wouldn't leave them lying there alone
+on the cold snow, would you?'
+
+'This is really most annoying,' thought Herbert Le Breton to himself,
+in his rational philosophic fashion: 'here we are, almost at the
+summit, and now we shall have to turn back again from the very
+threshold of our goal, without having seen the view for which we've
+climbed up, and risked our lives too--all for a purely sentimental
+reason, because we won't leave those three dead men alone on the
+snow for an hour or two longer! it's a very short climb to the
+top now, and I could manage it by myself in twenty minutes. If
+only the chief guide had slid over with the others, I should have
+gone on alone, and had the view at least for my trouble. I could
+have pretended the accident happened on the way down again. As it
+is, I shall have to turn back ingloriously, re infecta. The guide
+will tell everybody at Pontresina that I went on, in spite of the
+accident; and then it would get into the English papers, and all
+the world would say that I was so dreadfully cruel and heartless.
+People are always so irrational in their ethical judgments. Oswald's
+quite dead, that's certain; nobody could fall over such a precipice
+as that without being killed a dozen times over before he even
+reached the bottom. A very painless and easy death too; I couldn't
+myself wish for a better one. We can't do them the slightest good
+by picking up their lifeless bodies, and yet a foolishly sentimental
+public opinion positively compels one to do it. Poor Oswald! Upon
+my soul I'm sorry for him, and for that pretty little sister of his
+too; but what's the use of bothering about it? The thing's done,
+and nothing that I can do or say will ever make it any better.'
+
+So they turned once more in single file down by the great glacier,
+and retraced their way to Pontresina without exchanging another word.
+To say the truth, the chief guide felt appalled and frightened by
+the presence of this impassive, unemotional British traveller, and
+did not even care to conceal his feelings. But then he wasn't an
+educated philosopher and man of culture like Herbert Le Breton.
+
+Late that evening a party of twelve villagers brought back three
+stiff and mangled corpses on loose cattle hurdles into the village
+of Pontresina. Two of them were the bodies of two local Swiss guides,
+and the third, with its delicate face unscathed by the fall, and
+turned calmly upwards to the clear moonlight, was the body of Harry
+Oswald. Alas, alas, Gilboa! The beauty of Israel is slain upon thy
+high places.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+'WHAT DO THESE HEBREWS HERE?'
+
+
+From Calcombe Pomeroy Ernest had returned, not to Dunbude, but to
+meet the Exmoor party in London. There he had managed somehow--he
+hardly knew how himself--to live through a whole season without an
+explosion in his employer's family. That an explosion must come,
+sooner or later, he felt pretty sure in his own mind for several
+reasons: his whole existence there was a mistake and an anomaly,
+and he could no more mix in the end with the Exmoor family than oil
+can mix with vinegar, or vice versâ. The round of dances and dinners
+to which he had to accompany his pupil was utterly distasteful to
+him. Lynmouth never learnt anything; so Ernest felt his own function
+in the household a perfectly useless one; and he was always on the
+eve of a declaration that he couldn't any longer put up with this,
+that, or the other 'gross immorality' in which Lynmouth was actively
+or passively encouraged by his father and mother. Still, there were
+two things which indefinitely postponed the smouldering outbreak.
+In the first place, Ernest wrote to, and heard from, Edie every
+day; and he believed he ought for Edie's sake to give the situation
+a fair trial, as long as he was able, or at least till he saw some
+other opening, which might make it possible within some reasonable
+period to marry her. In the second place, Lady Hilda had perceived
+with her intuitive quickness the probability that a cause of
+dispute might arise between her father and Ernest, and had made
+up her mind as far as in her lay to prevent its ever coming to a
+head. She didn't wish Ernest to leave his post in the household--so
+much originality was hardly again to be secured in a hurry--and
+therefore she laid herself out with all her ingenuity to smooth
+over all the possible openings for a difference of opinion whenever
+they occurred. If Ernest's scruples were getting the upper hand
+of his calmer judgment, Lady Hilda read the change in his face at
+once, and managed dexterously to draw off Lynmouth, or to talk over
+her mother quietly to acquiesce in Ernest's view of the question.
+If Lord Exmoor was beginning to think that this young man's confounded
+fads were really getting quite unbearable, Lady Hilda interposed
+some casual remark about how much better Lynmouth was kept out of
+the way now than he used to be in Mr. Walsh's time. Ernest himself
+never even suspected this unobtrusive diplomatist and peacemaker;
+but as a matter of fact it was mainly owing to Lady Hilda's constant
+interposition that he contrived to stop in Wilton Place through
+all that dreary and penitential London season.
+
+At last, to Ernest's intense joy, the season began to show premonitory
+symptoms of collapsing from inanition. The twelfth of August was
+drawing nigh, and the coming-of-age of grouse, that most important
+of annual events in the orthodox British social calendar, would
+soon set free Lord Exmoor and his brother hereditary legislators
+from their arduous duty of acting as constitutional drag on the
+general advance of a great, tolerant, and easy-going nation. Soon
+the family would be off again to Dunbude, or away to its other moors
+in Scotland; and among the rocks and the heather Ernest felt he
+could endure Lord Exmoor and Lord Lynmouth a little more resignedly
+than among the reiterated polite platitudes and monotonous gaieties
+of the vacuous London drawing-rooms.
+
+Lady Hilda, too, was longing in her own way for the season to be
+over. She had gone through another of them, thank goodness, she
+said to herself at times with a rare tinge of pensiveness, only to
+discover that the Hughs, and the Guys, and the Algies, and the Montys
+were just as fatuously inane as ever; and were just as anxious as
+before to make her share their fatuous inanity for a whole lifetime.
+Only fancy living with an unadulterated Monty from the time you
+were twenty to the time you were seventy-five--at which latter date
+he, being doubtless some five years older than one-self to begin
+with, would probably drop off quietly with suppressed gout, and
+leave you a mourning widow to deplore his untimely and lamented
+extinction for the rest of your existence! Why, long before that
+time you would have got to know his very thoughts by heart (if he
+had any, poor fellow!) and would be able to finish all his sentences
+and eke out all his stories for him, the moment he began them.
+Much better marry a respectable pork-butcher outright, and have
+at least the healthful exercise of chopping sausage-meat to fill
+up the stray gaps in the conversation. In that condition of life,
+they say, people are at any rate perfectly safe from the terrors
+of ennui. However, the season was over at last, thank Heaven; and
+in a week or so more they would be at dear old ugly Dunbude again
+for the whole winter. There Hilda would go sketching once more on
+the moorland, and if this time she didn't make that stupid fellow
+Ernest see what she was driving at, why, then her name certainly
+wasn't Hilda Tregellis.
+
+A day or two before the legal period fixed for the beginning of
+the general grouse-slaughter, Ernest was sitting reading in the
+breakfast room at Wilton Place, when Lynmouth burst unexpectedly
+into the room in his usual boisterous fashion.
+
+'Oh, I say, Mr. Le Breton,' he began, holding the door in his hand
+like one in a hurry, 'I want leave to miss work this morning. Gerald
+Talfourd has called for me in his dog-cart, and wants me to go out
+with him now immediately.'
+
+'Not to-day, Lynmouth,' Ernest answered quietly. 'You were out
+twice last week, you know, and you hardly ever get your full hours
+for work at all since we came to London.'
+
+'Oh, but look here, you know, Mr. Le Breton; I really MUST go
+to-day, because Talfourd has made an appointment for me. It's awful
+fun--he's going to have some pigeon-shooting.'
+
+Ernest's countenance fell a little, and he answered in a graver
+voice than before, 'If that's what you want to go for, Lynmouth, I
+certainly can't let you go. You shall never have leave from me to
+go pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Why not?' Lynmouth asked, still holding the door-handle at the
+most significant angle.
+
+'Because it's a cruel and brutal sport,' Ernest replied, looking
+him in the face steadily; 'and as long as you're under my charge
+I can't allow you to take part in it.'
+
+'Oh, you can't,' said Lynmouth mischievously, with a gentle touch
+of satire in his tone. 'You can't, can't you! Very well, then,
+never mind about it.' And he shut the door after him with a bang,
+and ran off upstairs without further remonstrance.
+
+'It's time for study, Lynmouth,' Ernest called out, opening the
+door and speaking to him as he retreated. 'Come down again at
+once, please, will you?'
+
+But Lynmouth made no answer, and went straight off upstairs to
+the drawing-room. In a few minutes more he came back, and said in
+a tone of suppressed triumph, 'Well, Mr. Le Breton, I'm going with
+Talfourd. I've been up to papa, and he says I may "if I like to."'
+
+Ernest bit his lip in a moment's hesitation. If it had been any
+ordinary question, he would have pocketed the contradiction of
+his authority--after all, if it didn't matter to them, it didn't
+matter to him--and let Lynmouth go wherever they allowed him. But
+the pigeon-shooting was a question of principle. As long as the
+boy was still nominally his pupil, he couldn't allow him to take
+any part in any such wicked and brutal amusement, as he thought it.
+So he answered back quietly, 'No, Lynmouth, you are not to go. I
+don't think your father can have understood that I had forbidden
+you.'
+
+'Oh!' Lynmouth said again, without a word of remonstrance, and
+went up a second time to the drawing-room.
+
+In a few minutes a servant came down and spoke to Ernest. 'My lord
+would like to see you upstairs for a few minutes, if you please,
+sir.'
+
+Ernest followed the man up with a vague foreboding that the deferred
+explosion was at last about to take place. Lord Exmoor was sitting
+on the sofa. 'Oh, I say, Le Breton,' he began in his good-humoured
+way, 'what's this that Lynmouth's been telling me about
+the pigeon-shooting? He says you won't let him go out with Gerald
+Talfourd.'
+
+'Yes,' Ernest answered; 'he wanted to miss his morning's work,
+and I told him I couldn't allow him to do so.'
+
+'But I said he might if he liked, Le Breton. Young Talfourd has
+called for him to go pigeon-shooting. And now Lynmouth tells me
+you refuse to let him go, after I've given him leave. Is that so?'
+
+'Certainly,' said Ernest. 'I said he couldn't go, because before he
+asked you I had refused him permission, and I supposed you didn't
+know he was asking you to reverse my decision.'
+
+'Oh, of course,' Lord Exmoor answered, for he was not an unreasonable
+man after his lights. 'You're quite right, Le Breton, quite right,
+certainly. Discipline's discipline, we all know, and must be kept
+up under any circumstances. You should have told me, Lynmouth, that
+Mr. Le Breton had forbidden you to go. However, as young Talfourd
+has made the engagement, I suppose you don't mind letting him have
+a holiday now, at my request, Le Breton, do you?'
+
+Here was a dilemma indeed for Ernest. He hardly knew what to
+answer. He looked by chance at Lady Hilda, seated on the ottoman
+in the corner; and Lady Hilda, catching his eye, pursed up her lips
+visibly into the one word, 'Do.' But Ernest was inexorable. If he
+could possibly prevent it, he would not let those innocent pigeons
+be mangled and slaughtered for a lazy boy's cruel gratification.
+That was the one clear duty before him; and whether he offended
+Lord Exmoor or not, he had no choice save to pursue it.
+
+'No, Lord Exmoor,' he said resolutely, after a long pause. 'I should
+have no objection to giving him a holiday, but I can't allow him
+to go pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Why not?' asked Lord Exmoor warmly.
+
+Ernest did not answer.
+
+'He says it's a cruel, brutal sport, papa,' Lynmouth put in
+parenthetically, in spite of an angry glance from Hilda; 'and he
+won't let me go while I'm his pupil.'
+
+Lord Exmoor's face grew very red indeed, and he rose from the sofa
+angrily. 'So that's it, Mr. Le Breton!' he said, in a short sharp
+fashion. 'You think pigeon-shooting cruel and brutal, do you? Will
+you have the goodness to tell me, sir, do you know that I myself
+am in the habit of shooting pigeons at matches?'
+
+'Yes,' Ernest answered, without flinching a muscle.
+
+'Yes!' cried Lord Exmoor, growing redder and redder. 'You knew
+that, Mr. Le Breton, and yet you told my son you considered the
+practice brutal and cruel! Is that the way you teach him to honour
+his parents? Who are you, sir, that you dare set yourself up
+as a judge of me and my conduct? How dare you speak to him of his
+father in that manner? How dare you stir him up to disobedience
+and insubordination against his elders? How dare you, sir; how dare
+you?'
+
+Ernest's face began to get red in return, and he answered with
+unwonted heat, 'How dare you address me so, yourself, Lord Exmoor?
+How dare you speak to me in that imperious manner? You're forgetting
+yourself, I think, and I had better leave you for the present, till
+you remember how to be more careful in your language. But Lynmouth
+is not to go pigeon-shooting. I object to his going, because the
+sport is a cruel and a brutal one, whoever may practise it. If
+I have any authority over him, I insist upon it that he shall not
+go. If he goes, I shall not stop here any longer. You can do as
+you like about it, of course, but you have my final word upon the
+matter. Lynmouth, go down to the study.'
+
+'Stop, Lynmouth,' cried his father, boiling over visibly with
+indignation: 'Stop. Never mind what Mr. Le Breton says to you; do
+you hear me? Go out if you choose with Gerald Talfourd.'
+
+Lynmouth didn't wait a moment for any further permission. He ran
+downstairs at once and banged the front door soundly after him
+with a resounding clatter. Lady Hilda looked imploringly at Ernest,
+and whispered half audibly, 'Now you've done it.' Ernest stood a
+second irresolute, while the Earl tramped angrily up and down the
+drawing-room, and then he said in a calmer voice, 'When would it
+be convenient, Lord Exmoor, that I should leave you?'
+
+'Whenever you like,' Lord Exmoor answered violently. 'To-day if
+you can manage to get your things together. This is intolerable,
+absolutely intolerable! Gross and palpable impertinence; in my
+own house, too! "Cruel and brutal," indeed! "Cruel and brutal."
+Fiddlesticks! Why, it's not a bit different from partridge-shooting!'
+And he went out, closely followed by Ernest, leaving Lady Hilda
+alone and frightened in the drawing-room.
+
+Ernest ran lightly upstairs to his own little study sitting-room.
+'I've done it this time, certainly, as Lady Hilda said,' he thought
+to himself; 'but I don't see how I could possibly have avoided it.
+Even now, when all's done, I haven't succeeded in saving the lives
+of the poor innocent tortured pigeons. They'll be mangled and hunted
+for their poor frightened lives, anyhow. Well, now I must look out
+for that imaginary schoolmastership, and see what I can do for dear
+Edie. I shan't be sorry to get out of this after all, for the place
+was an impossible one for me from the very beginning. I shall sit
+down this moment and write to Edie, and after that I shall take out
+my portmanteau and get the man to help me put my luggage up to go
+away this very evening. Another day in the house after this would
+be obviously impossible.'
+
+At that moment there came a knock at the door--a timid, tentative
+sort of knock, and somebody put her head inquiringly halfway through
+the doorway. Ernest looked up in sudden surprise. It was Lady Hilda.
+
+'Mr. Le Breton,' she said, coming over towards the table where
+Ernest had just laid out his blotting-book and writing-paper: 'I
+couldn't prevent myself from coming up to tell you how much I admire
+your conduct in standing up so against papa for what you thought
+was right and proper. I can't say how greatly I admire it. I'm so
+glad you did as you did do. You have acted nobly.' And Hilda looked
+straight into his eyes with the most speaking and most melting
+of glances. 'Now,' she said to herself, 'according to all correct
+precedents, he ought to seize my hand fervently with a gentle
+pressure, and thank me with tears in his eyes for my kind sympathy.'
+
+But Ernest, only looking puzzled and astonished, answered in the
+quietest of voices, 'Thank you very much, Lady Hilda: but I assure
+you there was really nothing at all noble, nothing at all to admire,
+in what I said or did in any way. In fact, I'm rather afraid,
+now I come to think of it, that I lost my temper with your father
+dreadfully.'
+
+'Then you won't go away?' Hilda put in quickly. 'You think better
+of it now, do you? You'll apologise to papa, and go with us to
+Dunbude for the autumn? Do say you will, please, Mr. Le Breton.'
+
+'Oh dear, no,' Ernest answered, smiling quietly at the bare idea
+of his apologising to Lord Exmoor. 'I certainly won't do that,
+whatever I do. To tell you the truth, Lady Hilda, I have not been
+very anxious to stop with Lynmouth all along: I've found it a most
+unprofitable tutorship--no sense of any duty performed, or any
+work done for society: and I'm not at all sorry that this accident
+should have broken up the engagement unexpectedly. At the same time,
+it's very kind of you to come up and speak to me about it, though
+I'm really quite ashamed you should have thought there was anything
+particularly praiseworthy or commendable in my standing out against
+such an obviously cruel sport as pigeon-shooting.'
+
+'Ah, but I do think so, whatever you may say, Mr. Le Breton,' Hilda
+went on eagerly. 'I do think so, and I think it was very good of
+you to fight it out so against papa for what you believe is right
+and proper. For my own part, you know, I don't see any particular
+harm in pigeon-shooting. Of course it's very dreadful that the
+poor dear little things should be shot and wounded and winged and
+so forth; but then everything, almost, gets shot, you see--rabbits,
+and grouse, and partridges, and everything; so that really it's
+hardly worth while, it seems to me, making a fuss about it. Still,
+that's not the real question. You think it's wrong; which is very
+original and nice and proper of you; and as you think it's wrong,
+you won't countenance it in any way. I don't care, myself, whether
+it's wrong or not--I'm not called upon, thank goodness, to decide
+the question; but I do care very much that you should suffer for
+what you think the right course of action.' And Lady Hilda in her
+earnestness almost laid her hand upon his arm, and looked up to
+him in the most unmistakable and appealing fashion.
+
+'You're very good, I'm sure, Lady Hilda,' Ernest replied, half
+hesitatingly, wondering much in his own mind what on earth she
+could be driving at.
+
+There was a moment's pause, and then Hilda said pensively, 'And
+so we shall never walk together at Dunbude on the Clatter any more,
+Mr. Le Breton! We shall never climb again among the big boulders
+on those Devonshire hillsides! We shall never watch the red deer
+from the big pool on top of the sheep-walk! I'm sorry for it, Mr.
+Le Breton, very sorry for it. Oh, I do wish you weren't going to
+leave us!'
+
+Ernest began to feel that this was really growing embarrassing. 'I
+dare say we shall often see one another,' he said evasively; for
+simple-minded as he was, a vague suspicion of what Lady Hilda wanted
+him to say had somehow forced itself timidly upon him. 'London's
+a very big place, no doubt; but still, people are always running
+together unexpectedly in it.'
+
+Hilda sighed and looked at him again intently without speaking.
+She stood so, face to face with him across the table for fully two
+minutes; and then, seeming suddenly to awake from a reverie, she
+started and sighed once more, and turned at last reluctantly to leave
+the little study. 'I must go,' she said hastily; 'mamma would be
+very angry indeed with me if she knew I'd come here; but I couldn't
+let you leave the house without coming up to tell you how greatly
+I admire your spirit, and how very, very much I shall always miss
+you, Mr. Le Breton. Will you take this, and keep it as a memento?'
+As she spoke, she laid an envelope upon the table, and glided
+quietly out of the room.
+
+Ernest took the envelope up with a smile, and opened it with some
+curiosity. It contained a photograph, with a brief inscription on
+the back, 'E. L. B., from Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+As he did so, Hilda Tregellis, red and pale by turns, had rushed
+into her own room, locked the door wildly, and flung herself in a
+perfect tempest of tears on her own bed, where she lay and tossed
+about in a burning agony of shame and self-pity for twenty minutes.
+'He doesn't love me,' she said to herself bitterly; 'he doesn't
+love me, and he doesn't care to love me, or want to marry me either!
+I'm sure he understood what I meant, this time; and there was no
+response in his eyes, no answer, no sympathy. He's like a block
+of wood--a cold, impassive, immovable, lifeless creature! And yet
+I could love him--oh, if only he would say a word to me in answer,
+how I could love him! I loved him when he stood up there and bearded
+papa in his own drawing-room, and asked him how dare he speak so,
+how dare he address him in such a manner; I KNEW then that I really
+loved him. If only he would let me! But he won't! To think that I
+could have half the Algies and Berties in London at my feet for the
+faintest encouragement, and I can't have this one poor penniless Ernest
+Le Breton, though I go down on my knees before him and absolutely
+ask him to marry me! That's the worst of it! I've humiliated myself
+before him by letting him see, oh, ever so much too plainly, that
+I wanted him to ask me; and I've been repulsed, rejected, positively
+refused and slighted by him! And yet I love him! I shall never love
+any other man as I love Ernest Le Breton.'
+
+Poor Lady Hilda Tregellis! Even she too had, at times, her sentimental
+moments! And there she lay till her eyes were red and swollen with
+crying, and till it was quite hopeless to expect she could ever
+manage to make herself presentable for the Cecil Faunthorpes'
+garden-party that afternoon at Twickenham.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+EVIL TIDINGS.
+
+
+Ernest had packed his portmanteau, and ordered a hansom, meaning
+to take temporary refuge at Number 28 Epsilon Terrace; and he went
+down again for a few minutes to wait in the breakfast-room, where
+he saw the 'Times' lying casually on the little table by the front
+window. He took it up, half dreamily, by way of having something to
+do, and was skimming the telegrams in an unconcerned manner, when
+his attention was suddenly arrested by the name Le Breton, printed
+in conspicuous type near the bottom of the third column. He looked
+closer at the paragraph, and saw that it was headed 'Accident
+to British Tourists in Switzerland.' A strange tremor seized him
+immediately. Could anything have happened, then, to Herbert? He
+read the telegram through at once, and found this bald and concise
+summary before him of the fatal Pontresina accident:--
+
+'As Mr. H. Oswald, F.R.S., of Oriel College, Oxford, and Mr.
+Le Breton, Fellow and Bursar of St. Aldate's College, along with
+three guides, were making the ascent of the Piz Margatsch, in the
+Bernina Alps, this morning, one of the party happened to slip near
+the great gulley known as the Gouffre. Mr. Oswald and two of the
+guides were precipitated over the edge of the cliff and killed
+immediately: the breaking of the rope at a critical moment alone
+saved the lives of Mr. Le Breton and the remaining guide. The bodies
+have been recovered this evening, and brought back to Pontresina.'
+
+Ernest laid down the paper with a thrill of horror. Poor Edie! How
+absolutely his own small difficulties with Lord Exmoor faded out
+of has memory at once in the face of that terrible, irretrievable
+calamity. Harry dead! The hope and mainstay of the family--the
+one great pride and glory of all the Oswalds, on whom their whole
+lives and affections centred, taken from them unexpectedly, without
+a chance of respite, without a moment's warning! Worst of all, they
+would probably learn it, as he did, for the first time by reading
+it accidentally in the curt language of the daily papers. Pray
+heaven the shock might not kill poor Edie!
+
+There was only a minute in which to make up his mind, but in that
+minute Ernest had fully decided what he ought to do, and how to
+do it. He must go at once down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and try to
+lighten this great affliction for poor little Edie. Nay, lighten
+it he could not, but at least he could sympathise with her in it,
+and that, though little, was still some faint shade better than
+nothing at all. How fortunate that his difference with the Exmoors
+allowed him to go that very evening without a moment's delay. When
+the hansom arrived at the door, Ernest told the cabman to drive
+at once to Paddington Station. Almost before he had had time to
+realise the full meaning of the situation, he had taken a third-class
+ticket for Calcombe Road, and was rushing out of London by the
+Plymouth express, in one of the convenient and commodious little
+wooden horse-boxes which the Great Western Railway Company provide
+as a wholesome deterrent for economical people minded to save half
+their fare by going third instead of first or second.
+
+Didcot, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Exeter, Newton Abbot, all followed
+one after another, and by the time Ernest had reached Calcombe
+Road Station he had begun to frame for himself a definite plan of
+future action. He would stop at the Red Lion Inn that evening, send
+a telegram from Exeter beforehand to Edie, to say he was coming
+next day, and find out as much as possible about the way the family
+had borne the shock before he ventured actually to see them.
+
+The Calcombe omnibus, drawn by two lean and weary horses, toiled
+its way slowly up the long steep incline for six miles to the
+Cross Foxes, and then rattled down the opposite slope, steaming and
+groaning, till it drew up at last with a sudden jerk and a general
+collapse in front of the old Red Lion Inn in the middle of the
+High Street. There Ernest put up for the present, having seen by
+the shutters at the grocer's shop on his way down that the Oswalds
+had already heard of Harry's accident. He had dinner by himself,
+with a sick heart, in the gloomy, close little coffee-room of the
+village inn, and after dinner he managed to draw in the landlord
+in person for a glass of sherry and half an hour's conversation.
+
+'Very sad thing, sir, this 'ere causality in Switzerland,' said
+the red-faced landlord, coming round at once to the topic of the
+day at Calcombe, after a few unimportant preliminary generalities.
+'Young Mr. Oswald, as has been killed, he lived here, sir;
+leastways his parents do. He was a very promising young gentleman
+up at Oxford, they do tell me--not much of a judge of horses, I
+should say, but still, I understand, quite the gentleman for all
+that. Very sad thing, the causality, sir, for all his family. 'Pears
+he was climbing up some of these 'ere Alps they have over there in
+them parts, covered with snow from head to foot in the manner of
+speaking, and there was another gentleman from Oxford with him, a
+Mr. Le Breton----'
+
+'My brother,' Ernest put in, interrupting him; for he thought it
+best to let the landlord know at once who he was talking to.
+
+'Oh, your brother, sir!' said the red-faced landlord, with a gleam
+of recognition, growing redder and hotter than ever; 'well, now you
+mention it, sir, I find I remember your face somehow. No offence,
+sir, but you're the young gentleman as come down in the spring to
+see young Mr. Oswald, aren't you?'
+
+Ernest nodded assent.
+
+'Ah, well, sir,' the landlord went on more freely--for of course
+all Calcombe had heard long since that Ernest was engaged to Edie
+Oswald--'you're one of the family like, in that case, if I may make
+bold to say so. Well, sir, this is a shocking trouble for poor old
+Mr. Oswald, and no mistake. The old gentleman was sort of centred
+on his son, you see, as the saying is: never thought of nobody else
+hardly, he didn't. Old Mr. Oswald, sir, was always a wonderful hand
+at figgers hisself, and powerful fond of measurements and such kinds
+of things. I've heard tell, indeed, as how he knew more mathematics,
+and trigononomy, and that, than the rector and the schoolmaster both
+put together. There's not one in fifty as knows as much mathematics
+as he do, I'll warrant. Well, you see, he brought up this son of
+his, little Harry as was--I can remember him now, running to and
+from the school, and figgerin' away on the slates, doin' the sums in
+algemer for the other boys when they went a-mitchin'--he brought
+him up like a gentleman, as you know very well, sir, and sent him to
+Oxford College: "to develop his mathematical talents, Mr. Legge,"
+his father says to me here in this very parlour. What's the
+consequence? He develops that boy's talent sure enough, sir, till
+he comes to be a Fellow of Oxford College, they tell me, and even
+admitted into the Royal Society up in London. But this is how he
+did it, sir: and as you're a friend of the family like, and want
+to know all about it, no doubt, I don't mind tellin' you on the
+strict confidential, in the manner of speakin'.' Here the landlord
+drew his chair closer, and sipped the last drop in his glass of sherry
+with a mysterious air of very private and important disclosures.
+Ernest listened to his roundabout story with painful attention.
+
+'Well, sir,' the landlord went on after a short and pensive pause,
+'old Mr. Oswald's business ain't never been a prosperous one--though
+he was such a clover hand at figgers, he never made it remunerative;
+a bare livin' for the family, I don't mind sayin'; and he always
+spent more'n he ought to 'a done on Mr. Harry, and on the young
+lady too, sir, savin' your presence. So when Mr. Harry was goin' to
+Oxford to college, he come to me, and he says to me, "Mr. Legge,"
+says he, "it's a very expensive thing sending my boy to the University,"
+says he, "and I'm going to borrow money to send him with." "Don't
+you go a-doin' that, Mr. Oswald," says I; "your business don't
+justify you in doin' it, sir," says I. For you see, I knowed all
+the ins and outs of that there business, and I knowed he hadn't
+never made more'n enough just to keep things goin' decent like, as
+you may say, without any money saved or put by against a emergence.
+"Yes, I will, Mr. Legge," says he; "I can trust confidentially in
+my son's abilities," says he; "and I feel confidential he'll be
+in a position to repay me before long." So he borrowed the money on
+an insurance of Mr. Harry's life. Mr. Harry he always acted very
+honourable, sir; he was a perfect gentleman in every way, as YOU
+know, sir; and he began repayin' his father the loan as fast as
+he was able, and I daresay doin' a great deal for the family, and
+especially for the young lady, sir, out of his own pocket besides.
+But he still owed his father a couple of hundred pound an' more
+when this causality happened, while the business, I know, had been
+a-goin' to rack and ruin for the last three year. To-day I seen the
+agent of the insurance, and he says to me, "Legge," says he, most
+private like, "this is a bad job about young Oswald, I'm afeard,
+worse'n they know for." "Why, sir?" says I. "Well, Legge," says
+he, "they'll never get a penny of that there insurance, and the
+old gentleman'll have to pay up the defissit on his own account,"
+says he. "How's that, Mr. Micklethwaite?" says I. "Because," says
+he, "there's a clause in the policy agin exceptional risks, in
+which is included naval and military services, furrin residences,
+topical voyages, and mountain-climbin'," says he; "and you mark my
+words," says he, "they'll never get a penny of it." In which case,
+sir, it's my opinion that old Mr. Oswald'll be clean broke, for he
+can't never make up the defissit out of his own business, can he
+now?'
+
+Ernest listened with sad forebodings to the red-faced landlord's
+pitiful story, and feared in his heart that it was a bad look-out
+for the poor Oswalds. He didn't sleep much that evening, and next
+day he went round early to see Edie. The telegram he found would
+be a useless precaution, for the gossip of Calcombe Pomeroy had
+recognised him at once, and news had reached the Oswalds almost
+as soon as he arrived that young Mr. Le Breton was stopping that
+evening at the Red Lion.
+
+Edie opened the door for him herself, pale of face and with eyes
+reddened by tears, yet looking beautiful even so in her simple black
+morning dress, her mourning of course hadn't yet come home--and
+her deep white linen collar. 'It's very good of you to have come
+so soon, Mr. Le Breton,' she said, taking his hand quietly--he
+respected her sorrow too deeply to think of kissing her; 'he will
+be back with us to-morrow. Your brother is bringing him back to us,
+to lay him in our little churchyard, and we are all so very very
+grateful to him for it.'
+
+Ernest was more than half surprised to hear it. It was an unusual
+act of kindly thoughtfulness on the part of Herbert.
+
+Next day the body came home as Edie had said, and Ernest helped
+to lay it reverently to rest in Calcombe churchyard. Poor old Mr.
+Oswald, standing bowed and broken-hearted by the open grave side,
+looked as though he could never outlive that solemn burial of all
+his hopes and aspirations in a single narrow coffin. Yet it was
+wonderful to Ernest to see how much comfort he took, even in this
+terrible grief, from the leader which appeared in the 'Times' that
+morning on the subject of the Pontresina accident. It contained
+only a few of the stock newspaper platitudes of regret at the loss
+of a distinguished and rising young light of science--the ordinary
+glib commonplaces of obituary notices which a practised journalist
+knows so well how to adapt almost mechanically to the passing event
+of the moment; but they seemed to afford the shattered old country
+grocer an amount of consolation and solemn relief that no mere
+spoken condolences could ever possibly have carried with them. 'See
+what a wonderful lot they thought of our boy up in London, Mr. Le
+Breton,' he said, looking up from the paper tearfully, and wiping
+his big gold spectacles, dim with moisture. 'See what the "Times"
+says about him: "One of the ablest among our young academical
+mathematicians, a man who, if his life had been spared to us, might
+probably have attained the highest distinction in his own department
+of pure science." That's our Harry, Mr. Le Breton; that's what
+the "Times" says about our dear, dead Harry! I wish he could have
+lived to read it himself, Edie--"a scholar of singularly profound
+attainments, whose abilities had recently secured him a place upon
+the historic roll of the Royal Society, and whom even the French
+Academy of Sciences had held worthy out of all the competitors
+of the civilised world, to be adjudged the highest mathematical
+honours of the present season." My poor boy! my poor, dear, lost
+boy! I wish you could have lived to hear it! We must keep the paper,
+Edie: we must keep all the papers; they'll show us at least what
+people who are real judges of these things thought about our dear,
+loved, lost Harry.'
+
+Ernest dared hardly glance towards poor Edie, with the tears trickling
+slowly down her face; but he felt thankful that the broken-hearted
+old father could derive so much incomprehensible consolation from
+those cold and stereotyped conventional phrases. Truly a wonderful
+power there is in mere printer's ink properly daubed on plain
+absorbent white paper. And truly the human heart, full to bursting
+and just ready to break will allow itself to be cheated and cajoled
+in marvellous fashions by extraordinary cordials and inexplicable
+little social palliatives. The concentrated hopes of that old man's
+life were blasted and blighted for ever; and he found a temporary
+relief from that stunning shock in the artificial and insincere
+condolences of a stock leader-writer on a daily paper!
+
+Walking back by himself in such sad meditations to the Red Lion,
+and sitting there by the open window, Ernest overheard a tremulous
+chattering voice mumbling out a few incoherent words at the Rector's
+doorway opposite. 'Oh, yes,' chirped out the voice in a tone of
+cheerful resignation, 'it's very sad indeed, very sad and shocking,
+and I'm naturally very sorry for it, of course. I always knew
+how it would be: I warned them of it; but they're a pig-headed,
+heedless, unmannerly family, and they wouldn't be guided by me. I
+said to him, "Now, Oswald, this is all very wrong and foolish of
+you. You go and put your son to Oxford, when he ought to be stopping
+at home, minding the shop and learning your business. You borrow
+money foolishly to send him there with. He'll go to Oxford; he'll
+fall in with a lot of wealthy young gentlemen--people above his
+own natural station--he'll take up expensive, extravagant ways, and
+in the end he'll completely ruin himself. He won't pay you back a
+penny, you may depend upon it--these boys never do, when you make
+fine gentlemen of them; they think only of their cigars and their
+horses, and their dog-carts and so forth, and neglect their poor
+old fathers and mothers, that brought them up and scraped and saved
+to make fine gentlemen of them. You just take my advice, Oswald, and
+don't send him to college." But Oswald was always a presumptuous,
+high-headed, independent sort of man, and instead of listening to
+me, what does he do but go and send this sharp boy of his up to
+Oxford. Well, now the boy's gone to Switzerland with one of the
+young Le Bretons--brother of the poor young man they've inveigled
+into what they call an engagement with Miss Edith, or Miss Jemima,
+or whatever the girl's name is--very well-connected people, the Le
+Bretons, and personal friends of the Archdeacon's--and there he's
+thrown himself over a precipice or something of the sort, no doubt
+to avoid his money-matters and debts and difficulties. At any
+rate, Micklethwaite tells me the poor old father'll have to pay
+up a couple of hundred pound to the insurance company: and how on
+earth he's ever to do it _I_ don't know, for to my certain knowledge
+the rent of the shop is in arrears half-a-year already. But it's
+no business of mine, thank goodness!--and I only hope that exposure
+will serve to open that poor young Le Breton's eyes, and to warn him
+against having anything further to say to Miss Jemima. A designing
+young minx, if ever there was one! Poor young Le Breton's come down
+here for the funeral, I hear, which I must say was very friendly
+and proper and honourable of him; but now it's over, I hope he'll
+go back again, and see Miss Jemima in her true colours.'
+
+Ernest turned back into the stuffy little coffee-room with his face
+on fire and his ears tingling with mingled shame and indignation.
+'Whatever happens,' he thought to himself, 'I can't permit Edie
+to be subjected any longer to such insolence as this! Poor, dear,
+guileless, sorrowing little maiden! One would have thought her
+childish innocence and her terrible loss would have softened the
+heart even of such a cantankerous, virulent old harridan as that,
+till a few weeks were over, at least. She spoke of the Archdeacon:
+it must be old Miss Luttrell! Whoever it is, though, Edie shan't
+much longer be left where she can possibly come in contact with
+such a loathsome mass of incredible and unprovoked malice. That
+Edie should lose her dearly-loved brother is terrible enough; but
+that she should be exposed afterwards to be triumphed over in her
+most sacred grief by that bad old woman's querulous "I told you
+so" is simply intolerable!' And he paced up and down the room with
+a boiling heart, unable to keep down his righteous anger.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+FLAT REBELLION.
+
+
+For the next fortnight Ernest remained at the Red Lion, though
+painfully conscious that he was sadly wasting his little reserve of
+funds from his late tutorship, in order to find out exactly what
+the Oswalds' position would be after the loss of poor Harry. Towards
+the end of that time he took Edie, pale and pretty in her simple
+new mourning, out once more into the Bourne Close for half an hour's
+quiet conversation. Very delicate and sweet and refined that tiny
+girlish face and figure looked in the plain unostentatious black
+and white of her great sorrow, and Ernest felt as he walked along
+by her side that she seemed to lean upon him naturally now; the
+loss of her main support and chief advisor in life seemed to draw
+her closer and closer every day to her one remaining prop and future
+husband.
+
+'Edie,' he said to her, as they rested once more beside the
+old wooden bridge across the little river, 'I think it's time now
+we should begin to talk definitely over our common plans for the
+future. I know you'd naturally rather wait a little longer before
+discussing them; I wish for both our sakes we could have deferred
+it; but time presses, and I'm afraid from what I hear in the village
+that things won't go on henceforth exactly as they used to do with
+your dear father and mother.'
+
+Edie coloured slightly as she answered, 'Then you've heard of all
+that already, Ernest'--she was learning to call him 'Ernest' now
+quite naturally. 'The Calcombe tattle has got round to you so soon!
+I'm glad of it, though, for it saves me the pain of having to tell
+you. Yes, it's quite true, and I'm afraid it will be a terrible,
+dreadful struggle for poor darling father and mother.' And the
+tears came up afresh, as she spoke, into her big black eyes--too
+familiar with them of late to make her even try to brush them away
+hastily from Ernest's sight with her little handkerchief.
+
+'I'm sorry to know it's true,' Ernest said, taking her hand gently;
+'very, very sorry. We must do what we can to lighten the trouble
+for them.'
+
+'Yes,' Edie replied, looking at him through her tears; 'I mean to
+try. At any rate, I won't be a burden to them myself any longer.
+I've written already up to an agency in London to see whether they
+can manage to get me a place as a nursery-governess.'
+
+'You a governess, Edie!' Ernest exclaimed hastily, with a gesture
+of deprecation. 'You a governess! Why, my own precious darling,
+you would never do for it!'
+
+'Oh yes, indeed,' Edie answered quickly, 'I really think I could,
+Ernest. Of course I don't know very much--not judged by a standard
+like yours or our dear Harry's. Harry used to say all a woman
+could ever know was to find out how ignorant she was. Dear fellow!
+he was so very learned himself he couldn't understand the complacency
+of little perky, half-educated schoolmistresses. But still, I know
+quite as much, I think, in my little way, as a great many girls
+who get good places in London as governesses. I can speak French
+fairly well, you know, and read German decently; and then dear
+Harry took such a lot of pains to make me get up books that he
+thought were good for me--history and so forth--and even to teach
+me a little, a very little, Latin. Of course I know I'm dreadfully
+ignorant; but not more so, I really believe, than a great many
+girls whom people consider quite well-educated enough to teach
+their daughters. After all, the daughters themselves are only women,
+too, you see, Ernest, and don't expect more than a smattering of
+book-knowledge, and a few showy fashionable accomplishments.'
+
+'My dear Edie,' Ernest answered, smiling at her gently in spite
+of her tearful earnestness; 'you quite misunderstand me. It wasn't
+THAT I was thinking of at all. There are very few governesses and
+very few women anywhere who have half the knowledge and accomplishments
+and literary taste and artistic culture that you have; very few
+who have had the advantage of associating daily with such a man as
+poor Harry; and if you really wanted to get a place of the sort,
+the mere fact that you're Harry's sister, and that he interested
+himself in superintending your education, ought, by itself, to
+ensure your getting a very good one. But what I meant was rather
+this--I couldn't endure to think that you should be put to all the
+petty slights and small humiliations that a governess has always
+to endure in rich families. You don't know what it is, Edie; you
+can't imagine the endless devices for making her feel her dependence
+and her artificial inferiority that these great people have devised
+in their cleverness and their Christian condescension. You don't
+know what it is, Edie, and I pray heaven you may never know; but
+_I_ do, for I've seen it--and, darling, I CAN'T let you expose
+yourself to it.'
+
+To say the truth, at that moment there rose very vividly before
+Ernest's eyes the picture of poor shy Miss Merivale, the governess
+at Dunbude to little Lady Sybil, Lynmouth's younger sister. Miss
+Merivale was a rector's daughter--an orphan, and a very nice girl
+in her way; and Ernest had often thought to himself while he lived
+at the Exmoors', 'With just the slightest turn of Fortune's wheel
+that might be my own Edie.' Now, for himself he had never felt any
+sense of social inferiority at all at Dunbude; he was an Oxford
+man, and by the ordinary courtesy of English society he was always
+treated accordingly in every way as an equal. But there were
+galling distinctions made in Miss Merivale's case which he could
+not think of even at the time without a blush of ingenuous shame,
+and which he did not like now even to mention to pretty, shrinking,
+eager little Edie. One thing alone was enough to make his cheeks burn
+whenever he thought of it--a little thing, and yet how unendurable!
+Miss Merivale lunched with the family and with her pupil in the
+middle of the day, but she did not dine with them in the evening.
+She had tea by herself instead in Lady Sybil's little school-room.
+Many a time when Ernest had been out walking with her on the
+terrace just before dinner, and the dressing-gong sounded, he had
+felt almost too ashamed to go in at the summons and leave the poor
+little governess out there alone with her social disabilities.
+The gong seemed to raise such a hideous artificial barrier between
+himself and that delicately-bred, sensitive, cultivated English
+lady. That Edie should be subjected to such a life of affronts as
+that was simply unendurable. True, there are social distinctions
+of the sort which even Ernest Le Breton, communist as he was,
+could not practically get over; but then they were distinctions
+familiarised to the sufferers from childhood upward, and so perhaps
+a little less insupportable. But that Harry Oswald's sister--that
+Edie, his own precious delicate little Edie, a dainty English
+wild-flower of the tenderest, should be transplanted from her own
+appreciative home to such a chilly and ungenial soil as that--the
+very idea of it was horribly unspeakable.
+
+'But, Ernest,' Edie answered, breaking in upon his bitter meditation,
+'I assure you I wouldn't mind it a bit. I know--it's very dreadful,
+but then,'--and here she blushed one of her pretty apologetic little
+blushes--'you know I'm used to it. People in business always are.
+They expect to be treated just like servant--now THAT, I know you'll
+say, is itself a piece of hubris, the expression of a horrid class
+prejudice. And so it is, no doubt. But they do, for all that. As
+dear Harry used to say, even the polypes in aristocratic useless
+sponges at the sea-bottom won't have anything to say to the sponges
+of commerce. I'm sure nobody I could meet in a governess's place
+could possibly be worse in that respect than poor old Miss Catherine
+Luttrell.'
+
+'That may be true, Edie darling,' Ernest answered, not caring
+to let her know that he had overheard a specimen of the Calcombe
+squirearchy, 'but in any case I don't want you to be troubled now,
+either with old Miss Luttrell or any other bitter old busybodies.
+I want to speak seriously to you about a very different project.
+Just look at this advertisement.'
+
+He took a scrap of paper from his pocket and handed it to Edie. It
+ran thus:--
+
+
+ 'WANTED at Pilbury Regis Grammar School, Dorset, a
+ Third Classical Master. Must be a Graduate of Oxford or
+ Cambridge; University Prizeman preferred. If unmarried,
+ to take house duty. Commence September 20th. Salary,
+ 200L a year. Apply, as above, to the Rev. J. Greatrex,
+ D.D., Head Master.'
+
+
+Edie read it through slowly. 'Well, Ernest?' she said, looking up
+from it into his face. 'Do you think of taking this mastership?'
+
+'If I can get it,' Ernest answered. 'You see, I'm not a University
+Prizeman, and that may be a difficulty in the way; but otherwise
+I'm not unlikely to suit the requirements. Herbert knows something
+of the school--he's been down there to examine; and Mrs. Greatrex
+had a sort of distant bowing acquaintance with my mother; so I hope
+their influence might help me into it.'
+
+'Well, Ernest?' Edie cried again, feeling pretty certain in her
+own heart what was coming next, and reddening accordingly.
+
+'Well, Edie, in that case, would you care to marry at once, and try
+the experiment of beginning life with me upon two hundred a year?
+I know it's very little, darling, for our wants and necessities,
+brought up as you and I have been: but Herr Max says, you know,
+it's as much as any one family ought ever to spend upon its own
+gratifications; and at any rate I dare say you and I could manage
+to be very happy upon it, at least for the present. In any case it
+wnuld be better than being a governess. Will you risk it, Edie?'
+
+'To me, Ernest,' Edie answered with her unaffected simplicity,
+'it really seems quite a magnificent income. I don't suppose any
+of our friends or neighbours in Calcombe spend nearly as much as
+two hundred a year upon their own families.'
+
+'Ah, yes, they do, darling. But that isn't the only thing. Two
+hundred a year is a very different matter in quiet, old-world,
+little Calcombe and in a fashionable modern watering-place like
+Pilbury Regis. We shall have to live in lodgings, Edie, and live
+very quietly indeed; but epen so I think it will be better than for
+you to go out and endure the humiliation of becoming a governess.
+Then I may understand that, if I can get this mastership, you'll
+consent to be married, Edie, before the end of September?'
+
+'Oh, Ernest, that's dreadfully soon!'
+
+'Yes, it is, darling; but you must have a very quiet wedding; and
+I can't bear to leave you here now any longer without Harry to
+cheer and protect you. Shall we look upon it as settled?'
+
+Edie blushed and looked down as she answered almost inaudibly,
+'As you think best, dear Ernest.'
+
+So that very evening Ernest sent off an application to Pilbury
+Regis, together with such testimonials as he had by him, mentioning
+at the same time his intention to marry, and his recent engagement
+at Lord Exmoor's. 'I hope they won't make a point about the
+University Prize, Edie,' he said timidly; 'but I rather think they
+don't mean to insist upon it. I'm afraid it may be put in to some
+extent mainly as a bait to attract parents. Advertisements are often
+so very dishonest. At any rate, we can only try; and if I get it,
+I shall be able to call you my little wife in September.'
+
+So soon after poor Harry's death he hardly liked to say much about
+how happy that consciousness would make him; but he sent off the
+letter with a beating heart, and waited anxiously for the head
+master's answer.
+
+'Maria,' said Dr. Greatrex to his wife next morning, turning over
+the pile of letters at the breakfast table, 'who do you think has
+applied for the third mastership? Very lucky, really, isn't it?'
+
+'Considering that there are some thirty millions of people
+in England, I believe, Dr. Greatrex,' said his wife with dignity,
+'that some seventy of those have answered your advertisement, and
+that you haven't yet given me an opportunity even of guessing which
+it is of them all, I'm sure I can't say so far whether it's lucky
+or otherwise.'
+
+'You're pleased to be satirical, my dear,' the doctor answered
+blandly; he was in too good a humour to pursue the opening further.
+'But no matter. Well, I'll tell you, then; it's young Le Breton.'
+
+'Not Lady Le Breton's son!' cried Mrs. Greatrex, forgetting her
+dignity in her surprise. 'Well, that certainly is very lucky. Now,
+if we could only get her to come down and stay with us for a week
+sometimes, after he's been here a little while, what a splendid
+advertisement it would be for the place, to be sure, Joseph!'
+
+'Capital!' the head master said, eyeing the letter complacently
+as he sipped his coffee. 'A perfect jewel of a master, I should
+say, from every possible point of view. Just the sort of person
+to attract parents and pupils. "Allow me to introduce you to our
+third master, Mr. Le Breton; I hope Lady Le Breton was quite well
+when you heard from her last, Le Breton?" and all that sort of
+thing. Depend upon it, Maria, there's nothing in the world that
+makes a middle-class parent--and our parents are unfortunately
+all middle-class--prick up his ears like the faintest suspicion or
+echo of a title. "Very good school," he goes back and says to his
+wife immediately; "we'll send Tommy there; they have a master who's
+an honourable or something of the sort; sure to give the boys a
+thoroughly high gentlemanly tone." It's snobbery, I admit, sheer
+snobbery: but between ourselves, Maria, most people are snobs,
+and we have to live, professionally, by accommodating ourselves
+to their foolish prejudices.'
+
+'At the same time, doctor,' said his wife severely, 'I don't think
+we ought to allow it too freely, at least with the door open.'
+
+'You're quite right, my dear,' the head master answered submissively,
+rising at the same time to shut the door. 'But what makes this
+particular application all the better is that young Le Breton would
+come here straight from the Earl of Exmoor's where he has been
+acting as tutor to the son and heir, Viscount Lynmouth. That's
+really admirable, now, isn't it? Just consider the advantages of
+the situation. A doubtful parent comes to inspect the arrangements;
+sniffs at the dormitories, takes the gauge of the studies, snorts
+over the playground, condescends to approve of the fives courts.
+Then, after doing the usual Christian principles business and
+working in the high moral tone a little, we invite him to lunch,
+and young Le Breton to meet him. You remark casually in the most
+unconscious and natural fashion--I admit, my dear, that you do these
+little things much better than I do--"Oh, talking of cricket, Mr.
+Le Breton, your old pupil, Lord Lynmouth, made a splendid score the
+other day at the Eton and Harrow." Fixes the wavering parent like
+a shot. "Third master something or other in the peerage, and has
+been tutor to a son of Lord Exmoor's. Place to send your boys to
+if you want to make perfect gentlemen of them." I think we'd better
+close at once with this young man's offer, Maria. He's got a very
+decent degree, too; a first in Mods and Greats; really very decent.'
+
+'But will he take a house-mastership do you think, doctor?' asked
+the careful lady.
+
+'No, he won't; he's married or soon going to be. We must let him
+off the house duty.'
+
+'Married!' said Mrs. Greatrex, turning it over cautiously. 'Who's
+he going to marry, I wonder? I hope somebody presentable.'
+
+'Why, of course!' Dr. Greatrex answered, as who should feel shocked
+at the bare suggestion that a young man of Ernest Le Breton's
+antecedents could conceivably marry otherwise.
+
+'His wife, or rather his wife that is to be, is a sister, he tells
+me, of that poor Mr. Oswald--the famous mathematician, you know,
+of Oriel--who got killed, you remember, by falling off the Matterhorn
+or somewhere, just the other day. You must have seen about it in
+the "Times."'
+
+'I remember,' Mrs. Greatrex answered, in placid contentment; 'and
+I should say you can't do better than take him immediately. It'd
+be an excellent thing for the school, certainly. As the third
+mastership's worth only two hundred a year, of course he can't
+intend to marry upon THAT; so he must have means of his own, which
+is always a good thing to encourage in an under-master: or if his
+wife has money, that comes in the end to the same thing. They'll take
+a house of their own, no doubt; and she'll probably entertain--very
+quietly, I daresay; still, a small dinner now and then gives a very
+excellent tone to the school in its own way. Social considerations,
+as I always say, Joseph, are all-important in school management;
+and I think we may take it for granted that Mr. Le Breton would be
+socially a real acquisition.'
+
+So it was shortly settled that Dr. Greatrex should write back
+accepting Ernest Le Breton as third master; and Mrs. Greatrex
+began immediately dropping stray allusions to 'Lady Le Breton, our
+new master's mother, you know,' among her various acquaintance,
+especially those with rising young families. The doctor and she
+thought a good deal of this catch they were making in the person of
+Ernest Le Breton. Poor souls, they little knew what sort of social
+qualities they were letting themselves in for. A firebrand or a
+bombshell would really have been a less remarkable guest to drop
+down straight into the prim and proper orthodox society of Pilbury
+Regis.
+
+When Ernest received the letter in which Dr. Greatrex informed him
+that he might have the third mastership, he hardly knew how to contain
+his joy. He kissed Edie a dozen times over in his excitement, and
+sat up late making plans with her which would have been delightful
+but for poor Edie's lasting sorrow. In a short time it was all duly
+arranged, and Ernest began to think that he must go back to London
+for a day or two, to let Lady Le Breton hear of his change of plans,
+and got everything in order for their quiet wedding. He grudged the
+journey sadly, for he was beginning to understand now that he must
+take care of the pence for Edie's sake as well as for humanity's--his
+abstraction was individualising itself in concrete form--but
+he felt so much at least was demanded of him by filial duty, and,
+besides, he had one or two little matters to settle at Epsilon
+Terrace which could not so well be managed in his absence even
+by his trusty deputy, Ronald. So he ran up to town once more in a
+hurry, and dropped in as if nothing had happened, at his mother's
+house. It was no unusual matter for him to pass a fortnight at
+Wilton Place without finding time to call round at Epsilon Terrace
+to see Ronald, and his mother had not heard at all as yet of his
+recent change of engagement.
+
+Lady Le Breton listened with severe displeasure to Ernest's account of
+his quarrel with Lord Exmoor. It was quite unnecessary and wrong,
+she said, to prevent Lynmnouth from his innocent boyish amusements.
+Pigeon-shooting was practised by the very best people, and she was
+quite sure, therefore, there could be no harm of any sort in it.
+She believed the sport was countenanced, not only by bishops, but
+even by princes. Pigeons, she supposed, had been specially created
+by Providence for our use and enjoyment--'their final cause
+being apparently the manufacture of pigeon-pie,' Ronald suggested
+parenthetically: but we couldn't use them without killing them,
+unfortunately; and shooting was probably as painless a form of
+killing as any other. Peter or somebody, she distinctly remembered,
+had been specially commanded to arise, kill, and eat. To object to
+pigeon-shooting indeed, in Lady Le Breton's opinion, was clearly
+flying in the face of Providence. Of Ronald's muttered reference
+to five sparrows being sold for two farthings, and yet not one of
+them being forgotten, she would not condescend to take any notice.
+However, thank goodness, the fault was none of hers; she could
+wash her hands entirely of all responsibility in the matter. She
+had done her best to secure Ernest a good place in a thoroughly
+nice family, and if he chose to throw it up at a moment's notice
+for one of his own absurd communistical fads, it was happily none
+of her business. She was glad, at any rate, that he'd got another
+berth, with a conscientious, earnest, Christian man like Dr.
+Greatrex. 'And indeed, Ernest,' she said, returning once more to
+the pigeon-shooting question, 'even your poor dear papa, who was
+full of such absurd religious fancies, didn't think that sport
+was unchristian, I'm certain; for I remember once, when we were
+quartered at Moozuffernugger in the North-West Provinces, he went
+out into a nullah near our compound one day, and with his own hand
+shot a man-eating tiger, which had carried off three little native
+children from the thanah; so that shows that he couldn't really
+object to sport; and I hope you don't mean to cast disrespect upon
+the memory of your own poor father!'. All of which profound moral
+and religious observations Ernest, as in duty bound, received with
+the most respectful and acquiescent silence.
+
+And now he had to approach the more difficult task of breaking
+to his mother his approaching marriage with Edie Oswald. He began
+the subject as delicately as he could, dwelling strongly upon poor
+Harry Oswald's excellent position as an Oxford tutor, and upon
+Herbert's visit with him to Switzerland--he knew his mother too
+well to suppose that the real merits of the Oswald family would
+impress her in any way, as compared with their accidental social
+status; and then he went on to speak as gently as possible about
+his engagement with little Edie. At this point, to his exceeding
+discomfiture, Lady Le Breton adopted the unusual tactics of bursting
+suddenly into a flood of tears.
+
+'Oh, Ernest,' she sobbed out inarticulately through her scented
+cambric handkerchief, 'for heaven's sake don't tell me that you've
+gone and engaged yourself to that designing girl! Oh, my poor,
+poor, misguided boy! Is there really no way to save you?'
+
+'No way to save me!' exclaimed Ernest, astonished and disconcerted
+by this unexpected outburst.
+
+'Yes, yes!' Lady Le Breton went on, almost passionately. 'Can't
+you manage somehow to get yourself out of it? I hope you haven't
+utterly compromised yourself! Couldn't dear Herbert go down
+to What's-his-name Pomeroy, and induce the father--a grocer, if
+I remember right--induce him, somehow or other, to compromise the
+matter?'
+
+'Compromise!' cried Ernest, uncertain whether to laugh or be angry.
+
+'Yes, compromise it!' Lady Le Breton answered, endeavouring to
+calm herself. 'Of course that Machiavellian girl has tried to drag
+you into it; and the family have aided and abetted her; and you've
+been weak and foolish--though not, I trust, wicked--and allowed them
+to get their net closed almost imperceptibly around you. But it
+isn't too late to withdraw even now, my poor, dear, deluded Ernest.
+It isn't too late to withdraw even now. Think of the disgrace and
+shame to the family! Think of your dear brothers and their blighted
+prospects! Don't allow this designing girl to draw you helplessly
+into such an ill-assorted marriage! Reflect upon your own future
+happiness! Consider what it will be to drag on years of your life
+with a woman, no longer perhaps externally attractive, whom you
+could never possibly respect or love for her own internal qualities!
+Don't go and wreck your own life, and your brothers' lives, for any
+mistaken and Quixotic notions of false honour! You mayn't like to
+throw her over, after you've once been inveigled into saying "Yes"
+(and the feeling, though foolish, does your heart credit); but
+reflect, my dear boy, such a promise, so obtained, can hardly be
+considered binding upon your conscience! I've no doubt dear Herbert,
+who's a capital man of business, would get them readily enough to
+agree to a compromise or a compensation.'
+
+'My dear mother,'said Ernest white with indignation, but speaking
+very quietly, as soon as he could edge in a word, 'you quite
+misunderstand the whole question. Edie Oswald is a lady by nature,
+with all a lady's best feelings--I hate the word because of its
+false implications, but I can't use any other that will convey to
+you my meaning--and I love and admire and respect and worship her
+with all my heart and with all my soul. She hasn't inveigled me or
+set her cap at me, as you call it, in any way; she's the sweetest,
+timidest, most shrinking little thing that ever existed; on the contrary,
+it is I who have humbly asked her to accept me, because I know no
+other woman to whom I could give my whole heart so unreservedly.
+To tell you the truth, mother, with my ideas and opinions, I could
+hardly be happy with any girl of the class that you would call
+distinctively ladies: their class prejudices and their social
+predilections would jar and grate upon me at every turn. But Edie
+Oswald's a girl whom I could worship and love without any reserve--whom
+I can reverence for her beautiful character, her goodness, and her
+delicacy of feeling. She has honoured me by accepting me, and I'm
+going to marry her at the end of this month, and I want, if possible,
+to get your consent to the marriage before I do so. She's a wife
+of whom I shall be proud in every way; I wish I could think she
+would have equal cause to be proud of her husband.'
+
+Lady Le Breton threw herself once more into a paroxysm of tears.
+'Oh, Ernest,' she cried, 'do spare me! do spare me! This is too
+wicked, too unfeeling, too cruel of you altogether! I knew already
+you were very selfish and heartless and headstrong, but I didn't
+know you were quite so unmanageable and so unkind as this. I appeal
+to your better nature--for you HAVE a better nature--I'm sure you
+have a better nature: you're MY son, and you can't be utterly devoid
+of good impulses. I appeal confidently to your better nature to
+throw off this unhappy, designing, wicked girl before it is too
+late! She has made you forget your duty to your mother, but not,
+I hope, irrevocably. Oh, my poor, dear, wandering boy, won't you
+listen to the voice of reason? won't you return once more like the
+prodigal son, to your neglected mother and your forgotten duty?'
+
+'My dear mother,' Ernest said, hardly knowing how to answer, 'you
+WILL persist in completely misunderstanding me. I love Edie Oswald
+with all my heart; I have promised to marry her, because she has
+done me the great and undeserved honour of accepting me as her
+future husband; and even if I wanted to break off the engagement
+(which it would break my own heart to do), I certainly couldn't
+break it off now without the most disgraceful and dishonourable
+wickedness. That is quite fixed and certain, and I can't go back
+upon it in any way.'
+
+'Then you insist, you unnatural boy,' said Lady Le Breton, wiping
+her eyes, and assuming the air of an injured parent, 'you insist,
+against my express wish, in marrying this girl Osborne, or whatever
+you call her?'
+
+'Yes, I do, mother,' Ernest answered quietly.
+
+'In that case,' said Lady Le Breton, coldly, 'I must beg of you
+that you won't bring this lady, whether as your wife or otherwise,
+under my roof. I haven't been accustomed to associate with the
+daughters of tradesmen, and I don't wish to associate with them
+now in any way.'
+
+'If so,' Ernest said, very softly, 'I can't remain under your roof
+myself any longer. I can go nowhere at all where my future wife
+will not be received on exactly the same terms that I am.'
+
+'Then you had bettor go,' said Lady Le Breton, in her chilliest
+manner. 'Ronald, do me the favour to ring ihe bell for a cab for
+your brother Ernest.'
+
+'I shall walk, thank you, mother,' said Ernest quietly. 'Good
+morning, dear Ronald.'
+
+Ronald rose solemnly and opened the door for him. 'Therefore shall
+a man leave his father and mother,' he said in his clear, soft
+voice, 'and shall cleave unto his wife; and they twain shall be
+one flesh. Amen.'
+
+Lady Le Breton darted a withering glance at her younger son as
+Ernest shut the door after him, and burst once more into a sudden
+flood of uncontrollable tears.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+'COME YE OUT AND BE YE SEPARATE.'
+
+
+Arthur Berkeley's London lodgings were wonderfully snug and
+comfortable for the second floor of a second-rate house in a small
+retired side street near the Embankment at Chelsea. He had made
+the most of the four modest little rooms, with his quick taste and
+his deft, cunning fingers:--four rooms, or rather boxes, one might
+almost call them; a bedroom each for himself and the Progenitor;
+a wee sitting-room for meals and music--the two Berkeleys would
+doubtless as soon have gone without the one as the other; and a tiny
+study where Arthur might work undisturbed at his own desk upon his
+new and original magnum opus, destined to form the great attraction
+of the coming season at the lately-opened Ambiguities Theatre. Things
+had prospered well with the former Oxford curate during the last
+twelve-month. His cantata at Leeds had proved a wonderful success,
+and had finally induced him to remove to London, and take to
+composing as a regular profession. He had his qualms about it, to
+be sure, as one who had put his hand to the plough and then turned
+back; he did not feel quite certain in his own mind how far he
+was justified in giving up the more spiritual for the more worldly
+calling; but natures like Arthur Berkeley's move rather upon passing
+feeling than upon deeper sentiment; and had he not ample ground, he
+asked himself, for this reconsideration of the monetary position?
+He had the Progenitor's happiness to insure before thinking of the
+possible injury to his non-existent parishioners. If he was doing
+Whippingham Parva or Norton-cum-Sutton out of an eloquent and
+valuable potential rector, if he was depriving the Church in the
+next half-century of a dignified and portly prospective archdeacon,
+he is at least making his father's last days brighter and more
+comfortable than his early ones had ever been. And then, was not
+music, too, in its own way, a service, a liturgy, a worship? Surely
+he could do higher good to men's souls--as they call them--to
+whatever little spark of nobler and better fire there might lurk
+within those dull clods of common clay he saw all around him--by
+writing such a work as his Leeds cantata, than by stringing together
+for ever those pretty centos of seventeenth-century conceits and
+nineteenth-century doubts or hesitations which he was accustomed
+to call his sermons! Whatever came of it, he must give up the
+miserable pittance of a curacy, and embrace the career open to the
+musical talents.
+
+So he fitted up his little Chelsea rooms in his own economically
+sumptuous fashion with some bits of wall paper, a few jugs and vases,
+and an etching or two after Meissonier; planted the Progenitor down
+comfortably in a large easy-chair, with a melodious fiddle before
+him; and set to work himself to do what he could towards elevating
+the British stage and pocketing a reasonable profit on his own
+account from that familiar and ever-rejuvenescent process. He was
+quite in earnest, now, about producing a totally new effect of his
+own; and believing in his work, as a good workman ought to do,
+he wrought at it indefatigably and well in the retirement of a
+second-pair back, overlooking a yardful of fluttering clothes, and
+a fine skyline vista of bare, yellowish brick chimneys.
+
+'What part are you working at to-day, Artie?' said the old shoemaker,
+looking over his son's shoulder at the blank music paper before
+him. 'Quartette of Biological Professors, eh?'
+
+'Yes, father,' Berkeley answered with a smile. 'How do you think
+it runs now?' and he hummed over a few lines of his own words, set
+with a quaint lilt to his own inimitable and irresistible music:--
+
+
+ And though in unanimous chorus
+ We mourn that from ages before us
+ No single enaliosaurus
+ To-day should survive,
+
+ Yet joyfully may we bethink us,
+ With the earliest mammal to link us,
+ We still have the ornithorhyncus
+ Extant and alive!
+
+
+'How do you think the score does for that, father, eh? Catching
+air rather, isn't it?'
+
+'Not a better air in the whole piece, Artie; but, my boy, who do
+you think will ever understand the meaning of the words. The gods
+themselves won't know what you're driving at.'
+
+'But I'm going to strike out a new line, Daddie dear. I'm not going
+to play to the gallery; I mean to play to the stalls and boxes.'
+
+'Was there ever such a born aristocrat as this young parson is!' cried
+the old man, lifting up both his hands with a playful gesture of
+mock-deprecation. 'He's hopeless! He's terrible! He's incorrigible!
+Why, you unworthy son of a respectable Paddington shoemaker, if even
+the intelligent British artizans in the gallery don't understand
+you, how the dickens do you suppose the oiled and curled Assyrian
+bulls in the stalls and boxes will have a glimmering idea of what
+you're driving at? The supposition's an insult to the popular
+intelligence--in other words, to me, sir, your Progenitor.'
+
+Berkeley laughed. 'I don't know about that, father,' he said, holding
+up the page of manuscript music at arm's length admiringly before
+him; 'but I do know one thing: this comic opera of mine is going
+to be a triumphant success.'
+
+'So I've thought ever since you began it, Artie. You see, my boy,
+there's a great many points in its favour. In the first place you
+can write your own libretto, or whatever you call it; and you know
+I've always held that though that Wagner man was wrong in practice--a
+most inflated thunder-bomb, his Lohengrin--yet he was right in
+theory, right in theory, Artie; every composer ought to be his own
+poet. Well, then, again, you've got a certain peculiar vein of
+humour of your own, a kind of delicate semi-serious burlesque turn
+about you that's quite original, both in writing and in composing;
+you're a humourist in verse and a humourist in music, that's the
+long and the short of it. Now, you've hit upon a fresh lode of
+dramatic ore in this opera of yours, and if my judgment goes for
+anything, it'll bring the house down the first evening. I'm a bit
+of a critic, Artie; by hook or by crook, you know, paper or money,
+I've heard every good opera, comic or serious, that's been given
+in London these last thirty years, and I flatter myself I know
+something by this time about operatic criticism.'
+
+'You're wrong about Wagner, father,' said Arthur, still glancing
+with paternal partiality at his sheet of manuscript: 'Lohengrin's
+a very fine work, a grand work, I assure you. I won't let you run
+it down. But, barring that, I think you're pretty nearly right in
+your main judgment. I'm not modest, and it strikes me somehow that
+I've invented a genre. That's about what it comes to.'
+
+'If you'd confine yourself to your native tongue, Mr. Parson,
+your ignorant old father might have some chance of agreeing or
+disagreeing with you; but as he doesn't even know what the thingumbob
+you say you've invented may happen to be, he can't profitably
+continue the discussion of that subject. However, my only fear is
+that you may perhaps be writing above the heads of the audience.
+Not in the music, Artie; they can't fail to catch that; it rings
+in one's head like the song of a hedge warbler--tirree, tirree,
+lu-lu-lu, la-la, tirree, tu-whit, tu-whoo, tra-la-la--but in the
+words and the action. I'm half afraid that'll be over their heads,
+even in the gallery. What do you think you'll finally call it?'
+
+'I'm hesitating, Daddy, between "Evolution" and "The Primate of
+Fiji." Which do you recommend--tell me?'
+
+'The Primate, by all means,' said the old man gaily. 'And you
+still mean to open with the debate in the Fijian Parliament on the
+Deceased Grandmother's Second Cousin Bill?'
+
+'No, I don't, Daddy. I've written a new first scene this week, in
+which the President of the Board of Trade remonstrates with the
+mermaids on their remissness in sending their little ones to the
+Fijian Board Schools, in order to receive primary instruction in the
+art of swimming. I've got a capital chorus of mermaids to balance
+the other chorus of Biological Professors on the Challenger Expedition.
+I consider it's a happy cross between Ariosto and Aristophanes.
+If you like, I'll give you the score, and read over the words to
+you.' 'Do,' said the old man, settling himself down in comfort in
+his son's easy-chair, and assuming the sternest air of an impartial
+critic. Arthur Berkeley read on dramatically, in his own clever
+airy fashion, suiting accent and gesture to the subject matter
+through the whole first three acts of that exquisitely humorous
+opera, the Primate of Fiji. Sometimes he hummed the tune over to
+himself as he went; sometimes he played a few notes upon his flute
+by way of striking the key-note; sometimes he rose from his seat in
+his animation, and half acted the part he was reading with almost
+unconscious and spontaneous mimicry. He read through the famous
+song of the President of the Local Government Board, that everybody
+has since heard played by every German band at the street corners;
+through the marvellously catching chorus of the superannuated
+tide-waiters; through the culminating dialogue between the London
+Missionary Society's Agent and the Hereditary Grand Sacrificer to
+the King of Fiji. Of course the recital lacked everything of the
+scenery and dresses that give it so much vogue upon the stage; but
+it had at least the charmingly suggestive music, the wonderful
+linking of sound to sense, the droll and inimitable intermixture
+of the plausible and the impossible which everybody has admired
+and laughed at in the acted piece.
+
+The old shoemaker listened in breathless silence, keeping his eye
+fixed steadily all the time upon the clean copy of the score. Only
+once he made a wry face to himself, and that was in the chorus to
+the debate in the Fijian Parliament on the proposal to leave off
+the practice of obligatory cannibalism. The conservative party
+were of opinion that if you began by burying instead of eating your
+deceased wife, you might end by the atrocious practice of marrying
+your deceased wife's sister; and they opposed the revolutionary
+measure in that well known refrain:--
+
+
+ Of change like this we're naturally chary,
+ Nolumus leges Fijiae mutari.
+
+
+That passage evidently gave the Progenitor deep pain.
+
+'Stick to your own language, my boy,' he murmured; 'stick to your
+own language. The Latin may be very fine, but the gallery wil never
+understand it.' However, when Arthur finished at last, he drew a
+long breath, and laid down the roll of manuscript with an involuntary
+little cry of half-stifled applause.
+
+'Artie,' he said rising from the chair slowly, 'Artie, that's not
+so bad for a parson, I can tell you. I hope the Archbishop won't
+be tempted to cite you for displaying an amount of originality
+unworthy of your cloth.'
+
+'Father,' said Arthur, suddenly, after a short pause, with a tinge
+of pensiveness in his tone that was not usual with him, in speaking
+at least; 'Father, I often think I ought never to have become a
+parson at all.'
+
+'Well, my boy,' said the old man, looking up at him sharply with
+his keen eyes, 'I knew that long ago. You've never really believed
+in the thing, and you oughtn't to have gone in for it from the very
+beginning. It was the music, and the dresses, and the decorations
+that enticed you, Artie, and not the doctrine.'
+
+Arthur turned towards him with a pained expression. 'Father,' he
+said, half reproachfully, 'Father, dear father, dou't talk to me
+like that. Don't think I'm so shallow or so dishonest as to subscribe
+to opinions I don't believe in. It's a curious thing to say, a
+curious thing in this unbelieving age, and I'm half ashamed to say
+it, even to you; but do you know, father, I really do believe it:
+in my very heart of hearts, I fancy I believe every word of it.'
+
+The old man listened to him compassionately and tenderly, as
+a woman listens to the fears and troubles of a little child. To
+him, that plain confession of faith was, in truth, a wonder and a
+stumbling-block. Good, simple-hearted, easy-going, logical-minded,
+sceptical shoemaker that he was, with his head all stuffed full of
+Malthus, and John Stuart Mill, and political economy, and the hard
+facts of life and science, how could he hope to understand the
+complex labyrinth of metaphysical thinking, and childlike faith,
+and aesthetic attraction, and historical authority, which made a
+sensitive man like Arthur Berkeley, in his wayward, half-serious,
+emotional fashion, turn back lovingly and regretfully to the fair
+old creed that his father had so long deserted? How strange that
+Artie, a full-grown male person, with all the learning of the schools
+behind him, should relapse at last into these childish and exploded
+mediaeval superstitions! How incredible that, after having been
+brought up from his babyhood upward on the strong meat of the agnostic
+philosophers, he should fall back in his manhood on the milk for
+babes administered to him by orthodox theology! The simple-minded
+old sceptic could hardly credit it, now that Arthur told him so
+with his own lips, though he had more than once suspected it when he
+heard him playing sacred music with that last touch of earnestness
+in his execution which only the sincerest conviction and most intimate
+realisation of its import can ever give. Ah well, ah well, good
+sceptical old shoemaker; there are perhaps more things in heaven
+and earth and in the deep soul of man than are dreamt of in your
+philosophy.
+
+Still, though the avowal shocked and disappointed him a little, the
+old man could not find it in his heart to say one word of sorrow
+or disapproval, far less of ridicule or banter, to his dearly loved
+boy. He felt instinctively, what Herbert Le Breton could not feel,
+that this sentimental tendency of his son's, as he thought it,
+lay far too deep and seemed far too sacred for mere argument or
+common discussion. 'Perhaps,' he said to himself softly, 'Artie's
+emotional side has got the better of his intellectual. I brought
+him up without telling him any thing of these things, except
+negatively, and by way of warning against superstitious tendencies;
+and when he went to Oxford, and saw the doctrines tricked out in
+all the authority of a great hierarchy, with its cathedrals, and
+chapels, and choirs, and altars, and robes, and fal-lal finery,
+it got the better of him; got the better of him, very naturally.
+Artie's a cleverer fellow than his old father--had more education,
+and so on; and I'm fond of him, very fond of him; but his logical
+faculty isn't quite straight, somehow: he lets his feelings have
+too much weight and prominence against his calmer reason! I can
+easily understand how, with his tastes and leanings, the clericals
+should have managed to get a hold over him. The clericals are such
+insinuating cunning fellows. A very impressionable boy Artie was,
+always; the poetical temperament and the artistic temperament
+always is impressionable, I suppose; but shoemaking certainly does
+develop the logical faculties. Seems as though the logical faculties
+were situated in the fore-part of the brain, as they mark them
+out on the phrenological heads; and the leaning forward that gives
+us the shoemaker's forehead must tend to enlarge them--give them
+plenty of room to expand and develop!' Saying which thing to himself
+musingly, the father took his son's hand gently in his, and only
+smoothed it quietly as he looked deep into Arthur's eyes, without
+uttering a single word.
+
+As for Arthur Berkeley, he sat silent, too, half averting his face
+from his father's gaze, and feeling a little blush of shame upon his
+cheek at having been surprised unexpectedly into such an unwonted
+avowal. How could he ever expect his father to understand the nature
+of his feelings! To him, good old man that he was, all these things
+were just matters of priestcraft and obscurantism--fables invented
+by the ecclesiastical mind as a means of getting fat livings and
+comfortable deaneries out of the public pocket. And, indeed, Arthur
+was well accustomed at Oxford to keeping his own opinions to himself
+on such subjects. What chance of sympathy or response was there for
+such a man as he in that coldly critical and calmly deliberative
+learned society? Not, of course, that all Oxford was wholly given
+over even then to extreme agnosticism. There were High Churchmen,
+and Low Churchmen, and Broad Churchmen enough, to be sure: men
+learned in the Fathers, and the Canons, and the Acts of the General
+Councils; men ready to argue on the intermediate state, or on the
+three witnesses, or on the heretical nature of the Old Catholic
+schism; men prepared with minute dogmatic opinions upon every
+conceivable or inconceivable point of abstract theology. There were
+people who could trace the Apostolic succession of the old Cornish
+bishops, and people who could pronounce authoritatively upon the
+exact distinction between justification and remission of sins. But
+for all these things Arthur Berkeley cared nothing. Where, then,
+among those learned exegetical theologians, was there room for one
+whose belief was a matter, not of reason and argument, but of feeling
+and of sympathy? He did not want to learn what the Council of Trent
+had said about such and such a dogma; he wanted to be conscious
+of an inner truth, to find the world permeated by an informing
+righteousness, to know himself at one with the inner essence of
+the entire universe. And though he could never feel sure whether
+it was all illusion or not, he had hungered and thirsted after
+believing it, till, as he told his father timidly that day, he
+actually did believe it somehow in his heart of hearts. Let us not
+seek to probe too deeply into those inner recesses, whose abysmal
+secrets are never perfectly clear even to the introspective eyes
+of the conscious self-dissector himself.
+
+After a pause Arthur spoke again. He spoke this time in a very low
+voice, as one afraid to open his soul too much, even to his father.
+'Dear, dear father,' he said, releasing his hand softly, 'you don't
+quite understand what I mean about it. It isn't because I don't
+believe, or try to believe, or hope I believe, that I think I ought
+never to have become a parson. In my way, as in a glass, darkly,
+I do strive my best to believe, though perhaps my belief is hardly
+more in its way than Ernest Le Breton's unbelieving. I do want to
+think that this great universe we see around us isn't all a mistake
+and an abortion. I want to find a mind and an order and a purpose
+in it; and, perhaps because I want it, I make myself believe that
+I have really found it. In that hope and belief, with the ultimate
+object of helping on whatever is best and truest in the world, I
+took orders. But I feel now that it was an error for me. I'm not
+the right man to make a parson. There are men who are born for that
+rôle; men who know how to conduct themselves in it decently and
+in seemly fashion; men who can quietly endure all its restraints,
+and can fairly rise to the height of all its duties. But I can't.
+I was intended for something lighter and less onerous than that.
+If I stop in the Church I shall do no good to myself or to it; if
+I come out of it, I shall make both parties freer, and shall be able
+to do more good in my own generation. And so, father, for the very
+same reasons that made me go into it, I mean to come out again. Not
+in any quarrel with it, nor as turning my back upon it, but just
+as the simple acknowledgment of a mistaken calling. It wouldn't
+be seemly, for example, for a parson to write comic operas. But
+I feel I can do more good by writing comic operas than by talking
+dogmatically about things I hardly understand to people who hardly
+understand me. So before I get this opera acted I mean to leave off
+my white tie, and be known in future, henceforth and for ever, as
+plain Arthur Berkeley.'
+
+The old shoemaker listened in respectful silence. 'It isn't for me,
+Artie,' he said, as his son finished, 'to stand between a man and
+his conscience. As John Stuart Mill says in his essay on "Liberty,"
+we must allow full play to every man's individuality. Wonderful
+man, John Stuart Mill; I understand his grandfather was a shoemaker.
+Well, I won't talk with you about the matter of conviction; but I
+never wanted you to be a parson, and I shall feel all the happier
+myself when you've ceased to be one.'
+
+'And I,' said Arthur, 'shall feel all the freer; but if I had been
+able to remain where I was, I should have felt all the worthier,
+for all that.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+A QUIET WEDDING.
+
+
+Fate was adverse for the moment to Arthur Berkeley's well meant
+designs for shuffling off the trammels of his ecclesiastical habit.
+He was destined to appear in public at least once more, not only in
+the black coat and white tie of his everyday professional costume,
+but even in the flowing snowy surplice of a solemn and decorous
+spiritual function. The very next morning's post brought him
+a little note from Ernest Le Breton specially begging him, in his
+own name and Edie's, to come down to Calcombe Pomeroy, and officiate
+as parson at their approaching wedding. The note had cost Ernest
+a conscientious struggle, for he would have personally preferred
+to be married at a Registry Office, as being more in accordance
+with the duties of a good citizen, and savouring less of effete
+ecclesiastical superstition; but he felt he couldn't even propose
+such a step to Edie; she wouldn't have considered herself married
+at all, unless she were married quite regularly by a duly qualified
+clerk in holy orders of the Church of England as by law established.
+Already, indeed, Ernest was beginning to recognise with a sigh
+that if he was going to live in the world at all, he must do so by
+making at least a partial sacrifice of political consistency. You
+may step out of your own century, if you choose, yourself, but you
+can't get all the men and women with whom you come in contact to
+step out of it also in unison just to please you.
+
+So Ernest had sat down reluctantly to his desk, and consented
+to ask Arthur Berkeley to assist at the important ceremony in his
+professional clerical capacity. If he was going to have a medicine
+man or a priest at all to marry him to the girl of his choice--a
+barbaric survival, at the best, he thought it--he would, at any
+rate, prefer having his friend Arthur--a good man and true--to
+having the fat, easy-going, purse-proud rector of the parish; the
+younger son of a wealthy family who had gone into the Church for
+the sake of the living, and who rolled sumptuously down the long
+hilly High Street every day in his comfortable carriage, leaning
+back with his fat hands folded complacently over his ample knees,
+and gazing abstractedly, with his little pigs'-eyes half buried
+in his cheek, at the beautiful prospect afforded him by the broad
+livery-covered backs of his coachman and his footman. Ernest could
+never have consented to lot that lazy, overfed, useless encumbrance
+on a long-suffering commonwealth, that idle gorger of dainty meats
+and choice wines from the tithes of the tolling, suffering people,
+bear any part in what was after all the most solemn and serious
+contract of his whole lifetime. And, to say the truth, Edie quite
+agreed with him on that point, too. Though her moral indignation
+against poor, useless, empty-headed old Mr. Walters didn't burn
+quite so fierce or so clear as Ernest's--she regarded the fat
+old parson, indeed, rather from the social point of view, as a
+ludicrously self-satisfied specimen of the lower stages of humanity,
+than from the political point of view, as a greedy swallower of
+large revenues for small work inefficiently performed--she would
+still have felt that his presence at her wedding jarred and grated
+on all the finer sensibilities of her nature, as out of accord
+with the solemn and tender associations of that supreme moment.
+To have been married by prosy old Mr. Walters, to have taken the
+final benediction on the greatest act of her life from those big
+white fat fingers, would have spoilt the reminiscence of the wedding
+day for her as long as she lived. But when Ernest suggested Arthur
+Berkeley's name to her, she acquiesced with all her heart in the
+happy selection. She liked Berkeley better than anybody else she
+had ever met, except Ernest; and she knew that his presence would
+rather add one more bright association to the day than detract from
+it in the coming years. Her poor little wedding would want all the
+additions that friends could make to its cheerfulness, to get over
+the lasting gloom and blank of dear Harry's absence.
+
+'You will come and help us, I know, Berkeley,' Ernest wrote to
+Arthur in his serious fashion. 'We feel there is nobody else we
+should so like to have present at our wedding as yourself. Come
+soon, too, for there are lots of things I want to talk over with
+you. It's a very solemn responsibility, getting married: you
+have to take upon yourself the duty of raising up future citizens
+for the state; and with our present knowledge of how nature works
+through the laws of heredity, you have to think whether you two
+who contemplate marriage are well fitted to act as parents to the
+generations that are to be. When I remember that all my own faults
+and failings may be handed on relentlessly to those that come after
+us--built up in the very fibre of their being--I am half appalled
+at my own temerity. Then, again, there is the inexorable question
+of money; is it prudent or is it wrong of us to marry on such
+an uncertainty? I'm afraid that Schurz and Malthas would tell us
+--very wrong. I have turned over these things by myself till I'm
+tired of arguing them out in my own head, and I want you to come
+down beforehand, so as to cheer me up a bit with your lighter and
+brighter philosophy. On the very eve of my marriage, I'm somehow
+getting dreadfully pessimistic.'
+
+Arthur read the letter through impatiently and crumpled it up in his
+hands with a gesture of despondency. 'Poor little Miss Butterfly,'
+he said to himself, pityingly, 'was there ever such an abstraction
+of an ethical unit as this good, solemn, self-torturing Ernest! How
+will she ever live with him? How will he ever live with her? Poor
+little soul! Harry is gone like the sunshine out of her life; and
+now this well-meaning, gloomy, conscientious cloud comes caressingly
+to overspread her with the shadowing pall of its endless serious
+doubts and hesitations. Fancy a man who has won little Miss
+Butterfly's heart--dear little Miss Butterfly's gay, laughing,
+tender little heart--writing such a letter as that to the friend
+who's going to marry them! Upon my word, I've half a mind to go
+into the concientious scruples business on my own account! Have I
+any right to be a party to fettering poor airy fairy little Miss
+Butterfly, with a heavy iron chain for life and always, to this
+great lumbering elephantine moral Ernest? Am I justified in tying
+the cable round her dainty little neck with a silken thread, and
+then fastening it round his big leg with rivets of hardened steel
+on the patent Bessemer process? If a couple of persons, duly called
+by banns in their own respective parishes, or furnished with the
+right reverend's perquisite, a licence, come to me, a clerk in holy
+orders, and ask me to marry them, I've a vague idea that unless I
+comply I lay myself open to the penalties of praemunire, or something
+else equally awful and mysterious. But if the couple write and
+ask me to come down into Devonshire and marry them, that's quite
+another matter. I can lawfully answer, 'Non possumus.' There's a
+fine ecclesiastical ring, by the way, about answering 'Non possumus;'
+it sums up the entire position of the Church in a nutshell! Well,
+I doubt whether I ought to go; but as a matter of friendship, I'll
+throw overboard my poor conscience. It's used to the process by
+this time, no doubt, like eels to skinning; and as Hudibras says,
+
+
+ However tender it may be,
+ 'Tis passing blind where 'twill not see.
+
+
+If she'd only have taken ME, now, who knows but I might in time
+have risen to be a Prebendary or even a Dean? 'They that have used
+the office of a deacon well, purchase to themselves a good degree,'
+Paul wrote to Timothy once; but it's not so now, it's not so now;
+preferment goes by favour, and the deacon must e'en shift as best
+he can on his own account.' So, in the end, Arthur packed up his
+surplice in his little handbag, and took his way peacefully down
+to Calcombe Pomeroy.
+
+It was a very quiet, almost a sombre wedding, for the poor Oswalds
+were still enveloped in the lasting gloom of their great loss,
+and not much outward show or preparation, such as the female heart
+naturally delights in, could possibly be made under these painful
+circumstances. Still, all the world of Calcombe came to see little
+Miss Oswald married to the grave gentleman from Oxford; and most
+of them gave her their hearty good wishes, for Edie was a general
+favourite with gentle and simple throughout the whole borough.
+Herbert was there, like a decorous gentleman, to represent the
+bridegroom's family, and so was Ronald, who had slipped away from
+London without telling Lady Le Breton, for fear of another distressful
+scone at the last moment. Arthur Berkeley read the service in
+his beautiful impressive manner, and looked his part well in his
+flowing white surplice. But as he uttered the solemn words, 'Whom
+God hath joined together, let no man put asunder,' the musical
+ring of his own voice sounded to his heart like the knell of his
+own one love--the funeral service over the only romance he could
+ever mix in throughout his whole lifetime. Poor fellow, he had
+taken the duty upon him with all friendly heartiness; but he felt
+an awful and lonely feeling steal over him when it was all finished,
+and when he knew that his little Miss Butterfly was now Ernest Le
+Breton's lawful wife for ever and ever.
+
+In the vestry, after signing the books, Herbert and Ronald and
+some of the others insisted on their ancient right of kissing the
+bride in good old English fashion. But Arthur did not. It would
+not have been loyal. He felt in his heart that he had loved little
+Miss Butterfly too deeply himself for that; to claim a kiss would
+be abusing the formal dues of his momentary position. Henceforth
+he would not even think of her to himself in that little pet name
+of his brief Oxford dream: he would call her nothing in his own
+mind but Mrs. Le Breton.
+
+Edie's simple little presents were all arranged in the tiny parlour
+behind the shop. Most of them were from her own personal friends:
+a few were from the gentry of the surrounding neighbourhood: but
+there were two handsomer than the rest: they came from outside the
+narrow little circle of Calcombe Pomeroy society. One was a plain
+gold bracelet from Arthur Berkeley; and on the gold of the inner
+face, though neither Edie nor Ernest noticed it, he had lightly
+cut with his knife on the soft metal the one word, 'Frustra.' The
+other was a dressing-case, with a little card inside, 'Miss Oswald,
+from Lady Hilda Tregellis.' Hilda had heard of Ernest's approaching
+wedding from Herbert (who took an early opportunity of casually
+lunching at Dunbude, in order to show that he mustn't be identified
+with his socialistic brother); and the news had strangely proved a
+slight salve to poor Hilda's wounded vanity--or, perhaps it would
+be fairer to say, to her slighted higher instincts. 'A country
+grocer's daughter!' she said to herself: 'the sister of a great
+mathematical scholar! How very original of him to think of marrying
+a grocer's daughter! Why, of course, he must have been engaged to
+her all along before he came here! And even if he hadn't been,
+one might have known at once that such a man as he is would never
+go and marry a girl whose name's in the peerage, when he could strike
+out a line for himself by marrying a grocer's daughter. I really
+like him better than ever for it. I must positively send her a
+little present. They'll be as poor as church mice, I've no doubt.
+I ought to send her something that'll be practically useful.' And
+by way of sending something practically useful, Lady Hilda chose
+at last a handsome silver-topped Russia leather dressing-case.
+
+It was not such a wedding as Edie had pictured to herself in her
+first sweet maidenly fancies; but still, when they drove away alone
+in the landau from the side-door of the Red Lion to Calcombe Road
+Station, she felt a quiet pride and security in her heart from the
+fact that she was now the wedded wife of a man she loved so dearly
+as Ernest Le Breton. And even Ernest so far conquered his social
+scruples that he took first-class tickets, for the first time in
+his life, to Ilfracombe, where they were to spend their brief and
+hasty fragment of a poor little honeymoon. It's so extremely hard
+to be a consistent socialist where women are concerned, especially
+on the very day of your own wedding!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+INTO THE FIRE.
+
+
+'Let me see, Le Breton,' Dr. Greatrex observed to the new master,
+'you've taken rooms for yourself in West Street for the present--you'll
+take a house on the parade by-and-by, no doubt. Now, which church
+do you mean to go to?'
+
+'Well, really,' Ernest answered, taken a little aback at the
+suddenness of the question, 'I haven't had time to think about it
+yet.'
+
+The doctor frowned slightly. 'Not had time to think about it,'
+he repeated, rather severely. 'Not had time to think about such
+a serious question as your particular place of worship! You quite
+surprise me. Well, if you'll allow me to make a suggestion in the
+matter it would be that you and Mrs. Le Breton should take seats,
+for the present at least, at St. Martha's. The parish church is high,
+decidedly high, and I wouldn't recommend you to go there; most of
+our parents don't approve of it. You're an Oxford man, I know, and
+so I suppose you're rather high yourself; but in this particular
+matter I would strongly advise you to subordinate your own personal
+feelings to the parents' wishes. Then there's St. Jude's; St.
+Jude's is distinctly low--quite Evangelical in fact: indeed, I may
+say, scarcely what I should consider sound church principles at
+all in any way; and I think you ought most certainly to avoid it
+sedulously. Evangelicism is on the decline at present in Pilbury
+Regis. As to St. Barnabas--Barabbas they call it generally, a most
+irreverent joke, but, of course, inevitable--Barabbas is absolutely
+Ritualistic. Many of our parents object to it most strongly. But
+St. Martha's is a quiet, moderate, inoffensive church in every
+respect--sound and sensible, and free from all extremes. You can
+give no umbrage to anybody, even the most cantankerous, by going
+to St. Martha's. The High Church people fraternise with it on the
+one hand, and the moderate church people fraternise with it on the
+other, while as to the Evangelicals and the dissenters, they hardly
+contribute any boys to the school, or if they do, they don't object
+to unobtrusive church principles. Indeed, my experience has been,
+Le Breton, that even the most rabid dissenters prefer to have their
+sons educated by a sound, moderate, high-principled, and, if I may
+say so, neutral-tinted church clergyman.' And the doctor complacently
+pulled his white tie straight before the big gilt-framed drawing-room
+mirror.
+
+'Then, again,' the doctor went on placidly in a bland tone of
+mild persuasion, 'there's the question of politics. Politics are
+a very ticklish matter, I can assure you, in Pilbury Regis. Have
+you any fixed political opinions of your own, Le Breton, or are
+you waiting to form them till you've had some little experience in
+your profession?'
+
+'My opinions,' Ernest answered timidly, 'so far as they can be
+classed under any of the existing political formulas at all, are
+decidedly Liberal--I may even say Radical.'
+
+The doctor bit his lip and frowned severely. 'Radical,' he said,
+slowly, with a certain delicate tinge of acerbity in his tone.
+'That's bad. If you will allow me to interpose in the matter, I
+should strongly advise you, for your own sake, to change them at
+once and entirely. I don't object to moderate Liberalism--perhaps
+as many as one-third of our parents are moderate Liberals;
+but decidedly the most desirable form of political belief for a
+successful schoolmaster is a quiet and gentlemanly, but unswerving
+Conservatism. I don't say you ought to be an uncompromising
+old-fashioned Tory--far from it: that alienates not only the
+dissenters, but even the respectable middle-class Liberals. What
+is above all things expected in a schoolmaster is a central position
+in politics, so to speak--a careful avoidance of all extremes--a
+readiness to welcome all reasonable progress, while opposing in
+a conciliatory spirit all revolutionary or excessive changes--in
+short, an attitude of studied moderation. That, if you will allow
+me to advise you, Le Breton, is the sort of thing, you may depend
+upon it, that most usually meets the wishes of the largest possible
+number of pupils' parents.'
+
+'I'm afraid,' Ernest answered, as respectfully as possible, 'my
+political convictions are too deeply seated to be subordinated to
+my professional interests.'
+
+'Eh! What!' the doctor cried sharply. 'Subordinate your principles
+to your personal interests! Oh, pray don't mistake me so utterly
+as that! Not at all, not at all, my dear Le Breton. I don't mean
+that for the shadow of a second. What I mean is rather this,' and
+here the doctor cleared his throat and pulled round his white tie
+a second time, 'that a schoolmaster, considering attentively what
+is best for his pupils, mark you--we all exist for our pupils, you
+know, my dear fellow, don't we?--a schoolmaster should avoid such
+action as may give any unnecessary scandal, you see, or seem to
+clash with the ordinary opinion of the pupils' parents. Of course, if
+your views are fully formed, and are of a mildly Liberal complexion
+(put it so, I beg of you, and don't use that distressful word
+Radical), I wouldn't for the world have you act contrary to them.
+But I wouldn't have you obtrude them too ostentatiously--for your
+own sake, Le Breton, for your own sake, I assure you. Remember,
+you're a very young man yet: you have plenty of time before you to
+modify your opinions in: as you go on, you'll modify them--moderate
+them--bring them into harmony with the average opinions of ordinary
+parents. Don't commit yourself at present--that's all I would
+say to you--don't commit yourself at present. When you're as old
+as I am, my dear fellow, you'll see through all these youthful
+extravagances.'
+
+'And as to the church, Mr. Le Breton,' said Mrs. Greatrex, with
+bland suggestiveness from the ottoman, 'of course, we regard the
+present very unsatisfactory arrangement as only temporary. The
+doctor hopes in time to get a chapel built, which is much nicer
+for the boys, and also more convenient for the masters and their
+families--they all have seats, of course, in the chancel. At Charlton
+College, where the doctor was an assistant for some years, before
+we came to Pilbury, there was one of the under-masters, a young man
+of very good family, who took such an interest in the place that
+he not only contributed a hundred pounds out of his own pocket
+towards building a chapel, but also got ever so many of his wealthy
+friends elsewhere to subscribe, first to that, and then to the organ
+and stained-glass window. We've got up a small building fund here
+ourselves already, of which the doctor's treasurer, and we hope
+before many years to have a really nice chapel, with good music
+and service well done--the kind of thing that'll be of use to the
+school, and have an excellent moral effect upon the boys in the
+way of religious training.'
+
+'No doubt,' Ernest answered evasively, 'you'll soon manage to raise
+the money in such a place as Pilbury.'
+
+'No doubt,' the doctor replied, looking at him with a searching
+glance, and evidently harbouring an uncomfortable suspicion,
+already, that this young man had not got the moral and religious
+welfare of the boys quite so deeply at heart as was desirable in
+a model junior assistant master. 'Well, well, we shall see you at
+school to-morrow morning, Le Breton: till then I hope you'll find
+yourselves quite comfortable in your new lodgings.'
+
+Ernest went back from this visit of ceremony with a doubtful heart,
+and left Dr. and Mrs. Greatrex alone to discuss their new acquisition.
+
+'Well, Maria,' said the doctor, in a dubious tone of voice, as soon
+as Ernest was fairly out of hearing, 'what do you think of him?'
+
+'Think!' answered Mrs. Greatrex, energetically. 'Why, I don't think
+at all. I feel sure he'll never, never, never make a schoolmaster!'
+
+'I'm afraid not,' the doctor responded, pensively. 'I'm afraid
+not, Maria. He's got ideas of his own, I regret to say; and, what's
+worse, they're not the right ones.'
+
+'Oh, he'll never do,' Mrs. Greatrex continued, scornfully. 'Nothing
+at all professional about him in any way. No interest or enthusiasm
+in the matter of the chapel; not a spark of responsiveness even
+about the stained-glass window; hardly a trace of moral or religious
+earnestness, of care for the welfare and happiness of the dear boys.
+He wouldn't in the least impress intending parents--or, rather, I
+feel sure he'd impress them most unfavourably. The best thing we
+can do, now we've got him, is to play off his name on relations in
+society, but to keep the young man himself as far as possible in
+the background. I confess he's a disappointment--a very great and
+distressing disappointment.'
+
+'He is, he is certainly,' the doctor acquiesced, with a sigh of
+regretfulness. 'I'm afraid we shall never be able to make much of
+him. But we must do our best--for his own sake, and the sake of the
+boys and parents, it's our duty, Maria, to do our best with him.'
+
+'Oh, of course,' Mrs. Greatrex replied, languidly: 'but I'm bound
+to say, I'm sure it'll prove a very thankless piece of duty. Young
+men of his sort have never any proper sense of gratitude.'
+
+Meanwhile, Edie, in the little lodgings in a side street near the
+school-house, had run out quickly to open the door for Ernest, and
+waited anxiously to hear his report upon their new employers.
+
+'Well, Ernest dear,' she asked, with something of the old childish
+brightness in her eager manner, 'and what do you think of them?'
+
+'Why, Edie,' Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead gently,
+'I don't want to judge them too hastily, but I'm inclined to
+fancy, on first sight, that both the doctor and his wife are most
+egregious and unmitigated humbugs.'
+
+'Humbugs, Ernest! why, how do you mean?'
+
+'Well, Edie, they've got the moral and religious welfare of the
+boys at their very finger ends; and, do you know--I don't want to
+be uncharitable--but I somehow imagine they haven't got it at heart
+as well. However, we must do our best, and try to fall in with
+them.'
+
+And for a whole year Ernest and Edie did try to fall in with them
+to the best of their ability. It was hard work, for though the
+doctor himself was really at bottom a kind-hearted man, with a mere
+thick veneer of professional humbug inseparable from his unhappy
+calling, Mrs. Greatrex was a veritable thorn in the flesh to poor
+little natural honest-hearted Edie. When she found that the Le
+Bretons didn't mean to take a house on the Parade or elsewhere,
+but were to live ingloriously in wee side street lodgings, her
+disappointment was severe and extreme; but when she incidentally
+discovered that Mrs. Le Breton was positively a grocer's daughter
+from a small country town, her moral indignation against the baseness
+of mankind rose almost to white heat. To think that young Le Breton
+should have insinuated himself into the position of third master
+under false pretences--should have held out as qualifications for
+the post his respectable connections, when he knew perfectly well
+all the time that he was going to marry somebody who was not in
+Society--it was really quite too awfully wicked and deceptive and
+unprincipled of him! A very bad, dishonest young man, she was very
+much afraid; a young man with no sense of truth or honour about
+him, though, of course, she wouldn't say so for the world before
+any of the parents, or do anything to injure the poor young fellow's
+future prospects if she could possibly help it. But Mrs. Greatrex
+felt sure that Ernest had come to Pilbury of malice prepense, as
+part of a deep-laid scheme to injure and ruin the doctor by his
+horrid revolutionary notions. 'He does it on purpose,' she used to
+say; 'he talks in that way because he knows it positively shocks
+and annoys us. He pretends to be very innocent all the time; but
+at heart he's a malignant, jealous, uncharitable creature. I'm sure
+I wish he had never come to Pilbury Regis! And to go quarrelling
+with his own mother, too--the unnatural man! The only respectable
+relation he had, and the only one at all likely to produce any good
+or salutary effect upon intending parents!'
+
+'My dear,' the doctor would answer apologetically, 'you're really
+quite too hard upon young Le Breton. As far as school-work goes, he's
+a capital master, I assure you--so conscientious, and hard-working,
+and systematic. He does his very best with the boys, even with that
+stupid lout, Blenkinsopp major; and he has managed to din something
+into them in mathematics somehow, so that I'm sure the fifth form
+will pass a better examination this term than any term since we
+first came here. Now that, you know, is really a great thing, even
+if he doesn't quite fall in with our preconceived social requirements.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't know about the mathematics or the fifth form,
+Joseph,' Mrs. Geatrex used to reply, with great dignity. 'That
+sort of thing falls under your department, I'm aware, not under
+mine. But I'm sure that for all social purposes, Mr. Le Breton
+is really a great deal worse than useless. A more unchristian,
+disagreeable, self-opinionated, wrong-headed, objectionable young
+man I never came across in the whole course of my experience. However,
+you wouldn't listen to my advice upon the subject, so it's no use
+talking any longer about it. I always advised you not to take him
+without further enquiry into his antecedents; and you overbore me:
+you said he was so well-connected, and so forth, and would hear
+nothing against him; so I wish you joy now of your precious bargain.
+The only thing left for us is to find some good opportunity of
+getting rid of him.'
+
+'I like the young man, as far as he goes,' Dr. Greatrex replied
+once, with unwonted spirit, 'and I won't get rid of him at all, my
+dear, unless he obliges me to. He's really well meaning, in spite
+of all his absurdities, and upon my word, Maria, I believe he's
+thoroughly honest in his opinions.'
+
+Mrs. Greatrex only met this flat rebellion by an indirect remark
+to the effect that some people seemed absolutely destitute of the
+very faintest glimmering power of judging human character.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+LITERATURE, MUSIC, AND THE DRAMA.
+
+
+'The Primate of Fiji' was duly accepted and put into rehearsal by
+the astute and enterprising manager of the Ambiguities Theatre.
+'It's a risk,' he said candidly, when he read the manuscript over,
+'a decided risk, Mr. Berkeley; I acknowledge the riskiness, but I
+don't mind trying it for all that. You see, you've staked everything
+upon the doubtful supposition that the Public possesses a certain
+amount of elementary intelligence, and a certain appreciation
+of genuine original wit and humour. Your play's literature, good
+literature; and that's rather a speculative element to introduce
+into the regular theatre nowadays. Illegitimate, I should call it;
+decidedly illegitimate--but still, perhaps, worth trying. Do you
+know the story about old Simon Burbury, the horsedealer? Young Simon
+says to him one morning, "Father, don't you think we might manage
+to conduct this business of ours without always telling quite
+so many downright lies about it?" The old man looks back at him
+reproachfully, and says with a solemn shake of the head, "Ah, Simon,
+Simon, little did I ever think I should live to see a son of mine
+go in for speculation!" Well, my dear sir, that's pretty much how
+a modern manager feels about the literary element in the drama.
+The Public isn't accustomed to it, and there's no knowing how they
+may take it. Shakespeare, now, they stand readily enough, because
+he's an old-established and perfectly respectable family purveyor.
+Sheridan, too, of course, and one play of Goldsmith's, and a trifle
+or so of George Colman--all recognised and all tolerated because
+of their old prescriptive respectability. But for a new author to
+aim at being literary's rather presumptuous; now tell me yourself,
+isn't it? Seems as if he was setting himself up for a heaven-sent
+genius, and trying to sit upon the older dramatists of the present
+generation. Melodrama, sensation, burlesque--that's all right
+enough--perfectly legitimate; but a real literary comic opera, with
+good words and good music--it IS a little strong, for a beginner,
+Mr. Berkeley, you WILL acknowledge.'
+
+'But don't you think,' Arthur answered, smiling good-humouredly at
+his cynical frankness, 'an educated and cultured Public is beginning
+to grow up that may, perhaps, really prefer a little literature,
+provided it's made light enough and attractive enough for their
+rapid digestion? Don't you think intelligent people are beginning
+to get just a trifle sick of burlesque, and spectacle, and sensation,
+and melodrama?'
+
+'Why, my dear sir,' the manager answered promptly, 'that's the exact
+chance on which I'm calculating when I venture to accept your comic
+opera from an unknown beginner. It's clever, there's no denying
+that, and I hope the fact won't be allowed to tell against it: but
+the music's bright and lively; the songs are quaint and catching;
+the dialogue's brisk and not too witty; and there's plenty of
+business--plenty of business in it. I incline to think we can get
+together a house at the Ambiguities that'll enter into the humour
+of the thing, and see what your play's driving at. How did you learn
+all about stage requirements, though? I never saw a beginner's
+play with so little in it that was absolutely impossible.'
+
+'I was a Shooting Star at Oxford,' Berkeley answered simply,
+'so that I know something--like a despised amateur--about stage
+necessities; and I've written one or two little pieces before for
+private acting. Besides, Watkiss has helped me with all the technical
+arrangements of the little opera.'
+
+'It'll do,' the manager answered, more confidently; 'I won't predict
+a success, because you know a manager should never prophesy unless
+he knows; but I think there's a Public in London that'll take it
+in, just as they took in "Caste" and "Society," twenty years back,
+at the Prince of Wales's. Anyhow, I'm quite prepared to give it
+a fair trial.'
+
+On the first night, Arthur Berkeley and the Progenitor went down
+in fear and trembling to the stage door of the Ambiguities. There
+was a full house, and the critics were all present, in some surprise
+at the temerity of this new man; for it was noised abroad already
+by those who had seen the rehearsals that 'The Primate of Fiji' was
+a fresh departure, after its own fashion, in the matter of English
+comic opera. The curtain rose upon the chorus of mermaids, and
+the first song was a decided hit. Still the Public, as becomes a
+first night, maintained a dignified and critical reserve. When the
+President of the Board of Trade, in full court costume, appeared
+upon the scene, in the midst of the very realistic long-haired
+sea-ladies, the audience was half shocked for a moment by the
+utter incongruity of the situation; but after a while they began
+to discover that the incongruity was part of the joke, and they
+laughed quietly a sedate and moderate laugh of suspended judgment.
+As the Progenitor had predicted, the gods were the first to enter
+into the spirit of the fun, and to give a hand to the Primate's
+first sermon. The scuntific professors on the Challenger Expedition
+took the fancy of the house a little more decidedly; and even the
+stalls thawed visibly when the professor of biology delivered his
+famous exposition of the evolution hypothesis to the assembled
+chiefs of Raratouga. But it was the one feeble second-hand old joke
+of the piece that really brought pit and boxes down together in a
+sudden fit of inextinguishable laughter. The professor of political
+economy enquired diligently, with note book in hand, of the Princess
+of Fiji, whether she thought the influence of the missionaries
+beneficial or otherwise; whether she considered these preachers
+of a new religion really good or not; to which the unsophisticated
+child of nature responded naively, 'Good, very good--roasted; but
+not quite so good boiled,' and the professor gravely entered the
+answer in his philosophic note-book. It was a very ancient jest
+indeed, but it tickled the ribs of the house mightily, as ancient
+jests usually do, and they burst forthwith into a hearty roar of
+genuine approval. Then Arthur began to breathe more freely. After
+that the house toned down again quietly, and gave no decided token
+of approbation till the end of the piece. When the curtain dropped
+there was a lull of hushed expectation for poor Arthur Berkeley;
+and at its close the house broke out into a storm of applause, and
+'The Primate of Fiji' had firmly secured its position as the one
+great theatrical success of the present generation.
+
+There was a loud cry of 'Author! Author!' and Arthur Berkeley,
+hardly knowing how he got there, or what he was standing on, found
+himself pushed from behind by friendly hands, on to the narrow
+space between the curtain and the footlights. He became aware that
+a very hot and red body, presumably himself, was bowing mechanically
+to a seething and clapping mass of hands and faces over the whole
+theatre. Backing out again, in the same semi-conscious fashion,
+with the universe generally reeling on more than one distinct axis
+all around him, he was seized and hand-shaken violently, first
+by the Progenitor, then by the manager, and then by half a dozen
+other miscellaneous and unknown persons. At last, after a lot more
+revolutions of the universe, he found himself comfortably pitched
+into a convenient hansom, with the Progenitor by his side; and
+hardly knew anything further till he discovered his own quiet supper
+table at the Chelsea lodgings, and saw his father mixing a strong
+glass of brandy and seltzer for him. to counteract the strength of
+the excitement.
+
+Next morning Arthur Berkeley 'awoke, and found himself famous.'
+'The Primate of Fiji' was the rage of the moment. Everybody went to
+hear it--everybody played its tunes at their own pianos--everybody
+quoted it, and adapted it, and used its clever catchwords as the
+pet fashionable slang expressions of the next three seasons. Arthur
+Berkeley was the lion of the hour; and the mantelpiece of the
+quiet little Chelsea study was ranged three rows deep with cards
+of invitation from people whose very names Arthur had never heard
+of six months before, and whom the Progenitor declared it was a
+sin and shame for any respectable young man of sound economical
+education even to countenance. There were countesses, and marchionesses,
+too, among the senders of those coronetted parallelograms of waste
+pasteboard, as the Progenitor called them--nay, there was even one
+invitation on the mantelpiece that bore the three strawberry leaves
+and other insignia of Her Grace the Duchess of Leicestershire.
+
+'Can't you give us just ONE evening, Mr. Berkeley,' said Lady
+Hilda Tregellis, as she sat on the centre ottoman in Mrs. Campbell
+Moncrieff's drawing-room with Arthur Berkeley talking lightly
+to her about the nothings which constitute polite conversation in
+the nineteenth century. 'Just one evening, any day after the next
+fortnight? We should be so delighted if you could manage to favour
+us.'
+
+'No, I'm afraid I can't, Lady Hilda,' Arthur answered. 'My evenings
+are so dreadfully full just now; and besides, you know, I'm not
+accustomed to so much society, and it unsettles me for my daily work.
+After all, you see, I'm a journeyman playwright now, and I have to
+labour at my unholy calling just like the theatrical carpenter.'
+
+'How delightfully frank,' thought Lady Hilda. 'Really I like him
+quite immensely.--Not even the afternoon on Wednesday fortnight?'
+she went on aloud. 'You might come to our garden party on Wednesday
+fortnight.'
+
+'Quite impossible,' Arthur Berkeley answered. 'That's my regular
+day at Pilbury Regis.'
+
+'Pilbury Regis!' cried Lady Hilda, starting a little. 'You don't
+mean to say you have engagements, and in the thick of the season,
+too, at Pilbury Regis!'
+
+'Yes, I have, every Wednesday fortnight,' Berkeley answered, with
+a smile. 'I go there regularly. You see, Lady Hilda, Wednesday's
+a half-holiday at Pilbury Grammar School; so every second week I
+run down for the day to visit an old friend of mine, who's also an
+acquaintance of yours, I believe,--Ernest Le Breton. He's married
+now, you know, and has got a mastership at the Pilbury Grammar
+School.'
+
+'Then you know Mr. Le Breton!' cried Lady Hilda, charmed at this
+rapprochement of two delightfully original men. 'He is so nice.
+I like him immensely, and I'm so glad you're a friend of his. And
+Mrs. Le Breton, too; wasn't it nice of him? Tell me, Mr. Berkeley,
+was she really and truly a grocer's daughter?'
+
+Berkeley's voice grew a little stiffer and colder as he answered,
+'She was a sister of Oswald of Oriel, the great mathematician, who
+was killed last year by falling from the summit of a peak in the
+Bernina.'
+
+'Oh, yes, yes, I know all about that, of course,' said Lady Hilda,
+quickly and carelessly. 'I know her brother was very clever and
+all that sort of thing; but then there are so many men who are very
+clever, aren't there? The really original thing about it all, you
+know, was that he actually married a grocer's daughter. That was
+really quite too delightfully original. I was charmed when I heard
+about it: I thought it was so exactly like dear Mr. Le Breton.
+He's so deliciously unconventional in every way. He was Lynmouth's
+tutor for a while, as you've heard, of course; and then he went
+away from us, at a moment's notice, so nicely, because he wouldn't
+stand papa's abominable behaviour, and quite right, too, when it
+was a matter of conscience--I dare say he's told you all about it,
+that horrid pigeon-shooting business. Well, and so you know Mrs.
+Le Breton--do tell me, what sort of person is she?'
+
+'She's very nice, and very good, and very pretty, and very clever,'
+Arthur answered, a little constrainedly. 'I don't know that I can
+tell you anything more about her than that.'
+
+'Then you really like her?' said Lady Hilda, warmly. 'You think
+her a fit wife for Mr. Le Breton, do you?'
+
+'I think him a very lucky fellow indeed to have married such a
+charming and beautiful woman,' Arthur answered, quietly.
+
+Lady Hilda noticed his manner, and read through it at once with a
+woman's quickness. 'Aha!' she said to herself: 'the wind blows that
+way, does it? What a very remarkable girl she must be, really,
+to have attracted two such men as Mr. Berkeley and Mr. Le Breton.
+I've lost one of them to her; I can't very well lose the other,
+too: for after Ernest Le Breton, I've never seen any man I should
+care to marry so much as Mr. Arthur Berkeley.'
+
+'Lady Hilda,' said the hostess, coming up to her at that moment,
+'you'll play us something, won't you? You know you promised to
+bring your music.'
+
+Hilda rose at once with stately alacrity. Nothing could have pleased
+her better. She went to the piano, and, to the awe and astonishment
+of Mrs. Campbell Moncrieff, took out an arrangement of the Fijian
+war-dance from 'The Primate of Fiji.' It suited her brilliant
+slap-dash style of execution admirably; and she felt she had never
+played so well in her life before. The presence of the composer,
+which would have frightened and unnerved most girls of her age, only
+made Hilda Tregellis the bolder and the more ambitious. Here was
+somebody at least who knew something about it; none of your ordinary
+fashionable amateurs and mere soulless professional performers,
+but the very man who had made the music--the man in whose brain the
+notes had first gathered themselves together into speaking melody,
+and who could really judge the comparative merits of her rapid
+execution. She played with wonderful verve and spirit, so that
+Lady Exmoor, seated on the side sofa opposite, though shocked at
+first at Hilda's choice of a piece, glanced more than once at the
+wealthiest young commoner present (she had long since mentally
+resigned herself to the prospect of a commoner for that poor dear
+foolish Hilda), and closely watched his face to see what effect
+this unwonted outburst of musical talent might succeed in producing
+upon his latent susceptibilities. But Lady Hilda herself wasn't
+thinking of the wealthy commoner; she was playing straight at Arthur
+Berkeley: and when she saw that Arthur Berkeley's mouth had melted
+slowly into an approving smile, she played even more brilliantly
+and better than ever, after her bold, smart, vehement fashion. As
+she left the piano, Arthur said, 'Thank you; I have never heard
+the piece better rendered.' And Lady Hilda felt that that was a
+triumph which far outweighed any number of inane compliments from
+a whole regiment of simpering Algies, Monties, and Berties.
+
+'You can't say any evening, then, Mr. Berkeley?' she said once
+more, as she held out her hand to him to say 'Good-night' a little
+later: 'not any evening at all, or part of an evening? You might
+really reconsider your engagements.'
+
+Arthur hesitated visibly. 'Well, possibly I might manage it,' he
+said, wavering, 'though, I assure you, my evenings are very much
+more than full already.'
+
+'Then don't make it an evening,' said Lady Hilda, pressingly.
+'Make it lunch. After all, Mr. Berkeley, it's we ourselves who want
+to see you; not to show you off as a curiosity to all the rest of
+London. We have silly people enough in the evenings; but if you'll
+come to lunch with us alone one day, we shall have an opportunity
+of talking to you on our own account.'
+
+Lady Hilda was tall and beautiful, and Lady Hilda spoke. as she
+always used to speak, with manifest sincerity. Now, it is not in
+human nature not to feel flattered when a beautiful woman pays
+one genuine homage; and Arthur Berkeley was quite as human, after
+all, as most other people. 'You're very kind,' he said, smiling.
+'I must make it lunch, then, though I really ought to be working
+in the mornings instead of running about merely to amuse myself.
+What day will suit you best?'
+
+'Oh, not to amuse yourself, Mr. Berkeley,' Hilda answered pointedly,
+'but to gratify us. That, you know, is a work of benevolence. Say
+Monday next, then, at two o'clock. Will that do for you?'
+
+'Perfectly,' Berkeley answered, taking her proffered hand extended
+to him with just that indefinable air of frankness which Lady
+Hilda knew so well how to throw into all her actions. 'Good evening.
+Wilton Place, isn't it!--Gracious heavens!' he thought to himself,
+as he glanced after her satin train sweeping slowly down the grand
+staircase, 'what on earth would the dear old Progenitor say if only
+he saw me in the midst of these meaningless aristocratic orgies. I
+am positively half-wheedled, it seems, into making love to an earl's
+daughter! If this sort of thing continues, I shall find myself,
+before I know it, connected by marriage with two-thirds of the
+British peerage. A beautiful woman, really, and quite queen-like
+in her manner when she doesn't choose rather to be unaffectedly
+gracious. How she sat upon that tall young man with the brown
+moustaches over by the mantelpiece! I didn't hear what she said
+to him, but I could see he was utterly crushed by the way he slank
+away with his tail between his legs, like a whipped spaniel. A
+splendid woman--and no doubt about it; looks as if she'd stepped
+straight out of the canvas of Titian, with the pearls in her hair
+and everything else exactly as he painted them. The handsomest
+girl I ever saw in my life--but not like Edie Le Breton. They say
+a man can only fall in love once in a lifetime. I wonder whether
+there's any truth in it! Well, well, you won't often see a finer
+woman in her own style than Lady Hilda Tregellis. Monday next, at
+two precisely; I needn't make a note of it--no fear of my forgetting.'
+
+'I really do think,' Lady Hilda said to herself as she unrolled
+the pearls from her thick hair in her own room that winter evening,
+'I almost like him better than I did Ernest Le Breton. The very
+first night I saw him at Lady Mary's I fell quite in love with his
+appearance, before I knew even who he was; and now that I've found
+out all about him, I never did hear anything so absolutely and
+delightfully original. His father a common shoemaker! That, to
+begin with, throws Ernest Le Breton quite into the shade! HIS father
+was a general in the Indian army--nothing could be more BANAL.
+Then Mr. Berkeley began life as a clergyman; but now he's taken off
+his white choker, and wears a suit of grey tweed like any ordinary
+English gentleman. So delightfully unconventional, isn't it? At
+last, to crown it all, he not only composes delicious music, but
+goes and writes a comic opera--such a comic opera! And the best
+of it is, success hasn't turned his head one atom. He doesn't run
+with vulgar eagerness after the great people, like your ordinary
+everyday successful nobody. He took no more notice of me, myself,
+at first, because I was Lady Hilda Tregellis, than if I'd been a
+common milkmaid; and he wouldn't come to our garden party because
+he wanted to go down to Pilbury Regis to visit the Le Bretons at
+their charity school or something! It was only after I played the
+war-dance arrangement so well--I never played so brilliantly in my
+life before--that he began to alter and soften a little. Certainly,
+these pearls do thoroughly become me. I think he looked after me
+when I was leaving the room just a tiny bit, as if he was really
+pleased with me for my own sake, and not merely because I happen
+to be called Lady Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+OFF WITH THE OLD LOVE.
+
+
+'It's really very annoying, this letter from Selah,' Herbert Le
+Breton murmured to himself, as he carefully burnt the compromising
+document, envelope and all, with a fusee from his oriental silver
+pocket match-case. 'I had hoped the thing had all been forgotten
+by this time, after her long silence, and my last two judiciously
+chilly letters--a sort of slow refrigerating process for poor
+shivering naked little Cupid. But here, just at the very moment
+when I fancied the affair had quite blown over, comes this most
+objectionable letter, telling me that Selah has actually betaken
+herself to London to meet me; and what makes it more annoying
+still, I wanted to go up myself this week to dine at home with
+Ethel Faucit. Mother's plan about Ethel Faucit is exceedingly
+commendable; a girl with eight hundred a year, cultivated tastes,
+and no father or other encumbrances dragging after her. I always
+said I should like to marry a poor orphan. A very desirable young
+woman to annex in every way! And now, here's Selah Briggs--ugh!
+how could I ever have gone and entangled myself in my foolish days
+with a young woman burdened by such a cognomen!--here's Selah
+Briggs must needs run away from Hastings, and try to hunt me up on
+her own account in London. If I dared, I wouldn't go up to see her
+at all, and would let the thing die a natural death of inanition--sine
+Cerere et Baccho, and so forth--(I'm afraid, poor girl, she'll be
+more likely to find Bacchus than Ceres if she sticks in London);
+but the plain fact is, I don't dare--that's the long and the short
+of it. If I did, Selah'd be tracking me to earth here in Oxford,
+and a nice mess that'd make of it! She doesn't know my name, to
+be sure; but as soon as she called at college and found nobody of
+the name of Walters was known there, she'd lie in wait for me about
+the gates, as sure as my name's Herbert Le Breton, and sooner or
+later she'd take it out of me, one way or the other. Selah has as
+many devils in her as the Gergesene who dwelt among the tombs, I'll
+be sworn to it; and if she's provoked, she'll let them all loose in
+a legion to crush me. I'd better see her and have it out quietly,
+once for all, than try to shirk it here in Oxford and let myself
+in at the end for the worse condemnation.'
+
+Under this impression, Herbert Le Breton, leaning back in his
+well-padded oak armchair, ordered his scout to pack his portmanteau,
+and set off by the very first fast train for Paddington station.
+He would get over his interview with Selah Briggs in the afternoon,
+and return to Epsilon Terrace in good time for Lady Le Breton's
+dinner. Say what you like of it, Ethel Faucit and eight hundred a
+year, certe redditum, was a thing in no wise to be sneezed at by
+a judicious and discriminating person.
+
+Herbert left his portmanteau in the cloakroom at Paddington, and
+drove off in a hansom to the queer address which Selah had given
+him. It was a fishy lodging of the commoner sort in a back street
+at Notting Hill, not far from the Portobello Road. At the top of the
+stairs, Selah stood waiting to meet him, and seemed much astonished
+when, instead of kissing her, as was his wont, he only shook her
+hand somewhat coolly. But she thought to herself that probably
+he didn't wish to be too demonstrative before the eyes of the
+lodging-house people, and so took no further notice of it.
+
+'Well, Selah,' Herbert said, as soon as he entered the room, and
+seated himself quietly on one of the straight-backed wooden chairs,
+'why on earth have you come to London?'
+
+'Goodness gracious, Herbert,' Selah answered, letting loose the
+floodgates of her rapid speech after a week's silence, 'don't you
+go and ask me why I've done it. Ask me rather why I didn't go and
+do it long ago. Father, he's got more and more aggravating every
+day for the last twelve-month, till at last I couldn't atand him any
+longer. Prayer meetings, missionary meetings, convention meetings,
+all that sort of thing I could put up with somehow; but when it
+came to private exhortations and prayer over me with three or four
+of the godliest neighbours, I made up my mind not to put up with
+it one day longer. So last week I packed up two or three little
+things hurriedly, and left a note behind to say I felt I was too
+unregenerate to live in such spiritual company any longer; and
+came straight up here to London, and took these lodgings. Emily
+Lucas, she wrote to me from Hastings--she's the daughter of the
+hairdresser in our street, you know, and I told her to write to me
+to the Post-office. Emily Lucas wrote to me that there was weeping
+and gnashing of teeth, and swearing almost, when they found out
+I'd really left them. And well there might be, indeed, for I did
+more work for them (mostly just to get away for a while from the
+privileges) than they'll ever get a hired servant to do for them in
+this world, Herbert.' Herbert moved uneasily on his chair, as he
+noticed how glibly she called him now by his Christian name instead
+of saying 'Mr. Walters.' 'And Emily says,' Selah went on, without
+stopping to take breath for a second, 'that father put an advertisement
+at once into the "Christian Mirror"--pah, as if it was likely
+I should go buying or reading the "Christian Mirror," indeed--to
+say that if "S. B." would return at once to her affectionate and
+injured parents, the whole past would be forgotten and forgiven.
+Forgotten and forgiven! I should think it would, indeed! But he
+didn't ask me whether their eternal bothering and plaguing of me
+about my precious soul for twenty years past would also be forgotten
+and forgiven! He didn't ask me whether all their meetings, and
+conventions, and prayers, and all the rest of it, would be forgotten
+and forgiven! My precious soul! In Turkey they say the women have
+no souls! I often wished it had been my happy lot to be born in
+Turkey, and then, perhaps, they wouldn't have worried me so much
+about it. I'm sure I often said to them, "Oh don't bother on account
+of my poor unfortunate misguided little soul any longer. It's lost
+altogether, I don't doubt, and it doesn't in the least trouble me.
+If it was somebody else's, I could understand your being in such
+a fearful state of mind about it; but as it's only mine, you know,
+I'm sure it really doesn't matter." And then they'd only go off
+worse than ever,--mother doing hysterics, and so forth--and say I
+was a wicked, bad, abominable scoffer, and that it made them horribly
+frightened even to listen to me. As if I wasn't more likely to
+know the real value of my own soul than anybody else was!'
+
+Herbert looked at her curiously and anxiously as she delivered
+this long harangue in a voluble stream, without a single pause
+or break; and then he said, in his quiet voice, 'How old are you,
+Selah?'
+
+'Twenty-two,' Selah answered, carelessly. 'Why, Herbert?'
+
+'Oh, nothing,' Herbert replied, turning away his eyes from her keen,
+searching gaze uncomfortably. He congratulated himself inwardly
+on the lucky fact that she was fully of age, for then at least he
+could only get into a row with her, and not with her parents. 'And
+now, Selah, do you know what I strongly advise you?'
+
+'To get married at once,' Selah put in promptly.
+
+Herbert drew himself up stiffly, and looked at her cautiously
+out of the corner of his eyes. 'No,' he said slowly, 'not to get
+married, but to go back again for the present to your people at
+Hastings. Consider, Selah, you've done a very foolish thing indeed
+by coming here alone in this way. You've compromised yourself,
+and you've compromised me. Indeed, if it weren't for the lasting
+affection I bear you'--he put this in awkwardly, but he felt it
+necessary to do so, for the flash of Selah's eyes fairly cowed him
+for the moment--'I wouldn't have come here at all this afternoon
+to see you. It might get us both into very serious trouble,
+and--and--and delay the prospect of our marriage. You see, everything
+depends upon my keeping my fellowship until I can get an appointment
+to marry on. Anything that risks loss of the fellowship is really
+a measurable danger for both of us.'
+
+Selah looked at him very steadily with her big eyes, and Herbert
+felt that he was quailing a little under their piercing, withering
+inquisition. By Jove, what a splendid woman she was, though, when
+she was angry! 'Herbert,' she said, rising from her chair and
+standing her full height imperiously before him, 'Herbert, you're
+deceiving me. I almost believe you're shilly-shallying with me.
+I almost believe you don't ever really mean to marry me.'
+
+Herbert moved uneasily upon his wooden seat. What was he to do?
+Should he make a clean breast of it forthwith, and answer boldly,
+'Well, Selah, you have exactly diagnosed my mental attitude'?
+Or should he try to put her off a little with some meaningless
+explanatory platitudes? Or should he--by Jove, she was a very
+splendid woman!--should he take her in his arms that moment, kiss
+her doubts and fears away like a donkey, and boldly and sincerely
+promise to marry her? Pooh! not such a fool as all that comes to!
+not even with Selah before him now; for he was no boy any longer,
+and not to be caught by the mere vulgar charms of a flashy,
+self-asserting greengrocer's daughter.
+
+'Selah,' he said at last, after a long pause, 'I strongly advise
+you once more to return to Hastings for the present. You'll find
+it better for you in the end. If your people are quite unendurable--as
+I don't doubt they are from what you tell me--you could look about
+meanwhile for a temporary appointment, say as'--he checked himself
+from uttering the word 'shop girl,' and substituted for it, 'draper's
+assistant.'
+
+Selah looked at him angrily. 'What fools you men are about such
+things!' she said in a voice of utter scorn. 'When do you suppose
+I ever learnt the drapery? Or who do you suppose would ever give me
+a place in a shop of that sort without having learnt the drapery?
+I dare say you think it takes ten years to make one of you fine
+gentlemen at college, with your Greek and your Latin, but that the
+drapery, or the millinery, or the confectionery, comes by nature!
+However, that's not the question now. The question's simply
+this--Herbert Walters, do you or don't you mean to marry me?'
+
+'I must temporise,' Herbert thought to himself, placidly. 'This
+girl's quite too unreservedly categorical! She eliminates modality
+with a vengeance!' 'Well, Selah,' he said in his calmest and most
+deliberate manner, 'we must take a great many points into consideration
+before deciding on that matter.' And then he went on to tell her
+what seemed to him the pros and cons of an immediate marriage.
+Couldn't she get a place meanwhile of some sort? Couldn't she let
+him have time to look about him? Couldn't she go back just for
+a few days to Hastings, until he could hear of something feasible
+for either of them? Selah interrupted him more than once with
+forcible interjectional observations such as 'bosh!' and 'rubbish!'
+and when he had finished she burst out once more into a long and
+voluble statement.
+
+For more than an hour Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs fenced
+with one another, each after their own fashion, in the little fishy
+lodgings; and at every fresh thrust, Herbert parried so much the
+worse that at last Selah lost patience utterly, and rose in the
+end to the dignity of the situation. 'Herbert Walters,' she said,
+looking at him with unspeakable contempt, 'I see through your
+flimsy excuses now, and I feel certain you don't mean to marry me!
+You never did mean to marry me! You wanted to amuse yourself by
+making love to a poor girl in a country town, and now you'd like
+to throw her overboard and leave her alone to her own devices.
+I knew you meant that when you didn't write to me; but I wouldn't
+condemn you unheard; I gave you a chance to clear yourself. I see
+now you were trying to drop the acquaintance quietly, and make it
+seem as if I had backed out of it as well as you.'
+
+Herbert felt the moment for breaking through all reserve had finally
+arrived. 'You admirably interpret my motives in the matter, Selah,'
+he said coldly. 'I don't think it would be just of me to interfere
+with your prospects in life any longer. I can't say how long it
+may be before I am able to afford marriage; and, meanwhile, I'm
+preventing you from forming a natural alliance with some respectable
+and estimable young man in your own station. I should be sorry to
+stand in your way any further; but if I could offer you any small
+pecuniary assistance at any time, either now or hereafter, you know
+I'd be very happy indeed to do so, Selah.'
+
+The angry girl turned upon him fiercely. 'Selah!' she cried in a
+tone of crushing contempt. 'What do you mean by calling me Selah,
+sir? How dare you speak to me by my Christian name in the same
+breath you tell me you don't mean to marry me? How dare you have
+the insolence and impertinence to offer me money! Never say another
+word to me as long as you live, Herbert Walters; and leave me now,
+for I don't want to have anything more to say to you or your money
+for ever.'
+
+Herbert took up his hat doubtfully. 'Selah!--Selah!--Miss Briggs,
+I mean,' he said, falteringly, for at that moment Selah's face was
+terrible to look at. 'I'm very sorry, I can assure you, that this
+interview--and our pleasant acquaintance--should unfortunately
+have had such a disagreeable termination. For my own part'--Herbert
+was always politic--'I should have wished to part with you in no
+unfriendly spirit. I should have wished to learn your plans for
+the future, and to aid you in forming a suitable settlement in life
+hereafter. May I venture to ask, before I go, whether you mean
+to remain in London or to return to Hastings? As one who has been
+your sincere friend, I should at least like to know what are your
+movements for the immediate present. How long do you mean to stop
+here, and when you leave these rooms where do you think you will
+next go to?'--'Confoundedly awkward,' he thought to himself, 'to
+have her prowling about and dogging one's footsteps here in London.'
+
+Selah read through his miserable transparent little pretences at
+once with a woman's quick instinctive insight. 'Ugh!' she cried,
+pushing him away from her, figuratively, with a gesture of disgust,
+'do you think, you poor suspicious creature, I want to go spying
+you or following you all over London? Are you afraid, in your sordid
+little respectable way, that I'll come up to Oxford to pry and peep
+into that snug comfortable fellowship of yours? Do you suppose I'm
+so much in love with you, Herbert Walters, that I can't let you go
+without wanting to fawn upon you and run after you ever afterwards!
+Pah! you miserable, pitiable, contemptible cur and coward, are you
+afraid even of a woman! Go away, and don't be frightened. I never
+want to see you or speak to you again as long as I live, you
+wretched, lying, shuffling hypocrite. I'd rather go back to my own
+people at Hastings a thousand times over than have anything more to
+do with you. They may be narrow-minded, and bigoted, and ignorant,
+and stupid, but at least they're honest--they're not liars and
+hypocrites. Go this minute, Herbert Walters, go away this minute,
+and don't stand there fiddling and quivering with your hat like
+a whipped schoolboy, but go at once, and take my eternal loathing
+and contempt for a parting present with you!'
+
+Herbert held the door gingerly ajar for half a second, trying to
+think of a neat and appropriate epigram, but at that particular
+moment, for the life of him, he couldn't hit on one. So he closed
+the door after him quietly, and walking out alone into the street,
+immediately nailed a passing hansom. 'I didn't come out of that
+dilemma very creditably to myself, I must admit,' he thought with
+a burning face, as he rolled along quickly in the hansom; 'but
+anyhow, now I'm well out of it. The coast's all clear at last for
+Ethel Faucit. It's well to be off with the old love before you're
+on with the new, as that horrid vulgar practical proverb justly
+though somewhat coarsely puts it. Still, she's a perfectly magnificent
+creature, is Selah; and by Jove, when she got into that towering
+rage (and no wonder, for I won't be unjust to her in that respect),
+her tone and attitude would have done credit to any theatre. I should
+think Mrs. Siddons must have looked like that, say as Constance.
+Poor girl, I'm really sorry for her; from the very bottom of my
+heart, I'm really sorry for her. If it rested with me alone, hang
+me if I don't think I would positively have married her. But after
+all, the environment, you know, the environment is always too strong
+for us!'
+
+Meanwhile, in the shabby lodgings near the Portobello Road, poor
+Selah, the excitement once over, was lying with her proud face
+buried in the pillows, and crying her very life out in great sobs
+of utter misery. The daydream of her whole existence was gone for
+ever: the bubble was burst; and nothing stood before her but a
+future of utter drudgery. 'The brute, the cur, the mean wretch,'
+she said aloud between her sobs; 'and yet I loved him. How beautifully
+he talked, and how he made me love him. If it had only been a common
+everyday Methodist sweetheart, now! but Herbert Walters! Oh, God,
+how I hate him, and how I did love him!'
+
+When Herbert reached his mother's house in Epsilon Terrace, Lady Le
+Breton met him anxiously at the door. 'Herbert,' she said, almost
+weeping, 'my dear boy, what on earth should I do if it were not
+for you! You're the one comfort I have in all my children. Would
+you believe it--no, you won't believe it--as I was walking back
+here this afternoon with Mrs. Faucit (Ethel's aunt, of all people
+in the world), what do you think I saw, in our own main street,
+too, but a young man, decently dressed, in his shirt sleeves. No
+coat, I assure you, but only his shirt sleeves. Imagine my horror
+when he came up to us--Mrs. Faucit, too, you know--and said to me
+out loud, in the most unconcerned voice, "Well, mother!" I couldn't
+believe my eyes. Herbert, but I solemnly declare to you it was
+positively Ronald! You really could have knocked me down with a
+feather. Disgraceful, wasn't it, perfectly disgraceful!'
+
+'How on earth did he come so?' asked Herbert, almost smiling in
+spite of himself.
+
+'Why, do you know, Herbert,' Lady Le Breton answered somewhat
+obliquely, 'a few days since, I met him wheeling along a barrow full
+of coals for a dirty, grimy, ragged little girl from some alley or
+gutter somewhere. I believe they call the place the Mews--at the
+back of the terrace, you remember. He pretended the child wasn't
+big enough to wheel the coals, which was absurd, of course, or else
+her parents wouldn't have sent her; but I'm sure he really did it
+on purpose to annoy me. He never does these things when I'm not by
+to see; or if he does, I never see him. Now, that was bad enough in
+all conscience, wasn't it? but to-day what he did was still more
+outrageous. He met a poor man, as he calls him, in Westbourne
+Grove, who was one of his Christian brethren (is that the right
+expression?) and who declared he was next door to starving. So
+what must Ronald do, but run into a pawnbroker's--I shouldn't have
+thought he could ever have heard of such a place--and sell his
+coat, or something of the sort, and give the man (who was doubtless
+an impostor) all the money. Then he positively walked home in his
+shirt sleeves. I call it a most unchristian thing to do--and to
+walk straight into my very arms, too, as I was coming along with
+Mrs. Faucit.'
+
+Herbert offered at once such condolences as were in his power. 'And
+are the Faucits coming to night?' he asked eagerly.
+
+Lady Le Breton kissed him again gently on the forehead. 'Oh,
+Herbert,' she said warmly, 'I can't tell you what a comfort you
+always are to me. Oh yes, the Faucits are coming; and do you know,
+Herbert, my dear boy, I'm quite sure that old Mr. Faucit, the uncle,
+wouldn't at all object to the match, and that Ethel's really very
+much disposed indeed to like you immensely. You've only to follow
+up the advantage, my dear boy, and I don't for a moment think she'd
+ever refuse you. And I've been talking to Sir Sydney Weatherhead
+about your future, too, and he tells me (quite privately, of course)
+that, with your position and honours at Oxford, he fully believes
+he can easily push you into the first good vacant post at the
+Education Office; only you must be careful to say nothing about it
+beforehand, or the others will say it's a job, as they call it.
+Oh, Herbert, I really and truly can't tell you what a joy and a
+comfort you always are to me!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE PHILISTINES TRIUMPH.
+
+
+'My dear,' said Dr. Greatrex, looking up in alarm from the lunch
+table one morning, in the third term of Ernest Le Breton's stay
+at Pilbury, 'what an awful apparition! Do you know, I positively
+see Mr. Blenkinsopp, father of that odious boy Blenkinsopp major,
+distinctly visible to the naked eye, walking across the front lawn--on
+the grass too--to our doorway. The pupil's parent is really the
+very greatest bane of all the banes that beset a poor harassed
+overdriven schoolmaster's unfortunate existence!'
+
+'Blenkinsopp?' Mrs. Greatrex said reflectively. 'Blenkinsopp? Who
+is he? Oh, I remember, a tobacco-pipe manufacturer somewhere in the
+midland counties, isn't he? Mr. Blenkinsopp, of Staffordshire, I
+always say to other parents--not Brosely--Brosely sounds decidedly
+commercial and unpresentable. No nice people would naturally
+like their sons to mix with miscellaneous boys from a place called
+Brosely. Now, what on earth can he be coming here for, I wonder,
+Joseph?'
+
+'Oh, _I_ know,' the doctor answered with a deep-drawn sigh. 'I
+know, Maria, only too well. It's the way of all parents. He's come
+to inquire after Blenkinsopp major's health and progress. They
+all do it. They seem to think the sole object of a head-master's
+existence is to look after the comfort and morals of their own
+particular Tommy, or Bobby, or Dicky, or Harry. For heaven's sake,
+what form is Blenkinsopp major in? For heaven's sake, what's his
+Christian name, and age last birthday, and place in French and
+mathematics, and general state of health for past quarter? Where's
+the prompt-book, with house-master's and form-master's report,
+Maria? Oh, here it is, thank goodness! Let me see; let me see--he's
+ringing at the door this very instant. "Blenkinsopp... major...
+Charles Warrington... fifteen... fifth form... average, twelfth boy
+of twelve... idle, inattentive, naturally stupid; bad disposition...
+health invariably excellent... second eleven... bats well." That'll
+do. Run my eye down once again, and I shall remember all about him.
+How about the other? "Blenkinsopp... minor... Cyril Anastasius
+Guy Waterbury Macfarlane"--heavens, what a name!... "thirteen...
+fourth form... average, seventh boy of eighteen... industrious and
+well-meaning, but heavy and ineffective... health good... fourth
+eleven... fields badly." Ah, that's the most important one. Now I'm
+primed. Blenkinsopp major I remember something about, for he's one
+of the worst and most hopelessly stupid boys in the whole school--I've
+caned him frequently this term, and that keeps a boy green in one's
+memory; but Blenkinsopp minor, Cyril Anastasius Guy Thingumbob
+Whatyoumaycallit,--I don't remember HIM a bit. I suppose he's one
+of those inoffensive, mildly mediocre sort of boys who fail to
+impress their individuality upon one in any way. My experience is
+that you can always bear in mind the three cleverest boys at the
+top of each form, and the three stupidest or most mischievous boys
+at the bottom; but the nine or a dozen meritorious nobodies in the
+middle of the class are all so like one another in every way that
+you might as well try to discriminate between every individual
+sheep of a flock in a pasture. And yet, such is the natural
+contradictiousness and vexatious disposition of the British parent,
+that you'll always find him coming to inquire after just one of
+those very particular Tommies or Bobbies. Charles Warrington:--Cyril
+Anastasius Guy Whatyoumay--call it: that'll do: I shall remember now
+all about them.' And the doctor arranged his hair before the looking
+glass into the most professional stiffness, as a preparatory step
+to facing Mr. Blenkinsopp's parental inquiries in the head-master's
+study.
+
+'What! Mr. Blenkinsopp! Yes, it is really. My dear sir, how DO you
+do? This is a most unexpected pleasure. We hadn't the least idea
+you were in Pilbury. When did you come here?'
+
+'I came last night, Dr. Greatrex,' answered the dreaded parent
+respectfully: 'we've come down from Staffordshire for a week at
+the seaside, and we thought we might as well be within hail of Guy
+and Charlie.'
+
+'Quite right, quite right, my dear sir,' said the doctor, mentally
+noting that Blenkinsopp minor was familiarly known as Guy, not
+Cyril; 'we're delighted to see you. And now you want to know all
+about our two young friends, don't you?'
+
+'Well, yes, Dr. Greatrex; I SHOULD like to know how they are getting
+on.'
+
+'Ah, of course, of course. Very right. It's such a pleasure to us
+when parents give us their active and hearty co-operation! You'd
+hardly believe, Mr. Blenkinsopp, how little interest some parents
+seem to feel in their boys' progress. To us, you know, who devote
+our whole time and energy assiduously to their ultimate welfare,
+it's sometimes quite discouraging to see how very little the
+parents themselves seem to care about it. But your boys are both
+doing capitally. The eldest--Blenkinsopp major, we call him; Charles
+Warrington, isn't it? (His home name's Charlie, if I recollect
+right. Ah, quite so.) Well, Charlie's the very picture of perfect
+health, as usual.' ('Health is his only strong point, it seems to
+me,' the doctor thought to himself instinctively. 'We must put that
+first and foremost.') 'In excellent health and very good spirits.
+He's in the second eleven now, and a capital batter: I've no doubt
+he'll go into the first eleven next term, if we lose Biddlecomb
+Tertius to the university. In work, as you know, he's not very
+great; doesn't do his abilities full justice, Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+through his dreadful inattention. He's generally near the bottom of
+the form, I'm sorry to say; generally near the bottom of the form.'
+
+'Well, I dare say there's no harm in that, sir,' said Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+senior, warmly. 'I was always at the bottom of the form at school
+myself, Doctor, but I've picked it up in after life; I've picked
+it up, sir, as you see, and I'm fully equal with most other people
+nowadays, as you'll find if you inquire of any town councilman or
+man of position down our way, at Brosely.'
+
+'Ah, I dare say you were, Mr. Blenkinsopp,' the doctor answered
+blandly, with just the faintest tinge of unconscious satire, peering
+at his square unintelligent features as a fancier peers at the
+face of a bull-dog; 'I dare say you were now. After all, however
+clever a set of boys may be, one of them MUST be at the bottom of
+the form, in the nature of things, mustn't he? And your Charlie,
+I think, is only fifteen. Ah, yes; well, well; he'll do better, no
+doubt, if we keep him here a year or two longer. So then there's
+the second: Guy, you call him, if I remember right--Cyril Anastasius
+Guy--our Blenkinsopp minor. Guy's a good boy; an excellent boy: to
+tell you the plain truth, Mr. Blenkinsopp, I don't know much of him
+personally myself, which is a fact that tells greatly in his favour.
+Charlie I must admit I have to call up some times for reproof: Guy,
+never. Charlie's in the fifth form: Guy's seventh in the fourth.
+A capital place for a boy of his age! He's very industrious, you
+know--what we call a plodder. They call it a plodder, you see,
+at thirteen, Mr. Blenkinsopp, but a man of ability at forty.' Dr.
+Greatrex delivered that last effective shot point-blank at the eyes
+of the inquiring parent, and felt in a moment that its delicate
+generalised flattery had gone home straight to the parent's
+susceptible heart.
+
+'But there's one thing, Doctor,' Mr. Blenkinsopp began, after a
+few minutes' further conversation on the merits and failings of Guy
+and Charlie, 'there's one other thing I feel I should like to speak
+to you about, and that's the teaching of your fifth form master,
+Mr. Le Breton. From what Charlie tells me, I don't quite like that
+young man's political ideas and opinions. It's said things to his
+form sometimes that are quite horrifying, I assure you; things
+about Property, and about our duty to the poor, and so on, that are
+positively enough to appal you. Now, for example, he told them--I
+don't quite like to repeat it, for it's sheer blasphemy I call
+it--but he told them in a Greek Testament lesson that the Apostles
+themselves were a sort of Republicans--Socialists, I think Charlie
+said, or else Chartists, or dynamiters. I'm not sure he didn't say
+St. Peter himself was a regular communist!'
+
+Dr. Greatrex drew a long breath. 'I should think, Mr. Blenkinsopp,'
+he suggested blandly, 'Charlie must really have misunderstood Mr.
+Le Breton. You see, they've been reading the Acts of the Apostles
+in their Greek Testament this term. Now, of course, you remember that,
+during the first days of the infant Church, while its necessities
+were yet so great, as many as were possessors of lands or houses
+sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold,
+and laid them down at the apostles' feet; and distribution was
+made unto every man according as he had need. You see, here's the
+passage, Mr. Blenkinsopp, in the authorised version. I won't trouble
+you with the original. You've forgotten most of your Greek, I dare
+say: ah, I thought go. It doesn't stick to us like the Latin, does
+it? Now, perhaps, in expounding that passage, Mr. Le Breton may have
+referred in passing--as an illustration merely--to the unhappily
+prevalent modern doctrines of socialism and communism. He may
+have warned his boys, for example, against confounding a Christian
+communism like this, if I may so style it, with the rapacious,
+aggressive, immoral forms of communism now proposed to us, which are
+based upon the forcible disregard of all Property and all vested
+interests of every sort. I don't say he did, you know, for I
+haven't conferred with him upon the subject: but he may have done
+so; and he may even have used, as I have used, the phrase "Christian
+communism," to define the temporary attitude of the apostles and
+the early Church in this matter. That, perhaps, my dear sir, may
+be the origin of the misapprehension.'
+
+Mr. Blenkinsopp looked hard at the three verses in the big Bible
+the doctor had handed him, with a somewhat suspicious glare. He
+was a self-made man, with land and houses of his own in plenty,
+and he didn't quite like this suggestive talk about selling them
+and laying the prices at the apostles' feet. It savoured to him both
+of communism and priestcraft. 'That's an awkward text, you know,'
+he said, looking up curiously from the Bible in his hand into the
+doctor's face, 'a very awkward text; and I should say it was rather
+a dangerous one to set too fully before young people. It seems
+to me to make too little altogether of Property. You know, Dr.
+Greatrex, at first sight it DOES look just a little like communism.'
+
+'Precisely what Mr. Le Breton probably said,' the doctor answered,
+following up his advantage quickly. 'At first sight, no doubt, but
+at first sight only, I assure you, Mr. Blenkinsopp. If you look
+on to the fourth verse of the next chapter, you'll see that St.
+Peter, at least, was no communist,--which is perhaps what Mr. Le
+Breton really said. St. Peter there argues in favour of purely
+voluntary beneficence, you observe; as when you, Mr. Blenkinsopp,
+contribute a guinea to our chapel window:--you see, we're grateful
+to our kind benefactors: we don't forget them. And if you'll look
+at the Thirty-eighth Article of the Church of England, my dear sir,
+you'll find that the riches and goods of Christians are not common,
+as touching the right, title, and possession of the same as certain
+Anabaptists--(Gracious heavens, is he a Baptist, I wonder?--if
+so, I've put my foot in it)--certain Anabaptists do falsely
+boast--referring, of course, to sundry German fanatics of the
+time--followers of one Kniperdoling, a crazy enthusiast, not to
+the respectable English Baptist denomination; but that nevertheless
+every man ought, of such things as he possesseth, liberally to
+give alms to the poor. That, you see, is the doctrine of the Church
+of England, and that, I've no doubt, is the doctrine that Mr. Le
+Breton pointed out to your boys as the true Christian communism of
+St. Peter and the apostles.'
+
+'Well, I hope so, Dr. Greatrex,' Mr. Blenkinsopp answered resignedly.
+'I'm sure I hope so, for his own sake, as well as for his pupils'.
+Still, in these days, you know, when infidelity and Radicalism
+are so rife, one ought to be on one's guard against atheism and
+revolution, and attacks on Property in every form; oughtn't one,
+Doctor? These opinions are getting so rampant all around us, Property
+itself isn't safe. One really hardly knows what people are coming
+to nowadays. Why, last night I came down here and stopped at the
+Royal Marine, on the Parade, and having nothing else to do, while
+my wife was looking after the little ones, I turned into a hall
+down in Combe Street, where I saw a lot of placards up about a
+Grand National Social Democratic meeting. Well, I turned in, Dr.
+Greatrex, and there I heard a German refugee fellow from London--a
+white-haired man of the name of Schurts, or something of the
+sort'--Mr. Blenkinsopp pronounced it to rhyme with 'hurts'--'who
+was declaiming away in a fashion to make your hair stand on end, and
+frighten you half out of your wits with his dreadful communistic
+notions. I assure you, he positively took my breath away. I ran out
+of the hall at last, while he was still speaking, for fear the roof
+should fall in upon our heads and crush us to pieces. I declare to
+you, sir, I quite expected a visible judgment!'
+
+'Did you really now?' said Dr. Greatrex, languidly. 'Well, I dare
+say, for I know there's a sad prevalence of revolutionary feeling
+among our workmen here, Mr, Blenkinsopp. Now, what was this man
+Schurz talking about?'
+
+'Why, sheer communism, sir,' said Mr. Blenkinsopp, severely: 'sheer
+communism, I can tell you. Co-operation of workmen to rob their
+employers of profits; gross denunciation of capital and capitalists;
+and regular inciting of them against the Property of the landlords,
+by quoting Scripture, too, Doctor, by quoting the very words
+of Scripture. They say the devil can quote Scripture to his own
+destruction, don't they, Doctor? Well, he quoted something out of
+the Bible about woe unto them that join field to field, or words
+to that effect, to make themselves a solitude in the midst of the
+earth. Do you know, it strikes me that it's a very dangerous book,
+the Bible--in the hands of these socialistic demagogues, I mean.
+Look now, at that passage, and at what Mr. Le Breton said about
+Christian communism!'
+
+'But, my dear Mr. Blenkinsopp,' the doctor cried, in a tone of
+gentle deprecation, 'I hope you don't confound a person like this
+man Schurz, a German refugee of the worst type, with our Mr. Le
+Breton, an Oxford graduate and an English gentleman of excellent
+family. I know Schurz by name through the papers: he's the author
+of a dreadful book called "Gold and the Proletariate," or something
+of that sort--a revolutionary work like Tom Paine's "Age of Reason,"
+I believe--and he goes about the country now and then, lecturing
+and agitating, to make money, no doubt, out of the poor, misguided,
+credulous workmen. You quite pain me when you mention him in the
+same breath with a hard-working, conscientious, able teacher like
+our Mr. Le Breton.'
+
+'Oh,' Mr. Blenkinsopp went on, a little mollified, 'then Mr. Le
+Breton's of a good family, is he? That's a great safeguard, at any
+rate, for you don't find people of good family running recklessly
+after these bloodthirsty doctrines, and disregarding the claims of
+Property.'
+
+'My dear sir,' the doctor continued, 'we know his mother, Lady
+Le Breton, personally. His father, Sir Owen, was a distinguished
+officer-general in the Indian army in fact; and all his people are
+extremely well connected with some of our best county families.
+Nothing wrong about him in any way, I can answer for it. He came
+here direct from Lord Exmoor's, where he'd been acting as tutor
+to Viscount Lynmouth, the eldest son of the Tregellis family: and
+you may be sure THEY wouldn't have anybody about them in any capacity
+who wasn't thoroughly and perfectly responsible, and free from
+any prejudice against the just rights of property.'
+
+At each successive step of this collective guarantee to Ernest
+Le Breton's perfect respectability, Mr. Blenkinsopp's square face
+beamed brighter and brighter, till at last when the name of Lord
+Exmour was finally reached, his mouth relaxed slowly into a broad
+smile, and he felt that he might implicitly trust the education
+of his boys to a person so intimately bound up with the best and
+highest interests of religion and Property in this kingdom. 'Of
+course,' he said placidly, 'that puts quite a different complexion
+upon the matter, Dr. Greatrex. I'm very glad to hear young Mr. Le
+Breton's such an excellent and trustworthy person. But the fact
+is, that Schurts man gave me quite a turn for the moment, with
+his sanguinary notions. I wish you could see the man, sir; a long
+white-haired, savage-bearded, fierce-eyed old revolutionist if ever
+there was one. It made me shudder to look at him, not raving and
+ranting like a madman--I shouldn't have minded so much if he'd a
+done that; but talking as cool and calm and collected, Doctor, about
+"eliminating the capitalist"--cutting off my head, in fact--as we
+two are talking here together at this moment. His very words were,
+sir, "we must eliminate the capitalist." Why, bless my soul,'--and
+here Mr. Blenkinsopp rushed to the window excitedly--'who on earth's
+this coming across your lawn, here, arm in arm with Mr. Le Breton,
+into the school-house? Man alive, Dr. Greatrex, whatever you choose
+to say, hanged if it isn't realty that German cut-throat fellow
+himself, and no mistake at all about it!'
+
+Dr. Greatrex rose from his magisterial chair and glanced with
+dignified composure out of the window. Yes, there was positively no
+denying it! Ernest Le Breton, in cap and gown, with Edie by his side,
+was walking arm in arm up to the school-house with a long-bearded,
+large-headed German-looking man, whose placid powerful face the Doctor
+immediately recognised as the one he had seen in the illustrated
+papers above the name of Max Schurz, the defendant in the coming state
+trial for unlawfully uttering a seditious libel! He could hardly
+believe his eyes. Though he knew Ernest's opinions were dreadfully
+advanced, he could not have suspected him of thus consorting with
+positive murderous political criminals. In spite of his natural and
+kindly desire to screen his own junior master, he felt that this
+public exhibition of irreconcilable views was quite unpardonable
+and irretrievable. 'Mr. Blenkinsopp,' he said gravely, turning to
+the awe-struck tobacco-pipe manufacturer with an expression of
+sympathetic dismay upon his practised face, 'I must retract all
+I have just been saying to you about our junior master. I was not
+aware of this. Mr. Le Breton must no longer retain his post as an
+assistant at Pilbury Regis Grammar School.'
+
+Mr. Blenkinsopp sank amazed into an easy-chair, and sat in dumb
+astonishment to see the end of this extraordinary and unprecedented
+adventure. The Doctor walked out severely to the school porch, and
+stood there in solemn state to await the approach of the unsuspecting
+offender.
+
+'It's so delightful, dear Herr Max,' Ernest was saying at that exact
+moment, 'to have you down here with us even for a single night.
+You can't imagine what an oasis your coming has been to us both.
+I'm sure Edie has enjoyed it just as much as I have, and is just
+as anxious you should stop a little time here with us as I myself
+could possibly be.
+
+'Oh, yes, Herr Schurz,' Edie put in persuasively with her sweet
+little pleading manner; 'do stay a little longer. I don't know
+when dear Ernest has enjoyed anything in the world so much as he
+has enjoyed seeing you. You've no idea how dull it is down here for
+him, and for me too, for that matter; everybody here is so borné,
+and narrow-minded and self-centred; nothing expansive or sympathetic
+about them, as there used to be about Ernest's set in dear, quiet,
+peaceable old Oxford. It's been such a pleasure to us to hear some
+conversation again that wasn't about the school, and the rector, and
+the Haigh Park people, and the flower show, and old Mrs. Jenkins's
+quarrel with the vicar of St. Barnabas. Except when Mr. Berkeley
+runs down sometimes for a Saturday to Monday trip to see us, and
+takes Ernest out for a good blow with him on the top of the breezy
+downs over yonder, we really never hear anything at all except the
+gossip and the small-talk of Pilbury Regis.'
+
+'And what makes it worse, Herr Max,' said Ernest, looking up in
+the old man's calm strong face with the same reverent almost filial
+love and respect as ever, 'is the fact that I can't feel any real
+interest and enthusiasm in the work that's set before me. I try
+to do it as well as I can, and I believe Dr. Greatrex, who's a
+kind-hearted good sort of man in his way, is perfectly satisfied
+with it; but my heart isn't in it, you see, and can't be in it.
+What sort of good is one doing the world by dinning the same foolish
+round of Horace and Livy and Latin elegiacs into the heads of all
+these useless, eat-all, do-nothing young fellows, who'll only be
+fit to fight or preach or idle as soon as we've finished cramming
+them with our indigestible unserviceable nostrums!'
+
+'Ah, Ernest, Ernest,' said Herr Max, nodding his heavy head gravely,
+'you always WILL look too seriously altogether at your social
+duties. I can't get other people to do it enough; and I can't get
+you not to do it too much entirely. Remember, my dear boy, my pet
+old saying about a little leaven. You're doing more good by just
+unobtrusively holding your own opinions here at Pilbury, and getting
+in the thin end of the wedge by slowly influencing the minds of
+a few middle-class boys in your form, than you could possibly be
+doing by making shoes or weaving clothes for the fractional benefit
+of general humanity. Don't be so abstract, Ernest; concrete yourself a
+little; isn't it enough that you're earning a livelihood for your
+dear little wife here, whom I'm glad to know at last and to receive
+as a worthy daughter? I may call you, Edie, mayn't I, my daughter?
+So this is your school, is it? A pleasant building! And that
+stern-looking old gentleman yonder, I suppose, is your head master?'
+
+'Dr. Greatrex,' said Edie innocently, stepping up to him in her bright
+elastic fashion, 'let me introduce you to our friend Herr Schurz,
+whose name I dare say you know--the German political economist.
+He's come down to Pilbury to deliver a lecture here, and we've been
+fortunate enough to put him up at our little lodging.'
+
+The doctor bowed very stiffly. 'I have heard of Herr Schurz's
+reputation already,' he said with as much diplomatic politeness
+as he could command, fortunately bethinking himself at the right
+moment of the exact phrase that would cover the situation without
+committing him to any further courtesy towards the terrible stranger.
+'Will you excuse my saying, Mrs. Le Breton, that we're very busy
+this afternoon, and I want to have a few words with your husband
+in private immediately? Perhaps you'd better take Herr Schurz on
+to the downs' ('safer there than on the Parade, at any rate,' he
+thought to himself quickly), 'and Le Breton will join you in the
+combe a little later in the afternoon. I'll take the fifth form
+myself, and let him have a holiday with his friend here if he'd
+like one. Le Breton, will you step this way please?' And lifting
+his square cap with stern solemnity to Edie, the doctor disappeared
+under the porch into the corridor, closely followed by poor frightened
+and wondering Ernest.
+
+Edie looked at Herr Max in dismay, for she saw clearly there was
+something serious the matter with the doctor. The old man shook
+his head sadly. 'It was very wrong of me,' he said bitterly: 'very
+wrong and very thoughtless. I ought to have remembered it and
+stopped away. I'm a caput lupinum, it seems, in Pilbury Regis, a
+sort of moral scarecrow or political leper, to be carefully avoided
+like some horrid contagion by a respectable, prosperous head-master.
+I might have known it, I might have known it, Edie; and now I'm
+afraid by my stupidity I've got dear Ernest unintentionally into
+a pack of troubles. Come on, my child, my poor dear child, come on
+to the downs, as he told us; I won't compromise you any longer by
+being seen with you in the streets, in the decent decorous whited
+sepulchres of Pilbury Regis.' And the grey old apostle, with two
+tears trickling unreproved down his wrinkled cheek, took Edie's arm
+tenderly in his, and led her like a father up to the green grassy
+slope that overlooks the little seaward combe by the nestling
+village of Nether Pilbury.
+
+Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex had taken Ernest into the breakfast-room--the
+study was already monopolised by Mr. Blenkinsopp--and had seated himself
+nervously, with his hands folded before him, on a straight-backed
+chair There was a long and awkward pause, for the doctor didn't
+care to begin the interview; but at last he sighed deeply and said
+in a tone of genuine disappointment and difficulty, 'My dear Le
+Breton, this is really very unpleasant.'
+
+Ernest looked at him, and said nothing.
+
+'Do you know,' the doctor went on kindly after a minute, 'I really
+do like you and sympathise with you. But what am I to do after
+this? I can't keep you at the school any longer, can I now? I put
+it to your own common-sense. I'm afraid, Le Breton--it gives me
+sincere pain to say so--but I'm afraid we must part at the end of
+the quarter.'
+
+Ernest only muttered that he was very sorry.
+
+'But what are we to do about it, Le Breton?' the doctor continued
+more kindly than ever. 'What are we ever to do about it? For my own
+sake, and for the boys' sake, and for respectability's pake, it's
+quite impossible to let you remain here any longer. The first thing
+you must do is to send away this Schurz creature'--Ernest started
+a little--'and then we must try to let it blow over as best we can.
+Everybody'll be talking about it; you know the man's become quite
+notorious lately; and it'll be quite necessary to say distinctly,
+Le Breton, before the whole of Pilbury, that we've been obliged to
+dismiss you summarily. So much we positively MUST do for our own
+protection. But what on earth are we to do for you, my poor fellow?
+I'm afraid you've cut your own throat, and I don't see any way on
+earth out of it.'
+
+'How so?' asked Ernest, half stunned by the suddenness of this
+unexpected dismissal.
+
+'Why, just look the thing in the face yourself, Le Breton. I can't
+very well give you a recommendation to any other head master without
+mentioning to him why I had to ask you for your resignation. And
+I'm afraid if I told them, nobody else would ever take you.'
+
+'Indeed?' said Ernest, very softly. 'Is it such a heinous offence
+to know so good a man as Herr Schurz--the best follower of the
+apostles I ever knew?'
+
+'My dear fellow,' said the doctor, confidentially, with an unusual
+burst of outspoken frankness, 'so far as my own private feelings
+are concerned, I don't in the least object to your knowing Herr
+Schurz or any other socialist whatsoever. To tell you the truth,
+I dare say he really is an excellent and most well-meaning person
+at bottom. Between ourselves, I've always thought that there was
+nothing very heterodox in socialism; in fact, I often think, Le
+Breton, the Bible's the most thoroughly democratic book that ever
+was written. But we haven't got to deal in practice with first
+principles; we have to deal with Society--with men and women as we
+find them. Now, Society doesn't like your Herr Schurz, objects to
+him, anathematises him, wants to imprison him. If you walk about
+with him in public, Society won't send its sons to your school.
+Therefore, you should disguise your affection, and if you want to
+visit him, you should visit him, like Nicodemus, by night only.'
+
+'I'm afraid,' said Ernest very fixedly, 'I shall never be able so
+far to accommodate myself to the wishes of Society.'
+
+'I'm afraid not, myself, Le Breton,' the doctor went on with
+imperturbable good temper. 'I'm afraid not, and I'm sorry for
+it. The fact is, you've chosen the wrong profession. You haven't
+pliability enough for a schoolmaster; you're too isolated, too much
+out of the common run; your ideas are too peculiar. Now, you've got
+me to-day into a dreadful pickle, and I might very easily be angry
+with you about it, and part with you in bad blood; but I really
+like you, Le Breton, and I don't want to do that; so I only tell
+you plainly, you've mistaken your natural calling. What it can be
+I don't know; but we must put our two heads together, and see what
+we can do for you before the end of the quarter. Now, go up to the
+combe to your wife, and try to get that terrible bugbear of a German
+out of Pilbury as quickly and as quietly as possible. Good-bye for
+to-day, Le Breton; no coolness between us, for this, I hope, my
+dear fellow.'
+
+Ernest grasped his hand warmly. 'You're very kind, Dr. Greatrex,'
+he said with genuine feeling. 'I see you mean well by me, and I'm
+very, very sorry if I've unintentionally caused you any embarrassment.'
+
+'Not at all, not at all, my dear fellow. Don't mention it. We'll
+tide it over somehow, and I'll see whether I can get you anything
+else to do that you're better fitted for.'
+
+As the door closed on Ernest, the doctor just gently wiped a certain
+unusual dew off his gold spectacles with a corner of his spotless
+handkerchief. 'He's a good fellow,' he murmured to himself,
+'an excellent fellow; but he doesn't manage to combine with the
+innocence of the dove the wisdom of the serpent. Poor boy, poor
+boy, I'm afraid he'll sink, but we must do what we can to keep his
+chin floating above the water. And now I must go back to the study
+to have out my explanation with that detestable thick-headed old
+pig of a Blenkinsopp! "Your views about young Le Breton," I must
+say to him, "are unfortunately only too well founded; and I have
+been compelled to dismiss him this very hour from Pilbury Grammar
+School." Ugh--how humiliating! the profession's really enough to
+give one a perfect sickening of life altogether!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+THE STREETS OF ASKELON.
+
+
+Before the end of the quarter, two things occurred which made
+almost as serious a difference to Ernest's and Edie's lives as the
+dismissal from Pilbury Regis Grammar School. It was about a week
+or ten days after Herr Max's unfortunate visit that Ernest awoke
+one morning with a very curious and unpleasant taste in his mouth,
+accompanied by a violent fit of coughing. He knew what the taste
+was well enough; and he mentioned the matter casually to Edie a
+little later in the morning. Edie was naturally frightened at the
+symptoms, and made him go to see the school doctor. The doctor felt
+his pulse attentively, listened with his stethoscope at the chest,
+punched and pummelled the patient all over in the most orthodox
+fashion, and asked the usual inquisitorial personal questions about
+all the other members of his family. When he heard about Ronald's
+predisposition, he shook his head seriously, and feared there was
+really something in it. Increased vocal resonance at the top of
+the left lung, he must admit. Some tendency to tubercular deposit
+there, and perhaps even a slight deep-seated cavity. Ernest must
+take care of himself for the present, and keep himself as free as
+possible from all kind of worry or anxiety.
+
+'Is it consumption, do you think, Dr. Sanders?' Edie asked
+breathlessly.
+
+'Well, consumption, Mrs. Le Breton, is a very vague and indefinite
+expression,' said the doctor, tapping his white shirtcuff with
+his nail in his slowest and most deliberate manner. 'It may mean
+a great deal, or it may mean very little. I don't want in any way
+to alarm you, or to alarm your husband; but there's certainly a
+marked incipient tendency towards tubercular deposit. Yes, tubercular
+deposit... Well, if you ask me the question point-blank, I should
+say so... certainly... I should say it was phthisis, very little
+doubt of it... In short, what some people would call consumption.'
+
+Ernest went home with Edie, comforting her all the way as well as
+he was able, and trying to make light of it, but feeling in his own
+heart that the look-out was decidedly beginning to gather blacker
+and darker than ever before them. Through the rest of that term
+he worked as well as he could; but Edie noticed every morning that
+the cough was getting worse and worse; and long before the time
+came for them to leave Pilbury he had begun to look distinctly
+delicate. Care for Edie and for the future was telling on him: his
+frame had never been very robust, and the anxieties of the last
+year had brought out the same latent hereditary tendency which had
+shown itself earlier and more markedly in the case of his brother
+Ronald.
+
+Meanwhile, Dr. Greatrex was assiduous in looking about for something
+or other that Ernest could turn his hand to, and writing letters
+with indefatigable kindness to all his colleagues and correspondents:
+for though he was, as Ernest said, a most unmitigated humbug, that
+was really his only fault; and when his sympathies were once really
+aroused, as the Le Bretons had aroused them, there was no stone he
+would leave unturned if only his energy could be of any service to
+those whom he wished to benefit. But unfortunately in this case
+it couldn't. 'I'm at my wit's end what to do with you, Le Breton,'
+he said kindly one morning to Ernest: 'but how on earth I'm to
+manage anything, I can't imagine. For my own part, you know, though
+your conduct about that poor man Schurz (a well-meaning harmless
+fanatic, I dare say) was really a public scandal--from the point
+of view of parents I mean, my dear fellow, from the point of view
+of parents--I should almost be inclined to keep you on here in
+spite of it, and brave the public opinion of Pilbury Regis, if it
+depended entirely upon my own judgment. But in the management of
+a school, my dear boy, as you yourself must be aware, a head master
+isn't the sole and only authority; there are the governors, for
+example, Le Breton, and--and--and, ur, there's Mrs. Greatrex. Now,
+in all matters of social discipline and attitude, Mrs. Greatrex is
+justly of equal authority with me; and Mrs. Greatrex thinks it would
+never do to keep you at Pilbury. So, of course, that practically
+settles the question. I'm awfully sorry, Le Breton, dreadfully sorry,
+but I don't see my way out of it. The mischief's done already, to
+some extent, for all Pilbury knows now that Schurz came down here
+to stop with you at your lodgings: but if I were to keep you on
+they'd say I didn't disapprove of Schurz's opinions, and that would
+naturally be simple ruination for the school--simple ruination.'
+
+Ernest thanked him sincerely for the trouble he had taken, but
+wondered desperately in his own heart what sort of future could
+ever be in store for them.
+
+The second event was less unexpected, though quite equally
+embarrassing under existing circumstances. Hardly more than a month
+before the end of the quarter, a little black-eyed baby daughter
+came to add to the prospective burdens of the Le Breton family.
+She was a wee, fat, round-faced, dimpled Devonshire lass to look
+at, as far surpassing every previous baby in personal appearance
+as each of those previous babies, by universal admission, had
+surpassed all their earlier predecessors--a fact which, as Mr.
+Sanders remarked, ought to be of most gratifying import both to
+evolutionists and to philanthropists in general, as proving the
+continuous and progressive amelioration of the human race: and
+Edie was very proud of her indeed, as she lay placidly in her very
+plain little white robes on the pillow of her simple wickerwork
+cradle. But Ernest, though he learned to love the tiny intruder
+dearly afterwards, had no heart just then to bear the conventional
+congratulations of his friends and fellow-masters. Another mouth
+to feed, another life dependent upon him, and little enough,
+as it seemed, for him to feed it with. When Edie asked him what
+they should name the baby--he had just received an adverse answer
+to his application for a vacant secretaryship--he crumpled up the
+envelope bitterly in his hand, and cried out in his misery, 'Call
+her Pandora, Edie, call her Pandora; for we've got to the very
+bottom of the casket, and there is nothing at all left for us now
+but hope--and even of that very little!'
+
+So they duly registered her name as Pandora; but her mother shortened
+it familiarly into Dot; and as little Dot she was practically known
+ever after.
+
+Almost as soon as poor Edie was able to get about again, the time
+came when they would have to leave Pilbury Regis. The doctor's
+search had been quite ineffectual, and he had heard of absolutely
+nothing that was at all likely to suit Ernest Le Breton. He had
+tried Government offices, Members of Parliament, colonial friends,
+every body he knew in any way who miyht possibly know of vacant
+posts or appointments, but each answer was only a fresh disappointment
+for him and for Ernest. In the end, he was fain to advise his
+peccant under-master, since nothing else remained for it, that
+he had better go up to London for the present, take lodgings, and
+engage in the precarious occupation known as 'looking about for
+something to turn up.' On the morning when Edie and he were to
+leave the town, Dr. Greatrex saw Ernest privately in his own study.
+
+'I wish very much I could have gone to the station to see you off,
+Le Breton,' he said, pressing his hand warmly; 'but it wouldn't
+do, you know, it wouldn't do, and Mrs. Greatrex wouldn't like it.
+People would say I sympathised secretly with your political opinions,
+which might offend Sir Matthew Ogle and others of our governors.
+But I'm sorry to get rid of you, really and sincerely sorry, my dear
+fellow; and apart from personal feeling, I'm sure you'd have made
+a good master in most ways, if it weren't for your most unfortunate
+socialistic notions. Get rid of them, Le Breton, I beg of you: do
+get rid of them. Well, the only thing I can advise you now is to
+try your hand, for the present only--till something turns up, you
+know--at literature and journalism. I shall be on the look-out for
+you still, and shall tell you at once of anything I may happen to
+hear of. But meanwhile, you must try to be earning something. And
+if at any time, my dear friend, you should be temporarily in want
+of money,'--the doctor said this in a shame-faced, hesitating sort
+of way, with not a little humming and hawing--'in want of money
+for immediate necessities merely, if you'll only be so kind as to
+write and tell me, I should consider it a pleasure and a privilege
+to lend you a ten pound note, you know--just for a short time, till
+you saw your way clear before you. Don't hesitate to ask me now,
+be sure; and I may as well say, write to me at the school, Le
+Breton, not at the school-house, so that even Mrs. Greatrex need
+never know anything about it. In fact, if you'll excuse me, I've
+put a small sum into this envelope--only twenty pounds--which
+may be of service to you, as a loan, as a loan merely; if you'll
+take it--only till something turns up, you know--you'll really be
+conferring a great favour upon me. There, there, my dear boy; now
+don't be offended: I've borrowed money myself at times, when I was
+a young man like you, and I hadn't a wife and family then as an
+excuse for it either. Put it in your pocket, there's a good fellow;
+you'll need it for Mrs. Le Breton and the baby, you see; now do
+please put it in your pocket.'
+
+The tears rode fast and hot in Ernest's eyes, and he grasped the
+doctor's other hand with grateful fervour. 'Dear Dr. Greatrex,'
+he said as well as he was able, 'it's too kind of you, too kind of
+you altogether. But I really can't take the money. Even after the
+expenses of Edie's illness and of baby Dot's wardrobe, we have
+a little sum, a very little sum laid by, that'll help us to tide
+over the immediate present. It's too good of you, too good of you
+altogether. I shall remember your kindness for ever with the most
+sincere and heartfelt gratitude.'
+
+As Ernest looked into the doctor's half-averted eyes, swimming
+and glistening just a little with sympathetic moisture, his heart
+smote him when he thought that he had ever described that good,
+kindly, generous man as an unmitigated humbug. 'It shows how little
+one can trust the mere outside shell of human beings,' he said to
+Edie, self-reproachfully, as they sat together in their hare third-class
+carriage an hour later. 'The humbug's just the conventional mask
+of his profession--necessary enough, I suppose, for people who
+are really going to live successfully in the world as we find it:
+the heart within him's a thousand times warmer and truer and more
+unspoiled than one could ever have imagined from the outer covering.
+He offered me his twenty pounds so delicately and considerately that
+but for my father's blood in me, Edie, for your sake, I believe I
+could almost have taken it.'
+
+When they got to London, Ernest wished to leave Edie and Dot
+at Arthur Berkeley's rooms (he knew nowhere else to leave them),
+while he went out by himself to look about for cheap lodgings. Edie
+was still too weak, he said, to carry her baby about the streets
+of London in search of apartments. But Edie wouldn't hear of this
+arrangement; she didn't quite like going to Arthur's, and she felt
+sure she could bargain with the London landladies a great deal
+more effectually than a man like Ernest--which was an important
+matter in the present very reduced condition of the family finances.
+In the end it was agreed that they should both go out on the hunt
+together, but that Ernest should be permitted to relieve Edie by
+turns in taking care of the precious baby.
+
+'They're dreadful people, I believe, London landladies,' said Edie,
+in her most housewifely manner; 'regular cheats and skinflints,
+I've always heard, who try to take you in on every conceivable point
+and item. We must be very careful not to let them get the better
+of us, Ernest, and to make full inquiries about all extras, and so
+forth, beforehand.'
+
+They turned towards Holloway and the northern district, to look
+for cheap rooms, and they saw a great many, more or less dear, and
+more or less dirty and unsuitable, until their poor hearts really
+began to sink within them. At last, in despair, Edie turned up a
+small side street in Holloway, and stopped at a tiny house with a
+clean white curtain in its wee front bay window. 'This is awfully
+small, Ernest,' she said, despondently, 'but perhaps, after all,
+it might really suit us.'
+
+The door was opened for them by a tall, raw-boned, hard-faced woman,
+the very embodiment and personification of Edie's ideal skinflint
+London landlady. Might they see the lodgings, Edie asked dubiously.
+Yes, they might, indeed, mum, answered the hard-faced woman. Edie
+glanced at Ernest significantly, as who should say that these would
+really never do.
+
+The lodgings were very small, but they were as clean as a new pin.
+Edie began to relent, and thought, perhaps in spite of the landlady,
+they might somehow manage to put up with them. 'What was the rent?'
+
+The hard-faced landlady looked at Edie steadily, and then answered
+'Fifteen shillings, mum.'
+
+'Oh, that's too much for us, I'm afraid,' said Edie ruefully. 'We
+don't want to go as high as that. We're very poor and quiet people.'
+
+'Well, mum,' the landlady assented quickly, 'it is 'igh for the
+rooms, perhaps, mum, though I've 'ad more; but it IS 'igh, mum. I
+won't deny it. Still, for you, mum, and the baby, I wouldn't mind
+making it twelve and sixpence.'
+
+'Couldn't you say half-a-sovereign?' Edie asked timidly, emboldened
+by success.
+
+'Arf a suvveran, mum? Well, I 'ardly rightly know,' said the
+hard-faced landlady deliberately. 'I can't say without askin' of
+my 'usband whether he'll let me. Excuse me a minnit, mum; I'll just
+run down and ask 'im.'
+
+Edie glanced at Ernest, and whispered doubtfully, 'They'll do, but
+I'm afraid she's a dreadful person.'
+
+Meanwhile, the hard-faced landlady had run downstairs quickly,
+and called out in a pleasant voice of childish excitement to her
+husband. 'John, John,' she cried--'drat that man, where's he gone
+to. Oh, a smokin' of course, in the back kitching. Oh, John, there's
+the sweetest little lady you ever set eyes on, all in black, with
+a dear baby, a dear little speechless infant, and a invalid 'usband,
+I should say by the look of 'im, 'as come to ask the price of the
+ground floor lodgin's. And seein' she was so nice and kindlike, I
+told her fifteen shillings, instead of a suvveran; and she says,
+can't you let 'em for less? says she; and she was that pretty and
+engagin' that I says, well, for you I'll make it twelve and sixpence,
+mum, says I: and says she, you couldn't say 'arf a suvveran, could
+you? and says I, I'll ask my 'usband: and oh, John, I DO wish you'd
+let me take 'em at that, for a kinder, sweeter-lookin' dearer family
+I never did, an' that I tell you.'
+
+John drew his pipe slowly out of his mouth--he was a big, heavy,
+coachman-built sort of person, in waistcoat and shirt-sleeves--and
+answered with a kindly smile, 'Why, Martha, if you want to take 'em
+for 'arf a suvveran, in course you'd ought to do it. Got a baby,
+pore thing, 'ave she now? Well, there, there, you just go this very
+minnit, and tell 'em as you'll take 'em.'
+
+The hard-faced landlady went up the stairs again, only stopping a
+moment to observe parenthetically that a sweeter little lady she
+never did, and what was 'arf-a-crown a week to you and me, John?
+and then, holding the corner of her apron in her hand, she informed
+Edie that her 'usband was prepared to accept the ten shillings
+weekly.
+
+'I'll try to make you and the gentleman comfortable, mum,' she
+said, eagerly; 'the gentleman don't look strong, now do he? We must
+try to feed 'im up and keep 'im cheerful. And we've got plenty of
+flowers to make the room bright, you see: I'm very fond of flowers
+myself, mum: seems to me as if they was sort of company to one, like,
+and when you water 'em and tend 'em always, I feel as if they was
+alive, and got to know one again, I do, and that makes one love
+'em, now don't it, mum? To see 'em brighten up after you've watered
+'em, like that there maiden-'air fern there, why it's enough to
+make one love 'em the same as if they was Christians, mum.' There
+was a melting tenderness in her voice when she talked about the
+flowers that half won over Edie's heart, even in spite of her hard
+features.
+
+'I'm glad you're so fond of flowers, Mrs.----. Oh, you haven't
+told us your name yet,' Edie said, beginning vaguely to suspect that
+perhaps the hard-faced landlady wasn't quite as bad as she looked
+to a casual observer.
+
+'Alliss, mum,' the landlady answered, filling up Edie's interrogatory
+blank. 'My name is 'Alliss.'
+
+'Alice what?' Edie asked again.
+
+'Oh, no, mum, you don't rightly understand me,' the landlady replied,
+getting very red, and muddling up her aspirates more decidedly
+than ever, as people with her failing always do when they want to
+be specially deliberate and emphatic: 'not Halice, but 'Alliss;
+haitch, hay, hell, hell, hi, double hess--'Alliss: my full name's
+Martha 'Alliss, mum; my 'usband's John 'Alliss. When would you like
+to come in?'
+
+'At once,' Edie answered. 'We've left our luggage at the cloak-room
+at Waterloo, and my husband will go back and fetch it, while I stop
+here with the baby.'
+
+'Not that, he shan't, indeed, mum,' cried the hard-faced landlady,
+hastily; 'beggin' your pardon for sayin' so. Our John shall go--that's
+my 'usband, mum; and you shall give 'im the ticket. I wouldn't let
+your good gentleman there go, and 'im so tired, too, not for the
+world, I wouldn't. Just you give me the ticket, mum, and John
+shall go this very minnit and fetch it.'
+
+'But perhaps your husband's busy,' said Ernest, reflecting upon
+the probable cost of cab hire; 'and he'll want a cab to fetch it
+in.'
+
+'Bless your 'eart, sir,' said the landlady, busily arranging things
+all round the room meanwhile for the better accommodation of the
+baby, ''e ain't noways busy 'e ain't. 'E's a lazy man, nowadays, John
+is: retired from business, 'e says, sir, and ain't got nothink to
+do but clean the knives, and lay the fires, and split the firewood,
+and such like. John were a coachman, sir, in a gentleman's family
+for most of 'is life, man and boy, these forty year, come Christmas;
+and we've saved a bit o' money between us, so as we don't need for
+nothink: and 'e don't want the cab, puttin' you to expense, sir,
+onnecessary, to bring the luggage round in. 'E'll just borrer the
+hand-barrer from the livery in the mews, sir, and wheel it round
+'isself, in 'arf an hour, and make nothink of it. Just you give
+me the ticket, and set you right down there, and I'll make you and
+the lady a cup of tea at once, and John'll bring round the luggage
+by the time you've got your things off.'
+
+Ernest looked at Edie, and Edie looked at Ernest. Could they
+have judged too hastily once more, after their determination to
+be lenient in first judgments for the future? So Ernest gave Mrs.
+Halliss the cloak-room ticket, and Mrs. Halliss ran downstairs
+with it immediately. 'John,' the cried again, '--drat that man,
+where's 'e gone to? Oh, there you are, dearie! Just you put on
+your coat an' 'at as fast as ever you can, and borrer Tom Wood's
+barrer, and run down to Waterloo, and fetch up them two portmanteaus,
+will you? And you drop in on the way at the Waterfield. dairy--not
+Jenkins's: Jenkins's milk ain't good enough for them--and tell 'em
+to send round two penn'orth of fresh this very minnit, do y'ear,
+John, this very minnit, as it's extremely pertickler. And a good thing
+I didn't give you them two eggs for your dinner, as is fresh-laid
+by our own 'ens this mornin', and no others like 'em to be 'ad in
+London for love or money; and they shall 'ave 'em boiled light for
+their tea this very evenin'. And you look sharp, John,--drat the
+man, 'ow long 'e is--for I tell yon, these is reel gentlefolk, and
+them pore too, which makes it all the 'arder; and they've got to
+be treated the same in every respect as if they was paying a 'ole
+suvverin, bless their 'earts, the pore creechurs.'
+
+'Pore,' said John, vainly endeavouring to tear on his coat with
+becoming rapidity under the influence of Mrs. Halliss's voluble
+exhortations. 'Pore are they, pore things? and so they may be. I've
+knowed the sons of country gentlemen, and that baronights too,
+Martha, as 'ad kep' their 'ounds, redooced to be that pore as
+they couldn't have afforded to a took our lodgings, even 'umble as
+they may be. Pore ain't nothink to do with it noways, as respecks
+gentility. I've lived forty years in gentlemen's families, up an'
+down, Martha, and I think I'd ought to know somethink about the
+'abits and manners of the aristocracy. Pore ain't in the question
+at all, it ain't, as far as breedin' goes: and if they're pore, and
+got to be gentlefolks too all the same'--John spoke of this last
+serious disability in a tone of unfeigned pity--'why, Martha, wot
+I says is, we'd ought to do the very best we can for 'em any 'ow,
+now, oughtn't we?'
+
+'Drat the man!' cried Mrs. Halliss again, impatiently; 'don't stand
+talkin' and sermonin' about it there no longer like a poll parrot,
+but just you run along and send in the milk, like a dear, will you?
+or that dear little lady'll have to be waitin' for her tea--and her
+with a month-old baby, too, the pretty thing, just to think of it!'
+
+And indeed, long before John Halliss had got back again with the
+two wee portmanteaus--'I could 'a carried that lot on my 'ead,' he
+soliloquised when he saw them, 'without 'avin' troubled to wheel
+round a onnecessary encumbrance in the way of a barrer'--Mrs. Halliss
+had put the room tidy, and laid the baby carefully in a borrowed
+cradle in the corner, and brought up Edie and Ernest a big square
+tray covered by a snow-white napkin--'My own washin', mum'--and
+conveying a good cup of tea, a couple of crisp rolls, and two
+such delicious milky eggs as were never before known in the whole
+previous history of the county of Middlesex. And while they drank
+their tea, Mrs. Halliss insisted upon taking the baby down into
+the kitchen, so that they mightn't be bothered, pore things; for
+the pore lady must be tired with nursin' of it herself the livelong
+day, that she must: and when she got it into the kitchen, she was
+compelled to call over the back yard wall to Mrs. Bollond, the
+greengrocer's wife next door, with the ultimate view to getting a
+hare's brain for the dear baby to suck at through a handkerchief.
+And Mrs. Bollond, being specially so invited, came in by the area
+door, and inspected the dear baby; and both together arrived at
+the unanimous conclusion that little Dot was the very prettiest
+and sweetest child that ever sucked its fat little fingers, Lord
+bless her!
+
+And in the neat wee parlour upstairs, Edie, pouring out tea from
+the glittering tin teapot into one of the scrupulously clean small
+whitey-gold teacups, was saying meanwhile to Ernest, 'Well, after
+all, Ernest dear, perhaps London landladies aren't all quite as
+black as they're usually painted.' A conclusion which neither Edie
+nor Ernest had ever after any occasion for altering in any way.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE CLOUDS BEGIN TO BREAK.
+
+
+And now, what were Ernest and Edie to do for a living! That was
+the practical difficulty that stared them at last plainly in the
+face--no mere abstract question of right and justice, of socialistic
+ideals or of political economy, but the stern, uncompromising,
+pressing domestic question of daily bread. They had come from
+Pilbury Regis with a very small reserve indeed in their poor lean
+little purses; and though Mrs. Halliss's lodgings might be cheap
+enough as London lodgings go, their means wouldn't allow them to
+stop there for many weeks together unless that hypothetical something
+of which they were in search should happen to turn up with most
+extraordinary and unprecedented rapidity. As soon as they were
+settled in at their tiny rooms, therefore, Ernest began a series
+of weary journeys into town, in search of work of some sort or
+another; and he hunted up all his old Oxford acquaintances in the
+Temple or elsewhere, to see if they could give him any suggestions
+towards a possible means of earning a livelihood. Most of them, he
+found to his surprise, though they had been great chums of his at
+college, seemed a little shy of him nowadays: one old Oxford friend,
+in particular, an impeccable man in close-cut frock coat and hat
+of shiny perfection, he overheard saying to another, he followed
+him accidentally up a long staircase in King's Bench Walk, 'Ah,
+yes, I met Le Breton in the Strand yesterday, when I was walking
+with a Q.C., too; he's married badly, got no employment, and looks
+awfully seedy. So very embarrassing, you know, now wasn't it?' And
+the other answered lightly, in the same unconcerned tone, 'Oh, of
+course, dreadfully embarrassing, really.' Ernest slank down the
+staircase again with a sinking heart, and tried to get no further
+hints from the respectabilities of King's Bench Walk, at least in
+this his utmost extremity.
+
+Night after night, as the dusk was beginning to throw its pall
+over the great lonely desert of London--one vast frigid expanse of
+living souls that knew and cared nothing about him--Ernest turned
+back, foot-sore and heart-sick, to the cheery little lodgings in
+the short side-street at Holloway. There good Mrs. Halliss, whose
+hard face seemed to grow softer the longer you looked at it, had
+a warm clip of tea always ready against his coming: and Edie, with
+wee Dot sleeping placidly on her arm, stood at the door to welcome
+him back again in wife-like fashion. The flowers in the window
+bloomed bright and gay in the tiny parlour: and Edie, with her
+motherly cares for little Dot, seemed more like herself than ever
+she had done before since poor Harry's death had clouded the morning
+of her happy lifetime. But to Ernest, even that pretty picture of
+the young mother and her sleeping baby looked only like one more
+reminder of the terrible burden he had unavoidably yet too lightly
+taken upon him. Those two dear lives depended wholly upon him for
+their daily bread, and where that daily bread was ever to come from
+he had absolutely not the slightest notion.
+
+There is no place in which it is more utterly dreary to be quite
+friendless than in teeming London. Still, they were not absolutely
+friendless even in that great lurid throng of jarring humanity,
+all eagerly intent on its own business, and none of it troubling
+its collective head about two such nonentities as Ernest and
+Edie. Ronald used to come round daily to see them and cheer them
+up with his quiet confidence in the Disposer of all things: and
+Arthur Berkeley, neglecting his West End invitations and his lady
+admirers, used to drop in often of an evening for a friendly chat
+and a rational suggestion or two.
+
+'Why don't you try journalism, Le Breton?' he said to Ernest one
+night, as they sat discussing possibilities for the future in the
+little parlour together. 'Literature in some form or other's clearly
+the best thing for a man like you to turn his hand to. It demands
+less compliance with conventional rules than any other profession.
+No editor or publisher would ever dream of dismissing you, for
+example, because you invited your firebrand friend Max Schurz to
+dinner. On the contrary, if it comes to that, he'd ask you what
+Herr Max thought about the future of trades unions and the socialist
+movement in Germany, and he'd advise you to turn it into a column
+and a half of copy, with a large type sensational heading, "A
+Communistic Leader Interviewed. From our Special Correspondent."'
+
+'But it's such a very useless, unsocialistic trade,' Ernest answered
+doubtfully. 'Do you think it would be quite right, Arthur, for
+a man to try and earn money by it? Of course it isn't much worse
+than school-mastering, I dare say; nobody can say he's performing
+a very useful function for the world by hammering a few lines of
+Ovid into the skull of poor stupid Blenkinsopp major, who after
+all will only use what he calls his education, if he uses it in
+any way at all, to enable him to make rather more money than any
+other tobacco-pipe manufacturer in the entire trade. Still, one
+does feel for all that, that mere writing of books and papers is a
+very unsatisfactory kind of work for an ethical being to perform for
+humanity. How much better, now, if one could only be a farm-labourer
+or a shoemaker!'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked across at him half angrily. 'My dear Ernest,'
+he said, in a severer voice than he often used, 'the time has gone
+by now for this economical puritanism of yours. It won't do any
+longer. You have to think of your child and of Mrs. Le Breton.
+Your first duty is to earn a livelihood for them and yourself;
+when you've done that satisfactorily, you may begin to think of the
+claims of humanity. Don't be vexed with me, my dear fellow, if I
+speak to you very plainly. You've lost your place at Pilbury because
+you wouldn't be practical. You might have known they wouldn't let
+you go hobnobbing publicly before the very eyes of boys and parents
+with a firebrand German Socialist. Mind, I don't say anything
+against Herr Schurz myself--what little I know about him is all in
+his favour--that he's a thorn in the side of those odious prigs,
+the political economists. I've often noticed that when a man wants
+to dogmatise to his heart's content without fear of contradiction,
+he invariably calls himself a political economist. Then if people
+differ from him, he smiles at them the benign smile of superior
+wisdom, and says superciliously, "Ah, I see you don't understand
+political economy!" Now, your Herr Schurz is a dissenter among
+economists, I believe--a sort of embryo Luther come to tilt with
+a German toy lance against their economical infallibilities; and
+I'm told he knows more about the subject than all the rest of them
+put together. Of course, if you like him and respect him--and I know
+you have one superstition left, my dear fellow--there's no reason
+on earth why you shouldn't do so; but you mustn't parade him too
+openly before the scandalised faces of respectable Pilbury. In
+future, you must be practical. Turn your hand to whatever you can
+get to do, and leave humanity at large to settle the debtor and
+creditor account with you hereafter.'
+
+'I'll do my best, Berkeley,' Ernest answered submissively; 'and if
+you like, I'll strangle my conscience and try my hand at journalism.'
+
+'Do, there's a good man,' Arthur Berkeley said, delighted at his
+late conversion. 'I know two or three editor fellows pretty well,
+and if you'll only turn off something, I'll ask them to have a look
+at it.'
+
+Next morning, at breakfast, Ernest discussed the possibilities
+of this new venture very seriously with sympathising Edie. 'It's
+a great risk,' he said, turning it over dubiously in his mind; 'a
+great risk, and a great expense too, for nothing certain. Let me
+see, there'll be a quire of white foolscap to start with; that'll
+be a shilling--a lot of money as things go at present, Edie, isn't
+it?'
+
+'Why not begin with half a quire, Ernest?' said his little wife,
+cautiously. 'That'd be only sixpence, you see.'
+
+'Do they halve quires at the stationer's, I wonder?' Ernest went
+on still mentally reckoning. 'Well, suppose we put it at sixpence.
+Then we've got pens already by us, but not any ink--that's a
+penny--and there's postage, say about twopence; total ninepence.
+That's a lot of money, isn't it, now, for a pure uncertainty?'
+
+'I'd try it, Ernest dear, if I were you,' Edie answered. 'We must
+do something, mustn't we, dear, to earn our living.'
+
+'We must,' Ernest said, sighing. 'I wish it were anything but
+that; but I suppose what must be must be. Well, I'll go out a walk
+by myself in the quietest streets I can find, and try if I can
+think of anything on earth a man can write about. Arthur Berkeley
+says I ought to begin with a social article for a paper; he knows
+the "Morning Intelligence" people, and he'll try to get them to
+take something if I can manage to write it. I wonder what on earth
+would do as a social article for the "Morning Intelligence"! If
+only they'd let me write about socialism now! but Arthur says they
+won't take that; the times aren't yet ripe for it. I wish they were,
+Edie, I wish they were; and then perhaps you and I would find some
+way to earn ourselves a decent living.'
+
+So Ernest went out, and ruminated quietly by himself, as well as he
+was able, in the least frequented streets of Holloway and Highgate.
+After about half an hour's excogitation, a brilliant idea at last
+flashed across him; he had found in a tobacconist's window something
+to write about! Your practised journalist doesn't need to think at
+all; he writes whatever comes uppermost without the unnecessarily
+troublesome preliminary of deliberate thinking. But Ernest Le
+Breton was only making his first experiment in the queer craft,
+and he looked upon himself as a veritable Watt or Columbus when he
+had actually discovered that hitherto unknown object, a thing to
+write about. He went straight back to good Mrs. Halliss's with his
+discovery whirling in his head, stopping only by the way at the
+stationer's, to invest in half a quire of white foolscap. 'The
+best's a shilling a quire, mister,' said the shopman; 'second best,
+tenpence.' Communist as he was, Ernest couldn't help noticing the
+unusual mode of address; but he took the cheaper quality quietly,
+and congratulated himself on his good luck in saving a penny upon
+the original estimate.
+
+When he got home, he sat down at the plain wooden table by the
+window, and began with nervous haste to write away rapidly at his
+first literary venture. Edie sat by in her little low chair and
+watched him closely with breathless interest. Would it be a success
+or a failure? That was the question they were both every moment
+intently asking themselves. It was not a very important piece
+of literary workmanship, to be sure; only a social leader for a
+newspaper, to be carelessly skimmed to-day and used to light the
+fire to-morrow, if even that; and yet had it been the greatest
+masterpiece ever produced by the human intellect Ernest could not
+have worked at it with more conscientious care, or Edie watched
+him with profounder admiration. When Shakespeare sat down to write
+'Hamlet,' it may be confidently asserted that neither Mistress Anne
+Shakespeare nor anybody else awaited the result of his literary
+labours with such unbounded and feverish anxiety. By the time
+Ernest had finished his second sheet of white foolscap--much erased
+and interlined with interminable additions and corrections--Edie
+ventured for a moment briefly to interrupt his creative efforts.
+'Don't you think you've written as much as makes an ordinary leader
+now, Ernest?' she asked, apologetically. 'I'm afraid you're making
+it a good deal longer than it ought to be by rights.'
+
+'I'm sure I don't know, Edie,' Ernest answered, gazing at the two
+laboured sheets with infinite dubitation and searching of spirit.
+'I suppose one ought properly to count the words in an average
+leader, and make it the same length as they always are in the
+"Morning Intelligence." I think they generally run to just a column.'
+
+'Of course you ought, dear,' Edie answered. 'Run out this minute
+and buy one before you go a single line further.'
+
+Ernest looked back at his two pages of foolscap somewhat ruefully.
+'That's a dreadful bore,' he said, with a sigh: 'it'll just run
+away with the whole penny I thought I'd managed to save in getting
+the second quality of foolscap for fivepence. However, I suppose
+it can't be helped, and after all, if the thing succeeds, one can
+look upon the penny in the light of an investment. It's throwing
+a sprat to catch a whale, as the proverb says: though I'm afraid
+Herr Max would say that that was a very immoral capitalist proverb.
+How horribly low we must be sinking, Edie, when we come to use the
+anti-social language of those dreadful capitalists!'
+
+'I don't think capitalists deal much in proverbs, dear,' said Edie,
+smiling in spite of herself; 'but you needn't go to the expense
+of buying a "Morning Intelligence," I dare say, for perhaps Mrs.
+Halliss may have an old one in the house; or if not, she might
+be able to borrow one from a neighbour. She has a perfect genius
+for borrowing, Mrs. Halliss; she borrows everything I want from
+somebody or other. I'll just run down to the kitchen this minute
+and ask her.'
+
+In a few seconds Edie returned in triumph with an old soiled and
+torn copy of the 'Morning Intelligence,' duly procured by the
+ingenious Mrs. Halliss from the dairy opposite. It was a decidedly
+antiquated copy, and it had only too obviously been employed by
+its late possessor to wrap up a couple of kippered herrings; but
+it was still entire, so far as regarded the leaders at least, and
+it was perfectly legible in spite of its ancient and fish-like
+smell. To ensure accuracy, Ernest and Edie took a leader apiece, and
+carefully counted up the number of words that went to the column.
+They came on an average to fifteen hundred. Then Ernest counted
+his own manuscript with equal care--no easy task when one took
+into consideration the interlined or erased passages--and, to his
+infinite disgust, discovered that it only extended to seven hundred
+and fifty words. 'Why, Edie,' he said, in a very disappointed
+tone, 'how little it prints into! I should certainly have thought
+I'd written at least a whole column. And the worst of it is, I
+believe I've really said all I have to say about the subject.'
+
+'What is it, Ernest dear?' asked Edie.
+
+'Italian organ-boys,' Ernest answered. 'I saw on a placard in
+the news shop that one of them had been taken to a hospital in a
+starving condition.' He hardly liked to tell even Edie that he had
+stood for ten minutes at a tobacconist's window and read the case
+in a sheet of 'Lloyd's News' conspicuously hung up there for public
+perusal.
+
+'Well, let me hear what you have written, Ernest dear, and then
+see if you couldn't expand it.'
+
+Ernest read it over most seriously and solemnly--it was only a
+social leader, of the ordinary commonplace talky-talky sort; but
+to those two poor young people it was a very serious and solemn
+matter indeed--no less a matter than their own two lives and little
+Dot's into the bargain. It began with the particular case of the
+particular organ-boy who formed the peg on which the whole article
+was to be hung; it went on to discourse on the lives and manners
+of organ-boys in general; it digressed into the natural history of
+the common guinea-pig, with an excursus on the scenery of the Lower
+Apennines; and. it finished off with sundry abstract observations
+on the musical aspect of the barrel-organ and the aesthetic value of
+hurdygurdy performances. Edie listened to it all with deep attention.
+
+'It's very good, Ernest dear,' she said, with wifely admiration,
+as soon as he had finished. 'Just like a real leader exactly; only,
+do you know, there aren't any anecdotes in it. I think a social
+leader of that sort ought always to have a lot of anecdotes. Couldn't
+you manage to bring in something about Fox and Sheridan, or about
+George IV. and Beau Brummel? They always do, you know, in most of
+the papers.'
+
+Ernest gazed at her in silent admiration. 'How clever of you, Edie,'
+he said, 'to think of that! Why, of course there ought to be some
+anecdotes. They're the very breath of life to this sort of meaningless
+writing. Only, somehow, George IV. and Beau Brummel don't seem
+exactly relevant to Italian organ-grinders, now do they?'
+
+'I thought,' said Edie, with hardly a touch of unintentional satire,
+'that the best thing about anecdotes of that kind in a newspaper
+was their utter irrelevancy. But if Beau Brummel won't do, couldn't
+you manage to work in Guicciardini and the galleys? That's strictly
+Italian, you know, and therefore relevant; and I'm sure the newspaper
+leaders are extremely fond of that story about Guiccardini.'
+
+'They are,' Ernest answered,'most undoubtedly; but perhaps for that
+very reason readers may be beginning to get just a little tired of
+it by this time.'
+
+'I don't think the readers matter much,' said Edie, with a
+brilliant, flash of practical common-sense; 'at least, not nearly
+half as much, Ernest, as the editor.'
+
+'Quite true,' Ernest replied, with another admiring look; 'but
+probably the editor more or less consults the taste and feelings
+of the readers. Well, I'll try to expand it a bit, and I'll manage
+to drag in an anecdote or two somehow--if not Guicciardini, at
+least something or other else Italian. You see Italy's a tolerably
+rich subject, because you can do any amount about Raffael, and Michael
+Angelo, and Leonardo, and so forth, not to mention Botticelli. The
+papers have made a dreadful run lately on Botticelli.'
+
+So Ernest sat down once more at the table by the window, and began
+to interlard the manuscript with such allusions to Italy and the
+Italians as could suggest themselves on the spur of the moment to
+his anxious imagination. At the end of half an hour--about the
+time a practised hand would have occupied in writing the whole
+article--he counted words once more, and found there were still
+two hundred wanting. Two hundred more words to say about Italian
+organ-boys! Alas for the untrained human fancy! A master leader
+writer at the office of the 'Morning Intelligence' could have run
+on for ever on so fertile and suggestive a theme--a theme pregnant
+with unlimited openings for all the cheap commonplaces of abstract
+journalistic philanthropy; but poor Ernest, a 'prentice hand at the
+trade, had yet to learn the fluent trick of the accomplished news
+purveyor; he absolutely could not write without thinking about
+it. A third time he was obliged to recommit his manuscript, and a
+third time to count the words over. This time, oh joy, the reckoning
+came out as close as possible to the even fifteen hundred. Ernest
+gave a sigh of relief, and turned to read it all over again,
+as finally enlarged and amended, to the critical ears of admiring
+Edie.
+
+There was anecdote enough now, in all conscience, in the article;
+and allusions enough to stock a whole week's numbers of the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' Edie listened to the whole tirade with an air of
+the most severe and impartial criticism. When Ernest had finished,
+she rose up and kissed him. 'I'm sure it'll do, Ernest,' she said
+confidently. 'It's exactly like a real leader. It's quite beautiful--a
+great deal more beautiful, in fact, than anything else I ever read
+in a newspaper: it's good enough to print in a volume.'
+
+'I hope the editor'll think so,' Ernest answered, dubiously. 'If
+not, what a lot of valuable tenpenny foolscap wasted all for nothing!
+Now I must write it all out again clean, Edie, on fresh pieces.'
+
+Newspaper men, it must be candidly admitted, do not usually write
+their articles twice over; indeed, to judge by the result, it may
+be charitably believed that they do not even, as a rule, read them
+through when written, to correct their frequent accidental slips
+of logic or English; but Ernest wrote out his organ-boy leader in
+his most legible and roundest hand, copperplate fashion, with as
+much care and precision as if it were his first copy for presentation
+to the stern writing-master of a Draconian board school. 'Editors
+are more likely to read your manuscript if it's legible, I should
+think, Edie,' he said, looking up at her with more of hope in his
+face than had often been seen in it of late. 'I wonder, now, whether
+they prefer it sent in a long envelope, folded in three; or in a
+square envelope, folded twice over; or in a paper cover, open like
+a pamphlet. There must be some recognised professional way of doing
+it, and I should think one's more likely to get it taken if one
+sends it in the regular professional fashion, than if one makes
+it look too amateurish. I shall go in for the long envelope; at
+any rate, if not journalistic, it's at least official.'
+
+The editor of the 'Morning Intelligence' is an important personage
+in contemporary politics, and a man of more real weight in the
+world than half-a-dozen Members of Parliament for obscure country
+boroughs; but even that mighty man himself would probably have been
+a little surprised as well as amused (if he could have seen it) at
+the way in which Ernest and Edie Le Breton anxiously endeavoured
+to conciliate beforehand his merest possible personal fads and
+fancies. As a matter of fact, the question of the particular paper
+on which the article was written mattered to him absolutely less
+than nothing, inasmuch as he never looked at anything whatsoever
+until it had been set up in type for him to pass off-hand judgment
+upon its faults or its merits. His time was far too valuable to be
+lightly wasted on the task of deciphering crabbed manuscript.
+
+In the afternoon, Berkeley called to see whether Ernest had followed
+his suggestion, and was agreeably surprised to find a whole article
+already finished. He glanced through the neatly written pages, and
+was still more pleased to discover that Ernest, with an unsuspected
+outburst of practicality and practicability, had really hit upon
+a possible subject. 'This may do, Ernest,' he said with a sigh of
+relief. 'I dare say it will. I know Lancaster wants leader writers,
+and I think this is quite good enough to serve his turn. I've
+spoken to him about you: come round with me now--he'll be at the
+office by four o'clock--and we'll see what we can do for you. It's
+absolutely useless sending anything to the editor of a daily paper
+without an introduction. You might write with the pen of the angel
+Gabriel, or turn out leaders which were a judicious mean between
+Gladstone, Burke, and Herbert Spencer, and it would profit you
+nothing, for the simple reason that he hasn't got the time to read
+them. He would toss Junius and Montesquieu into the waste paper
+basket, and accept copy on the shocking murder in the Borough
+Road from one of his regular contributors instead. He can't help
+himself: and what you must do, Ernest, is to become one of the
+regular ring, and combine to keep Junius and Montesquieu permanently
+outside.'
+
+'The struggle for existence gives no quarter,' Ernest said sadly
+with half a sigh.
+
+'And takes none,' Berkeley answered quickly. 'So for your wife's
+sake you must try your best to fight your way through it on your
+own account, for yourself and your family.'
+
+The editor of the 'Morning Intelligence,' Mr. Hugh Lancaster, was
+a short, thick-set, hard-headed sort of man, with a kindly twinkle
+in his keen grey eyes, and a harassed smile playing continually
+around the corners of his firm and dose mouth. He looked as though
+he was naturally a good-humoured benevolent person, overdriven
+at the journalistic mill till half the life was worn out of him,
+leaving the benevolence as a wearied remnant, without energy
+enough to express itself in any other fashion than by the perpetual
+harassed smile. He saw Arthur Berkeley and Ernest Le Breton at once
+in his own sanctum, and took the manuscript from their hands with
+a languid air of perfect resignation. 'This is the friend you
+spoke of, is it, Berkeley?' he said in a wearied way. 'Well, well,
+we'll see what we can do for him.' At the same time he rang a tiny
+hand-bell. A boy, rather the worse for printer's ink, appeared at
+the summons. Mr. Lancaster handed him Ernest's careful manuscript
+unopened, with the laconic order, 'Press. Proof immediately.' The
+boy took it without a word. 'I'm very busy now,' Mr. Lancaster went
+on in the same wearied dispirited manner: 'come again in thirty-five
+minutes. Jones, show these gentlemen into a room somewhere.' And
+the editor fell back forthwith into his easy-chair and his original
+attitude of listless indifference. Berkeley and Ernest followed
+the boy into a bare back room, furnished only with a deal table and
+two chairs, and there anxiously awaited the result of the editor's
+critical examination.
+
+'Don't be afraid of Lancaster, Ernest,' Arthur said kindly. 'His
+manner's awfully cold, I know, but he means well, and I really
+believe he'd go out of his way, rather than not, to do a kindness
+for anybody he thought actually in want of occupation. With most
+men, that's an excellent reason for not employing you: with Lancaster
+I do truly think it's a genuine recommendation.'
+
+At the end of thirty-five minutes the grimy-faced office-boy
+returned with a friendly nod. 'Editor'll see you,' he said, with
+the Spartan brevity of the journalistic world--nobody connected
+with newspapers ever writes or speaks a single word unnecessarily,
+if he isn't going to be paid for it at so much per thousand--and
+Ernest followed him, trembling from head to foot, into Mr.
+Lancaster's private study.
+
+The great editor took up the steaming hot proof that had just been
+brought him, and glanced down it carelessly with a rapid scrutiny.
+Then he turned to Ernest, and said in a dreamy fashion, 'This will
+do. We'll print this to-morrow. You may send us a middle very
+occasionally. Come here at four o'clock, when a subject suggests
+itself to you, and speak to me about it. My time's very fully
+occupied. Good morning, Mr. Le Breton. Berkeley, stop a minute, I
+want to talk with you.'
+
+It was all done in a moment, and almost before Ernest knew what
+had happened he was out in the street again, with tears filling his
+eyes, and joy his heart, for here at last was bread, bread, bread,
+for Edie and the baby! He ran without stopping all the way back
+to Holloway, rushed headlong into the house and fell into Edie's
+arms, calling out wildly, 'He's taken it! He's taken it!' Edie
+kissed him half-a-dozen times over, and answered bravely, 'I knew
+he would, Ernest. It was such a splendid article.' And yet thousands
+of readers of the 'Morning Intelligence' next day skimmed lightly
+over the leader on organ-boys in their ordinary casual fashion,
+without even thinking what hopes and fears and doubts and terrors
+had gone to the making of that very commonplace bit of newspaper
+rhetoric. For if the truth must be told, Edie's first admiring
+criticism was perfectly correct, and Ernest Le Breton's leader was
+just for all the world exactly the same as anybody else's.
+
+Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stayed behind as requested in Mr.
+Lancaster's study, and waited to hear what Mr. Lancaster had to say
+to him. The editor looked up at him wearily from his chair, passed
+his bread hand slowly across his bewildered forehead, and then said
+the one word, 'Poor?'
+
+'Nothing on earth to do,' Berkeley answered.
+
+'He might make a journalist, perhaps,' the editor gaid, sleepily.
+'This social's up to the average. At any rate, I'll do my very best
+for him. But he can't live upon socials. We have too many social
+men already. What can he do? That's the question. It won't do to
+say he can write pretty nearly as well about anything that turns
+up as any other man in England can do. I can get a hundred young
+fellows in the Temple to do that, any day. The real question's this:
+is there anything he can write about a great deal better than all
+the other men in all England put together?'
+
+'Yes, there is,' Berkeley answered with commendable promptitude,
+undismayed by Mr. Lancaster's excessive requirements. 'He knows
+more about communists, socialists, and political exiles generally,
+than anybody else in the whole of London.'
+
+'Good,' the editor answered, brightening up, and speaking for
+a moment a little less languidly. 'That's good. There's this man
+Schurz, now, the German agitator. He's going to be tried soon for
+a seditious libel it seems, and he'll be sent to prison, naturally.
+Now, does your friend know anything at all of this fellow?'
+
+'He knows him personally and intimately,' Berkeley replied,
+delighted to find that the card which had proved so bad a one at
+Pilbury Regis was turning up trumps in the more Bohemian neighbourhood
+of the Temple and Fleet Street. 'He can give you any information
+you want about Schurz or any of the rest of those people. He
+has associated with them all familiarly for the last six or seven
+years.'
+
+'Then he takes an interest in politics,' said Mr. Lancaster, almost
+waking up now. 'That's good again. It's so very difficult to find
+young men nowadays, able to write, who take a genuine interest in
+politics. They all go off after literature and science and aesthetics,
+and other dry uninteresting subjects. Now, what does your average
+intelligent daily paper reader care, I should like to know, about
+literature and science and aesthetics and so forth? Well, he'll do,
+I've very little doubt: at any rate, I'll give him a trial. Perhaps
+he might be able to undertake this Great Widgerly disenfranchising
+case. Stop! he's poor, isn't he? I daresay he'd just as soon not
+wait for his money for this social. In the ordinary course, he
+wouldn't get paid till the end of the quarter; but I'll give you a
+cheque to take back to him now; perhaps he wants it. Poor fellow,
+poor fellow! he really looks very delicate. Depend upon it, Berkeley,
+I'll do anything on earth for him, if only he'll write tolerably.'
+
+'You're awfully good,' Arthur said, taking the proffered cheque
+gratefully. 'I'm sure the money will be of great use to him: and
+it's very kind indeed of you to have thought of it.'
+
+'Not at all, not at all,'the editor answered, collapsing dreamily.
+'Good morning, good morning.'
+
+At Mrs. Halliss's lodgings in Holloway, Edie was just saying to
+Ernest over their simple tea, 'I wonder what they'll give you for
+it, Ernest.' And Ernest had just answered, big with hope, 'Well,
+I should think it would be quite ten shillings, but I shouldn't
+be surprised, Edie, if it was as much as a pound;' when the door
+opened, and in walked Arthur Berkeley, with a cheque in his hand,
+which he laid by Edie's teacup. Edie took it up and gave a little
+cry of delight and astonishment. Ernest caught it from her hand in
+his eagerness, and gazed upon it with dazed and swimming vision.
+Did he read the words aright, and could it be really, 'Pay E. Le
+Breton, Esq., or order, three guineas'? Three guineas! Three guineas!
+Three real actual positive gold and silver guineas! It was almost
+too much for either of them to believe, and all for a single
+morning's light labour! What a perfect Eldorado of wealth and
+happiness seemed now to be opening out unexpectedly before them!
+
+So much Arthur Berkeley, his own eyes glistening too with a sympathetic
+moisture, saw and heard before he went away in a happier mood and
+left them to their own domestic congratulations. But he did not see
+or know the reaction that came in the dead of night, after all that
+day's unwonted excitement, to poor, sickening, weary, over-burdened
+Ernest. Even Edie never knew it all, for Ernest was careful to
+hide it as much as possible from her knowledge. But he knew himself,
+though he would not even light the candle to see it, that he had
+got those three glorious guineas--the guineas they had so delighted
+in--with something more than a morning's labour. He had had to pay
+for them, not figuratively but literally, with some of his very
+life-blood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+HARD PRESSED.
+
+
+A week or two later, while 'The Primate of Fiji' was still running
+vigorously at the Ambiguities Theatre, Arthur Berkeley's second
+opera, 'The Duke of Bermondsey; or, the Bold Buccaneers of the Isle
+of Dogs,' was brought out with vast success and immense exultation
+at the Marlborough. There is always a strong tendency to criticise
+a little severely the second work of a successful beginner: people
+like to assume a knowing air, and to murmur self-complacently that
+they felt sure from the beginning he couldn't keep up permanently
+to his first level. But in spite of that natural tendency of the
+unregenerate human mind, and in spite, too, of a marked political
+bias on the author's part, 'The Duke of Bermondsey' took the town
+by storm almost as completely as 'The Primate of Fiji' had done before
+it. Everybody said that though the principles of the piece were
+really quite atrocious, when one came to think of them seriously,
+yet the music and the dialogue were crisp and brisk enough to float
+any amount of social or economical heresy that that clever young
+man, Mr. Arthur Berkeley, might choose to put into one of his
+amusing and original operas.
+
+The social and economical heresies, of course, were partly due
+to Ernest Le Breton's insidious influence. At the same time that
+Berkeley was engaged in partially converting Ernest, Ernest was
+engaged in the counter process of partially converting Berkeley.
+To say the truth, the conversion was not a very difficult matter
+to effect; the neophyte had in him implicitly already the chief
+saving doctrines of the socialistic faith, or, if one must put it
+conversely, the germs of the disease were constitutionally implanted
+in his system, and only needed a little external encouragement
+to cring the poison out fully in the most virulent form of the
+complaint. The great point of 'The Duke of Bermondsey' consisted in
+the ridiculous contrast it exhibited between the wealth, dignity,
+and self-importance of the duke himself, and the squalid, miserable,
+shrinking poverty of the East-end purlieus from which he drew his
+enormous revenues. Ernest knew a little about the East-end from
+practical experience; he had gone there often with Ronald, on his
+rounds of mercy, and had seen with his own eyes those dens of misery
+which most people have only heard or read about. It was Ernest who
+had suggested this light satirical treatment of the great social
+problem, whose more serious side he himself had learnt to look
+at in Max Schurz's revolutionary salon; and it was to Ernest that
+Arthur Berkeley owed the first hint of that famous scene where the
+young Countess of Coalbrookdale converses familiarly on the natural
+beauties of healthful labour with the chorus of intelligent colliery
+hands, in the most realistic of grimy costumes, from her father's
+estates in Staffordshire. The stalls hardly knew whether to laugh
+or frown when the intelligent colliers respectfully invited the
+countess, in her best Ascot flounces and furbelows, to enjoy the
+lauded delights of healthful mine labour in propriâ personâ: but
+they quite recovered their good humour when the band of theatrical
+buccaneers, got up by the duke in Spanish costumes, with intent
+to deceive his lawless tenants in the East-end, came unexpectedly
+face to face with the genuine buccaneers of the Isle of Dogs,
+clothed in real costermonger caps and second-hand pilot-jackets
+of the marine-storedealers' fashionable pattern. It was all only
+the ridiculous incongruity of our actual society represented in the
+very faintest shades of caricature upon the stage; but it made the
+incongruities more incongruous still to see them crowded together
+so closely in a single concentrated tableau. Unthinking people
+laughed uproariously at the fun and nonsense of the piece; thinking
+people laughed too, but not without an uncomfortable side twinge of
+conscientious remorse at the pity of it all. Some wise heads even
+observed with a shrug that when this sort of thing was applauded
+upon the stage, the fine old institutions of England were getting
+into dangerous contact with these pernicious continental socialistic
+theories. And no doubt those good people were really wise in their
+generation. 'When Figaro came,' Arthur Berkeley said himself
+to Ernest, 'the French revolution wasn't many paces behind on the
+track of the ages.'
+
+'Better even than the Primate, Mr. Berkeley,' said Hilda Tregellis,
+as she met him in a London drawing-room a few days later. 'What
+a delightful scene, that of the Countess of Coalbrookdale! You're
+doing real good, I do believe, by making people think about
+these things more seriously, you know. As poor dear Mr. Le Breton
+would have said, you've got an ethical purpose--isn't that the
+word?--underlying even your comic operas. By the way, do you ever
+see the Le Bretons now? Poor souls, I hear they're doing very
+badly. The elder brother, Herbert Le Breton--horrid wretch!--he's
+here to-night; going to marry that pretty Miss Faucit, they say;
+daughter of old Mr. Faucit, the candle-maker--no, not candles,
+soap I think it is--but it doesn't matter twopence nowadays, does
+it? Well, as I was saying, you're doing a great deal of good
+with characters like this Countess of Coalbrookdale. We want more
+mixture of classes, don't we? more free intercourse between them;
+more familiarity of every sort. For my part, now, I should really
+very much like to know more of the inner life of the working classes.'
+'If only he'd ask me to go to lunch,' she thought, 'with his dear
+old father, the superannuated shoemaker! so very romantic, really!'
+
+But Arthur only smiled a sphinx-like smile, and answered lightly,
+'You would probably object to their treatment of you as much as the
+countess objected to the uupleasant griminess of the too-realistic
+coal galleries. Suppose you were to fall into the hands of a logical
+old radical workman, for example, who tore you to pieces, mentally
+speaking, with a shake or two of his big teeth, and calmly
+informed you that in his opinion you were nothing more than a very
+empty-headed, pretentious, ignorant young woman--perhaps even,
+after the plain-spoken vocabulary of hie kind, a regular downright
+minx and hussey?'
+
+'Charming,' Lady Hilda answered, with perfect candour; 'so very
+different from the senseless adulation of all the Hughs, and Guys,
+and Berties! What I do love in talking to clever men, Mr. Berkeley,
+is their delicious frankness and transparency. If they think one
+a fool, they tell one so plainly, or at least they let one see it
+without any reserve. Now that, you know, is really such a very
+delightful trait in clever people's characters!'
+
+'I don't know how you can have had the opportunity of judging, Lady
+Hilda,' Arthur answered, looking at her handsome open face with a
+momentary glance of passing admiration--Hilda Tregellis was improving
+visibly as she matured--'for no one can possibly ever have thought
+anything of the sort with you, I'm certain: and that I can say
+quite candidly, without the slightest tinge of flattery or adulation.'
+
+'What! YOU don't think me a fool, Mr. Berkeley,' cried Lady Hilda,
+delighted even with that very negative bit of favourable appreciation.
+'Now, that I call a real compliment, I assure you, because I know
+you clever people pitch your standard of intelligence so very,
+very high! You consider everybody fools, I'm sure, except the few
+people who are almost as clever as you yourselves are. However, to
+return to the countess: I do think there ought to be more mixture
+of classes in England, and somebody told me'--this was a violent
+effort to be literary on Hilda's part, by way of rising to the
+height of the occasion--'somebody told me that Mr. Matthew Arnold,
+who's so dreadfully satirical, and cultivated, and so forth,
+thinks exactly the same thing, you know. Why shouldn't the Countess
+of Coalbrookdale have really married the foreman of the colliers?
+I daresay she'd have been a great deal happier with a kind-hearted
+sensible man like him than with that lumbering, hunting,
+pheasant-shooting, horse-racing lout of a Lord Coalbrookdale, who
+would go to Norway on a fishing tour without her--now wouldn't
+she?'
+
+'Very probably,' Berkeley answered: 'but in these matters we don't
+regard happiness only,--that, you see, would be mere base, vulgar,
+commonplace utilitarianism:--we regard much more that grand
+impersonal overruling entity, that unseen code of social morals,
+which we commonly call the CONVENANCES. Proper people don't
+take happiness into consideration at all, comparatively: they act
+religiously after the fashion that the CONVENANCES impose upon
+them.'
+
+'Ah, but why, Mr. Berkeley,' Lady Hilda said, vehemently, 'why
+should the whole world always take it for granted that because
+a girl happens to be born the daughter of people whose name's in
+the peerage, she must necessarily be the slave of the proprieties,
+devoid of all higher or better instincts? Why should they take it
+for granted that she's destitute of any appreciation for any kind
+of greatness except the kind that's represented by a million and a
+quarter in the three per cents., or a great-great-grandfather who
+fought at the battle of Naseby? Why mayn't she have a spark of
+originality? Why mayn't she be as much attracted by literature,
+by science, by art, by... by... by beautiful music, as, say, the
+daughter of a lawyer, a doctor, or, or, or a country shopkeeper?
+What I want to know is just this, Mr. Berkeley: if people don't
+believe in distinctions of birth, why on earth should they suppose
+that Lady Mary, or Lady Betty, or Lady Winifred, must necessarily
+be more banale and vulgar-minded, and common-place than plain Miss
+Jones, or Miss Brown, or Miss Robinson? You admit that these other
+girls may possibly care for higher subjects: then why on earth
+shouldn't we, can you tell me?'
+
+'Certainly,' Arthur Berkeley answered, looking down into Lady
+Hilda's beautiful eyes after a dreamy fashion, 'certainly there's no
+inherent reason why one person shouldn't have just as high tastes
+by nature as another. Everything depends, I suppose, upon inherited
+qualities, variously mixed, and afterwards modified by society and
+education.--It's very hot here, to-night, Lady Hilda, isn't it?'
+
+'Very,' Lady Hilda echoed, taking his arm as she spoke. 'Shall we
+go into the conservatory?'
+
+'I was just going to propose it myself,' Berkeley said, with a faint
+tremor thrilling in his voice. She was a very beautiful woman,
+certainly, and her unfeigned appreciation of his plays and his
+music was undeniably very flattering to him.
+
+'Unless I bring him fairly to book this evening,' Hilda thought to
+herself as she swept with him gracefully into the conservatory, 'I
+shall have to fall back upon the red-haired hurlyburlying Scotch
+professor, after all--if I don't want to end by getting into the
+clutches of one of those horrid Monties or Algies!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+IRRECLAIMABLE.
+
+
+The occasional social articles for the 'Morning Intelligence' supplied
+Ernest with work enough for the time being to occupy part of his
+leisure, and income enough to keep the ship floating somehow, if
+not securely, at least in decent fair-weather fashion. His frequent
+trips with Ronald into the East-end gave him something comparatively
+fresh to write about, and though he was compelled to conceal his own
+sentiments upon many points, in order to conform to that impersonal
+conscience, 'the policy of the paper,' he was still able to deal
+with subjects that really interested him, and in which he fancied
+he might actually be doing a little good. A few days after he had
+taken seriously to the new occupation, good Mrs. Halliss made her
+appearance in the tiny sitting-room one morning, and with many
+apologies and much humming and hawing ventured to make a slight
+personal representation to wondering little Edie.
+
+'If you please, mum,' she said nervously, fumbling all the while with
+the corner of the table cloth she was folding on the breakfast-table,
+'if I might make so bold, mum, without offence, I should like to
+say as me an' John 'as been talkin' it hover, an' we think now as
+your good gentleman 'as so much writin' to do, at 'is littery work,
+mum, as I may make bold to call it, perhaps you wouldn't mind, so
+as not to disturb 'im with the blessed baby--not as that dear child
+couldn't never disturb nobody, bless 'er dear 'eart, the darling,
+not even when she's cryin', she's that sweet and gentle,--but we
+thought, mum, as littery gentlemen likes to 'ave the coast clear,
+in the manner of speakin', and perhaps you wouldn't mind bein' so
+good as to use the little front room upstairs, mum, for a sort o'
+nursery, as I may call it, for the dear baby. It was our bedroom,
+that was, where John an' me used to sleep; but we've been an'
+putt our things into the front hattic, mum, as is very nice and
+comfortable in every way, so as to make room for the dear baby. An'
+if you won't take it as a liberty, mum, me an' John 'ud be more'n
+glad if you'd kindly make use of that there room for a sort of
+occasional nursery for the dear baby.'
+
+Edie bit her lip hard in her momentary confusion. 'Oh, dear, Mrs.
+Halliss,' she said, almost crying at the kindly meant offer, 'I'm
+afraid we can't afford to have THREE rooms all for ourselves as
+things go at present. How much do you propose to charge us for the
+additional nursery?'
+
+'Charge you for it, mum,' Mrs. Halliss echoed, almost indignantly;
+'charge our lodgers for any little hextry accommodation like the
+small front room upstairs, mum--now, don't you go and say that to
+John, mum, I beg of you; for 'is temper's rather short at times,
+mum, thro' boin' asmatic and the rheumatiz, though you wouldn't
+think it to look at 'im, that you wouldn't; an' I'm reely afraid,
+mum, he might get angry if anybody was to holler 'im anythink for
+a little bit of hextry accommodation like that there. Lord bless
+your dear 'eart, mum, don't you say nothink more about that, I beg
+of you; for if John was to 'ear of it, he'd go off in a downright
+tearin' tantrum at the bare notion. An' about dinner, mum, you'll
+'ave the cold mutton an' potatoes, and a bit of biled beetroot; and
+I'll just run round to the greengrocer's this moment to order it
+for early dinner.' And before Edie had time to thank her, the good
+woman was out of tha room again, and down in the kitchen at her
+daily preparations, with tears trickling slowly down both her hard
+red cheeks in her own motherly fashion.
+
+So from that time forth, Ernest had the small sitting-room entirely
+to himself, whenever he was engaged in his literary labours, while
+Edie and Dot turned the front bedroom on the first floor into
+a neat and commodious nursery. As other work did not turn up so
+rapidly as might have been expected, and as Ernest grew tired after
+a while of writing magazine articles on 'The Great Social Problem,'
+which were invariably 'declined with thanks' so promptly as to lead
+to a well-founded suspicion that they had never even been opened by
+the editor, he determined to employ his spare time in the production
+of an important economical volume, a treatise on the ultimate ethics
+of a labouring community, to be entitled 'The Final Rule of Social
+Right Living.' This valuable economical work he continued to toil
+at for many months in the intervals of his other occupations; and
+when at last it was duly completed, he read it over at full length
+to dear little Edie, who considered it one of the most profoundly
+logical and convincing political treatises ever written. The various
+leading firms, however, to whom it was afterwards submitted with
+a view to publication, would appear, oddly enough, to have doubted
+its complete suitability to the tastes and demands of the reading
+public in the present century; for they invariably replied to Ernest's
+inquiries that they would be happy to undertake its production
+for the trilling sum of one hundred guineas, payable in advance;
+but that they did not see their way to accepting the risk and
+responsibility of floating so speculative a volume on their own
+account. In the end, the unhappy manuscript, after many refusals,
+was converted into cock-boats, hats, and paper dollies for little
+Dot; and its various intermediate reverses need enter no further
+into the main thread of this history. It kept Ernest busy in the
+spare hours of several months, and prevented him from thinking too
+much of his own immediate prospects, in his dreams for the golden
+future of humanity; and insomuch it did actually subserve some
+indirectly useful function; but on the other hand it wasted a
+considerable quantity of valuable tenpenny foolscap, and provided
+him after all with one more severe disappointment, to put on top of
+all the others to which he was just then being subjected. Clearly,
+the reading public took no paying interest in political economy; or
+if they did, then the article practically affected by the eternal
+laws of supply and demand was at least not the one meted out to
+them from the enthusiastic Schurzian pen of Ernest Le Breton.
+
+One afternoon, not long after Ernest and Edie had taken rooms at
+Mrs. Halliss's, they were somewhat surprised at receiving the honour
+of a casual visit from a very unexpected and unusual quarter. Ronald
+was with them, talking earnestly over the prospects of the situation,
+when a knock came at the door, and to their great astonishment
+the knock was quickly followed by the entrance of Herbert. He had
+never been there before, and Ernest felt sure he had come now for
+some very definite and sufficient purpose. And so he had indeed:
+it was a strange one for him; but Herbert Le Breton was actually
+bound upon a mission of charity. We have all of us our feelings,
+no doubt, and Herbert Le Breton, too, in his own fashion, had his.
+Ernest was after all a good fellow enough at bottom, and his own
+brother: (a man can't for very rospectability's sake let his own
+brother go utterly to the dogs if he can possibly help it); and so
+Herbert had made up his mind, much against his natural inclination,
+to warn Ernest of the danger he incurred in having anything more
+to do or say with this insane, disreputable old Schurz fellow. For
+his own part, he hated giving advice; people never took it; and that
+was a deadly offence against his amour propre and a gross insult to
+his personal dignity; but still, in this case, for Ernest's sake,
+he determined after an inward struggle to swallow his own private
+scruples, and make an effort to check his brother on the edge of
+the abyss. Not that he would come to the point at once; Herbert
+was a careful diplomatic agent, and he didn't spoil his hand
+by displaying all his cards too openly at the outset; he would
+begin upon comparatively indifferent subjects, and lead round the
+conversation gradually to the perils and errors of pure Schurzianism.
+So he set out by admiring his niece's fat arms--a remarkable stretch
+of kindliness on Herbert's part, for of course other people's babies
+are well known to be really the most uninteresting objects in the
+whole animate universe--and then he passed on by natural transitions
+to Ernest's housekeeping arrangements, and to the prospects of
+journalism as a trade, and finally to the necessity for a journalist
+to consult the tastes of his reading public. 'And by the way,
+Ernest,' he said quietly at last, 'of course after this row at
+Pilbury, you'll drop the acquaintance of your very problematical
+German socialist.'
+
+Edie started in surprise. 'What? Herr Schurz?' she said eagerly.
+'Dear simple, kindly old Herr Schurz! Oh no, Herbert, that I'm sure
+he won't; Ernest will never drop HIS acquaintance, whatever happens.'
+
+Herbert coughed drily. 'Then there are two of them for me to contend
+against,' he said to himself with an inward smile. 'I should really
+hardly have expected that, now. One would have said a priori
+that the sound common-sense and practical regard for the dominant
+feelings of society, which is so justly strong in most women,
+would have kept HER at any rate--with her own social disabilities,
+too--from aiding and abetting her husband in such a piece of
+egregious folly'--'I'm sorry to hear it, Mrs. Le Breton,' he went
+on aloud,--he never called her by her Christian name, and Edie was
+somehow rather pleased that he didn't: 'for you know Herr Schurz
+is far from being a desirable acquaintance. Quite apart from his
+own personal worth, of course--which is a question that I for my part
+am not called upon to decide--he's a snare and a stumbling-block
+in the eyes of society, and very likely indeed to injure Ernest's
+future prospects, as he has certainly injured his career in the
+past. You know he's going to be tried in a few weeks for a seditious
+libel and for inciting to murder the Emperor of Russia. Now, you
+will yourself admit, Mrs. Le Breton, that it's an awkward thing
+to be mixed up with people who are tried on a criminal charge for
+inciting to murder. Of course, we all allow that the Czar's a very
+despotic and autocratic sovereign, that his existence is an anomaly,
+and that the desire to blow him up is a very natural desire for
+every intelligent Russian to harbour privately in the solitude of
+his own bosom. If we were Russians ourselves, no doubt we'd try to
+blow him up too, if we could conveniently do so without detection.
+So much, every rational Englishman, who isn't blinded by prejudice
+or frightened by the mere sound of words, must at once frankly
+acknowledge. But unfortunately, you see, the mass of Englishmen
+ARE blinded by prejudice, and ARE frightened by the mere sound
+of words. To them, blowing up a Czar is murder (though of course
+blowing up any number of our own black people isn't); and inciting
+to blow up the Czar, or doing what seems to most Englishmen
+equivalent to such incitement, as for example, saying in print
+that the Czar's government isn't quite ideally perfect and ought
+gradually and tentatively to be abolished--why, that, I say,
+is a criminal offence, and is naturally punishable by a term of
+imprisonment. Now, is it worth while to mix oneself up with people
+like that, Ernest, when you can just as easily do without having
+anything on earth to say to them?'
+
+Edie's face burnt scarlet as she listened, but Ernest only answered
+more quietly--he never allowed anything that Herbert said to disturb
+his equanimity--'We don't think alike upon this subject, you know,
+Herbert; and I'm afraid the disagreement is fundamental. It doesn't
+matter so much to us what the world thinks as what is abstractly
+right; and Edie would prefer to cling to Herr Schurz, through good
+report and evil report, rather than to be applauded by your mass
+of Englishmen for having nothing to do with inciting to murder. We
+know that Herr Max never did anything of the kind; that he is the
+gentlest and best of men; and that in Russian affairs he has always
+been on the side of the more merciful methods, as against those
+who would have meted out to the Czar the harsher measure of pure
+justice.'
+
+'Well,' Herbert answered bravely, with a virtuous determination not
+to be angry at this open insult to his own opinion, but to persevere
+in his friendly efforts for his brother's sake, 'we won't take Herr
+Max into consideration at all, but will look merely at the general
+question. The fact is, Ernest, you've chosen the wrong side. The
+environment is too strong for you; and if you set yourself up against
+it, it'll crush you between the upper and the nether mill-stone.
+It isn't your business to reform the world; it's your business to
+live in it; and if you go on as you're doing now, it strikes me that
+you'll fail at the outset in that very necessary first particular.'
+
+'If I fail,' Ernest answered with a heavy heart, 'I can only die
+once; and after all every man can do no more than till to the best
+of his ability the niche in nature that he finds already cut out
+for him by circumstances.'
+
+'My dear Ernest,' Herbert continued quietly, twisting himself
+a cigarette with placid deliberateness, as a preliminary to his
+departure; 'your great mistake in life is that you WILL persist in
+considering the universe as a cosmos. Now the fact is, it isn't
+a cosmos; it's a chaos, and a very poor one at that.'
+
+'Ah, yes,' Ernest answered gravely; 'nobody recognises that fact
+more absolutely than I do; but surely it's the duty of man to try
+as far as in him lies to cosmise his own particular little corner
+of it.'
+
+'In the abstract, certainly: as a race, most distinctly so; but as
+individuals, why, the thing's clearly impossible. There was one
+man who once tried to do it, and his name was Don Quixote.'
+
+'There was another, I always thought,' Ernest replied more solemnly,
+'and after his name we've all been taught as children to call
+ourselves Christians. At bottom, my ideal is only the Christian
+ideal.'
+
+'But, my dear fellow, don't you see that the survival of the fittest
+must succeed in elbowing your ideal, for the present at least, out
+of existence? Look here, Ernest, you're going the wrong way to work
+altogether for your own happiness and comfort. It doesn't matter
+to me, of course; you can do as you like with yourself, and I oughtn't
+to interfere with you; but I do it because I'm your brother, and
+because I take a certain amount of interest in you accordingly.
+Now, I quite grant with you that the world's in a very unjust social
+condition at present. I'm not a fool, and I can't help seeing that
+wealth is very badly distributed, and that happiness is very unequally
+meted. But I don't feel called upon to make myself the martyr of
+the cause of readjustment for all that. If I were a working man,
+I should take up the side that you're taking up now; I should have
+everything to gain, and nothing to lose by it. But your mistake
+is just this, that when you might identify your own interests with
+the side of the "haves," as I do, you go out of your way to identify
+them with the side of the "have-nots," out of pure idealistic Utopian
+philanthropy. You belong by birth to the small and intrinsically
+weak minority of persons specially gifted by nature and by fortune;
+and why do you lay yourself out with all your might to hound on the
+mass of your inferiors till they trample down and destroy whatever
+gives any special importance, interest, or value to intellectual
+superiority, vigour of character, political knowledge, or even
+wealth? I can understand that the others should wish to do this;
+I can understand that they will inevitably do it in the long run;
+but why on earth do you, of all men, want to help them in pulling
+down a platform on which you yourself might, if you chose, stand
+well above their heads and shoulders?'
+
+'Because I feel the platform's an unjust one,' Ernest answered,
+warmly.
+
+'An excellent answer for them,' Herbert chimed in, in his coldest
+and calmest tone, 'but a very insufficient one for you. The injustice,
+if any, tells all in your own favour. As long as the mob doesn't
+rise up and tear the platform down (as it will one day), why on
+earth should you be more anxious about it than they are?'
+
+'Because, Herbert, if there must be injustice, I would rather suffer
+it than do it.'
+
+'Well, go your own way,' Herbert answered, with a calm smile
+of superior wisdom; 'go your own way and let it land you where it
+will. For my part, I back the environment. But it's no business
+of mine; I have done my best to warn you. Liberavi animam meam. You
+won't take my advice, and I must leave you to your own devices.'
+And with just a touch of the hand to Edie, and a careless nod to
+his two brothers, he sauntered out of the room without another
+word. 'As usual,' he thought to himself as he walked down the stairs,
+'I go out of my way to give good advice to a fellow-creature, and
+I get only the black ingratitude of a snubbing in return. This is
+really almost enough to make even me turn utterly and completely
+selfish!'
+
+'I wonder, Ernest,' said Ronald, looking up as Herbert shut the
+door gently behind him, 'how you and I ever came to have such a
+brother as Herbert!'
+
+'I think it's easy enough to understand, Ronald, on plain hereditary
+principles.'
+
+Ronald sighed. 'I see what you mean,' he said; 'it's poor mother's
+strain--the Whitaker strain--coming out in him.'
+
+'I often fancy, Ronald, I can see the same two strains in varying
+intensity, running through all three of us alike. In Herbert the
+Whitaker strain is uppermost, and the Le Breton comparatively in
+abeyance; in me, they're both more or less blended; in you, the
+Le Breton strain comes out almost unadulterated. Yet even Herbert
+has more of a Le Breton in him than one might imagine, for he's with
+us intellectually; it's the emotional side only that's wanting to
+him. Even when members of a family are externally very much unlike
+one another in the mere surface features of their characters,
+I believe you can generally see the family likeness underlying it
+for all that.'
+
+'Only you must know how to analyse the character to see it,' said
+Edie. 'I don't think it ever struck me before that there was anything
+in common between you and Herbert, Ernest, and yet now you point
+it out I believe there really is something after all. I'm sorry
+you told me, for I can't bear to think that you're like Herbert.'
+
+'Oh, no,' Ronald put in hastily; 'it isn't Ernest who has something
+in him like Herbert; it's Herbert who has something in him like
+Ernest. There's a great deal of difference between the one thing
+and the other. Besides, he hasn't got enough of it, Edie, and Ernest
+has.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+RONALD COMES OF AGE.
+
+
+'Strange,' Ronald Le Breton thought to himself, as he walked
+along the Embankment between Westminster and Waterloo, some weeks
+later--the day of Herr Max's trial,--'I had a sort of impulse
+to come down here alone this afternoon: I felt as if there was an
+unseen Hand somehow impelling me. Depend upon it, one doesn't have
+instincts of that sort utterly for nothing. The Finger that guides
+us guides us always aright for its own wise and unfathomable
+purposes. What a blessing and a comfort it is to feel that one's
+steps are continually directed from above, and that even an
+afternoon stroll through the great dreary town is appointed to us
+for some fit and sufficient reason! Look at that poor girl over
+there now, at the edge of the Embankment! I wonder what on earth
+she can have come here for. Why...how pale and excited she looks.
+What's she going so near the edge for? Gracious heavens! it can't
+be...yes...it is... no, no, but still it must be...that's what the
+Finger was guiding me here for this afternoon. There's no denying
+it. The poor creature's tempted to destroy herself. My instinct
+tells me so at once, and it never tells me wrong. Oh, Inscrutable
+Wisdom, help me, help me: give me light to act rightly! I must go
+up this very moment and speak to her!'
+
+The girl was walking moodily along the edge of the bank, and looking
+in a dreamy fashion over the parapet into the sullen fast-flowing
+brown water below. An eye less keen than Ronald's might have seen
+in a moment, from her harassed weary face and her quick glance
+to right and left after the disappearing policeman, that she was
+turning over in her own mind something more desperate than any
+common everyday venture. Ronald stepped up to her hastily, and,
+firm in his conviction that the Finger was guiding him aright,
+spoke out at once with boldness on the mere strength of his rapid
+instinctive conjecture.
+
+'Stop, stop,' he said, laying his hand gently on her shoulder: 'not
+for a moment, I beg of you, not for a moment. Not till you've at
+least told me what is your trouble.'
+
+Selah turned round sharply and looked up in his face with a vague
+feeling of indefinable wonder. 'What do you mean?' she asked, in
+a husky voice. 'Don't do what? How do you know I was going to do
+anything?'
+
+'You were going to throw yourself into the river,'Ronald answered
+confidently; 'or at least you were debating about it in your own
+soul. I know you were, because a sure Guide tells me so.'
+
+Selah's lip curled a little at the sound of that familiar language.
+'And suppose I was,' she replied, defiantly, in her reckless
+fashion; 'suppose I was: what's that to you or anybody, I should
+like to know? Are you your brother's keeper, as your own Bible puts
+it? Well, yes, then, perhaps I WAS going to drown myself: and if I
+choose, as soon as your back's turned, I shall go and do it still;
+so there; and that's all I have to say about it.'
+
+Ronald turned his face towards her with an expression of the
+intensest interest, but before he could put in a single word, Selah
+interrupted him.
+
+'I know what you're going to say,' she went on, looking up at him
+rebelliously. 'I know what you're going to say every bit as well
+as if you'd said it. You're one of these city missionary sort of
+people, you are; and you're going to tell me it's awfully wicked
+of me to try and destroy myself, and ain't I afraid of a terrible
+hereafter! Ugh! I hate and detest all that mummery.'
+
+Ronald looked down upon her in return with a sort of silent
+wondering pity. 'Awfully wicked,' he said slowly, 'awfully wicked!
+How meaningless! How incomprehensible! Awfully wicked to be
+friendless, or poor, or wretched, or unhappy! Awfully wicked to be
+driven by despair, or by heartlessness, to such a pitch of misery
+or frenzy that you want to fling yourself wildly into the river,
+only to be out of it all, anywhere, in a minute! Why you poor,
+unhappy girl, how on earth can you possibly help it?'
+
+There was something in the tone of his earnest voice that melted
+for a moment even Selah Briggs's pride and vehemence. It was very
+impertinent of him to try and interfere with her purely personal
+business, no doubt, but he seemed to do so in a genuinely
+kindly rather than in a fussy interfering spirit. At any rate he
+didn't begin by talking to her that horrid cant about the attempt
+to commit suicide being so extremely wicked! If he had done that,
+Selah would have felt it was not only an unwarrantable intrusion
+upon her liberty of action, but a grotesque insult to her natural
+intelligence as well.
+
+'I've a right to drown myself if I choose,' she faltered out,
+leaning faintly as she spoke against the parapet, 'and nobody else
+has any possible right to hinder or prevent me. If you people make
+laws against my rights in that matter, I shall set your laws aside
+whenever and wherever it happens to suit my personal convenience.'
+
+'Exactly so,' Ronald answered, in the same tone of gentle and
+acquiescent persuasion. 'I quite agree with you. It's as clear
+as daylight that every individual human being has a perfect right
+to put an end to his own life whenever it becomes irksome or
+unpleasant to him; and nobody else has any right whatever to interfere
+with him. The prohibitions that law puts upon our freedom in that
+respect are only of a piece with the other absurd restrictions of
+our existing unchristian legislation--as opposed to the spirit of
+the Word as the old rule that made us bury a suicide at four cross
+roads with a hideously barbarous and brutal ceremonial. They're
+all mere temporary survivals from a primitive paganism: the truth
+shall make us free. But though we mayn't rightly interfere, we may
+surely inquire in a brotherly spirit of interest, whether it isn't
+possible for us to make life less irksome for those who, unhappily,
+want to get rid of it. After all, the causes of our discontent are
+often quite removable. Tell me, at least, what yours are, and let
+me see whether I'm able to do anything towards removing them.'
+
+Selah hung back a little sullenly. This was a wonderful mixture of
+tongues that the strange young man was talking in! When he spoke
+about the right and wrong of suicide, ethically considered, it
+might have been Herbert Walters himself who was addressing her:
+when he glided off sideways to the truth and the Word, it might
+have been her Primitive Methodist friends at Hastings, in full
+meeting assembled. And, by the way, he reminded her strangely,
+somehow, of Herbert Walters! What manner of man could he be, she
+wondered, and what strange sort of new Gospel was this that he was
+preaching to her?
+
+'How do I know who you are?' she asked him, carelessly. 'How do
+I know what you want to know my story for? Perhaps you're only
+trying to get something out of me.'
+
+'Trust me,' Ronald said simply. 'By faith we live, you know. Only
+trust me.'
+
+Selah answered nothing.
+
+'Come over here to the bench by the garden,' Ronald went on earnestly.
+'We can talk there more at our leisure. I don't like to see you
+leaning so close to the parapet. It's a temptation; I know it's a
+temptation.'
+
+Seiah looked at him again inquiringly. She had never before met
+anybody so curious, she fancied. 'Aren't you afraid of being seen
+sitting with me like this,' she said, 'on the Embankment benches?
+Some of your fine friends might come by and wonder who on earth you
+had got here with you.' And, indeed, Selah's dress had grown vory
+shabby and poor-looking during a long and often fruitless search
+for casual work or employment in London.
+
+But Ronald only surveyed her gently from head to foot with a quiet
+smile, and answered softly, 'Oh, no; there's no reason on earth why
+we shouldn't sit down and talk together; and even if there were,
+my friends all know me far too well by this time to be surprised
+at anything I may do, when the Hand guides me. If you will only sit
+down and tell me your story, I should like to see whether I could
+possibly do anything to help you.'
+
+Selah let him lead her in his gentle half-womanly fashion to the
+bench, and sat down beside him mechanically. Still, she made no
+attempt to begin her pitiful story. Ronald suspected for a second
+some special cause for her embarrassment, and ventured to suggest
+a possible way out of it. 'Perhaps,' he said timidly, 'you would
+rather speak to some older and more fatherly man about it, or to
+some kind lady. If so, I have many good friends in London who would
+listen to you with as much interest and attention as I should.'
+
+The old spirit flared up in Selah for a second, as she answered
+quickly, 'No, no, sir, it's nothing of that sort. I can tell YOU
+as well as I can tell anybody. If I've been unfortunate, it's been
+through no fault of my own, thank goodness, but only through the
+hard-heartedness and unkindness of other people. I'd rather speak
+to you than to anyone else, because I feel somehow--why, I don't
+know--as if you had something or other really good in you.'
+
+'I beg your pardon,' Ronald said hastily, 'for even suggesting it
+but you see, I often have to meet a great many people who've been
+unhappy through a great many different causes, and that leads one
+occasionally for a time into mistaken inferences. Let me hear all
+your history, please, and I firmly believe, through the aid that
+never forsakes us, I shall be able to do something or other to help
+you in your difficulties.'
+
+Thus adjured, Selah began and told her whole unhappy history
+through, without pause or break, into Ronald's quietly sympathetic
+ear. She told him quite frankly and fully how she had picked up
+the acquaintance of a young Mr. Walters from Oxford at Hastings:
+how this Mr. Walters had led her to believe he would marry her:
+how she had left her home hurriedly, under the belief that he would
+be induced to keep his promise: how he had thrown her over to her
+own devices: and how she had ever since been trying to pick up a
+precarious livelihood for herself in stray ways as a sempstress,
+work for which she wag naturally very ill-fitted, and for which
+she had no introductions. She slurred over nothing on either side
+of the story; and especially she did not forget to describe the
+full measure of her troubles and trials from her Methodist friends
+at Hastings. Ronald shook his head sympathetically at this stage
+of the story. 'Ah, I know, I know,' he muttered, half under his
+breath; 'nasty pious people! Very well meaning, very devout, very
+earnest, one may be sure of it--but oh! what terrible soul-killing
+people to live among! I can understand all about it, for I've met
+them often--Sabbath-keeping folks; preaching and praying folks;
+worrying, bothering, fussy-religious folks: formalists, Pharisees,
+mint-anise and-cummin Christians: awfully anxious about your soul,
+and so forth, and doing their very best to make you as miserable
+all the time as a slave at the torture! I don't wonder you ran away
+from them.'
+
+'And I wasn't really going to drown myself, you know, when you
+spoke to me.' Selah said, quite apologetically. 'I was only just
+looking over into the beautiful brown water, and thinking how
+delicious it would be to fling oneself in there, and be carried
+off down to the sea, and rolled about for ever into pebbles on
+the shingle, and there would be an end of one altogether--oh, how
+lovely!'
+
+'Very natural,' Ronald answered calmly. 'Very natural. Of course
+it would. I've often thought the same thing myself. Still, one
+oughtn't, if possible, to give way to these impulses: one ought to
+do all that's in one's power to prevent such a miserable termination
+to one's divinely allotted existence. After all, it is His will,
+you see, that we should be happy.'
+
+When Selah had quite finished all her story, Ronald began drawing
+circles in the road with the end of his stick, and perpending
+within himself what had better be done about it, now that all was
+told him. 'No work,' he said, half to himself; 'no money; no food.
+Why, why, I suppose you must be hungry.'
+
+Selah nodded assent.
+
+'Will you allow me to offer you a little lunch?' he asked, hesitatingly,
+with something of Herbert's stately politeness. Even in this last
+extremity, Ronald felt instinctively what was due to Selah Briggs's
+natural sentiments of pride and delicacy. He must speak to her
+deferentially as if she were a lady, not give her alms as if she
+were a beggar.
+
+Then for the first time that day Selah burst suddenly into tears.
+'Oh, sir,' she said, sobbing, 'you are very kind to me.'
+
+Ronald waited a moment or two till her eyes were dry, and then took
+her across the gardens and into Gatti's. Any other man might have
+chosen some other place of entertainment under the circumstances,
+but Ronald, in his perfect simplicity of heart, looked only for
+the first shop where he could get Selah the food she needed. He
+ordered something hot hastily, and, when it came, though he had had
+his own lunch already, he played a little with a knife and fork
+himself for show's sake, in order not to seem as if he were merely
+looking on while Selah was eating. These little touches of feeling
+were not lost upon Selah: she noticed them at once, and recognised
+in what Ernest would have called her aboriginal unregenerate
+vocabulary that she was dealing with a true gentleman.
+
+'Walters,' Ronald said, pausing a second with a bit of chop poised
+lightly on the end of his fork; 'let me see--Walters. I don't know
+any man of that name, myself, but I've had two brothers at Oxford,
+and perhaps one of them could tell me who he is. Walters--Walters.
+You said your own name was Miss Briggs, I think, didn't you? My
+name's Ronald Le Breton.'
+
+'How curious,' Selah said, colouring up. 'I'm sure I remember Mr.
+Walters talking more than once to me about his brother Ronald.'
+
+'Indeed,' Ronald answered, without even a passing tinge of suspicion.
+That any man should give a false name to other people with intent
+to deceive was a thing that would never have entered into his simple
+head--far less that his own brother Herbert should be guilty of
+such a piece of disgraceful meanness.
+
+'I think,' Ronald went on, as soon as Selah had finished her lunch,
+'you'd better come with me back to my mother's house for the present.
+I suppose, now you've talked it over a little, you won't think of
+throwing yourself into the river any more for to-day. You'll postpone
+your intention for the present, won't you? Adjourn it sine die till
+we can see what can be done for you.'
+
+Selah smiled faintly. Even with the slight fresh spring of hope
+that this chance rencontre had roused anew within her, it seemed
+rather absurd and childish of her to have meditated suicide only
+an hour ago. Besides, she had eaten and drunk since then, and the
+profoundest philosophers have always frankly admitted that the
+pessimistic side of human nature is greatly mitigated after a good
+dinner.
+
+Ronald called a hansom, and drove up rapidly to Epsilon Terrace.
+When he got there, he took Selah into the little back breakfast
+room, regardless of the proprieties, and began once more to consider
+the prospects of the future.
+
+'Is Lady Le Breton in?' he asked the servant: and Selah noticed
+with surprise and wonder that this strange young man's mother was
+actually 'a lady of title,' as she called it to herself in her
+curious ordinary language.
+
+'No, sir,' the girl answered; 'she have been gone out about an
+hour.'
+
+'Then I must leave you here while I go out and get you lodgings for
+the present,' Ronald said, quietly; 'you won't object to my doing
+that, of course: you can easily pay me back from your salary as
+soon as we succeed in finding you some suitable occupation. Let
+me see, where can I put you for the next fortnight? Naturally you
+wouldn't like to live with religious people, would you?'
+
+'I hate them,' Selah answered vigorously.
+
+'Of course, of course,' Ronald went on, as if to himself. 'Perfectly
+natural. She hates them! So should I if I'd been bothered and worried
+out of my life by them in the way she has. I hate them myself--that
+kind: or, rather, it's wrong to say that of them, poor creatures,
+for they mean well, they really mean well at bottom, in their
+blundering, formal, pettifogging way. They think they can take the
+kingdom of Heaven, not by storm, but by petty compliances, like
+servile servants who have to deal with a capricious, exacting
+master. Poor souls, they know no better. They measure the universe
+by the reflection in their muddy mill-pond. Nasty pious people is
+what I always call them; nasty pious people: little narrow souls,
+trying hard to be Christians after their lights, and only attaining,
+after all, to a sort of second-hand diluted Judaism, a religion
+of cup-washing, and phylacteries, and new moons, and sabbaths, and
+daily sacrifices. However, that's neither here nor there. I won't
+hand you over, Miss Briggs, to any of those poor benighted people.
+No, nor to any religious people at all. It wouldn't suit you: you
+want to be well out of it. I know the very place for you. There
+are the Baumanns: they'd be glad to let a room: Baumann's a German
+refugee, and a friend of Ernest's: a good man, but a secularist.
+THEY wouldn't bother you with any religion: poor things, they
+haven't got any. Mrs. Baumann's an excellent woman--educated, too;
+no objection at all in any way to the Baumanns. They're people I
+like and respect immensely--every good quality they have; and I'm
+often grieved to think such excellent people should be deprived of
+the comfort and pleasure of believing. But, then, so's my dear brother
+Ernest; and you know, they're none the worse for it, apparently,
+any of them: indeed, I don't know that there's anybody with whom
+I can talk more sympathetically on spiritual matters than dear
+Ernest. Depend upon it, most of the most spiritually-minded people
+nowadays are outside all the churches altogether.'
+
+Selah listened in blank amazement to this singular avowal of
+heterodox opinion from an obviously religious person. What Ronald
+Le Breton could be she couldn't imagine; and she thought with
+an inward smile of the very different way in which her friends at
+Hastings would have discussed the spiritual character of a wicked
+secularist.
+
+Just at that moment a latch-key turned lightly in the street door,
+and two sets of footsteps came down the passage to Lady Le Breton's
+little back breakfast-room. One set turned up the staircase, the
+other halted for a second at the breakfast-room doorway. Then the
+door opened gently, and Herbert Le Breton and Selah Briggs stood
+face to face again in blank astonishment.
+
+There was a moment's pause, as Selah rose with burning cheeks from
+the chair where she was sitting; and neither spoke a word as they
+looked with eyes of mutual suspicion and dislike into each other's
+faces. At last Herbert Le Breton turned with some acerbity to his
+brother Ronald, and asked in a voice of affected contempt, 'Who is
+this woman?'
+
+'This LADY'S name is Miss Briggs,' Ronald answered, pointedly, but,
+of course, quite innocently.
+
+'I needn't ask you who this man is,' Selah said, with bitter
+emphasis. 'It's Herbert Walters.'
+
+A horrible light burst in upon Ronald instantaneously as she uttered
+the name; but he could not believe it; he would not believe it: it
+was too terrible, too incredible. 'No, no,' he said falteringly,
+turning to Selah; 'you must be mistaken. This is not Mr. Walters.
+This is my brother, Herbert Le Breton.'
+
+Selah gazed into Herbert's slinking eyes with a concentrated
+expression of scorn and disgust. 'Then he gave me a false name,'
+she said, slowly, fronting him like a tigress. 'He gave me a false
+name, it seems, from the very beginning. All through, the false
+wretch, all through, he actually meant to deceive me. He laid his
+vile scheme for it beforehand. I never wish to see you again,
+you miserable cur, Herbert Le Breton, if that's your real name at
+last. I never wish to see you again: but I'm glad I've done it now
+by accident, if it were only to inflict upon you the humiliation
+of knowing that I have measured the utmost depth of your infamy!
+You mean, common, false scoundrel, I have measured to the bottom
+the depth of your infamy!'
+
+'Oh, don't,' Ronald said imploringly, laying his hand upon her arm.
+'He deserves it, no doubt; but don't glory over his humiliation.'
+He had no need to ask whether she spoke the truth; his brother's
+livid and scarlet face was evidence enough against him.
+
+Herbert, however, answered nothing. He merely turned angrily
+to Ronald. 'I won't bandy words,' he said constrainedly in his
+coldest tone, 'with this infamous woman whom you have brought here
+on purpose to insult me; but I must request you to ask her to leave
+the house immediately. Your mother's home is no place to which to
+bring people of such a character.'
+
+As he spoke, the door opened again, and Lady Le Breton, attracted
+by the sound of angry voices, entered unexpectedly. 'What does all
+this riot mean, Herbert?' she asked, imperiously. 'Who on earth
+is this young woman that Ronald has brought into my own house,
+actually without my permission?'
+
+Herbert whispered a few words quietly into her ear, and then left
+the room hurriedly with a stiff and formal bow to his brother
+Ronald. Lady Le Breton turned round to the culprit severely.
+
+'Disgraceful, Ronald!' she cried in her sternest and most angry
+voice; 'perfectly disgraceful! You aid and abet this wretched
+creature--whose object is only to extort money by false pretences
+out of your brother Herbert--you aid and abet her in her abominable
+stratagems, and you even venture to introduce her clandestinely
+into my own breakfast-room. I wonder you're not ashamed of yourself.
+What on earth can you mean by such extraordinary, such unChristian
+conduct? Go to your own room this moment, sir, and ask this young
+woman to leave the house immediately.'
+
+'I shall go without being asked,' Selah said, proudly, her big eyes
+flashing defiance haughtily into Lady Le Breton's. 'I don't know
+who you all may be, or what this gentleman who brought me here may
+have to do with you: but if you are in any way connected with that
+wretch Herbert Le Breton, who called himself Herbert Walters for
+the sake of deceiving me, I don't want to have anything further to
+say to any of the whole pack of you. Please stand out of my way,'
+she went on to Ronald, 'and I shall have done with you all together
+this very instant. I wish to God I had never seen a single one of
+you.'
+
+'No, no, not just yet, please,' Ronald put in hastily. 'You mustn't
+go just yet, I implore you, I beg of you, till I have explained to
+my mother, before you, how this all happened; and then, when you
+go, I shall go with you. Though I have the misfortune to be the
+brother of the man who gave you a false name in order to deceive
+you, I trust you will still allow me to help you as far as I am
+able, and to take you to my German friends of whom I spoke to you.'
+
+'Ronald,' Lady Le Breton cried, in her most commanding tone, 'you
+must have taken leave of your senses. How dare you keep this person
+a moment longer in my house against my wish, when even she herself
+is anxious to quit it? Let her go at once, let her go at once,
+sir.'
+
+'No, mother,' Ronald answered firmly. 'We are commanded in the Word
+to obey our parents in all things, "in the Lord." I think you've
+forgotten that proviso, mother, "in the Lord." Now, mother, I will
+tell you all about it.' And then, in a rapid sketch, Ronald, with
+his back planted solidly against the door, told his mother briefly
+all he knew about Selah Briggs, how he had found her, how he had
+brought her home not knowing who she was, and how she had recognised
+Herbert as her unfaithful lover. Lady Le Breton, when she saw
+that escape was practically impossible, flung herself back in an
+easy-chair, where she swayed herself backward and forward gently
+all the while, without once lifting her eyes towards Ronald, and
+sighed impatiently from time to time audibly, as if the story merely
+bored her. As for poor Selah, she stood upright in front of Ronald
+without a word, looking neither to the right nor to the left, and
+waiting eagerly for the story to be finished.
+
+When Ronald had said his say, Lady Le Breton looked up at last and
+said simply, with a pretended yawn, 'Now, Ronald, will you go to
+your own room?'
+
+'I will not,' Ronald answered, in a soft whisper. 'I will go with
+this lady to the rooms of which I have spoken to her.'
+
+'Then,' Lady Le Breton said coldly, 'you shall not return here.
+It seems I'm to lose all my children, one after another, by their
+extraordinary rebelliousness!'
+
+'By your own act--yes,' Ronald answered, very calmly. 'You
+forgot that last Thursday was my birthday, I daresay, mother; but
+I didn't forget it; it was; and I came of age then. I'm my own
+master now. I've stopped here as long as I could, mother, because
+of the commandment: but I can't stop here any longer. I shall go
+to Ernest's for to-night as soon as I've got rooms for this lady.'
+
+'Good evening,' Lady Le Breton said, bowing frigidly, without
+another word.
+
+'Good evening, mother,' Ronald replied, in his natural voice. 'Miss
+Briggs, will you come with me? I'm very sorry that this unhappy
+scene should have been inflicted upon you against my will; but I
+hope and pray that you won't have lost all confidence in my wish
+to help you, in spite of these unfortunate accidents.'
+
+Selah followed him blindly, in a dazzled fashion, out on to the
+flagstones of Epsilon Terrace.
+
+'Dear me, dear me,' moaned Lady Le Breton, sinking back vacantly
+once more, with an air of resignation after her efforts, into the
+easy-chair: 'was there ever a mother so plagued and burdened with
+unnatural and undutiful sons as I am? If it weren't for dear Herbert,
+I'm sure I don't know what I should ever do between them. Ronald,
+too, who always pretended to be so very, very religious! To think
+that he should go and uphold the word of a miserable, abandoned,
+improper adventuress against his own brother Herbert! Atrocious,
+perfectly atrocious! Where on earth he can have picked up such a
+woman I'm positively at a loss to imagine. But it's exactly like
+his poor dear father: I remember once when we were stationed at
+Moozuffernugger, in the North-West Provinces, with the 14th Bengal,
+poor Owen absolutely insisted on taking up the case of some Eurasian
+waman, who pretended she'd been badly treated by young Walker of
+our regiment! I call it quite improper--almost unseemly--to meddle
+in the affairs of such people. I daresay Herbert has had something
+or other to say to this horrid girl; young men will be young men,
+and in the army we know how to make allowances for that sort of
+thing: but that Ronald should positively think of bringing such a
+person into my breakfast-room is not to be heard of. Ronald's a pure
+Le Breton--that's undeniable, thank goodness; not a single one of
+the good Whitaker points to be found in all his nature. However,
+poor dear Sir Owen, in spite of all his nonsense, was at least
+an officer and a gentleman; whereas the nonsense these boys have
+picked up at Oxford and among their German refugee people is both
+irreligious, and, I may even say, indecent, or, to put it in the
+mildest way, indecorous. I wish with all my heart I'd never sent
+them to Oxford. I've always thought that if only Ernest had gone
+in for a direct commission, he'd soon have got all that absurd
+revolutionary rubbish knocked out of him in a mess-room! But it's
+a great comfort to me to think I have one real blessing in dear
+Herbert, who's just such a son as any mother might well be thoroughly
+proud of in every way!'
+
+While Lady Le Breton was thus communing with herself in the
+breakfast-room, and while Herbert was trying to patch up a hollow
+truce with his own much-bruised self-respect in his own bedroom,
+Ronald was taking poor dazed and wearied Selah round to the refuge
+of the Baumanns' hospitable roof. As soon as that matter was
+temporarily arranged to the mutual satisfaction of all the parties
+concerned, Ronald walked over alone to Ernest's little lodgings at
+Holloway. He would sleep there that night, and send round a letter
+to Amelia, the housemaid, in the morning, asking her to pack up his
+things and forward them at once to Mrs. Halliss's. For himself,
+he did not propose, unless circumstances compelled it, again to
+enter his mother's rooms, except by her own express invitation.
+After all, he thought, even his little income, if clubbed with Edie
+and Ernest's, would probably help them all to live now in tolerable
+comfort.
+
+So he told Edie all his story, and Edie listened to it with an
+approving smile. 'I think, dear Ronald,' she said, taking his hand
+in hers, 'you did quite right--quite as Ernest himself would have
+done under the circumstances.'
+
+'Where's Ernest?' asked Ronald, half smiling at that naive wifely
+standard of right conduct.
+
+'Gone with Mr. Berkeley to the trial,' Edie answered.
+
+'The trial! What trial?'
+
+'Oh, don't you know? Herr Max's. They're trying him to-day for
+littering a seditious libel and inciting to murder the chief of
+the Third Section at St. Petersburg.'
+
+'But he said nothing at all,' Ronald cried in astonishment. 'I read
+the article myself. He said nothing that any Englishman mightn't
+have said under the same circumstances. Why, I could have written
+the libel, as they call it, myself, even, and I'm not much of a
+politician either! They can't ever be trying him in a country like
+England for anything so ridiculously little as that!'
+
+'But they are,' Edie answered quietly; 'and dear Ernest's dreadfully
+afraid the verdict will go against him.'
+
+'Nonsense,' Ronald answered with natural confidence. 'No English
+jury would ever convict a man for speaking up like that against
+an odious and abominable tyranny.'
+
+Very late in the afternoon, Ernest and Berkeley returned to the
+lodgings. Ernest's face was white with excitement, and his lips
+were trembling violently with suppressed emotion. His eyes were red
+and swollen. Edie hardly needed to ask in a breathless whisper of
+Arthur Berkeley, 'What verdict?'
+
+'Guilty,' Arthur Berkeley answered with a look of unfeigned horror
+and indignation. He had learnt by this time quite to take the
+communistic view of such questions.
+
+'Guilty,' Ronald cried, jumping up from his chair in astonishment.
+'Impossible! And what sentence?'
+
+'Twelve months' hard labour,' Berkeley answered, slowly and
+remorsefully.
+
+'An atrocious sentence!' Ronald exclaimed, turning red with excitement.
+'An abominable sentence! A most malignant and vindictive sentence!
+Who was the judge, Arthur?'
+
+'Bassenthwaite,' Berkeley replied half under his breath.
+
+'And may the Lord have mercy upon his soul!' said Ronald solemnly,
+
+But Ernest never said a single word. He only sat down and ate his
+supper in silence, like one stunned and dazzled. He didn't even
+notice Ronald's coming. And Edie knew by his quick breath and his
+face alternately flushed and pallid that there would be another
+crisis in his gathering complaint before the next morning.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+TELL IT NOT IN OATH.
+
+
+As they sat silent in that little sitting-room after supper, a double
+knock at the door suddenly announced the arrival of a telegram
+for Ernest. He opened it with trembling lingers. It was from
+Lancaster:--'Come down to the office at once. Schurz has been
+sentenced to a year's imprisonment, and we want a leader about
+him for to-morrow.' The telegram roused Ernest at once from his
+stupefied lethargy. Here was a chance at last of doing something
+for Max Schurz and for the cause of freedom! Here was a chance
+of waking up all England to a sense of the horrible crime it had
+just committed through the voice of its duly accredited judicial
+mouthpiece! The country was trembling on the brink of an abyss, and
+he, Ernest Le Breton, might just be in time to save it. The Home
+Secretary must be compelled by the unanimous clamour of thirty
+millions of free working people to redress the gross injustice of
+the law in sending Max Sohurz, the greatest, noblest, and purest-minded
+of mankind, to a common felon's prison! Nothing else on earth could
+have moved Ernest, jaded and dispirited as he was at that moment,
+to the painful exertion of writing a newspaper leader after the
+day's fatigues and excitements, except the thought that by doing so
+he might not only blot out this national disgrace, as he considered
+it, but might also help to release the martyr of the people's rights
+from his incredible, unspeakable punishment. Flushed and feverish
+though he was, he rose straight up from the table, handed the
+telegram to Edie without a word, and started off alone to hail a
+hansom cab and drive down immediately to the office. Arthur Berkeley,
+fearful of what might happen to him in his present excited state,
+stole out after him quietly, and followed him unperceived in another
+hansom at a little distance.
+
+When Ernest got to the 'Morning Intelligence' buildings, he was
+shown up at once into the editorial room. He expected to find Mr.
+Lancaster at the same white heat of indignation as himself; but
+to his immense surprise he actually found him in the usual sleepy
+languid condition of apathetic impartiality. 'I wired for you, Le
+Breton,' the impassive editor said calmly, 'because I understand
+you know all about this man Schurz, who has just got his twelve
+months' imprisonment this evening. I suppose, of course, you've
+heard already all about it.'
+
+'I've been at the trial all day,' Ernest answered, 'and myself
+heard the verdict and sentence.'
+
+'Good,' Mr. Lancaster said, with a dreamy touch of approval in his
+tone. 'That's good journalism, certainly, and very smart of you.
+Helps you to give local colour and realistic touches to the matter.
+But you ought to have called in here to see me immediately. We
+shall have a regular reporter's report of the trial, of course;
+but reporters' reports are fearfully and wonderfully lifeless. If
+you like, besides the leader, you might work up a striking headed
+article on the Scene in Court. This is an important case, and we
+want something more about it than mere writing, you know; a little
+about the man himself and his personal history, which Berkeley tells
+me you're well acquainted with. He's written something called "Gold
+and the Proletariate," or whatever it is; just tell our readers
+all about it. As to the leader, say what you like in it--of course
+I shall look over the proof, and tone it down a bit to suit the
+taste of our public--we appeal mainly to the mercantile middle class,
+I need hardly say; but you know the general policy of the paper,
+and you can just write what you think best, subject to subsequent
+editorial revision. Get to work at once, please, as the articles
+are wanted immediately, and send down slips as fast as they're
+written to the printers.'
+
+Ernest could hardly contain his surprise at Mr. Lancaster's calmness
+under such unheard-of circumstances, when the whole laborious
+fabric of British liberties was tottering visibly to its base--but
+he wisely concluded to himself that the editor had to see articles
+written about every possible subject every evening--from a European
+convulsion to a fire at a theatre,--and that use must have made
+it in him a property of easiness. When a man's obliged to work
+himself up perpetually into a state of artificial excitement about
+every railway accident, explosion, shipwreck, earthquake, or volcanic
+eruption, in Europe, Asia, Africa, America, and the islands of the
+Pacific Ocean, why then, Ernest charitably said to himself, his
+sympathies must naturally end by getting a trifle callous, especially
+when he's such a very apathetic person to start with as this laconic
+editorial Lancaster. So he turned into the little bare box devoted
+to his temporary use, and began writing with perfectly unexampled
+and extraordinary rapidity at his leader and his article about the
+injured and martyred apostle of the slighted communistic religion.
+
+It was only a few months since Ernest had, with vast toil and
+forethought, spun slowly out his maiden newspaper article on the
+Italian organ-boy, and now he found himself, to his own immense
+surprise, covering sheet after sheet of paper in feverish haste
+with a long account of Max Schurz's splendid life and labours, and
+with a really fervid and eloquent appeal to the English people not
+to suffer such a man as he to go helplessly and hopelessly to an
+English prison, at the bare bidding of a foreign despot. He never
+stopped for one moment to take thought, or to correct what he had
+written; in the excitement of the moment his pen travelled along
+over the paper as if inspired, and he found the words and thoughts
+thronging his brain almost faster than his lagging hand could
+suffice to give them visible embodiment. As each page was thrown
+off hurriedly, he sent it down, still pale and wet, to the printers
+in the office; and before two o'clock in the morning, he had full
+proofs of all he had written sent up to him for final correction. It
+was a stirring and vigorous leader, he felt quite certain himself
+as he read it over; and he thought with a swelling breast that
+it would appear next day, with all the impersonal authority of
+the 'Morning Intelligence' stamped upon its face, at ten thousand
+English breakfast tables, where it might rouse the people in their
+millions to protest sternly before it was too late against this
+horrid violation of our cherished and boasted national hospitality.
+
+Meanwhile, Arthur Berkeley had stopped at the office, and run in
+hastily for five minutes' talk with the terrible editor. 'Don't
+say anything to shock Le Breton, I beg of you, Lancaster,' he said,
+'about this poor man Schurz who has just been sent for a year to
+prison. It's a very hard case, and I'm awfully sorry for the man
+myself, though that's neither here nor there. I can see from your
+face that you, for your part, don't sympathise with him; but at
+any rate, don't say anything about it to hurt Le Breton's feelings.
+He's in a dreadfully feverish and excited condition this evening;
+Max Schurz has always been to him almost like a father, and he
+naturally takes his sentence very bitterly to heart. To tell you
+the truth, I regret it a great deal myself, I know a little of
+Schurz, through Le Breton, and I know what a well-meaning, ardent,
+enthusiastic person he really is, and how much good actually
+underlies all his chaotic socialistic notions. But at any rate, I
+do beg of you, don't say anything to further excite and hurt poor
+Le Breton.'
+
+'Certainly not,' the editor answered, smoothing his large hands
+softly one over the other. 'Certainly not; though I confess, as a
+practical man, I don't sympathise in the least with this preposterous
+German refugee fellow. So far as I can learn, he's been at the
+bottom of half the revolutionary and insurrectionary movements of
+the last twenty years--a regular out-and-out professional socialistic
+incendiary.'
+
+'You wouldn't say so,' Berkeley replied quietly, 'if you'd seen
+more of him, Lancaster.' But being a man of the world, and having
+come mainly on Ernest's account, he didn't care to press the abstract
+question of Herr Max's political sincerity any further.
+
+'Well,' the editor went on, a little testily, 'be that as it may, I
+won't discuss the subject with your friend Le Breton, who's really
+a nice, enthusiastic young fellow, I think, as far as I've seen
+him. I'll simply let him write to-night whatever he pleases, and
+make the necessary alterations in proof afterwards, without talking
+it over with him personally at all. That'll avoid any needless
+discussion and ruffling of his supersensitive communistic feelings.
+Poor fellow, he looks very ill indeed to-night. I'm really extremely
+sorry for him.'
+
+'When will he be finished?' asked Arthur.
+
+'At two,' the editor answered.
+
+'I'll send a cab for him,' Arthur said; 'there'll be none about
+at that hour, probably. Will you kindly tell him it's waiting for
+him?'
+
+At two o'clock or a little after, Ernest drove home with his heart
+on fire, full of eagerness and swelling hope for to-morrow morning.
+He found Edie waiting for him, late as it was, with a little bottle
+of wine--an unknown luxury at Mrs. Halliss's lodgings--and such
+light supper as she thought he could manage to swallow in his
+excitement. Ernest drank a glass of the wine, but left the supper
+untasted. Then he went to bed, and tossed about uneasily till
+morning. He couldn't sleep through his anxiety to see his great
+leader appear in all the added dignity of printer's ink and rouse
+the slumbering world of England up to a due sense of Max Schurz's
+wrongs and the law's incomprehensible iniquity.
+
+Before seven, he rose very quietly, dressed himself without
+saying a word, and stole out to buy an early copy of the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' He got one at the small tobacconist's shop round the
+corner, where he had taken his first hint for the Italian organ-boy
+leader. It was with difficulty that he could contain himself till
+he was back in Mrs. Halliss's little front parlour; and there
+he tore open the paper eagerly, and turned to the well-remembered
+words at the beginning of his desperate appealing article. He could
+recollect the very run of every clause and word he had written: 'No
+Englishman can read without a thrill of righteous indignation,' it
+began,'the sentence passed last night upon Max Schurz, the author
+of that remarkable economical work, "Gold and the Proletariate."
+Herr Schurz is one of those numerous refugees from German despotism
+who have taken advantage of the hospitable welcome usually afforded
+by England to the oppressed of all creeds or nations'--and so forth,
+and so forth. Where was it now? Yes, that was it, in the place of
+honour, of course--the first leader under the clock in the 'Morning
+Intelligence.' His eye caught at once the opening key-words, 'No
+Englishman.' Sinking down into the easy-chair by the flowers in the
+window he prepared to run it through at his leisure with breathless
+anxiety.
+
+'No Englishman can read without a feeling of the highest approval
+the sentence passed last night upon Max Schurz, the author of that
+misguided economical work, "Gold and the Proletariate." Herr Schurz
+is one of those numerous refugees from German authority, who have
+taken advantage of the hospitable welcome usually afforded by England
+to the oppressed of all creeds or nations, in order to hatch plots
+in security against the peace of sovereigns or governments with
+which we desire always to maintain the most amicable and cordial
+relations.' Ernest's eyes seemed to fail him. The type on the paper
+swam wildly before his bewildered vision. What on earth could
+this mean? It was his own leader, indeed, with the very rhythm and
+cadence of the sentences accurately preserved, but with all the
+adjectives and epithets so ingeniously altered that it was turned
+into a crushing condemnation of Max Schurz, his principles,
+his conduct, and his ethical theories. From beginning to end, the
+article appealed to the common-sense of intelligent Englishmen to
+admire the dignity of the law in thus vindicating itself against
+the atrocious schemes of a dangerous and ungrateful political exile
+who had abused the hospitality of a great fres country to concoct
+vile plots against the persons of friendly sovereigns and innocent
+ministers on the European continent.
+
+Ernest laid down the paper dreamily, and leant back for a moment
+in his chair, to let his brain recover a little from the reeling
+dizziness of that crushing disappointment. Then he turned in a
+giddy mechanical fashion to the headed article on the fourth page.
+There the self-same style of treatment met once more his astonished
+gaze. All the minute facts as to Max Schurz's history and personality
+were carefully preserved; the description of his simple artisan
+life, his modest household, his Sunday evening receptions, his great
+following of earnest and enthusiastic refugees--every word of all
+this, which hardly anyone else could have equally well supplied,
+was retained intact in the published copy; yet the whole spirit
+of the thing had utterly evaporated, or rather had been perverted
+into the exact opposite unsympathetic channel. Where Ernest had
+written 'enthusiasm,' Lancaster had simply altered the word to
+'fanaticism;' where Ernest had spoken of Herr Max's 'single-hearted
+devotion,' Lancaster had merely changed the phrase into 'undisguised
+revolutionary ardour.' The whole paper was one long sermon against
+Max Schurz's Utopian schemes, imputing to him not only folly but
+even positive criminality as well. We all know how we all in England
+look upon the foreign political refugee--a man to be hit again with
+impunity, because he has no friends; but to Ernest, who had lived
+so long in his own little socialistic set, the discovery that people
+could openly say such things against his chosen apostle at the very
+moment of his martyrdom, was a hideous and blinding disillusionment.
+He put the paper down upon the table once more, and buried his face
+helplessly between his burning hands.
+
+The worst of it all was this: if Herr Max ever saw those articles
+he would naturally conclude that Ernest had been guilty of the
+basest treachery, and that too on the very day when he most needed
+the aid and sympathy of all his followers. With a thrill of horror
+he thought in his own soul that the great leader might suspect him
+for an hour of being the venal Judas of the little sect.
+
+How Ernest ever got through that weary day he did not know himself;
+nothing kept him up through it except his burning indignation
+against Lancaster's abominable conduct. About eleven o'clock,
+Arthur Berkeley called in to see him. 'I'm afraid you've been a
+little disappointed,' he said, 'about the turn Lancaster has given
+to your two articles. He told me he meant to alter the tone so
+as to suit the policy of the paper, and I see he's done so very
+thoroughly. You can't look for much sympathy from commonplace,
+cold, calculating Englishmen for enthusiastic natures like Herr
+Max's.'
+
+Ernest turned to him in blank amazement. He had expected Berkeley
+to be as angry as himself at Lancaster's shameful mutilation of his
+appealing leader; and he found now that even Berkeley accepted it
+as an ordinary incident in the course of journalistic business. His
+heart sank within him as he thought how little hope there could be
+of Herr Max's liberation, when even his own familiar friend Berkeley
+looked upon the matter in such a casual careless fashion.
+
+'I shall never write another word for the "Morning Intelligence,"'
+he cried vehemently, after a moment's pause. 'If we starve for
+it, I shall never write another word in that wicked, abominable,
+dishonourable paper. I can die easily enough, heaven knows, without
+a murmur: but I can't be disloyal to dear Herr Max, and to all my
+innate ingrained principles.'
+
+'Don't say that, Ernest,' Berkeley answered gently. 'Think of
+Mrs. Le Breton and the baby. The luxury of starvation for the sake
+of a cause is one you might venture to allow yourself if you were
+alone in the world as I am, but not one which you ought to force
+unwillingly upon your wife and children. You've been getting a
+trifle more practical of late under the spur of necessity; don't go
+and turn impossible again at the supreme moment. Whatever happens,
+it's your plain duty to go on writing for the "Morning Intelligence."
+You say with your own hand only what you think and believe yourself:
+the editor alone is responsible for the final policy of the paper.'
+
+Ernest only muttered slowly to himself,--'Never, never, never!'
+
+Still, though the first attempt had failed, Ernest did not wholly
+give up his hopes of doing something towards the release of Herr Max
+from that unutterable imprisonment. He drew up a form of petition
+to the Home Secretary, in which he pointed out the reasons for
+setting aside the course of the law in the case of this particular
+political prisoner. With feverish anxiety he ran about London
+for the next two days, trying to get influential signatures to his
+petition, and to rouse the people in their millions to demand the
+release of the popular martyr. Alas for the stolid indifference of
+the British public! The people in their millions sat down to eat
+and drink, and rose up to play, exactly as if nothing unusual in
+any way had happened. Most of them had never heard at all of Herr
+Max, or of 'Gold and the Proletariate,' and those who had heard
+understood for the most part that he was a bad lot who was imprisoned
+for trying nefariously to blow up the Emperor of Rooshia. Crowds
+of people nightly besieged the doors of the Ambiguities and the
+Marlborough, to hear the fate of 'The Primate of Fiji' and 'The Duke
+of Bermondsey;' but very few among the millions took the trouble to
+sign their names to Ernest Le Breton's despairing petition. Even
+the advanced radicals of the market-place, the men who figured
+largely at Trafalgar Square meetings and Agricultural Labourers'
+Unions, feared to damage their reputation for moderation and sobriety
+by getting themselves mixed up with a continental agitator like
+this man Schurz that people were talking about. The Irish members
+expressed a pious horror of the very word dynamite: the working-man
+leaders hemmed and hawed, and regretted their inability, in their
+very delicate position, to do anything which might seem like
+countenancing Russian nihilism. In the end, Ernest sent, in his
+petition with only half a dozen unknown signatures; and the Home
+Secretary's private prompter threw it into the waste-paper basket
+entire, without even taking the trouble to mention its existence
+to his harassed and overburdened chief. Just a Marylebone communist
+refugee in prison! How could a statesman with half the bores and
+faddists of England on his troubled hands, find time to look at
+uninfluential petitions about an insignificant worthless nobody
+like that?
+
+So gentle, noble-natured, learned Herr Max went to prison and served
+his year there uncomplainingly, like any other social malefactor;
+and Society talked about his case with languid interest for nearly
+a fortnight, and then straightway found a new sensation, and forgot
+all about him. But there are three hundred and sixty-five days of
+twenty-four hours each in every year; and for every one of those days
+Herr Max and Herr Max's friends never forgot for an hour together
+that he was in prison.
+
+And at the end of the week Ernest got a letter from Lancaster,
+enclosing a cheque for eight guineas. That is a vast sum of money,
+eight guineas: just think of all the bread, and meat, and tea,
+and clothing one can buy with it for a small family! 'My dear Le
+Breton,' the editor wrote--in his own hand, too; a rare honour;
+for he was a kindly man, and he had learned, much to his surprise,
+from Arthur Berkeley, that Ernest was angry at his treatment of the
+Schurzian leader: 'My dear Le Breton, I enclose cheque for eight
+guineas, for your two articles. I hope you didn't mind the way
+I was obliged to cut them up in some unessential details, so as
+to suit the policy of the paper. I kept whatever was really most
+distinctive as embodying special information in them. You know
+we are above all things strictly moderate. Please send us another
+social shortly.'
+
+It was a kind letter, undoubtedly a kind and kindly-meant letter:
+but Ernest flung it from him as though he had been stung by a
+serpent or a scorpion. Then he handed the cheque to Edie in solemn
+silence, to see what she would do with it. He merely wanted to try
+her constancy. For himself, he would have felt like a Judas indeed
+if he had taken and used their thirty pieces of silver.
+
+Edie looked at the cheque intently and sighed a deep sigh of regret.
+How could she do otherwise? They were so very poor, and it was
+such an immense sum of money! Then she rose quietly without saying
+a word, and lighted a match from the box on the mantelpiece. She
+held the cheque firmly between her finger and thumb till it was
+nearly burnt, end let it drop slowly at last into the empty fireplace.
+Ernest rose up and kissed her tenderly. The leaden weight of the
+thirty pieces of silver was fairly off their united conscience. They
+had made what reparation they could for the evil of that unhappy,
+undesigned leader. After all Ernest had wasted the last remnant of
+his energy on one eventful evening, all for nothing.
+
+As Edie sat looking wistfully at the smouldering fragments of the
+burnt cheque, Ernest roused her again by saying quietly, 'To-day's
+Saturday. Have we got anything for to-morrow's dinner, Edie?'
+
+'Nothing,' Edie answered, simply. 'How much money have you left,
+Ernest?'
+
+'Sixpence,' Ernest said, without needing to consult his empty
+purse for confirmation--he had counted the pence, as they went, too
+carefully for that already. 'Edie, I'm afraid we must go at last
+to the poor man's banker till I can get some more money.'
+
+'Oh, Ernest--not--not--not the pawnbroker!'
+
+'Yes, Edie, the pawnbroker.'
+
+The tears came quickly into Edie's eyes, but she answered nothing.
+They must have food, and there was no other way open before them.
+They rose together and went quietly into the bedroom. There they
+gathered together the few little trinkets and other things that might
+be of use to them, and Ernest took down his hat from the stand to
+go out with them to the pawnbroker's.
+
+As he turned out he was met energetically on the landing by a
+stout barricade from good Mrs. Halliss. 'No, sir, not you, sir,'
+the landlady said firmly, trying to take the parcel from him as he
+went towards the door. 'I beg your pardon, sir, for 'avin' over'eard
+what wasn't meant for me to 'ear, no doubt, but I couldn't 'elp it,
+sir, and John an' me can't allow nothink of this sort, we can't.
+We're used to this sort o' things, sir, John and me is; but you
+and the dear lady isn't used to 'em, sir, and didn't nought to be
+neither, and John an' me can't allow it, not anyhow.'
+
+Ernest turned scarlet with shame, but could say nothing. Edie only
+whispered softly, 'Dear, dear Mrs. Halliss, we're so sorry, but we
+can't help it.'
+
+''Elp it, ma'am,' said Mrs. Halliss, herself almost crying, 'nor
+there ain't no reason why you should try to 'elp it neither. As I
+says to John, "John," says I, "there ain't no 'arm in it, noways,"
+says I, "but I can't stand by," says I, "and see them two poor dear
+young creechurs," meanin' no offence, ma'am, "a-pawning of their
+own jewelry and things to go and pay for their Sunday's dinner."
+And John, 'e says, says 'e, "Quite right, Martha," says 'e; "don't
+let 'em, my dear," says 'e. "The Lord has prospered us a bit in our
+'umble way, Martha," says 'e, "and we ain't got no cause to want,
+we ain't; and if the dear lady and the good gentleman wouldn't
+take it as a liberty," says 'e, "it 'ud be better they should just
+borrer a pound or two for a week from us," says 'e, beggin' your
+pardon, ma'am, for 'intin' of it, "than that there Mr. Le Breting,
+as ain't accustomed to such places nohow, should go a-makin'
+acquaintance, for the fust time of his life, as you may say, with
+the inside of a pawnbroker's shop," says 'e. "John," says I, "it's
+my belief the lady and gentleman 'ud be insulted," says I, "though
+they ARE the sweetest unassoomin'est young gentlefolk I ever did
+see," says I, "if we were to go as tin' them to accept the loan
+of money from the likes of you and me, John, as is no better, by
+the side of them, nor old servants, in the manner o' speakin'."
+"Insulted," says 'e; "not a bit of it, they needn't, Martha,"
+says 'e, "for I knows the ways of the aristocracy," says 'e, "and
+I knows as there's many a gentleman as owns 'is own 'osses and
+'is own 'ounds as isn't afraid to borrer a pound or so from 'is own
+coachman, or even from 'is own groom--not but what to borrer from
+a groom is lowerin'," says 'e, "in a tempory emergency. Mind you,
+Martha," says 'e, "a tempory emergency is a thing as may 'appen
+to landed gentlefolks any day," says 'e. "It's like a 'ole in your
+coat made by a tear," says 'e; "a haccident as may 'appen to-morrer
+to the Prince of Wales 'isself upon the 'untin' field," 'e says.
+"Well, then, John," says I, "I'll just go an' speak to 'em about
+it, this very minnit," says I, and if I might make so bold, ma'am,
+without seemin' too presumptious, I should be very glad if you'd
+kindly allow me, ma'am, to lend Mr. Le Breting a few suvverins till
+'e gets 'is next remittances, ma'am.'
+
+Edie looked at Ernest, and Ernest looked at Edie and the landlady;
+and then they all three burst out crying together without further
+apology. Perhaps it was the old Adam left in Ernest a little;
+but though he could stand kindness from Dr. Greatrex or from Mr.
+Lancaster stoically enough, he couldn't watch the humble devotion
+of those two honest-hearted simple old servants without a mingled
+thrill of shame and tenderness. 'Mrs. Halliss,' he said, catching
+up the landlady's hard red hand gratefully in his own, 'you are too
+good and too kind, and too considerate for us altogether. I feel
+we have done nothing to deserve such great kindness from you. But
+I really don't think it would be right of us to borrow from you when
+we don't even know how long it may be before we're able to return
+your money or whether we shall ever be able to return it at all.
+We're so much obliged to you, so very very much obliged to you,
+dear Mrs. Halliss, but I think we ought as a matter of duty to pawn
+these few little things rather than run into debt which we've no
+fair prospect at present of ever redeeming.'
+
+'HAS you please, sir,' Mrs. Halliss said gently, wiping her eyes
+with her snow-white apron, for she saw at once that Ernest really
+meant what he said. 'Not that John an' me would think of it for a
+minnit, sir, so long as you wouldn't mind our takin' the liberty;
+but any'ow, sir, we can't allow you to go out yourself and go to
+the pawnbroker's. It ain't no fit place for the likes of you, sir,
+a pawnbroker's ain't, in all that low company; and I don't suppose
+you'd rightly know 'ow much to hask on the articles, neither.
+John, 'e ain't afeard of goin'; an' 'e says, 'e insists upon it as
+'e's to go, for 'e don't think, sir, for the honour of the 'ouse,
+'e says, sir, as a lodger of ours ought to be seen a-goin' to the
+pawnbroker's. Just you give them things right over to John, sir,
+and 'e'll get you a better price on 'em by a long way nor they'd
+ever think of giving a gentleman like you, sir.'
+
+Ernest fought off the question in a half-hearted fashion for a
+little while, but Mrs. Halliss insisted upon it, and after a short
+time Ernest gave way, for to say the truth he had very vague ideas
+himself as to how he ought to proceed in a pawnbroking expedition.
+Mrs. Halliss ran down the kitchen stairs quickly, for fear he
+should change his mind as soon as her back was turned, and called
+out gaily to her husband in the first delight of her unexpected
+triumph.
+
+'John,' she cried, '--drat that man, where is 'e? John, dear, you
+just putt your 'at on, and purtend to run round the corner a bit
+to Aston's the pawnbroker's. The Lord have mercy upon me for the
+stories I've been a-tellin' of 'em, but I couldn't bear to see them
+two pore things a-pawnin' their little bits of jewelry and sich,
+and Mr. Le Breting, too, 'im as ain't fit to go knockin' together
+with underbred folks like pawnbrokers. So I told 'im as you'd take
+'em round and pawn 'em for 'im yourself; not as I don't suppose
+you've never pawned nothink in your 'ole life, John, leastways not
+since ever you an' me kep' company, for afore that I suppose you
+was purty much like other young men is, John, for all you shakes
+your 'ead at it now so innocent like. But you just run round,
+there's a dear, and make as if you was goin' to the pawnbroker's,
+and then you come straight 'ome again unbeknown to 'em. I ain't
+a goin' to let them two pore dears go pawnin' their things for a
+dinner nohow. You take them two suvverins out of your box, John,
+and putt away these 'ere little things for the present time till
+the pore souls is able to pay us, and if they never don't, small
+matter neither. Now you go fast, John, there's a dear, and come
+back, and mind you give them two suvverins to Mr. Le Breting as
+natural like as ever you're able.'
+
+'Pawn 'em,' John said in a pitying voice, 'no indeed, it ain't
+come to that yet, I should 'ope, that they need go a-pawnin' their
+effects while we've got a suvverin or two laid by in our box,
+Martha. Not as anybody need be ashamed of pawnin' on occasions, for
+that matter,--I don't say as a reg'lar thing, but now an' then on
+occasions, as you may call it; for even in the best dookal families,
+I've 'eard tell they DO sometimes 'ave to pawn the dimonds, so
+that pawnin' ain't in the runnin' noways, bless you, as respects
+gentility. Not as I'd like to go into a pawnshop myself, Martha,
+as I've always been brought up respectable; but when you send for
+Mr. Hattenborough to your own ressydence and say quite commandin'
+like, "'Er Grace 'ud be obleeged if you'd wait upon 'er in Belgrave
+Square to hinspeck 'er dimonds as I want to raise the wind on 'em,"
+why, that's quite another matter nat'rally.'
+
+When honest John came back in a few minutes and handed the
+two sovereigns over to Ernest, he did it with such an unblushing
+face as might have won him applause on any stage for its perfect
+naturalness. 'Lor' bless your 'eart, sir,' he said in answer to
+Ernest's shamefaced thanks, touching the place where his hat ought
+to be mechanically, 'it ain't nothing, sir, that ain't. If it
+weren't for the dookal families of England, sir, it's my belief the
+pawnbrokin' business wouldn't be worth mentioning in the manner o'
+speakin'.'
+
+That evening, Ernest paced up and down the little parlour rather
+moodily for half an hour with three words ringing perpetually in his
+dizzy ears-the 'Never, never, never,' he had used so short a tune
+since about the 'Morning Intelligence.' He must get money somehow
+for Dot and Edie! he must get money somehow to pay good Mrs. Halliss
+for their board and lodging! There was only one way possible.
+Fight against it as he would, in the end he must come back to that
+inevitable conclusion. At last he sat down with a gloomy face at
+the centre table, and pulled out a sheet of blank foolscap.
+
+'What are you going to do, Ernest?' Edie asked him.
+
+Ernest groaned. 'I'm writing a social for the "Morning Intelligence,"
+Edie,' he answered bitterly.
+
+'Oh, Ernest!' Edie said with a face of horror and surprise. 'Not
+after the shameful way they've treated poor Max Schurz!'
+
+Ernest groaned again. 'There's nothing else to be done, Edie,' he
+said, looking up at her despondently. 'I must earn money somehow
+to keep the house going.'
+
+It is the business of the truthful historian to narrate facts, not
+to palliate or extenuate the conduct of the various actors. Whether
+Ernest did right or wrong, at least he did it; he wrote a playful
+social for Monday's 'Morning Intelligence,' and carried it into
+the office on Sunday afternoon himself, beause there was no postal
+delivery in the London district.
+
+That night, he lay awake once more for hours together, tossing
+and turning, and reflecting bitterly on his own baseness and his
+final moral downfall. Herbert was right, after all. The environment
+was beginning to conquer. He could hold out no longer. Herr Max
+was in prison; the world was profoundly indifferent; he himself
+had fallen away like Peter; and there was nothing left for him now
+but to look about and find himself a dishonourable grave.
+
+And Dot? And Edie? What was to become of them after? Ah me, for
+the pity of it when a man cannot even crawl quietly into a corner
+and die in peace like a dog, without being tortured by fears
+and terrors beforehand as to what will come to those he loves far
+better than life when he himself is quietly dead and buried out of
+the turmoil!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+A MAN AND A MAID.
+
+
+IF Ernest and Edie had permitted it, Ronald Le Breton would have
+gone at once, after his coming of age, to club income and expenditure
+with his brother's household. But, as Edie justly remarked, when
+he proposed it, such a course would pretty nearly have amounted to
+clubbing HIS income with THEIR expenditure; and even in their last
+extreme of poverty that was an injustice which neither she nor her
+husband could possibly permit. Ronald needed all his little fortune
+for his own simple wants, and though they themselves starved,
+they couldn't bear to deprive him of the small luxuries which had
+grown into absolute necessaries for one so feeble and weak. Indeed,
+ill as Ernest himself now was, he had never outgrown the fixed
+habit of regarding Ronald as the invalid of the family; and to have
+taken anything, though in the direst straits, from him, would have
+seemed like robbing the helpless poor of their bare necessities.
+So Ronald was fain at last to take lodgings for himself with
+a neighbour of good Mrs. Halliss's, and only to share in Ernest's
+troubles to the small extent of an occasional loan, which Edie
+would have repaid to time if she had to go without their own poor
+little dinner for the sake of the repayment.
+
+Meanwhile, Ronald had another interest on hand which to his
+enthusiastic nature seemed directly imposed upon him by the finger
+of Providence--to provide a home and occupation for poor Selah,
+whom Herbert had cast aside as a legacy to him. As soon as he
+had got settled down to his own new mode of life in the Holloway
+lodgings, he began to look about for a fit place for the homeless
+girl--a place, he thought to himself, which must combine several
+special advantages; plenty of work--she wanted that to take her
+mind off brooding; good, honest, upright people; and above all, no
+religion. Ronald recognised that last undoubted requirement as of
+absolutely paramount importance. 'She'll stand any amount of talk
+or anything else from me,' he said to himself often, 'because she
+knows I'm really in earnest; but she wouldn't stand it for a moment
+from those well-meaning, undiscriminating, religious busy-bodies,
+who are so awfully anxious about other people's souls, though
+they never seem for a single minute to consider in any way other
+people's feelings.' After a little careful hunting among his
+various acquaintances, however, he found at last a place that would
+exactly suit Selah at a stationer's in Netting Hill; and there he
+put her--with full confidence that Selah would do the work entrusted
+to her well and ably, if not from conscientiousness, at least from
+personal pride, 'which, after all,' Roland soliloquised dreamily,
+'is as good a substitute for the genuine article as one can
+reasonably expect to find in poor fallen human nature.'
+
+'I wish, Mr. Le Breton,' Selah said, quite timidly for her (maidenly
+reserve, it must be admitted, was not one of Selah Briggs's strong
+points), 'that I wasn't going to be quite so far from you as Notting
+Hill. If I could see you sometimes, you know, I should feel that
+it might keep me more straight--keep me away from the river in
+future, I mean. I can't stand most people's preaching, but somehow,
+your preaching seems to do me more good than harm, really, which is
+just the exact opposite way, it seems to me, from everybody else's.'
+
+Ronald smiled sedately. 'I'm glad you want to see me sometimes,'
+he said, with a touch of something very like gallantry in his tone
+that was wholly unusual with him. 'I shall walk over every now and
+then, and look you up at your lodgings over yonder; and besides,
+you can come on Sundays to dear Edie's, and I shall be able to
+meet you there once a fortnight or thereabouts. But I'm not going
+to let you call me Mr. Le Breton any longer; it isn't friendly:
+and, what's more, it isn't Christian. Why should there be these
+artificial barriers between soul and soul, eh, Selah? I shall
+call you Selah in future: it seems more genuine and heartfelt, and
+unencumbered with needless conventions, than your misters and
+misses. After all, why should we keep up such idle formalities
+between brethren and fellow-workers?'
+
+Selah started a little--she knew better than Ronald himself did
+what such first advances really led to. 'Oh, Mr. Le Breton,' she
+said quickly, 'I really can't call you Ronald. I can never call
+any other man by his Christian name as long as I live, after--your
+brother.'
+
+'You mistake me, Selah,' Ronald put in hastily, with his quaint
+gravity. 'I mean it merely as a sign of confidence and a mark of
+Christian friendship. Sisters call their brothers by their Christian
+names, don't they? So there can be no harm in that, surely. It seems
+to me that if you call me Mr. Le Breton, you're putting me on the
+footing of a man merely; if you call me Ronald, you're putting me
+on the footing of a brother, which is really a much more harmless
+and unequivocal position for me to stand in. Do, please, Selah,
+call me Ronald.'
+
+'I'm afraid I can't,' Selah answered. 'I daren't. I mustn't.' But
+she faltered a little for a moment, notwithstanding.
+
+'You must, Selah,' Ronald said, with all the force of his enthusiastic
+nature, fixing his piercing eyes full upon her. 'You must, I tell
+you. Call me Ronald.'
+
+'Very well--Ronald,' Selah said at last, after a long pause.
+'Good-bye, now. I must be going. Good-bye, and thank you. Thank
+you. Thank you.' There was a tear quivering even in Selah Briggs's
+eye, as she held his hand lingeringly a moment in hers before
+releasing it. He was a very good fellow, really, and he had been
+so very kind, too, in interesting himself about her future.
+
+'What a marvellous thread of sameness,' Ronald thought to himself,
+as he walked back rapidly to his solitary lodgings, 'runs through
+the warp and woof of a single family, after all! What an underlying
+unity of texture there must be throughout, in all its members,
+however outwardly dissimilar they may seem to be from one another!
+One would say at first sight there was very little, if anything,
+in common between me and Herbert. And yet this girl interests me
+wonderfully. Of course I'm not in love with her--the notion of
+MY falling in love with anybody is clearly too ridiculous. But I'm
+attracted by her, drawn towards her, fascinated as it were; I feel
+a sort of curious spell upon me whenever I look into her deep big
+eyes, flashing out upon one with their strange luminousness. It
+isn't merely that the Hand has thrown her in my way: that counts
+for something, no doubt, but not for everything. Besides, the
+Hand doesn't act blindly--nay, rather, acts with supreme wisdom,
+surpassing the powers or the comprehension of man. When it threw
+Selah Briggs in my way, depend upon it, it was because the Infinite
+saw in me something that was specially adapted to her, and in her
+something that was specially adapted to me. The instrument is duly
+shaped by inscrutable Wisdom for its own proper work. Now, whatever
+interests ME in her, must have also interested Herbert in her
+equally and for the same reason. We're drawn towards her, clearly;
+she exercises over both of us some curious electric power that she
+doesn't exercise, presumably, over other people. For Herbert must
+have been really in love with her--not that I'm in love with her,
+of course; but still, the phenomena are analogous, even if on
+a slightly different plane--Herbert must have been really in love
+with her, I'm sure, or such a prudent man as he is would never have
+let himself get into what he would consider such a dangerous and
+difficult entanglement. Yes, clearly, there's something in Selah
+Briggs that seems to possess a singular polarity, as Ernest would
+call it, for the Le Breton character and individuality!
+
+'And then, it cuts both ways, too, for Selah was once desperately
+in love with Herbert: of that I'm certain. She must have been, to
+judge from the mere strength of the final revulsion. She's a girl
+of intensely deep passions--I like people to have some depth to
+their character, even if it's only in the way of passion--and she'd
+never have loved him at all without loving him fervently and almost
+wildly: hers is a fervent, wild, indomitable nature. Yes, she was
+certainly in love with Herbert; and now, though of course I don't
+mean to say she's in love with me (I hope it isn't wrong to think
+in this way about an unmarried girl), still I can't help seeing
+that I have a certain influence over her in return--that she pays
+much attention to what I say and think, considers me a person
+worth considering, which she doesn't do, I'm sure, with most other
+people. Ah, well, there's a vast deal of truth, no doubt, in these
+new hereditary doctrines of Darwin's and Galton's that Herbert
+and Ernest talk about so much; a family's a family, that's certain,
+not a mere stray collection of casual acquaintances. How the
+likeness runs through the very inmost structure of our hearts and
+natures! I see in Selah very much what Herbert saw in Selah: Selah
+sees in me very much what she saw in Herbert. Extraordinary insight
+into human nature men like Darwin and Galton have, to be sure? And
+David, too, what a marvellous thinker he was, really! What unfathomed
+depths of meaning lie unexpected in that simple sentence of his,
+"I am fearfully and wonderfully made." Fearfully and wonderfully,
+indeed, when one remembers that from one father and mother Herbert
+and I have both been compounded, so unlike in some things that we
+scarcely seem to be comparable with one another (look at Herbert's
+splendid intellect beside mine!), so like in others that Selah
+Briggs--goodness gracious, what am I thinking of? I was just going
+to say that Selah Briggs falls in love first with one of us and
+then with the other. I do hope and trust it isn't wrong of me to
+fill my poor distracted head so much with these odd thoughts about
+that unfortunate girl, Selah!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+THE ENVIRONMENT FINALLY TRIUMPHS.
+
+
+Winter had come, and on a bitter cold winter's night, Ernest
+Le Breton once more received an unexpected telegram asking him to
+hurry down without a moment's delay on important business to the
+'Morning Intelligence' office. The telegram didn't state at all
+what the business was; it merely said it was urgent and immediate
+without in any way specifying its nature. Ernest sallied forth
+in some perturbation, for his memories of the last occasion when
+the 'Morning Intelligence' required his aid on important business
+were far from pleasant ones; but for Edie's sake he felt he must
+go, and so he went without a murmur.
+
+'Sit down, Le Breton,' Mr. Lancaster said slowly when Ernest
+entered. 'The matter I want to see you about's a very peculiar one.
+I understand from some of my friends that you're a son of Sir Owen
+Le Breton, the Indian general.'
+
+'Yes, I am,' Ernest answered, wondering within himself to what
+end this curious preamble could possibly be leading up. If there's
+any one profession, he thought, which is absolutely free from the
+slightest genealogical interest in the persons of its professors,
+surely that particular calling ought to be the profession of
+journalism.
+
+'Well, so I hear, Le Breton. Now, I believe I'm right in saying,
+am I not, that it was your father who first subdued and organised
+a certain refractory hill-tribe on the Tibetan frontier, known as
+the Bodahls, wasn't it?'
+
+'Quite right,' Ernest replied, with a glimmering idea slowly rising
+in his mind as to what Mr. Lancaster was now driving at.
+
+'Ah, that's good, very good indeed, certainly. Well, tell me,
+Le Breton, do you yourself happen to know anything on earth about
+these precious insignificant people?'
+
+'I know all about them,' Ernest answered quickly. 'I've read all
+my father's papers and despatches, and seen his maps and plans and
+reports in our house at home from my boyhood upward. I know as much
+about the Bodahls, in fact, as I know about Bayswater, or Holborn,
+or Fleet Street.'
+
+'Capital, capital,' the editor said, fondling his big hands softly;
+'that'll exactly suit us. And could you get at these plans and papers
+now, this very evening, just to refresh the gaps in your memory?'
+
+'I could have them all down here,' Ernest answered, 'at an hour's
+notice.'
+
+'Good,' the editor said again. 'I'll send a boy for them with a
+cab. Meanwhile, you'd better be perpending this telegram from our
+Simla correspondent, just received. It's going to be the question
+of the moment, and we should very much like you to give us a leader
+of a full column about the matter.'
+
+Ernest took the telegram and read it over carefully. It ran in the
+usual very abbreviated newspaper fashion: 'Russian agents revolted
+Bodahls Tibetan frontier. Advices Peshawur state Russian army
+marching on Merv. Bodahls attacked Commissioner, declared independence
+British raj.'
+
+'Will you write us a leader?' the editor asked, simply.
+
+Ernest drew a long breath. Three guineas! Edie, Dot, an empty
+exchequer! If he could only have five minutes to make his mind up!
+But he couldn't. After all, what did it matter what he said about
+these poor unknown Bodahls? If HE didn't write the leader, somebody
+else who knew far less about the subject than he did would be sure
+to do it. He wasn't responsible for that impalpable entity 'the
+policy of the paper.' Beside the great social power of the 'Morning
+Intelligence,' of the united English people, what was he, Ernest
+Le Breton, but a miserable solitary misplaced unit? One way or the
+other, he could do very little indeed, for good or for evil. After
+half a minute's internal struggle, he answered back the editor
+faintly, 'Yes, I will.' 'For Edie,' he muttered half audibly to
+himself; 'I must do it for dear Edie.'
+
+'And you'll allow me to make whatever alterations I think necessary
+in the article to suit the policy of the paper?' the editor asked
+once more, looking through him with his sleepy keen grey eyes.
+'You see, Le Breton, I don't want to annoy you, and I know your
+own principles are rather peculiar; but of course all we want you
+for is just to give us the correct statement of facts about these
+outlandish people. All that concerns our own attitude towards them
+as a nation falls naturally under the head of editorial matter.
+You must see yourself that it's quite impossible for us to let any
+one single contributor dictate from his own standpoint the policy
+of the paper.'
+
+Ernest bent his head slowly. 'You're very kind to argue out the
+matter with me so, Mr. Lancaster,' he said, trembling with excitement.
+'Yes, I suppose I must bury my scruples. I'll write a leader about
+these Bodahls, and let you deal with it afterwards as you think
+proper.'
+
+They showed him into the bare little back room, and sent a boy
+up with a hastily written note to Ronald for the maps and papers.
+There Ernest sat for an hour or two, writing away for very life,
+and putting on paper everything that he knew about the poor Bodahls.
+By two o'clock, the proofs had all come up to him, and he took
+his hat in a shamefaced manner to sally out into the cold street,
+where he hoped to hide his rising remorse and agony under cover of
+the solitary night. He knew too well what 'the policy of the paper'
+would be, to venture upon asking any questions about it. As he
+left the office, a boy brought him down a sealed envelope from Mr.
+Lancaster. With his usual kindly thoughtfulness the editor had sent
+him at once the customary cheque for three guineas. Ernest folded
+it up with quivering fingers, and felt the blood burn in his cheeks
+as he put it away in his waistcoat pocket. That accursed money!
+For it he had that night sold his dearest principles! And yet, not
+for it, not for it, not for it--oh, no, not for it, but for Dot
+and Edie!
+
+The boy had a duplicate proof in his other hand, and Ernest saw at
+once that it was his own leader, as altered and corrected by Mr.
+Lancaster. He asked the boy whether he might see it; and the boy,
+knowing it was Ernest's own writing, handed it to him at once
+without further question. Ernest did not dare to look at it then
+and there for fear he should break down utterly before the boy; he
+put it for the moment into his inner pocket, and buttoned his thin
+overcoat tightly around him. It was colder still in the frosty air
+of early morning, and the contrast to the heated atmosphere of the
+printing house struck him with ominous chill as he issued slowly
+forth into the silent precincts of unpeopled Fleet Street.
+
+It was a terrible memorable night, that awful Tuesday; the coldest
+night known for many years in any English winter. Snow lay deep upon
+the ground, and a few flakes were falling still from the cloudy
+sky, for it was in the second week of January. The wind was drifting
+it in gusty eddies down the long streets, and driving the drifts
+before it like whirling dust in an August storm. Not a cab was to
+be seen anywhere, not even a stray hansom crawling home from clubs
+or theatres; and Ernest set out with a rueful countenance to walk
+as best he might alone through the snow all the way to Holloway.
+It is a long and dreary trudge at any time; it seemed very long
+and dreary indeed to Ernest Le Breton, with his delicate frame and
+weak chest, battling against the fierce wind on a dark and snowy
+winter's night, and with the fever of a great anxiety and a great
+remorse silently torturing his distracted bosom. At each step he
+took through the snow, he almost fancied himself a hunted Bodahl.
+Would British soldiers drive those poor savage women and children
+to die so of cold and hunger on their snowy hilltops? Would English
+fathers and mothers, at home at their ease, applaud the act with
+careless thoughtlessness as a piece of our famous spirited foreign
+policy? And would his own article, written with his own poor thin
+cold fingers in that day's 'Morning Intelligence,' help to spur
+them on upon that wicked and unnecessary war? What right had we to
+conquer the Bodahls? What right had we to hold them in subjection
+or to punish them for revolting? And above all, what right had
+he, Ernest Le Breton, upon whose head the hereditary guilt of the
+first conquest ought properly to have weighed with such personal
+heaviness--what right had he, of all men, directly or indirectly,
+to aid or abet the English people in their immoral and inhuman
+resolve? Oh, God, his sin was worse than theirs; for they sinned,
+thinking they did justly; but as for him, he sinned against the
+light; he knew the better, and, bribed by gold, he did the worse.
+At that moment, the little slip of printed paper in his waistcoat
+pocket seemed to burn through all the frosts of that awful evening
+like a chain of molten steel into his very marrow!
+
+Trudging on slowly through the white stainless snow, step by
+step,--snow that cast a sheet of pure white even over the narrow
+lanes behind the Farringdon Road,--cold at foot and hot at heart,
+he reached at last the wide corner by the Angel at Islington. The
+lights in the windows were all out long ago, of course, but the
+lamps outside were still flaring brightly, and a solitary policeman
+was standing under one of them, trying to warm his frozen hands by
+breathing rapidly on the curved and distorted fingers. Ernest was
+very tired of his tramp by that time, and emboldened by companionship
+he stopped awhile to rest himself in the snow and wind under the
+opposite lamplight. Putting his back against the post, he drew the
+altered proof of his article slowly out of his inner pocket. It
+had a strange fascination for him, and yet he dreaded to look at
+it. With an effort, he unfolded it in his stiff fingers, and held
+the paper up to the light, regardless of the fact that the policeman
+was watching his proceedings with the interest naturally due from
+a man of his profession to a suspicious-looking character who
+was probably a convicted pickpocket. The first sentence once more
+told him the worst. There was no doubt at all about it. The three
+guineas in his pocket were the price of blood!
+
+'The insult to British prestige in the East,' ran that terrible
+opening paragraph, 'implied in the brief telegram which we publish
+this morning from our own Correspondent at Simla, calls for a speedy
+and a severe retribution. It must be washed out in blood.' Blood,
+blood, blood! The letters swam before his eyes. It was this, then,
+that he, the disciple of peace-loving Max Schurz, the hater of war
+and conquest, the foe of unjust British domination over inferior
+races--it was this that he had helped to make plausible with his
+special knowledge and his ready pen! Oh, heaven, what reparation
+could he make for this horrid crime he had knowingly and wilfully
+committed? What could he do to avoid the guilt of those poor
+savages' blood upon his devoted head? In one moment he thought out
+a hundred scenes of massacre and pillage--scenes such as he knew
+only too well always precede and accompany the blessings of British
+rule in distant dependencies. The temptation had been strong--the
+money had been sorely wanted--there was very little food in
+the house; but how could he ever have yielded to such a depth of
+premeditated wickedness! He folded the piece of paper into his
+pocket once more, and buried his face in his hands for a whole
+minute. The policeman now began to suspect that he was not so much
+a pickpocket as an escaped lunatic.
+
+And so he was, no doubt. Of course we who are practical men of
+the world know very well that all this foolish feeling on Ernest
+Le Breton's part was very womanish and weak and overwrought; that
+he ought to have done the work that was set before him, asking no
+questions for conscience' sake; and that he might honestly have
+pocketed the three guineas, letting his supposed duty to a few
+naked brown people somewhere up in the Indian hill-country take
+care of itself, as all the rest of us always do. But some allowance
+must naturally be made for his peculiar temperament and for his
+particular state of health. Consumptive people are apt to take a
+somewhat hectic view of life in every way; they lack the common-sense
+ballast that makes most of us able to value the lives of a few
+hundred poor distant savages at their proper infinitesimal figure.
+At any rate, Ernest Le Breton, as a matter of fact, rightly or
+wrongly, did take this curious standpoint about things in general;
+and did then and there turn back through the deep snow, all his
+soul burning within him, fired with dire remorse, and filled only
+with one idea--how to prevent this wicked article to which he had
+contributed so many facts and opinions from getting printed in
+to-morrow's paper. True, it was not he who had put in the usual
+newspaper platitudes about the might of England, and the insult to
+the British flag, and the immediate necessity for a stern retaliation;
+but all that vapouring wicked talk (as he thought it) would go
+forth to the world fortified by the value of his special facts and
+his obviously intimate acquaintance with the whole past history of
+the Bodahl people. So he turned back and battled once more with the
+wind and snow as far as Fleet Street; and then he rushed excitedly
+into the 'Morning Intelligence' office, and asked with the wildness
+of despair to see the editor.
+
+Mr. Lancaster had gone home an hour since, the porter said; but
+Mr. Wilks, the sub-editor, was still there, superintending the
+printing of the paper, and if Ernest liked, Mr. Wilks would see
+him immediately.
+
+Ernest nodded assent at once, and was forthwith ushered up into Mr.
+Wilks's private sanctum. The sub-editor was a dry, grizzly-bearded
+man, with a prevailing wolfish greyness of demeanour about his whole
+person; and he shook Ernest's proffered hand solemnly, in the dreary
+fashion that is always begotten of the systematic transposition of
+night and day.
+
+'For heaven's sake, Mr. Wilks,' Ernest cried imploringly, 'I want
+to know whether you can possibly suppress or at least alter my
+leader on the Bodahl insurrection!'
+
+Mr. Wilks looked at him curiously, as one might look at a person
+who had suddenly developed violent symptoms of dangerous insanity.
+'Suppress the Bodahl leader,' he said slowly like one dreaming.
+'Suppress the Bodahl leader! Impossible! Why, it's the largest type
+heading in the whole of to-day's paper, is this Bodahl business.
+"Shocking Outrage upon a British Commissioner on the Indian
+Frontier. Revolt of the Entire Bodahl Tribe. Russian Intrigue
+in Central Asia. Dangerous Position of the Viceroy at Simla." Oh,
+dear me, no; not to have a leader upon THAT, my dear sir, would be
+simply suicidal!'
+
+'But can't you cut out my part of it, at least,' Ernest said
+anxiously. 'Oh, Mr. Wilks, you don't know what I've suffered to-night
+on account of this dreadful unmerited leader. It's wicked, it's
+unjust, it's abominable, and I can't bear to think that I have had
+anything to do with sending it out into the world to inflame the
+passions of unthinking people! Do please try to let my part of it
+be left out, and only Mr. Lancaster's, at least, be printed.'
+
+Mr. Wilks looked at him again with the intensest suspicion.
+
+'A sub-editor,' he answered evasively, 'has nothing at all to do with
+the politics of a paper. The editor alone manages that department
+on his own responsibility. But what on earth would you have me do?
+I can't stop the machines for half an hour, can I, just to let you
+have the chance of doctoring your leader? If you thought it wrong
+to write it, you ought never to have written it; now it's written
+it must certainly stand.'
+
+Ernest sank into a chair, and said nothing; but he turned so deadly
+pale that Mr. Wilks was fain to have recourse to a little brown
+flask he kept stowed away in a corner of his desk, and to administer
+a prompt dose of brandy and water.
+
+'There, there,' he said, in the kindest manner of which he was
+capable, 'what are you going to do now? You can't be going out
+again in this state and in this weather, can you?'
+
+'Yes, I am,' Ernest answered feebly. 'I'm going to walk home at
+once to Holloway.'
+
+'To Holloway!' the sub-editor said in a tone of comparative
+horror. 'Oh! no, I can't allow that. Wait here an hour or two till
+the workmen's trains begin running. Or, stay; Lancaster left his
+brougham here for me to-night, as I have to be off early to-morrow
+on business; I'll send you home in that, and let Hawkins get me a
+cab from the mews by order.'
+
+Ernest made no resistance; and so the sub-editor sent him home at
+once in Lancaster's brougham.
+
+When he got home in the early grey of morning, he found Edie still
+sitting up for him in her chair, and wondering what could be
+detaining him so long at the newspaper office. He threw himself
+wildly at her feet, and, in such broken sentences as he was able
+to command, he told her all the pitiful story. Edie soothed him
+and kissed him as he went along, but never said a word for good or
+evil till he had finished.
+
+'It was a terrible temptation, darling,' she said softly: 'a terrible
+temptation, indeed, and I don't wonder you gave way to it; but we
+mustn't touch the three guineas. As you say rightly, it's blood-money.'
+
+Ernest drew the cheque slowly from his pocket, and held it hesitatingly
+a moment in his hand. Edie looked at him curiously.
+
+'What are you going to do with it, darling?' she asked in a low
+voice, as he gazed vacantly at the last dying embers in the little
+smouldering fireplace.
+
+'Nothing, Edie dearest,' Ernest answered huskily, folding it
+up and putting it away in the drawer by the window. They neither
+of them dared to look the other in the face, but they bad not the
+heart to burn it boldly. It was blood-money, to be sure; but three
+guineas are really so very useful!
+
+Four days later, little Dot was taken with a sudden illness. Ernest
+and Edie sat watching by her little cradle throughout the night,
+and saw with heavy hearts that she was rapidly growing feebler. Poor
+wee soul, they had nothing to keep her for: it would be better,
+perhaps, if she were gone; and yet, the human heart cannot be stifled
+by such calm deliverances of practical reason; it WILL let its hot
+emotions overcome the cold calculations of better and worse supplied
+it by the unbiassed intellect.
+
+All night long they sat there tearfully, fearing she would not
+live till morning; and in the early dawn they sent round hastily
+for a neighbouring doctor. They had no money to pay him with, to
+be sure; but that didn't much matter; they could leave it over for
+the present, and perhaps some day before long Ernest might write
+another social, and earn an honest three guineas. Anyhow, it was
+a question of life and death, and they could not help sending for
+the doctor, whatever difficulty they might afterwards find in paying
+him.
+
+The doctor came, and looked with the usual professional seriousness
+at the baby patient. Did they feed her entirely on London milk? he
+asked doubtfully. Yes, entirely. Ah! then that was the sole root
+of the entire mischief. She was very dangerously ill, no doubt,
+and he didn't know whether he could pull her through anyhow; but
+if anything would do it, it was a change to goat's milk. There was
+a man who sold goat's milk round the corner. He would show Ernest
+where to find him.
+
+Ernest looked doubtfully at Edie, and Edie looked back again
+at Ernest. One thought rose at once in both their minds. They had
+no money to pay for it with, except--except that dreadful cheque.
+For four days it had lain, burning a hole in Ernest's heart from
+its drawer by the window, and he had not dared to change it. Now
+he rose without saying a word, and opened the drawer in a solemn,
+hesitating fashion. He looked once more at Edie inquiringly; Edie
+nodded a faint approval. Ernest, pale as death, put on his hat,
+and went out totteringly with the doctor. He stopped on the way
+to change the cheque at the baker's where they usually dealt, and
+then went on to the goat's milk shop. How that sovereign he flung
+upon the counter seemed to ring the knell of his seif-respect! The
+man who changed it noticed the strangeness of Ernest's look, and
+knew at once he had not come by the money honestly. He rang it twice
+to make sure it was good, and then gave the change to Ernest. But
+Dot, at least, was saved; that was a great thing. The milk arrived
+duly every morning for some weeks, and, after a severe struggle,
+Dot grew gradually better. While the danger lasted, neither of
+them dared think much of the cheque; but when Dot had got quite
+well again, Ernest was concious of a certain unwonted awkwardness
+of manner in talking to Edie. He knew perfectly well what it meant;
+they were both accomplices in crime together.
+
+When Ernest wrote his 'social' after Max Schurz's affair, he felt
+he had already touched the lowest depths of degradation. He knew
+now that he had touched a still lower one. Oh! horrible abyss of
+self-abasement!--he had taken the blood-money. And yet, it was to
+save Dot's life! Herbert was right, after all: quite right. Yes,
+yes, all hope was gone: the environment had finally triumphed.
+
+In the awful self-reproach of that deadly remorse for the acceptance
+of the blood-money, Ernest Le Breton felt at last in his heart
+that surely the bitterness of death was past. It would be better
+for them all to die together than to live on through such a life of
+shame and misery. Ah, Peter, Peter, you are not the only one that
+has denied his Lord and Master!
+
+And yet, Ernest Le Breton had only written part of a newspaper
+leader about a small revolt of the Bodahls. And he suffered more
+agony for it than many a sensitive man, even, has suffered for the
+commission of some obvious crime.
+
+'I say, Berkeley,' Lancaster droned out in the lobby of their club
+one afternoon shortly afterwards, 'what on earth am I ever to do
+about that socialistic friend of yours, Le Breton? I can't ever
+give him any political work again, you know. Just fancy! first, you
+remember, I set him upon the Schurz imprisonment business, and he
+nearly went mad then because I didn't back up Schurz for wanting to
+murder the Emperor of Russia. After that, just now the other day,
+I tried him on the Bodahl business, and hang me if he didn't have
+qualms of conscience about it afterwards, and trudge back through
+all the snow that awful Tuesday, to see if he couldn't induce Wilks
+to stop the press, and let him cut it all out at the last moment!
+He's as mad as a March hare, you know, and if it weren't that I'm
+really sorry for him I wouldn't go on taking socials from him any
+longer. But I will; I'll give him work as long as he'll do it for
+me on any terms; though, of course, it's obviously impossible under
+the circumstances to let him have another go at politics, isn't
+it?'
+
+'You're really awfully kind, Lancaster,' Berkeley answered warmly.
+'No other fellow would do as much for Le Breton as you do. I admit
+he's absolutely impracticable, but I would give more than I can
+tell you if only I thought he could be made to pull through somehow.'
+
+'Impracticable!' the editor said shortly, 'I believe you, indeed.
+Why, do you remember that ridiculous Schurz business? Well, I sent
+Le Breton a cheque for eight guineas for that lot, and can you
+credit it, it's remained uncashed from that day to this. I really
+think he must have destroyed it.'
+
+'No doubt,' Arthur answered, with a smile. 'And the Bodahls? What
+about them?'
+
+'Oh! he kept that cheque for a few days uncashed--though I'm sure
+he wanted money at the time; but in the end, I'm happy to say, he
+cashed it.'
+
+Arthur's countenance fell ominously.
+
+'He did!' he said gloomily. 'He cashed it! That's bad news indeed,
+then. I must go and see them to-morrow morning early. I'm afraid
+they must be at the last pitch of poverty before they'd consent to
+do that. And yet, Solomon says, men do not despise a thief if he
+steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry. And Le Breton, after
+all, has a wife and child to think of.'
+
+Lancaster stared at him blankly, and turned aside to glance at
+the telegrams, saying to himself meanwhile, that all these young
+fellows of the new school alike were really quite too incomprehensible
+for a sensible, practical man like himself to deal with comfortably.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+DE PROFUNDIS.
+
+
+After all Ernest didn't get many more socials to write for the
+'Morning Intelligence,' as it happened; for the war that came on
+shortly after crowded such trifles as socials fairly out of all the
+papers, and he had harder work than ever to pick up a precarious
+living somehow by the most casual possible contributions. Of course
+he tried many other channels; but he had few introductions, and then
+his views were really so absurdly ultra that no reasonable editor
+could ever be expected to put up with them. He got tired at last of
+seeing his well-meant papers return to him, morning after morning,
+with the unvarying legend, 'Declined with thanks;' and he might have
+gone to the wall utterly but for the kindly interest which Arthur
+Berkeley still took in his and Edie's future. On the very day
+after his conversation with Lancaster at the club Arthur dropped
+round casually at Holloway, and brought with him a proposal which
+he said had just been made him by a colonial newsagent. It was a
+transparent little ruse enough; but Ernest and Edie were not learned
+in the ways of the world and did not suspect it so readily as older
+and wiser heads might probably have done. Would Ernest supply a
+fortnightly letter, to go by the Australian mail, to the Paramatta
+'Chronicle and News,' containing London political and social gossip
+of a commonplace kind--just the petty chit-chat he could pick up
+easily out of 'Truth' and the 'World'--for the small sum of thirty
+shillings a letter?
+
+Yes, Ernest thought he could manage that.
+
+Very well, then. The letter must be sent on alternate Wednesdays
+to the colonial newsagent's address, and it would be duly forwarded
+by mail to the office of the Paramatta 'Chronicle.' A little
+suspicious, that item, Berkeley thought, but Ernest swallowed it
+like a child and made no comment. It must be addressed to 'Paramatta,
+care of Lane & Co.,' and the payments would be made fortnightly
+through the same agency. Arthur watched his friend's face narrowly
+at this point again; but Ernest in his simple-minded, unsuspecting
+wasy, never noticed the obvious meaning of this little deception.
+He thanked Arthur over and over again for his kindness, but he
+never guessed how far it extended. The letters kept him employed
+for two days a week, or thereabouts, and though they never got
+to Paramatta, nor any farther than Arthur Berkeley's own study in
+the little house he had taken for himself at Chelsea, they were
+regularly paid for through the colonial newsagents, by means of
+a cheque which really owed its ultimate origin to Arthur Berkeley
+himsslf. Fifteen shillings a week is not a large fortune, certainly;
+but still it is considerably better than nothing, when you come to
+try both methods of living by practical experience.
+
+Even so, however, Ernest and Edie had a hard struggle, with their
+habits of life and Ernest's delicate health, to make both ends meet
+upon that modest income. They found the necessity for recourse to
+the imaginary pawnbroker growing upon them with alarming rapidity;
+and though the few small articles that they sent out for that purpose
+never really went beyond kind Mrs. Halliss's kitchen dresser, yet
+so far as Ernest and Edie were concerned, the effect was much the
+same as if they had been really pledged to the licensed broker.
+The good woman hid them away carefully in the back drawers of the
+dresser, sending up as much money for the poor little trinkets as
+she thought it at all credible that any man in his senses could
+possibly advance--if she had given altogether too much, she thought
+it probable that even the unsuspicious Le Bretons would detect the
+kindly deception--at the time remarking to John that 'if ever them
+pore dear young creechurs was able to redeem 'em again, why, well
+an' good; an' if not, why, they could just find some excuse to
+give 'em back to the dear lady after pore Mr. Le Breting was dead
+an' gone, as he must be, no doubt, afore many months was over.'
+What wretched stuff that is that some narrow-minded cynics love
+to talk, after their cheap moralising fashion, about the coldness
+and cruelty of the world! The world is not cold and cruel; it is
+brimming over everywhere with kindliness and warmth of heart; and
+you have only got to put yourself into the proper circumstances
+in order to call forth at once on every hand, and in all classes,
+its tenderest and truest sympathies. None but selfish, unsympathetic
+people themselves ever find it otherwise in the day of trouble. It
+is not the world that is cold and heartless--it is not the individual
+members of the world that are cruel and unkind--it is the relentless
+march of circumstances--the faulty organisation which none of us
+can control, and for which none of us is personally responsible,
+that grinds us to powder under its Juggernaut wheels. Private
+kindliness is for ever trying, feebly and unsuccessfully, but with
+its best efforts, to undo the evil that general mismanagement is
+for ever perpetrating in its fateful course.
+
+One day, a few weeks later, Arthur Berkeley called in again, and on
+the stairs he met a child playing--a neighbour's child whom good
+Mrs. Halliss allowed to come in and amuse herself while the mother
+went out charing. The girl had a bright gold object in her hand;
+and Arthur, wondering how she came by it, took it from her and
+looked at it curiously. He recognised it in a moment for what it
+was--a gold bracelet, a well remembered gold bracelet--the very
+one that he himself had given as a wedding present to poor Edie.
+He turned it over and looked closely at the inside: cut into the
+soft gold he saw the one word 'Frustra,' that he himself had carved
+into it with his penknife the night before the memorable wedding.
+
+'Where did you get this?' he asked the child.
+
+'Mrs. 'Alliss give it me,' the little one answered, beginning to
+cry.
+
+Arthur ran lightly down the steps again, and knocked at the door of
+Mrs. Halliss's kitchen, with the tell-tale bracelet in his hand.
+Mrs. Halliss opened the dcor to him respectfully, and after a faint
+attempt at innocent prevarication, felt bound to let out all the
+pitiful little secret without further preamble. So Arthur, good,
+kind-hearted, delicate-souled Arthur, took his seat sadly upon one
+of the hard wooden kitchen chairs, and waited patiently while Mrs.
+Halliss and honest John, in their roundabout inarticulate fashion,
+slowly unfolded the story how them two pore young creechurs upstairs
+had been druv that low through want of funs that Mrs. Le Breting,
+God bless 'er 'eart, 'ad 'ad to pawn her poor little bits of
+jewelry and such like: and how they 'adn't 'ad the face to go an'
+pawn it for her, and so 'ad locked it up in their drawers, and
+waited hopefully for better times. Arthur listened to all this with
+an aching heart, and went home alone to ponder on the best way of
+still further assisting them.
+
+The only thing that occurred to him was a plan for giving Edie,
+too, a little relief, in the way of what she might suppose to be
+money-getting occupation. She used to paint a little in water-colours,
+he remembered, in the old days; so he put an advertisement in a
+morning paper, which he got Mrs. Halliss to show Edie, asking for
+drawings of orchids, the flowers to be supplied and accurately copied
+by an amateur at a reasonable price. Edie fell into the harmless
+friendly trap readily enough, and was duly supplied with orchids by
+a florist in Regent Street, who professed to receive his instructions
+from the advertiser. The pictures were all produced in due time,
+and were sent to a fixed address, where a gentleman in a hansom used
+to call for them at regular intervals. Arthur Berkeley kept those
+poor little water-colours long afterwards locked up in a certain
+drawer all by themselves: they were sacred mementoes to him of that
+old hopeless love for the little Miss Butterfly of his Oxford days.
+
+With the very first three guineas that Edie earned, carefully
+saved and hoarded out of her payments for the water-colours, she
+insisted in the pride of her heart that Ernest should go and visit
+a great London consulting physician. Sir Antony Wraxall was the
+best specialist in town on the subject of consumption, she had heard,
+and she was quite sure so clever a man must do Ernest a great deal
+of good, if he didn't even permanently cure him.
+
+'It's no use, Edie darling,' Ernest said to her imploringly. 'You'll
+only be wasting your hard-earned money. What I want is not advice
+or medicine; I want what no doctor on earth can possibly give
+me--relief from this terrible crushing responsibility.'
+
+But Edie would bear no refusal. It was HER money, she said, the
+first she had ever earned in her whole life, and she should certainly
+do as she herself liked with it. Sir Antony Wraxall, she was quite
+confident, would soon be able to make him better.
+
+So Ernest, overborne by her intreaties, yielded at last, and made
+an appointment with Sir Antony Wraxall. He took his quarter-hour in
+due form, and told the great physician all his symptoms as though
+he believed in the foolish farce. Sir Antony held his head solemnly
+on one side, weighed him with puritanical scrupulosity to a quarter
+of an ounce on his delicate balance, listened attentively at the
+chest with his silver-mounted stethoscope, and perpended the net
+result of his investigation with professional gravity; then he gave
+Edie his full advice and opinion to the maximum extent of five
+minutes.
+
+'Your husband's case is not a hopeful one, Mrs. Le Breton,' he said
+solemnly, 'but still, a great deal may be done for him.' Edie's face
+brightened visibly. 'With care, his life may be prolonged for many
+years,--I may even say, indeed, quite indefinitely.' Edie smiled
+with joy and gratitude. 'But you must strictly observe my rules
+and directions--the same that I've just given in a similar case to
+the Crown Prince of Servia who was here before you. In the first
+place, your husband must give up work altogether. He must be
+content to live perfectly and absolutely idle. Then, secondly, he
+must live quite away from England. I should recommend the Engadine
+in summer, and Algeria or the Nile trip every winter; but, if that's
+beyond your means--and I understand from Mr. Le Breton that you're
+in somewhat straitened circumstances--I don't object to Catania,
+or Malaga, or even Mentone and the Riviera. You can rent furnished
+villas for very little on the Riviera. But he must in no case come
+farther north, even in summer, than the Lake of Geneva. That, I
+assure you, is quite indispensable, if he wishes to live another
+twelvemonth. Take him south at once, in a coupé-lit of course, and
+break the journey once or twice at Lyons and Marseilles. Next, as
+to diet, he must live generously--very generously. Don't let him
+drink claret; claret's poor sour stuff; a pint of good champagne
+daily, or a good, full-bodied, genial vintage Burgundy would be
+far better and more digestible for him. Oysters, game, sweetbreads,
+red mullet, any little delicacy of that sort as much as possible.
+Don't let him walk; let him have carriage exercise daily; you can
+hire carriages for a mere trifle monthly at Cannes and Mentone.
+Above all things, give him perfect freedom from anxiety. Allow him
+to concentrate his whole attention on the act of getting well,
+and you'll find he'll improve astonishingly in no time. But if you
+keep him here in England and feed him badly and neglect my directions,
+I can't answer for his getting through another winter....Don't
+disturb yourself, I beg of you; don't, pray, give way to tears;
+there is really no occasion for it, my dear madam, no occasion for
+it at all, if you'll only do as I tell you....Quite right, thank
+you. Good morning.--Next case, McFarlane.--Good morning. Good
+morning.'
+
+So that was the end of weeping little Edie's poor hardly-spared
+three guineas.
+
+The very next day Arthur Berkeley happened to mount the stairs
+quietly, at an earlier hour than usual, and knocked at the door
+of Ernest's lodging. There was no answer, so he turned the handle,
+and entered by himself. The remains of breakfast lay upon the
+table. Arthur did not want to spy, but he couldn't help remarking
+that these remains were extremely meagre and scanty. Half a loaf
+of bread stood upon a solitary plate in the centre; a teapot and
+two cups occupied one side; and--that was all. In spite of himself,
+he couldn't restrain his curiosity, and he looked more closely at
+the knives and plates. Not a mark of anything but crumbs upon them,
+not even butter! He looked into the cups. Nothing but milkless
+tea at the bottom! Yes, the truth was only too evident; they had
+had no meat for breakfast, no butter, no milk, no sugar; it was
+quite clear that the meal had consisted entirely of dry bread with
+plain tea--call it hot water--and that for a dying man and a delicate
+over-worked lady! Arthur looked at that pitiable breakfast-table with
+a twinge of remorse, and the tears rose sharply and involuntarily
+into his eyes. He had not done enough for them, then; he had not
+done enough for them.
+
+Poor little Miss Butterfly! and had it really come to this! You,
+so bright, so light, so airy, in want, in positive want, in hunger
+even, with your good, impossible, impracticable Ernest! Had it
+come to this! Bread and water; dry bread and water! Down tears,
+down; a man must be a man; but, oh, what a bitter sight for Arthur
+Berkeley! And yet, what could he do to mend it? Money they would
+not take; he dare not even offer it; and he was at his wit's end
+for any other contrivance for serving them without their knowledge.
+He must do what he could; but how he was to do it, he couldn't
+imagine.
+
+As he stood there, ruminating bitterly over that poor bare table,
+he thought he heard sounds above, as of Edie coming downstairs
+with Dot on her shoulder. He knew she would not like to know that
+he had surprised the secret of their dire poverty; and he turned
+silently and cautiously to descend the stair. There was only just
+time enough to get away, for Edie was even then opening the door
+of the nursery. Noiselessly, with cat-like tread, he crept down
+the steps once more, and heard Edie descending, and singing as she
+came down to Dot. It was a plaintive little song, in a sad key--a
+plaintive little song of his own--but not wholly distressful,
+Arthur thought; she could still sing, then, to her baby! With the
+hot tears rising a second time to his eyes, he groped his way to
+the foot of the staircase. There he brushed them hurriedly aside
+with his hand, and turned out into the open street. The children
+were playing and tumbling in the sun, and a languid young man
+in a faultless frock coat and smooth silk hat was buying a showy
+button-hole flower from the little suburban florist's opposite.
+
+With a heavy heart Arthur Berkeley turned homeward to his own cosy
+little cottage; that modest palace of art which he had once hoped
+little Miss Butterfly might have shared with him. He went up the
+steps, and turned quickly into his own small study. The Progenitor
+was there, sitting reading in an easy-chair. 'At least,' Arthur
+thought to himself, 'I have made HIS old age happy. If I could only
+do as much for little Miss Butterfly! for little Miss Butterfly!
+for little Miss Butterfly! If I could only do as much for her, oh,
+how happy and contented I should be!'
+
+He flung himself down on his own sofa, and brushed big eyes nervously
+with his handkerchief before he dared lookup again towards the
+Progenitor. 'Father,' he said, clutching his watchchain hard and
+playing with it nervously to keep down his emotion, 'I'm afraid
+those poor Le Bretons are in an awfully bad way. I'm afraid, do you
+know, that they actually haven't enough to eat! I went into their
+rooms just now, and, would you believe it, I found nothing on the
+table for breakfast but dry bread and tea!'
+
+The Progenitor looked up quietly from the volume of Morley's 'Voltaire'
+which he was at that moment placidly engaged in devouring. 'Nothing
+but dry bread and tea,' he said, in what seemed to Arthur a horribly
+unconcerned tone. 'Really, hadn't they? Well, I dare say they ARE
+very badly off, poor people. But after all, you know, Artie, they
+can't be really poor, for Le Breton told me himself he was generally
+earning fifteen shillings or a pound a week, and that, you see, is
+really for three people a very good income, now isn't it?'
+
+Arthur, delicate-minded, gentle, chivalrous Arthur, gazed in surprise
+and sudden distress at that dear, good, unselfish old father of
+his. How extraordinary that the kindly old man couldn't grasp the
+full horror of the situation! How strange that he, who would himself
+have been so tender, so considerate, so womanly in his care and
+sympathy towards anything that seemed to him like real poverty
+or real suffering, should have been so blinded by his long hard
+workingman life towards the peculiar difficulties and trials of
+classes other than his own as not to recognise the true meaning of
+that dreadful disclosure! Arthur was not angry with him--he felt
+too fully at that moment what depths of genuine silent hardship
+uncomplainingly endured were implied in the stoically calm frame
+of mind which could treat Edie Le Breton's penury of luxuries as
+a comparatively slight matter: after all, his father was right at
+bottom; such mere sentimental middle-class poverty is as nothing
+to the privations of the really poor; yet he could not help feeling
+a little disappointed for all that. He wanted sympathy in his
+pity, and he could clearly expect none here. 'Why, father,' he
+cried bitterly, 'you don't throw yourself into the position as you
+ought to do. A pound a week, paid regularly, would be a splendid
+income of course for people brought up like you or me. But just
+consider how those two young people have been brought up! Consider
+their wants and their habits! Consider the luxury they have been
+accustomed to! And then think of their being obliged to want now
+almost for food in their last extremity!'
+
+His father answered in the same quiet tone--not hardly, but calmly,
+as though he were discussing a problem in political economy instead
+of the problem of Edie Le Breton's happiness--'Well, you see, it's
+all a matter of the standard of comfort. These two friends of yours
+have been brought up above their future; and now that they're got
+to come down to their natural level, why, of course, they feel it,
+depend upon it, they feel it. Their parents, of course, shouldn't
+have accustomed them to a style of life above their station. Good
+dry bread, not too stale, does nobody any harm: still, I dare say
+they don't like coming down to it. But bless your heart, Artie,
+if you'd seen the real want and poverty that I've seen, my boy--the
+actual hunger and cold and nakedness that I've known honest working
+people brought down to by no work, and nothing but the House open
+before them, or not that even, you wouldn't think so much of the
+sentimental grievances of people who are earning fifteen shillings
+a week in ease and comfort.'
+
+'But, Father,' Arthur went on, scarcely able to keep down the
+rising tone of indignation at such seeming heartlessness, 'Ernest
+doesn't earn even that always. Sometimes he earns nothing, or next
+to nothing; and it's the uncertainty and insecurity that tells
+upon them even more than the poverty itself. Oh, Father, Father,
+you who have always been so good and kind, I never heard you speak
+so cruelly about anyone before as you're speaking now about that
+poor, friendless, helpless, penniless, heart-broken little woman!'
+
+The old shoemaker caught at the word suddenly, and looking him
+through and through with an unexpected gleam of discovery, laid
+down the life of Voltaire on the table with a bang, and sat straight
+upright in his chair, nodding his head, and muttering slowly to
+himself, 'Little woman--he said "little woman!" Poor Artie, Poor
+Artie!' in a tone of inexpressible pity. At last he turned to Arthur
+and cried with a voice of womanly tenderness, 'My boy, my boy, I
+didn't know before it was the lassie you were thinking of; I thought
+it was only poor young Le Breton. I see it all now; I've surprised
+your secret; you've let it out to me without knowing it. Oh, Artie,
+if that's She, I'm sorry for her, and I'm sorry for you, my boy,
+from the bottom of my heart. If that's She, Artie, we'll put our
+heads together, and see what plan we can manage to save her from
+what she has never been accustomed to. Don't think too hardly of
+your old Progenitor, Artie; he hasn't mixed with these people all
+his life, and learned to sympathise with them as you've done, my
+son; he doesn't understand them or know their troubles as you do:
+but if that's her that you told me about one day, we shall find the
+means to make her happy and comfortable yet, if we have to starve
+for it. Dear Arthur, do not think I could be harsh or unfeeling
+for a moment to the woman that you ever once in passing fixed your
+heart upon. Let's talk it over and think it over, and sooner or
+later we'll surely find the way to accomplish it.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+PRECONTRACT OF MARRIAGE.
+
+
+Whether Ronald Le Breton's abstruse speculations on the theory of
+heredity were well founded or not, it certainly did happen, at any
+rate, that the more he saw of Selah Briggs the better he liked her;
+and the more Selah saw of him the better she liked him in return.
+Curiously enough, too, Selah did actually recognise in him what
+he fancied he recognised in himself, that part of his brother's
+nature (not all wholly assumed) which was just what Selah had
+first been drawn to admire in Herbert himself. It wasn't merely
+the originality of his general point of view: it was something more
+deep-seated and undefinable than that--in a word, his idiosyncrasy.
+Selah Briggs, with her peculiar fiery soul and rebellious nature,
+found in both the Le Bretons something that seemed at once to satisfy
+her wants, to fulfil her desires, to saturate her affinities: and
+with Ronald, as with Herbert before, she was conscious of a certain
+awe and respect which was all the more pleasant to her because
+her untamed spirit had never felt anything like it with any other
+human being. She didn't understand them, and she didn't want to
+understand them: that constituted just the very charm of their
+whole personality to her peculiar fancy. All the other people she
+had ever met were as transparent as glass, for good or for evil;
+she could see through all their faults and virtues as easily as
+one sees through a window: the Le Bretons were to her inscrutable,
+novel, incomprehensible, inexplicable, and she prized them for
+their very inscrutability. And so it came to pass, that almost by
+a process of natural and imperceptible transference, she passed on
+at last to Ronald's account very much the same intensity of feeling
+that she had formerly felt towards his brother Herbert.
+
+But at the same time, Selah never for a moment let him see it. She
+was too proud to confess now that she could ever love another man:
+the Mr. Walters she had once believed in had never, never, never
+existed: and she would raise no other idol in future to take the
+place of that vanished ideal. She was grateful to Ronald, and even
+fond of him: but that was all-outwardly at least. She never let him
+see, by word or act, that in her heart of hearts she was beginning
+to love him. And yet Ronald instinctively knew it. He himself
+could not have told you why; but he knew it. Even a woman cannot
+hide a secret from a man with that peculiarly penetrating intuitive
+temperament which belongs to sensitive, delicate types like Ronald
+Le Breton's.
+
+One Sunday evening, when Selah had been spending a few hours at
+Edie's lodgings (Ronald always made it an excuse for finding them
+a supper, on the ground that Selah was really his guest, though he
+could not conveniently ask her to his own rooms), he walked home
+towards Notting Hill with Selah; and as they crossed the Regent's
+Park, he took the opportunity to say something to her that he had
+had upon his mind for a few weeks past, in some vague, indefinite,
+half-unconscious fashion.
+
+'Selah,' he began, a little timidly, 'don't you think it's very
+probable we shan't have Ernest here much longer with us?'
+
+'I'm afraid it is, Ronald,' Selah answered. She had got quite
+accustomed now to calling him Ronald. With such a poor, weak, sickly
+fellow as that, why really, after all, it did not much matter.
+
+'Well, Selah,' Ronald went on, gravely, his eyes filling with
+tears as he spoke, 'in that case, you know, I can't think what's
+to become of poor Edie. It's a dreadful contingency to talk about,
+Selah, and I can't bear talking about it; but we MUST face these
+things, however terrible, mustn't we? and in this case one's
+absolutely bound to face it for poor Edie's sake as well as for
+Ernest's. Selah, she must have a home to go to, when dear Ernest's
+taken from us.'
+
+'I'm very sorry for her, Ronald,' Selah answered, with unusual
+softness of manner, 'but I really don't see how a home can possibly
+be provided for her.'
+
+'I do,' Ronald answered, more calmly; 'and for their sakes, Selah,
+I want you to help me in trying to provide it.'
+
+'How?' Selah asked, looking up in his face curiously, as they passed
+into a ray of lamplight.
+
+'Listen, Selah, and I'll tell you. Why, by marrying me.'
+
+'Never?' Selah answered, firmly, and with a decided tinge of the old
+Adam in her trembling voice. 'Never, Ronald! Never, never, never!'
+
+'Wait a minute, Selah,' Ronald pleaded, 'till you've heard the
+end of what I have to say to you. Consider that when dear Ernest's
+gone (oh! Selah, you must excuse me; it makes me cry so to think
+of it), there'll be nowhere on earth for poor little Edie and Dot
+to go to.'
+
+'Did ever a man propose to a girl so extraordinarily in all this
+world,' Selah thought to herself, angrily. 'He actually expects me
+to marry him in order to provide a home for his precious sister-in-law.
+That's really carrying unselfishness a step too far, I call it.'
+
+'Edie couldn't come and live with me, of course,' Ronald went on,
+quickly, 'if I were a bachelor; but if I were married, why then,
+naturally, she and Dot could come and live with us; and she could
+earn a little money somehow, no doubt; and, at any rate, it'd be
+better for her than starvation.'
+
+Selah stopped a minute, and tapped the hard ground two or three
+times angrily with the point of her umbrella. 'And me, Ronald?'
+she said in a curious defiant voice. 'And ME? I suppose you've
+forgotten all about ME. You don't ask me to marry you because
+you love me; you don't ask me whether I love you or not; you only
+propose to me that I should quietly turn domestic housekeeper for
+Mrs. Ernest Le Breton. And for my part, I answer you plainly, once
+for all, that I'm not going to do it--no, never, never, never!'
+
+She spoke haughtily, flashing her eyes at him in the fierce old
+fashion, and Ronald was almost frightened at the angry intensity
+of her contemptuous gestures. 'Selah,' he cried, trying to take
+her hand, which she tore away from him hurriedly: 'Selah, you
+misunderstand me. I only approached the subject that way because
+I didn't want to seem overweening and presumptuous. It's a very
+great piece of vanity, it seems to me, for any man to ask a woman
+whether she loves him. I'm too conscious of all my own faults and
+failings, Selah, to venture upon asking you ever to love me; but
+I do love you, Selah, I'm sure I do love you; and I hoped, I somehow
+fancied--it may have been mere fancy, but I DID imagine--that I
+detected, I can't say how, that you did really love me, too, just
+a very very little. Oh, Selah, it's because I really love you that
+I ask you whether you'll marry me, such as I am; I know I'm a poor
+sort of person to marry, but I ventured to hope you might love me
+just a little for all that.'
+
+He looked so frail and gentle as he stood there pleading in the
+pale moonlight, that Selah could have taken him to her bosom then
+and there and fondled him as one would pet a sick child, for pure
+womanliness; but the devil in her blood kept her from doing it, and
+she answered haughtily, instead: 'Ronald, if you wanted to marry
+me, you ought to have asked me for my own sake. Now that you've
+asked me for another's, you can't expect me to give you an answer.
+Keep your money, my poor boy; you'll want it all for you and her
+hereafter; don't go sharing it and spending it on perfect strangers
+such as me. And don't go talking to me again about this business
+as long as your sister-in-law is unprovided for. I'm not going to
+take the bread out of her mouth, and I'm not going to marry a man
+who doesn't utterly and entirely love me.'
+
+'But I do,' Ronald answered, earnestly; 'I do, Selah; I love you
+truly and faithfully from the very bottom of my heart.'
+
+'Leave off, Roland,' Selah said in the same angry tone. 'If you
+ever talk to me of this again, I give you my word of honour about
+it, I'll never speak another word to you.'
+
+And Ronald, who deeply respected the sanctity of a promise, were
+it only a threat, bided his time, and said no more about it for
+the present.
+
+Next day, as Ronald sat reading in his own rooms, he was much
+surprised at hearing a well-known voice at the door, inquiring
+with some asperity whether Mr. Le Breton was at home. He listened
+to the voice in intense astonishment. It was his mother's.
+
+'Ronald,' Lady Le Breton began, the moment she had been shown into
+his little sitting-room, 'I didn't think, after your undutiful,
+ungrateful conduct--with that abominable woman, too--that I should
+ever have come to see you, unless you came first, as you ought
+clearly to do, and begged my pardon penitently for your disgraceful
+behaviour. It's hard, I know, to acknowledge oneself in the wrong,
+but every Christian ought to be above vindictiveness and obstinate
+self-will; and I expect you, therefore, sooner or later, to come
+and ask forgiveness for your dreadful unkindness to me. Till then,
+as I said, I didn't expect to call upon you in any way. But I've
+felt compelled to-day to come and speak to you about a matter
+of duty, and as a matter of duty strictly I regard it, not as any
+relaxation of my just attitude of indignant expectancy towards
+yourself; no parent ought rightly to overlook such conduct as
+yours on the part of a son.' Ronald inclined his head respectfully.
+'Well, what I've come to speak to you about to-day, Ronald, is
+about your poor misguided brother Ernest. He, too, as you know,
+has behaved very badly to me.'
+
+'No,' Ronald answered stoutly, without further note or comment.
+Where the matter touched himself only he could maintain a decent
+silence, but where it touched poor dying Ernest he couldn't possibly
+restrain himself, even from a sense of filial obligation.
+
+'Very badly to me,' Lady Le Breton went on sternly, without in any
+way noticing the brief interruption, 'and I can't, of course, go
+to see him either, especially not as I should by so doing expose
+myself to meeting the person whom he has chosen to make his wife.
+Still, as I hear that Ernest a in a very serious or even dangerous
+condition----'
+
+'He's dying,' Ronald answered, the quick tears once more finding
+the easy road to his eyes as usual.
+
+'I considered, as a mother, it was my duty to warn him to take a
+little thought about his soul.'
+
+'His soul!' Ronald exclaimed in astonishment. 'Ernest's soul! Why,
+mother, dear Ernest has no need to look after his soul. He doesn't
+take that sordid, petty, limited view of our relations with
+eternity, and of our relations with the Infinite, which makes them
+all consist of the miserable, selfish, squalid desire to save our
+own poor personal little souls at all hazards. Ernest has something
+better and nobler to think of, I can assure you, than such a mere
+self-centred idea as that.'
+
+'Ronald!' Lady Breton exclaimed, drawing herself up with much
+dignity; 'how on earth you, who have always pretended to be a
+religious person, can utter such a shocking and wicked sentiment
+as that, really passes my comprehension. What in the world is
+religion for, I should like to know, if it isn't to teach us how
+to save our own souls? But the particular thing I want to speak
+to you about is just this: couldn't you manage to induce Ernest to
+see the Archdeacon a little, and let the Archdeacon speak to him
+about his deplorable spiritual condition? I thought about you both
+so much at church yesterday, when the dear Archdeacon was preaching
+such a beautiful sermon; his text was like this, as far as I can
+remember it. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but
+the end thereof are the ways of death." I couldn't help thinking
+all the time of my own two poor rebellious boys, and of the path
+that their misguided notions were leading them on. For I believe
+Ernest does really somehow persuade himself that he's in the
+right--it's inconceivable, but it's the fact; and I'm afraid the end
+thereof will be the ways of death; and then, as the dear Archdeacon
+said, "After death the judgment." Oh, Ronald, when I think of your
+poor dear brother Ernest's open unbelief, it makes me tremble for
+his future, so that I couldn't rest upon my bed until I'd been to
+see you and urged you to go and try to save him.'
+
+'Mother,' Ronald said with that tone in which he was well accustomed
+to answering Lady Le Breton's religious harangues; 'I don't think
+you need feel any uneasiness whatever on dear Ernest's account,
+so far as all that's concerned. What does HE want with saving
+his soul, mother? "Whosoever will save his life shall lose it."
+Remember what is written: "Not every one that saith unto me, Lord,
+Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven."'
+
+'But, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton continued, half angrily, 'consider
+his unbelief, his dreadful opinions, his errors of doctrine! How
+on earth can we be happy about him when we think of those?'
+
+'I don't think, Mother,' Ronald answered gently, 'that Infinite
+Justice and Infinite Love take much account of a man's opinions.
+They take account of his life and soul only, not of the correctness
+of his propositions in dogmatic theology; "Other sheep have I which
+are not of this fold--them also must I bring."'
+
+'It seems to me, Ronald,' Lady Le Breton rejoined coldly, 'that
+you don't in the least care for whatever is most distinctive and
+characteristic in the whole of Christian doctrine. You talk so
+very very differently on religious subjects from that dear, good,
+excellent Archdeacon.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+A GLEAM OF SUNSHINE.
+
+
+Lady Hilda Tregellis rang the bell resolutely. 'I shall have no
+more nonsense about it,' she said to herself in her most decisive
+and determined manner. 'Whether mamma wishes it or not, I shall go
+and see them this very day without another word upon the subject.'
+
+The servant answered the bell and stood waiting for his orders by
+the doorway.
+
+'Harris, will you tell Jenkins at once that I shall want
+the carriage at half-past eleven?'
+
+'Yes, my lady.'
+
+'All right then. That'll do. Don't stand staring at me there like
+an image, but go this minute and do as I tell you.'
+
+'Beg pardon, my lady, but her ladyship said she wanted the carriage
+herself at twelve puncshual.'
+
+'She can't have it, then, Harris. That's all. Go and give my message
+to Jenkins at once, and I'll settle about the carriage with my lady
+myself.'
+
+'She's the rummest young lady ever I come across,' the man murmured
+to himself in a dissatisfied fashion, as he went down the stairs
+again: 'but there, it's none of my business, thank goodness. The
+places and the people she does go and hunt up when she's got the
+fit on are truly ridic'lous: blest if she didn't acshally make Mr.
+Jenkins drive her down into Camberwell the other mornin', to see
+'ow the poor lived, she said; as if it mattered tuppence to us in
+our circles of society 'ow the poor live. I wonder what little game
+she's up to now? Well, well, what the aristocracy is coming to in
+these days is more'n I can fathom, as sure as my name's William
+'Arris.'
+
+The little game that Lady Hilda was up to that morning was one that
+a gentleman in Mr. Harris's position was certainly hardly like to
+appreciate or sympathise with.
+
+The evening before, she had met Arthur Berkeley once more at a small
+At Home, and had learned from him full particulars as to the dire
+straits into which the poor Le Bretons had finally fallen. Now,
+Hilda Tregellis was a kind-hearted girl at bottom, and when she
+heard all about it, she said at once to Arthur, 'I shall go and
+see them myself to-morrow, Mr. Berkeley, whether mamma allows me
+or not.'
+
+'What good will it do?' Arthur had answered her quickly. 'You
+can't find work for poor Le Breton, can you? and of course if you
+can't do that you can be of no earthly use in any way to the poor
+creatures.'
+
+'I don't know about that,' Hilda responded warmly. 'Sympathy's
+always something, isn't it, Mr. Berkeley? Nobody ought to know that
+better than you do. Besides, there's no saying when one may happen
+to turn up useful. Of course, I've never been of the slightest use
+to anybody in all my life, myself, I know, and I dare say I never
+shall be, but at least there's no harm in trying, is there? I'm on
+speaking terms with such an awful lot of people, all of them rich
+and many of them influential--Parliament, and Government offices,
+and all that sort of nonsense, you know--people who have no end
+of things to give away, and can't tell who on earth they'd better
+give them to, for fear of offending all the others, that I might
+possibly hear of something or other.'
+
+'I'm afraid, Lady Hilda,' Berkeley answered smiling, 'none of those
+people would have anything to offer that could possibly be of the
+slightest use to poor Le Breton. If he's to be saved at all, he
+must be saved in his own time and by his own methods. For my own
+part, I don't see what conceivable chance of success in life there
+is left for him. You can't imagine a man like him making money
+and living comfortably. It's a tragedy--all the dramas of real life
+always ARE tragedies; but I'm terribly afraid there's no conceivable
+way out of it.'
+
+Lady Hilda only looked at him with bold good humour. 'Nonsense,'
+she said bravely. 'All pure rubbishing pessimistic nonsense. (I
+hope pessimistic's the right word--it's a very good word, anyhow,
+even if it isn't in the proper place.) Well, I don't agree with you
+at all about this question, Mr. Berkeley. I'm very fond of Mr. Le
+Breton, really very fond of him; and I believe there's a corner
+somewhere for every man if only he can jog down properly into his
+own corner instead of being squeezed forcibly into somebody else's.
+The worst of it is, all the holes are round, and Mr. Le Breton's
+a square man, I allow: he wants all the angles cutting down off
+him.'
+
+'But you can't cut them off; that's the very trouble,' Arthur answered,
+with just a faint rising suspicion that he was half jealous of the
+interest Hilda showed even in poor lonely Ernest Le Breton. Gracious
+heavens! could he be playing false at last to the long-cherished
+memory of little Miss Butterfly? could he be really beginning to
+fall just a little in love, after all, with this bold beautiful
+Lady Hilda Tregellis? He didn't know, and yet he somehow hardly
+liked himself to think it. And while Edie was still so poor too!
+
+'No, you can't cut them off; I know that perfectly well,' Hilda
+rejoined quickly. 'I wouldn't care twopence for him if I thought
+you could. It's the angles that give him all his charming delicious
+originality. But you can look out a square hole for him somewhere,
+you know, and that of course would be a great deal better. Depend
+upon it, Mr. Berkeley, there are square holes up and down in the
+world, if only we knew where to look for them; and the mistake
+that everybody has made in poor Mr. Le Breton's case has been that
+instead of finding one to suit him, they've gone on trying to poke
+him down anyhow by main force into one of the round ones. That
+goes against the grain, you know; besides which I call it a clear
+waste of the very valuable solid mahogany corners.'
+
+Arthur Berkeley looked at her silently for a moment, as if a gleam
+of light had burst suddenly in upon him. Then he said to her slowly
+and deliberately, 'Perhaps you're right, Lady Hilda, though I never
+thought of it quite in that light before. But one thing certainly
+strikes me now, and that is that you're a great deal cleverer after
+all than I ever thought you.'
+
+Lady Hilda made a little mock curtsey. 'It's very good of you to
+say so,' she answered, half-saucily. 'Only the compliment is rather
+double-edged, you must confess, because it implies that up to now
+you've had a dreadfully low opinion of my poor little intelligence.'
+
+So after that conversation Lady Hilda made up her mind that she
+would certainly go the very next day and call as soon as possible
+upon Edie Le Breton. Nobody could tell what good might possibly
+come of it; but at least there could come no harm. And so, when the
+carriage drew up it the door at half-past eleven, Hilda Tregellis
+stepped into it with a vague consciousness of an important mission,
+and ordered Jenkins to drive at once to the side street in Holloway,
+whose address Arthur Berkeley had last night given her. Jenkins
+touched his hat with mechanical respect, but inwardly wondered what
+the dickens my lady would think if only she came to know of these
+'ere extrornary goin's on.
+
+At the door of the lodgings Hilda alighted and rang the bell herself.
+Good Mrs. Halliss opened the door, and answered quickly that Mrs.
+Le Breton was at home. Her woman's eye detected at once the coronet
+on the carriage, and she was ready to burst with delight when the
+tall visitor handed her a card for Edie, bearing the name of Lady
+Hilda Tregellis. It was almost the first time that Edie had had
+any lady callers; certainly the first time she had had any of such
+social distinction; and Mrs. Halliss made haste to usher her up in
+due form, and then ran down hastily to communicate the good news
+to honest John, who in his capacity of past coachman was already
+gazing out of the area window with deep interest at the carriage
+and horses.
+
+'There, John dear,' she cried, with tears of joy in her eyes,
+forgetting in her excitement to drat the man for not being in the
+back kitchen, 'to think that we should see a carriage an' pair like
+that there a-drawin' up in front of out own very 'ouse, and Lady
+'Ilder Tergellis, or summat o' the sort, a-comin' 'ere to see that
+dear little lady in the parlour, why, it's enough to make one's
+'eart burst, nearly, just you see now if it reelly isn't. You could
+a' knocked me down with a feather, a'most, when that there Lady
+'Ilder 'anded me 'er curd, and asked so sweet-like if Mrs. Le
+Breting was at 'ome. Mr. Le Breting's people is comin' round, you
+may be sure of it; 'is mother's a lady of title, that much we know
+for certing; and she wouldn't go and let 'er own flesh an' blood
+die 'ere of downright poverty, as they're like to do and won't let
+us 'elp it, pore dears, without sendin' round to inquire and assist
+'em. Married against 'er will, I understand, from what that dear
+Mr. Berkeley, bless 'is kind 'eart, do tell me; not as I can believe
+'e married beneath 'im, no, not no ways; for a sweeter, dearer,
+nicer little lady than our Mrs. Le Breting I never did, an' that
+I tell you. Sweeter manners you never did see yourself, John, for
+all you've lived among the aristocracy: an' I always knew 'is people
+'ud come round at last, and do what was right by 'im. An' you may
+depend upon it, John, this 'ere Lady 'Ilder's one of his relations,
+an' she's come round on a message from Lady Le Breting, to begin
+a reconciliation. And though we should be sorry to lose 'em, as
+'as stood by 'em through all their troubles, I'm glad to 'ear it,
+John, that I am, for I can't a-bear to see that dear young fellow
+a-eatin' 'is life out with care and anxiety.' And Mrs. Halliss, who
+had always felt convinced in her own mind that Ernest must really
+be the unacknowledged heir to a splendid fortune, began to wipe
+her eyes violently in her delight at this evident realisation of
+her wildest fancies and wishes.
+
+Meanwhile, upstairs in the little parlour, Edie had risen in some
+trepidation as Mrs. Halliss placed in her hands Lady Hilda Tregellis's
+card. Ernest was out, gone to walk feebly around the streets of
+Holloway, and she hardly knew at first what to say to so unexpected
+a visitor. But Lady Hilda put her almost at her ease at once
+by coming up to her with both her arms outstretched, as to an old
+friend, and saying, with one of her pleasantest smiles:
+
+'You must forgive me, Mrs. Le Breton, for never having come to
+call on you before; but I have been long meaning to, and doubting
+whether you would care to see me or not. You know, I'm a very old
+friend of your husband's--he was SO kind to me always when he was
+down at our place in dear old Devonshire. (You're a Devonshire girl
+yourself, aren't you? just as I am. I thought so. I'm so glad of
+it. I always get on so well with the dear old Devonshire folk.)
+Well, I've been meaning to come for ever so long, and putting
+it off, and putting it off, and putting it off, as one WILL put
+things off, you know, when you're not quite sure about them, until
+last evening. And then our friend, Mr. Arthur Berkeley, who knows
+everybody, talked to me about your husband and you, and told me
+he thought you wouldn't mind my coming to see you, for he fancied
+you hadn't much society up here that you cared for or sympathised
+with: though, of course, I'm dreadfully afraid of coming to call
+upon you, because I know you're the sister of that very clever Mr.
+Oswald, whose sad death we were all so sorry to hear about in the
+papers; and naturally, as you've lived so much with him and with
+Mr. Le Breton, you must be so awfully learned and all that sort of
+thing, and no doubt despise ignorant people like myself dreadfully.
+But you really mustn't despise me, Mrs. Le Breton, because, you
+see, I haven't had all the advantages that you've had; indeed, the
+only clever people I've ever met in all my life are your husband
+and Mr. Arthur Berkeley, except, of course, Cabinet ministers and
+so forth, and they don't count, because they're political, and so
+very old, and solemn, and grand, and won't take any notice of us
+girls, except to sit upon us. So that's what's made me rather afraid
+to call upon you, because I thought you'd be quite too much in
+the higher education way for a girl like me; and I haven't got any
+education at all, except in rubbish, as your husband used always
+to tell me. And now I want you to tell me all about Mr. Le Breton,
+and the baby--Dot, you call her, Mr. Berkeley told me--and yourself,
+too; for, though I've never seen you before, I feel, of course,
+like an old friend of the family, having known your husband so very
+intimately.'
+
+Lady Hilda designedly delivered all this long harangue straight
+off without a break, in her go-ahead, breathless, voluble fashion,
+because she felt sure Edie wouldn't feel perfectly at her ease at
+first, and she wanted to give her time to recover from the first
+foolish awe of that meaningless prefix, Lady. Moreover, Lady Hilda,
+in spite of her offhand manner was a good psychologist, and a true
+woman: and she had concocted her little speech on the spur of the
+moment with some cleverness, so as just to suit her instinctive
+reading of Edie's small personal peculiarities. She saw in a moment
+that that slight, pale, delicate girl was lost in London, far from
+her own home and surroundings; and that the passing allusion to
+their common Devonshire origin would please and conciliate her, as
+it always does with the clannish, warm-hearted, simple-minded West
+Country folk. Then again, the deft hints as to their friendship
+with Arthur Berkeley, as to Ernest's stay at Dunbude, and as to
+her own fear lest Edie should be too learned for her, all tended
+to bring out whatever points of interest they had together: while
+the casual touch about poor Harry's reputation, and the final
+mention of little Dot by name, completed the conquest of Edie's
+simple, gentle little woman's heart. So this was the great Lady
+Hilda Tregellis, she thought, of whom she had heard so much, and
+whom she had dreaded so greatly as a grand rival! Why, after all,
+she was exactly like any other Devonshire girl in Calcombe Pomeroy,
+except, perhaps, that she was easier to get on with, and smiled a
+great deal more pleasantly than ten out of a dozen.
+
+'It's very kind indeed of you to come,' Edie answered, smiling back
+as well as she was able the first moment that Lady Hilda allowed
+her a chance to edge in a word sideways. 'Ernest will be so very
+very sorry that he's missed you when he comes in. He's spoken to
+me a great deal about you ever so many times.'
+
+'No, has he really?' Lady Hilda asked quickly, with unmistakable
+interest and pleasure. 'Well, now, I'm so glad of that, for to tell
+you the truth, Mrs. Le Breton, though he was really always very
+kind to me, and so patient with all my stupidity, I more than
+half fancied he didn't exactly like me. In fact, I was dreadfully
+afraid he thought me a perfect nuisance. I'm so sorry he isn't in,
+because the truth is, I came partly to see him as well as to see
+you, and I should be awfully disappointed if I had to miss him.
+Where's he gone, if I may ask? Perhaps I may be able to wait and
+see him.'
+
+'Oh, he's only out walking somewhere--ur--somewhere about Holloway,'
+Edie answered, half blushing at the nature of their neighbourhood,
+and glancing round the little room to see how it was likely to
+strike so grand a person as Lady Hilda Tregellis.
+
+Hilda noticed the glance, and made as if she did not notice it. Her
+heart had begun to warm at once to this poor, pale, eager-looking
+little woman, who had had the doubtful happiness of winning Ernest
+Le Breton's love. 'Then I shall certainly wait and see him, Mrs. Le
+Breton.' she said cordially. 'What a dear cosy little room you've
+got here, to be sure. I do so love those nice bright little
+cottage parlours, with their pretty pots of flowers and cheerful
+furniture--so much warmer and more comfortable, you know, than the
+great dreary empty barns that most people go and do penance by
+living in. If ever I marry--which I don't suppose I ever shall do,
+for nobody'll have me, I'm sorry to say: at least, nobody but stupid
+people in the peerage, Algies and Berties and Monties I always call
+them--well, if I ever do marry, I shall have a cosy little house
+just like this one, with no unnecessary space to walk over every
+time you come in or out, and with a chance of keeping yourself
+warm without having to crone over the fire in order to get safely
+out of the horrid draughts. And Dot, now let me see, how old is
+she by this time? I ought to remember, I'm sure, for Mr. Berkeley
+told me all about her at the time; and I said should I write and
+ask if I might stand as godmother; and Mr. Berkeley laughed at
+me, and said what could I be dreaming of, and did I think you were
+going to make your baby liable to fine and imprisonment if it ever
+published works hereafter on philosophy or something of the sort.
+So delightfully original of all of you, really.'
+
+Once started on that fertile theme of female conversation, Edie and
+Hilda got on well enough in all conscience to satisfy the most
+exacting mind. Dot was duly brought in and exhibited by Mrs. Halliss;
+and was pronounced to be the very sweetest, dearest, darlingest
+little duck ever seen on earth since the beginning of all things.
+Her various points of likeness to all her relations were duly
+discussed; and Hilda took particular pains to observe that she
+didn't in the very faintest degree resemble that old horror, Lady
+Le Breton. Then her whole past history was fully related, she had
+been fed on, and what illnesses she had had, and how many teeth
+she had got, and all the other delightful nothings so perennially
+interesting to the maternal heart. Hilda listened to the whole
+account with unfeigned attention, and begged leave to be allowed
+to dance Dot in her own strong arms, and tickled her fat cheek with
+her slender forefinger, and laughed with genuine delight when the
+baby smiled again at her and turned her face to be tickled a second
+time. Gradually Hilda brought the conversation round to Ernest's
+journalistic experiences, and at last she said very quietly, 'I'm
+sorry to learn from Mr. Berkeley, dear, that your husband doesn't
+get quite as much work to do as he would like to have.'
+
+Edie's tender eyes filled at once with swimming tears. That one
+word 'dear,' said so naturally and simply, touched her heart at
+once with its genuine half unspoken sympathy. 'Oh, Lady Hilda,'
+she answered falteringly, 'please don't make me talk about that.
+We are so very, very, very poor. I can't bear to talk about it to
+you. Please, please don't make me.'
+
+Hilda looked at her with the moisture welling up in her own eyes
+too, and said softly, 'I'm SO sorry: dear, dear little Mrs. Le
+Breton, I'm so very, very, very sorry for you! from the bottom of
+my heart I'm sorry for you.'
+
+'It isn't for myself, you know,' Edie answered quickly: 'for
+myself, of course, I could stand anything; but it's the trouble
+and privations for darling Ernest. Oh, Lady Hilda, I can't bear to
+say it, but he's dying, he's dying.'
+
+Hilda took the pretty small hand affectionately in hers. 'Don't,
+dear, don't,' she said, brushing away a tear from her own eyes at
+the same time. 'He isn't, believe me, he isn't. And don't call
+me by that horrid stiff name, dear, please don't. Call me Hilda.
+I should be so pleased and flattered if you would call me Hilda.
+And may I call you Edie? I know your husband calls you Edie, because
+Mr. Ronald Le Breton told me so. I want to be a friend of yours;
+and I feel sure, if only you will let me, that we might be very
+good and helpful friends indeed together.'
+
+Edie pressed her hand softly. How very different from the imaginary
+Lady Hilda she had. pictured to herself in her timid, girlish fancy!
+How much even dear Ernest had been mistaken as to what there was
+of womanly really in her. 'Oh, don't speak so kindly to me,' she
+said imploringly; 'don't speak so kindly, or else you'll make me
+cry. I can't bear to hear you speak so kindly.'
+
+'Cry, dear,' Lady Hilda whispered in a gentle tone, kissing her
+forehead delicately as she spoke: 'cry and relieve yourself. There'a
+nothing gives one so much comfort when one's heart is bursting as a
+regular good downright cry.' And, suiting the action to the word,
+forthwith Lady Hilda laid her own statuesque head down beside Edie's,
+and so those two weeping women, rivals once in a vague way, and
+now bound to one another by a new-found tie, mingled their tears
+silently together for ten minutes in unuttered sympathy.
+
+As they sat there, both tearful and speechless, with Lady Hilda
+soothing Edie's wan hand tenderly in hers, and leaning above her,
+and stroking her hair softly with a sister's fondness, the door
+opened very quietly, and Arthur Berkeley stood for a moment pausing
+in the passage, and looking in without a word upon the unexpected
+sight that greeted his wondering vision. He had come to call upon
+Ernest about some possible opening for a new writer on a paper lately
+started; and hearing the sound of sobs within had opened the door
+quietly and tentatively. He could hardly believe his own eyes when
+he actually saw Lady Hilda Tregellis sitting there side by side
+with Edie Le Breton, kissing her pale forehead a dozen times in
+a minute, and crying over her like a child with unwonted tears of
+unmistakable sympathy. For ten seconds Arthur held the door ajar
+in his hands, and gazed silently with the awe of chivalrous respect
+upon the tearful, beautiful picture. Then he shut the door again
+noiselessly and unperceived, and stole softly out into the street
+to wait alone for Ernest's return. It was not for him to intrude
+his unbidden presence upon the sacred sorrow of those two weeping
+sister-women.
+
+He lighted a cigar outside, and walked up and down a neighbouring
+street feverishly till he thought it likely the call would be
+finished. 'Dear little Mrs. Le Breton,' he said to himself softly,
+'dear little Miss Butterfly of the days that are dead; softened
+and sweetened still more by suffering, with the beauty of holiness
+glowing in your face, how I wish some good for you could unexpectedly
+come out of this curious visit. Though I don't see how it's
+possible: I don't see how it's possible. The stream carries us all
+down unresistingly before its senseless flood, and sweeps us at
+last, sooner or later, like helpless logs, into the unknown sea.
+Poor Ernest is drifting fast thitherwards before the current, and
+nothing on earth, it seems to me, can conceivably stop him!'
+
+He paced up and down a little, with a quick, unsteady tread, and
+took a puff or two again at his cigar abstractedly. Then he held
+it thoughtfully between his fingers for a while and began to hum
+a few bars from his own new opera then in course of composition--a
+stately long-drawn air, it was. something like the rustle of Hilda
+Tregellis's satin train as she swept queenlike down the broad marble
+staircase of some great Elizabethan country palace. 'And dear Lady
+Hilda too,' he went on, musingly: 'dear, kind, sympathising Lady
+Hilda. Who on earth would ever have thought she had it in her to
+comfort that poor, weeping, sorrowing girl as I just now saw her
+doing? Dear Lady Hilda! Kind Lady Hilda! I have undervalued you
+and overlooked you, because of the mere accident of your titled
+birth, but I could have kissed you myself, for pure gratitude,
+that very minute, Hilda Tregellis, when I saw you stooping down and
+kissing that dear white forehead that looked so pale and womanly
+and beautiful. Yes, Hilda, I could have kissed you. I could have
+kissed your own grand, smooth, white marble forehead. And no very
+great trial of endurance, either, Arthur Berkeley, if it comes to
+that; for say what you will of her, she's a beautiful, stately,
+queenlike woman indeed; and it somehow strikes me she's a truer
+and better woman, too, than you have ever yet in your shallow
+superficiality imagined. Not like little Miss Butterfly! Oh, no,
+not like little Miss Butterfly! But still, there are keys and keys
+in music; and if every tune was pitched to the self-same key, even
+the tenderest, what a monotonous, dreary world it would be to live
+and sing in after all. Perhaps a man might make himself a little
+shrine not wholly without sweet savour of pure incense for beautiful,
+stately, queenlike Hilda Tregellis too! But no; I mustn't think
+of it. I have no other duty or prospect in life possible as yet
+while dear little Miss Butterfly still remains practically unprovided
+for!'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+HOPE.
+
+
+From Edie Le Breton's lodgings, Hilda Tregellis drove straight,
+without stopping all the way, to Arthur Berkeley's house at Chelsea;
+for Arthur had long since risen to the dignity of an enfranchised
+householder, and had bought himself a pretty cottage near the
+Embankment, with room enough for himself and the Progenitor, and
+even for any possible future domestic contingency in the way of
+wife and children. It was a very unconventional thing for her to
+do, no doubt; but Lady Hilda was certainly not the person to be
+deterred from doing anything she contemplated on the bare ground
+of its extreme unconventionally; and so far was she from objecting
+personally to her visit on this score, that before she rang the
+Berkeleys' bell she looked quietly at her little bijou watch, and
+said with a bland smile to the suspicious Mr. Jenkins, 'Let me see,
+Jenkins; it's one o'clock. I shall lunch with my friends here this
+morning; so you may take the carriage home now for my lady, and I
+shall cab it back, or come round by Metropolitan.' Jenkins was too
+much accustcmed to Lady Hilda's unaccountable vagaries to express
+any surprise at her wildest resolutions, even if she had proposed
+to go home on a costermonger's barrow; so he only touched his hat
+respectfully, in his marionette fashion, and drove away at once
+without further colloquy.
+
+'Is Mr. Berkeley at home?' Hilda asked of the pretty servant girl
+who opened the door to her, mentally taking note at the same time
+that Arthur's aesthetic tendencies evidently extended even to his
+human surroundings.
+
+'Which Mr. Berkeley?' the girl asked in reply. 'Mr. Berkeley
+senerer, 'e's at 'ome, but Mr. Arthur, 'e's gone up this mornin'
+to 'Olloway.'
+
+Hilda seized with avidity upon this unexpected and almost providential
+opening. 'No, is he?' she said, delighted. 'Then I'll go in and see
+Mr. Berkeley senior. No card, thank you: no name: tell him merely
+a lady would like to see him. I dare say Mr. Arthur'll be back
+before long from Holloway.'
+
+The girl hesitated a moment as if in doubt, and surveyed Lady Hilda
+from head to foot. Hilda, whose eyes were still red from crying,
+couldn't help laughing outright at the obvious cause of the girl's
+hesitation. 'Do as I tell you,' she said in her imperious way. 'Who
+on earth do you take me for, my good girl? That's my card, see: but
+you needn't give it to Mr. Berkeley senior. Now go and tell him at
+once that a lady is waiting to see him.'
+
+The innate respect of the English working classes for the kind of
+nobility that is supposed to be represented by the British peerage
+made the girl drop an instinctive curtsey as she looked at the card,
+and answer in a voice of hushed surprise, 'Yes, my lady.' She had
+heard Lady Hilda Tregellis spoken of more than once at her master's
+table, and she knew, of course, that so great a personage as that
+could do no wrong. So she merely ushered her visitor at once into
+Arthur Berkeley's beautiful little study, with its delicate grey
+pomegranate wall paper and its exquisite unpolished oak fittings,
+and said simply, in an overawed manner, 'A lady wishes to speak to
+you, sir.'
+
+The old shoemaker looked up from the English translation of Ribot's
+'Psychologie Anglaise Contemporaine,' with whose intricacies he
+was manfully struggling, and rose with native politeness to welcome
+Hilda.
+
+'Good morning,' Hilda said, extending her hand to him with one of
+her beaming disarming smiles, and annihilating all that was most
+obtrusively democratic in him at once by her pleasant manner. 'I'm
+a friend of your son's, Mr. Berkeley, and I've come here to see
+him about very particular private business--in short, on an errand
+of charity. Will he be long gone, do you know?'
+
+'Not very,' the Progenitor answered, in a somewhat embarrassed
+manner, surveying her curiously. 'At least, I should think not.
+He's gone to Holloway for an hour or two, but I fancy he'll be back
+for two o'clock luncheon, Miss----ur, I don't think I caught your
+name, did I?'
+
+'To Holloway,' Hilda echoed, taking no notice of his suggested
+query. 'Oh, then he's gone to see the poor dear Le Bretons, of
+course. Why, that's just what I wanted to see him about. If you'll
+allow me then, I'll just stop and have lunch with you.'
+
+'The dickens you will,' the Progenitor thought to himself in speechless
+astonishment. 'That's really awfully cool of you. However, I dare
+say it's usual to invite oneself in the state of life that that boy
+Artie has gone and hoisted himself into, most unnaturally. A fine
+lady, no doubt, of their modern pattern; but in my day, up in
+Paddington, we should have called her a brazen hussey.--Certainly,
+if you will,' he added aloud. 'If you've come on any errand that
+will do any good to the Le Bretons, I'm sure my son'll be delighted
+to see you. He's greatly grieved at their unhappy condition.'
+
+'I'm afraid I've nothing much to suggest of any very practical
+sort,' Hilda answered, with a slight sigh; 'but at least I should
+like to talk with him about the matter. Something must be done
+for these two poor young people, you know, Mr. Berkeley. Something
+must really be done to help them.'
+
+'Then you're interested in them, Miss--ur--ur--ah, yes--are you?'
+
+'Look at my eyes,' Hilda said plumply. 'Are they very red, Mr.
+Berkeley?'
+
+'Well....ur...yes, if I may venture to say so to a lady,' the old
+shoemaker answered hesitatingly, with unwonted gallantry. 'I should
+say they were a trifle, ur, just a trifle roseate, you know.'
+
+'Quite so,' Hilda went on, seriously. 'That's it. They're red with
+crying. I've been crying like a baby all the morning with that
+poor, dear, sweet little angel of a Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+'Then you're a great friend of hers, I suppose,' the Progenitor
+suggested mildly.
+
+'Never set eyes on her in my life before this morning, on the
+contrary,' Hilda continued in her garrulous fashion. 'But, oh, Mr.
+Berkeley, if you'd only seen that dear little woman, crying as if
+her heart would break, and telling me that dear Ernest was dying,
+actually dying; why--there--excuse me--I can't help it, you know;
+we women are always crying about something or other, aren't we?'
+
+The old man laid his hand on hers quietly. 'Don't mind ME, my
+dear,' he said with genuine tenderness. 'Don't mind me a bit; I'm
+only an old shoemaker, as I dare say you've heard before now; but
+I know you'll be the better for crying--women always are--and tears
+shed on somebody else's account are never thrown away, my dear,
+are they?'
+
+Hilda took his hand between hers, and wiping her eyes once more
+whispered softly, 'No, Mr. Berkeley, no; perhaps they're not; but
+oh, they're so useless; so very, very, very useless. Do you know,
+I never felt my own powerlessness and helplessness in all my life
+so much as I did at that dear, patient little Mrs. Le Breton's
+this very morning. There I sat, knowing she was in dire need of
+money for her poor husband, and wanting sufficient food and drink,
+perhaps, for herself, and him, and the dear darling baby; and in
+my hand in my muff I had my purse there with five tenners--Bank of
+England ten-pound uotes, you know--fifty pounds altogether, rolled
+up inside it; and I would have given anything if only I could have
+pulled them out and made them a present to her then and there; and
+I couldn't, you see: and, oh, Mr. Berkeley, isn't it terrible to
+look at them? And then, before I left, poor Mr. Le Breton himself
+came in, and I was quite shocked to see him. I used to know him a
+few years ago, and even then he wasn't what you'd call robust by
+any means; but now, oh, dear me, he does look so awfully ill and
+haggard and miserable that it quite made me break down again, and I
+cried about him before his very face; and the moment I got away, I
+said to the coachman, "Jenkins, drive straight off to the Embankment
+at Chelsea;" and here I am, you see, waiting to talk with your
+clever son about it; for, really, Mr. Berkeley, the poor Le Bretons
+haven't got a single friend anywhere like your son Arthur.'
+
+And then Lady Hilda went on to praise Arthur's music to the
+Progenitor, and to speak of how much admired he was everywhere,
+and to hint that so much genius and musical power must of course be
+largely hereditary. Whereat the old man, not unmoved by her gentle
+insinuating flattery, at last confessed to his own lifelong musical
+tastes, and even casually acknowledged that the motive for one or
+two of the minor songs in the famous operas was not entirely of
+Arthur's own unaided invention. And so, from one subject to another,
+they passed on so quickly, and hit it off with one another so exactly
+(for Hilda had a wonderful knack of leading up to everybody's strong
+points), that long before lunch was ready, the Progenitor had been
+quite won over by the fascinations of the brazen hussey, and was
+prepared to admit that she was really a very nice, kind, tender-hearted,
+intelligent, appreciative, and discriminating young lady. True,
+she had not read Mill or Fawcett, and was ignorant of the very name
+of Herbert Spencer; but she had a vast admiration for his dear boy
+Artie, and she saw that he himself knew a thing or two in his own
+modest way, though he was only what the grand world she moved in
+would doubtless call an old superannuated journeyman shoemaker.
+
+'Ah, yes, a shoemaker! so I've heard somewhere, I fancy,' Lady
+Hilda remarked brightly, when for the third time in the course of
+their conversation he informed her with great dignity of the interesting
+fact; 'how very delightful and charming that is, really, now isn't
+it? So original, you know, to make shoes instead of going into some
+useless profession, especially when you're such a great reader
+and student and thinker as you are--for I see you're a philosopher
+and a psychologist already, Mr. Berkeley'--Hilda considered it rather
+a bold effort on her part to pronounce the word 'psychologist' at
+the very first trial without stumbling; but though she was a little
+doubtful about the exact pronunciation of that fearful vocable,
+she felt quite at her ease about the fact at least, because
+she carefully noticed him lay down Ribot on the table beside him,
+name upward; 'one can't help finding that much out on a very short
+acquaintance, can one? Though, indeed, now I come to think of it,
+I believe I've heard often that men of your calling generally ARE
+very fond of reading, and are very philosophical, and clever, and
+political, and all that sort of thing; and they say that's the
+reason, of course, why Northampton's such an exceptionally intelligent
+constituency, and always returns such thoroughgoing able logical
+Radicals.'
+
+The old man's eyes beamed, as she spoke, with inexpressible pride
+and pleasure. 'I'm very glad indeed to hear you say so,' he answered
+promptly with a complacent self-satisfied smile, 'and I believe
+you're right too, Miss, ur--ur--ur--quite so. The practice of
+shoemaking undoubtedly tends to develop a very high and exceptional
+level of general intelligence and logical power.'
+
+'I'm sure of it,' Hilda answered demurely, in a tone of the deepest
+and sincerest conviction; 'and when I heard somebody say somewhere,
+that your son was...--well, WAS your son, I said to myself at once,
+"Ah, well, there now, that quite accounts, of course, for young
+Mr. Berkeley's very extraordinary and unusual abilities!"'
+
+'She's really a most sensible, well-informed young woman, whoever
+she is,' the Progenitor thought to himself silently; 'and it's
+certainly a pity that dear Artie couldn't take a fancy to some nice,
+appreciative, kind-hearted, practical girl like that now, instead
+of wearing away all the best days of his life in useless regret
+for that poor slender, unsubstantial nonentity of a watery little
+Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+By two o'clock lunch was ready, and just as it had been announced,
+Arthur Berkeley ran up the front steps, and let himself in with
+his proprietory latch-key. Turning straight into the dining-room,
+he was just in time to see his own father walking into lunch arm
+in arm with Lady Hilda Tregellis. As Mrs. Hallis had graphically
+expressed it, he felt as if you might have knocked him down with
+a feather! Was she absolutely ubiquitous, then, this pervasive
+Lady Hilda? and was he destined wherever he went to come upon her
+suddenly in the most unexpected and incomprehensible situations?
+
+'Will you sit down here, my dear,' the Progenitor was saying to
+Hilda at the exact moment he entered, 'or would you prefer your
+back to the fire?'
+
+Arthur Berkeley opened his eyes wide with unspeakable amazement.
+'What, YOU here,' he exclaimed, coming forward suddenly to shake
+hands with Hilda; 'why, I saw you only a couple of hours since at
+the Le Bretons' at Holloway.'
+
+'You did!' Hilda cried with almost equal astonishment, 'Why, how
+was that? I never saw YOU.'
+
+Arthur sighed quietly. 'No,' he answered, with a curious look at
+the Progenitor; 'you were engaged when I opened the door, and I
+didn't like to disturb you. You were--you were speaking with poor
+little Mrs. Le Breton. But I'm so much obliged to you for your
+kindness to them, Lady Hilda; so very much obliged to you for your
+great kindness to them.'
+
+It was the Progenitor's turn now to start in surprise. 'What! Lady
+Hilda!' he cried with a bewildered look. 'Lady Hilda! Did I hear
+you say "Lady Hilda"? Is this Lady Hilda Tregellis, then, that I've
+heard you talk about so often, Artie?'
+
+'Why, of course, Father. You didn't know who it was, then, didn't
+you? Lady Hilda, I'm afraid you've been stealing a march upon the
+poor unsuspecting hostile Progenitor.'
+
+'Not quite that, Mr. Berkeley,' Hilda replied, laughing; 'only
+after the very truculent character I had heard of your father as
+a regular red-hot militant Radical, I thought I'd better not send
+in my name to him at once for fear it might prejudice him against
+me before first acquaintance.'
+
+The Progenitor looked at her steadfastly from head to foot, standing
+before him there in her queenly beauty, as if she were some strange
+wild beast that he had been requested to inspect and report upon
+for a scientific purpose. 'Lady Hilda Tregellis!' he said slowly
+and deliberately; 'Lady Hilda Tregellis! So this is Lady Hilda
+Tregellis, is it? Well, all I can say is this, then, that as far as
+I can judge her, Lady Hilda Tregellis is a very sensible, modest,
+intelligent, well-conducted young woman, which is more than I
+could possibly have expected from a person of her unfortunate and
+distressing hereditary antecedents. But you know, my dear, it was
+a very mean trick of you to go and take an old man's heart by guile
+and stratagem in that way!'
+
+Hilda laughed a little uneasily. The Progenitor's manner was perhaps
+a trifle too open and unconventional even for her. 'It wasn't for
+that I came, Mr. Berkeley,' she said again with one of her sunny
+smiles, which brought the Progenitor metaphorically to her feet
+again, 'but to talk over this matter of the poor Le Bretons with
+your son. Oh, Mr. Arthur, something must really be done to help
+them. I know you say there's nothing to be done; but there must be;
+we must find it out; we must invent it; we must compel it. When
+I sat there this morning with that dear little woman and saw
+her breaking her full heart over her husband's trouble, I said to
+myself, somehow, Hilda Tregellis, if you can't find a way out of
+this, you're not worth your salt in this world, and you'd better
+make haste and take a rapid through-ticket at once to the next, if
+there is one.'
+
+'Which is more than doubtful, really,' the Progenitor muttered
+softly half under his breath; 'which, as Strauss has conclusively
+shown, is certainly a good deal more than doubtful.'
+
+Arthur took no notice of the interruption, but merely answered
+imploringly, with a despairing gesture of his hands, 'What are we
+to do, Lady Hilda? What can we possibly do?'
+
+'Why, sit down and have some lunch first,' Hilda rejoined with
+practical common-sense, 'and then talk it over rationally afterwards,
+instead of wringing our hands helplessly like a pair of Frenchmen
+in a street difficulty.' (Hilda had a fine old crusted English
+contempt, by the way, for those vastly inferior and foolish creatures
+known as foreigners.)
+
+Thus adjured, Berkeley sat down promptly, and they proceeded to take
+counsel together in this hard matter over the cutlets and claret
+provided before them. 'Ernest and Mrs. Le Breton told me all about
+your visit,' Arthur went on, soon after; 'and they're so much obliged
+to you for having taken the trouble to look them up in their sore
+distress. Do you know, Lady Hilda, I think you've quite made a
+conquest of our dear little friend, Mrs. Le Breton.'
+
+'I don't know about that,' Hilda responded with a smile, 'but I'm
+sure, at any rate, that the sweet little woman quite made a conquest
+of me, Mr. Berkeley. In fact, I can't say what you think, but for
+my part I'm determined an effort must be made one way or another
+to save them.'
+
+'It's no use,' Arthur answered, shaking his head sadly; 'it can't
+be done. There's nothing for it but to let them float down helplessly
+with the tide, wherever it may bear them.'
+
+'Stuff and nonsense,' Hilda replied energetically. 'All rubbish,
+utter rubbish, and if I were a man as you are, Mr. Berkeley, I
+should be ashamed to take such a desponding view of the situation.
+If we say it's got to be done, it will be done, and that's an end
+of it. Work must and can be found for him somehow or somewhere.'
+
+'But the man's dying,' Arthur interrupted with a vehement gesture.
+'There's no more work left in him. The only thing that's any use
+is to send him off to Madeira, or Egypt, or Catania, or somewhere
+of that sort, and let him die quietly among the palms and cactuses
+and aloes. That's Sir Antony Wraxall's opinion, and surely nobody
+in London can know half as well as he does about the matter.'
+
+'Sir Antony's a fool,' Hilda responded with refreshing bluntness.
+'He knows nothing on earth at all about it. He's accustomed to
+prescribing for a lot of us idle good-for-nothing rich people'--('Very
+true,' the Progenitor assented parenthetically;) 'and he's got
+into a fixed habit of prescribing a Nile voyage, just as he's got
+into a fixed habit of prescribing old wine, and carriage exercise,
+and ten thousand a year to all his patients. What Mr. Le Breton
+really wants is not Egypt, or old wine, or Sir Antony, or anything
+of the sort, but relief from this pressing load of anxiety and
+responsibility. Put him in my hands for six months, and I'll back
+myself at a hundred to six against Sir Antony to cure him for a
+monkey.'
+
+'For a what!' the Progenitor asked with a puzzled expression of
+countenance.
+
+'Back myself for a monkey, you know,' Hilda answered, without
+perceiving the cause of the old man's innocent confusion.
+
+The Progenitor was evidently none the wiser still for Hilda's
+answer, though he forbore to pursue the subject any farther, lest
+he should betray his obvious ignorance of aristocratic manners and
+dialect.
+
+But Arthur looked up at Lady Hilda with something like the gleam of
+a new-born hope on his distressed features. 'Lady Hilda,' he said
+almost cheerfully, 'you really speak as if you had some practicable
+plan actually in prospect. It seems to me, if anybody can pull
+them through, you can, because you've got such a grand reserve of
+faith and energy. What is it, now, you think of doing?'
+
+'Well,' Hilda answered, taken a little aback at this practical
+question, 'I've hardly got my plan matured yet; but I've got a
+plan; and I thought it all out as far as it went as I came along
+here just now in the carriage. The great thing is, we must inspire
+Mr. Le Breton with a new confidence; we must begin by showing him
+we believe in him, and letting him see that he may still manage
+in some way or other to retrieve himself. He has lost all hope: we
+must begin with him over again. I've got an idea, but it'll take
+money. Now, I can give up half my allowance for the next year--the
+Le Bretons need never know anything about it--that'll be something:
+you're a rich man now, I believe, Mr. Berkeley; will you make up
+as much as I do, if my plan seems a feasible one to you for retrieving
+the position?'
+
+The Progenitor answered quickly for him: 'Miss Tregellis,' he
+said, with a little tremor in his voice, '--you'll excuse me, my
+dear, but it's against my principles to call anybody my lady:--he
+will, I know he will; and if he wouldn't, why, my dear, I'd go
+back to my cobbling and earn it myself rather than that you or your
+friends should go without it for a single minute.'
+
+Arthur said nothing, but he bowed his head silently. What a lot of
+good there was really in that splendid woman, and what a commanding,
+energetic, masterful way she had about her! To a feckless, undecided,
+faltering man like Arthur Berkeley there was something wonderfully
+attractive and magnificent, after all, in such an imperious resolute
+woman as Lady Hilda.
+
+'Then this is my plan,' Hilda went on hastily. 'We must do
+something that'll take Mr. Le Breton out of himself for a short
+time entirely--that'll give him occupation of a kind he thinks
+right, and at the same time put money in his pocket. Now, he's
+always talking about this socialistic business of his; but why
+doesn't he tell us what he has actually seen about the life and
+habits of the really poor? Mrs. Le Breton tells me he knows the
+East End well: why doesn't he sit down and give us a good rattling,
+rousing, frightening description of all that's in it? Of course,
+I don't care twopence about the poor myself--not in the lump, I
+mean--I beg your pardon, Mr. Berkeley,'--for the Progenitor gave
+a start of surprise and astonishment--'you know we women are nothing
+if not concrete; we never care for anything in the abstract, Mr. Le
+Breton used to tell me; we want the particular case brought home
+to our sympathies before we can interest ourselves about it. After
+all, even YOU who are men don't feel very much for all the miserable
+wretched people there are in China, you know; they're too far away
+for even you to bother your heads about. But I DO care about the
+Le Bretons, and it strikes me we might help them a little in this
+way. I know a lot of artists, Mr. Berkeley; and I know one who
+I think would just do for the very work I want to set him. (He's
+poor, too, by the way, and I don't mind giving him a lift at the
+same time and killing two birds with one stone.) Very well, then;
+I go to him, and say, "Mr. Verney," I say,--there now, I didn't mean
+to tell you his name, but no matter; "Mr. Verney," I shall say, "a
+friend of mine in the writing line is going to pay some visits to
+the very poor quarters in the East End, and write about it, which
+will make a great noise in the world as sure as midday."'
+
+'But how do you know it will?' asked the Progenitor, simply.
+
+Hilda turned round upon him with an unfeigned look of startled
+astonishment. 'How do I know it will?' she said confidently. 'Why,
+because I mean it to, Mr. Berkeley. Because I say it shall. Because
+I choose to make it. Two Cabinet ministers shall quote it in the
+House, and a duke shall write letters to the "Times" denouncing it
+as an intensely wicked and revolutionary publication. If I choose
+to float it, I WILL float it.--Well, "Mr. Verney," I say for example,
+"will you undertake to accompany him and make sketches? It'll be
+unpleasant work, I know, because I've been there myself to see,
+and the places don't smell nice at all--worse than Genoa or the
+old town at Nice even, I can tell you: but it'll make you a name;
+and in any case the publisher who's getting it up'll pay you well
+for it." Of course, Mr. Verney says "Yes." Then we go on to Mr.
+Le Breton and say, "A young artist of my acquaintance is making a
+pilgrimage into the East End to see for himself how the people live,
+and to make pictures of them to stir up the sluggish consciences of
+the lazy aristocrats"--that's me and my people, of course: that'll
+be the way to work it. Play upon Mr. Le Breton's tenderest feelings.
+Make him feel he's fighting for the Cause; and he'll be ready to
+throw himself, heart and soul, into the spirit of the project. I
+don't care twopence about the Cause myself, of course, so that's
+flat, and I don't pretend to, either, Mr. Berkeley; but I care a
+great deal for the misery of that poor, dear, pale little woman,
+sitting there with me this morning and regularly sobbing her heart
+out; and if I can do anything to help her, why, I shall be only
+too delighted.'
+
+'Le Breton's a well-meaning young fellow, certainly,' the Progenitor
+murmured gently in a voice of graceful concession; 'and I believe
+his heart's really in the Cause, as you call it; but you know, my
+dear, he's very far from being sound in his economical views as to
+the relations of capital and labour. Far from sound, as John Stuart
+Mill would have judged the question, I can solemnly assure you.'
+
+'Very well,' Hilda went on, almost without noticing the interruption.
+'We shall say to him, or rather we shall get our publisher to say
+to him, that as he's interested in the matter, and knows the East
+End well, he has been selected--shall we put it on somebody's
+recommendation?--to accompany the artist, and to supply the reading
+matter, the letter-press I think you call it; in fact, to write up
+to our illustrator's pictures; and that he is to be decently paid
+for his trouble. He must do something graphic, something stirring,
+something to wake up lazy people in the West End to a passing
+sense of what he calls their responsibilities. That'll seem like
+real work to Mr. Le Breton. It'll put new heart into him; he'll take
+up the matter vigorously; he'll do it well; he'll write a splendid
+book; and I shall guarantee its making a stir in the world this
+very dull season. What's the use of knowing half the odiously
+commonplace bores and prigs in all London if you can't float a
+single little heterodox pamphlet for a particular purpose? What do
+you think of it, Mr. Berkeley?'
+
+Arthur sighed again. 'It seems to me, Lady Hilda,' he said, regretfully,
+'a very slender straw indeed to hang Ernest Le Breton's life on:
+but any straw is better than nothing to a drowning man. And you
+have so much faith yourself, and mean to fling yourself into it so
+earnestly, that I shouldn't be wholly surprised if you were somehow
+to pull it through. If you do, Lady Hilda--if you manage to save
+these two poor young people from the verge of starvation--you'll
+have done a very great good work in your day, and you'll have made
+me personally eternally your debtor.'
+
+Was it mere fancy, the Progenitor wondered, or did Hilda cast her
+eyes down a little and half blush as she answered in a lower and
+more tremulous tone than usual, 'I hope I shall, Mr. Berkeley;
+for their sakes, I hope I shall.' The Progenitor didn't feel quite
+certain about it, but somehow, more than once that evening, as he
+sat reading Spencer's 'Data of Ethics' in his easy-chair, a curious
+vision of Lady Hilda as a future daughter-in-law floated vaguely
+with singular persistence before the old shoemaker's bewildered
+eyes. 'It'd be a shocking falling away on Artie's part from his
+father's principles,' he muttered inarticulately to himself several
+times over; 'and yet, on the other hand, I can't deny that this bit
+of a Tregellis girl is really a very tidy, good-looking, respectable,
+well-meaning, intelligent, and appreciative sort of a young woman,
+who'd, maybe, make Artie as good a wife as anybody else he'd be
+likely to pitch on.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+THE TIDE TURNS.
+
+
+When Ernest Le Breton got a letter from the business house of a
+well-known publishing firm, asking him whether he would consent to
+supply appropriate letterpress for an illustrated work on the poor
+of London, then in course of preparation, his delight and relief
+were positively unbounded. That anyone should come and ask him for
+work, instead of his asking them, was in itself a singular matter
+for surprise and congratulation; that the request should be based
+on the avowed ground of his known political and social opinions
+was almost incredible. Ernest felt that it was a triumph, not only
+for him, but for his dearly-loved principles and beliefs as well.
+For the first time in his life, he was going to undertake a piece
+of work which he not only thought not wrong, but even considered
+hopeful and praise-worthy. Arthur Berkeley, who called round as if
+by accident the same morning, saw with delight that Lady Hilda's
+prognostication seemed likely to be fulfilled, and that if only
+Ernest could be given some congenial occupation there was still
+a chance, after all, for his permanent recovery; for it was clear
+enough that as there was hope, there must be a little life yet left
+in him.
+
+It was Lady Hilda who, as she herself expressively phrased it,
+had squared the publishers. She had called upon the head of the
+well-known house in person, and had told him fully and frankly
+exactly what was the nature of the interest she took in the poor
+of London. At first the publisher was scandalised and obdurate: the
+thing was not regular, he said--not in the ordinary way of business;
+his firm couldn't go writing letters of that sort to unknown young
+authors and artists. If she wanted the work done, she must let them
+give her own name as the promoter of the undertaking. But Hilda
+persevered, as she always did; she smiled, pleaded, cajoled,
+threatened, and made desperate love to the publisher to gain his
+acquiescence in her benevolent scheme. After all, even publishers
+are only human (though authors have been frequently known to deny
+the fact); and human nature, especially in England, is apt to
+be very little proof against the entreaties of a pretty girl who
+happens also to be an earl's daughter. So in the end, when Lady Hilda
+said most bewitchingly, 'I put it upon the grounds of a personal
+favour, Mr. Percival,' the obdurate publisher gave way at last,
+and consented to do her bidding gladly.
+
+For six weeks Ernest went daily with Ronald and the young artist into
+the familiar slums of Bethnal Green, and Bermondsey, and Lambeth,
+whose ins and outs he was beginning to know with painful accuracy;
+and every night he came back, and wrote down with a glowing pen all
+that he had seen and heard of distressing and terrible during his
+day's peregrination. It was an awful task from one point of view,
+for the scenes he had to visit and describe were often heart-rending;
+and Arthur feared more than once that the air of so many loathsome
+and noxious dens might still further accelerate the progress of
+Ernest's disease; but Lady Hilda said emphatically, No; and somehow
+Arthur was beginning now to conceive an immense respect for the
+practical value of Lady Hilda's vehement opinions. As a matter of
+fact, indeed, Ernest did not visibly suffer at all either from the
+unwonted hard work or from the strain upon mind and body to which
+he had been so little accustomed. Distressing as it all was, it
+was change, it was variety, it was occupation, it was relief from
+that terrible killing round of perpetual personal responsibility.
+Above all, Ernest really believed that here at last was an
+opportunity of doing some practical good in his generation, and he
+threw himself into it with all the passionate ardour of a naturally
+eager and vivid nature. The enthusiasm of humanity was upon him, and
+it kept him going at high-pressure rate, with no apparent loss of
+strength and vigour throughout the whole ordeal. To Arthur Berkeley's
+intense delight, he was even visibly fatter to the naked eye at the
+end of his six weeks' exploration of the most dreary and desolate
+slums in all London.
+
+The book was written at white heat, as the best of such books always
+are, and it was engraved and printed at the very shortest possible
+notice. Terrible and ghastly it certainly was at last--instinct
+with all the grim local colouring of those narrow, squalid,
+fever-stricken dens, where misfortune and crime huddle together
+indiscriminately in dirt and misery--a book to make one's blood run
+cold with awe and disgust, and to stir up even the callous apathy
+of the great rich capitalist West End to a passing moment's
+ineffective remorse; but very clever and very graphic after its
+own sort beyond the shadow of a question, for all its horror. When
+Arthur Berkeley turned over the first proof-sheets of 'London's
+Shame,' with its simple yet thrilling recital of true tales taken
+down from the very lips of outcast children or stranded women, with
+its awful woodcuts and still more awful descriptions--word-pictures
+reeking with the vice and filth and degradation of the most
+pestilent, overcrowded, undrained tenements--he felt instinctively
+that Ernest Le Breton's book would not need the artificial aid of
+Lady Hilda's influential friends in order to make it successful
+and even famous. The Cabinet ministers might be as silent as they
+chose, the indignant duke might confine his denunciations to the
+attentive and sympathetic ear of his friend Lord Connemara; but
+nothing on earth could prevent Ernest Le Breton's fiery and scathing
+diatribe from immediately enthralling the public attention. Lady
+Hilda had hit upon the exact subject which best suited his peculiar
+character and temperament, and he had done himself full justice in
+it. Not that Ernest had ever thought of himself, or even of his
+style, or the effect he was producing by his narrative; it was just
+the very non-self-consciousness of the thing that gave it its power.
+He wrote down the simple thoughts that came up into his own eager
+mind at the sight of so much inequality and injustice; and the
+motto that Arthur prefixed upon the title-page, 'Facit indignatio
+versum,' aptly described the key-note of that fierce and angry
+final denunciation. 'Yes, Lady Hilda had certainly hit the right
+nail on the head,' Arthur Berkeley said to himself more than once:
+'A wonderful woman, truly, that beautiful, stately, uncompromising,
+brilliant, and still really tender Hilda Tregellis.'
+
+Hilda, on her part, worked hard and well for the success of Ernest's
+book as soon as it appeared. Nay, she even condescended (not being
+what Ernest himself would have described as an ethical unit) to
+practise a little gentle hypocrisy in suiting her recommendations
+of 'London's Shame' to the tastes and feelings of her various
+acquaintances. To her Radical Cabinet minister friend, she openly
+praised its outspoken zeal for the cause of the people, and its
+value as a wonderful storehouse of useful facts at first hand for
+political purposes in the increasingly important outlying Metropolitan
+boroughs. 'Just think, Sir Edmund,' she said, persuasively, 'how
+you could crush any Conservative candidate for Hackney or the Tower
+Hamlets out of that awful chapter on the East End match-makers;'
+while with the Duke, to whom she presented a marked copy as a
+sample of what our revolutionary thinkers were really coming to,
+she insisted rather upon its wicked interference with the natural
+rights of landlords, and its abominable insinuation (so subversive
+of all truly English ideas as to liberty and property) that they
+were bound not to poison their tenants by total neglect of sanitary
+precautions. 'If I were you, now,' she said to the Duke in the
+most seemingly simple-minded manner possible, 'I'd just quote those
+passages I've marked in pencil in the House to-night on the Small
+Urban Holdings Bill, and point out how the wave of Continental
+Socialism is at last invading England with its devastating flood.'
+And the Duke, who was a complacent, thick-headed, obstinate old
+gentleman, congenitally incapable of looking at any question from
+any other point of view whatsoever except that of his own order,
+fell headlong passively into Lady Hilda's cruel little trap, and
+murmured to himself as he rolled down luxuriously to the august
+society of his peers that evening, 'Tremendous clever girl, Hilda
+Tregellis, really. "Wave of Continental Socialism at last invading
+England with its what-you-may-call-it flood," she said, if I remember
+rightly. Capital sentence to end off one's speech with, I declare.
+Devizes'll positively wonder where I got it from. I'd no idea before
+that girl took such an intelligent interest in political questions.
+So they want their cottages whitewashed, do they? What'll they ask
+for next, I wonder? Do they think we're to be content at last with
+one and a-half per cent, upon the fee-simple value of our estates,
+I should like to know? Why, some of the places this writer-fellow
+talks about are on my own property in The Rookery--"one of the most
+noisome court-yards in all London," he actually calls it. Whitewash
+their cottages, indeed! The lazy improvident creatures! They'll
+be asking us to put down encaustic tiles upon the floors next, and
+to paper their walls with Japanese leather or fashionable dados.
+Really, the general ignorance that prevails among the working classes
+as to the clearest principles of political economy is something
+absolutely appalling, absolutely appalling.' And his Grace scribbled
+a note in his memorandum-book of Hilda's ready-made peroration, for
+fear he should forget its precise wording before he began to give
+the House the benefit of his views that night upon the political
+economy of Small Urban Holdings.
+
+Next morning, all London was talking of the curious coincidence
+by which a book from the pen of an unknown author, published only
+one day previously, had been quoted and debated upon simultaneously
+in both Houses of Parliament on a single evening. In the Commons,
+Sir Edmund Calverley, the distinguished Radical minister, had read
+a dozen pages from the unknown work in his declamatory theatrical
+fashion, and had so electrified the House with its graphic and
+horrible details that even Mr. Fitzgerald-Grenville, the well-known
+member for the Baroness Drummond-Lloyd (whose rotten or at least
+decomposing borough of Cherbury Minor he faithfully represented in
+three successive Parliaments), had mumbled out a few half-inaudible
+apologetic sentences about this state of things being truly
+deplorable, and about the necessity for meeting such a distressing
+social crisis by the prompt and vigorous application of that excellent
+specific and familiar panacea, a spirited foreign policy. In the
+Lords, the Duke himself, by some untoward coincidence, had been
+moved to make a few quotations, accompanied by a running fire of
+essentially ducal criticism, from the very selfsame obscure author;
+and to his immense surprise, even the members of his own party
+moved uneasily in their seats during the course of his speech; while
+later in the evening, Lord Devizes muttered to him angrily in the
+robing-room, 'Look here, Duke, you've been and put your foot in it,
+I assure you, about that Radical book you were ill-advised enough
+to quote from. You ought never to have treated the Small Urban
+Holdings Bill in the way you did; and just you mark my words,
+the papers'll all be down upon you to-morrow morning, as sure as
+daylight. You've given the "Bystander" such an opening against
+you as you'll never forget till your dying day, I can tell you.'
+And as the Duke drove back again after his arduous legislative
+efforts that evening, he said to himself between the puffs at his
+Havana, 'This comes, now, of allowing oneself to be made a fool
+of by a handsome woman. How the dooce I could ever have gone and
+taken Hilda Tregellis's advice on a political question is really
+more than I can fathom:--and at my time of life too! And yet, all
+the same, there's no denying that she's a devilish fine woman, by
+Jove, if ever there was one.'
+
+Of course, everybody asked themselves next day what this book
+'London's Shame' was like, and who on earth its author could be;
+so much so, indeed, that a large edition was completely exhausted
+within a fortnight. It was the great sensational success of that
+London season. Everybody read it, discussed it, dissected it,
+corroborated it, refuted it, fought over it, and wrote lengthy
+letters to all the daily papers about its faults and its merits.
+Imitators added their sincerest flattery: rivals proclaimed themselves
+the original discoverers of 'London's Shame': one enterprising author
+even thought of going to law about it as a question of copyright.
+Owners of noisome lanes in the East End trembled in their shoes,
+and sent their agents to inquire into the precise degree of squalor
+to be found in the filthy courts and alleys where they didn't care
+to trust their own sensitive aristocratic noses. It even seemed as
+if a little real good was going to come at last out of Ernest Le
+Breton's impassioned pleading--as if the sensation were going to
+fall not quite flat at the end of its short run in the clubs and
+drawing-rooms of London as a nine days' wonder.
+
+And Ernest Le Breton? and Edie? In the little lodgings at Holloway,
+they sat first trembling for the result, and ready to burst with
+excitement when Lady Hilda, up at the unwonted hour of six in the
+morning, tore into their rooms with an early copy of the 'Times'
+to show them the Duke's speech, and Sir Edmund's quotations, and
+the editorial leader in which even that most dignified and reticent
+of British journals condescended to speak with studiously moderated
+praise of the immense collection of facts so ably strung together
+by Mr. Ernest Le Breton (in all the legible glory of small capitals,
+too,) as to the undoubtedly disgraceful condition of some at
+least among our London alleys. How Edie clung around Lady Hilda
+and kissed her! and how Lady Hilda kissed her back and cried over
+her with tears of happier augury! and how they both kissed and
+cried over unconscious wondering little Dot! And how Lady Hilda
+could almost have fallen upon Ernest, too, as he sat gazing in
+blank astonishment and delight at his own name in the magnificent
+small capitals of a 'Times' leader. Between crying and laughing,
+with much efficient aid in both from good Mrs. Halliss, they hardly
+knew how they ever got through the long delightful hours of that
+memorable epoch-making morning.
+
+And then there came the gradual awakening to the fact that this
+was really fame--fame, and perhaps also competence. First in the
+field, of course, was the editor of the 'Cosmopolitan Review,'
+with a polite request that Ernest would give the readers of that
+intensely hot-and-hot and thoughtful periodical the opportunity of
+reading his valuable views on the East End outcast question, before
+they had had time to be worth nothing for journalistic purposes,
+through the natural and inevitable cooling of the public interest
+in this new sensation. Then his old friends of the 'Morning
+Intelligence' once more begged that he would be good enough to
+contribute a series of signed and headed articles to their columns,
+on the slums and fever dens of poverty-stricken London. Next,
+an illustrated weekly asked him to join with his artist friend in
+getting up another pilgrimage into yet undiscovered metropolitan
+plague-spots. And so, before the end of a month, Ernest Le Breton,
+for the first time in his life, had really got more work to do
+than he could easily manage, and work, too, that he felt he could
+throw his whole life and soul into with perfect honesty.
+
+When the first edition of 'London's Shame' was exhausted, there
+was already a handsome balance to go to Ernest and his artist
+coadjutor, who, by the terms of the agreement, were to divide
+between them half the profits. The other half, for appearance'
+sake, Lady Hilda and Arthur had been naturally compelled to reserve
+for themselves: for of course it would not have been probable that
+any publisher would have undertaken the work without any hope of
+profit in any way. Arthur called upon Hilda at Lord Exmoor's house
+in Wilton Place to show her the first balance-sheet and accompanying
+cheque. 'What on earth can we do with it?' he asked seriously. 'We
+can't divide it between us: and yet we can't give it to the poor
+Le Bretons. I don't see how we're to manage.'
+
+'Why, of course,' Hilda answered promptly. 'Put it into the Consols
+or whatever you call it, for the benefit of little Dot.'
+
+'The very thing!' Arthur answered in a tone of obvious admiration.
+'What a wonderfully practical person you really are, Lady Hilda.'
+
+As to Ernest and Edie, when they got their own cheque for their
+quarter of the proceeds, they gazed in awe and astonishment at the
+bigness of the figure; and then they sat down and cried together
+like two children, with their hands locked in one another's.
+
+'And you'll get well, now, Ernest dear,' Edie whispered gently.
+'Why, you're ever so much fatter, darling, already. I'm sure you'll
+get well in no time, now, Ernest.'
+
+'Upon my word, Edie,' Ernest answered, kissing her white forehead
+tenderly, 'I really and truly believe I shall. It's my opinion
+that Sir Antony Wraxall's an unmitigated ignorant humbug.'
+
+A few weeks later, when Ernest's remarkable article on 'How to Improve
+the Homes of the Poor' appeared in one of the leading magazines,
+Mr. Herbert Le Breton of the Education Office looked up from his
+cup of post-prandial coffee in his comfortable dining-room at South
+Kensington, and said musingly to his young wife, 'Do you know,
+Ethel, it seems to me that my brother Ernest's going to score a
+success at last with this slum-hunting business that he's lately
+invented. There's an awful lot about it now in all the papers
+and reviews. Perhaps it might be as well, after all, to scrape an
+acquaintance with him again, especially as he's my own brother.
+There's no knowing, really, when a man of his peculiar ill-regulated
+mercurial temperament may be going to turn out famous. Don't you
+think you'd better find out where they're living now--they've left
+Holloway, no doubt, since this turn of the tide--and go and call
+upon Mrs. Ernest?'
+
+Whereto Mrs. Herbert Le Breton, raising her eyes for a moment from
+the pages of her last new novel, answered languidly: 'Don't you
+think, Herbert, it'd be better to wait a little while and see how
+things turn out with them in the long run, you know, before we
+commit ourselves by going to call upon them? One swallow, you see,
+doesn't make a summer, does it, dear, ever?' Whence the acute and
+intelligent reader will doubtless conclude that Mrs. Herbert Le
+Breton was a very prudent sensible young woman, and that perhaps
+even Herbert himself had met at last with his fitting Nemesis. For
+what worse purgatory could his bitterest foe wish for a selfishly
+prudent and cold-hearted man, than that he should pass his whole
+lifetime in congenial intercourse with a selfishly prudent and
+cold-hearted wife, exactly after his own pattern?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+OUT OF THE HAND OP THE PHILISTINES.
+
+
+Ernest's unexpected success with 'London's Shame' was not, as Arthur
+Berkeley at first feared it might be, the mere last dying flicker
+of a weak and failing life. Arthur was quite right, indeed, when
+he said one day to Lady Hilda that its very brilliancy and fervour
+had the hectic glow about it, as of a man who was burning himself
+out too fiercely and rapidly; you could read the feverish eagerness
+of the writer in every line; but still, Lady Hilda answered with
+her ordinary calm assurance that it was all going well, and that
+Ernest only needed the sense of security to pull him round again;
+and as usual, Lady Hilda's practical sagacity was not at fault.
+The big pamphlet--for it was hardly more than that--soon proved
+an opening for further work, in procuring which Hilda and Arthur
+were again partially instrumental. An advanced Radical member
+of Parliament, famous for his declamations against the capitalist
+faction, and his enormous holding of English railway stock, was
+induced to come forward as the founder of a new weekly paper,
+'in the interest of social reform.' Of course the thing was got
+up solely with an idea to utilising Ernest as editor, for, said
+the great anti-capitalist with his usual charming frankness, 'the
+young fellow has a positive money-value, now, if he's taken in hand
+at once before the sensation's over, and there can be no harm in
+turning an honest penny by exploiting him, you know, and starting
+a popular paper.' When Ernest was offered the post of editor to
+the new periodical, at a salary which almost alarmed him by its
+plutocratic magnificence (for it was positively no less than six
+hundred a year), he felt for a moment some conscientious scruples
+about accepting so splendid a post. And when Lady Hilda in her
+emphatic fashion promptly over-ruled these nascent scruples by the
+application of the very simple solvent formula, 'Bosh!' he felt
+bound at least to stipulate that he should be at perfect liberty
+to say whatever he liked in the new paper, without interference or
+supervision from the capitalist proprietor. To which the Radical
+member, in his business capacity, immediately responded, 'Why,
+certainly. What we want to pay you for is just your power of startling
+people, which, in its proper place, is a very useful marketable
+commodity. Every pig has its value--if only you sell it in the
+best market.'
+
+'The Social Reformer, a Weekly Advocate of the New Economy,' achieved
+at once an immense success among the working classes, and grew
+before long to be one of the most popular journals of the second
+rank in all London. The interest that Ernest had aroused by his big
+pamphlet was carried on to his new venture, which soon managed to
+gain many readers by its own intrinsic merits. 'Seen your brother's
+revolutionary broadsheet, Le Breton?' asked a friend at the club
+of Herbert not many weeks later--he was the same person who had
+found it 'so very embarrassing' to recognise Ernest--in his shabby
+days when walking with a Q.C.--'It's a dreadful tissue of the
+reddest French communism, I believe, but still, it's scored the
+biggest success of its sort in journalism, I'm told, since the
+days of Kenealy's "Englishman." Bradbury, who's found the money to
+start it--deuced clever fellow in his way, Bradbury!--is making an
+awful lot out of the speculation, they say. What do you think of
+the paper, eh?'
+
+Herbert drew himself up grimly. 'To tell you the truth,' he said
+in his stiffest style, 'I haven't yet had time to look at a copy.
+Ernest Le Breton's not a man in whose affairs I feel called upon to
+take any special interest; and I haven't put myself to the trouble
+of reading his second-hand political lucubrations. Faint echoes of
+Max Schurz, all of it, no doubt; and having read and disposed of
+Schurz himself long ago, I don't feel inclined now to go in for a
+second supplementary course of Schurz and water.'
+
+'Well, well, that may be so,' the friend answered, turning over the
+pages of the peccant periodical carelessly; 'but all the same I'm
+afraid your brother's really going to do an awful lot of mischief
+in the way of setting class against class, and stirring up the
+dangerous orders to recognise their own power. You see, Le Breton,
+the real danger of this sort of thing lies in the fact that your
+brother Ernest's a more or less educated and cultivated person. I
+don't say he's really got any genuine depth of culture--would you
+believe it, he told me once he'd never read Rabelais, and didn't
+want to?--and of course a man of true culture in the grain, like
+you and me now, my dear fellow, would never dream of going and
+mistaking these will-o'-the-wisps of socialism for the real guiding
+light of regenerated humanity--of course not. But the dangerous
+symptom at the present day lies just in the fact that while the
+papers written for the mob used to be written by vulgar, noisy,
+self-made, half-educated demagogues, they're sent out now with all
+the authority and specious respectability of decently instructed
+and comparatively literary English gentlemen. Now, nobody can
+deny that that's a thing very seriously to be regretted; and for my
+part I'm extremely sorry your brother has been ill-advised enough
+to join the mob that's trying to pull down our comfortably built
+and after all eminently respectable, even if somewhat patched up,
+old British constitution.'
+
+'The subject's one,' Herbert answered curtly, 'in which I for my
+part cannot pretend to feel the remotest personal interest.'
+
+Ernest and Edie, howerer, in the little lodgings up at Holloway,
+which they couldn't bear to desert even now in this sudden burst
+of incredible prosperity, went their own way as self-containedly
+as usual, wholly unconcerned by the non-arrival of Mrs. Herbert
+on a visit of ceremony, or the failure of the 'Social Reformer' to
+pierce the lofty ethereal regions of abstract contemplation where
+Herbert himself sat throned like an Epicurean god in the pure halo
+of cultivated pococurantism. Every day, as that eminent medical
+authority, Hilda Tregellis, had truly prophesied, Ernest's cheeks
+grew less and less sunken, and a little colour returned slowly
+to their midst; while Edie's face was less pale than of old, and
+her smile began to recover something of its old-fashioned girlish
+joyousness. She danced about once more as of old, and Arthur Berkeley,
+when he dropped in of a Sunday afternoon for a chat with Ernest,
+noticed with pleasure that little Miss Butterfly was beginning to
+flit round again almost as naturally as in the old days when he
+first saw her light little form among the grey old pillars of Magdalen
+Cloisters. Yet he couldn't help observing, too, that his feeling
+towards her was more one of mere benevolence now, and less of tender
+regret, than it used to be even a few short months before, in the
+darkest days of Edie's troubles. Could it be, he asked himself
+more than once, that the tall stately picture of Hilda Tregellis
+was overshadowing in his heart the natural photograph of that
+unwedded Edie Oswald that he once imagined was so firmly imprinted
+there? Ah well, ah well, it may be true that a man can love really
+but once in his whole lifetime; and yet, the second spurious
+imitation is positively sometimes a very good facsimile of the
+genuine first impression, for all that.
+
+As the months went slowly round, too, the time came in the end for
+good Herr Max to be released at last from his long imprisonment.
+On the day that he came out, there was a public banquet at the
+Marylebone dancing saloon; and all the socialists and communards
+were there, and all the Russian nihilists, and all the other
+wicked revolutionary plotters in all London: and in the chair sat
+Ernest Le Breton, now the editor of an important social paper, while
+at his left hand, to balance the guest of the evening, sat Arthur
+Berkeley, the well-known dramatic author, who was himself more than
+suspected of being the timid Nicodemus of the new faith. And when
+Ernest announced that Herr Schurz had consented to aid him on the
+'Social Reformer,' and to add the wisdom of age to the impetuosity
+of youth in conducting its future, the simple enthusiasm of the wicked
+revolutionists knew no bounds. And they cried 'Hoch!' and 'Viva!'
+and 'Hooray!' and many other like inarticulate shouts in many
+varieties of interjectional dialect all the evening; and everybody
+agreed that after all Herr Max was VERY little grayer than before
+the trial, in spite of his long and terrible term of imprisonment.
+
+He WAS a little embittered by his troubles, no doubt;--what can
+you expect if you clap men in prison for the expression of their
+honest political convictions?--but Ernest tried to keep his eye
+steadily rather on the future than on the past; and with greater
+ease and unwonted comforts the old man's cheerfulness as well as
+his enthusiasm gradually returned. 'I'm too old now to do anything
+more worth doing myself before I die,' he used to say, holding
+Ernest's arm tightly in his vice-like grip: 'but I have great hopes
+in spite of everything for friend Ernest; I have very great hopes
+indeed for friend Ernest here. There's no knowing yet what he may
+accomplish.'
+
+Ernest only smiled a trifle sadly, and murmured half to himself that
+this was a hard world, and he began himself to fear there was no
+fitting feeling for a social reformer except one of a brave despair.
+'We can do little or nothing, after all,' he said slowly; 'and
+our only consolation must be that even that little is perhaps just
+worth doing.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+LAND AT LAST: BUT WHAT LAND?
+
+
+Long before the 'Social Reformer' had fully made its mark in the
+world, another event had happened of no less importance to some
+of the chief actors in the little drama whose natural termination
+it seemed to form. While the pamphlet and the paper were in course
+of maturation, Arthur Berkeley had been running daily in and out
+of the house in Wilton Place in what Lady Exmoor several times
+described as a positively disgraceful and unseemly manner. ('What
+Hilda can mean,' her ladyship observed to her husband more than
+once, 'by encouraging that odd young man's extraordinary advances
+in the way she does is really more than I can understand even in
+her.') But when the Le Bretons were fairly launched at last on the
+favourable flood of full prosperity, both Hilda and Arthur began to
+feel as though they had suddenly been deprived of a very pleasant
+common interest. After all, benevolent counsel on behalf of other
+people is not so entirely innocent and impersonal in certain cases
+as it seems to be at first sight. 'Do you know, Lady Hilda,'
+Berkeley said one afternoon, when he had come to pay, as it were,
+a sort of farewell visit, on the final completion of their joint
+schemes for restoring happiness to the home of the Le Bretons,
+'our intercourse together has been very delightful, and I'm quite
+sorry to think that in future we must see so much less of one another
+than we've been in the habit of doing for the last month or so.'
+
+Hilda looked at him straight and said in her own frank unaffected
+fashion, 'So am I, Mr. Berkeley, very sorry, very sorry indeed.'
+
+Arthur looked back at her once more, and their eyes met. His
+look was full of admiration, and Hilda saw it. She moved a little
+uneasily upon the ottoman, waiting apparently as though she expected
+Arthur to say something else. But Arthur looked at her long and
+steadfastly, and said nothing.
+
+At last he seemed to wake from his reverie, and make up his mind
+for a desperate venture. Could he be mistaken? Could he have read
+either record wrong--his own heart, or Hilda's eyes? No, no, both
+of them spoke to him too plainly and evidently. His heart was
+fluttering like a wind-shaken aspen-leaf; and Hilda's eyes were
+dimming visibly with a tender moisture. Yes, yes, yes, there was
+no misreading possible. He knew he loved her! he knew she loved
+him!
+
+Bending over towards where Hilda sat, he took her hand in
+his dreamily: and Hilda let him take it without a movement. Then
+he looked deeply into her eyes, and felt a curious speechlessness
+coming over him, deep down in the ball of his throat.
+
+'Lady Hilda,' he began at last with an effort, in a low voice, not
+wholly untinged with natural timidity, 'Lady Hilda, is a working
+man's son----'
+
+Hilda looked back at him with a sudden look of earnest deprecation.
+'Not that way, Mr. Berkeley,' she said quietly: 'not that way,
+please: you'll hurt me if you do: you know that's not the way _I_
+look at the matter. Why not simply "Hilda"?'
+
+Berkeley clasped her hand eagerly and raised it to his lips. 'Hilda,
+then,' he said, kissing it twice over. 'It SHALL be Hilda.'
+
+Hilda rose and stood before him erect in all her queenlike beauty.
+'So now that's settled,' she said, with a vain endeavour to control
+her tears of joy. 'Don't let's talk about it any more, now; I can't
+bear to talk about it: there's nothing to arrange, Arthur. Whenever
+you like will suit me. But, oh, I'm so happy, so happy, so happy--I
+never thought I could be so happy.'
+
+'Nor I,' Arthur answered, holding her hand a moment in his tenderly.
+
+'How strange,' Hilda said again, after a minute's delicious silence;
+'it's the poor Le Bretons who have brought us two thus together.
+And yet, they were both once our dearest rivals. YOU were in love
+with Edie Le Breton: _I_ was half in love with Ernest Le Breton:
+and now--why, now, Arthur, I DO believe we're both utterly in love
+with one another. What a curious little comedy of errors!'
+
+'And yet only a few months ago it came very near being a tragedy,
+rather,' Arthur put in softly.
+
+'Never mind!' Hilda answered in her brightest and most joyous tone,
+as she wiped the joyful tears from her eyes. 'It isn't a tragedy,
+now, after all, Arthur, and all's well that ends well!'
+
+When the Countess heard of Hilda's determination--Hilda didn't
+pretend to go through the domestic farce of asking her mother's
+consent to her approaching marriage--she said that so far as she
+was concerned a more shocking or un-Christian piece of conduct on
+the part of a well-brought-up girl had never yet been brought to
+her knowledge. To refuse Lord Connemara, and then go and marry the
+son of a common cobbler! But the Earl only puffed away vigorously
+at his cheroot, and observed philosophically that for his part he
+just considered himself jolly well out of it. This young fellow
+Berkeley mightn't be a man of the sort of family Hilda would
+naturally expect to marry into, but he was decently educated and
+in good society, and above all, a gentleman, you know, don't you
+know: and, hang it all, in these days that's really everything.
+Besides, Berkeley was making a pot of money out of these operas
+of his, the Earl understood, and as he had always expected that
+Hilda'd marry some penniless painter or somebody of that sort, and
+be a perpetual drag upon the family exchequer, he really didn't see
+why they need trouble their heads very much about it. By George,
+if it came to that, he rather congratulated himself that the girl
+hadn't taken it into her nonsensical head to run away with the groom
+or the stable-boy! As to Lynmouth, he merely remarked succinctly in
+his own dialect, 'Go it, Hilda, go it, my beauty! You always were
+a one-er, you know, and it's my belief you always will be.'
+
+It was somewhere about the same time that Ronald Le Breton, coming
+back gladdened in soul from a cheerful talk with Ernest, called
+round of an evening in somewhat unwonted exultation at Selah's
+lodgings. 'Selah,' he said to her calmly, as she met him at the door
+to let him in herself, 'I want to have a little talk with you.'
+
+'What is it about, Ronald?' Selah asked, with a perfect consciousness
+in her own mind of what the subject he wished to discourse about
+was likely to be.
+
+'Why, Selah,' Ronald went on in his quiet, matter-of-fact, unobtrusive
+manner, 'do you know, I think we may fairly consider Ernest and
+Edie out of danger now.'
+
+'I hope so, Ronald,' Selah answered imperturbably. 'I've no doubt
+your brother'll get along all right in future, and I'm sure at least
+that he's getting stronger, for he looks ten per cent. better than
+he did three months ago.'
+
+'Well, Selah!'
+
+'Well, Ronald!'
+
+'Why, in that case, you see, your objection falls to the ground.
+There can be no possible reason on either side why you should any
+longer put off marrying me. We needn't consider Edie now; and you
+can't have any reasonable doubt that I want to marry you for your
+own sake this time.'
+
+'What a nuisance the man is!' Selah cried impetuously. 'Always
+bothering a body out of her nine senses to go and marry him. Have
+you never read what Paul says, that it's good for the unmarried
+and widows to abide? He was always dead against the advisability
+of marriage, Paul was.'
+
+'Brother Paul was an able and earnest preacher,' Ronald murmured
+gravely, 'from whose authority I should be sorry to dissent except
+for sufficient and weighty reason; but you must admit that on this
+particular question he was prejudiced, Selah, decidedly prejudiced,
+and that the balance of the best opinion goes distinctly the other
+way.'
+
+Selah laughed lightly. 'Oh, does it?' she said, in her provoking,
+mocking manner. 'Then you propose to marry me, I suppose, on the
+balance of the best Scriptural opinion.'
+
+'Not at all, Selah,' Ronald replied without a touch of anything
+but grave earnestness in his tone--it must be admitted Ronald was
+distinctly lacking in the sense of humour. 'Not at all, I assure
+you. I propose to marry you because I love you, and I believe in
+your heart of hearts you love me, too, you provoking girl, though
+you're too proud or too incomprehensible ever to acknowledge it.'
+
+'And even if I do?' Selah asked. 'What then?'
+
+'Why, then, Selah,' Ronald answered confidently, taking her hand
+boldly in his own and actually kissing her--yes, kissing her; 'why,
+then, Selah, suppose we say Monday fortnight?'
+
+'It's awfully soon,' Selah replied, half grumbling. 'You don't give
+a body time to think it over.'
+
+'Certainly not,' Ronald responded, quickly, taking the handsome
+face firmly between his two spare hands, and kissing her lips half
+a dozen times over in rapid succession.
+
+'Let me go, Ronald,' Selah cried, struggling to be free, and trying
+in vain to tear down his thin wiry arms with her own strong shapely
+hands. 'Let me go at once,--there's a good boy, and I'll marry you
+on Monday fortnight, or do anything else you like, just to keep
+you quiet. After all, you're a kind-hearted fellow enough, and you
+want looking after and taking care of, and if you insist upon it,
+I don't mind giving way to you in this small matter.'
+
+Ronald stepped back a pace or two, and stood looking at her a little
+sadly with his hands folded. 'Oh, Selah,' he cried in a tone of
+bitter disappointment, 'don't speak like that to me, don't, please.
+Don't, don't tell me that you don't really love me--that you're
+going to marry me for nothing else but out of mere compassion for
+my weakness and helplessness!'
+
+Selah burst at once into a wild flood of uncontrollable tears: 'Oh,
+Ronald,' she cried in her old almost fiercely passionate manner,
+flinging her arms around his neck and covering him with kisses;
+'Oh, Ronald, how can you ever ask me whether I really really love
+you! You know I love you! You know I love you! You've given me back
+life and everything that's dear in it, and I never want to live
+for anything any longer except to love you, and wait upon you,
+and make you happy. I'm stronger than you, Ronald, and I shall be
+able to do a little to make you happy, I do believe. My ways are
+not your ways, nor my thoughts your thoughts, my darling; but I
+love you all the better for that, Ronald, I love you all the better
+for that; and if you were to kick me, beat me, trample on me now,
+Ronald, I should love you, love you, love you for ever still.'
+
+So they two were quietly married, with no audience save Ernest and
+Edie, on that very Monday fortnight.
+
+When Herbert Le Breton heard of it from his mother a few days later,
+he went home at once to his own eminently cultured home and told
+Mrs. Le Breton the news, of course without much detailed allusion
+to Selah's earlier antecedents. 'And do you know, Ethel,' he added
+significantly, 'I think it was an excellent thing that you decided
+not to call after all upon Ernest's wife, for I'm sure it'll be
+a great deal safer for you and me to have nothing to say in any
+way to the whole faction of them. A greengrocer's daughter, you
+know--quite unpresentable. They'll be all mixed up together in
+future, which'll make it quite impossible to know the one without
+at the same time knowing the other. Now, it'd be just practicable
+for you to call upon Mrs. Ernest, I must admit, but to call upon
+Mrs. Ronald would be really and truly too inconceivable.'
+
+At the end of the first year of the 'Social Reformer,' the annual
+balance was duly audited, and it showed a very considerable and
+solid surplus to go into the pocket of the enterprising Radical
+proprietor. Ernest and Herr Max scanned it closely together, and
+even Ernest could not refrain from a smile of pleasure when he saw
+how thoroughly successful the doubtful venture had finally turned
+out. 'And yet,' he said regretfully, as he looked at the heavy
+balance-sheet, 'what a strange occupation after all for the author
+of "Gold and the Proletariate," to be looking carefully over the
+sum-total of a capitalist's final balance! To think, too, that all
+that money has come out of the hard-earned scraped-up pennies of
+the toiling poor! I often wish, Herr Max, that even so I had been
+brought up an honest shoemaker! But whether I'm really earning my
+salt at the hands of humanity now or not is a deep problem I often
+have many an uncomfortable internal sigh over to this day.'
+
+'There is work and work, friend Ernest,' Herr Max answered, as gently
+as had been his wont in older years; 'and for my part it seems to
+me you are better here writing your Social Reformers than making
+shoes for a single generation. One man builds for to-day, another
+man builds for to-morrow; and he that plants a fruit tree for his
+children to eat of is doing as much good work in the world as he
+that sows the corn in spring to be reaped and eaten at this autumn's
+harvest.'
+
+'Perhaps so,' Ernest answered softly. 'I wish I could think so.
+But after all I'm not quite sure whether, if we had all starved
+eighteen months ago together, as seemed so likely then, it wouldn't
+have been the most right thing in the end that could possibly have
+happened to all of us. As things are constituted now, there seems
+only one life that's really worth living for an honest man, and
+that's a martyr's. A martyr's or else a worker's. And I, I greatly
+fear, have managed somehow to miss being either. The wind carries
+us this way and that, and when we would do that which is right, it
+drifts us away incontinently into that which is only profitable.'
+
+'Dear Ernest,' Edie cried in her bright old-fashioned manner from
+the ofice door, 'Dot has come in her new frock to bring Daddy home
+for her birthday dinner as she was promised. Come quick, or your
+little daughter'll be very angry with you. And Lady Hilda Berkeley
+has come, too, to drive us back in her own brougham. Now don't
+be a silly, there's a dear, or say that you can't drive away from
+the office of the "Social Reformer" in Lady Hilda's brougham!'
+
+
+
+
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