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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69000 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69000)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The private life of Henry Maitland, by
-Morley Roberts
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The private life of Henry Maitland
- A record dictated by J. H.
-
-Author: Morley Roberts
-
-Release Date: September 16, 2022 [eBook #69000]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY
-MAITLAND ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE PRIVATE LIFE OF
-
- HENRY MAITLAND
-
-
- _A RECORD DICTATED BY J. H._
-
-
-
- REVISED AND EDITED BY
- MORLEY ROBERTS
-
-
-
- HODDER & STOUGHTON
- NEW YORK
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1912,
- By George H. Doran Company
-
-
-
-
- INSCRIBED
- TO THE MEMORY OF
- MY WIFE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-This book was dictated by J.H. mostly in my presence, and I consider
-it well worth publishing. No doubt Henry Maitland is not famous,
-though since his death much has been written of him. Most of it,
-however, outside of literary criticism, has been futile and
-uninstructed. But J.H. really knew the man, and here is what he has
-said of him. We shall be told, no doubt, that we have used
-Maitland's memory for our own ends. Let that be as it may; such an
-accusation can only be met by denial. When there is no proof of
-guilt, there may well be none of innocence. The fact remains that
-Henry Maitland's life was worth doing, even in the abbreviated and
-censored form in which it now appears. The man was not eminent, only
-because he was not popular and did not live long enough. One gets to
-eminence nowadays by longevity or by bad work. While Maitland
-starved, X or Y or Z may wallow in a million sixpences. In this
-almost childishly simple account of a man's life there is the essence
-of our literary epoch. Here is a writing man put down, crudely it
-may be, but with a certain power. There is no book quite like it in
-the English tongue, and the critic may take what advantage he will of
-that opening for his wit.
-
-At any rate here we have a portrait emerging which is real. Henry
-Maitland stands on his feet, and on his living feet. He is not a
-British statue done in the best mortuary manner. There is far too
-little sincere biography in English. We are a mealy-mouthed race,
-hypocrites by the grave and the monument. Ten words of natural
-eulogy, and another ten of curious and sympathetic comment, may be
-better than tons of marble built up by a hired liar with his tongue
-in his cheek. In the whole book, which cannot be published now,
-there are things worth waiting for. I have cut and retrenched with
-pain, for I wanted to risk the whole, but no writer or editor is his
-own master in England. I am content to have omitted some truth if I
-have permitted nothing false. The reader who can say truly, "I
-should not have liked to meet Henry Maitland," is a fool or a
-fanatic, or more probably both. Neither of those who are primarily
-responsible for this little book is answerable to such. We do not
-desire his praise, or even his mere allowance. Such as are
-interested in the art of letters, and in those who practise in the
-High Court of Literature, will perceive what we had in our minds.
-Here is life, not a story or a constructed diary, and the art with
-which it is done is a secondary matter. If Henry Maitland bleeds and
-howls, so did Philoctetes, and the outcry of Henry Maitland is more
-pertinent to our lives. For all life, even at its best, is tragic;
-and there is much in Maitland's which is dramatically common to our
-world as we see it and live in it. If we have lessened him at times
-from the point of view of a hireling in biographic praise, we have
-set him down life size all the same; and as we ask no praise, we care
-for no blame. Here is the man.
-
-MORLEY ROBERTS.
-
-NOTE.--The full manuscript, which may possibly be published after
-some years, is, in the meantime placed in safe custody.
-
-
-
-
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY MAITLAND
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-It is never an easy thing to write the life, or even such a sketch as
-I propose making, of a friend whom one knew well, and in Henry
-Maitland's case it is most uncommonly difficult. The usual
-biographer is content with writing panegyric, and as he must depend
-for his material, and even sometimes for his eventual remuneration,
-on the relatives of his subject, he is from the start in a hopeless
-position, except, it may be, as regards the public side of the life
-in question. But in the case of a man of letters the personal
-element is the only real and valuable one, or so it seems to me, and
-even if I were totally ignorant of Maitland's work I think it would
-yet be possible for me to do a somewhat lifelike and live sketch of
-him. I believe, moreover, that it is my duty to do it, although no
-doubt in some ways it must be painful to those connected with him.
-Yet soon after his death many came to me desiring me to write his
-biography. It was an understood thing that of all his friends I knew
-him best, and was certainly the greatest and chief authority on his
-career from the Moorhampton College days up to his final break with
-his second wife. But in 1904 there were many obstacles to my doing
-this work. His two sons were young. His sisters and his mother were
-still alive. I say nothing of the wife herself, then being taken
-care of, or of a third lady of whom I must speak presently. Several
-people came to me with proposals about a book on Henry Maitland. One
-of the partners of a big publishing house made me a definite offer
-for it on behalf of his firm. On the other hand one of his
-executors, Miss Kingdon, a most kindly and amiable and very able
-woman employed in a great accountant's office in the city, who had
-done very much for Henry Maitland in his later life, begged me not to
-do the book, or if I did it to hold it over until her
-responsibilities as executrix and trustee for the sons were at an
-end. But it is now nearly nine years since he died, and I feel that
-if I do not put down at once what I knew of him it never will be
-written, and something will be lost, something which has perhaps a
-little value, even though it is not so great as those could wish who
-knew and loved Henry Maitland.
-
-There is no doubt many people will accuse me of desiring to use his
-memory for my own advantage. "My withers are unwrung." Those who
-speak in this way must have little knowledge of the poor profit to be
-derived from writing such a book, and the proportion of that profit
-to the labour employed in it. On three separate occasions I spoke to
-Maitland about writing his biography, and it was an understood thing
-between us that if he died before me I was to write his life and tell
-the whole and absolute truth about him. This he gave me the most
-definite permission to do. I believe he felt that it might in some
-ways be of service to humanity for such a book to be written. Only
-the other day, when I wrote to Miss Kingdon concerning the biography,
-she answered me: "If I seem lacking in cordiality in this matter do
-not attribute it to any want of sympathy with you. I am not
-attempting to dissuade you. Henry Maitland was sent into hell for
-the purpose of saving souls; perhaps it is a necessary thing that his
-story should be written by all sorts of people from their different
-points of view." Once I proposed to him to use his character and
-career as the chief figure in a long story. He wrote to me, "By all
-means. Why not?" Had I not the letter in which he said this I
-should myself almost doubt my own recollection, but it is certain
-that he knew the value of his own experience, and felt that he might
-perhaps by his example save some from suffering as he did.
-
-No doubt very much that I say of him will not be true to others. To
-myself it is true at any rate. We know very little of each other,
-and after all it is perhaps in biography that one is most acutely
-conscious of the truth in the pragmatic view of truth. Those things
-are true in Henry Maitland's life and character which fit in wholly
-with all my experience of him and make a coherent and likely theory.
-I used to think I knew him very well, and yet when I remember and
-reflect it seems to me that I know exceedingly little about him. And
-yet again, I am certain that of the two people in the world that I
-was best acquainted with he was one. We go through life believing
-that we know many, but if we sit down and attempt to draw them we
-find here and there unrelated facts and many vague incoherencies. We
-are in a fog about our very dear friend whom but yesterday we were
-ready to judge and criticise with an air of final knowledge. There
-is something humiliating in this, and yet how should we, who know so
-little of ourselves, know even those we love? To my mind, with all
-his weaknesses, which I shall not extenuate, Maitland was a noble and
-notable character, and if anything I should write may endure but a
-little while it is because there is really something of him in my
-words. I am far more concerned to write about Henry Maitland for
-those who loved him than for those who loved him not, and I shall be
-much better pleased if what I do about him takes the shape of an
-impression rather than of anything like an ordinary biography. Every
-important and unimportant political fool who dies nowadays is buried
-under obituary notices and a mausoleum in two volumes--a mausoleum
-which is, as a rule, about as high a work of art as the angels on
-tombstones in an early Victorian cemetery. But Maitland, I think,
-deserves, if not a better, a more sympathetic tribute.
-
-When I left Radford Grammar School my father, being in the Civil
-Service, was sent to Moorhampton as Surveyor of Taxes, and his family
-shortly followed him. I continued my own education at Moorhampton
-College, which was then beginning to earn a high reputation as an
-educational centre. Some months before I met Maitland personally I
-knew his reputation was that of an extraordinary young scholar. Even
-as a boy of sixteen he swept everything before him. There was nobody
-in the place who could touch him at classical learning, and everybody
-prophesied the very greatest future for the boy. I met him first in
-a little hotel not very far from the College where some of us young
-fellows used to go between the intervals of lectures to play a game
-of billiards. I remember quite well seeing him sit on a little table
-swinging his legs, and to this day I can remember somewhat of the
-impression he made upon me. He was curiously bright, with a very
-mobile face. He had abundant masses of brown hair combed backwards
-over his head, grey-blue eyes, a very sympathetic mouth, an
-extraordinarily well-shaped chin--although perhaps both mouth and
-chin were a little weak--and a great capacity for talking and
-laughing.
-
-Henceforth he and I became very firm friends at the College, although
-we belonged to two entirely different sets. I was supposed to be an
-extraordinarily rowdy person, and was always getting into trouble
-both with the authorities and with my fellows, and he was a man who
-loathed anything like rowdiness, could not fight if he tried,
-objected even then to the Empire, hated patriotism, and thought about
-nothing but ancient Greece and Rome, or so it would appear to those
-who knew him at that time.
-
-I learnt then a little of his early history. Even when he was but a
-boy of ten or eleven he was recognised as a creature of most
-brilliant promise. He always believed that he owed most, and perhaps
-everything, to his father, who must have been a very remarkable man.
-Henry never spoke about him in later life without emotion and
-affection. I have often thought since that Maitland felt that most
-of his disasters sprang from the premature death of his father, whom
-he loved so tenderly. Indeed the elder man must have been a
-remarkable figure, a gentle, courtly, and most kindly man, himself
-born in exile and placed in alien circumstances. Maitland often used
-to speak, with a catch in his voice, of the way his father read to
-him. I remember not what books, but they were the classic authors of
-England; Shakespeare, Wordsworth, and Tennyson. Some seem to imagine
-that the father had what is called a well-stocked library. This was
-not true, but he had many good books and taught his son to love them.
-Among these there was one great volume of Hogarth's drawings which
-came into Henry Maitland's personal possession, only, I think, when
-he was finally domiciled in a London flat, where he and I often
-looked at it. It is curious that as a boy Hogarth had a fascination
-for him. He sometimes copied these drawings, for as a child he had
-no little skill as a draughtsman. What appealed to him in later days
-in Hogarth was the power of the man's satire, his painful bitterness,
-which can only be equalled by the ironies of Swift in another medium.
-Although personally I admire Hogarth I could never look at him with
-anything like pleasure or, indeed, without acute discomfort. I
-remember that Maitland in later years said in his book about the
-Victorian novelist: "With these faces who would spend hours of
-leisure? Hogarth copied in the strict sense of the word. He gives
-us life and we cannot bear it."
-
-Maitland's family came, I think, from Worcester, but something led
-the elder Maitland to Mirefield's, and there he came in contact with
-a chemist called Lake, whose business he presently bought. Perhaps
-the elder Maitland was not a wholly happy man. He was very gentle,
-but not a person of marked religious feeling. Indeed I think the
-attitude of the family at that time was that of free thought. From
-everything that Henry said of his father it always seemed to me that
-the man had been an alien in the cold Yorkshire town where his son
-was born. And Maitland knew that had his father lived he would never
-have been thrown alone into the great city of Moorhampton, "Lord of
-himself, that heritage of woe." Not all women understand the dangers
-that their sons may meet in such surroundings, and those who had
-charge of Henry Maitland's future never understood or recognized them
-in his youth. But his father would have known. In one chapter of
-"The Vortex," there is very much of Maitland. It is a curiously
-wrought picture of a father and his son in which he himself played
-alternately the part of father and child. I knew his anxieties for
-his own children, and on reading that chapter one sees them renewed.
-But in it there was much that was not himself. It was drawn rather
-from what he believed his father had felt. In "The Vortex" the
-little boy spends an hour alone with his father just before bedtime,
-and he calls it "A golden hour, sacred to memories of the world's own
-childhood."
-
-Maitland went to school in Mirefields and this school has been called
-a kind of "Dotheboys Hall," which of course is absolutely ridiculous.
-It was not, in fact, a boarding-school at all, but a day school. The
-man who ran it was called Hinkson. Maitland said he was an
-uneducated man, or at any rate uneducated from his point of view in
-later years, yet he was a person of very remarkable character, and
-did very good work, taking it all round. A man named Christopher
-started this school and sold it to Hinkson, who had, I believe, some
-kind of a degree obtained at Durham. The boys who attended it were
-good middle class and lower middle class, some the sons of
-professional men, some the offspring of the richer tradesmen. Upon
-the whole it was a remarkably good school for that time. Many of the
-boys actually left the Grammar School at Mirefields to attend it.
-Henry Maitland always owned that Hinkson took great pains with his
-scholars, and affirmed that many owed him much. As I said, the
-general religious air of Maitland's home at that time was one of free
-thought. I believe the feminine members of the family attended a
-Unitarian Church, but the father did not go to church at all. One
-example of this religious attitude of his home came out when Hinkson
-called on his boys to repeat the collect of the day and Maitland
-replied with an abrupt negative that they did not do that kind of
-thing at home. Whereupon Hinkson promptly set him to acquire it,
-saying sternly that it would do him no harm.
-
-For the most part in those early days the elder Maitland and his son
-spent Sunday afternoon in the garden belonging to their Mirefields
-house. Oddly enough this garden was not attached to the dwelling but
-was a kind of allotment. It has been photographically reproduced by
-Henry Maitland in the seventh chapter of the first volume of
-"Morning." Very often Henry Maitland's father read to him in that
-garden.
-
-One of Maitland's schoolfellows at Hinkson's school was the son of
-the man from whom his father had bought the druggist's business. The
-elder Lake was a friend of Barry Sullivan, and theatrically mad. He
-started plays in which Henry always took some part, though not the
-prominent part which has been attributed to him by some.
-Nevertheless he was always interested in plays and had a very
-dramatic way of reading anything that was capable of dramatic
-interpretation. He always loved the sound of words, and even when he
-was a boy of about twelve he took down a German book and read some of
-it aloud to the younger Lake, who did not know German and said so.
-Whereupon Maitland shook his fist at him and said: "But Lake, listen,
-listen, listen--doesn't it sound fine?" This endured through all his
-life. At this same time he used to read Oliver Wendell Holmes aloud
-to some of the other boys. This was when he was thirteen. Even then
-he always mouthed the words and loved their rhythm.
-
-Naturally enough, his father being a poor man, there would have been
-no opportunity of Henry Maitland's going to Moorhampton and to its
-great college if he had not obtained some scholarship. This, I
-think, was the notion that his father had at the time, and the
-necessity for it became more imperative when his father died. He did
-obtain this scholarship when he was somewhere about sixteen, and
-immediately afterwards was sent over to Moorhampton quite alone and
-put into lodgings there. At his school in Mirefields he had taken
-every possible prize, and I think it was two exhibitions from the
-London University which enabled him to go to Moorhampton. The
-college was a curious institution, one of the earliest endeavours to
-create a kind of university centre in a great provincial city. We
-certainly had a very wonderful staff there, especially on the
-scientific side. Among the men of science at the college were Sir
-Henry Bissell; Schorstein, the great chemist; Hahn, also a chemist,
-and Balfour, the physicist. On the classical side were Professor
-Little and Professor Henry Parker, who were not by any means so
-eminent as their scientific colleagues. The eminence of our
-scientific professors did not matter very much from Henry Maitland's
-point of view, perhaps, for from the day of his birth to the day of
-his death, he took no interest whatever in science and loathed all
-forms of speculative thought with a peculiar and almost amusing
-horror. Mathematics he detested, and if in later years I ever
-attempted to touch upon metaphysical questions he used to shut up, to
-use an American phrase, just like a clam. But on the classical side
-he was much more than merely successful. He took every possible
-prize that was open to him. In his book "The Exile," there is a
-picture of a youth on prize day going up to receive prize after
-prize, and I know that this chapter contains much of what he himself
-must have felt when I saw him retire to a modest back bench loaded
-with books bound in calf and tooled in gold.
-
-Of course a college of this description, which was not, properly
-speaking, a university, could only be regarded, for a boy of his
-culture, as a stepping-stone to one of the older universities,
-probably Cambridge, since most of my own friends who did go to the
-university went there from Moorhampton. I do not think there was a
-professor or lecturer or a single student in the college who did not
-anticipate for Henry Maitland one of the brightest possible futures,
-so far as success at the university could make it so. It is possible
-that I alone out of those who regarded him with admiration and
-affection had some doubt of this, and that was not because I
-disagreed as a boy with any of the estimates that had been formed of
-him, but simply because for some reason or another he chose me as a
-confidant. Many years afterwards he said to me with painful
-bitterness: "It was a cruel and most undesirable thing that I, at the
-age of sixteen, should have been turned loose in a big city,
-compelled to live alone in lodgings, with nobody interested in me but
-those at the college. I see now that one of my sisters should
-certainly have been sent with me to Moorhampton."
-
-One day he showed me a photograph. It was that of a young girl, aged
-perhaps seventeen--he at the time being very little more--with her
-hair down her back. She was not beautiful, but she had a certain
-prettiness, the mere prettiness of youth, and she was undoubtedly not
-a lady. After some interrogation on my part he told me that she was
-a young prostitute whom he knew, and I do not think I am exaggerating
-my own feelings when I say that I recognised instinctively and at
-once that if his relations with her were not put an end to some kind
-of disaster was in front of him. It was not that I knew very much
-about life, for what could a boy of less than eighteen really know
-about it?--but I had some kind of instinctive sense in me, and I was
-perfectly aware, even then, that Henry Maitland had about as little
-_savoir-vivre_ as anybody I had ever met up to that time, or anybody
-I could ever expect to meet. It may seem strange to some that even
-at that time I had no moral views, and extremely little religion,
-although I may say incidentally that I thought about it sufficiently
-to become deliberately a Unitarian, refusing to be confirmed in the
-English Church, very much to the rage of the parish clergyman, and
-with the result of much friction with my father. Yet although I had
-no moral views I did my best to get Maitland to give up this girl,
-but he would not do it. The thing went on, so far as I am aware, for
-the best part of a year. He did all he could, apparently, to get
-Marian Hilton to leave the streets. He even bought a sewing machine
-and gave it to her with this view. That was another sample of his
-early idealism.
-
-This was in 1876, and the younger Lake, who was three years older
-than Maitland, had by then just qualified as a doctor. He was an
-assistant at Darwen and one day went over to Moorhampton to see
-Henry, who told him what he had told me about this Marian Hilton. He
-even went so far as to say that he was going to marry her. Dr. Lake,
-of course, being an older man, and knowing something of life through
-his own profession, did not approve of this and strongly objected.
-Afterwards he regretted a thousand times that he had not written
-direct to Maitland's people to tell them of what was going on.
-Still, although he was the older man, he was not so much older as to
-have got rid of the boyish loyalty of one youth to another, and he
-did not do what he knew he ought to have done. He found out that
-Maitland had even sold his father's watch to help this girl. This
-affair was also known to a young accountant who came from Mirefields
-whom I did not know, and also to another man at the college who is
-now in the Government Service. So far as I remember the accountant
-was not a good influence, but his other friend did what he could to
-get Maitland to break off this very undesirable relationship, with no
-more success than myself.
-
-I have never understood how it was that he got into such frightful
-financial difficulties. I can only imagine that Marian must have
-had, in one way or another, the greater portion of the income which
-he got from the scholarships he held. I do know that his affection
-for her seemed at this time to be very sincere. And out of that
-affection there grew up, very naturally, a horror in his sensitive
-mind for the life this poor child was leading. He haunted the
-streets which she haunted, and sometimes saw her with other men. I
-suppose even then she must have been frightfully extravagant, and
-perhaps given to drink, but considering what his income was I think
-he should have been able to give her a pound a week if necessary, and
-yet have had sufficient to live on without great difficulty.
-Nevertheless he did get into difficulties, and never even spoke to me
-about it. I was quite aware, in a kind of dim way, that he was in
-trouble and looked very ill, but he did not give me his fullest
-confidence, although one day he told me, as he had told Lake, that he
-proposed marrying her. I was only a boy, but I was absolutely
-enraged at the notion and used every possible means to prevent him
-committing such an absurd act of folly. When I met him I discussed
-it with him. When I was away from him I wrote him letters. I
-suppose I wrote him a dozen letters begging that he would do no such
-foolish thing. I told him that he would wrong himself, and could do
-the girl no possible good. My instincts told me even then that she
-would, instead of being raised, pull him down. These letters of mine
-were afterwards discovered in his rooms when the tragedy had happened.
-
-During that time in 1876, we students at Moorhampton College were
-much disturbed by a series of thefts in the common room, and from a
-locker room in which we kept our books and papers and our overcoats.
-Books disappeared unaccountably and so did coats. Money was taken
-from the pockets of coats left in the room, and nobody knew who was
-to blame for this. Naturally enough we suspected a porter or one of
-the lower staff, but we were wrong. Without our knowledge the
-college authorities set a detective to discover who was to blame.
-One day I went into the common room, and standing in front of the
-fire found a man, a young fellow about my age, called Sarle, with
-whom I frequently played chess--he was afterwards president of the
-chess club at Oxford--and he said to me: "Have you heard the news?"
-"What news?" I asked. "Your friend, Henry Maitland, has been
-stealing those things that we have lost," he said. And when he said
-it I very nearly struck him, for it seemed a gross and incredible
-slander. But unfortunately it was true, and at that very moment
-Maitland was in gaol. A detective had hidden himself in the small
-room leading out of the bigger room where the lockers were and had
-caught him in the act. It was a very ghastly business and certainly
-the first great shock I ever got in my life. I think it was the same
-for everybody who knew the boy. The whole college was in a most
-extraordinary ferment, and, indeed, I may say the whole of
-Moorhampton which took any real interest in the college.
-
-Professor Little, who was then the head of the college, sent for me
-and asked me what I knew of the matter. I soon discovered that this
-was because the police had found letters from me in Maitland's room
-which referred to Marian Hilton. I told the professor with the
-utmost frankness everything that I knew about the affair, and
-maintained that I had done my utmost to get him to break with her, a
-statement which all my letters supported. I have often imagined a
-certain suspicion, in the minds of some of those who are given to
-suspicion, that I myself had been leading the same kind of life as
-Henry Maitland. This was certainly not true; but I believe that one
-or two of those who did not like me--and there are always some--threw
-out hints that I knew Maitland had been taking these things. Yet
-after my very painful interview with Professor Little, who was a very
-delightful and kindly personality--though certainly not so strong a
-man as the head of such an institution should be--I saw that he gave
-me every credit for what I had tried to do. Among my own friends at
-the college was a young fellow, Edward Wolff, the son of the Rev. Mr.
-Wolff, the Unitarian minister at the chapel in Broad Street. Edward
-was afterwards fifth wrangler of his year at Cambridge. He got his
-father to interest himself in Henry Maitland's future. Mr. Wolff and
-several other men of some eminence in the city did what they could
-for him. They got together a little money and on his release from
-prison sent him away to America. He was met on coming out of prison
-by Dr. Lake's father, who also helped him in every possible way.
-
-It seemed to me then that I had probably seen the last of Maitland,
-and the turn my own career took shortly afterwards rendered this even
-more likely. In the middle of 1876 I had a very serious disagreement
-with my father, who was a man of great ability but very violent
-temper, and left home. On September 23 of that year I sailed for
-Australia and remained there, working mostly in the bush, for the
-best part of three years. During all that time I heard little of
-Henry Maitland, though I have some dim remembrance of a letter I
-received from him telling me that he was in America. It was in 1879
-that I shipped before the mast at Melbourne in a blackwall barque and
-came back to England as a seaman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-A psychologist or a romancer might comment on the matter of the last
-chapter till the sun went down, but the world perhaps would not be
-much further advanced. It is better, I think, for the man's apology
-or condemnation to come out of the drama that followed. This is
-where Life mocks at Art. The tragic climax and catastrophe are in
-the first act, and the remainder is a long and bitter commentary.
-Maitland and I never discussed his early life. Practically we never
-spoke of Moorhampton though we often enough touched on ancient things
-by implication. His whole life as I saw it, and as I shall relate
-it, is but a development of the nature which made his disaster
-possible.
-
-So one comes back to my own return from Australia. I had gone out
-there as a boy, and came back a man, for I had had a man's
-experiences; work, adventure, travel, hunger, and thirst. All this
-hardened a somewhat neurotic temperament, at any rate for the time,
-till life in a city, and the humaner world of books removed the
-temper which one gets when plunged in the baths of the ocean. During
-some months I worked for a position in the Civil Service and thought
-very little of Maitland, for he was lost. Yet as I got back into the
-classics he returned to me at times, and I wrote to my own friends in
-Moorhampton about him. They sent me vague reports of him in the
-United States, and then at last there came word that he was once more
-in England; possibly, and even probably, in London. Soon afterwards
-I found an advertisement in the _Athenæum_ of a book entitled
-"Children of the Dawn," by Henry Maitland. As soon as I saw it I
-went straightway to the firm which published it, and being ignorant
-of the ways of publishers, demanded Maitland's address, which was
-promptly and very properly refused--for all they knew I might have
-been a creditor. They promised, however, to send on a letter to him,
-and I wrote one at once, receiving an answer the very next day. He
-appointed as our meeting-place the smoking-room of the Horse Shoe
-Hotel at the bottom of Tottenham Court Road. Conceivably it was one
-of the most curious meetings that had ever taken place in such a
-locality. We met late at night in the crowded smoking-room, and I
-found him very much his old self, for he was still a handsome and
-intelligent boy, though somewhat worn and haggard considering his
-years. As for myself, I remember that he told me, chuckling, that I
-looked like a soldier, which was no doubt the result of some years on
-horseback--possibly I walked with a cavalry stride. We sat and drank
-coffee, and had whiskey, and smoked, until we were turned out of the
-hotel at half-past twelve. It was perhaps owing to the fact that I
-was ever the greater talker that he learnt more of my life in
-Australia than I learnt of his in the United States. He was, in
-fact, somewhat reserved as to his adventures there. And yet, little
-by little, I learnt a great deal--it was always a case of little by
-little with him. At no time did he possess any great fluency or
-power of words when speaking of his own life.
-
-It seems that friends had given him some letters to writers and
-others in New York, and he made the acquaintance there of many whose
-names I forget. I only recollect the name of Lloyd Garrison, the
-poet. Maitland told me that upon one occasion Lloyd Garrison induced
-him to go home with him about two o'clock in the morning to hear a
-sonnet on which Garrison had been working, as he affirmed almost with
-tears, for three whole months. As Maitland said, the result hardly
-justified the toil. Among the friends that he made there were a few
-artistic and literary tendencies who had made a little club, where it
-was _de rigueur_ at certain times to produce something in the form of
-a poem. Maitland showed me the set of verses with which he had paid
-his literary footing; they were amusing, but of no great importance.
-So long as Maitland's money lasted in New York he had not an
-unpleasant time. It was only when he exhausted his means and had to
-earn a living by using his wits that he found himself in great
-difficulties, which were certainly not to be mitigated by the
-production of verse. But Maitland never pretended to write poetry,
-though he sometimes tried. I still have a few of his poems in my
-possession, one of them a set of love verses which he put into one of
-his books but omitted on my most fervent recommendation. I believe,
-however, that there is still much verse by him in existence, if he
-did not destroy it in later years when circumstances, his wanderings
-and his poverty, made it inconvenient to preserve comparatively
-worthless papers. And yet, if he did not destroy it, it might now be
-of no small interest to men of letters.
-
-When his means were almost exhausted he went to Boston, and from
-there drifted to Chicago. With a very few comments and alterations,
-the account given in "Paternoster Row," contains the essence of
-Maitland's own adventures in America. It is, of course, written in a
-very light style, and is more or less tinged with humour. This
-humour, however, is purely literary, for he felt very little of it
-when he was telling me the story. He certainly lived during two
-days, for instance, upon peanuts, and he did it in a town called
-Troy. I never gathered what actually drove him to Chicago: it was,
-perhaps, the general idea that one gets in America that if one goes
-west one goes to the land of chances, but it certainly was not the
-land for Henry Maitland. Nevertheless, as he relates in "Paternoster
-Row," he reached it with less than five dollars in his pocket, and
-with a courage which he himself marvelled at, paid four and a half
-dollars for a week's board and lodging, which made him secure for the
-moment. This boarding-house he once or twice described to me. It
-was an unclean place somewhere on Wabash Avenue, and was occupied
-very largely by small actors and hangers-on at the Chicago theatres.
-The food was poor, the service was worse, and there was only one
-common room, in which they ate and lived. It was at this time, when
-he had taken a look round Chicago and found it very like Hell or
-Glasgow, which, indeed, it is, that he determined to attack the
-editor of the _Chicago Tribune_. The description he gives of this
-scene in "Paternoster Row" is not wholly accurate. I remember he
-said that he walked to and fro for hours outside the offices of the
-paper before he took what remained of his courage in both hands,
-rushed into the elevator, and was carried to an upper story. He
-asked for work, and the accessible and genial editor demanded, in
-return, what experience he had had with journalism. He said, with
-desperate boldness, "None whatever," and the editor, not at all
-unkindly, asked him what he thought he could do for them. He
-replied, "There is one thing that is wanting in your paper." "What
-is that?" asked the editor. "Fiction," said Maitland, "I should like
-to write you some." The editor considered the matter, and said that
-he had no objection to using a story provided it was good; it would
-serve for one of the weekly supplements, because these American
-papers at the end of the week have amazing supplements, full of all
-sorts of conceivable matter. Maitland asked if he might try him with
-a story of English life, and got permission to do so.
-
-He went away and walked up and down the lake shore for hours in the
-bitter wind, trying to think out a story, and at last discovered one.
-On his way home he bought a pen, ink, and paper, which they did not
-supply at the boarding-house. As it was impossible to write in his
-bedroom, where there was, of course, no fire, and no proper heating,
-it being so poor a place, he was compelled to write on the table of
-the common room with a dozen other men there, talking, smoking, and
-no doubt quarrelling. He wrote this story in a couple of days, and
-it was long enough to fill several columns of the paper. To his
-intense relief it was accepted by the editor after a day or two's
-waiting, and he got eighteen dollars according to "Paternoster Row,"
-though I believe as a matter of fact it was less in reality. He
-stayed for some time in Chicago working for the _Tribune_, but at
-last found that he could write no more. I believe the editor himself
-suggested that the stories were perhaps not quite what he wanted.
-The one that I saw I only remember vaguely. It was, however, a sort
-of psychological love-story placed in London, written without much
-distinction.
-
-The account Broughton gives in "Paternoster Row" of his visit to Troy
-is fairly representative of Maitland's experiences. It was there
-that he lived for two or three days on peanuts, buying five cents'
-worth in the street now and then at some Italian peanut stand. In
-"Paternoster Row" he calls them loathsome, and no doubt they soon do
-become loathsome. A few are rather pleasing, more than a few are
-objectionable; and when anybody tries a whole diet of them for a day
-or two there is no doubt "loathsome" would be the proper word. After
-that he worked for a photographer for a few days, and then, I think,
-for a plumber, but of this I remember very little. It is quite
-certain that he never earned enough money in America to enable him to
-return to England, but who lent it to him I have no idea. To have
-been twenty-four hours with no more than a handful of peanuts in his
-pocket was no doubt an unpleasant experience, but, as I told him, it
-seemed very little to me. On one occasion in Australia I had been
-rather more than four and a half days without food when caught in a
-flood. Nevertheless this starvation was for him one of the
-initiation ceremonies into the mysteries of literature, and he was
-always accustomed to say, "How can such an one write? He never
-starved."
-
-Nevertheless to have been hard up in Chicago was a very great
-experience, as every one knows who knows that desperate city of the
-plains. Since that time I myself have known Chicago well, and have
-been there "dead broke." Thus I can imagine the state that he must
-have been in, and how desperate he must have become, to get out of
-his difficulties in the way that he actually employed. The endeavour
-to obtain work in a hustling country like the United States is ever a
-desperate proceeding for a nervous and sensitive man, and what it
-must have been to Henry Maitland to do what he did with the editor of
-the _Chicago Tribune_ can only be imagined by those who knew him. In
-many ways he was the most modest and the shyest man who ever lived,
-and yet he actually told this editor: "I have come to point out to
-you there is a serious lack in your paper." To those who knew
-Maitland this must seem as surprising as it did to myself, and in
-later years he sometimes thought of that incident with inexpressible
-joy in his own courage. Of course the oddest thing about the whole
-affair is that up to that moment he had never written fiction at all,
-and only did it because he was driven to desperation. As will be
-seen when I come later to discuss his qualifications as a writer this
-is a curious comment on much of his bigger work. To me it seems that
-he should never have written fiction at all, although he did it so
-admirably. I think it would be very interesting if some American
-student of Maitland would turn over the files of the _Tribune_ in the
-years 1878 and 1879 and disinter the work he did there. This is
-practically all I ever learnt about his life on the other side of the
-Atlantic. I was, indeed, more anxious to discover how he lived in
-London, and in what circumstances. I asked him as delicately as
-possible about his domestic circumstances, and he then told me that
-he was married, and that his wife was with him in London.
-
-It is very curious to think that I never actually met his first wife.
-I had, of course, seen her photograph, and I have on several
-occasions been in the next room to her. On those occasions she was
-usually unable to be seen, mostly because she was intoxicated. When
-we renewed our acquaintance in the Horse Shoe Tavern he was then
-living in mean apartments in one of the back streets off Tottenham
-Court Road not very far from the hotel and indeed not far from a
-cellar that he once occupied in a neighbouring street. Little by
-little as I met him again and again I began to get some hold upon his
-actual life. Gradually he became more confidential, and I gathered
-from him that the habits of his wife were perpetually compelling him
-to move from one house to another. From what he told me, sometimes
-hopefully, and more often in desperation, it seems that this poor
-creature made vain and violent efforts to reform, generally after
-some long debauch. And of this I am very sure, that no man on earth
-could have made more desperate efforts to help her than he made. But
-the actual fact remains that they were turned out of one lodging
-after the other, for even the poorest places, it seems, could hardly
-stand a woman of her character in the house. I fear it was not only
-that she drank, but at intervals she deserted him and went back, for
-the sake of more drink, and for the sake of money with which he was
-unable to supply her, to her old melancholy trade. And yet she
-returned again with tears, and he took her in, doing his best for
-her. It was six months after our first meeting in Tottenham Court
-Road that he asked me to go and spend an evening with him. Naturally
-enough I then expected to make Mrs. Maitland's acquaintance, but on
-my arrival he showed some disturbance of mind and told me that she
-was ill and would be unable to see me. The house they lived in then
-was not very far from Mornington Crescent. It was certainly in some
-dull neighbourhood not half a mile away. The street was, I think, a
-cul-de-sac. It was full of children of the lower orders playing in
-the roadway. Their fathers and mothers, it being Saturday night, sat
-upon the doorsteps, or quarrelled, or talked in the road. The front
-room in which he received me was both mean and dirty. The servant
-who took me upstairs was a poor foul slut, and I do not think the
-room had been properly cleaned or dusted for a very long time. The
-whole of the furniture in it was certainly not worth seven and
-sixpence from the point of view of the ordinary furniture dealer.
-There were signs in it that it had been occupied by a woman, and one
-without the common elements of decency and cleanliness. Under a
-miserable and broken sofa lay a pair of dirty feminine boots. And
-yet on one set of poor shelves there were, still shining with gold,
-the prizes Maitland had won at Moorhampton College, and his painfully
-acquired stock of books that he loved so much.
-
-As I came in by arrangement after my own dinner, we simply sat and
-smoked and drank a little whiskey. Twice in the course of an hour
-our conversation was interrupted by the servant knocking at the door
-and beckoning to Maitland to come out. In the next room I then heard
-voices, sometimes raised, sometimes pleading. When Maitland returned
-the first time he said to me, "I am very sorry to have to leave you
-for a few minutes. My wife is really unwell." But I knew by now the
-disease from which she suffered. Twice or thrice I was within an ace
-of getting up and saying, "Don't you think I'd better go, old chap?"
-And then he was called out again. He came back at last in a state of
-obvious misery and perturbation, and said, "My dear man, my wife is
-so ill that I think I must ask you to go." I shook hands with him in
-silence and went, for I understood. A little afterwards he told me
-that that very afternoon his wife had gone out, and obtaining drink
-in some way had brought it home with her, and that she was then
-almost insane with alcohol. This was the kind of life that Henry
-Maitland, perhaps a great man of letters, lived for years.
-Comfortable people talk of his pessimism, and his greyness of
-outlook, and never understand. The man really was a hedonist, he
-loved things beautiful--beautiful and orderly. He rejoiced in every
-form of Art, in books and music, and in all the finer inheritance of
-the past. But this was the life he lived, and the life he seemed to
-be doomed to live from the very first.
-
-When a weak man has a powerful sense of duty he is hard to handle by
-those who have some wisdom. In the early days I had done my best to
-induce him to give up this woman, long before he married her, when he
-was but a foolish boy. Now I once more did my best to get him to
-leave her, but I cannot pretend for an instant that anything I said
-or did would have had any grave effect if it had not been that the
-poor woman was herself doomed to be her own destroyer. Her outbreaks
-became more frequent, her departures from his miserable roof more
-prolonged. The windy gaslight of the slums appealed to her, and the
-money that she earned therein; and finally when it seemed that she
-would return no more he changed his rooms, and through the landlady
-of the wretched house at which he found she was staying he arranged
-to pay her ten shillings a week. As I know, he often made much less
-than ten shillings a week, and frequently found himself starving that
-she might have so much more to spend in drink.
-
-This went on for years. It was still going on in 1884 when I left
-England again and went out to Texas. I had not succeeded in making a
-successful attack upon the English Civil Service, and the hateful
-work I did afterwards caused my health to break down. I was in
-America for three years. During that time I wrote fully and with a
-certain regularity to Maitland. When I came back and was writing
-"The Western Trail," he returned me the letters he had received from
-me. Among them I found some, frequently dealing with literary
-subjects, addressed from Texas, Minnesota, Iowa, the Rocky Mountains,
-Lower British Columbia, Oregon, and California. In his letters to me
-he never referred to Marian, but I gathered that his life was very
-hard, and, of course, I understood, without his saying it, that he
-was still supporting her. I found that this was so when I returned
-to England in 1887. At that time, by dint of hard, laborious work,
-which included a great deal of teaching, he was making for the first
-time something of a living. He occupied a respectable but very
-dismal flat somewhere at the back of Madame Tussaud's, in a place at
-that time called "Cumberland Residences." It was afterwards renamed
-"Cumberland Mansions," and I well remember Maitland's frightful and
-really superfluous scorn of the snobbery which spoke in such a change
-of name. As I said, we corresponded the whole of the time I was in
-America. I used to send him a great deal of verse, some of which he
-pronounced actually poetry. No doubt this pleased me amazingly, and
-I wish that I still possessed his criticisms written to me while I
-was abroad. It is, from any point of view, a very great disaster
-that in some way which I cannot account for I have lost all his
-letters written to me previous to 1894. Our prolonged, and
-practically uninterrupted correspondence began in 1884, so I have
-actually lost the letters of ten whole years. They were interesting
-from many points of view. Much to my surprise, while I was in
-America, they came to me, not dated in the ordinary way, but
-according to the Comtist calendar. I wrote to him for an
-explanation, because up to that time I had never heard of it. In his
-answering letter he told me that he had become a Positivist. This
-was doubtless owing to the fact that he had come accidentally under
-the influence of some well-known Positivists.
-
-It seems that in desperation at his utter failure to make a real
-living at literature he had taken again to a tutor's work, which in a
-way was where he began. I find that in the marriage certificate
-between him and Marian Hilton he called himself a teacher of
-languages. But undoubtedly he loathed teaching save in those rare
-instances where he had an intelligent and enthusiastic pupil. At the
-time that I came back to England he was teaching Harold Edgeworth's
-sons. Without a doubt Harold Edgeworth was extremely kind to Henry
-Maitland and perhaps to some little extent appreciated him, in spite
-of the preface which he wrote in later years to the posthumous
-"Basil." He was not only tutor to Harold Edgeworth's sons, but was
-also received at his house as a guest. He met there many men of a
-certain literary eminence; Cotter Morrison, for instance, of whom he
-sometimes spoke to me, especially of his once characterising a social
-chatterer as a cloaca maxima of small talk. He also met Edmund
-Roden, with whom he remained on terms of friendship to the last,
-often visiting him in his house at Felixstowe, which is known to many
-men of letters. I think the fact that Edmund Roden was not only a
-man of letters but also, oddly enough, the manager of a great
-business, appealed in some way to Maitland's sense of humour. He
-liked Roden amazingly, and it was through him, if I remember rightly,
-that he became socially acquainted with George Meredith, whom,
-however, he had met in a business way when Meredith was reading for
-some firm of publishers at a salary of two hundred a year.
-
-Nevertheless, in spite of his making money by some tutorial work,
-Maitland was still as poor as a rat in a cellar, and the absurd
-antinomy between the society he frequented at times and his real
-position, made him sometimes shout with laughter which was not always
-really humorous. It was during this period of his life that a lady
-asked him at an "at-home" what his experience was in the management
-of butlers. According to what he told me he replied seriously that
-he always strictly refrained from having anything to do with men
-servants, as he much preferred a smart-looking young maid. It was
-during this period that he did some work with a man employed, I
-think, at the London Skin Hospital. This poor fellow, it seemed,
-desired to rise in life, and possessed ambition. He wanted to pass
-the London matriculation examination and thus become, as he imagined,
-somebody of importance. Naturally enough, being but a clerk, he
-lacked time for work, and the arrangement come to between him and
-Maitland was that his teacher should go to his lodging at seven
-o'clock in the morning and give him his lesson in bed before
-breakfast. As this was just before the time that Maitland worked for
-Mr. Harold Edgeworth, he was too poor, so he said, to pay bus fares
-from the slum in which he lived, and as a result he had to rise at
-six o'clock in the morning, walk for a whole hour to his pupil's
-lodging, and then was very frequently met with the message that Mr.
-So-and-so felt much too tired that morning to receive him, and begged
-Mr. Maitland would excuse him. It is a curious comment on the
-authority of "The Meditations of Mark Sumner," which many cling to as
-undoubtedly authentic, that he mentions this incident as if he did
-not mind it. As a matter of fact he was furiously wrath with this
-man for not rising to receive him, and used to go away in a state of
-almost ungovernable rage, as he told me many and many a time.
-
-After my return from America we used to meet regularly once a week on
-Sunday afternoons, for I had now commenced my own initiation into the
-mystery of letters, and had become an author. By Maitland's advice,
-and, if I may say so, almost by his inspiration--most certainly his
-encouragement--I wrote "The Western Trail," and having actually
-printed a book I felt that there was still another bond between me
-and Maitland. I used to turn up regularly at 7K Cumberland
-Residences at three o'clock on Sundays. From then till seven we
-talked of our work, of Latin and of Greek, of French, and of
-everything on earth that touched on literature. Long before seven
-Maitland used to apply himself very seriously to the subject of
-cooking. As he could not afford two fires he usually cooked his pot
-on the fire of the sitting-room. This pot of his was a great
-institution. It reminds me something of the gypsies' pot in which
-they put everything that comes to hand. Maitland's idea of cooking
-was fatness and a certain amount of gross abundance. He used to put
-into this pot potatoes, carrots, turnips, portions of meat, perhaps a
-steak, or on great days a whole rabbit, all of which he had bought
-himself, and carried home with his own hands. We used to watch the
-pot boiling, and perhaps about seven or half-past he would
-investigate its contents with a long, two-pronged iron fork, and
-finally decide much to our joy and contentment that the contents were
-edible. After our meal, for which I was usually ready, as I was
-practically starving much of this time myself, we removed the débris,
-washed up in company, and resumed our literary conversation, which
-sometimes lasted until ten or eleven. By that time Maitland usually
-turned me out, although my own day was not necessarily done for
-several hours. At those times when I was writing at all, I used to
-write between midnight and six o'clock in the morning.
-
-Those were great talks that we had, but they were nearly always talks
-about ancient times, about the Greeks and Romans, so far as we
-strayed from English literature. It may seem an odd thing, and it
-_is_ odd until it is explained, that he had very little interest in
-the Renaissance. There is still in existence a letter of his to
-Edmund Roden saying how much he regretted that he took no interest in
-it. That letter was, I think, dated from Siena, a city of the
-Renaissance. The truth of the matter is that he was essentially a
-creature of the Renaissance himself, a pure Humanist. For this very
-reason he displayed no particular pleasure in that period. He was
-interested in the time in which the men of the Renaissance revelled
-after its rediscovery and the new birth of learning. He would have
-been at his best if he had been born when that time was in flower.
-The fathers of the Renaissance rediscovered Rome and Athens, and so
-did he. No one can persuade me that if this had been his fate his
-name would not now have been as sacred to all who love literature as
-those of Petrarch and his glorious fellows. As a matter of fact it
-was this very quality of his which gave him such a lofty and lordly
-contempt for the obscurantist theologian. In my mind I can see him
-treating with that irony which was ever his favourite weapon, some
-relic of the dark ages of the schools. In those hours that we spent
-together it was wonderful to hear him talk of Greece even before he
-knew it, for he saw it as it had been, or as his mind made him think
-it had been, not with the modern Greek--who is perhaps not a Greek at
-all--shouting in the market-place. I think that he had a historical
-imagination of a very high order, even though he undoubtedly failed
-when endeavouring to use it. That was because he used it in the
-wrong medium. But when he saw the Acropolis in his mind he saw it
-before the Turks had stabled their horses in the Parthenon, and
-before the English, worse vandals than the Turks, had brought away to
-the biting smoke of London the marbles of Pheidias. Even as a boy he
-loved the roar and fume of Rome, although he had not yet seen it and
-could only imagine it. He saw in Italy the land of Dante and
-Boccaccio, a land still peopled in the south towards Sicily with such
-folks as these and Horace had known. My own education had been
-wrought out in strange, rough places in the new lands. It was a
-fresh education for me to come back to London and sit with Maitland
-on these marvellous Sunday afternoons and evenings when he wondered
-if the time would ever come for him to see Italy and Greece in all
-reality. It was for the little touches of realism, the little
-pictures in the Odes, that he loved Horace, and loved still more his
-Virgil; and, even more, Theocritus and Moshos, for Theocritus wrote
-things which were ancient and yet modern, full of the truth of
-humanity. Like all the men of the Renaissance he turned his eyes
-wistfully to the immemorial past, renewed in the magic alembic of his
-own mind.
-
-Nevertheless, great as these hours were that we spent together, they
-were sometimes deeply melancholy, and he had nothing to console him
-for the miseries which were ever in the background. It was upon one
-of these Sundays, I think early in January, 1888, that I found him in
-a peculiarly melancholy and desperate condition. No doubt he was
-overworked, for he always was overworked; but he said that he could
-stand it no longer, he must get out of London for a few days or so.
-For some reason which I cannot for the world understand, he decided
-to go to Eastbourne, and begged me to go with him. Why he should
-have selected, in Christmas weather and an east wind, what is
-possibly the coldest town in England in such conditions, I cannot
-say, but I remember that the journey down to the sea was mercilessly
-cold. Of course we went third class, and the carriages were totally
-unheated. We were both of us practically in extreme poverty. I was
-living in a single room in Chelsea, for which I paid four shillings a
-week, and for many months my total weekly expenses were something
-under twelve shillings. At that particular moment he was doing
-extremely badly, and the ten shillings that he paid regularly to his
-wife frequently left him with insufficient to live upon. I can
-hardly understand how it was that he determined to spend even the
-little extra money needed for such a journey. When we reached
-Eastbourne we walked with our bags in our hands down to the sea
-front, and then, going into a poor back street, selected rooms. It
-was perhaps what he and I often called "the native malignity of
-matter," and his extreme ill luck in the matter of landladies, which
-pursued him for ever throughout his life in lodgings, that the
-particular landlady of the house in which we took refuge was
-extraordinarily incapable. The dwelling itself was miserably
-draughty and cold, and wretchedly furnished. The east wind which
-blows over the flat marshes between Eastbourne and the Downs entered
-the house at every crack, and there were many of them. The first
-night we were in the town it snowed very heavily, and in our shabby
-little sitting-room we shivered in spite of the starved fire. We sat
-there with our overcoats on and did our best to be cheerful. Heaven
-alone knows what we talked of, but most likely, and very possibly, it
-may have been Greek metres, always his great passion. Yet neither of
-us was in good case. We both had trouble enough on our shoulders. I
-remember that he spoke very little of his wife, for I would not let
-him do so, although I knew she was most tremendously on his mind, and
-was, in fact, what had driven him for the moment out of London. Of
-course, he had a very natural desire that she should die and have
-done with life, with that life which must have been a torment to
-herself as it was a perpetual torture and a running sore to him. At
-the same time the poor fellow felt that he had no right to wish that
-she would die, but I could see the wish in his eyes, and heaven knows
-that I wished it fervently for him.
-
-The next morning we went for a long walk across the Downs to the
-little village of East Dean. It was blowing a whole gale from the
-north east, and it was quite impossible to go near the steep cliffs.
-The snow was in places two feet deep, and a sunk road across the
-Downs was level with the turf. I think now that none but madmen
-would have gone out on such a day. Doubtless we were mad enough; at
-any rate we were writers, and by all traditions had the right to be
-mad. But when we once got started we meant going through it at all
-events. I did not remember many colder days, in spite of my travels,
-but we persevered, and at last came to the little village and there
-took refuge in the public-house and drank beer. Maitland, with his
-extraordinary mixture of fine taste and something which was almost
-grossness in regard to food, loved all malt liquors--I think partly
-because he felt some strange charm in their being historically
-English drinks. The walk back to Eastbourne tried us both hard, for
-neither of us had been well fed for months, and the wind and snow in
-our faces made walking heavy and difficult. Nevertheless Maitland
-was now almost boisterously cheerful, as he often was outwardly when
-he had most reason to be the opposite. While he walked back the
-chief topic of conversation was the very excellent nature of the
-pudding which he had instructed our landlady to prepare against a
-hungry return.
-
-He was always extraordinarily fond of rich, succulent dishes. A
-_fritto misto_ for instance, made him shout for joy, though he never
-met with it until he went to Italy. With what inimitable fervour of
-the gastronomic mind would he declare these preferences! Dr. Johnson
-said that in a haggis there was much "fine, confused feeding," and
-Maitland undoubtedly agreed with him, as he always said when he
-quoted the passage. In many of his books there are examples of his
-curious feeling with regard to food. They are especially frequent in
-"Paternoster Row"; as, for instance, when one character says: "Better
-dripping this than I've had for a long time.... Now, with a little
-pepper and salt, this bread and dripping is as appetising a food as I
-know. I often make a dinner of it." To which the other replies: "I
-have done the same myself before now. Do you ever buy
-pease-pudding?" and to this the Irishman's reply was enthusiastic.
-"I should think so! I get magnificent pennyworths at a shop in
-Cleveland Street, of a very rich quality indeed. Excellent faggots
-they have there, too. I'll give you a supper of them one night
-before you go." I had often heard of this particular shop in
-Cleveland Street, and of one shop where they sold beef, kept by a man
-whose pride was that he had been carving beef behind the counter for
-thirty years without a holiday.
-
-And now we were hurrying back to Eastbourne, Maitland said, not
-because it was cold; not because the north-east wind blew; not
-because we were exposed to the very bitterest weather we remembered;
-but because of an exceedingly rich compound known as an apple
-pudding. He and the wind worked me up to an almost equal expression
-of ardour, and thus we came back to our poverty-stricken den in good
-spirits. But, alas, the dinner that day was actually disastrous.
-The meat was grossly overdone, the vegetables were badly cooked, the
-beer was thin and flat. We were in dismay, but still we said to each
-other hopefully that there was the pudding to come. It was brought
-on and looked very fine, and Maitland cut into it with great joy and
-gave me a generous helping. I know that I tasted it eagerly, but to
-my tongue there was an alien flavour about it. I looked up and said
-to Maitland, "It is very curious, but this pudding seems to me to
-taste of kerosene." Maitland laughed, but when his turn came to try
-he laughed no longer, for the pudding actually did taste of lamp oil.
-It appeared, on plaintive and bitter inquiry, that our unfortunate
-landlady after making it had put it under the shelf on which she kept
-her lamp gear. We subsided on melancholy and mouldy cheese. This
-disappointment, however childish it may appear to the better fed, was
-to Henry Maitland something really serious. Those who have read "The
-Meditations of Mark Sumner," without falling into the error of
-thinking that the talk about food in that melancholy book was only
-his fun, will understand that it was a very serious matter with
-Maitland. It took all his philosophy and a very great deal of mine
-to survive the tragedy, and to go on talking as we did of new words
-and the riches of philology. And as we talked the wind roared down
-our street in a vicious frenzy. It was a monstrously bad time to
-have come to Eastbourne, and we had no compensations.
-
-It was the next night that the great news came. In spite of the
-dreariest weather we had spent most of the day in the open air.
-After our dinner, which this time was more of a success, or at any
-rate less of a tragic failure, we were sitting hugging the fire to
-keep warm when a telegram was brought in for him. He read it in
-silence and handed it over to me with the very strangest look upon
-his face that I had ever seen. It was unsigned, and came from
-London. The message was: "Your wife is dead." There was nothing on
-earth more desirable for him than that she should die, the poor
-wretch truly being like a destructive wind, for she had torn his
-heart, scorched his very soul, and destroyed him in the beginning of
-his life. All irreparable disasters came from her, and through her.
-Had it not been for her he might then have held, or have begun to
-hope for, a great position at one of the universities. And now a
-voice out of the unknown cried that she was dead.
-
-He said to me, with a shaking voice and shaking hands, "I cannot
-believe it--I cannot believe it." He was as white as paper; for it
-meant so much--not only freedom from the disaster and shame and
-misery that drained his life-blood, but it would mean a cessation of
-money payments at a time when every shilling was very hard to win.
-And yet this was when he was comparatively well known, for it was two
-years after the publication of "The Mob." And still, though his
-books ran into many editions, for some inexplicable reason, which I
-yet hope to explain, he sold them one after another for fifty pounds.
-And I knew how he worked; how hard, how remorselessly. I knew who
-the chief character was in "Paternoster Row" before "Paternoster Row"
-was written. I knew with what inexpressible anguish of soul he
-laboured, with what dumb rage against destiny. And now here was
-something like freedom at last, if only it were true.
-
-This message came so late at night that there was no possibility of
-telegraphing to London to verify it even if he had been sure that he
-could get to the original sender. It was also much too late to go up
-to town. We sat silently for hours, and I knew that he was going
-back over the burning marl of the past. Sometimes he did speak,
-asking once and again if it could be true, and I saw that while he
-was still uncertain he was bitter and pitiless. Yet if she were only
-really dead...
-
-We went up to town together in the morning. In the train he told me
-that while he was still uncertain, he could not possibly visit the
-place she lived in, and he begged me to go there straight and bring
-him word as to the truth of this report. I was to explore the
-desperate slum in the New Cut in which she had exhausted the last
-dreadful years of her life, and upon leaving him I went there at
-once. With Maitland's full permission I described something of the
-milieu in "John Quest." On reaching the New Cut I dived into an
-inner slum from an outer one, and at last found myself in a kitchen
-which was only about eight or nine feet square. It was, of course,
-exceedingly dirty. The person in charge of it was a cheerful
-red-headed girl of about eighteen years of age. On learning the
-cause of my visit she went out and brought in her mother, and I soon
-verified the fact that Marian Maitland was dead. She had died the
-first bitter night we spent at Eastbourne, and was found next morning
-without any blankets, and with no covering for her emaciated body but
-a damp and draggled gown.
-
-Presently the neighbours came in to see the gentleman who was
-interested in this woman's death. They talked eagerly of the
-funeral, for, as Maitland knew only too well, a funeral, to these
-people, is one of their great irregular but recurring festivals. At
-Maitland's desire I gave them carte blanche up to a certain sum, and
-I think they felt that, as the agent of the husband, I behaved very
-well. Of course they knew all about the poor girl who lay dead
-upstairs, and although they were honest enough people in their way,
-and though the red-headed girl to whom I first talked worked hard in
-a factory making hooks and eyes, as she told me, they seemed to have
-no moral feelings whatever about her very obvious profession. I
-myself did not see the dead woman. I was not then acquainted with
-death, save among strangers. I could not bring myself to look upon
-her. Although death is so dreadful always, the surroundings of death
-may make things worse. But still, she _was_ dead, and I hastened
-back to Maitland to tell him so. It was a terrible and a painful
-relief to him; and when he was sure she was gone, he grieved for her,
-grieved for what she might have been, and for what she was. He
-remembered now that at intervals she used to send him heart-breaking
-messages asking to be forgiven, messages that even his unwisdom at
-last could not listen to. But he said very little. So far as the
-expression of his emotions went he often had very great self-control.
-It is a pity that his self-control so rarely extended itself to acts.
-But now he was free. Those who have forged their own chains, and
-lived in a hell of their own dreadful making, can understand what
-this is and what it means. But he did go down to the pit in which
-she died, and when I saw him a day or two later he was strangely
-quiet, even for him. He said to me, "My dear chap, she had kept my
-photograph, and a very little engraving of the Madonna di San Sisto,
-all these years of horrible degradation." He spoke in the almost
-inaudible tone that was characteristic of him, especially at that
-time. We arranged the funeral together, and she was buried. If only
-all the misery that she had caused him could have been buried with
-her, it would have been well. She died of what I may call,
-euphemistically, specific laryngitis. Once he told me a dreadful
-story about her in hospital. One of the doctors at St. Thomas's had
-questioned her, and after her answers sent for Maitland, and speaking
-to him on the information given him by the wife, was very bitter.
-Henry, even as he told me this years after, shook with rage and
-indignation. He had not been able to defend himself without exposing
-his wife's career.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-There are many methods of writing biography. Each has its
-advantages, even the chronological compilation. But chronology is no
-strong point of mine, and in this sketch I shall put but little
-stress on dates. There is great advantage in describing things as
-they impress themselves on the writer. A portrait gains in coherency
-and completeness by temporary omissions more than it can ever gain by
-the empty endeavour to handle each period fully. In this last
-chapter I might have endeavoured to describe Maitland at work, or to
-speak of his ambitions, or even to criticise what he had already
-done, or to give my own views of what he meant to achieve. There is
-authority for every method, and most authorities are bad, save
-Boswell--and few would pine for Boswell's qualities at the price of
-his failings. Yet one gets help from him everywhere, little as it
-may show. Only the other day I came across a passage in the "Journal
-of a Tour to the Hebrides" which has some value. Reporting Johnson,
-he writes: "Talking of biography, he said he did not think the life
-of any literary man in England had been well written. Besides the
-common incidents of life it should tell us his studies, his mode of
-living, the means by which he attained to excellence, and his opinion
-of his own works." Such I shall endeavour to do. Nevertheless
-Johnson was wrong. Good work had then been done in biography by
-Walton, whose Lives, by the way, Maitland loved; and Johnson himself
-was not far from great excellence when he described his friend Savage
-in the "Lives of the Poets" in spite of its want of colloquial ease.
-There came in then the value of friendship and actual personal
-knowledge, as it did in Boswell's "Life," I can only hope that my own
-deep acquaintance with Maitland will compensate for my want of skill
-in the art of writing lives, for which novel-writing is but a poor
-training. Yet the deeper one's knowledge the better it is to
-simplify as one goes, taking things by themselves, going forwards or
-backwards as may seem best, without care of tradition, especially
-where tradition is mostly bad. We do not write biography in England
-now as Romain Rolland writes that of Beethoven. Seldom are we
-grieved for our heroes, or rejoice with them. Photography, or the
-photographic portrait, is more in request than an impression.
-However, to resume in my own way, having to be content with that, and
-caring little for opinion, that fluctuant critic.
-
-Long as our friendship existed it is perhaps curious that we never
-called each other, except on very rare occasions, by anything but our
-surnames. This, I think, is due to the fact that we had been at
-Moorhampton College together. It is, I imagine, the same thing with
-all schoolboys. Provided there is no nickname given, men who have
-been chums at school seem to prefer the surname by which they knew
-their friends in the early days. I have often noticed there is a
-certain savage tendency on the part of boys to suppress their
-Christian names, their own peculiar mark. And sometimes I have
-wondered whether this is not in some obscure way a survival of the
-savage custom of many tribes in which nobody is ever mentioned by his
-right name, because in that name there inheres mysteriously the very
-essence of his being and inheritance, the knowledge of which by
-others may expose him to some occult danger.
-
-I believe I said above that from the time I first met Maitland after
-my return from Australia, until I went away again to Arizona, I was
-working in the Admiralty and the India Office as a writer at tenpence
-an hour. No doubt I thought the pay exiguous, and my prospects worth
-nothing. Yet when I came back from America and found him domiciled
-at 7K Cumberland Residences, my economic basis in life became even
-more exiguous, whatever hope might have said of my literary future.
-I was, in fact, a great deal poorer than Maitland. He lived in a
-flat and had at least two rooms and a kitchen. Yet it was a horrible
-place of extraordinary gloom, and its back windows overlooked the
-roaring steam engines of the Metropolitan Railway. In some ways no
-doubt my own apartment, when I took to living by myself in Chelsea,
-was superior in cheerfulness to 7K. Shortly after my return to
-England, when I had expended the fifty pounds I received for my first
-book, "The Western Trail," I took a single room in Chelsea, put in a
-few sticks of furniture given to me by my people, and commenced
-housekeeping on my own account on all I could make and the temporary
-ten shillings a week allowed me by my father, who at that time, for
-all his native respect for literature, regarded the practice of it
-with small hope and much suspicion. I know that it greatly amused
-Maitland to hear of his views on the subject of the self revelations
-in "The Western Trail," which dealt with my life in Western America.
-After reading that book he did not speak to me for three days, and
-told my younger brother, "These are pretty revelations about your
-brother having been a common loafer." At this Maitland roared, but
-he roared none the less when he understood that three columns of
-laudation in one of the reviews entirely changed my father's view of
-that particular book.
-
-I should not trouble to say anything about my own particular
-surroundings if it were not that in a sense they also became
-Maitland's, although I went more frequently to him than he came to
-me. Nevertheless he was quite familiar with my one room and often
-had meals there which I cooked for him. Of course at that time, from
-one point of view, I was but a literary beginner and aspirant, while
-Maitland was a rising and respected man, who certainly might be poor,
-and was poor, but still he had published "The Mob" and other books,
-his name was well known, and his prospects, from the literary, if not
-from the financial point of view, seemed very good. I was the author
-of one book, the result of three years' bitter hard experience,
-written in twenty-six days as a _tour de force_, and though I had
-ambition I seemed to have nothing more to write about. From my own
-point of view Maitland was, of course, very successful. His flat
-with more rooms than one in it was a mansion, and he was certainly
-making something like a hundred a year. Still, I think that when he
-came down to me and found me comparatively independent, he rather
-envied me. At any rate I had not to keep an errant wife on the money
-that I made with infinite difficulty. He came to see me in Chelsea
-in my very early days, and took great joy in my conditions. For one
-thing I had no attendance with this room. I was supposed to look
-after it for myself in every way. This, he assured me, made my
-estate the more gracious, as any one can understand who remembers all
-that he has said about landladies and lodging-house servants and
-charwomen. He was overjoyed with the list of things I bought: a
-fender and fire-irons, a coal-scuttle, a dust-bin, and blacking
-brushes. He found me one day shaving by the aid of my own dim
-reflection in the glass of an etching which I had brought from home,
-because I had no looking-glass and no money to spare to buy one. I
-remember we frequently went together over the question of finance.
-Incidentally I found his own habit of buying cooked meat peculiarly
-extravagant. I have a book somewhere among my papers in which I kept
-accounts for my first three months in Chelsea to see how I was going
-to live on ten shillings a week, which Maitland assured me was
-preposterous riches, even if I managed to make no more.
-
-Naturally enough, seeing that we had been friends for so long, and
-seeing that he had encouraged me so greatly to write my first book,
-he took a vast interest in all my proceedings, and was very joyous,
-as he would have said, to observe that I could not afford sheets but
-slept in the blankets which I had carried all over America. I seek
-no sympathy on this point, for after all it was not a matter of my
-being unable to afford linen; it is impossible for the average
-comfortable citizen to understand how disagreeable sheets become
-after some thousands of nights spent camping in mere wool, even of
-the cheapest. It took me years to learn to resign myself to cold
-linen, or even more sympathetic cotton, when I became a respectable
-householder.
-
-In the neighbourhood where I lived there was, of course, a great
-artistic colony, and as I knew one or two artists already, I soon
-became acquainted with all the others. Many of them were no richer
-than myself, and as Bohemia and the belief that there was still a
-Bohemia formed one of Maitland's greatest joys, he was always
-delighted to hear of any of our remarkable shifts to live. It is an
-odd thing to reflect that A. D. Mack, Frank Wynne, Albert Croft, and
-three other artists whose names I now forget, and I once had a
-glorious supper of fried fish served in a newspaper on the floor of
-an empty studio. The only thing I missed on that particular occasion
-was Maitland's presence, but, of course, the trouble was that
-Maitland would seldom associate with anybody whom he did not know
-already, and I could rarely get him to make the acquaintance of my
-own friends. Yet such experiences as we were sometimes reduced to
-more than proved to him that his dear Bohemia existed, though later
-in his life, as one sees in "Mark Sumner," he often seemed to doubt
-whether it was still extant. On this point I used to console him,
-saying that where any two artists butted their foolish heads against
-the economic system, there was Bohemia; Bohemia, in fact, was living
-on a course of high ideals, whatever the world said of them. At this
-hour there are writers learning their business on a little oatmeal,
-as George Meredith did, or destroying their digestions, as I did mine
-and Henry Maitland's, on canned corn beef. Even yet, perhaps, some
-writers and artists are making their one big meal a day on fried fish.
-
-One Sunday when I missed going to Maitland's, because he was then out
-of town visiting his family, I had a tale for him on his return. It
-appeared that I had been writing, and had got so disgusted with the
-result of it that I found I could not possibly stay in my room, and
-so determined to go round to my friend Mack. No sooner had I made up
-my mind on this subject than there was a knock at the door, and
-presently in came Mack himself. I said promptly, "It is no good your
-coming here, for I was just going round to you." Whereupon he
-replied, "It is no good your coming to me because I have no coal, no
-coke, and nobody will give me any more because I owe for so much
-already." I replied that I was not going to stay in my room in any
-case, and affirmed that I would rather be in his studio in the cold
-than the room where I was. Whereupon he suddenly discovered that my
-scuttle was actually full of coal, and proposed to take it round to
-the studio. This seemed a really brilliant idea, and after much
-discussion of ways and means my inventive faculty produced an old
-portmanteau and several newspapers, and after wrapping up lumps of
-coal in separate pieces of paper we packed the portmanteau with the
-coal and carried it round to the studio in Manresa Road. This seemed
-to Maitland so characteristic of an artist's life that he was very
-much delighted when I told him.
-
-It is an odd thing that in one matter Maitland and I were at that
-time much alike. From most points of view there can hardly have been
-two more different men, for he was essentially a man of the study and
-the cloister, while I was far more naturally a man of the open air.
-Nevertheless, when it came to journalism we were both of the same
-mind. While I was away from England and he was teaching Harold
-Edgeworth's sons, Edgeworth introduced him to John Harley, then
-editing the _Piccadilly Gazette_, who offered, and would no doubt
-have kept to it, to use as much matter as possible if Maitland would
-supply him with something in the journalistic form. Apparently he
-found it too much against his natural grain to do this work, and I
-was now in the same predicament. It is true that I had something of
-a natural journalistic flair which he lacked, but my nose for a
-likely article was rendered entirely useless to me by the fact that I
-never could write anything until I had thought about it for several
-days, by which time it was stale, and much too late from the
-newspaper point of view. Nevertheless Maitland did occasionally do a
-little odd journalism, for I remember once, before I went to America,
-being with him when he received the proofs of an article from the
-_St. James' Gazette_, and picking up "Mark Sumner" one may read: "I
-thought of this as I sat yesterday watching a noble sunset, which
-brought back to my memory the sunsets of a London autumn, thirty
-years ago. It happened that, on one such evening, I was by the river
-at Chelsea, with nothing to do except to feel that I was hungry, and
-to reflect that, before morning, I should be hungrier still. I
-loitered upon Battersea Bridge--the old picturesque wooden bridge,
-and there the western sky took hold upon me. Half an hour later I
-was speeding home. I sat down, and wrote a description of what I had
-seen, and straightway sent it to an evening paper, which, to my
-astonishment, published the thing next day--'On Battersea Bridge.' I
-have never seen that article since I saw the proof of it, but there
-was something so characteristic in it that I think it would be worth
-some one's while to hunt up the files of the _St. James' Gazette_ in
-order to find it. It appears that while he was leaning over the
-bridge, enjoying the sunset, there was also a workman looking at it.
-The river was at a low stage, for it was at least three-quarters-ebb,
-and on each side of the river there were great patches of shining
-mud, in which the glorious western sky was reflected, turning the
-ooze into a mass of most wonderful colour. Maitland said to me, "Of
-course I was pleased to see somebody else, especially a poor fellow
-like that, enjoying the beauty of the sunset. But presently my
-companion edged a little closer to me, and seeing my eyes directed
-towards the mud which showed such heavenly colouring, he remarked to
-me, with an air of the deepest interest, 'Throws up an 'eap of mud,
-don't she?'"
-
-Sometimes when Maitland came down to me in Danvers Street he used to
-go over my accounts and discuss means of making them less. I think
-his chief joy in them was the feeling that some of his more
-respectable friends, such as Harold Edgeworth, would have been
-horrified at my peculiarly squalid existence. In a sense it was, no
-doubt, squalid, and yet in another it was perhaps the greatest time
-in my life, and Maitland knew it. In the little book in which I kept
-my expenses he came across one day on which I had absolutely spent
-nothing. This was a great joy to him. On another day he found a
-penny put down as "charity." On looking up the book I find that a
-note still declares that this penny was given to a little girl to pay
-her fare in the bus. I remember quite well that this beneficence on
-my part necessitated my walking all the way to Chelsea from Hyde Park
-Corner. Yet Maitland assured me that, compared with himself at
-times, I was practically a millionaire, although he owned that he had
-very rarely beaten my record for some weeks when all expenditure on
-food was but three-and-six-pence. One week it actually totalled no
-more than one-and-elevenpence, but I have no doubt that I went out to
-eat with somebody else on those days--unless it was at the time my
-liver protested, and gave me such an attack of gloom that I went to
-bed and lay there for three days without eating, firmly determined to
-die and have done with the literary struggle. This fast did me a
-great deal of good. On the fourth day I got up and rustled
-vigorously for a meal, and did some financing with the admirable
-result of producing a whole half-crown.
-
-Whenever Maitland came to me I cooked his food and my own on a little
-grid, or in a frying-pan, over the fire in my one room. This fire
-cost me on an average a whole shilling a week, or perhaps a penny or
-two more if the coals, which I bought in the street, went up in
-price. This means that I ran a fire on a hundredweight of coal each
-week, or sixteen pounds of coal a day. Maitland, who was an expert
-on coal, assured me that I was extremely extravagant, and that a fire
-could be kept going for much less. On trying, I found out that when
-I was exceedingly hard up I could keep in a very little fire for
-several hours a day on only eight pounds of coal, but sometimes I had
-to let it go out, and run round to a studio to get warm by some
-artist's stove,--provided always that the merchant in coke who
-supplied him had not refused my especial friend any further credit.
-
-At this time Maitland and I were both accustomed to work late,
-although he was just then beginning to labour at more reasonable
-times, though not to write fewer hours. As for me, I used to find
-getting up in the morning at a proper hour quite impossible.
-Probably this was due to some inherited gout, to poisonous
-indigestion from my own cooking, or to a continued diet of desiccated
-soups and "Jungle" beef from Chicago. However, it seemed to Maitland
-that I was quite in the proper tradition of letters while I was
-working on a long novel, only published years afterwards, which I
-used to begin at ten or eleven o'clock at night, frequently finishing
-at six o'clock in the morning when the sparrows began to chirp
-outside my window.
-
-As a result of this night-work I used to get up at four o'clock in
-the afternoon, sometimes even later, to make my own breakfast.
-Afterwards I would go out to see some of my friends in their studios,
-and at the time most people were thinking of going to bed I sat down
-to the wonderfully morbid piece of work which I believed was to bring
-me fame. This was a rather odd book, called "The Fate of Hilary
-Dale." It has no claim whatever to any immortality, and from my
-point of view its only value lies in the fact that there is a very
-brief sketch of Maitland in it. He is described in these words:
-"Will Curgenven, writer, teacher, and general apostle of culture, as
-it is understood by the elect, had been hard at work for some hours
-on an essay on Greek metres, and was growing tired of it. His dingy
-subject and dingy Baker Street flat began to pall on him, and he rose
-to pace his narrow room." Now Will Curgenven, of course, was
-Maitland and the dingy Baker Street flat was 7K. "'Damn the nature
-of things,' as Porson said when he swallowed embrocation instead of
-whisky!" was what I went on to put into his mouth. This, indeed, was
-one of Maitland's favourite exclamations. It stood with him for all
-the strange and blasphemous and eccentric oaths with which I then
-decorated my language, the result of my experiences in the back
-blocks of Australia and the Pacific Slope of America. In this book I
-went on to make a little fun of his great joy in Greek metres. I
-remember that once he turned to me with an assumed air of strange
-amazement and exclaimed: "Why, my dear fellow, do you know there are
-actually miserable men who do not know--who have never even heard
-of--the minuter differences between Dochmiacs and Antispasts!" That,
-again, reminds me of a passage in "Paternoster Row," which always
-gives me acute pleasure because it recalls Maitland so wonderfully.
-It is where one of the characters came in to the hero and wanted his
-opinion on the scansion of a particular chorus in the "Œdipus
-Rex." Maydon laid hold of the book, thought a bit, and began to read
-the chorus aloud. Whereupon the other one cried: "Choriambics, eh?
-Possible, of course; but treat them as Ionics a minore with an
-anacrusis, and see if they don't go better." Now in this passage the
-speaker is really Maitland, for he involved himself in terms of
-pedantry with such delight that his eyes gleamed. No doubt it was an
-absurd thing, but Greek metres afforded so bright a refuge from the
-world of literary struggle and pressing financial difficulty.
-
-"Damn the nature of things!" was Porson's oath. Now Maitland had a
-very peculiar admiration for Porson. Porson was a Grecian. He loved
-Greek. That was sufficient for Maitland. In addition to that claim
-on his love, it is obvious that Porson was a man of a certain
-Rabelaisian turn of mind, and that again was a sufficient passport to
-his favour. No doubt if Porson had invited Maitland to his rooms,
-and had then got wildly drunk, it would have annoyed Maitland
-greatly; but the picture of Porson shouting Greek and drinking
-heavily attracted him immensely. He often quoted all the little
-stories told of Porson, such as the very well-known one of another
-scholar calling on him by invitation late one evening, and finding
-the room in darkness and Porson on the floor. This was when his
-visitor called out: "Porson, where are the candles, and where's the
-whiskey?" and Porson answered, still upon the floor, but neither
-forgetful of Greek nor of his native wit.
-
-When any man of our acquaintance was alluded to with hostility, or if
-one animadverted on some popular person who was obviously uneducated,
-Maitland always vowed that he did not know Greek, and probably or
-certainly had never starved. His not knowing Greek was, of course, a
-very great offence to Maitland, for he used to quote Porson on
-Hermann:
-
- "The Germans in Greek
- Are far to seek.
- Not one in five score,
- But ninety-nine more.
- All save only Hermann,
- And Hermann's a German."
-
-Of course a man who lacked Greek, and had not starved, was
-anathema--not to be considered. And whatever Porson may have done he
-did know Greek, and that saved his soul. Maitland often quoted very
-joyfully what he declared to be some of the most charming lines in
-the English language:
-
- "I went to Strasburg, and there got drunk
- With the most learned Professor Runck.
- I went to Wortz, and got more drunken
- With the more learned Professor Runcken."
-
-But if the spirit was willing, the flesh was weak. I never saw
-Maitland drunk in his life. Indeed he was no real expert in
-drinking. He had never had any education in the wines he loved. Any
-amateur of the product of the vine will know how to estimate his
-actual qualifications as a judge, when I say that Asti, Capri, and
-especially Chianti seemed to him the greatest wines in the world,
-since by no means could he obtain the right Falernian of Horace,
-which, by the way, was probably a most atrocious vintage. As it
-happened I had been employed for many months on a great vineyard in
-California, and there had learnt not a little about the making and
-blending of wine. Added to this I had some natural taste in it, and
-had read a great deal about wine-making and the great vintages of
-France and Germany. One could always interest Maitland by telling
-him something about wine, provided one missed out the scientific side
-of it. But it was sad that I lacked, from his point of view, the
-proper enthusiasm for Chianti. Yet, indeed, one knows what was in
-his classic mind, from the fact that a poor vintage in a real Italian
-flask, or in something shaped like an amphora, would have made him
-chuckle with joy far more readily than if a rich man had offered him
-in a bottle some glorious first growth of the Medoc, Laflitte,
-Latour, or Haut-Brion. But, indeed, he and I, even when I refused
-indignantly to touch the Italians, and declared with resolution for a
-wine of Burgundy or the Médoc, rarely got beyond a Bourgeois vintage.
-
-Nevertheless though I aspired to be his tutor in wines I owed him
-more than is possible to say in the greater matters of education. My
-debt to him is really very big. It was, naturally enough, through
-his influence, that while I was still in my one room in Danvers
-Street I commenced to read again all the Greek tragedies. By an odd
-chance I came across a clergyman's son in Chelsea who also had a
-certain passion for Greek. He used to come to my room and there we
-re-read the tragedies. Oddly enough I think my new friend never met
-Maitland, for Maitland rarely came to my room save on Sundays, and
-those days I reserved specially for him. But whenever we met, either
-there or at 7K, we always read or recited Greek to each other, and
-then entered into a discussion of the metrical value of the
-choruses--in which branch of learning I trust I showed proper
-humility, for in prosody he was remarkably learned. As for me, I
-knew nothing of it beyond what he told me, and cared very little,
-personally, for the technical side of poetry. Nevertheless it was
-not easy to resist Maitland's enthusiasm, and I succumbed to it so
-greatly that I at last imagined that I was really interested in what
-appealed so to him. Heaven knows, in those days I did at least learn
-something of the matter.
-
-We talked of rhythm, and of Arsis or Ictus. Pyrrhics we spoke of,
-and trochees and spondees were familiar on our lips. Especially did
-he declare that he had a passion for anapæsts, and when it came to
-the actual metres, Choriambics and Galliambics were an infinite joy
-to him. He explained to me most seriously the differences between
-trimeter Iambics when they were catalectic, acatalectic,
-hypercatalectic. What he knew about comic tetrameter was at my
-service, and in a short time I knew, as I imagined, almost all that
-he did about Minor Ionic, Sapphic, and Alcaic verse. Once more these
-things are to me little more than words, and yet I never hear one of
-them mentioned--as one does occasionally when one comes across a
-characteristic enthusiast--but I think of Henry Maitland and his
-gravely joyous lectures to me on that vastly important subject. No
-doubt many people will think that such little details as these are
-worth nothing, but I shall have failed greatly in putting Maitland
-down if they do not seem something in the end. These trifles are,
-after all, touches in the portrait as I see the man, and that they
-all meant much to him I know very well. To get through the early
-days of literary poverty one must have ambition and enthusiasm of
-many kinds. Enthusiasm alone is nothing, and ambition by itself is
-too often barren, but the two together are something that the gods
-may fight against in vain. I know that this association with him,
-when I was his only friend, and he was my chief friend, was great for
-both of us, for he had much to endure, and I was not without my
-troubles. Yet we made fun together of our squalor, and rejoiced in
-our poverty, so long as it did not mean acute suffering; and when it
-did mean that, we often-times got something out of literature to help
-us to forget. On looking back, I know that many things happened
-which seem to me dreadful, but then they appeared but part of the
-day's work.
-
-It rarely happened that I went to him without some story of the
-week's happenings, to be told again in return something which had
-occurred to him. For instance, there was that story of the lady who
-asked him his experience with regard to the management of butlers.
-In return I could tell him of going out to dinner at houses where
-people would have been horrified to learn that I had eaten nothing
-that day, and possibly nothing the day before. For us to consort
-with the comfortably situated sometimes seemed to both of us an
-intolerably fine jest, which was added to by the difference of these
-comfortable people from the others we knew. Here and there we came
-across some fatly rich person who, by accident, had once been
-deprived of his usual dinner. It seemed to give him a sympathetic
-feeling for the very poor. But, after all, though I did sometimes
-associate with such people, I was happier in my own room with
-Maitland, or in his flat, where we discussed our Æschylus, or wrought
-upon metres or figures of speech--always a great joy to us. Upon
-these, too, Maitland was really quite learned. He was full of
-examples of brachyology. Anacoluthon he was well acquainted with.
-Not even Farrar, in his "Greek Syntax," or some greater man, knew
-more examples of chiasmus, asyndeton, or hendiadys. In these byways
-he generally rejoiced, and we were never satisfied unless at each
-meeting, wherever it might be, we discovered some new phrase, or new
-word, or new quotation.
-
-Once at 7K I quoted to him from Keats' "Endymion" the lines about
-those people who "unpen their baaing vanities to browse away the
-green and comfortable juicy hay of human pastures." All that evening
-he was denouncing various comfortable people who fed their baaing
-vanity on everything delightful. He declared they browsed away all
-that made life worth while, and in return for my gift to him of this
-noble quotation he produced something rather more astounding, and
-perhaps not quite so quotable, out of Zola's "Nana." We had been
-talking of realism, and of speaking the truth, of being direct, of
-not being mealy-mouthed; in fact, of not letting loose "baaing
-vanities," and suddenly he took down "Nana" and said, "Here Zola has
-put a phrase in her mouth which rejoices me exceedingly. It is a
-plain, straight-forward, absolutely characteristic sentiment, such as
-we in England are not allowed to represent. Nana, on being
-remonstrated with by her lover-in-chief for her infidelities, returns
-him the plain and direct reply, 'Quand je vois un homme qui me plait,
-je couche avec.' He went on to declare that writing any novels in
-England was indeed a very sickening business, but he added, "I really
-think we begin to get somewhat better in this. However, up to the
-last few years, it has been practically impossible to write anything
-more abnormal about a man's relations with women than a mere bigamy."
-Things have certainly altered, but I think he was one of those who
-helped to break down that undue sense of the value of current
-morality which has done so much harm to the study of life in general,
-and indeed to life itself. His general rage and quarrel with that
-current morality, for which he had not only a contempt, but a
-loathing which often made him speechless, comes out well in what he
-thought and expressed about the Harold Frederick affair. There was,
-of course, as everybody knows, a second illegitimate family. While
-the good and orthodox made a certain amount of effort to help the
-wife and the legal children, they did their very best to ignore the
-second family. However, to Maitland's great joy, there were certain
-people, notably Mrs. Stephens, who did their very best for the other
-children and for the poor mother. Maitland himself subscribed,
-before he knew the actual position, to both families, and betrayed
-extraordinary rage when he learnt how that second family had been
-treated, and heard of the endeavours of the "unco' guid" to ignore
-them wholly. But then such actions and such hypocrisy are
-characteristic of the middle class in this country and not in this
-country alone. He loathed their morals which became a system of
-cruelty; their greed and its concomitant selfishness: their timidity
-which grows brutal in defence of a position to which only chance and
-their rapacity have entitled them.
-
-Apropos of his hatred of current morality, it is a curious thing that
-the only quarrel I ever had with him showed his early point of view
-rather oddly. Among the few men he knew there was one, with whom I
-was a little acquainted, who had picked up a young girl in a tavern
-and taken her to live with him. My own acquaintance with her led to
-some jealousy between me and the man who was keeping her, and he
-wrote to Maitland complaining of me, and telling him many things
-which were certainly untrue. Maitland when he considered the fact of
-his having ruined his own life for ever and ever by his relations
-with a woman of this order, had naturally built up a kind of theory
-of these things as a justification for himself. This may seem a
-piece of extravagant psychology, but I have not the least doubt that
-it is true. Without asking my view of the affair he wrote to me very
-angrily, and declared that I had behaved badly. He added that he
-wished me to understand that he considered an affair of that
-description as sacred as any marriage. Though he was young, and in
-these matters no little of a prig, I was also young, and of a hot
-temper. That he had not made any inquiries of me, or even asked my
-version of the circumstances, so angered me that I wrote back to him
-saying that if he spoke to me in that way I should decline to have
-anything more to do with him. As he was convinced, most unjustly,
-that his view was entirely sound, this naturally enough led to an
-estrangement which lasted for the best part of a year, but I am glad
-to remember that I myself made it up by writing to him about one of
-his books. This was before I went to America, and although I was
-working, it was a great grief to me that we did not meet during this
-estrangement for any of our great talks, which, both then and
-afterwards, were part of my life, and no little part of it. Often
-when I think of him I recollect those lines of Callimachus to
-Heracleitus in Corey's "Ionica":
-
- "They told me, Heracleitus, they told me you were dead;
- They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed.
- I wept as I remembered how often you and I
- Had tired the sun with talking, and sent him down the sky."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-In the last chapter I quoted from Boswell, always a favourite of
-Maitland's, as he is of all true men of letters. But there is yet
-another quotation from the same work which might stand as a motto for
-this book, as it might for the final and authoritative biography of
-Maitland which perhaps will some day be done: "He asked me whether he
-had mentioned, in any of the papers of the 'Rambler,' the description
-in Virgil of the entrance into Hell, with an application to the
-Press; 'for,' said he, 'I do not much remember them.' I told him,
-'No.' Upon which he repeated it:
-
- _'Vestlbulum ante ipsum primisque in faucibus Orci,
- Lucius et ultrices posuere cubilia Curæ;
- Pallentesque habitant Morbi, tristisque Senectus,
- Et Metus, et malesuada Fames, ac turpis Egestas;
- Terribiles vis formæ: Letumque, Labosque.'_
-
-'Now,' said he, 'almost all these apply exactly to an author; all
-these are the concomitants of a printing-house.'" Nevertheless,
-although cares, and sometimes sullen sorrows, want and fear, still
-dwelt with Maitland, a little time now began for him in which he had
-some peace of mind, if not happiness. That was a plant he never
-cultivated. One of his favourite passages from Charlotte Brontë,
-whose work was in many ways a passion to him, is that in which she
-exclaims: "Cultivate happiness! Happiness is not a potato," and
-indeed he never grew it. Still there were two periods in his life in
-which he had some peace, and the first period now began. I speak of
-the time after the death of his first wife. The drain of ten
-shillings a week--which must seem so absurdly little to many--had
-been far more than he could stand, and many times he had gone without
-the merest necessities of life so that the poor alien in the New Cut
-should have money, even though he knew that she spent it at once upon
-drink and forgetfulness. Ten shillings a week was very much to him.
-For one thing it might mean a little more food and better food. It
-meant following up his one great hobby of buying books. Those who
-know "The Meditations," know what he thought of books, for in that
-respect this record is a true guide, even if it should be read with
-caution in most things. Nevertheless although he was happier and
-easier, it is curious that his most unhappy and despairing books were
-written during this particular period. "In the Morning," it is true,
-was done before his wife died, and some people who do not know the
-inner history of the book may not regard it as a tragedy. In one
-sense, however, it was one of the greatest literary tragedies of
-Henry Maitland's life, according to his own statement to me.
-
-At that time he was publishing books with the firm of Miller and
-Company, and, of course, he knew John Glass, who read for them, very
-well indeed. It seems that Glass, who had naturally enough,
-considering his period, certain old-fashioned ideas on the subject of
-books and their endings, absolutely and flatly declined to recommend
-his firm to publish "In the Morning," unless Maitland re-wrote the
-natural tragic end of the book and made it turn out happily. I think
-nothing on earth, or in some hell for men of letters, could have made
-Maitland more angry and wretched. If there was one thing that he
-clung to during the whole of his working time, it was sincerity, and
-sincerity in literary work implies an absolute freedom from alien and
-extrinsic influence. I can well remember what he said to me about
-Glass' suggestion. He abused him and the publishers; the public,
-England, the world, and the very universe. He almost burst into
-tears as he explained to me what he had been obliged to do for the
-sake of the great fifty pounds he was to get for the book. For at
-this time he only got fifty pounds for a long three-volume novel. He
-always wrote with the greatest pain and labour, but I do not suppose
-he ever put anything on paper in his life which cost him such acute
-mental suffering as the last three chapters of this book which were
-written to John Glass' barbaric order.
-
-After his wife's death he wrote "The Under-World," "Bond and Free,"
-"Paternoster Row," and "The Exile." It is a curious fact, although
-it was not always obvious even to himself, and is not now obvious to
-anybody but me, that I stood as a model to him in many of these
-books, especially, if I remember rightly, for one particular
-character in "Bond and Free." Some of these sketches are fairly
-complimentary, and many are much the reverse. The reason of this use
-of me was that till much later he knew very few men intimately but
-myself; and when he wanted anybody in his books of a more or less
-robust character, and sometimes more or less of a kind that he did
-not like, I, perforce, had to stand for him. On one occasion he
-acknowledged this to me, and once he was not at all sure how I should
-take it. As a matter of fact the most life-like portrait of me ends
-as a villain, and, as he had touched me off to the very life in the
-first volume, it did make me a little sorer than I acknowledged. I
-leave the curious to discover this particular scoundrel. Of course
-it was only natural that my wild habits and customs, the relics of
-Australia and America, afforded him a great deal of amusement and
-study. On one occasion they cost him, temporarily, the very large
-sum of three pounds. As he said, he used to look upon me as a kind
-of hybrid, a very ridiculous wild man with strong literary leanings,
-with an enormous amount of general and unrelated knowledge; and at
-the same time as a totally unregulated or ill-regulated ruffian.
-This was a favourite epithet of his, for which I daresay there was
-something to be said. Now one Sunday it happened that I was going up
-to see him at 7K, and came from Chelsea with two or three books in my
-hand, and, as it happened, a pair of spectacles on my nose. At that
-time I sometimes carried an umbrella, and no doubt looked exceedingly
-peaceful. As a result of this a young man, who turned out afterwards
-to be a professional cricketer, thought I was a very easy person to
-deal with, and to insult. As I came to York Place, which was then
-almost empty of passers by, I was walking close to the railings and
-this individual came up and pushing rudely past me, stepped right in
-front of me. Now this was a most outrageous proceeding, because he
-had fifteen free feet of pavement, and I naturally resented it. I
-made a little longer step than I should otherwise have done and
-"galled his kibe." He turned round upon me and, using very bad
-language, asked me where I was going to, who I thought I was, and
-what I proposed to do about it. I did not propose to do anything,
-but did it. I smote him very hard with the umbrella, knocking him
-down. He remained on the pavement for a considerable time, and then
-only got up at the third endeavour, and promptly gave me into
-custody. The policeman, who had happened to see the whole affair,
-explained to me, with that civility common among the custodians of
-order to those classes whose dress suggests they are their masters,
-that he was compelled to take the charge. I was removed to Lower
-Seymour Street and put in a cell for male prisoners only, where I
-remained fully half an hour.
-
-While I was in this cell a small boy of about nine was introduced and
-left there. I went over to him and said, "Hullo, my son, what's
-brought you here?" Naturally enough he imagined that I was not a
-prisoner but a powerful official, and bursting into tears he said,
-"Oh, please, sir, it warn't me as nicked the steak!" I consoled him
-to the best of my ability until I was shortly afterwards invited down
-to Marlborough Street Police Court, where Mr. De Rutzen, now Sir
-Albert De Rutzen, was sitting. As I had anticipated the likelihood
-of my being fined, and as I had no more than a few shillings with me,
-I had written a letter to Maitland, and procuring a messenger through
-the police, had sent it up to him. He came down promptly and sat in
-the court while I was being tried for this assault. After hearing
-the case Mr. De Rutzen decided to fine me three pounds, which
-Maitland paid, with great chuckles at the incident, even though he
-considered his prospect of getting the money back for some months was
-exceedingly vague. It was by no means the first time that he had
-gone to the police court for copy which "is very pretty to observe,"
-as Pepys said, when after the Fire of London it was discovered that
-as many churches as public houses were left standing in the city.
-That such a man should have had to pursue his studies of actual life
-in the police courts and the slums was really an outrage, another
-example of the native malignity of matter. For, as I have insisted,
-and must insist again, he was a scholar and a dreamer. But his
-pressing anxieties for ever forbade him to dream, or to pursue
-scholarship without interruption. He desired time to perfect his
-control of the English tongue, and he wanted much that no man can
-ever get. It is my firm conviction that if he had possessed the
-smallest means he would never have thought himself completely master
-of the medium in which he worked. He often spoke of poor Flaubert
-saying: "What an accursed language is French!" He was for ever
-dissatisfied with his work, as an artist should be, and I think he
-attained seldom, if ever, the rare and infrequent joy that an artist
-has in accomplishment. It was not only his desire of infinite
-perfection as a writer pure and simple, which affected and afflicted
-him. It was the fact that he should never have written fiction at
-all. He often destroyed the first third of a book. I knew him to do
-so with one three times over. This, of course, was not always out of
-the cool persuasion that what he had done was not good, for it often
-was good in its way, but frequently he began, in a hurry, in despair,
-and with the prospects of starvation, something that he knew not to
-be his own true work, or something which he forced without adequate
-preparation. Then I used to get a dark note saying, "I have
-destroyed the whole of the first volume and am, I hope, beginning to
-see my way." It was no pleasant thing to be a helpless spectator of
-these struggles, in which he found no rest, when I knew his destiny
-was to have been a scholar at a great university.
-
-When one understands his character, or even begins to understand it,
-it is easy enough to comprehend that the temporary ease with regard
-to money which came after his wife's death did not last so very long.
-The pressure of her immediate needs and incessant demands being at
-last relaxed he himself relaxed his efforts in certain directions and
-presently was again in difficulties. I know that it will sound very
-extraordinary to all but those who know the inside of literary life
-that this should have been so. A certain amount of publicity is
-almost always associated in the minds of the public with monetary
-success of a kind. Yet one very well-known acquaintance of mine, an
-eminent if erratic journalist, one day had a column of favourable
-criticism in a big daily, and after reading it went out and bought a
-red herring with his last penny and cooked it over the fire in his
-solitary room. It was the same with myself. It was almost the same
-with Maitland even at this time. No doubt the worst of his financial
-difficulties were before I returned from America, and even before his
-wife died, but never, till the end of his life, was he at ease with
-regard to money. He never attained the art of the pot-boiler by
-which most of us survive, even when he tried short stories, which he
-did finally after I had pressed him to attempt them for some years.
-
-In many ways writing to him was a kind of sacred mission. It was not
-that he had any faith in great results to come from it, but the
-profession of a writer was itself sacred, and even the poorest
-sincere writer was a _sacer vates_. He once absolutely came down all
-the way to me in Chelsea to show me a well-known article in which
-Robert Louis Stevenson denied, to my mind not so unjustly, that a
-writer could claim payment at all, seeing that he left the world's
-work to do what he chose to do for his own pleasure. Stevenson went
-on to compare such a writer to a _fille de joie_. This enraged
-Maitland furiously. I should have been grieved if he and Stevenson
-had met upon that occasion. I really think something desperate might
-have happened, little as one might expect violence from such a
-curious apostle of personal peace as Maitland. Many years afterwards
-I related this little incident to Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa,
-but I think by that time Maitland himself was half inclined to agree
-with his eminent brother author. And yet, as I say, writing was a
-mission, even if it was with him an acquired passion; but his
-critical faculties, which were so keenly developed, almost destroyed
-him. There can be no stronger proof that he was not one of those
-happy beings who take to the telling of stories because they must,
-and because it is in them. There was no time that he was not obliged
-to do his best, though every writer knows to his grief that there are
-times when the second best must do. And thus it was that John Glass
-so enraged him. All those things which are the care of the true
-writer were of most infinite importance to him. A misprint, a mere
-"literal," gave him lasting pain. He desired classic perfection,
-both of work and the mere methods of production. He would have taken
-years over a book if fear and hunger and poverty had permitted him to
-do so. And yet he wrote "Isabel," "The Mob," and "In the Morning,"
-all in seven months, even while he read through the whole of Dante's
-"Divina Commedia," for recreation, and while he toiled at the alien
-labour of teaching. Yet this was he who wrote to one friend: "Would
-it not be delightful to give up a year or so to the study of some old
-period of English history?" When he was thirty-six he said: "The
-four years from now to forty I should like to devote to a vigorous
-apprenticeship in English." But this was the man who year after year
-was compelled to write books which the very essence of his being told
-him would work no good. Sometimes I am tempted to think that the
-only relief he got for many, many years came out of the hours we
-spent in company, either in his room or mine. We read very much
-together, and it was our delight, as I have said, to exchange
-quotations, or read each other passages which we had discovered
-during the week. He recited poetry with very great feeling and
-skill, and was especially fond of much of Coleridge. I can hear him
-now reading those lines of Coleridge to his son which end:
-
- "Therefore all seasons shall be sweet to thee
- Whether the summer clothe the general earth
- With greenness, or the redbreast sit and sing
- Betwixt the tufts of snow on the bare branch
- Of mossy apple-tree, while the nigh thatch
- Smokes in the sun-thaw; whether the eave-drops fall
- Heard only in the trances of the blast,
- Or if the secret ministry of frost
- Shall hang them up in silent icicles,
- Quietly shining to the quiet Moon."
-
-And to hear him chant the mighty verse of the great Greeks who were
-dead, and yet were most alive to him, was always inspiring. The time
-was to come, though not yet, when he was to see Greece, and when he
-had entered Piræus and seen the peopled mountains of that country
-Homer became something more to him than he had been, and the language
-of Æschylus and Sophocles took on new glories and clothed itself in
-still more wondrous emotions. He knew a hundred choruses of the
-Greek tragedies by heart, and declaimed them with his wild hair flung
-back and his eyes gleaming as if the old tragedians, standing in the
-glowing sun of the Grecian summer, were there to hear him, an alien
-yet not an alien, using the tongue that gave its chiefest glories to
-them for ever. But he had been born in exile, and had made himself
-an outcast.
-
-Those who have read so far, and are interested in him, will see that
-I am much more concerned to say what I felt about him than to relate
-mere facts and dates. I care little or nothing that in some ways
-others know more or less of him, or know it differently. I try to
-build up my little model of him, try to paint my picture touch by
-touch; often, it may be, by repetition, for so a man builds himself
-for his friends in his life. I must paint him as a whole, and put
-him down, here and there perhaps with the grain of the canvas showing
-through the paint, or perhaps with what the worthy critics call a
-rich impasto, which may be compiled of words. Others may criticise,
-and will criticise, what I write. No doubt they will find much of it
-wrong, or wrong-headed, and will attribute to me other motives than
-those which move me, but if it leads them to bring out more of his
-character than I know or remember, I shall be content. For the more
-that is known of him, the more he will be loved.
-
-It was somewhere about this time that I undertook to write one of two
-or three articles which I have done about him for periodicals, and
-the remembrance of that particular piece of work reminds me very
-strongly of his own ideas of his own humour in writing. There have
-been many discussions, wise and otherwise, as to whether he possessed
-any at all, and I think the general feeling that he was very greatly
-lacking in this essential part of the equipment of a writer, to be on
-the whole true. Among my lost letters there was one which I most
-especially regret not to be able to quote, for it was very long,
-perhaps containing two thousand words, which he sent to me when he
-knew I had been asked to do this article. Now the purport of
-Maitland's letter was to prove to me that every one was wrong who
-said he had no humour. In one sense there can be no greater proof
-that anybody who said so was right. He enumerated carefully all the
-characters in all the books he had hitherto written in whom he
-thought there was real humour. He gave me a preposterous list of
-these individuals, with his comments, and appealed to me in all
-deadly seriousness to know whether I did not agree with him that they
-were humorous. But the truth is that, save as a talker, he had very
-little humour, and even then it was frequently verbal. It was,
-however, occasionally very grim, and its strength, oddly enough, was
-of the American kind, since it consisted of managed exaggeration. He
-had a certain joy in constructing more or less humorous nicknames for
-people. Sometimes these were good, and sometimes bad, but when he
-christened them once he kept to it always. I believe the only man of
-his acquaintance who had no nickname at all was George Meredith, but
-then he loved and admired Meredith in no common fashion.
-
-In some of his books he speaks, apparently not without some learning,
-of music, but there are, I fancy, signs that his knowledge of it was
-more careful construction than actual knowledge or deep feeling.
-Nevertheless he did at times discover a real comprehension of the
-greater musicians, especially of Chopin. Seeing that this was so, it
-is very curious, and more than curious in a writer, that he had a
-measureless adoration of barrel organs. He delighted in them
-strangely, and when any Italian musician came into his dingy street
-or neighbourhood, he would set the window open and listen with
-ardour. Being so poor, he could rarely afford to give away money
-even in the smallest sum. Pennies were indeed pennies to him. But
-he did sometimes bestow pence on wandering Italians who ground out
-Verdi in the crowded streets. Among the many languages which he knew
-was, of course, Italian; for, as I have said, he read the "Divina
-Commedia" easily, reading it for relaxation as he did Aristophanes.
-It was a great pleasure to him, even before he went to Italy, to
-speak a few words in their own tongue to these Italians of the
-English streets. He remembered that this music came from the south,
-the south that was always his Mecca, the Kibleh of the universe.
-Years afterwards, when he had been in the south, and knew Naples and
-the joyous crowds of the Chaiaja--long before I had been there and
-had listened to its uproar from the Belvidere of San Martino--he
-found Naples chiefly a city of this joyous popular music. Naples, he
-said, was the most interesting modern city in Europe; and yet I
-believe the chief joy he had there was hearing its music, and the
-singing of the lazzaroni down by Santa Lucia. "Funiculi, Funicula,"
-he loved as much as if it were the work of a classic, and "Santa
-Lucia" appealed to him like a Greek chorus. I remember that, years
-later, he wrote to me a letter of absurd and exaggerated anger, which
-was yet perfectly serious, about the action of the Neapolitan
-municipality in forbidding street organs to play in the city.
-Sometimes, though rarely, seeing that he could not often afford a
-shilling, he went to great concerts in London. Certainly he spoke as
-one not without instruction in musical subjects in "The Vortex," but
-I fancy that musical experts might find flaws in his nomenclature.
-Nevertheless he did love music with a certain ardent passion.
-
-He was a man not without a certain sensuality, but it was his
-sensuousness which was in many ways the most salient point in his
-character. As I often told him, he was a kind of incomplete
-Rabelaisian. That was suggested to me by his delighted use of
-Gargantuan epithets with regard to the great recurrent subject of
-food. He loved all things which were redolent of oil and grease and
-fatness. The joy of great abundance appealed to him, and I verily
-believe that to him the great outstanding characteristic of the past
-in England was its abundant table. Indeed, in all things but rowdy
-indecency, he was a Rabelaisian, and being such, he yet had to put up
-with poor and simple food. However, provided it was at hand in large
-quantities, he was ready to feed joyously. He would exclaim: "Now
-for our squalid meal! I wonder what Harold Edgeworth, or good old
-Edmund Roden would say to this?" When I think of the meagre preface
-that Harold Edgeworth wrote in later years for "Basil," when that
-done by G.H. Rivers--afterwards published separately--did not meet
-with the approval of Maitland's relatives and executors, I feel that
-Edgeworth somewhat deserved the implied scorn of Maitland's words.
-As for Edmund Roden, he often spoke of him affectionately. In later
-years he sometimes went down to Felixstowe to visit him. He liked
-his house amazingly, and was very much at home in it. It was there
-that he met Grant Allen, and Sir Luke Redburn, whom he declared to be
-the most interesting people that he saw in Felixstowe at that time.
-
-I am not sure whether it was on this particular occasion, perhaps in
-1895, that he went down to Essex with a great prejudice against Grant
-Allen. The reason of this was curious. He was always most vicious
-when any writer who obviously lived in comfort, complained loudly and
-bitterly of the pittance of support given him by the public, and the
-public's faithful servants, the publishers. When Allen growled
-furiously on this subject in a newspaper interview Maitland recalled
-to me with angry amusement a certain previous article in which, if I
-remember rightly, Grant Allen proclaimed his absolute inability to
-write if he were not in a comfortable room with rose-coloured
-curtains. "Rose-coloured curtains!" said Maitland contemptuously,
-and looking round his own room one certainly found nothing of that
-kind. It was perhaps an extraordinary thing, one of the many odd
-things in his character, that the man who loved the south so, who
-always dreamed of it, seemed to see everything at that period of his
-life in the merest black and white. There was not a spark or speck
-of colour in his rooms. Now in my one poor room in Chelsea I had
-hung up all sorts of water-colours acquired by various means from
-artists who were friends of mine. By hook or by crook I got hold of
-curtains with colour in them, and carpets, too, and Japanese fans.
-My room was red and yellow and scarlet, while his were a dingy
-monochrome, as if they sympathised with the outlook at the back of
-his flat, which stared down upon the inferno of the Metropolitan
-Railway. But to return to Grant Allen. Maitland now wrote:
-"However, I like him very much. He is quite a simple, and very
-gentle fellow, crammed with multifarious knowledge, enthusiastic in
-scientific pursuits. With fiction and that kind of thing he ought
-never to have meddled; it is the merest pot-boiling. He reads
-nothing whatever but books of scientific interest."
-
-It was at Felixstowe, too, that he met Carew Latter who induced him
-to write twenty papers in one of the journals Latter conducted. They
-were to be of more or less disreputable London life. Some of them at
-least have been reprinted in his volumes of short stories. There is
-certainly no colour in them; in some ways they resemble sketches with
-the dry-point. Of course after he had once been on the continent,
-and had got south to Marseilles and the Cannebiere, he learnt to know
-what colour was, and wrote of it in a way he had never done before,
-as I noticed particularly in one paragraph about Capri seen at sunset
-from Naples. In this sudden discovery of colour he reminded me,
-oddly enough, of my old acquaintance Wynne, the now justly celebrated
-painter, who, up to a certain time in his life, had painted almost in
-monochrome, and certainly in a perpetual grey chord. Then he met
-Marvell, the painter, who was, if anything, a colourist. I do not
-think Marvell influenced Wynne in anything but colour, but from that
-day Wynne was a colourist, and so remains, although to it he has
-added a great and real power of design and decoration. It is true
-that Maitland never became a colourist in writing, but those who have
-read his work with attention will observe that after a certain date
-he was much more conscious of the world's colour.
-
-In those days our poverty and our ambition made great subjects for
-our talks. I myself had been writing for some years with no more
-than a _succès d'estime_, and I sometimes thought that I would throw
-up the profession and go back to Australia or America, or to the sea,
-or would try Africa at last. But Maitland had no such possibilities
-within him. He maintained grimly, though not without humour, that
-his only possible refuge when war, or some other final disaster made
-it impossible for writers to earn their difficult living, was a
-certain block of buildings opposite 7K. This, however, was not
-Madame Tussaud's as the careless might imagine, it was the Marylebone
-workhouse, which he said he regarded with a proprietary eye. It
-always afforded him a subject for conversation when his prospects
-seemed rather poorer than usual. It was, at any rate, he declared,
-very handy for him when he became unable to do more work. No doubt
-this was his humour, but there was something in this talk which was
-more than half serious. He always liked to speak of the gloomy side
-of things, and I possess many letters of his which end with
-references to the workhouse, or to some impending, black disaster.
-In one he said: "I wish I could come up, but am too low in health and
-spirits to move at present. A cold clings about me, and the future
-looks dark." Again he said: "No, I shall never speak of my work. It
-has become a weariness and toil--nothing more." And again: "It is a
-bad, bad business, that of life at present." And yet once more: "It
-is idle to talk about occupation--by now I have entered on the last
-stage of life's journey." This was by no means when he had come
-towards the end of his life. However, the workhouse does come up,
-even at the end, in a letter written about two months before his
-death. He wrote to me: "I have been turning the pages with great
-pleasure, to keep my thoughts from the workhouse." Those who did not
-know him would not credit him with the courage of desperation which
-he really possessed, if they saw his letters and knew nothing more of
-the man.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-The art of portraiture, whether in words or paint, is very difficult,
-and appears less easy as I attempt to draw Maitland. Nevertheless
-the time comes when the artist seems to see his man standing on his
-feet before him, put down in his main planes, though not yet,
-perhaps, with any subtlety. The anatomy is suggested at any rate, if
-there are bones in the subject or in the painter. As it seems to me,
-Maitland should now stand before those who have read so far with
-sympathy and understanding. I have not finished my drawing, but it
-might even now suffice as a sketch, and seem from some points of view
-to be not wholly inadequate. It is by no means easy to put him down
-in a few words, but patience and the addition of detail reach their
-end, it may be not without satisfaction--for "with bread and steel
-one gets to China." It is not possible to etch Maitland in a few
-lines, for as it seems to me it is the little details of his
-character with which I am most concerned that give him his greatest
-value. It is not so much the detail of his actual life, but the
-little things that he said, and the way he seemed to think, or even
-the way that he avoided thinking, which I desire to put down. And
-when I say those things he wished not to think of, I am referring
-more especially to his views of the universe, and of the world
-itself, those views which are a man's philosophy, and not less his
-philosophy when of set purpose he declines to think of them at all,
-for this Maitland did without any doubt. Goethe said, when he spoke,
-if I remember rightly, about all forms of religious and metaphysical
-speculation, "Much contemplation, or brooding over these things is
-disturbing to the spirit." Unfortunately I do not know German so I
-cannot find the reference to this, but Maitland, who knew the
-language very thoroughly and had read nearly everything of great
-importance in it, often quoted this passage, having naturally a great
-admiration for Goethe. I do not mean that he admired him merely for
-his position in the world of letters. What he did admire in Goethe
-was what he himself liked and desired so greatly. He wished for
-peace, for calmness of spirit. He did not like to be disturbed in
-any way whatsoever. He would not disturb himself. He wished people
-to be reasonable, and thought this was a reasonable request to make
-of them. I remember on one occasion when I had been listening to him
-declaiming about some one's peculiar lack of reasonableness, which
-seemed to him the one great human quality, that I said: "Maitland,
-what would you do if you were having trouble with a woman who was in
-a very great rage with you?" He replied, with an air of surprise,
-"Why, of course, I should reason with her." I said shortly, "Don't
-ever get married again! " Nevertheless he was a wonderfully patient
-and reasonable man himself, and truly lacked everything
-characteristic of the combatant. He would discuss, he would never
-really argue. I do not suppose that he was physically a coward, but
-his dread of scenes and physical violence lay very deep in his
-organisation. Although he used me as a model I never really drew him
-at length in any of my own books, but naturally he was a subject of
-great psychological interest to me. Pursuing my studies in him I
-said, one day, "Maitland, what would you do if a man disagreed with
-you, got outrageously and unreasonably angry, and slapped you in the
-face?" He replied, in his characteristically low and concentrated
-voice, "Do? I should look at him with the most infinite disgust, and
-turn away."
-
-His horror of militarism was something almost comic, for it showed
-his entire incapacity for grasping the world's situation as it shows
-itself to any real and ruthless student of political sociology who is
-not bogged in the mud flats of some Utopian island. Once we were
-together on the Horse Guards' Parade and a company of the Guards came
-marching up. We stood to watch them pass, and when they had gone by
-he turned to me and said, "Mark you, my dear man, this, _this_ is the
-nineteenth century!" In one of his letters written to me after his
-second marriage he said of his eldest son: "I hope to send him
-abroad, to some country where there is no possibility of his having
-to butcher or be butchered." This, of course, was his pure reason
-pushed to the point where reason becomes mere folly, for such is the
-practical antinomy of pure reason in life. It was in this that he
-showed his futile idealism, which was in conflict with what may be
-called truly his real pessimism. That he did good work in many of
-his books dealing with the lower classes is quite obvious, and cannot
-be denied. He showed us the things that exist. It is perfectly
-possible, and even certainly true, that many of the most pessimistic
-writers are in reality optimists. They show us the grey in order
-that we may presently make it rose. But Maitland wrote absolutely
-without hope. He took his subjects as mere subjects, and putting
-them on the table, lectured in pathology. He made books of his
-dead-house experiences, and sold them, but never believed that he, or
-any other man, could really do good by speaking of what he had seen
-and dilated upon. The people as a body were vile and hopeless. He
-did not even inquire how they became so. He thought nothing could be
-done, and did not desire to do it. His future was in the past. The
-world's great age would never renew itself, and only he and a few
-others really understood the desperate state into which things had
-drifted. Since his death there has been some talk about his
-religion. I shall speak of this later, on a more fitting occasion;
-but, truly speaking, he had no religion. When he gave up his
-temporary Positivist pose, which was entirely due to his gratitude to
-Harold Edgeworth for helping him, he refused to think of these things
-again. They disturbed the spirit. If I ever endeavoured to inveigle
-him into a discussion or an argument upon any metaphysical subject he
-grew visibly uneasy. He declined to argue, or even to discuss, and
-though I know that in later life he admitted that even immortality
-was possible I defy any one to bring a tittle of evidence to show
-that he ever went further. This attitude to all forms of religious
-and metaphysical thought was very curious to me. It was, indeed,
-almost inexplicable, as I have an extreme pleasure in speculative
-inquiry of all kinds. The truth is that on this side of his nature
-he was absolutely wanting. Such things interested him no more than
-music interests a tone-deaf man who cannot distinguish the shriek of
-a tom-cat from the sound of a violin. If I did try to speak of such
-things he listened with an air of outraged and sublime patience which
-must have been obvious to any one but a bore. Whether his philosophy
-was sad or not, he would not have it disturbed.
-
-His real interest in religion seemed to lie in his notion that it was
-a curious form of delusion almost ineradicable from the human mind.
-There is a theory, very popular among votaries of the creeds, which
-takes the form of denying that any one can really be an atheist.
-This is certainly not true, but it helps one to understand the
-theologic mind, which has an imperative desire to lay hold of
-something like an inclusive hypothesis to rest on. So far as
-Maitland was concerned there was no more necessity to have an
-hypothesis about God than there was to have one about quaternions,
-and quaternions certainly did not interest him. He shrugged his
-shoulders and put these matters aside, for in many things he had none
-of the weaknesses of humanity, though in others he had more than his
-share. In his letters to G.H. Rivers, which I have had the privilege
-of reading, there are a few references to Rivers' habits and powers
-of speculation. I think it was somewhere in 1900 or 1901 that he
-read "Forecasts." By this time he had a strong feeling of affection
-for Rivers, and a very great admiration for him. His references to
-him in the "Meditations" are sufficiently near the truth to
-corroborate this. Nevertheless his chief feeling towards Rivers and
-his work, beyond the mere fact that it was a joy to him that a man
-could make money by doing good stuff, was one of amazement and
-surprise that any one could be deeply interested in the future, and
-could give himself almost wholly or even with partial energy, to
-civic purposes. And so he wrote to Rivers: "I must not pretend to
-care very much about the future of the human race. Come what may,
-folly and misery are sure to be the prevalent features of life, but
-your ingenuity in speculation, the breadth of your views, and the
-vigour of your writing, make this book vastly enjoyable. The
-critical part of it satisfies, and often delights me. Stupidity
-should have a sore back for some time to come, and many a wind-bag
-will be uneasily aware of collapse."
-
-It is interesting to note, now that I am speaking of his friendship
-for Rivers, and apropos of what I shall have to say later about his
-religious views, that he wrote to Rivers: "By the bye, you speak of
-God. Well, I understand what you mean, but the word makes me stumble
-rather. I have grown to shrink utterly from the use of such terms,
-and though I admit, perforce, a universal law, I am so estranged by
-its unintelligibility that not even a desire to be reverent can make
-those old names in any way real to me." So later he said that he was
-at a loss to grasp what Rivers meant when he wrote: "There stirs
-something within us now that can never die again." I think Maitland
-totally misinterpreted the passage, which was rather apropos of the
-awakening of the civic spirit in mankind than of anything else, but
-he went on to say that he put aside the vulgar interpretation of such
-words. However, was it Rivers' opinion that the material doom of the
-earth did not involve the doom of earthly life? He added that
-Rivers' declared belief in the coherency and purpose of things was
-pleasant to him, for he himself could not doubt for a moment that
-there _was_ some purpose. This is as far as he ever went. On the
-other hand, he did doubt whether we, in any sense of the pronoun,
-should ever be granted understanding of that purpose. Of course all
-this shows that he possessed no metaphysical endowments or apparatus.
-He loved knowledge pure and simple, but when it came to the exercises
-of the metaphysical mind he was pained and puzzled. He lacked any
-real education in philosophy, and did not even understand its
-peculiar vocabulary. However vain those of us who have gone through
-the metaphysical mill may think it in actual products, we are all yet
-aware that it helps greatly to formulate our own philosophy, or even
-our own want of it. For it clears the air. It cuts away all kinds
-of undergrowth. It at any rate shows us that there is no
-metaphysical way out, for the simple reason that there has never
-existed one metaphysician who did not destroy another. They are all
-mutually destructive. But Maitland had no joy in construction or
-destruction; and, as I have said, he barely understood the technical
-terms of metaphysics. There was a great difference with regard to
-these inquiries between him and Rivers. The difference was that
-Rivers enjoyed metaphysical thinking and speculation where Maitland
-hated it. But all the same Rivers took it up much too late in life,
-and about the year 1900 made wonderful discoveries which had been
-commonplaces to Aristotle. A thing like this would not have mattered
-much if he had regarded it as education. However, he regarded it as
-discovery, and wrote books about it which inspired debates, and
-apparently filled the metaphysicians with great joy. It is always a
-pleasure to the evil spirit that for ever lives in man to see the
-ablest people of the time showing that they are not equally able in
-some other direction than that in which they have gained distinction.
-
-It is curious how this native dislike of Maitland to being disturbed
-by speculative thought comes out in a criticism he made of Thomas
-Hardy. He had always been one of this writer's greatest admirers,
-and I know he especially loved "The Woodlanders," but he wrote in a
-letter to Dr. Lake something very odd about "Jude the Obscure." He
-calls it: "a sad book! Poor Thomas is utterly on the wrong tack, and
-I fear he will never get back into the right one. At his age, a
-habit of railing at the universe is not overcome." Of course this
-criticism is wholly without any value as regards Hardy's work, but it
-is no little side light on Maitland's own peculiar habits of thought,
-or of persistent want of thought, on the great matters of
-speculation. His objection was not to anything that Hardy said, but
-to the fact that the latter's work, filled with what Maitland calls
-"railing at the universe," personally disturbed him. Anything which
-broke up his little semi-classic universe, the literary hut which he
-had built for himself as a shelter from the pitiless storm of cosmic
-influences, made him angry and uneasy for days and weeks. He never
-lived to read Hardy's "Dynasts," a book which stands almost alone in
-literature, and is to my mind a greater book than Goethe's "Faust,"
-but if he had read it I doubt if he would have forgiven Thomas Hardy
-for disturbing him. He always wanted to be left alone. He had
-constructed his pattern of the universe, and any one who shook it he
-denounced with, "Confound the fellow! He makes me unhappy." The one
-book that he did read, which is in itself essentially a disturbing
-book to many people, and apparently read with some pleasure, was the
-earliest volume of Dr. Frazer's "Golden Bough"; but it is a curious
-thing that what interested him, and indeed actually pleased him, was
-Frazer's side attacks upon the dogmas of Christianity. He said: "The
-curious thing about Frazer's book is, that in illustrating the old
-religious usages connected with tree-worship and so on, he throws
-light upon every dogma of Christianity. This by implication; he
-never does it expressly. Edmund Roden has just pointed this out to
-the Folk-lore Society, with the odd result that Gladstone wrote at
-once resigning membership." This was written after Gladstone died,
-but it reads as if Maitland was not aware that he was dead. Odd as
-it may seem, it is perfectly possible that he did not know it. He
-cared very little for the newspapers, and sometimes did not read any
-for long periods. It is rather curious that when I proved to him in
-later years that he had once dated his letters according to the
-Positivist Calendar, he seemed a little disturbed and shocked.
-Still, it was very natural that when exposed to Positivist influences
-he should have become a Positivist, for among the people of that odd
-faith, if faith it can be called, he found both kindness and
-intellectual recognition. But when his mind became clearer and
-calmer, and something of the storm and stress had passed by, he was
-aware that his attitude had been somewhat pathologic, and did not
-like to recall it. This became very much clearer to him, and indeed
-to me, when another friend of ours, a learned and very odd German who
-lived and starved in London, went completely under in the same
-curious religious way. His name was Schmidt. He remained to the day
-of Maitland's death a very great friend of his, and I believe he
-possesses more letters from Henry Maitland than any man
-living--greatly owing to his own vast Teutonic energy and industry in
-writing to his friends.
-
-But in London Schmidt came to absolute destitution. I myself got to
-know him through Maitland. It appeared that he owned a collie dog,
-which he found at last impossible to feed, even though he starved
-himself to do so. Maitland told me of this, and introduced me to
-Schmidt. On hearing his story, and seeing the dog, I went to my own
-people, who were then living in Clapham, and asked them if they would
-take the animal from Schmidt and keep it. When I saw the German
-again I was given the dog, together with a paper on which were
-written all Don's peculiar tricks, most of which had been taught to
-him by his master and needed the German language for their words of
-command. Soon after this Schmidt fell into even grimmer poverty, and
-was rescued from the deepest gulf by some religious body analogous in
-those days to the Salvation Army of the present time. Of this
-Maitland knew nothing, until one day going down the Strand he found
-his friend giving away religious pamphlets at the door of Exeter
-Hall. When he told me this he said he went next day to see the man
-in his single room lodging and found him sitting at the table with
-several open Bibles spread out before him. He explained that he was
-making a commentary on the Bible at the instigation of one of his new
-friends, and he added: "Here, _here_ is henceforth my life's work."
-Shortly after this, I believe through Harold Edgeworth or some one
-else to whom Maitland appealed, the poor German was given work in
-some quasi-public institution, and with better fare and more ease his
-brain recovered. He never mentioned religion again. It was thus
-that Maitland himself recovered from similar but less serious
-influences in somewhat similar conditions. For some weeks in 1885 I
-was myself exposed to such influences in Chicago, in even bitterer
-conditions than those from which Schmidt and Maitland had suffered,
-but not for one moment did I alter my opinions. As a kind of final
-commentary on this chapter and this side of Maitland's mind, one
-might quote from a letter to Rivers: "Seeing that mankind cannot have
-done altogether with the miserable mystery of life, undoubtedly it
-behoves us before all else to enlighten as we best can the lot of
-those for whose being we are responsible. This for the vast majority
-of men--a few there are, I think, who are justified in quite
-neglecting that view of life, and, by the bye, Marcus Aurelius was
-one of them. Nothing he could have done would have made Commodus
-other than he was--I use, of course, the everyday phrases, regardless
-of determinism--and then one feels pretty sure that Commodus was not
-his son at all. For him, life was the individual, and whether he has
-had any true influence or not, I hold him absolutely justified in
-thinking as he did." There again comes out Maitland's view, his
-anti-social view, the native egoism of the man, his peculiar solitude
-of thought.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-To have seen "Shelley plain" once only is to put down a single point
-on clear paper. To have seen him twice gives his biographer the
-right to draw a line. Out of three points may come a triangle. Out
-of the many times in many years that I saw Maitland comes the
-intricate pattern of him. I would rather do a little book like
-"Manon Lescaut" than many biographical quartos lying as heavy on the
-dead as Vanbrugh's mansions. If there are warts on Maitland so there
-were on Cromwell. I do not invent like the old cartographers, who
-adorned their maps with legends saying, "Here is much gold," or "Here
-are found diamonds." Nor have I put any imaginary "Mountains of the
-Moon" into his map, or adorned vacant parts of ocean with whales or
-wonderful monsters. I put down nothing unseen, or most reasonably
-inferred. In spite of my desire, which is sincere, to say as little
-as possible about myself, I find I have to speak sometimes of things
-primarily my own. There is no doubt it did Maitland a great deal of
-good to have somebody to interest himself in, even if it were no one
-of more importance than myself. Although he was so singularly a
-lonely man, he could not always bury himself in the classics, or even
-in his work, done laboriously in eight prodigious hours. We for ever
-talked about what we were going to do, and there was very little that
-I wrote, up to the time of his leaving London permanently, which I
-did not discuss with him. Yet I was aware that with much I wrote he
-was wholly dissatisfied. I remember when I was still living in
-Chelsea, not in Danvers Street but in Redburn Street, where I at last
-attained the glory of two rooms, he came to me one Sunday in a very
-uneasy state of mind. He looked obviously worried and troubled, and
-was for a long time silent as he sat over the fire. I asked him
-again and again what was the matter, because, as can be easily
-imagined, I always had the notion that something must be the matter
-with him, or soon would be. In answer to my repeated importunities
-he said, at last: "Well, the fact of the matter is, I want to speak
-to you about your work." It appeared that I and my affairs were at
-the bottom of his discomfort. He told me that he had been thinking
-of my want of success, and that he had made up his mind to tell me
-the cause of it. He was nervous and miserable, though I begged him
-to speak freely, but at last got out the truth. He told me that he
-did not think I possessed the qualities to succeed at the business I
-had so rashly commenced. He declared that it was not that he had not
-the very highest opinion of such a book as "The Western Trail," but
-as regards fiction he felt I was bound to be a failure. Those who
-knew him can imagine what it cost him to say as much as this. I
-believe he would have preferred to destroy half a book and begin it
-again. Naturally enough what he said I found very disturbing, but I
-am pleased to say that I took it in very good part, and told him that
-I would think it over seriously. As may be imagined, I did a great
-deal of thinking on the subject, but the result of my cogitations
-amounted to this: I had started a thing and meant to go through with
-it at all costs. I wrote this to him later, and the little incident
-never made any difference whatever to our affectionate friendship. I
-reminded him many years after of what he had said, and he owned then
-that I had done something to make him revise his former opinion.
-When I come to speak of some of his letters to me about my later
-books it will be seen how generous he could be to a friend who, for
-some time then, had not been very enthusiastic about his own work. I
-have said before, and I always believed, that it was he and not
-myself who was at the wrong kind of task. Fiction, even as he
-understood it, was not for a man of his nature and faculties. He
-would have been in his true element as a don of a college, and much
-of his love of the classics was a mystery to me, as it would have
-been to most active men of the world, however well educated. I did
-understand his passion for the Greek tragedies, but he had almost
-more delight in the Romans; and, with the exception of Catullus and
-Lucretius, the Latin classics are to me without any savour. There is
-no doubt that in many ways I was but a barbarian to him. For one
-thing, at that time I was something of a fanatical imperialist. He
-took no more interest in the Empire, except as literary material,
-than he did in Nonconformist theology. Then I was certainly highly
-patriotic as regards England, but he was very cosmopolitan. It was
-no doubt a very strange thing that he should have spoken to me about
-my having little faculty for writing fiction when I had so often come
-to the same silent conclusion about himself. Naturally enough I did
-not dare to tell him so, for if such a pronouncement had distressed
-me a little it would distress him very much more. Yet I think he did
-sometimes understand his real limitations, especially in later years,
-when he wrote more criticism. The man who could say that he was
-prepared to spend the years from thirty-six to forty in a vigorous
-apprenticeship to English, was perfectly capable of continuing that
-apprenticeship until he died.
-
-He took a critical and wonderful interest in the methods of all men
-of letters, and that particular interest with regard to Balzac, which
-was known to many, has sometimes been mistaken. Folks have said, and
-even written, that he meant to write an English "Comedie Humaine."
-There is, no doubt, a touch of truth in this notion, but no more than
-a touch. He would have liked to follow in Balzac's mighty footsteps,
-and do something for England which would possibly be inclusive of all
-social grades. At any rate he began at the bottom and worked
-upwards. It is quite obvious to me that what prevented him from
-going further in any such scheme was not actually a want of power or
-any failure of industry, it was a real failure of knowledge and of
-close contact with the classes composing the whole nation. Beyond
-the lower middle class his knowledge was not very deep. He was
-mentally an alien, and a satiric if interested intruder. He had been
-exiled for the unpardonable sins of his youth. It is impossible for
-any man of intellect not to suspect his own limitations, and I am
-sure he knew that he should have been a pure child of books, for as
-soon as he got beyond the pale of his own grim surroundings, those
-surroundings which had been burnt, and were still being burnt into
-his soul, he apparently lost interest. Though two or three of these
-later books have indeed much merit, such novels as "The Vortex" and
-"The Best of All Things" are really failures. I believe he felt it.
-Anthony Hope Hawkins once wrote to me apropos of something, that
-there were very few men writing who really knew that all real
-knowledge had to be "bought." Maitland had bought his knowledge of
-sorrow and suffering and certain surroundings at a personal price
-that few can pay and not be bankrupt. But while I was associating
-with almost every class in the world he lived truly alone. There
-were, indeed, long months when he actually saw no one, and there were
-other periods when his only friend besides myself was that
-philosophic German whose philosophy put its lofty tail between its
-legs on a prolonged starvation diet.
-
-As one goes on talking of him and considering his nature there are
-times when it seems amazing that he did not commit suicide and have
-done with it. Certainly there were days and seasons when I thought
-this might be his possible end. But some men break and others bend,
-and in him there was undoubtedly some curious strength though it were
-but the Will to Live of Schopenhauer, the one philosopher he
-sometimes read. I myself used to think that it was perhaps his
-native sensuousness which kept him alive in spite of all his misery.
-No man ever lived who enjoyed things that were even remotely
-enjoyable more acutely than himself, though I think his general
-attitude towards life was like his attitude towards people and the
-world. For so many good men Jehovah would have spared the Cities of
-the Plains. So in a certain sense the few good folk that he
-perceived in any given class made him endure the others that he
-hated, while he painted those he loved against their dingy and
-dreadful background. The motto on the original title-page of "The
-Under World" was a quotation from a speech by Renan delivered at the
-Académie Française in 1889: "La peinture d'un fumier peut être
-justifiée pourvu qu'il y pousse une belle fleur; sans cela, le fumier
-n'est que repoussant." The few beautiful flowers of the world for
-Henry Maitland were those who hated their surroundings and desired
-vainly to grow out of them. Such he pitied, hopeless as he believed
-their position, and vain as he knew to be their aspirations. In a
-way all this was nothing but translated self-pity. Had he been more
-fortunate in his youth I do not believe he would have ever turned his
-attention in any way towards social affairs, in which he took no
-native interest. His natural sympathy was only for those whom he
-could imagine to be his mental fellows. Almost every sympathetic
-character in all his best books was for him like the starling in the
-cage of Sterne--the starling that cried, "I can't get out! I can't
-get out!" Among the subjects that he refused to speak of or to
-discuss was one which for a long time greatly interested me, and
-interests me still--I refer to Socialism. But then Socialism, after
-all, is nothing but a more or less definitive view of a definite
-organisation with perfectly recognised ends, and he saw no
-possibility of any organisation doing away with the things he
-loathed. That is to say, he was truly hopeless, most truly
-pessimistic. He was a sensuous and not a scientific thinker, and to
-get on with him for any length of time it was necessary for me to
-suppress three-quarters of the things I wished to speak about. He
-was a strange egoist, though truly the hateful world was not his own.
-It appeared to me that he prayed, or strove, for the power to ignore
-it. It is for this reason that it seems to me now that all his
-so-called social work and analysis were in the nature of an alien
-_tour de force_. He bent his intellect in that direction, and
-succeeded even against his nature. He who desired to be a Bentley or
-a Porson wrote bitterly about the slums of Tottenham Court Road.
-With Porson he damned the nature of things, and wrote beautifully
-about them. I remember on one occasion telling him of a piece of
-script in the handwriting of the great surgeon, John Hunter, which
-ran: "Damn civilisation! It makes cats eat their kittens, sows eat
-their young, and women send their children out to nurse." I think
-that gave him more appreciation of science than anything he had ever
-heard. For it looked back into the past, and for Henry Maitland the
-past was the age of gold. In life, as he had to live it, it was
-impossible to ignore the horrors of the present time. He found it
-easier to ignore the horrors of the past, and out of ancient history
-he made his great romance, which, truly, he never wrote.
-
-It is a curious thing that a man who was thus so essentially romantic
-should have been mistaken, not without great reason, for a realist.
-In one sense he was a realist, but this was the fatal result of his
-nature and his circumstances. Had he lived in happier surroundings,
-still writing fiction, I am assured it would have been romance. And
-yet, curiously enough, I doubt if any of his ideas concerning women
-were at all romantic. His disaster with his first wife was due to
-early and unhappily awakened sex feeling, but I think he believed
-that his marrying her was due to his desire to save somebody whom he
-considered to be naturally a beautiful character from the dunghill in
-which he found her. This poor girl was his first _belle fleur_. In
-all his relations with women it seems as if his own personal
-loneliness was the dominating factor. So much did he feel these
-things that it was rarely possible to discuss them with him.
-Nevertheless it was the one subject, scientifically treated, on which
-I could get him to listen to me. In the first five years of my
-literary apprenticeship I began a book, which is still unfinished,
-and never will be finished, called "Social Pathology." So far as it
-dealt with sex and sex deprivation, he was much interested in it. In
-all his books there is to be found the misery of the man who lives
-alone and yet cannot live alone. I do not think that in any book but
-"The Unchosen," he ever made a study of that from the woman's side.
-But it is curiously characteristic of his sex view that the chief
-feminine character of that book apparently knew not love even when
-she thought that she knew it, but was only aware of awakened senses.
-
-One might have imagined, considering his early experiences, that he
-would have led the ordinary life of man, and associated, if only
-occasionally, with women of the mercenary type. This, I am wholly
-convinced, was a thing he never did, though I possess one poem which
-implies the possible occurrence of such a passing liaison. There
-was, however, another incident in his life which occurred not long
-before I went to America. He was then living in one room in the
-house of a journeyman bookbinder. On several occasions when I
-visited him there I saw his landlady, a young and not unpleasing
-woman, who seemed to take great interest in him, and did her very
-best to make him comfortable in narrow, almost impossible,
-surroundings. Her husband, a man a great deal older than herself,
-drank, and not infrequently ill-treated her. This was not wholly
-Maitland's story, for I saw the man myself, as well as his wife. It
-appears she went for sympathy to her lodger, and he told her
-something of his own troubles. Their common griefs threw them
-together. She was obviously of more than the usual intelligence of
-her class. It appeared that she desired to learn French, or made
-Maitland believe so; my own view being that she desired his company.
-The result of this was only natural, and soon afterwards Maitland was
-obliged to leave the house owing to the jealousy of her husband, who
-for many years had already been suspicious of her without any cause.
-But this affair was only passing. He took other rooms, and so far as
-I know never saw her again.
-
-While I was in America he was living at 7K, and in that gloomy flat
-there was an affair of another order, an incident not without many
-parallels in the lives of poor artists and writers. It seems that a
-certain lady not without importance in society, the wife of a rich
-husband, wrote to him about one of his books, and having got into
-correspondence with him allowed her curiosity to overcome her
-discretion. She visited him very often in his chambers, and though
-he told me but little I gathered what the result was. Oddly enough,
-by a curious chain of reasoning and coincidence, I afterwards
-discovered this woman's name, which I shall, of course, suppress. So
-far as I am aware these were the only two romantic or quasi-romantic
-incidents in Maitland's life until towards the end of it. When I
-came back from America he certainly had no mistress, and beyond an
-occasional visit from the sons of Harold Edgeworth, he practically
-received no one but myself. His poverty forbade him entertaining any
-but one of his fellows who was as poor as he was, and the few
-acquaintances he had once met in better surroundings than his own
-gradually drifted away from him, or died as Cotter Morison died.
-Although he spoke so very little about these matters of personal
-loneliness and deprivation I was yet conscious from the general tenor
-of his writing and an occasional dropped word, how bitterly he felt
-it personally. It had rejoiced my unregenerate heart in America to
-learn that he was not entirely without feminine companionship at a
-time when the horror of his life was only partially mitigated by the
-preference of his mad and wretched wife for the dens and slums of the
-New Cut. This woman of the upper classes had come to him like a
-star, and had been a lamp in his darkness. I wonder if she still
-retains within her heart some memories of those hours.
-
-I have not been able to discover whether it is true, as has been
-said, that some of Maitland's ancestors were originally German. He
-himself thought this was so, without having anything definite that I
-remember to go upon. If it were true I wonder whether it was his
-Teutonic ancestry which made him turn with a certain joy to the
-German ideal of woman, that of the haus-frau. If little or nothing
-were known about him, or only so much as those know who have already
-written of him, it might, in some ways, be possible to reconstruct
-him by a process of deductive analysis, by what the school logicians
-call the _regressus a principiatis ad principia_. This is always a
-fascinating mental exercise, and indeed I think, with a very little
-light on Maitland's life, it should not have been difficult for some
-to build up a picture not unlike the man. For instance, no one with
-a gleam of intelligence, whether a critic or not, could read some
-portions of the chapter in "Victorian Novelists" on "Women and
-Dickens" without coming to the inevitable conclusion that Maitland's
-fortune with regard to the women with whom he had been thrown in
-contact must have been most lamentably unfortunate. Although Dickens
-drew certain offensive women with almost unequalled power, he treats
-them so that one becomes oblivious of their very offensiveness, as
-Maitland points out. Maitland's own commentary on such women is ten
-thousand times more bitter, and it is _felt_, not observed, as in
-Dickens' books. He calls them "these remarkable creatures," and
-declares they belong mostly to one rank of life, the lower middle
-class. "In general their circumstances are comfortable .... nothing
-is asked of them but a quiet and amiable discharge of their household
-duties; they are treated by their male kindred with great, often with
-extraordinary consideration. Yet their characteristic is acidity of
-temper and boundless licence of querulous or insulting talk. The
-real business of their lives is to make all about them as
-uncomfortable as they can. Invariably, they are unintelligent and
-untaught; very often they are fragrantly imbecile. Their very
-virtues (if such persons can be said to have any) become a scourge.
-In the highways and byways of life, by the fireside, and in the
-bed-chamber, their voices shrill upon the terrified ear." He adds
-that no historical investigation is needed to ascertain the
-truthfulness of these presentments. Indeed Maitland required no
-historical investigation, he had his personal experience to go upon;
-but this, indeed, is obvious. Nevertheless one cannot help feeling
-in reading this appalling indictment, that something might be said
-upon the other side, and that Maitland's attitude was so essentially
-male as to vitiate many of his conclusions.
-
-A few pages further on in this book he says: "Another man, obtaining
-his release from these depths, would have turned away in loathing;
-Dickens found therein matter for his mirth, material for his art."
-But Maitland knew that Dickens had not suffered in the way he himself
-had done. Thus it was that he rejoiced in the punishment which Mrs.
-Joe Gargery received. Maitland writes: "Mrs. Joe Gargery shall be
-brought to quietness; but how? By a half-murderous blow on the back
-of her head, from which she will never recover. Dickens understood
-by this time that there is no other efficacious way with these
-ornaments of their sex."
-
-Having spoken of Dickens it may be as well to dispose of him, with
-regard to Maitland, in this particular chapter. It seems to be
-commonly thought that Maitland wrote his book about the Victorian
-novelists not only with the sympathy which he expressed, but with
-considerable joy in the actual work. This is not true, for he
-regarded it essentially as a pot-boiler, and did it purely for the
-money. By some strange kink in his mind he chose to do it in Italy,
-far from any reference library. He wrote: "My little novelist book
-has to be written before Christmas, and to do this I must get settled
-at the earliest possible date in a quiet north Italian town. I think
-I shall choose Siena." On what principle he decided to choose a
-quiet north Italian town to write a book about Victorian novelists I
-have never been able to determine. It was certainly a very curious
-proceeding, especially as he had no overwhelming love of North Italy,
-which was for him the Italy of the Renaissance. As I have said, he
-actually disliked the work, and had no desire to do it, well as it
-was done. It is, however, curious, to me, in considering this book,
-to find that neither he nor any other critic of Dickens that I have
-ever read seems to give a satisfactory explanation of the great, and
-at times overwhelming, attraction that Dickens has for many. And yet
-on more than one occasion I discussed Dickens with him, and in a
-great measure he agreed with a theory I put forth with some
-confidence. I think it still worth considering. For me the great
-charm of Dickens lies not wholly in his humour or even greatly in his
-humour. It is not found in his characterisation, nor in his
-underlying philosophy of revolt, although almost every writer of
-consequence is a revolutionist. It results purely and simply from
-what the critics of the allied art of painting describe as "quality."
-This is a word exceedingly difficult to define. It implies more or
-less the characteristic way in which paint is put upon the canvas. A
-picture may be practically worthless from the point of view of
-subject or composition, it may even be comparatively poor in
-colouring, and yet it may have an extreme interest of surface. One
-finds, I think, the same thing in Dickens' writings. His page is
-full. It is fuller than the page of any other English writer. There
-are, so to speak, on any given page by any man a certain number of
-intellectual and emotional stimuli. Dickens' page is full of these
-stimuli to a most extreme degree. It is like a small mosaic, and yet
-clear. It has cross meanings, cross lights, reflections,
-suggestions. Compare a page of Dickens with a page, say, of
-Thackeray. Take a pencil and write down the number of mental
-suggestions given by a sentence of Thackeray. Take, again, a
-sentence of Dickens, and see how many more there are to be found. It
-is this tremendous and overflowing fulness which really constitutes
-Dickens' great and peculiar power.
-
-But all this is anticipation. Not yet was he to write of Dickens,
-Thackeray, and the Brontës, for much was to befall him before he went
-to Italy again. He was once more alone, and I think I knew that this
-loneliness would not last for long. I have often regretted that I
-did not foresee what I might have foreseen if I had considered the
-man and his circumstances with the same fulness which comes to one in
-later years after Fate has wrought itself out. Had I known all that
-I might have known, or done all that I might have done, I could
-perhaps have saved him from something even worse than his first
-marriage. Yet, after all, I was a poor and busy man, and while
-living in Chelsea had many companions, some of them men who have now
-made a great name in the world of Art. The very nature of Maitland
-and his work, the dreadful concentration he required to do something
-which was, as I insist again, alien from his true nature, forbade my
-seeing him very often, or even often enough to gather from his
-reticence what was really in his mind. Had I gone to see him without
-any warning, it would, I knew, have utterly destroyed his whole day's
-work. But this solitude, this enforced and appalling loneliness,
-which seemed to him necessary for work if he was to live, ate into
-him deeply. It destroyed his nerve and what judgment he ever had
-which, heaven knows, was little enough. What it means to some men to
-live in such solitude only those who know can tell, and they never
-tell. To Maitland, with his sensual and sensuous nature, it was most
-utter damnation.
-
-By now he had come out of the pit of his first marriage, and
-gradually the horrors he had passed through became dim to his eyes.
-They were like a badly toned photograph, and faded. I did foresee
-that something would happen sooner or later to alter the way in which
-he lived, but I know I did not foresee, and could not have foreseen
-or imagined what was actually coming, for no one could have
-prophesied it. It was absurd, impossible, monstrous, and almost
-bathos. And yet it fits in with the character of the man as it had
-been distorted by circumstance. One Sunday when I visited him he
-told me, with a strange mixture of abruptness and hesitation, that he
-had made the acquaintance of a girl in the Marylebone road.
-Naturally enough I thought at first that his resolution and his
-habits had broken down and that he had picked up some prostitute of
-the neighbourhood. But it turned out that the girl was
-"respectable." He said to me: "I could stand it no longer, so I
-rushed out and spoke to the very first woman I came across." It was
-an unhappy inspiration of the desperate, and was the first act of a
-prolonged drama of pain and misery. It took me some time and many
-questions to find out what this meant, and what it was to lead to,
-but presently he replied sullenly that he proposed to marry the girl
-if she would marry him. On hearing this, I fell into silence and we
-sat for a long time without speaking. Knowing him as I did, it was
-yet a great shock to me. For I would rather have seen him in the
-physical clutches of the biggest harpy in the Strand--knowing that
-such now could not long hold him. I had done my best, as a mere boy,
-to prevent him marrying his first wife, and had failed with the most
-disastrous results. I now determined to stop this marriage if I
-could. I ventured to remind him of the past, and the part I had
-played in it when I implored him to have no more to do with Marian
-Hilton long before he married her. I told him once more, trying to
-renew it in him, of the relief it had been when his first wife died,
-but nothing that I could say seemed to move, or even to offend him.
-His mind recognised the truth of everything, but his body meant to
-have its way. He was quiet, sullen, set--even when I told him that
-he would repent it most bitterly. The only thing I could at last get
-him to agree to was that he would take no irrevocable step for a week.
-
-I asked him questions about the girl. He admitted that he did not
-love her in any sense of the word love. He admitted that she had no
-great powers of attraction, that she seemed to possess no
-particularly obvious intellect. She had received his advances in the
-street in the way that such girls, whose courtship is traditionally
-carried on in the open thoroughfare, do receive them. But when he
-asked her to visit him in his chambers she replied to that invitation
-with all the obvious suspicion of a lower-class girl from whom no sex
-secrets were hidden. From the very start the whole affair seemed
-hopeless, preposterous, intolerable, and I went away from him in
-despair. It was a strange thing that Maitland did not seem to know
-what love was. If I have not before this said something about his
-essential lack of real passion in his dealings with women it must be
-said now. Of course, it is quite obvious that he had a boyish kind
-of passion for Marian Hilton, but it was certainly not that kind of
-passion which mostly keeps boys innocent. Indeed those calf loves
-which afflict youths are at the same time a great help to them, for a
-boy is really as naturally coy as any maiden. If by any chance
-Maitland, instead of coming into the hands of a poor girl of the
-streets of Moorhampton, had fallen in love with some young girl of
-decent character and upbringing, his passions would not have been so
-fatally roused. I think it was probably the whole root of his
-disaster that this should have occurred at all. Possibly it was the
-horror and rage and anger connected with this first affair, combined
-with the fact that it became actually sensual, which prevented him
-having afterwards what one might without priggishness describe as a
-pure passion. At any rate I never saw any signs of his being capable
-of the overwhelming passion which might under other circumstances
-drive a man down to hell, or raise him to heaven. To my mind all his
-books betray an extreme lack of this. His characters in all their
-love-affairs are essentially too reasonable. A man wishes to marry a
-girl, not because he desires her simply and overwhelmingly, but
-because she is a fitting person, or the kind of woman of whom he has
-been able to build up certain ideas which suit his mind. In fact the
-love of George Hardy for Isabel in "The Exile" is somewhat typical of
-the whole attitude he had towards affairs of passion. Then again in
-"Paternoster Row" there is the suicide of Gifford which throws a very
-curious light on Maitland's nature. Apparently Gifford did not
-commit suicide because of his failure, or because he was half
-starving, it was because he was weakly desirous of a woman like
-Anne--not necessarily Anne herself. In Maitland's phrase, he desired
-her to complete his manhood, to my mind the most ridiculous way of
-putting the affair. It is in this, I think, that Maitland showed his
-essential lack of knowledge of the other sex. A man does not
-captivate women by going to them and explaining, with more or less
-periphrasis, that they are required to complete his manhood, that he
-feels a rather frustrate male individual without them. And if he has
-these ideas at the back of his head and goes courting, the result is
-hardly likely to be successful. Maitland never understood the
-passion in the man that sweeps a woman off her feet. One finds this
-lack in all his men who live celibate lives. They suffer physically,
-or they suffer to a certain degree from loneliness, but one never
-feels that only one woman could cure their pain, or alleviate their
-desolation. At times Maitland seemed, as it were, to be in love with
-the sex but not with the woman. Of course he had a bitter hatred of
-the general prejudices of morality, a thing which was only natural to
-any one who had lived his life and thought what he thought. It is a
-curious thing to note that his favourite poem in the whole English
-language was perhaps the least likely one that could be picked out.
-This was Browning's "Statue and the Bust," which is certainly of a
-teaching not Puritan in its essence. The Puritan ideal Maitland
-loathed with a fervour which produced the nearest I have ever seen in
-him to actual rage and madness. He roared against it if he did not
-scoff. He sometimes quoted the well-known lines from the unknown
-Brathwait:
-
- "Where I saw a Puritane one
- Hanging of his Cat on Monday,
- For killing of a Mouse on Sonday."
-
-I remember very well his taking down Browning when I was with him one
-afternoon at 7K. He read a great portion of "The Statue and the
-Bust" out aloud, and we discussed it afterwards, of course pointing
-out to each other with emphasis its actual teaching, its loathing of
-futility. It teaches that the two people who loved each other but
-never achieved love were two weaklings, who ought to have acted, and
-should not have allowed themselves to be conquered by the lordly
-husband. Maitland said: "Those people who buy Browning and think
-they understand it--oh, if they really knew what he meant they would
-pick him up with a pair of tongs, and take him out, and burn him in
-their back yards--in their back yards!" It strikes one that
-Maitland, in his haste, seemed to imagine that the kind of bourgeois
-or bourgeoise whom he imagined thus destroying poor Browning with the
-aid of tongs, possessed such things as back yards, and, perhaps,
-frequented them on Sunday afternoons. But he had lived for so many
-years in houses which had not a garden, or anything but a small, damp
-yard behind, that he began to think, possibly, that all houses were
-alike. I roared with laughter at his notion of what these prosperous
-Puritans would do. I had a picture in my mind of some well-dressed
-woman of the upper middle-class bringing out "The Statue and the
-Bust" with a pair of tongs, and burning it in some small and horrible
-back yard belonging to a house in the slums between Tottenham Court
-Road and Fitzroy Square. And yet, although he understood Browning's
-sermon against the passive futility of these weak and unfortunate
-lovers he could not, I think, have understood wholly, or in anything
-but a literary sense the enormous power of passion which Browning
-possessed. This lack in him is one of the keys to his character, and
-it unlocks much. When I left him after he told me about this new
-affair, I went back to my own rooms and sat thinking it over,
-wondering if it were possible even now to do anything to save him
-from his own nature, and the catastrophe his nature was preparing.
-Without having seen the girl I felt sure that it would be a
-catastrophe, for I knew him too well. Nevertheless on reflecting
-over the matter it did seem to me that there was one possible chance
-of saving him from himself. It was a very unlikely thing that I
-should succeed, but at any rate I could try.
-
-I have said that we rarely spoke of his early life, and never of what
-had happened in Moorhampton. Nevertheless I was, of course, aware
-that it dominated the whole of his outlook and all of his thoughts in
-any way connected with ordinary social life, especially with regard
-to intercourse with those who might know something about his early
-career. At this time I do not think that he actually blamed himself
-much for what had happened. Men die many times in life and are born
-again, and by this time he must have looked on the errant youth who
-had been himself as little more than an ancestor. He himself had
-died and risen again, and if he was not the man he might have been,
-he was certainly not the man he had been. Nevertheless he was
-perpetually alive to what other people might possibly think of him.
-I believe that the real reason for his almost rigid seclusion from
-society was that very natural fear that some brute, and he knew only
-too well that there are such brutes, might suddenly and unexpectedly
-expose his ancient history. It is true that even in our society in
-England, which is not famous all the world over for tact, it was not
-very likely to happen. Nevertheless the bare possibility that it
-might occur absolutely dominated him. It requires very little
-sympathy or understanding of his character to see that this must have
-been so. No doubt it was mainly from this cause that he considered
-he had no right to approach women of his own class, seeing that he
-had declassed himself, without telling the whole truth. But this was
-quite impossible for him to do, and I knew it. In some cases it
-would have been wise, in some unwise, but Henry Maitland was unable
-to do such a thing. The result was this sudden revolt, and the
-madness which led him to speak to this girl of the Marylebone Road,
-whom I had not yet met but whom I pictured, not inadequately, in my
-mind. At the first glance it seemed that nothing could possibly be
-done, that the man must be left to "dree his weird," to work out his
-fate and accomplish his destiny. And yet I lay awake for a very long
-time that night thinking of the whole situation, and I at last
-determined to take a step on his behalf which, at any rate, had the
-merit of some originality and courage.
-
-Years ago in Moorhampton, when he was a boy, before the great
-disaster came, Maitland had visited my uncle's house, and had
-obviously pleased every one he met there. He was bright, not bad
-looking, very cheerful and enthusiastic, and few that met him did not
-like him. Among those whose acquaintance he made at that house were
-two of my own cousins. In later years they often spoke of him to me,
-even although they had not seen him since he was a boy of seventeen.
-I now went to both of them and told them the whole affair in
-confidence, speaking quite openly of his character, and the
-impossibility he discovered within himself of living in the
-desolation which fate had brought upon him. They understood his
-character, and were acquainted with his reputation. He was a man of
-genius, if not a man of great genius, and occupied a certain position
-in literature which would one day, we all felt assured, be still a
-greater position. They were obviously exceedingly sorry for him, and
-not the less sorry when I told them of the straits in which he
-sometimes found himself. Nevertheless it seemed to me, as I
-explained to them, that if he had been lucky enough to marry some one
-in sympathy with him and his work, some one able to help in a little
-way to push him forward on the lines on which he might have attained
-success, there was yet great hope for him even in finance, or so I
-believed. Then I asked them whether it would not be possible to stop
-this proposed outrageous marriage, a thing which seemed to me utterly
-unnatural. They were, however, unable to make any suggestion, and
-certainly did not follow what was in my mind. Then I opened what I
-had to say, and asked them abruptly if it were not possible for one
-of them to consider whether she would marry him if the present affair
-could be brought decently to an end. They were both educated women,
-and knew at least two foreign languages. They were accustomed to
-books, and appreciated his work.
-
-No doubt my proposal sounded absurd, unconventional, and perhaps not
-a little horrifying. Nevertheless when I have had anything to do in
-life I have not been accustomed to let convention stand in my way.
-Such marriages have been arranged and have not been unsuccessful.
-There was, I thought, a real possibility of such a marriage as I
-proposed being anything but a failure. Our conversation ended at
-last in both of them undertaking to consider the matter if, after
-meeting Maitland again, they still remained of the same mind, and if
-he found that such a step was possible. I have often wondered since
-whether any situation exactly like this ever occurred before. I own
-that I found it somewhat interesting, and when at last I went back to
-Maitland I felt entitled to tell him that he could do much better
-than marrying an unknown girl of the lower classes whom he had
-accosted in the streets in desperation. But he received what I had
-to say in a very curious manner. It seemed to depress him
-profoundly. Naturally enough, I did not tell him the names of those
-who were prepared to make his acquaintance, but I did tell him that I
-had been to a lady who had once met him and greatly admired his work,
-who would be ready to consider the possibility of her becoming his
-wife if on meeting once again they proved sympathetic. He shook his
-head grimly, and, after a long silence, he told me that he had not
-kept his word, and that he had asked Ada Brent to marry him. He had,
-he said, gone too far to withdraw.
-
-There is such a thing in life as the tyranny of honour, and
-personally I cared very little for this point of honour when I
-thought of his future. It was not as if this girl's affections were
-in any way engaged. If they had been I would have kept silence,
-bitterly as I regretted the whole affair. She was curious about him,
-and that was all. It would do her no harm to lose him, and, indeed,
-as the event proved, it would have been better if she had not married
-at all. Therefore I begged him to shut up the flat and leave London
-at once. I even offered to try and find the money for him to do so.
-But, like all weak people, he was peculiarly obstinate, and nothing
-that I could urge had the least effect upon him. I have often
-thought it was his one great failure in rectitude which occurred at
-Moorhampton that made him infinitely more tenacious of doing nothing
-which might seem in any way dishonourable, however remotely. I did
-not succeed in moving him, with whatever arguments I plied him, and
-the only satisfaction I got out of it was the sense that he knew I
-was most deeply interested in him, and had done everything, even much
-more than might have been expected, to save him from what I thought
-must lead to irreparable misery. Certainly the whole incident was
-remarkable. There was, perhaps, a little air of curiously polite
-comedy about it, and yet it was the prelude to a tragedy.
-
-It was soon after this, in fact it was on the following Sunday, that
-I made the acquaintance of the young woman who was to be his second
-wife, to bear his children, to torture him for years, to drive him
-almost mad, and once more make a financial slave of him. We three
-met in the gloomy sitting-room at 7K. My first impression of this
-girl was more unfavourable than I had expected. She was the daughter
-of a small tradesman but little removed from an artisan, and she
-looked it. In the marriage certificate her father is described as a
-carver, for what reason I am unable to determine, for I have a very
-distinct recollection that Maitland told me he was a bootmaker,
-probably even a cobbler. I disliked the young woman at first sight,
-and never got over my early impression. From the very beginning it
-seemed impossible that she could ever become in any remote degree
-what he might justifiably have asked for in a wife. Yet she was not
-wholly disagreeable in appearance. She was of medium height and
-somewhat dark. She had not, however, the least pretence to such
-beauty as one might hope to find even in a slave of the kitchen. She
-possessed neither face nor figure, nor a sweet voice, nor any
-charm--she was just a female. And this was she that the most
-fastidious man in many ways, that I knew, was about to marry. I went
-away with a sick heart, for it was nothing less than a frightful
-catastrophe, and I had to stand by and see it happen. He married her
-on March 20, 1891, and went to live near Exeter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-For many months after he left London I did not see Maitland, although
-we continued to correspond, somewhat irregularly. He was exceedingly
-reticent as to the results of his marriage, and I did not discover
-definitely for some time to what extent it was likely to prove a
-failure. Indeed, I had many things to do, and was both financially
-and in other matters in a parlous condition. In some ways it was a
-relief to me that he should be living in the country, as I always
-felt, rightly or wrongly, a certain feeling of responsibility with
-regard to him when he was close at hand. Marriage always takes one's
-friends away from one, and for a time he was taken from me. But as I
-am not anxious to write in great detail about the more sordid facts
-of his life, especially when they do not throw light on his
-character, I am not disturbed at knowing little of the earlier days
-of his second marriage. The results are sufficient, and they will
-presently appear. For Maitland remained Maitland, and his character
-did not alter now. So I may return for a little while to matters
-more connected with his literary life.
-
-I have, I think, before this endeavoured to describe or suggest his
-personal appearance, but whenever I think of him I regret deeply that
-no painter ever made an adequate portrait of the man. He was
-especially interesting-looking, and most obviously lovable and
-sympathetic when any of his feelings were roused. His grey eyes were
-very bright and intelligent, his features finely cut, and at times he
-was almost beautiful; although his skin was not always in such a good
-condition as it should have been, and he was always very badly
-freckled. For those who have never seen him a photograph published
-in a dull literary journal, which is now defunct, is certainly the
-most adequate and satisfying presentment of him in existence. On a
-close inspection of this photograph it will be observed that he
-brushed his hair straight backward from his forehead without any
-parting. He had a curious way of dressing his hair, about which he
-was very particular. It was very fine hair of a brown colour,
-perhaps of a rather mousy tint, and it was never cut except at the
-ends at the nape of his neck. Whenever he washed his face he used to
-fasten this hair back with an elastic band which he always carried in
-his waistcoat pocket. On some occasions, when I have stayed the
-night at 7K and seen him at his toilette, this elastic band gave him
-a very odd appearance, almost as if he wore, for the time being, a
-very odd halo; but as his hair was so long in front it would
-otherwise have fallen into the basin of water. He told me that once
-in Germany a waiter entered the room while he was washing his face,
-and on perceiving this peculiar head-dress betrayed signs of mixed
-amusement and alarm. As Maitland said, "I believe he thought I was
-mad."
-
-His forehead was high, his head exceedingly well shaped but not
-remarkably large. He always wore a moustache. Considering his very
-sedentary life his natural physique was extremely good, and he was
-capable of walking great distances if he were put to it and was in
-condition. Seen nude, he had the figure of a possible athlete. I
-used to tell him that he might be an exceedingly strong man if he
-cared to take the trouble to become one, but his belief, which is to
-be found expressed in one passage of "The Meditations," was that no
-one in our times could be at once intellectually and physically at
-his best. Indeed, he had in a way a peculiar contempt for mere
-strength, and I do not doubt that much of his later bodily weakness
-and illness might have been avoided if he had thought more of
-exercise and open air.
-
-In no way was he excessive, in spite of his jocular pretence of a
-monstrous addiction to "strong waters" as he always called them. He
-did love wine, as I have written, but he loved it with discretion,
-although not with real knowledge. It was a case of passion and faith
-with him. I could imagine that in some previous incarnation--were
-there such things as reincarnations--he must have been an Italian
-writer of the South he loved so well. A little while ago I spoke of
-the strange absence of colour in his rooms. On rereading "The
-Meditations," I find some kind of an explanation, or what he
-considered an explanation, of this fact, to which I myself drew his
-attention. He seemed to imagine that his early acquaintance with his
-father's engravings inspired him with a peculiar love of black and
-white. More probably the actual truth is that his father's possible
-love of colour had never been developed any more than his son's.
-
-His fantastic attempts at times to make one believe that he was a
-great drinker, when a bottle of poor and common wine served him and
-me for a dinner and made us joyous, were no more true than that he
-was a great smoker. He had a prodigious big pot of tobacco in his
-rooms in the early days, a pot containing some form of mild returns
-which to my barbaric taste suggested nothing so much as hay that had
-been stored next some mild tobacco. It was one of my grievances
-against him that when I visited his rooms hard up for tobacco, a
-thing which frequently occurred in those days, I was almost unable to
-use his. But it was always a form of joke with him to pretend that
-his habits were monstrously excessive. As I have said, one of his
-commonest forms of humour was exaggeration. Many people
-misunderstood that his very expressions of despair were all touched
-with a grim humour. Nevertheless he and his rooms were grim enough.
-On his shelves there was a French book, the title of which I forget,
-dealing without any reticence with the lives of the band of young
-French writers under the Second Empire, who perished miserably in the
-conditions to which they were exposed. This book is a series of
-short and bitter biographies, ending for the most part with, "mourut
-à l'hôpital," or "brûlait la cervelle." We were by no means for ever
-cheerful in these times.
-
-I do not think I have said very much, except by bitter implication,
-of his financial position, or what he earned. But his finances were
-a part of his general life's tragedy. There is a passage somewhere
-at the end of a chapter in "In the Morning" which says: "Put money in
-thy purse; and again, put money in thy purse; for, as the world is
-ordered, to lack current coin is to lack the privileges of humanity,
-and indigence is the death of the soul." I have been speaking wholly
-in vain if it is not understood that he was a man extremely difficult
-to influence, even for his own good. This was because he was weak,
-and his weakness came out with most exceeding force in all his
-dealings with publishers and editors. For the most part he was
-atrociously paid, but the fact remains that he was paid, and his
-perpetual fear was that his books would presently be refused, and
-that he would get no one to take them if he remonstrated with those
-who were his taskmasters. In such an event he gloomily anticipated,
-not so much the workhouse, but once more a cellar off the Tottenham
-Court Road, or some low, poverty-stricken post as a private tutor or
-the usher of a poor school. Sometimes when we were together he used
-to talk with a certain pathetic jocosity, or even jealousy, of
-Coleridge's luck in having discovered his amiable patron, Gillman.
-He did not imagine that nowadays any Gillmans were to be found, nor
-do I think that any Gillman would have found Maitland possible. One
-night after we had been talking about Coleridge and Gillman he sat
-down and wrote a set of poor enough verses, which are not without
-humour, and certainly highly characteristic, that ran as follows:
-
- THE HUMBLE ASPIRATION OF H.M., NOVELIST
-
- "Hoc erat in votis."
-
- Oh could I encounter a Gillman,
- Who would board me and lodge me for aye,
- With what intellectual skill, man,
- My life should be frittered away!
-
- What visions of study methodic
- My leisurely hours would beguile!--
- I would potter with details prosodic,
- I would ponder perfections of style.
-
- I would joke in a vein pessimistic
- At all the disasters of earth;
- I would trifle with schemes socialistic,
- And turn over matters for mirth.
-
- From the quiddities quaint of Quintilian
- I would flit to the latest critiques;--
- I would visit the London Pavilion,
- And magnify lion-comiques.
-
- With the grim ghastly gaze of a Gorgon
- I would cut Hendersonian bores--
- I would follow the ambulant organ
- That jingles at publicans' doors.
-
- In the odorous alleys of Wapping
- I would saunter on evenings serene;
- When the dews of the Sabbath were dropping
- You would find me on Clerkenwell Green.
-
- At the Hall Scientific of Bradlaugh
- I would revel in atheist rant,
- Or enjoy an attack on some bad law
- By the notable Mrs. Besant.
-
- I would never omit an oration
- Of Cunninghame Graham or Burns;
- And the Army miscalled of Salvation
- Should furnish me frolic by turns.
-
- Perchance I would muse o'er a mystic;
- Perchance I would booze at a bar;
- And when in the mind journalistic
- I would read the "Pall Mall" and the "Star."
-
- Never more would I toil with my quill, man,
- Or plead for the publishers' pay.--
- Oh where and O where is the Gillman,
- Who will lodge me and board me for aye?
-
-
-Now as to his actual earnings. His first book "Children of the
-Dawn," was published by Hamerton's. So far as I am aware it brought
-him in nothing. The book, naturally enough, was a dead failure;
-nobody perceived its promise, and it never sold. I do not think he
-received a penny on account for it. He got little more for "Outside
-the Pale," which was published in 1884, the year I went to America,
-and was dedicated to me, as the initials J.C.H. on the dedication
-page of the first edition testify. At that time I still retained in
-signature my second initial. This book was published by Andrews and
-Company, and it was through it that he first made acquaintance in a
-business way with George Meredith, then quite a poor man, and working
-for the firm as a reader just before he went to Chapman and Hall.
-
-In "Outside the Pale," as a manuscript there was a chapter, or part
-of a chapter, of a curiously romantic kind. It was some such theme
-as that which I myself treated in a romantic story called "The
-Purification." Hilda Moon, the idealised heroine of the streets,
-washed herself pure of her sins in the sea at midnight, if I remember
-the incident rightly, for I never actually read it. It appears that
-George Meredith was much taken with the book, but found his sense of
-fitness outraged by the introduction of this highly romantic
-incident. It seemed out of tone with the remainder of the book and
-the way in which it was written. He begged Maitland to eliminate it.
-Now as a rule Maitland, being a young writer, naturally objected to
-altering anything, but he knew that Meredith was right. At any rate,
-even at that period, the older man had had such an enormous
-experience that Maitland accepted his opinion and acted upon it. He
-told me that George Meredith came downstairs with him into the
-street, and standing on the doorstep once more reiterated his advice
-as to this particular passage. He said in the peculiar way so
-characteristic of him, "My dear sir, I beg you to believe, it made me
-_shiver_!" That passage is missing in the published book.
-
-"Outside the Pale" had a kind of _succès d'estime_. Certain people
-read it, and certain people liked it. It was something almost fresh
-in English. Nevertheless he made little or nothing out of it. Few,
-indeed, were those who made money out of Andrews and Company at that
-time. The business was run by Harry Andrews, known in the trade as
-"the liar," a man who notoriously never spoke the truth if a lie
-would bring him in a penny. I afterwards published a book with the
-same firm, and had to deal with the same man. After "Outside the
-Pale" came "Isabel," which, as I have said, was obviously written
-under the influence of Tourgeniev. So far as I am aware this
-influence has not been noted, even by so acute a critic as Thomas
-Sackville, but I myself was at that time a great reader of
-Tourgeniev, partly owing to Maitland's recommendation and insistence
-upon the man, and I recognised his influence at once. Maitland
-openly acknowledged it, a thing no writer does without very strong
-reason. This book, of course, was not a success. That, I believe,
-was the last work he published with Andrews and Company. So far as
-he was concerned the firm had not been a success. He was still
-compelled to earn his bread and cheese and rent by teaching.
-
-Although Tourgeniev was the earliest great influence upon Maitland,
-his influence was very largely that of form. So far as feeling was
-concerned his god for many years was undoubtedly Dostoievsky. That
-Russian writer himself suffered and had been down into the depths
-like the modern writer Gorki, which was what appealed to Maitland.
-Indeed he says somewhere: "Dostoievsky, a poor and suffering man,
-gives us with immense power his own view of penury and wretchedness."
-It was Maitland who first introduced "Crime and Punishment," to me.
-There is no doubt, when one comes to think of it seriously, a certain
-likeness between the modern Russian school and Maitland's work, and
-that likeness is perhaps founded on something deeper than mere
-community of subject which shows itself here and there. Perhaps
-there is something essentially Slav-like in Maitland's attitude to
-life. He was a dreamer, rebellious and unable. If, indeed, his
-ancestry was partly Teutonic, he might have been originally as much
-Slav as German.
-
-In 1886, while I was still in America, he began "The Mob." At that
-time, just when he had almost done the first two volumes, there
-occurred the Trafalgar Square Riots, in which John Burns, Hyndman,
-and Henry Hyde Champion, were concerned. Fool as Maitland was about
-his own affairs, he yet saw that it was a wonderful coincidence from
-his point of view that he should have been dealing with labour
-matters and the nature of the mob at this juncture. Some rare
-inspiration or suggestion led him to rush down with the first two
-volumes to Messrs. Miller and Company, where they were seen by John
-Glass, who said to him, "Give us the rest at once and we will begin
-printing it now." He went home and wrote the third volume in a
-fortnight while the other two volumes were in the press. This book
-was published anonymously, as it was thought, naturally enough, that
-this would give it a greater chance of success. It might reasonably
-be attributed to any one, and Maitland's name at that time, or indeed
-at any time afterwards, was very little help towards financial
-success. Now I am of opinion, speaking from memory, that this book
-was bought out and out by the publishing firm for fifty pounds. To a
-young writer who had never made so much fifty pounds was a large sum.
-In Maitland's exaggerated parlance it was "gross and riotous wealth."
-
-Having succeeded in getting hold of a good firm of notable and
-well-known publishers, he dreaded leaving them, even though he very
-soon discovered that fifty pounds for a long three-volume novel was
-most miserable pay. That he wrote books rapidly at times was no
-guarantee that he would always write them as rapidly. For once in
-his life he had written a whole volume in a fortnight, but it might
-just as well take him many months. There are, indeed, very few of
-his books of which most of the first volume was not destroyed,
-rewritten, and sometimes destroyed and again rewritten. Nevertheless
-he discovered a tremendous reluctance to ask for better terms. It
-was not only his fear of returning to the old irremediable poverty
-which made him dread leaving a firm who were not all they might have
-been, but he was cursed with a most unnecessary tenderness for them.
-He actually dreaded hurting the feelings of a publishing firm which
-had naturally all the qualities and defects of a corporation. The
-reason that he did at last leave this particular firm was rather
-curious. It shows that what many might think a mere coincidence may
-prejudice a fair man's mind.
-
-As I have said, he had been in the habit of selling his books
-outright for fifty pounds. After this had gone on for many books I
-suggested to him, as everything he wrote went into several editions
-under the skilful management of the firm, that it might be as well to
-sell them the first edition only and ask for a royalty on the
-succeeding ones. Now this would never have occurred to him, and he
-owned that it was a good idea. So when "The Flower," was finished he
-sold the first edition for forty pounds, and arranged for a
-percentage on succeeding editions. He went on with the next book at
-once. Now as it happened, curiously enough, there was no second
-edition of "The Flower" called for, and this so disheartened poor
-Maitland that he sold his two next novels outright for the usual sum.
-
-One day when I was with him he spoke of the bad luck of "The Flower,"
-which seemed to him almost inexplicable. It was so very unlucky that
-it had not done well, for the loss of the extra ten pounds was not
-easy for him to get over in his perpetual and grinding poverty. When
-we had discussed the matter he determined to ask the firm what they
-would give him for all further rights in the book. He did this, and
-they were kind enough to pay the sum of ten pounds for them, making
-up the old price of fifty pounds for the whole book. Then, by one of
-those chances which only business men are capable of thoroughly
-appreciating, a demand suddenly sprang up for the story and the
-publishers were enabled to bring out a new edition at once. Some
-time later it went into a third edition, and, I believe, even into a
-fourth. Now it will hardly be credited that Maitland was very sore
-about this, for he was usually a very just man; and when I suggested,
-for the hundredth time but now at the psychological moment, that the
-firm of Bent and Butler who were then publishing for me, might give
-him very good terms, he actually had the courage to leave his own
-publishers, and never went back to them.
-
-I have insisted time and again upon Maitland's weakness and his
-inability to move. Nothing, I believe, but a sense of rankling
-injustice would have made him move. I had been trying for three
-years to get him to go to my publishing friends, and I have heard his
-conduct in the matter described as obstinacy. But to speak truly it
-was sheer weakness and nervousness. The older firm at any rate gave
-him fifty pounds for a book, and they were wealthy people, likely to
-last. My own friends were new men, and although they gave him a
-hundred pounds on account of increasing royalties, it was conceivably
-possible that they might be a failure and presently go out of
-business. His notion was that the firm he had left would then refuse
-to have anything more to do with him, that he would get no other firm
-to publish his work, and that he would be thrown back into the ditch
-from which he had crawled with so much difficulty. It is an odd
-comment on himself where he makes one man say to another in
-"Paternoster Row": "You are the kind of man who is roused by
-necessity. I am overcome by it. My nature is feeble and luxurious.
-I never in my life encountered and overcame a practical difficulty."
-He spoke afterwards somewhat too bitterly of his earlier publishing
-experiences, and was never tired of quoting Mrs. Gaskell to show how
-Charlotte Brontë had fared.
-
-In "The Meditations" he says: "Think of that grey, pinched life, the
-latter years of which would have been so brightened had Charlotte
-Brontë received but, let us say, one-third of what, in the same space
-of time, the publisher gained by her books. I know all about this;
-alas! no man better." There was no subject on which he was more
-bitterly vocal. Mr. Jones-Brown, the senior partner of Messrs.
-Miller and Company, I knew myself, for after I wrote "The Wake of the
-Sun," it was read by Glass and sold to them for fifty pounds. When
-this bargain was finally struck Mr. Jones-Brown said to me: "Now, Mr.
-H., as the business is all done, would you mind telling me quite
-frankly to what extent this book of yours is true?" I replied: "It
-is as true in every detail as it can possibly be." "Then you mean to
-say," he asked, "that you actually did starve as you relate?" I
-said: "Certainly I did, and I might have made it a deal blacker if I
-had chosen." He fell into a momentary silent reverie and shaking his
-head, murmured: "Ah, hunger is a dreadful thing;--I once went without
-dinner myself!" This was a favourite story of Henry Maitland's. It
-was so characteristic of the class he chiefly loathed. Those who
-have gathered by now what his satiric and ironic tendencies were, can
-imagine his bitter, and at the same time uproariously jocular
-comments on such a statement. For he was the man who had stood
-cursing outside a cookshop without even a penny to satisfy his raging
-hunger, as he truly relates under cover of "The Meditations."
-
-It is an odd, and perhaps even remarkable fact, that the man who had
-suffered in this way, and was so wonderfully conscious of the
-absurdities and monstrosities of our present social system, working
-by the pressure of mere economics, should have regarded all kinds of
-reform not merely without hope, but with an actual terror. He had
-once, as he owned, been touched by Socialism, probably of a purely
-academic kind; and yet, when he was afterwards withdrawn from such
-stimuli as had influenced him to think for once in terms of
-sociology, he went back to his more natural depairing conservative
-frame of mind. He lived in the past, and was conscious every day
-that something in the past that he loved was dying and must vanish.
-No form of future civilisation, whatever it might be, which was
-gained by means implying the destruction of what he chiefly loved,
-could ever appeal to him. He was not even able to believe that the
-gross and partial education of the populace was better than no
-education at all, in that it must some day inevitably lead to better
-education and a finer type of society. It was for that reason that
-he was a Conservative. But he was the kind of Conservative who would
-now be repudiated by those who call themselves such, except perhaps
-in some belated and befogged country house.
-
-A non-combative Tory seems a contradiction in words, but Maitland's
-loathing of disturbance in any form, or of any solution of any
-question by means other than the criticism of the Pure Reason, was
-most extreme. As for his feelings towards the Empire and all that it
-implied, that is best put in a few words he wrote to me about my
-novel "In the Sun": "Yes, this is good, but you know that I loathe
-the Empire, and that India and Africa are abomination to me." To
-anticipate as I tell his story I may quote again on the same point
-from a letter written to me in later years when he was in Paris: "I
-am very seriously thinking of trying to send my boy to some part of
-the world where there is at least a chance of his growing up an
-honest farmer without obvious risk of his having to face the slavery
-of military service. I would greatly rather never see him again than
-foresee his marching in ranks; butchering, or to be butchered."
-
-This implies, of course, as I have said before, that he failed for
-ever to grasp the world as it was. He clung passionately and with
-revolt to his own ideas of what it ought to be, and protested with a
-curious feeble violence against the actual world as he would not see
-it. It is a wonder that he did any work at all. If he had had fifty
-pounds a year of his own he would have retreated into a cottage and
-asphyxiated himself with books.
-
-I have often thought that the most painful thing in all his work was
-what he insisted on so often in "Paternoster Row" with regard to the
-poor novelist there depicted. The man was always destroying
-commenced work. Once he speaks about "writing a page or two of
-manuscript daily, with several holocausts to retard him." Within my
-certain knowledge this happened scores of times to Maitland. He
-destroyed a quarter of a volume, half a volume, three quarters of a
-volume, a whole volume, and even more, time and time again. He did
-this, to my mind, because he fancied nervously that he must write,
-that he had to write, and began without adequate preparation. It
-became absolutely tragic, for he commenced work knowing that he would
-destroy it, and knowing the pain such destruction would cost him,
-when a little rest might have enabled him to begin cheerfully with a
-fresh mind. I used to suggest this to him, but it was entirely
-useless. He would begin, and destroy, and begin again, and then only
-partially satisfy himself at last when he was in a state of financial
-desperation, with the ditch or the workhouse in front of him.
-
-In this he never seemed to learn by experience. It was a curious
-futility, which was all the odder because he was so peculiarly
-conscious of a certain kind of futility exhibited by our friend
-Schmidt. He used to write to Maitland at least a dozen times a year
-from Potsdam. These letters were all almost invariably read to me.
-They afforded Maitland extraordinary amusement and real pleasure, and
-yet great pain. Schmidt used to begin the letter with something like
-this: "I have been spending the last month or two in deep meditation
-on the work which it lies in my power to do. I have now discovered
-that I was not meant to write fiction. I am therefore putting it
-resolutely aside, and am turning to history, to which I shall
-henceforward devote my life." About two months later Maitland would
-read me a portion of a letter which began: "I have been much troubled
-these last two months, and have been considering my own position and
-my own endowments with the greatest interest. I find that I have
-been mistaken in thinking that I had any powers which would enable me
-to write history in a satisfactory manner. I see that I am
-essentially a philosopher. Henceforth I shall devote myself to
-philosophy." Again, a month or two after, there would come a letter
-from him, making another statement as if he had never made one
-before: "I am glad to say that I have at last discovered my own line.
-After much thought I am putting aside philosophy. Henceforward I
-devote myself to fiction." This kind of thing occurred not once but
-twenty or thirty times, and the German for ever wrote as if he had
-never written anything before with regard to his own powers and
-capabilities. One is reminded forcibly of a similar case in England,
-that of J.K. Stephen.
-
-As I have been speaking of "Paternoster Row," it is very interesting
-to observe that Maitland was frequently writing most directly of
-himself in that book. It is curious that in this, one of his most
-successful novels, he should have recognised his own real
-limitations. He says that "no native impulse had directed him to
-novel-writing. His intellectual temper was that of the student, the
-scholar, but strongly blended with a love of independence which had
-always made him think with detestation of a teacher's life." He goes
-on to speak of the stories which his hero wrote, "scraps of immature
-psychology, the last thing a magazine would accept from an unknown
-man." It may be that he was thinking here of some of his own short
-stories, for which I was truly responsible. Year after year I
-suggested that he should do some, as they were, on the whole, the
-easiest way of making a little money. Naturally I had amazing
-trouble with him because it was a new line, but I returned to the
-charge in season and out of season, every Sunday and every week-day
-that I saw him, and every time I wrote. We were both perfectly
-conscious that he had not the art of writing dramatic short stories
-which were essentially popular. There is no doubt that he did not
-possess this faculty. When one goes through his shorter work one
-discovers few indeed which are stories or properly related to the
-_conte_. They are, indeed, often scraps of psychology, sometimes
-perhaps a little crude, but the crudeness is mostly in the
-construction. They are in fact rather possible passages from a book
-than short stories. Nevertheless he did fairly well with these when
-he worked with an agent, which he did finally and at last on
-continued pressure from me. I notice, however, that in his published
-volumes of short stories there are several missing which I should
-like to see again. I do not know whether they are good, but two or
-three that I remember vaguely were published, I believe, in the old
-"Temple Bar." One was a story about a donkey, which I entirely
-forget, and another was called "Mr. Why." It was about a poor man,
-not wholly sane, who lived in one room and left all that that room
-contained to some one else upon his death. On casual search it
-seemed that the room contained nothing, but the heir or heiress
-discovered at last on the top of an old cupboard Why's name written
-large in piled half-crowns.
-
-It may have been noticed by some that he spoke in the little
-"Gillman" set of verses which I have quoted, of "Hendersonian bores."
-This perhaps requires comment. For one who loved his Rabelais and
-the free-spoken classics of our own tongue, Maitland had an extreme
-purity of thought and speech, a thing which one might not, in some
-ways, have looked for. No one, I think, would have dared to tell him
-a gross story, which did not possess remarkable wit or literary
-merit, more than once. His reception of such tales was never
-cordial, and I remember his peculiar and astounding indignation at
-one incident. Somehow or another he had become acquainted with an
-East End clergyman named Henderson. This Henderson had, I believe,
-read "The Under World," or one of the books dealing with the kind of
-parishioner that he was acquainted with, and had written to Maitland.
-In a way they became friends, or at any rate acquaintances, for the
-clergyman too was a peculiarly lonely man. He occasionally came to
-7K, and I myself met him there. He was a man wholly misplaced, in
-fact he was an absolute atheist. Still, he had a cure of souls
-somewhere the other side of the Tower, and laboured, as I understood,
-not unfaithfully. He frequently discussed his mental point of view
-with Maitland and often used to write to him. By some native kink in
-his mind he used to put into these letters indecent words. I suppose
-he thought it was a mere outspoken literary habit. As a matter of
-fact this enraged Maitland so furiously that he brought the letters
-to me, and showing them demanded my opinion as to what he should do.
-He said: "This kind of conduct is outrageous! What am I to do about
-it?" Now, it never occurred to Maitland in a matter like this, or
-indeed in any matter, to be absolutely outspoken and straightforward.
-He was always so afraid of hurting people's feelings. I said: "It is
-perfectly obvious what to do. My good man, if you don't like it,
-write and tell him that you don't." This was to him a perfectly
-impossible solution of a very great difficulty. How it was solved I
-do not exactly remember, but I do know that we afterwards saw very
-little of Mr. Henderson, who is embalmed, like a poor fly, in the
-"Gillman" poem.
-
-It was characteristic, and one of the causes of his continued
-disastrous troubles, that Maitland was incapable of being abruptly or
-strenuously straightforward. A direct "No," or "This shall not be
-done," seemed to him, no doubt, to invite argument and struggle, the
-one thing he invariably procured for himself by invariably avoiding
-it.
-
-"Paternoster Row," was written, if I remember rightly, partly in
-1890, and finished in 1891, in which year it was published. It is an
-odd thing to think of that he was married to his second wife in March
-1891, shortly before this book came out. In the third volume there
-is practically a strange and bitter, and very remarkable, forecast of
-the result of that marriage, showing that whilst Maitland's instincts
-and impulses ran away with him, his intellect was yet clear and cold.
-It is the passage where the hero suggests that he should have married
-some simple, kind-hearted work-girl. He says, "We should have lived
-in a couple of poor rooms somewhere, and--we should have loved each
-other." Whereupon Gifford--here Maitland's intellect--exclaims upon
-him for a shameless idealist, and sketches, most truly the likely
-issue of such a marriage, given Maitland or Reardon. He says: "To
-begin with, the girl would have married you in firm persuasion that
-you were a 'gentleman' in temporary difficulties, and that before
-long you would have plenty of money to dispose of. Disappointed in
-this hope, she would have grown sharp-tempered, querulous, selfish.
-All your endeavours to make her understand you would only have
-resulted in widening the impassable gulf. She would have
-misconstrued your every sentence, found food for suspicion in every
-harmless joke, tormented you with the vulgarest forms of jealousy.
-The effect upon your nature would have been degrading." Never was
-anything more true.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-Whatever kind of disaster his marriage was to be for Maitland, there
-is no doubt that it was for me also something in the nature of a
-catastrophe. There are marriages and marriages. By some of them a
-man's friend gains, and by others he loses, and they are the more
-frequent, for it is one of the curiosities of human life that a man
-rarely finds his friend's wife sympathetic. As it was, I knew that
-in a sense I had now lost Henry Maitland, or had partially lost him,
-to say the least of it. Unfair as it was to the woman, I felt very
-bitter against her, and he knew well what I felt. Thinking of her as
-I did, anything like free human intercourse with his new household
-would be impossible, unless, indeed, the affair turned out other than
-I expected. And then he had left London and gone to his beloved
-Devonshire. How much he loved it those who have read "The
-Meditations" can tell, for all that is said there about that county
-was very sincere, as I can vouch for. Born himself in a grim part of
-Yorkshire, and brought up in Mirefields and Moorhampton, that rainy
-and gloomy city of the north, he loved the sweet southern county.
-And yet it is curious to recognise what a strange passion was his for
-London. He had something of the same passion for it as Johnson had,
-although the centre of London for him was not Fleet Street but the
-British Museum and its great library. He wrote once to his doctor
-friend: "I dare not settle far from London, as it means ill-health to
-me to be out of reach of the literary 'world'--a small world enough,
-truly." But, of course, it was most extraordinarily his world. He
-was a natural bookworm compelled to spin fiction. And yet he did
-love the country, though he now found no peace there. With his wife
-peace was impossible, and this I soon learnt from little things that
-he wrote to me, though he was for the first few months of his
-marriage exceedingly delicate on this subject, as if he were willing
-to give her every possible chance. I was only down in Devonshire
-once while he was there with his wife. I went a little trip in a
-steamship to Dartmouth, entering its narrow and somewhat hazardous
-harbour in the middle of the great blizzard which that year
-overwhelmed the south of England, and especially the south of Devon,
-in the heaviest snow drifts. When I did at last get away from
-Dartmouth, I found things obviously not all they should be, though
-very little was said about it between us. I remember we went out for
-a walk together, going through paths cut in snow drifts twelve or
-even fifteen feet in depth. Though such things had been a common
-part of some of my own experiences they were wonderfully new to
-Maitland, and made him for a time curiously exhilarated. I did not
-stay long in Devon, nor, as a matter of fact, did he. For though he
-had gone there meaning to settle, he found the lack of the British
-Museum and his literary world too much for him, and besides that his
-wife, a girl of the London streets and squares, loathed the country,
-and whined in her characteristic manner about its infinite dulness.
-Thus it was that he soon left the west and took a small house in
-Ewell, about which he wrote me constant jeremiads.
-
-He believed, with no rare ignorance, as those who are acquainted with
-the methods of the old cathedral builders will know, that all honest
-work had been done of old, that all old builders were honourable men,
-and that modern work was essentially unsound. He had never learned
-that the first question the instructed ask the attendant verger on
-entering a cathedral is: "When did the tower fall down?" It rarely
-happens that one is not instantly given a date, not always very long
-after that particular tower was completed. I remember that it
-annoyed him very much when I proved to him by documentary evidence
-that a great portion of the work in Peterborough Cathedral was of the
-most shocking and scandalous description. Nevertheless these facts
-do not excuse the modern jerry-builder, and the condition of his
-house was one, though only one, of the perpetual annoyances he had to
-encounter.
-
-But, after all, though pipes break and the roof leaks, that is
-nothing if peace dwells in a house. There could be no peace in
-Maitland's house, for his wife had neither peace nor any
-understanding. Naturally enough she was an uneducated woman. She
-had read nothing but what such people read. It is true she did not
-speak badly. For some reason which I cannot understand she was not
-wholly without aspirates. Nevertheless many of her locutions were
-vulgar, and she had no natural refinement. This, I am sure, would
-have mattered little, and perhaps nothing, if she had been a simple
-housewife, some actual creature of the kitchen like Rousseau's
-Thérèse. As I have said, I think that Maitland was really incapable
-of a great passion, and I am sure that he would have put up with the
-merest haus-frau, if she had known her work and possessed her patient
-soul in quiet without any lamentations. If there was any lamenting
-to be done Maitland himself might have done it in choice terms not
-without humour. And indeed he did lament, and not without cause. On
-my first visit to Ewell after his return from Devon I again met Mrs.
-Maitland. She made me exceedingly uneasy, both personally, as I had
-no sympathy for her, and also out of fear for his future. It did not
-take me long to discover that they were then living on the verge of a
-daily quarrel, that a dispute was for ever imminent, and that she
-frequently broke out into actual violence and the smashing of
-crockery. While I was with them she perpetually made whining and
-complaining remarks to me about him in his very presence. She said:
-"Henry does not like the way I do this, or the way I say that." She
-asked thus for my sympathy, casting bitter looks at her husband. On
-one occasion she even abused him to my face, and afterwards I heard
-her anger in the passage outside, so that I actually hated her and
-found it very hard to be civil.
-
-By this time I had established a habit of never spending any time in
-the company of folks who neither pleased nor interested me. I
-commend this custom to any one who has any work to do in the world.
-Thus my forthcoming refusal to see any more of her was anticipated by
-Maitland, who had a powerful intuition of the feelings I entertained
-for his wife. In fact, things soon became so bad that he found it
-necessary to speak to me on the subject, as it was soon nearly
-impossible for any one to enter his house for fear of an exhibition
-of rage, or even of possible incivility to the guest himself. As he
-said, she developed the temper of a devil, and began to make his life
-not less wretched, though it was in another way, than the poor
-creature had done who was now in her grave. Naturally, however, as
-we had been together so much, I could not and would not give up
-seeing him. But we had to meet at the station, and going to the
-hotel would sit in the smoking-room to have our talk. These talks
-were now not wholly of books or of our work, but often of his
-miseries. One day when I found him especially depressed he
-complained that it was almost impossible for him to get sufficient
-peace to do any of his work. On hearing this the notion came to me
-that, though I had been unable to prevent him marrying this woman, I
-might at any rate make the suggestion that he should take his courage
-in both his hands and leave her. But I was in no hurry to put this
-into his head so long as there seemed any possibility of some kind of
-peace being established. However, she grew worse daily, or so I
-heard, and at last I spoke.
-
-He answered my proposal in accents of despair, and I found that he
-was now expecting within a few months his first child's birth. Under
-many conditions this might have been a joy to him, but now it was no
-joy. And yet there was, he said, some possibility that after this
-event things might improve. I recognised such a possibility without
-much hope of its ever becoming a reality. Indeed it was a vain hope.
-It is true enough that for a time, the month or so while she was
-still weak after childbirth, she was unable to be actively offensive;
-but, honestly, I think the only time he had any peace was before she
-was able to get up and move about the house. During the last weeks
-of her convalescence she vented her temper and exercised her uncivil
-tongue upon the nurses, more than one of whom left the house, finding
-it impossible to stay with her. However he was at any rate more or
-less at peace in his own writing room during this period. When she
-again became well I gathered the real state of the case from him both
-from letters and conversations, and I saw that eventually he would
-and must leave her. Knowing him as I did, I was aware that there
-would be infinite trouble, pain, and worry before this was
-accomplished, and yet the symptoms of the whole situation pointed out
-the inevitable end. I had not the slightest remorse in doing my best
-to bring this about, but in those days I had trouble enough of my own
-upon my shoulders, and found it impossible to see him so often as I
-wished; especially as a visit from me, or from anybody else, always
-meant the loss of a day's work to him. Yet I know that he bore ten
-thousand times more than I myself would have borne in similar
-circumstances, and I shall give a wrong impression of him if any one
-thinks that most of his complaints and confessions were not dragged
-out of him by me. He did not always complain readily, but one saw
-the trouble in his eyes. Yet now it became evident that he would and
-must revolt at last. It grew so clear at last, that I wanted him to
-do it at once and save himself years of misery, but to act like that,
-not wholly out of pressing and urgent necessity but out of wisdom and
-foresight, was wholly beyond Henry Maitland.
-
-It was in such conditions that the child was born and spent the first
-months of its life. Those who have read his books, and have seen the
-painful paternal interest he has more than once depicted, will
-understand how bitterly he felt that his child, the human being for
-whose existence he was responsible, should be brought up in such
-conditions by a mother whose temper and conduct suggested almost
-actual madness. He wrote to me: "My dire need at present is for a
-holiday. It is five years since I had a real rest from writing, and
-I begin to feel worn out. It is not only the fatigue of inventing
-and writing; at the same time I keep house and bring up the boy, and
-the strain, I can assure you, is rather severe. What I am now trying
-to do is to accumulate money enough to allow of my resting, at all
-events from this ceaseless production, for half a year or so. It
-profits me nothing to feel that there is a market for my work, if the
-work itself tells so severely upon me. Before long I shall really be
-unable to write at all. I am trying to get a few short stories done,
-but the effort is fearful. The worst of it is, I cannot get away by
-myself. It makes me very uncomfortable to leave the house, even for
-a day. I foresee that until the boy is several years older there
-will be no possibility of freedom for me. Of one thing I have very
-seriously thought, and that is whether it would be possible to give
-up housekeeping altogether, and settle as boarders in some family on
-the Continent. The servant question is awful, and this might be an
-escape from it, but of course there are objections. I might find all
-my difficulties doubled."
-
-I do not think that this letter requires much comment or
-illustration. Although it is written soberly enough, and without
-actual accusation, its meaning is as plain as daylight. His wife was
-alternately too familiar, or at open hostility with the servant; none
-could endure her temper. She complained to him, or the servant
-complained to him, and he had to make peace, or to try to make
-it--mostly in vain. And then the quarrel broke out anew, and the
-servant left. The result was that Maitland himself often did the
-household work when he should have been writing. He was dragged away
-from his ordinary tasks by an uproar in the kitchen; or perhaps one
-or both of the angry women came to him for arbitration about some
-point of common decency. There is a phrase of his in "The
-Meditations" which speaks of poor Hooker, whose prose he so much
-admired, being "vixen-haunted." This epithet of his is a reasonable
-and admirable one, but how bitter it was few know so well as myself.
-
-In this place it does not seem to me unnatural or out of place to
-comment a little on Raymond, the chief character in "The Vortex." He
-was undoubtedly in a measure the later Maitland. His idea was to
-present a man whose character developed with somewhat undue slowness.
-He said that Raymond would probably never have developed at all after
-a certain stage but for the curious changes wrought in his views and
-sentiments by the fact of his becoming a father. Of course it must
-be obvious to any one, from what I have said, that Maitland himself
-would never have remained so long with his second wife after the
-first few months if it had not been that she was about to become a
-mother. The earlier passages in "The Vortex" where he speaks about
-children, or where Raymond himself speaks about them, are meant to
-contrast strongly with his way of thinking in the later part of the
-book when this particular character had children of his own. The
-author declared that Raymond, as a bachelor, was largely an egoist.
-Of course the truth of the matter is that Maitland himself was
-essentially an egoist. I once suggested to him that he came near
-being a solipsist, a word he probably had never heard of till then,
-as he never studied psychology, modern or otherwise. However, when
-Raymond grew riper in the experience which killed his crude egoism,
-he became another man. Maitland, in writing about this particular
-book, said: "That Raymond does nothing is natural to the man. The
-influences of the whirlpool--that is London--and its draught on the
-man's vitality embarrass any efficiency there might have been in
-him." Through the whole story of Maitland one feels that everything
-that was in any way hostile to his own views of life did essentially
-embarrass, and almost make impossible, anything that was in him. He
-had no strength to draw nutriment by main force from everything
-around him, as a strong man does. He was not so fierce a fire as to
-burn every kind of fuel.
-
-I remember in this connection a very interesting passage in Hamley's
-"Operations of War": "When a general surveying the map of the theatre
-finds direct obstacles in the path he must advance by, he sees in
-them, if he be confident of his skill in manoeuvring, increased
-opportunities for obtaining strategical successes ... in fact, like
-any other complications in a game, they offer on both sides
-additional opportunities to skill and talent, and additional
-embarrassments to incapacity." But then Maitland loathed and hated
-and feared obstacles of every kind. He was apt to sit down before
-them wringing his hands, and only desperation moved him, not to
-attack, but to elude them. It is an odd thing in this respect to
-note that he played no games, and despised them with peculiar vigour.
-There is a passage in one of his letters to Rivers about a certain
-Evans, mentioned with a note of exclamation, and thus kindly
-embalmed: "Evans, strange being! Yet, if his soul is satisfied with
-golf and bridge, why should he not go on golfing and bridging? At
-all events he is working his way to sincerity."
-
-The long letter I quoted from above was written, I believe, in 1895,
-when the boy was nearly three years old. I have not attempted, and
-shall not attempt, to give any detailed account month by month, or
-even year by year, of his domestic surroundings. It was a wonder to
-me that the marriage lasted, but still it did last, and all one knew
-was that some day it must come to an end. The record of his life in
-these days would be appalling if I remembered it sufficiently, or had
-kept a diary--as no doubt I ought to have done--or had all the
-documents which may be in existence dealing with that time. That he
-endured so many years was incredible, and still he did endure, and
-the time went on, and he worked; mostly, as he said to me, against
-time, and a good deal on commission. He wrote: "The old fervours do
-not return to me, and I have got into the very foolish habit of
-perpetually writing against time and to order. The end of this is
-destruction." But still I think he knew within him that it could not
-last. Had it not been for the boy, and, alas, for the birth of yet
-another son, he would now have left her. He acknowledged it to
-me--if he could not fight he would have to fly.
-
-This extraordinary lack of power to deal with any obstacle must seem
-strange to most men, though no doubt many are weak. Yet few are so
-weak as Maitland. Oddly enough I have heard the idea expressed that
-there was more power of fight in Maitland than he ever possessed, and
-on inquiry I have learned that this notion was founded on a partial,
-or perhaps complete misunderstanding of certain things he expressed
-in the latter part of "The Vortex." Towards the end of the book it
-seems to be suggested that Maitland, or Raymond, tended really
-towards what he calls in one of his letters a "barrack-room" view of
-life. Some people seem to think that the man who was capable of
-writing what he did in that book really meant it, and must have had a
-little touch of that native and natural brutality which makes
-Englishmen what they are. But Maitland himself, in commenting on
-this particular attitude of Raymond, declared that this quasi or
-semi-ironic imperialism of the man was nothing but his hopeless
-recognition of facts which filled him with disgust. The world was
-going in a certain way. There was no refusing to see it. It stared
-every one in the eyes. Then he adds: "But _what_ a course for things
-to take!"
-
-Raymond in fact talks with a little throwing up of the arm, and in a
-voice of quiet sarcasm, "Go ahead--I sit by and watch, and wonder
-what will be the end of it all." This was his own habit of mind in
-later years. He had come at last and at long last, to recognise a
-course of things which formerly he could not, or would not, perceive;
-and he recognised it with just that tossing of arm or head,
-involuntary of course. I do not think that at this time he would
-have seen a battalion of Guards go by and have turned to me saying:
-"And this, _this_ is the nineteenth century!" He once wrote to
-Rivers, what he had said a hundred times to me: "I have a conviction
-that all I love and believe in is going to the devil. At the same
-time I try to watch with interest this process of destruction,
-admiring any bit of sapper work that is well done." It is rather
-amusing to note that in the letter, written in the country, which
-puts these things most dolefully, he adds: "The life here shows
-little trace of vortical influence." Of course this is a reference
-to the whirlpool of London.
-
-In 1896 I was myself married, and went to live in a little house in
-Fulham. I understood what peace was, and he had none. As Maitland
-had not met my wife for some years I asked him to come and dine with
-us. It was not the least heavy portion of his burden that he always
-left his own house with anxiety and returned to it with fear and
-trembling. This woman of his home was given to violence, even with
-her own young children. It was possible, as he knew, for he often
-said so to me, that he might return and find even the baby badly
-injured. And yet at last he made up his mind to accept my
-invitation. Whether it was the fact that he had accepted one from
-me--and I often fancy that his wife had a grudge against me because I
-would not go to her house any more--I do not know, but when I met him
-in the hall of my own house I found him in the most extraordinary
-state of nervous and physical agitation. Though usually of a
-remarkable, if healthy, pallor, he was now almost crimson, and his
-eyes sparkled with furious indignation. He was hot, just as if he
-had come out of an actual physical struggle. What he must have
-looked like when he left Ewell I do not know, for he had had all the
-time necessary to travel from there to Fulham to cool down in. After
-we shook hands he asked me, almost breathlessly, to allow him to wash
-his face, so I took him into the bathroom. He removed his coat, and
-producing his elastic band from his waistcoat pocket, put it about
-his hair like a fillet, and began to wash his face in cold water. As
-he was drying himself he broke out suddenly: "I can't stand it any
-more. I have left her for ever." I said: "Thank heaven that you
-have. I am very glad of it--and for every one's sake don't go back
-on it."
-
-Whatever the immediate cause of this outburst was, it seems that that
-afternoon the whole trouble came to a culmination. The wife behaved
-like a maniac; she shrieked, and struck him. She abused him in the
-vilest terms, such as he could not or would not repeat to me. It was
-with the greatest difficulty that I at last got him calm enough to
-meet any one else. When he did calm down after he had had something
-to eat and a little to drink, the prospect of his freedom, which he
-believed had come to him once more, inspired him with pathetic and
-peculiar exhilaration. In one sense I think he was happy that night.
-He slept in London.
-
-I should have given a wholly false impression of Maitland if any one
-now imagined that I believed that the actual end had come to his
-marriage. No man knew his weakness better than I did, and I moved
-heaven and earth in my endeavours to keep him to his resolution, to
-prevent him going back to Epsom on any pretext, and all my efforts
-were vain. In three days I learned that his resolution had broken
-down. By the help of some busybody who had more kindness than
-intelligence, they patched up a miserable peace, and he went back to
-Ewell. And yet that peace was no peace. Maitland, perhaps the most
-sensitive man alive, had to endure the people in the neighbouring
-houses coming out upon the doorstep, eager to inquire what disaster
-was occurring in the next house. There were indeed legends in the
-Epsom Road that the mild looking writer beat and brutalised his wife,
-though most knew, by means of servants' chatter, what the actual
-facts were.
-
-It was in this year that he did at last take an important step which
-cost him much anxiety before putting it through. His fears for his
-eldest child were so extreme that he induced his people in the north
-to give the child a home--the influence and example of the mother he
-could no longer endure for the boy. His wife parted with the child
-without any great difficulty, though of course she made it an
-occasion for abusing her husband in every conceivable way. He wrote
-to me in the late summer of that year: "I much want to see you, but
-just now it is impossible for me to get to town, and the present
-discomfort of everything here forbids me to ask you to come. I am
-straining every nerve to get some work done, for really it begins to
-be a question whether I shall ever again finish a book.
-Interruptions are so frequent and so serious. The so-called holiday
-has been no use to me; a mere waste of time--but I was obliged to go,
-for only in that way could I have a few weeks with the boy who, as I
-have told you, lives now at Mirefields and will continue to live
-there. I shall never let him come back to my own dwelling. Have
-patience with me, old friend, for I am hard beset." He ends this
-letter with: "If the boy grows up in clean circumstances, that will
-be my one satisfaction."
-
-Whether he had peace or not he still worked prodigiously, though not
-perhaps for so many hours as was his earlier custom. But his health
-about this time began to fail. Much of this came from his habits of
-work, which were entirely incompatible with continued health of brain
-and body. He once said to Rivers: "Visitors--I fall sick with terror
-in thinking of them. If by rare chance any one comes here it means
-to me the loss of a whole day, a most serious matter." And his whole
-day was, of course, a long day. No man of letters can possibly sit
-for ever at the desk during eight hours, as was frequently "his brave
-custom" as he phrased it somewhere. If he had worked in a more
-reasonable manner, and had been satisfied with doing perhaps a
-thousand words a day, which is not at all an unreasonably small
-amount for a man who works steadily through most of the year, his
-health might never have broken down in the way it did. He had been
-moved in a way towards these hours, partly by actual desperation;
-partly by the great loneliness which had been thrust upon him; very
-largely by the want of money which prevented him from amusing himself
-in the manner of the average man, but chiefly by his sense of
-devotion to what he was doing. One of his favourite stories was that
-of Heyne, the great classical scholar, who was reported to work
-sixteen hours a day. This he did, according to the literary
-tradition, for the whole of his working life, except upon the day
-when he was married. He made, for that occasion only, a compact with
-the bride that he was to be allowed to work half his usual stint.
-And half Heyne's usual amount was Maitland's whole day, which I
-maintain was at least five hours too much. This manner of working,
-combined with his quintessential and habitual loneliness made it very
-hard, not only upon him, but also on his friends. It was quite
-impossible to see him, even about matters of comparative urgency,
-unless a meeting had been arranged beforehand. For even after his
-work was done, it was never done. He started preparing for the next
-day, turning over phrases in his mind, and considering the next
-chapter. I believe that in one point I was very useful to him in
-this matter, for I suggested to him, as I have done to others, that
-my own practice of finishing a chapter and then writing some two or
-three lines of the next one while my mind was warm upon the subject,
-was a vast help for the next day's labour.
-
-Now the way he worked was this. After breakfast, at nine o'clock, he
-sat down and worked till one. Then he had his midday meal, and took
-a little walk. In the afternoon, about half-past three, he sat down
-again and wrote till six o'clock or a little after. Then he worked
-again from half-past seven to ten. I very much doubt whether there
-is any modern writer who has ever tried to keep up work at this rate
-who did not end in a hospital or a lunatic asylum, or die young. To
-my mind it shows, in a way that nothing else can, that he had no
-earthly business to be writing novels and spinning things largely out
-of his subjective mind, when he ought to have been dealing with the
-objective world, or with books. I myself write with a certain amount
-of ease. It may, indeed, be difficult to start, but when a thing is
-begun I go straight ahead, writing steadily for an hour, or perhaps
-an hour and a half--rarely any more. I have then done my day's work,
-which is now very seldom more than two thousand words, although on
-one memorable occasion I actually wrote thirteen thousand words with
-the pen in ten hours. Maitland used to write three or four of his
-slips, as he called them, which were small quarto pages of very fine
-paper, and on each slip there were twelve hundred words. Whether he
-wrote one, or two, or three slips in the day he took an equal length
-of time.
-
-Among my notes I find one about a letter of his written in June 1895
-to Mrs. Lake, declining an invitation to visit Dr. Lake's house
-which, no doubt, would have done him a great deal of good. He says:
-"Let me put before you an appalling list of things that have to be
-done, (1) Serial story (only begun) of about eighty thousand words.
-(2) Short novel for Cassell's to be sent in by end of October.
-Neither begun nor thought of. (3) Six short stories for the _English
-Illustrated_--neither begun nor thought of. (4) Twenty papers for
-_The Sketch_ of a thousand words each. Dimly foreseen." Now to a
-man who had the natural gift of writing fiction and some reasonable
-time to do it in, this would seem no such enormous amount of work.
-For Maitland it was appalling, not so much, perhaps, on account of
-the actual amount of labour--if it had been one book--but for its
-variousness. He moved from one thing to another in fiction with
-great slowness.
-
-As I have said, his health was not satisfactory. I shall have
-something to say about this in detail a little later. It was his own
-opinion, and that of certain doctors, that his lung was really
-affected by tuberculosis. Of this I had then very serious doubts.
-But he wrote in January 1897: "The weather and my lung are keeping me
-indoors at present, but I should much like to come to you.
-Waterpipes freezing--a five-pound note every winter to the plumber.
-Of course this is distinctly contrived by the building fraternity."
-
-But things were not always as bad as may be gathered from a casual
-consideration of what I have said. In writing a life events come too
-thickly. For instance in 1897 he wrote to me: "Happily things are
-far from being as bad as last year." It appears that a certain lady,
-a Miss Greathead, about whom I really know nothing but what he told
-me, interested herself with the utmost kindness in his domestic
-affairs. He wrote to me: "Miss Greathead has been of very great use,
-and will continue to be so, I think. This house is to be given up in
-any case at Michaelmas, and another will not be taken till I see my
-way more clearly. Where I myself shall live during the autumn is
-uncertain. We must meet in the autumn. Work on--I have plans for
-seven books."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-What dismal catastrophe or prolonged domestic uproar led to the final
-end of his married life in 1897 I do not know. Nor have I cared to
-inquire very curiously. The fact remains, and it was inevitable.
-Towards the end of the summer he made up his mind to go to Italy in
-September. He wrote to me: "All work in England is at an end for me
-just now. I shall be away till next spring--looking forward with
-immense delight to solitude. Of course I have a great deal to do as
-soon as I can settle, which I think will be at Siena first." As a
-matter of fact the very next letter of his which I possess came to me
-from Siena. He said: "I am so confoundedly hard at work upon the
-Novelists book that I find it very difficult to write my letters.
-Thank heaven, more than half is done. I shall go south about the
-tenth of November. It is dull here, and I should not stay for the
-pleasure of it. You know that I do not care much for Tuscany. The
-landscape is never striking about here, and one does not get the
-glorious colour of the south." So one sees how Italy had awakened
-his colour sense. As I have said, it was after his first visit to
-Italy that I noted, both in his books and his conversation, an acute
-awakening passion for colour. I think it grew in him to the end of
-his life. He ended this last letter to me with: "Well, well, let us
-get as soon as possible into Magna Graecia and the old dead world."
-
-I said some time ago that I had finished all I had to write about the
-Victorian novelists, and yet I find there is something still to say
-of Dickens, and it is not against the plan of such a rambling book as
-this to put it down here and now. When he went to Siena to write his
-book of criticism it seemed to me a very odd choice of a place for
-such a piece of work, and indeed I wondered at his undertaking it at
-any price. It is quite obvious to all those who really understand
-his attitude towards criticism of modern things that great as his
-interest was in Dickens it would never have impelled him to write a
-strong, rough, critical book mostly about him had it not been for the
-necessity of making money. Indeed he expressed so much to me, and I
-find again in a letter that he wrote to Mrs. Rivers, with whom he was
-now on very friendly terms, "I have made a good beginning with my
-critical book, and long to have done with it, for of course it is an
-alien subject." No doubt there are at least two classes of
-Maitland's readers, those who understand the man and love his really
-characteristic work, and those who have no understanding of him at
-all, or any deep appreciation, but probably profess a great
-admiration for this book which they judge by the part on Dickens. I
-think that Andrew Lang was one of these, judging from a criticism
-that he once wrote on Maitland. I know that I have often heard
-people of intelligence express so high an opinion of the "Victorian
-Novelists" as to imply a lack of appreciation of his other work. The
-study is no doubt written with much skill, and with a good writer's
-command of his subject, and command of himself. That is to say, he
-manages by skill to make people believe he was sufficiently
-interested in his subject to write about it. To speak plainly he
-thought it a pure waste of time, except from the mere financial point
-of view, just as he did his cutting down of Mayhew's "Life of
-Dickens"--which, indeed, he considered a gross outrage, but professed
-his inability to refuse the "debauched temptation" of the hundred and
-fifty pounds offered him for the work.
-
-It would be untrue if I seemed to suggest that he was not
-enthusiastic about Dickens, even more so than I am myself save at
-certain times and seasons. For me Dickens is a man for times and
-periods. I cannot read him for years, and then I read him all. What
-I do mean is that Maitland's love of this author, or of Thackeray,
-say, would never have impelled him to write. Yet there is much in
-the book which is of great interest, if it were only as matter of
-comment on Maitland's own self. The other day I came across one
-sentence which struck me curiously. It was where Maitland asked the
-reader to imagine Charles Dickens occupied in the blacking warehouse
-for ten years. He said: "Picture him striving vainly to find
-utterance for the thoughts that were in him, refused the society of
-any but boors and rascals, making perhaps futile attempts to succeed
-as an actor, and in full manhood measuring the abyss which sundered
-him from all he had hoped." When I came to the passage I put the
-book down and pondered for a while, knowing well that as Maitland
-wrote these words he was thinking even more of himself than of
-Dickens, and knowing that what was not true of his subject was most
-bitterly true of the writer. There is another passage somewhere in
-the book in which he says that Dickens could not have struggled for
-long years against lack of appreciation. This he rightly puts down
-to Dickens' essentially dramatic leanings. The man needed immediate
-applause. But again Maitland was thinking of himself, for he had
-indeed struggled many years without any appreciation save that of one
-or two friends and some rare birds among the public. I sometimes
-think that one of Maitland's great attractions to Dickens lay in the
-fact, which he himself mentions and enlarges on, that Dickens treated
-of the lower middle class and the class immediately beneath it. This
-is where the great novelist was at his best, and in the same way
-these were the only classes that Maitland really knew well. There is
-in several things a curious likeness between Dickens and Maitland,
-though it lies not on the surface. He says that Dickens never had
-any command of a situation although he was so very strong in
-incident. This was also a great weakness of Henry Maitland. It
-rarely happens that he works out a powerful and dramatic situation to
-its final limits, though sometimes he does succeed in doing so. This
-failure in dealing with great situations is peculiarly characteristic
-of most English novelists. I have frequently noticed in otherwise
-admirable books by men of very considerable abilities and
-attainments, with tolerable command of their own language, that they
-have on every occasion shirked the great dramatic scene just when it
-was expected and needed. Perhaps this is due to the peculiar
-_mauvaise honte_ of the English mind. To write, and yet not to give
-oneself away, seems to be the aim of too many writers, though the
-great aim of all great writing is to do, or to try to do, what they
-avoid. The final analysis of dreadful passion and pain comes,
-perhaps, too close to them. They feel the glow but also a sensation
-of shame in the great emotions. There are times that Maitland felt
-this, though perhaps unconsciously. It is at any rate certain that,
-like so many people, he never actually depicted with blood and tears
-the frightful situations in which his life was so extraordinarily
-full.
-
-It is an interesting passage in this book in which Maitland declares
-that great popularity was never yet attained by any one deliberately
-writing down to a low ideal. Above all men he knew that the artist
-was necessarily sincere, however poor an artist he might be. So
-Rousseau in his "Confessions" asserts that nothing really great can
-come from an entirely venal pen. I remember Maitland greatly enjoyed
-a story I told him about myself. While I was still a
-poverty-stricken and struggling writer my father, who had no
-knowledge whatever of the artistic temperament, although he had a
-very great appreciation of the best literature of the past, came to
-me and said seriously: "My boy, if you want money and I know you do,
-why do you not write 'Bow Bells Novelettes'? They will give you
-fifteen pounds for each of them." I replied to him, not I think
-without a tinge of bitterness at being so misunderstood: "My dear
-sir, it is as much a matter of natural endowment to be a damned fool
-as to be a great genius, and I am neither."
-
-I have said that Maitland was most essentially a conservative, indeed
-in many ways a reactionary, if one so passive can be called that. I
-think the only actual revolutionary utterance of his mind which
-stands on record is in the "Victorian Novelists." It is when he is
-speaking of Mr. Casby of the shorn locks. He wrote: "This question
-of landlordism should have been treated by Dickens on a larger scale.
-It remains one of the curses of English life, and is likely to do so
-till the victims of house-owners see their way to cutting, not the
-hair, but the throats, of a few selected specimens."
-
-It may seem a hard thing to say, but it is a fact, that any
-revolutionary sentiment there was in Maitland was excited, not by any
-native liberalism of his mind, or even by his sympathy for the
-suffering of others, but came directly out of his own personal
-miseries and trials. He had had to do with landlords who refused to
-repair their houses, and with houses which he looked upon as the
-result of direct and wicked conspiracy between builders and plumbers.
-But his words are capable of a wider interpretation than he might
-have given them.
-
-If I had indeed been satisfied that this departure of Maitland's to
-Italy had meant the end of all the personal troubles of his marriage,
-I should have been highly satisfied, and not displeased with any part
-I might have taken in bringing about so desirable a result. But I
-must say that, knowing him as I did, I had very serious doubts. I
-was well aware of what a little pleading might do with him. It was
-in fact possible that one plaintive letter from his wife might have
-brought him back again. Fortunately it was never written. The woman
-was even then practically mad, and though immensely difficult to
-manage by those friends, such as Miss Greathead and Miss Kingdon, who
-interested themselves in his affairs and did much more for him at
-critical times than I had been able to do, she never, I think,
-appealed to her husband. But it was extraordinary, before he went to
-Italy, to observe the waverings of his mind. When he was keeping his
-eldest boy at Mirefields, supplying his wife with money for the house
-and living in lodgings at Salcombe, he wrote giving a rough account
-of what he might do, or might have to do, and ended up by saying:
-"Already, lodgings are telling on my nerves. I almost think I suffer
-less even from yells and insults in a house of my own." He even
-began to forget "the fifth-rate dabblers in the British gravy," for
-which fine phrase T.E. Brown is responsible. Maitland ought to have
-known it and did not. It was this perpetual wavering and weakness in
-him which perplexed his friends, and would indeed have alienated at
-last very many of them had it not been for the enduring charm in all
-his weakness. Nevertheless he was now out of England, and those who
-knew him were glad to think it was so. He was, perhaps, to have a
-better time. Nevertheless, even so, he wrote to his friend Lake:
-"Yes, it is true that I am going to glorious scenes, but do not
-forget that I go with much anxiety in my mind--anxiety about the
-little children, the chances of life and death, &c., &c. It is not
-like my Italian travel eight years ago, when--save for cash--I was
-independent. I have to make a good two hundred a year apart from my
-own living and casual expenses. If I live I think I shall do it--but
-there's no occasion for merriment." Yet if it was no occasion for
-mere merriment it was an occasion for joy. He knew it well, and so
-did those know who understand the description that Maitland gave in
-"Paternoster Row," of the sunset at Athens. It is very wonderfully
-painted, and as he describes it he makes Gifford say: "Stop, or I
-shall clutch you by the throat. I warned you before that I cannot
-stand these reminiscences." And this reminds me that when I wrote to
-him once from Naples, he replied: "You fill me with envious gloom."
-But now, when he had finished his pot-boiler of Siena, he was going
-south to Naples, his "most interesting city of the modern world," and
-afterwards farther south to the Calabrian Hills, and the old dead
-world of Magna Graecia.
-
-As a result of that journey he gave us "Magna Graecia." This book of
-itself is a sufficient proof that he was by nature a scholar, an
-inhabitant of the very old world, a discoverer of the time of the
-Renaissance, a Humanist, a pure man of letters, and not by nature a
-writer of novels or romances. Although Maitland's scholarship was
-rather wide than deep save in one or two lines of investigation, yet
-his feeling for all those matters with which a sympathetic
-scholarship can deal was amazingly deep and true. Once in Calabria
-and the south he made and would make great discoveries. In spite of
-his poverty, which comes out so often in the description of his
-conditions upon this journey, he loved everything he found there with
-a strange and wonderful and almost pathetic passion. I remember on
-his return how he talked to me of the far south, and of his studies
-in Cassiodorus. One incident in "Magna Graecia," which is related
-somewhat differently from what he himself told me at the time,
-pleased him most especially. It was when he met two men and
-mentioned the name of Cassiodorus, whereupon they burst out with
-amazement, "Cassiodoria, why we know Cassiodoria!" That the name
-should be yet familiar to these live men of the south gratified his
-historic sense amazingly, and I can well remember how he threw his
-head back and shook his long hair with joy, and burst into one of his
-most characteristic roars of laughter. It was a simple incident, but
-it brought back the past to him.
-
-Of all his books I think I love best "Magna Graecia." I always liked
-it much better than "The Meditations of Mark Sumner," and for a
-thousand reasons. For one thing it is a wholly true book. In "The
-Meditations," he falsified, in the literary sense, very much that he
-wrote. As I have said, it needs to be read with a commentary or
-guide. But "Magna Graecia" is pure Maitland; it is absolutely
-himself. It is, indeed, very nearly the Maitland who might have been
-if ill luck had not pursued him from his boyhood. Had he been a
-successful man on the lines that fate pointed out to him; had he
-succeeded greatly--or nobly, as he would have said--at the
-University; had he become a tutor, a don, a notable man among men of
-letters, still would he have travelled in southern Italy, and made
-his great pilgrimage to the Fonte di Cassiodorio. Till he knew south
-Italy his greatest joy had been in books. That he loved books we all
-know. There, of a certainty, "The Meditations" is a true witness.
-But how much more he loved the past and the remains of Greece and
-old, old Italy, "Magna Graecia" proves to us almost with tears.
-
-I have said that Maitland was perhaps not a deep scholar, for
-scholarship nowadays must needs be specialised if it is to be deep.
-He had his odd prejudices, and hugged them. The hypothesis of Wolf
-concerning Homer visibly annoyed him. He preferred to think of the
-Iliad and the Odyssey as having been written by one man. This came
-out of his love of personality--the great ones of the past were as
-gods to him. All works of art, or books, or great events were wholly
-theirs, for they made even the world, and the world made them not.
-Though I know that he would have loved, in many ways, a book such as
-Gilbert Murray's "Rise of the Greek Epic," yet Murray's fatally
-decisive analysis of the Homeric legend would have pained him deeply.
-On one occasion I remember sending to him, partly as some reasonable
-ground for my own scepticism, but more, I think, out of some
-mischievous desire to plague him, a cleverly written pamphlet by a
-barrister which threw doubts upon the Shakespearean legend. He wrote
-to me: "I have read it with great indignation. Confound the
-fellow!--he disturbs me." But then he was essentially a
-conservative, and he lived in an alien time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-What he suffered, endured, and enjoyed in Magna Graecia and his old
-dead world, those know who have read with sympathy and understanding.
-It was truly as if the man, born in exile, had gone home at last--so
-much he loved it, so well he understood the old days. And now once
-more he came back to England to a happier life, even though great
-anxieties still weighed him down. Yet with some of these anxieties
-there was joy, for he loved his children and thought very much of
-them, hoping and fearing. One of the very first letters I received
-from him on his return from Italy is dated May 7, 1898, and was
-written from Henley in Arden: "You have it in your power to do me a
-most important service. Will you on every opportunity industriously
-circulate the news that I am going to live henceforth in
-Warwickshire? It is not strictly true, but a very great deal depends
-on my real abode being protected from invasion. If you could inspire
-a newspaper paragraph.... I should think it impudent to suppose that
-newspapers cared about the matter but that they have so often
-chronicled my movements, and if by any chance the truth got abroad it
-would mean endless inconvenience and misery to me. You shall hear
-more in detail when I am less be-devilled." All this requires little
-comment. Every one can understand how it was with him.
-
-Later in the year he wrote to me: "My behaviour is bestial, but I am
-so hard driven that it is perhaps excusable. All work impossible
-owing to ceaseless reports of mad behaviour in London. That woman
-was all but given in charge the other day for assaulting her landlady
-with a stick. My solicitor is endeavouring to get the child out of
-her hands. I fear its life is endangered, but of course the
-difficulty of coming to any sort of arrangement with such a person is
-very great.... Indeed I wish we could have met before your departure
-for South Africa. My only consolation is the thought that something
-or other decisive is bound to have happened before you come back, and
-then we will meet as in the old days, please heaven. As for me, my
-literary career is at an end, and the workhouse looms larger day by
-day. I should not care, of course, but for the boys. A bad job, a
-bad job." But better times were perhaps coming for him. The child
-that he refers to as still in the hands of his mother was his
-youngest boy. Much of his life at this time is lost to me because
-much happened while I was absent in South Africa, where I spent some
-months in travel. I remember it pleased him to get letters from me
-from far-off places such as Buluwayo. He always had the notion that
-I was an extraordinarily capable person, an idea which only had some
-real truth if my practical capacities were compared with his strange
-want of them. By now he was not living in Warwickshire; indeed, if I
-remember rightly, on my return from Africa I found him at Godalming.
-
-When I left Cape Town I was very seriously ill, and I remained ill
-for some months after my return home. Therefore it was some time
-till we met again. But when we did meet it was at Leatherhead, where
-he was in lodgings, pleased to be not very far from George Meredith,
-who indeed, I think, loved him. It was, of course, as I have said,
-through Maitland that I first met Meredith. For some reason which I
-do not know, Maitland gave him a volume of mine, "The Western Trail,"
-which the old writer was much pleased with. Indeed it was in
-consequence of his liking for that book that he asked me to dine with
-him just before I went to Africa. Maitland was not present at this
-dinner, he was then still in Warwickshire; but Meredith spoke very
-affectionately of him, and said many things not unpleasing about his
-work. But probably Meredith, like myself, thought more of the man
-than he did of his books, which is indeed from my point of view a
-considerable and proper tribute to any writer. Sometimes the work of
-a man is greater than himself, and it seems a pity when one meets
-him; but if a man is greater than what he does one may always expect
-more, and some day may get it. It was apropos of Maitland, in some
-way which I cannot exactly recall, that Meredith, who was in great
-form that night, and wonderful in monologue--as he always was, more
-especially after he became so deaf that it was hard to make him
-hear--told us an admirably characteristic story about two poor
-schoolboys. It appeared, said Meredith, that these two boys, who
-came of a clever but poverty-stricken house, did very badly at their
-school because they were underfed. As Meredith explained this want
-of food led to a poor circulation. What blood these poor boys had
-was required for the animal processes of living, and did not enable
-them to carry on the work of the brain in the way that it should have
-done. However, it one day happened that during play one of these
-boys was induced to stand upon his head, with the result that the
-blood naturally gravitated to that unaccustomed quarter. His ideas
-instantly became brilliant--so brilliant, indeed, that a great idea
-struck him. He resumed his feet, rushed home, and communicated his
-discovery to his brother, and henceforward they conducted their
-studies standing upon their heads, and became brilliant and visibly
-successful men. Of course it was a curious thing, though not so
-curious when one reflects on the nature of men who are really men of
-letters, that Meredith and Henry Maitland had one thing tremendously
-in common, their love of words. In my conversation with Meredith
-that day I mentioned the fact that I had read a certain interview
-with him. I asked him whether it conveyed his sentiments with any
-accuracy. He replied mournfully: "Yes, yes,--no doubt the poor
-fellow got down more or less what I meant, but he used none of my
-beautiful words, none of my beautiful words!"
-
-It does not seem unnatural to me to say something of George Meredith,
-since he had in many ways an influence on Maitland. Certainly when
-it came to the question of beautiful words they were on the same
-ground, if not on the same level. I myself have met during my
-literary life, and in some parts of the world where literature is
-little considered, many men who were reputed great, and indeed were
-great, it may be, in some special line, yet Meredith was the only man
-I ever knew to whom I would have allowed freely the word "great" the
-moment I met him, without any reservation. This I said to Maitland
-and he smiled, feeling that it was true. I remember he wrote to Lake
-about Meredith, saying: "You ought to read 'Richard Feverel,' 'Evan
-Harrington,' 'The Egoist,' and 'Diana of the Crossways.' These, in
-my opinion, are decidedly his best books, but you won't take up
-anything of his without finding strong work." And "strong work" with
-Maitland was very high praise indeed.
-
-By now, when he was once more in Surrey, we did not meet so
-infrequently as had been the case after his second marriage and
-before the separation. It is true that his living out of London made
-a difference. Still I now went down sometimes and stayed a day with
-him. We talked once more in something of our old manner about books
-and words, the life of men of letters, and literary origins or
-pedigrees, always a strong point in him. It was ever a great joy to
-Maitland when he discovered the influence of one writer upon another.
-For instance, it was he who pointed out to me first that Balzac was
-the literary parent of Murger, as none indeed can deny who have read
-the chapter in "Illusions Perdues" where Lucien Rubempré writes and
-sings the drinking song with tears in his eyes as he sits by the
-bedside of Coralie, his dead mistress. This he did, as will be
-remembered, to obtain by the sale of the song sufficient money to
-bury her. From that chapter undoubtedly sprang the whole of the "Vie
-de Bohème," though to it Murger added much, and not least his
-livelier sense of humour. Again, I well remember how Maitland took
-down Tennyson--ever a joy to him, because Tennyson was a master of
-words though he had little enough to say--and showed me the influence
-that the "Wisdom of Solomon," in the Apocrypha, had upon some of the
-last verses of "The Palace of Art." No doubt some will not see in a
-mere epithet or two that Solomon's words had any connection with the
-work of the Poet-Laureate, whom I nicknamed, somewhat to Maitland's
-irritation, "the bourgeois Chrysostom." Yet I myself have no doubt
-that Maitland was right; but even if he were not he would still have
-taken wonderful joy in finding out the words of the two verses which
-run: "Whether it were a whistling wind, or a melodious noise of birds
-among the spreading branches, or a pleasant fall of water running
-violently, or a terrible sound of stones cast down, or a running that
-could not be seen of skipping beasts, or a roaring voice of most
-savage wild beasts, or a rebounding echo from the hollow mountains;
-these things made them swoon for fear." Of course he loved all
-rhythm, and found it sometimes in unexpected places, even in
-unconsidered writers. There was one passage he used to quote from
-Mrs. Ewing, who, indeed, was no small writer, which he declared to be
-wonderful, and in its way quite perfect: "He sat, patient of each
-succeeding sunset, until this aged world should crumble to its
-close." Then, again, he rejoiced when I discovered, though no doubt
-it had been discovered many times before, that his musical Keats owed
-so much to Fletcher's "Faithful Shepherdess."
-
-It would be a very difficult question to ask, in some examination
-concerning English literature, what book in English by its very
-nature and style appealed most of all to Henry Maitland. I think I
-am not wrong when I say that it was undoubtedly Walter Savage
-Landor's "Imaginary Conversations." That book possesses to the full
-the two great qualities which most delighted him. It is redolent of
-the past, and those classic conversations were his chief joy; but
-above and beyond this true and great feeling of Landor's for the past
-classic times there was the most eminent quality of Landor's rhythm.
-I have many times heard Maitland read aloud from "Æsop and Rhodope,"
-and I have even more often heard him quote without the book the
-passage which runs: "There are no fields of amaranth on this side of
-the grave; there are no voices, O Rhodope, that are not soon mute,
-however tuneful; there is no name, with whatever emphasis of
-passionate love repeated of which the echo is not faint at last."
-Maitland knew, and none knew better, that in a triumphant passage
-there is triumphant rhythm, and in a passage full of mourning or
-melancholy the accompanying and native rhythm is both melancholy and
-mournful. How many times, too, I have heard him quote, again from
-Landor, "Many flowers must perish ere a grain of corn be ripened."
-
-All this time the wife was I know not where, nor did I trouble much
-to inquire. Miss Kingdon and Miss Greathead looked after her very
-patiently, and did good work for their friend Maitland, as he well
-knew. But although he was rejoiced to be alone for a time, or at any
-rate relieved from the violent misery of her presence, I came once
-more to discern, both from things he said and from things he wrote to
-me, that a celibate life began again to oppress him gravely. Yet it
-was many months before he at last confided in me fully, and then I
-think he only did it because he was certain that I was the one friend
-he possessed with whom he could discuss any question without danger
-of moral theories or prepossessions interfering with the rightful
-solution. Over and beyond this qualification for his confidence
-there was the fact that I knew him, whereas no one else did. To
-advise any man it is necessary to know the man who is to be advised,
-for wisdom _in vacuo_ or _in vitro_ may be nothing but foolishness.
-Others would have said to him, "Look back on your experience and
-reflect. Have no more to do with women in any way." No doubt it
-would have been good advice, but it would have been impossible for
-him to act on it. Therefore when he at last opened his mind to me
-and told me of certain new prospects which were disclosing themselves
-to him, I was not only sympathetic but encouraging. It seems that in
-the year 1898 he first met a young French lady of Spanish origin with
-whom he had previously corresponded for some little time. Her name
-was Thérèse Espinel. She belonged to a very good family, perhaps
-somewhat above the _haute bourgeoisie_, and was a woman of high
-education and extreme Gallic intelligence. As I came to know her
-afterwards I may also say that she was a very beautiful woman, and
-possessed, what I know to have been a very great charm to Maitland,
-as it always was to me, a very sweet and harmonious voice--it was
-perhaps the most beautiful human voice for speaking that I have ever
-heard. Years afterwards I took her to see George Meredith. He
-kissed her hand and told her she had beautiful eyes. As she was
-partly Spanish she knew Spanish well. Her German was excellent, her
-English that of an educated Englishwoman. It appears that she came
-across Maitland's "Paternoster Row," and it occurred to her that it
-should be translated into French. She got into correspondence with
-him about this book, and in 1898 came over to England and made his
-acquaintance. It is curious to remember that on one other occasion
-Maitland got into correspondence with another French lady, who
-insisted emphatically that he was the one person whom she could trust
-to direct her aright in life--a notion at the time not a little
-comical to me, and also to the man who was to be this soul's director.
-
-When these two people met and proved mutually sympathetic it was not
-unnatural that he should tell her something of his own life,
-especially when one knows that so much of their earlier talks dealt
-with "Paternoster Row" and with its chief character, so essentially
-Henry Maitland. He gave her, indeed, very much of his story, yet not
-all of it, not, indeed, the chief part of it, since the greatest
-event in his life was the early disaster which had maimed and
-distorted his natural career and development. Yet even so much as he
-told her of his first and second marriage--for he by no means
-concealed from the beginning that he was yet married--very naturally
-engaged her womanly compassion. Adding this to her real and fervent
-admiration of his literary powers, his personality and story seem to
-have inclined her to take an even tenderer interest in him. She was
-certainly a bright and wonderful creature, although not without a
-certain native melancholy, and possessed none of those conventional
-ideas which wreck some lives and save others from disaster.
-Therefore I was not much surprised, although I had not been told
-everything that had happened, when Maitland wrote to me that he
-contemplated taking a very serious step. It was indeed a very
-serious one, but so natural in the circumstances, as I came to hear
-of them, that I myself made no strictures on his scheme. It was no
-other than the proposal that he and this new acquaintance of his
-should cast in their lot together and make the world and her
-relatives believe that they were married. No doubt when I was
-consulted I found it in some ways difficult to give a decision. What
-might be advisable for the man might not be so advisable for his
-proposed partner. He was making no sacrifice, and she was making
-many. Nevertheless, I hold the view that these matters are matters
-for the people concerned and are nobody else's business. The thing
-to be considered from my point of view was whether Maitland would be
-able to support her, and whether she was the kind of woman who would
-retain her hold upon him and give him some peace and happiness
-towards the end of his life. In thinking over these things I
-remembered that the other two women had not been ladies. They had
-not been educated. They understood nothing of the world which was
-Maitland's world, and, as I knew, a disaster was bound to come in
-both cases. But now it appeared to me that there was a possible hope
-for the man, and a hope that such a step might almost certainly end
-in happiness, or at any rate in peace. That something of the kind
-would occur I knew, and even if this present affair went no farther,
-yet some other woman would have to be dealt with even if she did not
-come into his life for a long while. Thérèse Espinel was at any
-rate, as I have said, beautiful and accomplished, essentially of the
-upper classes, and, what was no small thing from Maitland's point of
-view, a capable and feeling musician. Of such a woman Maitland had
-had only a few weeks' experience many years before. I thought the
-situation promised much, and raised no moral objection to the step he
-proposed to take as soon as I saw he was strongly bent in one
-direction. For one thing I was sure of, and it was that anything
-whatever which put a definite obstacle in the way of his returning to
-his wife was a thing to be encouraged. It was, in fact, absolutely a
-duty; and I care not what comments may be made upon my attitude or my
-morals.
-
-That Maitland would have gone back to his wife eventually I have very
-little doubt, and of course nothing but disaster and new rage and
-misery would have come of his doing so. For these reasons I did
-everything in my power to help and encourage him in a matter which
-gave him extreme nervousness and anxiety. I know he said to me that
-the step he proposed to take early in 1899 grew more and more serious
-the more he thought of it. Again, I think there was no overwhelming
-passion at the back of his mind. Yet it was a true and sincere
-affection, of that I am sure. But there were many difficulties. It
-appears that the girl's father had died a few months before, and as
-there was some money in the family this fact involved certain serious
-difficulties about the future signing of names when all the legal
-questions concerned with the little property that there was came to
-be settled. Then he asked me what sort of hope was there that this
-pretended marriage would not become known in England. He said: "I
-fear it certainly would." When I reflect now upon the innumerable
-lies and subterfuges that I myself indulged in with the view of
-preventing anybody knowing of this affair in London, I can see he was
-perfectly justified in his fears, for when the step was at last taken
-I was continually being asked about Maitland's wife. Naturally
-enough, it was said by one set of people that she was with him in
-France; while it was said by others, much better informed, that she
-was still in England. I was sometimes requested to settle this
-difficult matter, and I did find it so difficult that at times I was
-compelled to state the actual truth on condition that what I said was
-regarded as absolutely confidential.
-
-He and Thérèse did, indeed, discuss the possibility of braving the
-world with the simple truth, but that he knew would have been a very
-tremendous step for her. The mother was yet living, and she played a
-strange part in this little drama--a part not so uncommonly played as
-many might think. She became at last her daughter's _confidante_ and
-learned the whole of Maitland's story, and although she opposed their
-solution of the trouble to the very best of her power, when it became
-serious she at last gave way and consented to any step that her
-daughter wished to take, provided that there was no public scandal.
-
-Of course, many people will regard with horror the part that her
-mother played in this drama, imputing much moral blame. There are,
-however, times when current morality has not the value which it is
-commonly given, and I think Madame Espinel acted with great wisdom,
-seeing that nothing she could have pleaded would have altered
-matters. Her daughter was no longer a child; she was a grown-up
-woman, not without determination, and entirely without religious
-prejudice, a thing not so uncommon with the intellectual Frenchwoman.
-Certainly there are some who will say that a public scandal was
-better than secrecy, and in this I am at one with them. Nevertheless
-there was much to consider, for there would certainly have been what
-Henry himself called "a horrific scandal," seeing that the family had
-many aristocratic relatives. Maitland, in fact, stated that it would
-be taking an even greater responsibility than he was prepared to
-shoulder if this were done. He wrote to me asking for my opinion and
-counsel, especially at the time when there was a vague and probably
-unfounded suggestion that he might be able to get a divorce from his
-wife. It appears more than one person wrote to him anonymously about
-her. I am sure he never believed what they told him, nor do I. No
-doubt from some points of view I have been very unjust to his wife,
-though I have tried to hold the balance true, but I never saw, or
-heard from Maitland, anything to suggest that his wife was not all
-that she should have been in one way, just as she was everything she
-should not have been in another. Seeing that Maitland would have
-given ten years of his life and every penny he possessed to secure a
-divorce, it is certain that he absolutely disbelieved what he was
-told. In fact, if he could have got a divorce by consent or
-collusion he would have gladly engaged to pay her fifty pounds a year
-during his life, whatever happened and whatever she did. But of
-course this could not be said openly, either by myself or by him, and
-nothing came out of the suggestion, whoever made it first.
-
-I proposed to him one afternoon when I was with him that he should
-make some inquiries as to what an American divorce would do for him.
-Whether it were valid or not, it might perhaps make things
-technically easier and enable him to marry in France with some show
-of legality. At the moment he paid no attention to what I said, or
-seemed to pay no attention, but it must have sunk into his mind, for
-a few days afterwards he wrote to me and said: "Is it a possible
-thing to get a divorce in some other country as things are?--a
-divorce which would allow of a legal marriage, say, in that same
-country. I have vaguely heard such stories, especially of
-Heligoland. The German novelist, Sacher Masoch, is said to have done
-it--said so by his first wife, who now lives in Paris." Upon
-receiving this letter of his I wrote and reminded him of what I had
-said about American divorces, and gave him all the information that I
-had in my mind and could collect at the moment, especially mentioning
-Dakota or Nevada as two States of the United States which had the
-most reasonable and wide-minded views of marriage and divorce. For
-this letter he wrote and thanked me heartily, but quoted from a
-letter of Thérèse which seemed to indicate, not unclearly, that she
-preferred him to take no steps which might lead to long legal
-processes. They should join their fortunes together, taking their
-chance as to the actual state of affairs being discovered afterwards.
-His great trouble, of course, was the absolute necessity of seeming
-in Paris to be legally married, out of regard for her relatives.
-Besides these connections of her family, she knew a very great number
-of important people in Paris and Madrid, and many of them should
-receive by custom the _lettres de faire part_. With some little
-trouble the financial difficulties with regard to the signing of
-documents were got over for the moment by a transfer of investments
-from Thérèse to her mother. On this being done their final
-determination was soon taken, and they determined, after this
-"marriage" was completed, to leave Paris and live somewhere in the
-mountains, perhaps in Savoy; and he then wrote to me: "You will be
-the only man in London who knows this story. Absolute silence--it
-goes without saying. If ever by a slip of the tongue you let a
-remark fall that my wife was dead, _tant mieux_; only no needless
-approach of the topic. A grave, grave responsibility mine. She is a
-woman to go through fire for, as you saw. An incredible woman to one
-who has spent his life with such creatures.... I have lately paid a
-bill of one pound for damage done by my wife, damage in a London
-house where she lived till turned out by the help of the police.
-Incredible stories about her. She attacked the landlord with a
-stick, and he had seriously to defend himself. Then she tore up
-shrubs and creepers in the garden. No, I have had my time of misery.
-It must come to an end."
-
-In the first part of this letter which I have just quoted he says,
-"She is a woman to go through fire for, as you saw." This expression
-does not mean that I had ever met her, but that I had seen sufficient
-of her letters to recognise the essential fineness of her character.
-I urged him once more to a rapid decision, and he promised that he
-would let nothing delay it. Nevertheless it is perfectly
-characteristic of him that, having now finally decided there should
-be no attempt at any divorce, he proceeded instantly to play with the
-idea again. No doubt he was being subjected to many influences of
-different kinds, for I find that he sent me a letter in which he told
-me that it seemed to be ascertained that an American divorce and
-remarriage would satisfy French law. If that was so, he would move
-heaven and earth to get all the necessary details of the procedure.
-He had written to a friend in Baltimore who knew all about such
-matters, but he implored me to find out if there were not some book
-which gave all possible information about the marriage and divorce
-laws of all the separate States of North America. He asked: "Do you
-really think that I can go and present myself for a divorce without
-the knowledge of the other person? The proceedings must be very
-astounding." His knowledge of America was not equal to my own, much
-as I had spoken to him about that country. The proceedings in
-divorce courts in some of the United States have long ceased to
-astonish anybody. He told me, however, that he had actually heard of
-American lawyers advertising for would-be divorcers, and he prayed
-devoutly that he could get hold of such a man. I did my best to rake
-up for him every possible piece of information on the subject, and no
-doubt his friend in Baltimore, of whom I know nothing, on his part
-sent him information. It seemed, however, that any proceeding would
-involve some difficulties, and on discovering this he instantly
-dropped the whole scheme. I find that he wrote to me afterwards,
-saying: "It is probable that I leave England at the end of April.
-Not one syllable about me to any one, of course. The step is so bold
-as to be really impudent, and I often have serious fears, not, of
-course, on my own account. You shall hear from abroad.... If some
-day one could know tranquillity and all meet together decently."
-
-After many qualms, hot and cold fits, despondency, and inspirations
-of courage, he at last took the decisive step. In May he was in
-Paris, and I think it was in that month that the "marriage" took
-place. I am singularly ignorant of the details, for he seemed to be
-somewhat reluctant to speak of them, and I do not even know whether
-any actual ceremony took place or not, nor am I much concerned to
-know. They were at any rate together, and no doubt tolerably happy.
-He wrote me nothing either about this subject or anything else for
-some time, and I was content to hear nothing. I do know, however,
-that they spent the summer together in Switzerland, moving from
-Trient, near the Col de Balme, to Locarno, on Lago Maggiore. He
-wrote to me once from the Rhône Valley saying that as a result of his
-new domestic peace and comfort, even though it were but the comfort
-of Swiss hotels, and owing also to the air of the mountains, which
-always suited him very well, he was in much better health than he had
-been for years past. His lung, the perpetual subject of his
-preoccupation, appears to have given him little trouble, although,
-knowing that its state was attributable in some measure to emphysema,
-he wrote to me for detailed explanations of that particular
-complaint. During the whole of this time, the only honeymoon he had
-ever had, he was, however, obliged to work very hard, for he was in
-ceaseless trouble about money. In his own words, he had to "publish
-furiously" in order to keep pace with his expenses. There was his
-wife in England, and there were also his children to be partially
-provided for. But for the time all went well with him. There were
-fears of all sorts, he told me, but they were to be forgotten as much
-as possible. He and Thérèse returned to Paris for the winter.
-
-During this time, or just about this time, which was when the South
-African War was raging, I wrote for a weekly journal, which I used to
-send regularly to Paris with my own contributions marked in it. This
-temporary aberration into journalism so late in my literary life
-interested him much. He wrote to me: "In the old garret days who
-would have imagined the strange present? I suppose you have now a
-very solid footing in journalism as well as in fiction. Of course it
-was wise to get it, as it seems more than probable that the novelists
-will be starved out very soon. With Europe in a state of war, which
-may last for a decennium, there will be little chance for
-story-tellers." Then, in spite of his new happiness, his inherited
-or acquired pessimism got the worst of him. He adds: "I wish I had
-died ten years ago. I should have gone away with some hope for
-civilisation, of which I now have none. One's choice seems to be
-between death in the workhouse, or by some ruffian's bullet. As for
-those who come after one, it is too black to think about."
-
-No doubt this was only his fun, or partly such. There is one phrase
-in Boswell's "Johnson" that he always loved amazingly; it is where
-Johnson declares that some poor creature had "no skill in
-inebriation." Maitland perhaps had no skill in inebriation when he
-drank at the fountain of literary pessimism, for indeed when he did
-drink there his views were fantastic and preposterous. As a matter
-of fact he was doing very well, in spite of the workhouse in
-Marylebone Road, from which he was now far enough. There might be
-little chance for story-tellers, yet his financial position, for the
-first time in his life, was tolerably sound. One publisher even gave
-him three hundred pounds on account for a book which I think was "The
-Best of all Things." For this book he also received five hundred
-dollars from America; so, for him, or indeed for almost any writer,
-he was very well paid. Little as the public may believe it, a sum of
-three hundred pounds on account of royalties is as much as any
-well-known man gets--unless by some chance he happens to be one of
-the half-dozen amazingly successful writers in the country, and they
-are by no means the best. It has been at my earnest solicitation
-that he had at last employed an agent, though, with his peculiar
-readiness to receive certain impressions, he had not gone to one I
-recommended, but to another, suddenly mentioned to him when he was
-just in the mood to act as I suggested. This agent worked for him
-very well, and Maitland was now getting five guineas a thousand words
-for stories, which is also a very good price for a man who does
-really good work. It is true that very bad work is not often well
-paid, but the very best work of all is often not to be sold at any
-price. About this time I obtained for him a very good offer for a
-book, and he wrote to me: "It is good to know that people care to
-make offers for my work. What I aim at is to get a couple of
-thousand pounds safely invested for my two boys. Probably I shall
-not succeed--and if I get the money, what security have I that it
-will be safe in a year or two? As likely as not the Bank of England
-will lie in ruins." After all, I must confess that he was skilful in
-the inebriation of his pessimism, for to me these phrases are
-delightful, in spite of the half-belief with which they were uttered.
-
-During the last winter of 1900 he wrote to me from Paris that he
-proposed to be in London for a few days in the spring of 1901, but
-much depended on the relation, which seemed to him highly
-speculative, between the money he received and the money he was
-obliged to spend. Apparently he found Paris anything but cheap.
-According to his own account, he was therefore in perpetual straits,
-in spite of the good prices he now obtained for his work. He added
-in this letter: "I hope to speak with you once more, before we are
-both shot or starved." This proposal to come across the Channel in
-the spring ended in smoke. He was not able to afford it, or was
-reluctant to move, or more likely reluctant to expose himself to any
-of the troubles still waiting for him in England. So long as his
-good friends who were looking after his wife, and more or less
-looking after his children, could do their work and save him from
-anxiety, he was not likely to wish his peace disturbed by any
-discussions on the subject. When he had decided not to come he sent
-me a letter in which one of the paragraphs reads: "I am still trying
-to believe that there is a King of England, and cannot take to the
-idea, any more than to the moral and material ruin which seems to be
-coming upon the old country. Isn't it astounding that we have the
-courage to write books? We shall do so, I suppose, until the day
-when publishers find their business at an end. I fear it may not be
-far off." At this moment, being more or less at peace, and working
-with no peculiar difficulty, he declared himself in tolerable health,
-although he affirmed he coughed a great deal. It seemed to me that
-he did not think so much about his health as he had done before and
-was to do later, and he displayed something like his old real nature
-with regard to literary enterprise. It was just about this time that
-he reminded me of his cherished project for a story of the sixth
-century A.D. This, of course, was the book published after his
-death, "Basil." He had then begun to work upon it, and said he hoped
-to finish it that summer. This cheered him up wonderfully, and he
-ended one letter to me with: "Well, well, let us be glad that again
-we exchange letters with address other than that of workhouse or
-hospital. It is a great demand, this, to keep sane and solvent--I
-dare hope for nothing more." Occasionally in his letters there
-seemed to me to be slight indications that he was perhaps not quite
-so happy as he wished to be.
-
-During that summer my wife and I were in Switzerland, and he wrote to
-me, while we were on the Lake of Geneva, from Vernet-les-Bains in the
-Eastern Pyrenees. By this time Thérèse and I, although we had never
-met, were accustomed to send messages to each other. It was a
-comfort to me to feel that he was with some one of whom I could think
-pleasantly, and whom I much wished to know. We had, indeed, proposed
-to meet somewhere on the Continent, but that fell through, partly
-because we were obliged to return to England earlier than we had
-proposed. Nevertheless, although we did not meet, and though I had
-some fears for him, I was tolerably happy about him and his affairs,
-and certainly did not anticipate the new crisis which was
-approaching, nor the form it would take.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-It was Maitland's custom to rely for advice and assistance on
-particular people at certain crises. In some cases he now appealed
-to Rivers; in very many he appealed to me; but when his health was
-particularly involved it was his custom to relapse desperately on his
-friend Dr. Lake. He even came to Lake on his return from Magna
-Graecia when he had taken Potsdam on his way home to England. He had
-gone there at Schmidt's strong invitation and particular desire that
-he should taste for once a real Westphalian ham. It is a peculiarly
-savage and not wholly safe custom of Germans to eat such hams
-uncooked, and Maitland, having fallen in with this custom, though he
-escaped trichinosis, procured for himself a peculiarly severe attack
-of indigestion. He came over from Folkestone to Lake in order to get
-cured. The ham apparently had not given him the lasting satisfaction
-which he usually got out of fine fat feeding. As I have said, Lake
-and Maitland had been friends from the time that Maitland's father
-bought his chemist's business from the Doctor's father. For they had
-been schoolfellows together at Hinkson's school in Mirefields.
-Nevertheless it was only in 1894 that they renewed their old
-acquaintance. Dr. Lake saw him once at Ewell, soon after a local
-practitioner had frightened Maitland very seriously by diagnosing
-phthisis and giving a gloomy prognosis. On that occasion Lake went
-over Maitland's chest and found very little wrong. Technically
-speaking, there was perhaps a slight want of expansion at the apex of
-each lung, and apparently some emphysema at the base of the left one,
-but certainly no active tubercular mischief.
-
-I speak of these things more or less in detail because health played
-so great a part in the drama of his life; as, indeed, it does in most
-lives. It is not the casual thing that novelists mostly make of it.
-It is a perpetually acting cause. Steady ill-health, even more than
-actually acute disease, is what helps to bring about most tragedies.
-When Lake made his diagnosis, with which I agree, though there is
-something else I must presently add to it, he took him to London,
-that he might see a notable physician, in order to reassure
-Maitland's mind thoroughly. They went together to Dr. Prior
-Smithson. I have never noted that it was Maitland who introduced Dr.
-Lake to Rivers. When Lake had arranged this London visit Maitland
-wrote to Rivers saying: "I am coming up to town to see a scoundrel
-specialist in diseases of the lung, who is as likely as not to upset
-all my plans of life. But don't be afraid of my company; you shall
-have no pathology. There will be with me an old schoolfellow of
-mine, a country surgeon, in whose house I am staying at present. He
-would think it very delightful to meet you." They did meet upon that
-occasion, when Dr. Smithson confirmed Lake's diagnosis and
-temporarily did a great deal to reassure Maitland. From my own
-medical knowledge and my general study of Maitland, combined with
-what some of his doctors have told me, I have come to the conclusion
-that he did suffer from pulmonary tuberculosis, but that it was
-practically arrested at an early stage. However, even arrested
-tuberculosis in many cases leaves a very poor state of nutrition.
-That his joy in food remained with him, though with a few lapses,
-points strongly to the conclusion that at this time tuberculosis was
-certainly not very active in him. He always needed much food, and
-food, especially, which he liked and desired. To want it was a
-tragedy, as I shall show presently.
-
-In 1897 when he went down to Salcombe he reported to Lake a great
-improvement in health, saying that his cough was practically gone,
-and that of course the wonderful weather accounted for it. He ate
-heartily, and even walked five miles a day without fatigue. He
-added: "The only difficulty is breathing through the nose. The other
-day a traction engine passed me on the road, and the men upon it
-looked about them wondering where the strange noises came from. It
-was my snoring! All the nasal cavities are excoriated! But I shall
-get used to this. I have a suspicion that it is _not_ the lung that
-accounts for this difficulty, for it has been the same ever since I
-can remember." By this he probably meant merely that it had lasted a
-long time. There was a specific reason for it. From Salcombe he
-reported to Lake that he had recovered a great deal of weight, but
-that for some time his wheezing had been worse than ever when the
-weather got very bad. He wrote: "Then again a practical paradox that
-frenzies one, for sleep came when bad weather prevented me from being
-so much out of doors!" All this he did not understand, but it is
-highly probable that at that time he had a little actual tubercular
-mischief, and a slight rise of temperature. As frequently happens,
-enforced rest in the house did for him what nothing else could do.
-But his health certainly was something of a puzzle. In 1898, when he
-was in Paris with Thérèse, he saw a Dr. Piffard, apparently not a
-lung specialist, but, as I am told, a physician of high standing.
-This doctor spoke rather gravely to him, and of course told him that
-he was working much too hard, for he was still keeping up his
-ridiculous habit of writing eight hours a day. He said that there
-was a moist spot in the right lung, with a little chronic bronchitis,
-and that the emphysema was very obvious. He had, too, some chronic
-rheumatism, and also on the right side of his forehead what Maitland
-described as a patch of psoriasis. Psoriasis, however, is not as a
-rule unilateral, and it was due to something else. This patch had
-been there for about a year, and was slowly getting worse. Dr.
-Piffard prescribed touching him under the right clavicle with the
-actual cautery, and for the skin gave him some subcutaneous
-injections of an arsenical preparation. He fed him with eggs, milk,
-and cod-liver oil, ordering much sleep and absolute rest. During
-this treatment he improved somewhat, and owned that he was really
-better. The cough had become trifling, his breath was easier and his
-sleep very good. His strength had much increased. He also declared
-that he saw a slight amelioration in the patch of so-called
-psoriasis. The truth is, I think, that nearly all this improvement
-was due to making him rest and eat. No doubt very much of his
-ill-health was the result of his abnormal habits, although there was
-something else at the back of it. For one thing he had rarely taken
-sufficient exercise, the exercise necessary for his really fine
-physique. As I have said, he never played a game in his life after
-he left Hinkson's school in Mirefields. Cricket he knew not.
-Football was a mystery to him, and a brutal mystery at that. It is
-true that occasionally he rowed in a boat at the seaside, for he did
-so at Salcombe when his eldest boy was there with him, but any kind
-of game or sport he actually loathed. It was a surprise to me to
-find out that Rivers, while he was at Folkestone, actually persuaded
-him to take to a bicycle. He even learned to like it. Rivers told
-Lake that he rode not badly, and with great dignity; and as Rivers
-rode beside him he heard him murmur: "Marvellous proceedings! Was
-the like ever seen?"
-
-However, the time was now coming when he was to appeal to Lake once
-more. In 1901 he had proposed to come over to England and see me,
-but he said that the doctor in Paris had forbidden him to go north,
-rather indicating the south for him. He wrote to me: "Now I must go
-to the centre of France--I don't think the Alps are possible--and
-vegetate among things which serve only to remind me that here is
-_not_ England. Then, again, I had thought night and day of an
-English potato, of a slice of English meat, of tarts and puddings,
-and of teacakes. Night and day had I looked forward to ravening on
-these things. Well, well!" But he did at last come back to England
-for some time.
-
-There is no doubt that the feeding in his French home was not fat, or
-fine, or confused feeding. Probably the notion of a Scotch haggis
-would give any French cook a fit of apoplexy. Just before he did
-come over from Paris, Lake had a letter from him which was much like
-the one he wrote to me: "Best wishes for the merry, merry time,--if
-merriment can be in the evil England of these days. I wish I could
-look in upon you at Christmas. I should roar with joy at an honest
-bit of English roast beef. Could you post a slice in a letter?--with
-gravy?" Lake said to his wife when he received this letter: "Why,
-this is written by a starving man!" Naturally enough, although I
-heard from him comparatively seldom, I had always been aware of these
-hankerings of his for England and English food. He did not take
-kindly to exile, or to the culinary methods of a careful French
-interior. Truly as he loved the Latin countries, there was much in
-their customs which troubled him greatly, and the food was his
-especial trouble when he was not being fed in Italy with oil and
-Chianti. I find occasional melancholy letters of his upon the
-subject, when he indulged in dithyrambs about the fine abundance of
-feeding in England--eggs and bacon and beer. There was no doubt he
-was not living in the way he should have lived. At any rate, it was
-about this time--although I did not know it, as I was either in the
-North of England or abroad, I forget which--that he came once more to
-Lake, and was found standing on his doorstep tolerably early in the
-morning. According to the doctor, on his arrival from Paris he was
-in the condition of a starved man. The proof of this is very simple.
-At that time, and for long after, Rivers was living at Folkestone,
-and as Lake's house was at that time full he was unable to entertain
-Maitland for long, and it was proposed that he should go over for a
-time and stay at Folkestone. When Lake examined Maitland he was
-practically no more than a skeleton, but after one week in Rivers'
-house he had picked up no less than seven pounds weight. There were
-then no physical signs of active mischief in the lungs except the
-remaining and practically incurable patch of emphysema. Although
-this sudden increase of weight does not entirely exclude
-tuberculosis, it is yet rather uncommon for so rapid an increase to
-take place in such cases, and it rather puts tuberculosis out of
-court as being in any way the real cause of much of his ill-health.
-Now of all this I knew very little, or next door to nothing, until
-afterwards. Although I was aware that he was uneasy about many
-things, I had not gathered that there was anything seriously wrong
-with him except his strong and almost irresistible desire to return
-to England. I now know that his reticence in speaking to me was due
-to his utter inability to confess that his third venture had almost
-come to disaster over the mere matter of the dining-table. I knew so
-much of the past that he feared to tell me of the present, though I
-do not think he could have imagined that I should say anything to
-make him feel that he had once again been a sad fool for not
-insisting good-humouredly on having the food he wanted. But he was
-ashamed to speak to me of his difficulties, fearing, perhaps, that I
-might not understand, or understand too well.
-
-Now he and Thérèse lived together with Madame Espinel. The old lady,
-a very admirable and delicate creature of an aristocratic type, was
-no longer young, and was typically French. She was in a poor state
-of health, and lived, like Cornaro, on next to nothing. Her views on
-food were what Maitland would have described as highly exiguous. She
-stood bravely by the French breakfast, a thing Maitland could endure
-with comfort for no more than a week or two at a time. Her notions
-as to the midday meal and dinner were not characterised by that early
-English abundance which he so ardently desired. After a long period
-of subdued friction on the subject it appears that his endurance of
-what he called prolonged starvation actually broke down. He demanded
-something for breakfast, something fat, something in the nature of
-bacon. How this was procured I do not know; I presume that bacon can
-be bought in Paris, though I do not remember having ever seen it
-there; perhaps it was imported from England for his especial benefit.
-However pleasing for the moment the result may have been to him from
-the gastronomic point of view, it led Madame Espinel to make as he
-alleged, uncalled-for and bitter remarks upon the English grossness
-of his tastes. As he was certainly run down and much underfed, his
-nerves were starved too, and he got into one of his sudden rages and
-practically ran away from France. I hinted, or said, not long ago
-that he was in a way an intellectual coward because he would never
-entertain any question as to the nature of the universe, or of our
-human existence in it. Things were to be taken as they stood, and
-not examined, for fear of pain or mental disturbance. It was a
-little later than this that Rivers said acutely to Lake: "Why, the
-man is a moral coward. He stands things up to a certain point and
-then runs away." So now he ran away from French feeding to Lake's
-doorstep, and Lake, as I have said, sent him to Rivers with the very
-best results, for Mrs. Rivers took a great interest in him, looking
-on him no doubt as a kind of foolish child of genius, and fed him, by
-Lake's direction, for all that she was worth. As soon as he was in
-anything like condition, or getting on towards it, he was unable to
-remain any longer at Folkestone and proposed to return once more to
-France. This, however, the doctor forbade, and thinking that a
-prolonged course of feeding and rest was the one thing he required,
-induced him to go to a sanatorium in the east of England. At this
-time Lake had practically no belief whatever in the man being
-tuberculous, but he used Maitland's firm conviction that he was in
-that condition to induce him to enter this establishment. It was
-perhaps the best thing which could be done for him. He was looked
-after very well, and the doctor at the sanatorium agreed with Lake in
-finding no evidence of active pulmonary trouble.
-
-As I have said, Maitland kept much, or most, of this from me--it was
-very natural. He wrote to me from the sanatorium very many letters,
-from which I shall not quote, as they were after all only the natural
-moans of a solitary invalid. But he forbade me to come to him, and I
-did not insist on making the visit which I proposed. I was quite
-aware, if it were only by instinct and intuition, that he had no
-desire for me to discover exactly how things had been going with him
-in France. Nevertheless I did understand vaguely, though it was not
-till afterwards that I discovered there had been a suggestion made
-that he should not return there, or, indeed, go back to the
-circumstances which had proved so nearly disastrous. I do not think
-that this suggestion was ever made personally to him, although I
-understand it was discussed by some of his friends. It appears that
-a year or so afterwards when he was talking to Miss Kingdon, she told
-him that it had been thought possible that he might not return to
-France. This he received with much amazement and indignation, for
-certainly he did go back, and henceforth I believe the management of
-the kitchen was conducted on more reasonable lines. Certainly he
-recovered his normal weight, and soon after his return was actually
-twelve stone. As a matter of fact, even before he left the
-sanatorium, he protested that he was actually getting obese.
-
-He was perfectly conscious after these experiences at Folkestone, and
-the east of England, that he owed very much both to Lake and Rivers.
-In fact he wrote to the doctor afterwards, saying that he and Rivers
-had picked him out of a very swampy place. He had always a great
-admiration for Rivers as a writer, and used to marvel wonderfully at
-his success. It seemed an extraordinary thing to Maitland that a man
-could do good work and succeed by it in England.
-
-It was in 1902 that Maitland and Thérèse took up their abode in St.
-Pée d'Ascain, under the shadow of the Pyrenees. From there he wrote
-me very frequently, and seemed to be doing a great deal of work. He
-liked the place, and, as there was an English colony in the town, had
-made not a few friends or acquaintances. By now it was a very long
-time since I had seen him, for we had not met during the time of his
-illness in England; and as I had been very much overworked, it
-occurred to me that three or four days at sea, might do something for
-me, and that I could combine this with a visit to my old friend. I
-did not, however, write to him that I was coming. Knowing his ways
-and his peculiar nervousness, which at this time most visibly grew
-upon him, I thought it best to say nothing until I actually came to
-Bordeaux. When I reached the city on the Gironde I put up at a hotel
-and telegraphed to know whether he could receive me. The answer I
-got was one word only, "Venez," and I went down by the early train,
-through the melancholy Landes, and came at last to St. Pée by the way
-of Bayonne. He met me at the station--which, by the way, has one of
-the most beautiful views I know--and I found him looking almost
-exactly as he had looked before, save that he wore his hair for the
-time a little differently from his custom in order to hide a fading
-scar upon his forehead, the result of that mysterious skin trouble.
-We were, I know, very glad to meet.
-
-I stayed at a little hotel by myself as he could not put me up, but
-went later to his house. It was now that I at last met Thérèse. As
-I have said, she was a very beautiful woman, tall and slender, of a
-pale, but clear complexion, very melancholy lovely eyes, and a voice
-that was absolute music. I could not help thinking that he had at
-last come home, for at that time my knowledge of their little
-domestic difficulties owing to the warring customs of their different
-countries was very vague, and she impressed me greatly. And yet I
-knew before I left that night that all was not well with Maitland,
-though it seemed so well with him. He complained to me when we were
-alone about his health, and even then protested somewhat forcibly
-against the meals. The house itself, or their apartment, was--from
-the foreign point of view--quite comfortable, but it did not suggest
-the kind of surroundings which I knew Maitland loved. There is, save
-in the best, a certain air of cold barrenness about so many foreign
-houses. The absence of rugs or carpets and curtains, the polish and
-exiguity of the furniture, the general air of having no more in the
-rooms than that which will just serve the purposes of life did not
-suit his sense of abundance and luxury.
-
-Blake has said, though I doubt if I quote with accuracy: "We do not
-know that we have enough until we have had too much," and this is a
-saying of wisdom as well concerning the things of the mind as those
-of the body. He had had at last a little too much domesticity, and,
-besides that, his desires were set towards London and the British
-Museum, with possibly half the year spent in Devonshire. He yearned
-to get away from the little polished French home he had made for
-himself and take Thérèse back to England with him. But this was
-impossible, for her mother still lived with them and naturally would
-not consent to expatriate herself at her age from her beloved France.
-It had been truly no little sacrifice for her, a very gentle and
-delicate woman even then suffering from cardiac trouble, to leave
-Paris and its neighbourhood and stay with her child nigh upon the
-frontier of Spain, almost beyond the borders of French civilisation.
-
-I stayed barely a week in St. Pée d'Ascain, but during that time we
-talked much both of his work and of mine. Once more his romance of
-the sixth century was in his mind and on his desk, though he worked
-more, perhaps, at necessary pot-boilers than at this long pondered
-task. Although he did not write so much as of old I found it almost
-impossible to get him to go out with me, save now and again for half
-an hour in the warmest and quietest part of the day. He had
-developed a great fear of death, and life seemed to him
-extraordinarily fragile. Such a feeling is ever the greatest warning
-to those who know, and yet I think if he had been rather more
-courageous and had faced the weather a little more, it might have
-been better for him. During these few days I became very friendly
-with Madame Espinel and her daughter, but more especially with the
-latter, because she spoke English, and my French has never been very
-fluent. It requires at least a month's painful practice for me to
-become more or less intelligible to those who speak it by nature. As
-I went away he gave me a copy of his new book "The Meditations of
-Mark Sumner." It is one of those odd things which occur so
-frequently in literary life that I myself had in a way given to him
-the notion of this book. It was not that I suggested that he should
-write it, indeed I had developed the idea of such a book to him upon
-my own account, for I proposed at that time to write a short life of
-an imaginary man of letters to whom I meant to attribute what I
-afterwards published in "Apteryx." Perhaps this seed had lain
-dormant in Maitland's mind for years, and when he at last wrote the
-book he had wholly forgotten that it was I who first suggested the
-idea. Certainly no two books could have been more different,
-although my own plan was originally much more like his. In the same
-way I now believe that my story "The Purification" owed its inception
-without my being aware of it to the suppressed passage in "Outside
-the Pale" of which I spoke some time ago. This passage I never read;
-but, when Maitland told me of it, it struck me greatly and remained
-in my mind. These influences are one of the great uses of literary
-companionship among men of letters. As Henry Maitland used to say:
-"We come together and strike out sparks."
-
-As I went north by train from St. Pée d'Ascain to Bordeaux, passing
-ancient Dax and all the sombre silences of the wounded serried rows
-of pines which have made an infertile soil yield something to
-commerce, Maitland's spirit, his wounded and often sickly spirit, was
-with me. I say "sickly" with a certain reluctance, and yet that is
-what I felt, for I know I read "The Meditations" with great revolt in
-spite of its obvious beauty and literary sincerity. Life, as I know
-well, is hard and bitter enough to break any man's spirit, and I knew
-that Maitland had been through a fire that not many men had known,
-yet as I read I thought, and still think, that in this book he showed
-an undue failure of courage. If he had been through so many
-disasters yet there was still much left for him, or should have been.
-He had not suffered the greatest disaster of all, for since the death
-of his father in his early youth he had lost none that he loved. The
-calculated dispirited air of the book afflicted me, and yet,
-naturally enough, I found it wonderfully interesting; for here was so
-much of my lifelong friend, even though now and again there are
-little lapses in sincerity when he put another face on things, and
-pretended, even to himself, that he had felt in one way and not in
-another. There is in it only a brief mention of myself, when he
-refers to the one solitary friend he possessed in London through so
-many years which were only not barren to him in the acquisition of
-knowledge.
-
-But even as I read in the falling night I came to the passage in
-which he speaks of the Anabasis. It is curious to think of, but I
-doubt if he had ever heard that modern scholarship refuses to believe
-it was Xenophon who wrote this book. Most assuredly had he heard it
-he would have rejected so revolutionary a notion with rage and
-indignation, for to him Xenophon and the Anabasis were one. In
-speaking of the march of the Greeks he quotes the passage where they
-rewarded and dismissed the guide who had led them through very
-dangerous country. The text says: "when evening came he took leave
-of us, and went his way by night." On reaching Bordeaux I surprised
-and troubled the telegraph clerk at the railway station by
-telegraphing to Henry Maitland those words in the original Greek,
-though naturally I had to write them in common script. Often-times I
-had been his guide but had never led him in safety.
-
-When I reached England again I wrote him a very long letter about
-"The Meditations," and in answer received one which I may here quote:
-"My dear old boy, it is right and good that the first word about
-'Mark Sumner' should come from you. I am delighted that you find it
-readable. For a good ten years I had this book in mind vaguely, and
-for two years have been getting it into shape. You will find that
-there is not very much reminiscence; more philosophising. Why, of
-course, the solitary friend is you. Good old Schmidt is mentioned
-later. But the thing is a curious blend, of course, of truth and
-fiction. Why, it's just because the world is 'inexplicable' that I
-feel my interest in it and its future grows less and less. I am a
-little oppressed by 'the burden of the mystery'; not seldom I think
-with deep content of the time when speculation will be at an end.
-But my delight in the beauty of the visible world, and my enjoyment
-of the great things of literature, grow stronger. My one desire now
-is to _utter_ this passion--yet the result of one's attempt is rather
-a poor culmination for Life."
-
-During this year, and indeed during the greater part of 1902, I was
-myself very ill and much troubled, though I worked exceedingly hard
-upon my longest book, "Rachel." In consequence of all I went through
-during the year I wrote to him very seldom until the beginning of the
-following spring I was able to send him the book. For a long time
-after discovering the almost impossibility of making more than a mere
-living out of fiction, I had in a sense given up writing for the
-public, as every man is more or less bound to do at last if he be not
-gratified with commercial success. Indeed for many years I wrote for
-some three people: for my wife; for Rawson, the naturalist, my almost
-lifelong friend; and for Maitland, the only man I had known longer
-than Rawson. Provided they approved, and were a little enthusiastic,
-I thought all was well, even though I could earn no more than a mere
-living. And yet I was conscious through all these working years that
-I had never actually conquered Maitland's utmost approval. For I
-knew what his enthusiasm was when he was really roused; how obvious,
-how sincere, and how tremendous. When I reflect that I did at last
-conquer it just before he died I have a certain melancholy pleasure
-in thinking of that book of mine, which indeed in many ways means
-very much to me, much more than I can put down, or would put down for
-any one now living. Were this book which I am now doing a life of
-myself rather than a sketch of him, I should certainly put in the
-letter, knowing that I should be forgiven for inserting it because it
-was a letter of Maitland's. It was, indeed, a highly characteristic
-epistle, for when he praised he praised indeed, and his words carried
-conviction to me, ever somewhat sceptical of most men's approval. He
-did even more than write to me, for I learnt that he spoke about this
-book to other friends of his, especially, as I know, to Edmund Roden;
-and also to George Meredith, who talked to me about it with obvious
-satisfaction when I next met him. Nothing pleased Maitland better
-than that any one he loved should do good work. If ever a man lived
-who was free from the prevalent vices of artistic and literary
-jealousy, it was Maitland.
-
-But now his time was drawing to an end. He and Thérèse and Madame
-Espinel left St. Pée d'Ascain in June 1903 and went thirty miles
-further into the Pyrenees. He wrote to me a few days after reaching
-the little mountain town of St. Christophe. The change apparently
-did him good. He declared that he had now no more sciatica, of which
-disease, by the way, I had not previously heard, and he admitted that
-his general health was improving. St. Christophe is very
-picturesquely situated, and Maitland loved it not the less for its
-associations in ancient legend, since it is not very far from the
-Port or Col de Roncesvalles, where the legendary Roland was slain
-fighting in the rearguard to protect Charlemagne's army. He and
-Thérèse went once further down the valley and stayed a night at
-Roncesvalles. If any man's live imagination heard the horn of Roland
-blow I think it should be Maitland. And yet though he took a great
-pleasure in this country of his, it was not England, nor had he all
-things at his command which he desired. I find that he now greatly
-missed the British Museum, which readers of "The Meditations" will
-know he much frequented in those old days. For he was once more hard
-at work upon "Basil," and wrote to me that he was greatly in want of
-exact knowledge as to the procedure in the execution of wills under
-the later Roman Empire. This was a request for information, and such
-requests I not infrequently received, always doing my best to tell
-him what I could discover, or to give him the names of authorities
-not known to himself. He frequently referred to me about points of
-difficulty, even when he was in England but away from London. At
-that time, naturally enough, I knew nothing whatever about wills
-under the Roman Empire, but in less than a week after he had written
-to me I think it highly probable that I knew more than any lawyer in
-London who was not actually lecturing on the subject to some pupils.
-I sent him a long screed on the matter. Before this reached him I
-got another letter giving me more details of what he required, and
-since this is certainly of some interest as showing his literary
-methods and conscientiousness I think it may be quoted. He says:
-"And now, hearty thanks for troubling about the legal question. The
-time with which I am concerned is about A.D. 540. I know, of course,
-that degeneration and the Gothic War made semi-chaos of Roman
-civilisation; but as a matter of fact the Roman law still existed.
-The Goths never interfered with it, and portions even have been
-handed down. Now the testator is a senator. He has one child only,
-a daughter, and to her leaves most of his estate. There are legacies
-to two nephews, and to a sister. A very simple will, you see--no
-difficulty about it. But he dying, all the legatees being with him
-at the time, how, as a matter of fact, were things settled? Was an
-executor appointed? Might an executor be a legatee?
-
-Probate, I think, as you say, there was none, but who inherited?
-Still fantastic things were done in those times, but what would the
-law have dictated? Funny, too, that this is the only real difficulty
-which bothers me in the course of my story. As regards all else that
-enters into the book I believe I know as much as one can without
-being a Mommsen. The senator owns property in Rome and elsewhere. I
-rather suppose it was a case of taking possession if you could, and
-holding if no one interfered with you. Wills of this date were
-frequently set aside on the mere assertion of a powerful senator that
-the testator had verbally expressed a wish to benefit him.... It is
-a glorious age for the romancer." As a full answer to this letter I
-borrowed and sent to him Saunders' "Justinian," and received
-typically exaggerated thanks.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-Now again he and I were but correspondents, and I do not think that
-in those days when I had so much to do, and had also very bad health,
-I was a very good correspondent. Maitland, although he sometimes
-apologised humorously, or even nervously, for writing at great
-length, was an admirable letter writer. He practised a lost art.
-Sometimes he put into his letters very valuable sketches of people.
-He did so both to me and to Rivers, and to others, and frequently
-made sharply etched portraits of people whom he knew at St Pée. He
-had a curious habit of nicknaming everybody. These nicknames were
-perhaps not the highest form of art, nor were they even always
-humorous, still it was a practice of his. He had a peculiarly verbal
-humor in these matters. Never by any chance, unless he was
-exceedingly serious, did he call any man by his actual name. Rawson,
-my most particular friend, whom he knew well, and whose books he
-admired very much for their style, was always known as "The
-Rawsonian," and I myself was referred to by a similarly formed name.
-These are matters of no particular importance, but still they show
-the man in his familiar moods and therefore have a kind of value--as
-if one were to show a score of photographs or sketches that were
-serious and then insert one where the wise man plays the child, or
-even the fool. There was not a person of any importance in St. Pée
-d'Ascain, although nobody knew it, who did not rejoice in some absurd
-nickname.
-
-However he went further than mere nicknames, and there is in one
-letter of his to Rivers a very admirable sketch of a certain
-personage: "one of the most cantankerous men I ever came across;
-fierce against the modern tendencies of science, especially in
-England; an anti-Darwinite &c. He rages against Huxley, accusing him
-of having used his position for personal vanity and gain, and of
-ruining the scientific and industrial prospects of England; charges
-of the paltriest dishonesty against H. and other such men abound in
-his conversation. X., it seems, was one of the original students of
-the Jermyn Street School of Mines, and his root grievance is the
-transformation of that establishment--brought about, he declares, for
-the personal profit of Huxley and of--the clerks of the War Office!
-_You_, he regards as a most valuable demonstration of the evils
-resulting from the last half-century of 'progress,' protesting loudly
-that every one of your books is a bitter satire on Huxley, his
-congeners, and his disciples. The man tells me that no scientific
-papers in England will print his writing, merely from personal
-enmity. He has also quarrelled with the scientific societies of
-France, and now, being a polyglot, he writes for Spain and
-Germany--the only two countries in Europe where scientific
-impartiality is to be found."
-
-In another letter of his he says: "By the bye, an English paper
-states that Henley died worth something more than eight hundred
-pounds." One might imagine that he would then proceed to condole
-with him on having had so little to leave, but that was not our
-Maitland. He went on: "Amazing! How on earth did he amass that
-wealth? I am rejoiced to know that his latter years have been passed
-without struggle for bread."
-
-The long letter about the Roman Empire and Roman law from which I
-quoted in the last chapter, was dated August 6, 1903, and I did not
-hear again from Maitland until November 1. I had written to him
-proposing to pay another visit to the south-west of France in order
-to see him in his Pyrenean home, but he replied very gloomily, saying
-that he was in evil case, that Thérèse had laryngitis, and that
-everything was made worse by incredibly bad weather. The
-workhouse--still the workhouse--was staring him in the face. He had
-to labour a certain number of hours each day in direly unfavourable
-conditions. If he did not finish his book at the end of the year
-sheer pauperdom would come upon him. In these circumstances I was to
-see that he dreaded a visit from any friend, indeed he was afraid
-that they would not be able to stay in St. Christophe on account of
-its excessive dampness. According to this pathetically exaggerated
-account they lived in a thick mist day and night. How on earth it
-came to be thought that such a dreadful country was good for
-consumptive people he could not imagine; though he owned, somewhat
-grudgingly, that he himself had got a good deal of strength there.
-He told me that as soon as the eternal rain ceased they were going
-down to Bayonne to see a doctor, and if he did no good Thérèse would
-go to the south of France. Finally, he was hanged if he knew how it
-would be managed. He ended up with: "In short I have not often in my
-life been nearer to an appalling crisis." At the end of this dismal
-letter, which did not affect me so much as might be thought, he spoke
-to me of my book, "Rachel," and said: "I have been turning the pages
-with great pleasure to keep my thoughts from the workhouse."
-
-As I have hinted, those will have gathered very little of Maitland
-who imagine that I took this _au pied de lettre_. Maitland had cried
-"Wolf!" so often, that I had almost ceased to believe that there were
-wolves, even in the Pyrenees. All things had gradually become
-appalling crises and dreadful disasters. A mere disturbance and an
-actual catastrophe were alike dire and irremediable calamities. And
-yet, alas, there was more truth underlying his words than even he
-knew. If a man lives for ever in shadow the hour comes at last when
-there is no more light; and even for those who look forward, one
-would think with a certain relief, to the workhouse, there comes a
-day that they shall work no more. I smiled when I read this letter,
-but, of course, telegraphed to him deferring my visit until the rain
-had ceased, or laryngitis had departed from his house, or until his
-spirits recovered their tone on the completion of his great romance.
-One could do no other, much as I desired to see him and have one of
-our prodigious and preposterously long talks in his new home. I do
-not think that I wrote to him after this lamentable reply of his, but
-on November 16 I received my last communication from him. It was
-three lines on a post-card, still dated from St. Christophe. He
-referred in it once more to my book, and said: "Delighted to see the
-advertisement in ------ to-day, especially after their very base
-notice last week. Hurrah! Illness and struggle still going on
-here." The struggle I believed in, but, as ever with one's friends,
-one doubted if the illness were serious. And yet the catastrophe was
-coming.
-
-At this time I was myself seriously ill. A chronic disease which had
-not been diagnosed resulted in a more or less serious infection of my
-own lungs, and, if I recollect truly, I had been in bed for nearly a
-fortnight. During the early days of my convalescence I went down to
-my club, and there one afternoon got this telegram from Rivers: "Have
-received following telegram from Maitland, 'Henry dying. Entreat you
-to come. In greatest haste.' I cannot go, can you?" This message
-to me was dated Folkestone, where Rivers was then living. Now at
-this time I was feeling very ill and utterly unfit to travel. I
-hardly knew what to do, but thought it best to go home and consult
-with my wife before I replied to Rivers. Anxious as she was to do
-everything possible for Maitland, she implored me not to venture on
-so long a journey, especially as it was mid-winter, just at
-Christmas-time. If I had not felt really ill she would not have
-placed any obstacles in my path, of that I am sure. She would,
-indeed, have urged me to go. After a little reflection I therefore
-replied to Rivers that I was myself very ill, but added that if he
-could not possibly go I would. At the same time I telegraphed to
-Maitland, or rather to Thérèse, saying that I was ill, but that I
-would come if she found it absolutely necessary. I do not think I
-received any answer to this message, a fact one easily understands
-when one learns how desperate things really were; but on December 26
-I got another telegram from Rivers. I found that he had gone to St.
-Christophe in spite of not being well. He wired to me: "No nurse.
-Nursing help may save Maitland. Come if possibly can. Am here but
-ill." Such an appeal could not be resisted. I went straight home,
-and showing this telegram to my wife she agreed with me that I ought
-to go. If Rivers was ill at St. Christophe it now seemed my absolute
-duty to go, whatever my own state of health.
-
-I left London that night by the late train, crossing to Paris by way
-of Newhaven and Dieppe in order that I might get at least three hours
-of rest in a recumbent position in the steamer, as I did not at that
-time feel justified in going all the way first class and taking a
-sleeper. I did manage to obtain some rest during the sea-passage,
-but on reaching Paris early in the morning I felt exceedingly unwell,
-and at the Gare St.-Lazare found at that hour no means of obtaining
-even a cup of coffee. I drove over to the Quai d'Orsay, and spent an
-hour or two in the coffee-room waiting for the departure of the
-express to Bordeaux. Ill as I was, and full of anxiety about
-Maitland, and now about Rivers, that journey was one long nightmare
-to me. I had not been able to take the Sud Express, and when at
-last, late in the evening, I reached Bayonne, I found that the last
-train to St. Christophe in its high Pyrenean valley had already gone
-hours before my arrival. While I was on my journey I had again
-telegraphed from Morcenx to Rivers or to Thérèse asking them to
-telegraph to me at the Hotel du Commerce, Bayonne, in case I was
-unable to get on that night, as I had indeed feared, although I was
-unable to get accurate information. On reaching this hotel I found
-waiting for me a telegram, which I have now lost, that was somehow
-exceedingly obscure but yet portended disaster. That I expected the
-worst I know, for I telegraphed to my wife the news in code that
-Maitland was dying and that the doctor gave no hope.
-
-If I had been a rich man, or even moderately furnished with money on
-that journey, I should have taken a motor-car if it could have been
-obtained, and have gone on at once without waiting for the morning.
-But now I was obliged to spend the night in that little old-fashioned
-hotel in the old English city of Bayonne, the city whose fortress
-bears the proud emblem "Nunquam polluta." I wondered much if I
-should yet see my old friend alive. It was possible, and I hoped.
-At any rate, he must know that I was coming and was near at hand if
-only he were yet conscious. How much I was needed I did not know
-till afterwards, for even as I was going south Rivers was once more
-returning to Paris on his homeward journey. As I learnt afterwards,
-he was far too unwell to stay. In the morning I took the first train
-to St. Christophe, passing Cambo, where Rostand, the poet, makes his
-home. On reaching the town where Maitland lived I found no one
-waiting for me as I had expected; for, naturally enough, I thought it
-possible that unless Rivers were very ill he would be able to meet
-me. It was a cold and gloomy morning when I left the station.
-Taking my bag in my hand, I hired a small boy to show me the house in
-which Maitland lived on the outskirts of the little Pyrenean town.
-This house, it seems, was let in flats, and the Maitlands occupied
-the first floor. On entering the hall I found a servant washing down
-the stone flooring. I said to her, "Comment Monsieur se porte-t-il?"
-and she replied, "Monsieur est mort." I then asked her where I
-should find the other Englishman. She answered that he had gone back
-to England the day before, and then took me upstairs and went in to
-tell Thérèse that I had come.
-
-I found her with her mother. She was the only woman who had given
-him any happiness. Now she was completely broken down by the anxiety
-and distress which had come upon her so suddenly. For indeed it
-seems that it had been sudden. Only four or five days ago Maitland
-had been working hard upon "Basil," the book from which he hoped so
-much, and in which he believed so fervently. Then it seems that he
-developed what he called a cold, some slight affection of the lungs
-which raised his temperature a little. Strangely enough he did not
-take the care of himself that he should have taken, or that care
-which I should have expected him to use, considering his curiously
-expressed nervousness about himself. By some odd fatality he became
-suddenly courageous at the wrong time, and went out for a walk in
-desperately bad weather. On the following day he was obviously very
-seriously ill, and sent for the doctor, who suspended judgment but
-feared that he had pneumonia. On the day succeeding this yet another
-doctor was called into consultation, and the diagnosis of pneumonia
-was confirmed without any doubt. But that was not, perhaps, what
-actually killed him. There was a very serious complication,
-according to Maitland's first physician, with whom I afterwards had a
-long conversation, partly through the intermediary of the nurse, an
-Englishwoman from Bayonne, who talked French more fluently than
-myself. He considered that Maitland also had myocarditis. I
-certainly did not think, and do not think, that he was right in this.
-Myocarditis is rarely accompanied with much or severe pain, while the
-anguish of violent pericarditis is often very great, and Maitland had
-suffered most atrociously. He was not now a strong man, not one with
-big reserves and powers of passive endurance, and in his agony he
-cried aloud for death.
-
-In these agonies there were periods of comparative ease when he
-rested and was quiet, and even spoke a little. In one of these
-intermissions Thérèse came to him and told him that I was now
-actually on my way. There is no reason, I think, why I should not
-write what he said. It was simply, "Good old H----." By this time
-Rivers had gone; but before his departure he had, I understand,
-procured the nurse. The last struggle came early that morning,
-December 28, while I was at the Bayonne hotel preparing to catch the
-early train. He died quietly just before dawn, I think at six
-o'clock.
-
-I was taken in to see Thérèse, who was still in bed, and found her
-mother with her. They were two desolate and lonely women, and I had
-some fears that Thérèse would hardly recover from the blow, so deeply
-did his death affect her. She was always a delicate woman, and came
-from a delicate, neurotic stock, as one could see so plainly in the
-elder woman. I did my best to say what one could say, though all
-that can possibly be said in such cases is nothing after all. There
-is no physic for grief but the slow, inevitable years. I stayed not
-long, but went into the other chamber and saw my dead friend. The
-bed on which he lay stood in a little alcove at the end of the room
-farthest from the window. I remember that the nurse, who behaved
-most considerately to me, stood by the window while I said farewell
-to him. He looked strangely and peculiarly intellectual, as so often
-happens after death. The final relaxation of the muscles about his
-chin and mouth accentuated most markedly the strong form of the
-actual skull. Curiously enough, as he had grown a little beard in
-his last illness, it seemed to me that he resembled very strongly
-another English writer not yet dead, one whom nature had, indeed,
-marked out as a story-teller, but who lacked all those qualities
-which made Maitland what he was. As I stood by this dead-bed
-knowing, as I did know, that he had died at last in the strange
-anguish which I was aware he had feared, it seemed to me that here
-was a man who had been born to inherit grief. He had never known
-pure peace or utter joy as even some of the very humblest know it. I
-looked back across the toilsome path by which he had come hither to
-the end, and it seemed to me that from the very first he had been
-doomed. In other times or some other age he might have had a better
-fate, but he was born out of his time and died in exile doubly. I
-put my hand upon his forehead and said farewell to him and left the
-room, for I knew that there was much to do and that in some way I had
-to do it.
-
-Thérèse was most anxious that he should not be buried in St.
-Christophe, of which she had conceived a natural horror. There was
-at this time an English clergyman in the village, the chaplain of the
-English church at St. Pée, about whom I shall have something to say
-later. With him I concerted what was to be done, and he obtained the
-necessary papers from the _mairie_. And all this time, across the
-road from the stone house in which Henry Maitland lay dead, I heard
-the sound of his coffin being made in the little carpenter's shop
-which stood there. When all was done that could be done, and
-everything was in order, I went to the little hotel and had my lunch
-all alone, and afterwards dined alone and slept that night in the
-same hotel. The next day, late in the afternoon, I went down to St.
-Pée d'Ascain in charge of his body. During this journey the young
-doctor who had attended Maitland accompanied me part of the way, and
-for the rest of it his nurse was my companion. At St. Pée d'Ascain,
-where it was then quite dark, we were received by the clergyman, who
-had preceded us, and by a hearse, into which we carried Maitland's
-body. I accompanied it to the English chapel, where it remained all
-night before the altar. I slept at my old hotel, where I was known,
-as I had stayed there at the time I last saw Maitland alive.
-
-In the morning a service was held for him according to the rites of
-the English Church. This was the desire of Thérèse and Madame
-Espinel, who, if it had been possible, I think would have desired to
-bury him according to the rites of the Catholic Church. Maitland, of
-course, had no orthodox belief. He refused to think of these things,
-for they were disturbing and led no-whither. Attending this service
-there were many English people, some who knew him, and some again who
-did not know him but went there out of respect for his name and
-reputation, and perhaps because they felt that they and he were alike
-in exile. We buried him in the common cemetery of St. Pée, a place
-not unbeautiful, nor unbeautifully situated. And while the service
-went on over his grave I was somehow reminded of the lovely cemetery
-at Lisbon where another English man of letters lies in a tomb far
-from his own country. I speak of Fielding.
-
-I left Thérèse and Madame Espinel still at St. Christophe, and did
-not see them again before I started for England. They, I knew, would
-probably return to Paris, or perhaps would go to relatives of theirs
-in Spain. I could help them no more, and by now I discovered that my
-winter journey, or perhaps even my short visit to the death-chamber
-of Henry Maitland, had given me some kind of pulmonary catarrh which
-in my overwrought and nervous state seemed likely, perhaps, to result
-in something more serious. Therefore, having done all that I could,
-and having seen him put in the earth, I returned home hurriedly. On
-reaching England I was very ill for many days, but recovered without
-any serious results. Soon afterwards some one, I know not who it
-was, sent me a paragraph published in a religious paper which claimed
-Maitland as a disciple of the Church, for it said that he had died
-"in the fear of God's holy name, and with the comfort and strength of
-the Catholic faith." When some men die there are for ever crows and
-vultures about. Although I was very loath to say anything which
-would raise an angry discussion, I felt that this could not be passed
-by and that he would not have wished it to be passed by. Had he not
-written of a certain character in one of his books "that he should be
-buried as a son of the Church, to whom he had never belonged, was a
-matter of indignation"? That others felt as I did is proved by a
-letter I got from his friend Edmund Roden, who wrote to me: "You have
-seen the report that the ecclesiastical buzzards have got hold of
-Henry Maitland in articulo mortis and dragged him into the fold."
-
-My own views upon religion did not matter. They were stronger and
-more pronounced, and, it may be, more atheistical than his own.
-Nevertheless I knew what he felt about these things, and in
-consequence wrote the following letter to the editor of the paper
-which had claimed him for the Church: "My attention has been drawn to
-a statement in your columns that Henry Maitland died in communion
-with the Church of England, and I shall be much obliged if you will
-give to this contradiction the same publicity you granted, without
-investigation, to the calumny. I was intimate with Maitland for
-thirty years, and had every opportunity of noting his attitude
-towards all theological speculation. He not only accepted none of
-the dogmas formulated in the creeds and articles of the Church of
-England, but he considered it impossible that any Church's definition
-of the undefinable could have any significance for any intelligent
-man. During the whole of our long intimacy I never knew him to waver
-from that point of view.
-
-"What communication may have reached you from any one who visited
-Maitland during his illness I do not know. But I presume you do not
-maintain that a change in his theological standpoint can reasonably
-be inferred from any words which he may have been induced to speak in
-a condition in which, according to the law of every civilised
-country, he would have been incompetent to sign a codicil to his will.
-
-"The attempt to draw such a deduction will seem dishonest to every
-fair-minded man; and I rely upon your courtesy to publish this
-vindication of the memory of an honest and consistent thinker which
-you have, however unintentionally, aspersed."
-
-Of course this letter was refused publication. The editor answered
-it in a note in which he maintained the position that the paper had
-taken up, stating that he was thoroughly satisfied with the sources
-of his information. Naturally enough I knew what those sources were,
-and I wrote a letter in anger to the chaplain of St. Pée, which, I
-fear, was full of very gross insults.
-
-Seeing that the paper refused my letter admission to its columns, on
-the advice of certain other people I wrote to a London daily saying:
-"As the intimate friend of Henry Maitland for thirty years, I beg to
-state definitely that he had not the slightest intellectual sympathy
-with any creed whatsoever. From his early youth he had none, save
-for a short period when, for reasons other than intellectual, he
-inclined to a vague and nebulous Positivism. His mental attitude
-towards all theological explanations was more than critical, it was
-absolutely indifferent; he could hardly understand how any one in the
-full possession of his faculties could subscribe to any formulated
-doctrines. No more than John Stuart Mill or Herbert Spencer could he
-have entered into communion with any Church."
-
-Of course I knew, as any man must know who is acquainted with
-humanity and its frailties, that it was possible for Maitland, during
-the last few poisoned hours of his life, to have gone back in his
-delirium upon the whole of his previous convictions. He knew that he
-was dying. When he asked to know the truth he had been told it. In
-such circumstances some men break down. There are what people call
-death-bed repentances. Therefore I did my best to satisfy myself as
-to whether anything whatever had occurred which would give any colour
-to these theologic lies. I could not trouble Thérèse upon this
-particular point, but it occurred to me that the nurse, who was a
-very intelligent woman, must be in a position to know something of
-the matter, and I therefore wrote to her asking her to tell me all
-she knew. She replied to me about the middle of January, telling me
-that she had just then had a long talk with Mrs. Maitland, and giving
-me the following facts.
-
-It appears that on Monday, December 21, Maitland was so ill that a
-consultation was thought necessary, and that both the doctors agreed
-that it was impossible for the patient to live through the night,
-though in fact he did not die till nearly a week afterwards. On
-Thursday, December 24, the chaplain was sent for, not for any
-religious reasons, or because Maitland had called for him, but simply
-because Thérèse thought that he might find some pleasure in seeing an
-English face. When the clergyman came it did indeed have this
-effect, for Maitland's face lit up and he shook him heartily by the
-hand. At this moment the young doctor came in and told the clergyman
-privately that Maitland had no chance whatever, and that it was a
-wonder that he was still alive. It is quite certain that there was
-no religious conversation between the clergyman and the patient at
-this time. The nurse arrived at eleven o'clock on Sunday morning,
-and insisted on absolute quietness in the room. The clergyman simply
-peeped in at the door to say good-bye, for at that time Mr. Rivers
-was in charge in the bedroom.
-
-The chaplain did not see Maitland again until the day I myself came
-to St. Christophe, when all was over. While Maitland was delirious
-it appears that he chanted some kind of _Te Deum_ repeatedly. To
-what this was attributable no man can say with certainty, but it is a
-curious thing to reflect upon that "Basil" was about the time of
-Gregory, and that Maitland had been studying most minutely the
-history of the early Church in many ecclesiastical works. According
-to those who heard his delirious talk, it seems that all he did say
-had reference to "Basil," the book about which he had been so
-anxious, and was never to finish. At any rate it is absolutely
-certain that Maitland never accepted the offices of the Church before
-his death, even in delirium. Before I leave this matter I may
-mention that the chaplain complicated matters in no small degree
-before he retired from the scene, by declaring most disingenuously
-that he had not written the notice which appeared in print. Now this
-was perfectly true. He did not write it. He had asked a friend of
-his to do so. When he learnt the truth this friend very much
-regretted having undertaken the task. I understand that though the
-editor refused to withdraw this statement the authorities of the
-paper wrote to the chaplain in no pleased spirit after they had
-received my somewhat severely phrased communication. It is a sad and
-disagreeable subject, and I am glad to leave it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-For ever on looking backwards one is filled with regrets, and one
-thing I regret greatly about Henry Maitland is that, though I might
-perhaps have purchased his little library, the books he had
-accumulated with so much joy and such self-sacrifice, I never thought
-of this until it was too late. Books made up so much of his life,
-and few of his had not been bought at the cost of what others would
-consider pleasure, or by the sacrifice of some sensation which he
-himself would have enjoyed at the time. Now I possess none of his
-books but those he gave me, save only the little "Anthologia Latina"
-which Thérèse herself sent to me. This was a volume in which he took
-peculiar delight, perhaps even more delight than he did in the Greek
-anthology, which I myself preferred so far as my Greek would then
-carry me. Many times I have seen him take down the little Eton
-anthology and read aloud. Now I myself may quote:
-
- _Animula vagula, blandula,
- Hospes comesque corporis,
- Qua nunc abibis in loca
- Pallidula, rigida, nudula----_
-
-
-I believe his library was sold in Paris, for now that Thérèse had no
-settled home it was impossible to carry it about with her. Among
-these books were all those beautifully bound volumes which he had
-obtained as prizes at Moorhampton College, and others which he had
-picked up at various times in the various bookshops of London, so
-many of which he speaks of in "The Meditations"--his old Gibbon in
-quarto, and some hundreds of others chosen with joy because they
-appealed to him in a way only a book-lover can understand. He had a
-strange pleasure in buying old copies of the classics, which shows
-that he was perhaps after all more of a bookman than a scholar. He
-would perhaps have rather possessed such a copy of Lucretius as is on
-my own shelves, which has no notes but is wonderfully printed, than
-the newest edition by the newest editor. He was conscious that his
-chief desire was literature rather than scholarship. Few indeed
-there are who know the classics as well as he did, who read them for
-ever with so much delight.
-
-Maitland, for an Englishman, knew many languages. His Greek, though
-not extraordinarily deep, was most familiar. He could read
-Aristophanes lying on the sofa, thoroughly enjoying it, and rarely
-rising to consult Liddell and Scott, a book which he adored in the
-most odd fashion, perhaps because it knew so much Greek. There was
-no Latin author whom he could not read fluently. I myself frequently
-took him up a difficult passage in Juvenal and Persius, and rarely,
-if ever, found him at fault, or slow to give me help. French he knew
-very nearly as well as a Frenchman, and spoke it very fluently. His
-Italian was also very good, and he spoke that too without hesitation.
-Spanish he only read; I do not think he often attempted to speak it.
-Nevertheless he read "Don Quixote" in the original; and his Italian
-can be judged by the fact that he read Dante's "Divina Commedia"
-almost as easily as he read his Virgil. German too was an open book
-to him, and he had read most of the great men who wrote in it,
-understanding even the obscurities of "Titan." I marked down the
-other day many of the books in which he chiefly delighted, or rather,
-let me say, many of the authors. Homer, of course, stood at the head
-of the list, for Homer he knew as well as he knew Shakespeare. His
-adoration for Shakespeare was, indeed, I think, excessive, but the
-less said of that the better, for I have no desire to express fully
-what I think concerning the general English over-estimation of that
-particular author. I do, however, understand how it was that
-Maitland worshipped him so, for whatever may be thought of
-Shakespeare's dramatic ability, or his characterisation, or his
-general psychology, there can be no dispute about his having been a
-master of "beautiful words." Milton he loved marvellously, and
-sometimes he read his sonnets to me. Much of "Lycidas" he knew by
-heart, and some of "Il Penseroso." Among the Latins, Virgil,
-Catullus, and Tibullus were his favourites, although he took a
-curious interest in Cicero, a thing in which I was never able to
-follow him. I once showed to Maitland in the "Tusculan Disputations"
-what Cicero seemed to think a good joke. It betrayed such an
-extraordinary lack of humour that I was satisfied to leave the
-"Disputations" alone henceforth. The only Latin book which I myself
-introduced to Maitland was the "Letters" of Pliny. They afterwards
-became great favourites with him because some of them dealt with his
-beloved Naples and Vesuvius. Lucian's "Dialogues" he admired very
-much, finding them, as indeed they are, always delightful; and it was
-very interesting to him when I showed him to what extent Disraeli was
-indebted to Lucian in those clever _jeux d'esprit_ "Ixion in Heaven,"
-"Popanilla," and "The Infernal Marriage." The "Golden Ass" of
-Apuleius he knew almost by heart. Petronius he read very frequently;
-it contained some of the actual life of the old world. He knew
-Diogenes Laertius very well, though he read that author, as Montaigne
-did, rather for the light he throws upon the private life of the
-Greeks than for the philosophy in the book; and he frequently dipped
-into Athenæus the Deipnosophist. Occasionally, but very
-occasionally, he did read some ancient metaphysics, for Plato was a
-favourite of his--not, I think, on account of his philosophy, but
-because he wrote so beautifully. Aristotle he rarely touched,
-although he knew the "Poetics." He had a peculiar admiration for the
-Stoic Marcus Aurelius, in which I never followed him because the
-Stoic philosophy is so peculiarly inhuman. But, after all, among the
-Greeks his chief joy was the tragedians, and there was no single play
-or fragment of Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides that he did not
-know almost by heart. Among the Frenchmen his great favourites were
-Rabelais and Montaigne and, later, Flaubert, Maupassant, Victor Hugo,
-Zola, Balzac, and the Goncourts. As I have said before, he had a
-great admiration for the Russian writers of eminence, and much
-regretted that he did not know Russian. He once even attempted it,
-but put it aside. I think Balzac was the only writer of importance
-that he read much of who did not possess a style; he owned that he
-found him on that account at times almost impossible to read.
-Nevertheless he did read him, and learnt much from him; but his chief
-admiration among the French on the ground of their being artists was
-for Flaubert and Maupassant. Zola's style did not appeal to him; in
-fact in many of his books it is little better than Balzac's.
-Maitland's love of beautiful words and the rhythms of prose was as
-deep as that of Meredith; and as I have said, his adoration of
-Shakespeare was founded on the fact that Shakespeare still remains
-the great enchanter in the world of phrases. He read English very
-deeply. There was little among the fields of English prose that he
-did not know well; but again he loved best those who had a noble
-style of their own, notably Sir Thomas Browne. If a man had
-something to say and did not say it well, Maitland read him with
-difficulty and held him at a discount. That is why he loved Landor
-at his best, why he loved Meredith, and why he often adored Hardy,
-especially in Hardy's earlier works, before he began to "rail at the
-universe" and disturb him. I think among other living writers of
-English fiction I can hardly mention more than one of whom he spoke
-with much respect, and he was Henry James. As he was a conservative
-he was especially a conservative critic. He found it difficult to
-appreciate anything which was wholly new, and the rising school of
-Celtic literature, which means much, and may mean more, in English
-literature, did not appeal to him greatly. He lived in the past,
-even in English, and often went back to Chaucer and drank at his well
-and at the everlasting fountain of Malory. So, as I have said, he
-loved old Walton. Boswell he read yearly at least, for he had an
-amazing admiration for old Johnson, a notable truth-teller. The man
-who could say what he thought, and say it plainly, was ever his
-favourite, although I could never induce him to admire Machiavelli,
-for the coldness of Machiavelli's intellect was a little too much for
-him. The pure intellect never appealed to Maitland. I think if he
-had attempted "The Critique of Pure Reason" he would have died before
-he had learnt Kant's vocabulary. Yet I once gave him a copy of it in
-the original. The only very modern writer that he took to was Walt
-Whitman, and the trouble I had in getting him to see anything in him
-was amazing, though at last he succumbed and was characteristically
-enthusiastic.
-
-What he wanted in literature was emotion, feeling, and
-humour--literature that affected him sensuously, and made him happy,
-and made him forget. For it is strange when one looks back at his
-books to think how much he loved pure beauty, though he found himself
-compelled to write, only too often, of the sheer brutality of modern
-civilisation and the foulest life of London. Of course he loved
-satire, and his own mind was essentially in some ways satiric. His
-greatest gift was perhaps that of irony, which he frequently
-exercised at the expense of his public. I remember very well his joy
-when something he had written which was ironically intended from the
-first word to the last was treated seriously by the critics. He was
-reminded, as he indeed reminded me, of Samuel Butler's "Fairhaven,"
-that book on Christianity which was reviewed by one great religious
-paper as an essay in religious apologetics. This recalls to my mind
-the fact that I have forgotten to say how much he loved Samuel
-Butler's books, or those with which he was more particularly
-acquainted, "Erewhon" and "Erewhon Revisited." Anything which dug
-knives into the gross stupidity of the mass of English opinion
-afforded him the intensest gratification. If it attacked their
-religion or their vanity he was equally delighted, and when it came
-to their hypocrisy--in spite of the defence he made later in "The
-Meditations" of English hypocrisy--he was equally pleased. In this
-connection I am reminded of a very little thing of no particular
-importance which occurred to him when he was upon one occasion at the
-Royal Academy. That year Sir Frederick Leighton exhibited a very
-fine decorative panel of a nude figure. While Maitland was looking
-at it a typical English matron with three young flappers of daughters
-passed him. One of the girls stood in front of this nude and said,
-"Oh, mamma, what is this?" Whereupon her mother replied hurriedly,
-"Only a goddess, my dear, only a goddess! Come along,--only a
-goddess." And he quoted to himself and afterwards to me, from "Roman
-Women": "And yet I love you not, nor ever can, Distinguished woman on
-the Pincian!" If I remember rightly, the notable address to
-Englishwomen in T.E. Brown's poem was published separately in a
-magazine which I brought to him. It gave great occasion for
-chuckling.
-
-I have not attempted to give any far-reaching notion of all
-Maitland's reading, but I think what I have said will indicate not
-unfairly what its reach was. What he desired was to read the best
-that had been written in all western languages; and I think, indeed,
-that very few men have read so much, although he made, in some ways,
-but little use of it. Nevertheless this life among books was his
-true life. Among books he lived, and among them he would have died.
-Had any globe-trotting Gillman offered to show him the world, he
-would have declined, I think, to leave the littoral of the
-Mediterranean, though with a book-loving Gillman he might have
-explored all literature.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-There have been few men so persecuted by Fortune as to lead lives of
-unhappiness, lighted only by transient gleams of the sun, who are yet
-pursued beyond the grave by outcries and misfortune, but this was
-undoubtedly the case with Maitland. Of course he always had notable
-ill luck, as men might say and indeed do say, but his ill luck sprang
-from his nature as well as from the nature of things. When a man
-puts himself into circumstances to which he is equal he may have
-misfortunes, or sometimes disasters, but he has not perpetual
-adversity. Maitland's nature was for ever thrusting him into
-positions to which he was not equal. His disposition, his very
-heredity, seems to have invited trouble. So out of his first great
-disaster sprang all the rest. He had not been equal to the stress
-laid upon him, and in later life he was never equal to the stress he
-laid upon himself. This is what ill luck is. It is an instinctive
-lack of wisdom. I think I said some chapters ago that I had not
-entirely disposed of the question of his health. I return to the
-subject with some reluctance. Nevertheless I think what I have to
-say should be said. It at any rate curiously links the last days of
-Maitland's life to the earlier times of his trouble, or so it will
-seem to physicians. I shall do no more than quote a few lines from a
-letter which he wrote to Lake. He says: "You remember that patch of
-skin disease on my forehead? Nothing would touch it; it had lasted
-for more than two years, and was steadily extending itself. At last
-a fortnight ago I was advised to try iodide of potassium.
-Result--perfect cure after week's treatment! I had resigned myself
-to being disfigured for the rest of my life; the rapidity of the cure
-is extraordinary. I am thinking of substituting iodide of potassium
-for coffee at breakfast and wine at the other meals. I am also
-meditating a poem in its praise--which may perhaps appear in the
-_Fortnightly Review_." Dr. Lake replied to these dithyrambs with a
-letter which Maitland did not answer. There is no need to comment
-upon this more particularly; it will at any rate be clear to those
-who are not uninstructed in medicine.
-
-His ill luck began early. It lasted even beyond the grave. Some men
-have accounted it a calamity to have a biography written of them.
-The first who said so must have been English, for in this country the
-absence of biographic art is rendered the more peculiarly dreadful by
-the existence in our language of one or two masterpieces. In some
-ways I would very willingly cease to speak now, for I have written
-nearly all that I had in my mind, and I know that I have spoken
-nothing which would really hurt him. As I have said in the very
-first chapter, he had an earnest desire that if anything were written
-about him after his death it should be something true. Still there
-are some things yet to be put down, especially about "Basil" and its
-publication. He left this book unfinished: it still lacked some few
-chapters which would have dealt with the final catastrophe. It fell
-to the executors to arrange for the publication of the incomplete
-book. As Maitland had left no money, certainly not that two thousand
-pounds which he vainly hoped for, there were still his children to
-consider; and it was thought necessary, for reasons I do not
-appreciate, to get a preface written for the book with a view, which
-seemed to me idle, of procuring it a great sale.
-
-It appears that Rivers offered to write this preface if it were
-wanted. What he wrote was afterwards published. The executors did
-not approve it, again for reasons which I do not appreciate, for I
-think that it was on the whole a very admirable piece of work. Yet I
-do not believe Rivers was sincere in the view he took of "Basil" as a
-work of art. In later years he acknowledged as much to me, but he
-thought it was his duty to say everything that could possibly be said
-with a view of imposing it on a reluctant public. The passage in
-this article mainly objected to was that which speaks obscurely of
-his early life at Moorhampton College and refers as obscurely to his
-initial great disaster. The reference was needed, and could hardly
-be avoided. Rivers said nothing openly but referred to "an abrupt
-incongruous reaction and collapse." This no doubt excited certain
-curiosities in certain people, but seeing that so many already knew
-the truth, I cannot perceive what was to be gained by entire silence.
-However, this preface was rejected and Mr. Harold Edgeworth was asked
-to write another. This he did, but it was a frigid performance. The
-writer acknowledged his ignorance of much that Maitland had written,
-and avowed his want of sympathy with most of it.
-
-Naturally enough, the trouble growing out of this dispute gave rise
-to considerable comment. As some theological buzzards had dropped
-out of a murky sky upon Maitland's corpse, so some literary kites now
-found a subject to gloat upon. Nevertheless the matter presently
-passed. "Basil," unhappily, was no success; and if one must speak
-the truth, it was rightly a failure. It is curious and bitter to
-think of that when he was dealing at the last in some kind of peace
-and quiet with his one chosen subject, that he had thought of for so
-many years and prepared for so carefully, it should by no means have
-proved what he believed it. There is, indeed, no such proof as
-"Basil" in the whole history of letters that the writer was not doing
-the work that his nature called for. Who that knows "Magna Graecia,"
-and who, indeed, that ever spoke with him, will not feel that if he
-had visited one by one all the places that he mentions in the book,
-and had written about them and about the historical characters that
-he hoped to realise, the book might have been as great or even
-greater than the shining pages of "Magna Graecia"? It was in the
-consideration of these things, while reviving the aspects of the past
-that he felt so deeply and loved so much, that his native and natural
-genius came out. In fiction it was only when rage and anger and
-disgust inspired him that he could hope to equal anything of the
-passion which he felt about his temperamental and proper work. Those
-books in which he let himself go perfectly naturally, and those books
-which came out of him as a terrible protest against modern
-civilisation, are alone great. Yet it is hard to speak without
-emotion and without pain of "Basil." He believed in it so greatly,
-and yet believed in it no more than any writer must while he is at
-work. The artist's own illusion of a book's strength and beauty is
-necessary to any accomplishment. He must believe with faith or do
-nothing. Maitland failed because it was not his real work.
-
-In one sense the great books of his middle period were what writers
-and artists know as "pot-boilers." They were, indeed, written for an
-actual living, for bread and for cheese and occasionally a very
-little butter. But they had to be written. He was obliged to do
-something, and did these best; he could do no other. He was always
-in exile. That was the point in my mind when I wrote one long
-article about him in a promising but passing magazine which preened
-its wings in Bond Street and died before the end of its first month.
-This article I called "The Exile of Henry Maitland." There is
-something of the same feeling in much that has been written of him by
-men perhaps qualified in many ways better than myself had they known
-him as well as I did. I have, I believe, spoken of the able
-criticism Thomas Sackville wrote of him in the foreword of the book
-of short stories which was published after Maitland's death. In the
-_Fortnightly Review_ Edwin Warren wrote a feeling and sympathetic
-article about him. Jacob Levy wrote not without discernment of the
-man. And of one thing all these men seemed tolerably sure, that in
-himself Maitland stood alone. But he only stood alone, I think, in
-the best work of his middle period. And even that work was alien
-from his native mind.
-
-In an early article written about him while he yet lived I said that
-he stood in a high and solitary place, because he belonged to no
-school, and most certainly not to any English school. No one could
-imitate, and no one could truly even caricature him. The essence of
-his best work was that it was founded on deep and accurate knowledge
-and keen observation. Its power lay in a bent, in a mood of mind,
-not by any means in any subject, even though his satiric discussion
-of what he called the "ignobly decent" showed his strength, and
-indirectly his inner character. His very repugnance to his early
-subjects led him to choose them. He showed what he wished the world
-to be by declaring and proving that it possessed every conceivable
-opposite to his desires. I pointed out some time ago, but should
-like to insist upon it again, that in one sense he showed an
-instinctive affinity for the lucid and subtle Tourgeniev. There is
-no more intensely depressing book in the entire English language than
-"Isabel." The hero's desires reached to the stars, but he was not
-able to steal or take so much as a farthing rushlight. Not even
-Demetri Roudine, that futile essence of futility, equals this,
-Maitland's literary child of bitter, unable ambitions. These
-Russians indeed were the writers with whom Maitland had most
-sympathy. They moved what Zola had never been able to stir in him,
-for he was never a Zolaist, either in mind or method. No man without
-a style could really influence him for more than a moment. Even his
-beloved Balzac, fecund and insatiable, had no lasting hold upon him,
-much as he admired the man's ambitions, his unparalleled industry,
-his mighty construction. For Balzac was truly architectonic, even if
-barbarous, and though these constructions of his are often imaginary
-and his perspectives a mystery. But great construction is obviously
-alien from Maitland. He wanted no elaborate architecture to do his
-thinking in. He would have been contented in a porch, or preferably
-in a cloister.
-
-I have declared that his greatest book is "The Exile"--I mean his
-greatest book among his novels. To say it is a masterpiece is for
-once not to abuse the word; for it is intense, deeply psychological,
-moving, true. "_L'anatomia presuppone il cadavere_," says Gabriele
-D'Annunzio, but "The Exile" is intolerable and wonderful vivisection.
-Yet men do bleed and live, and the protagonist in this book--in much,
-in very much, Henry Maitland--bleeds but will not die. He was born
-out of the leisured classes and resented it with an incredible
-bitterness, with a bitterness unparalleled in literature. I know
-that on one occasion Maitland spoke to me with a certain joy of
-somebody who had written to him about his books and had selected "The
-Exile" as the greatest of them. I think he knew it was great. It
-was, of course, an ineffable failure from the commercial point of
-view.
-
-On more than one occasion, as it was known that I was acquainted with
-Maitland, men asked me to write about him. I never did so without
-asking his permission to do it. This happened once in 1895. He
-answered me: "What objection could I possibly have, unless it were
-that I should not like to hear you reviled for log-rolling? But it
-seems to me that you might well write an article which would incur no
-such charge; and indeed, by so doing, you would render me a very
-great service. For I have in mind at present a careful and
-well-written attack in the current _Spectator_. Have you seen it?
-Now I will tell you what my feelings are about this frequent attitude
-in my critics."
-
-Maitland's views upon critics and reviewing were often somewhat
-astounding. He resented their folly very bitterly. Naturally
-enough, we often spoke of reviewers, for both of us, in a sense, had
-some grievances. Mine, however, were not bitter. Luckily for me, I
-sometimes did work which appealed more to the general, while his
-appeal was always to the particular. Apropos of a review of one of
-Rivers' books he says: "I have also, unfortunately, seen the ----.
-Now, can you tell me (in moments of extreme idleness one wishes to
-know such things) who the people are who review fiction for the ----?
-Are they women, soured by celibacy, and by ineffectual attempts to
-succeed as authors? Even as they treat you this time they have
-consistently treated me--one continuous snarl and sneer. They are
-beastly creatures--I can think of no other term."
-
-It was unfortunate that he took these things so seriously, for nobody
-knows so well as the reviewers that their work is not serious. Yet,
-according to them the general effect of Maitland's books, especially
-"Jubilee," was false, misleading, and libellous; and was in essence
-caricature. One particular critic spoke of "the brutish stupefaction
-of his men and women," and said, "his realism inheres only in his
-rendering of detail." Now Maitland declared that the writer
-exhibited a twofold ignorance--first of the life he depicted, and
-again of the books in which he depicted it. Maitland went on to say:
-"He--the critic--speaks specially of 'Jubilee,' so for the moment we
-will stick to that. I have selected from the great mass of lower
-middle-class life a group of people who represent certain of its
-grossnesses, weaknesses, &c., peculiar to our day. Now in the first
-place, this group of people, on its worst side, represents a
-degradation of which the critic has obviously no idea. In the second
-place, my book, if properly read, contains abundant evidence of good
-feeling and right thinking in those members of the group who are not
-hopelessly base. Pass to instances: 'The seniors live a ... life
-unglorified by a single fine emotion or elevating instinct.' Indeed?
-What about Mr. Ward, who is there precisely to show that there can
-be, and are, these emotions and instincts in individuals? Of the
-young people (to say not a word about Nancy, at heart an admirable
-woman), how is it possible to miss the notes of fine character in
-poor Halley? Is not the passionate love of one's child an 'elevating
-instinct'? nor yet a fine emotion? Why, even Nancy's brother shows
-at the end that favourable circumstances could bring out in him
-gentleness and goodness."
-
-There indeed spoke Maitland. He felt that everything was
-circumstance, and that for nine hundred and ninety-nine out of a
-thousand circumstance was truly too much, as it had been for him. It
-appears that the critic added that the general effect of the book was
-false; and Maitland replied that it would be so to a very rapid
-skimmer of the book, precisely as the general effect upon a rapid
-observer of the people themselves would be false. He was enraged to
-think that though people thought it worth while to write at length
-about his books, they would not take the trouble to study them
-seriously. He added: "In this section of the lower middle class the
-good is not on the surface; neither will it be found on the surface
-of my narrative."
-
-In this letter he went on to say something more of his books in
-general. Apropos of a paragraph written by Mr. Glass about his work
-as a whole, he said: "My books deal with people of many social
-strata; there are the vile working class, the aspiring and capable
-working class, the vile lower middle, the aspiring and capable lower
-middle, and a few representatives of the upper middle class. My
-characters range from the vileness of 'Arry Parson to the genial and
-cultured respectability of Mr. Comberbatch. There are books as
-disparate as 'The Under World' and 'The Unchosen.' But what I desire
-to insist upon is this, that the most characteristic, the most
-important, part of my work is that which deals with a class of young
-men distinctive of our time--well-educated, fairly bred, _but without
-money_. It is this fact, as I gather from reviews and conversation,
-of the poverty of my people which tells against their recognition as
-civilised beings. 'Oh,' said some one to Butler, 'do ask Mr.
-Maitland to make his people a little better off.' There you have it."
-
-And there one has also the source of Maitland's fountain of
-bitterness. He went on to say: "Now think of some of these young
-men, Hendon, Gifford, Medwin, Pick, Early, Hillward, Mallow. Do you
-mean to say that books containing such a number of such men deal,
-first and foremost, with the commonplace and the sordid? Why, these
-fellows are the very reverse of commonplace; most of them are
-martyred by the fact of possessing uncommon endowments. Is it not
-so? This side of my work, to me the most important, I have never yet
-seen recognised. I suppose Glass would class these men as 'at best
-genteel, and not so very genteel.' Why, 'ods bodikins! there's
-nothing in the world so hateful to them as gentility. But you know
-all this, and can you not write of it rather trenchantly? I say
-nothing about my women. That is a moot point. But surely there are
-some of them who help to give colour to the groups I draw." The end
-of the letter was: "I write with a numbed hand. I haven't been warm
-for weeks. This weather crushes me. Let me have a line about this
-letter."
-
-The sort of poverty which crushed the aspiring is the keynote to the
-best work he did. He knew it, and was right in knowing it. He
-played all these parts himself. In many protean forms Maitland
-himself is discerned under the colour and character of his chosen
-names; and so far as he depicted a class hitherto untouched, or
-practically untouched, in England, as he declares, he was a great
-writer of fiction. But he was not a romantic writer. There were
-some books of romance he loved greatly. We often and often spoke of
-Murger's "Vie de Bohème." I do not think there was any passage in
-that book which so appealed to him as when Rodolphe worked in his
-adventitious fur-coat in his windy garret, declaring genially:
-"Maintenant le thermomètre va être furieusement vexé." Nevertheless,
-as I have said before, he knew, and few knew so well, the very bitter
-truth that Murger only vaguely indicated here and there in scattered
-passages. In the "Vie de Bohème" these characters "range" themselves
-at last; but mostly such men did not. They went under, they died in
-the hospital, they poisoned themselves, they blew out their brains,
-they sank and became degraded parasites of an uncomprehending
-bourgeoisie.
-
-I spoke some time back of the painful hour when Maitland came to me
-to declare his considered opinion that I myself could not write
-successful fiction. It is an odd thing that I never returned the
-compliment in any way, for though I knew he could, and did, write
-great fiction, I knew his best work would not have been fiction in
-other circumstances. Out of martyrdom may come great things, but not
-out of martyrdom spring the natural blossoms of the natural mind.
-That he lived in the devil's twilight between the Dan of Camberwell
-and the Beersheba of Camden Town, when his natural environment should
-have been Italy, and Rome, or Sorrento, is an unfading tragedy. Only
-once or twice in his life did a spring or summer come to him in which
-he might grow the flowers he loved best and knew to be his natural
-destiny. The greatest tragedy of all, to my mind, is that final
-tragedy of "Basil" where at last, after long years of toil in fiction
-while fiction was yet necessary to his livelihood, he was compelled
-by his training to put into the form of a novel a theme not fit for
-such treatment save in the hands of a native and easy story-teller.
-
-I have said nothing, or little except by implication, of the man's
-style. In many ways it was notable and even noble. To such a
-literary intelligence, informed with all the learning of the past
-towards which he leant, much of his style was inevitable; it was the
-man and his own. For the greater part it is lucid rather than
-sparkling, clear, if not cold; yet with a subdued rhythm, the result
-of much Latin and more Greek, for the metres of the Greek tragedies
-always inspired him with their noble rhythms. Though he was often
-cold and bitter, especially in his employment of irony, of which he
-is the only complete master in English literature except Samuel
-Butler, he could rise to heights of passionate description; and here
-and there a sense of luxury tinges his words with Tyrian purple--and
-this in spite of all his sense of restraint, which was more marked
-than that of almost any living writer.
-
-When I think of it all, and consider his partly wasted years, I even
-now wonder how it was he induced himself to deal with the life he
-knew so well; but while that commercialism exists which he abhorred
-as much as he abhorred the society in which it flourishes, there
-seems no other practicable method for a man of letters to attain
-speech and yet to live. I often declared that fiction as we wrote it
-was truly diagnostic of a disordered and unnecessarily degraded form
-of civilisation; and he replied with deep feeling that to him the
-idylls of Theocritus, of Moschus, the simple tragedies, the natural
-woes and joys of men who ploughed the soil or worked at the
-winepress, were the truest and most vivid forms and subjects of Art.
-Neither before his death nor after did he attain the artist's true
-and great reward of recognition in the full sense that would have
-satisfied him even if he had remained poor. Nevertheless there were
-some who knew. There are perhaps a few more who know now that he is
-gone and cannot hear them. Popularity he never hoped for, and never
-will attain, but he has a secure place in the hierarchy of the
-literature of England which he loved. But he appeals now, as he
-appealed while he lived, not to the idle and the foolish, not to the
-fashionable mob, but to the more august tribunal of those who have
-the sympathy which comes from understanding.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The private life of Henry Maitland, by Morley Roberts</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The private life of Henry Maitland</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A record dictated by J. H.</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Morley Roberts</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 16, 2022 [eBook #69000]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY MAITLAND ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE PRIVATE LIFE OF<br />
- HENRY MAITLAND<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- <i>A RECORD DICTATED BY J. H.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- REVISED AND EDITED BY<br />
- <span style="font-size: 150%">MORLEY ROBERTS</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- HODDER &amp; STOUGHTON<br />
- NEW YORK<br />
- GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- Copyright, 1912,<br />
- By George H. Doran Company<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- INSCRIBED<br />
- TO THE MEMORY OF<br />
- MY WIFE<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap00b"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-PREFACE
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-This book was dictated by J.H. mostly in my
-presence, and I consider it well worth publishing.
-No doubt Henry Maitland is not famous,
-though since his death much has been written of
-him. Most of it, however, outside of literary
-criticism, has been futile and uninstructed. But
-J.H. really knew the man, and here is what he
-has said of him. We shall be told, no doubt,
-that we have used Maitland's memory for our
-own ends. Let that be as it may; such an
-accusation can only be met by denial. When there is
-no proof of guilt, there may well be none of
-innocence. The fact remains that Henry Maitland's
-life was worth doing, even in the abbreviated
-and censored form in which it now appears.
-The man was not eminent, only because he was
-not popular and did not live long enough. One
-gets to eminence nowadays by longevity or by
-bad work. While Maitland starved, X or Y or
-Z may wallow in a million sixpences. In this
-almost childishly simple account of a man's life
-there is the essence of our literary epoch. Here
-is a writing man put down, crudely it may be,
-but with a certain power. There is no book
-quite like it in the English tongue, and the critic
-may take what advantage he will of that
-opening for his wit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At any rate here we have a portrait emerging
-which is real. Henry Maitland stands on his
-feet, and on his living feet. He is not a British
-statue done in the best mortuary manner. There
-is far too little sincere biography in English.
-We are a mealy-mouthed race, hypocrites by
-the grave and the monument. Ten words of
-natural eulogy, and another ten of curious and
-sympathetic comment, may be better than tons
-of marble built up by a hired liar with his
-tongue in his cheek. In the whole book, which
-cannot be published now, there are things worth
-waiting for. I have cut and retrenched with
-pain, for I wanted to risk the whole, but no
-writer or editor is his own master in England.
-I am content to have omitted some truth if I
-have permitted nothing false. The reader who
-can say truly, "I should not have liked to meet
-Henry Maitland," is a fool or a fanatic, or more
-probably both. Neither of those who are
-primarily responsible for this little book is
-answerable to such. We do not desire his praise, or
-even his mere allowance. Such as are interested
-in the art of letters, and in those who practise
-in the High Court of Literature, will
-perceive what we had in our minds. Here is life,
-not a story or a constructed diary, and the art
-with which it is done is a secondary matter. If
-Henry Maitland bleeds and howls, so did
-Philoctetes, and the outcry of Henry Maitland
-is more pertinent to our lives. For all life, even
-at its best, is tragic; and there is much in
-Maitland's which is dramatically common to our
-world as we see it and live in it. If we have
-lessened him at times from the point of view of
-a hireling in biographic praise, we have set him
-down life size all the same; and as we ask no
-praise, we care for no blame. Here is the man.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MORLEY ROBERTS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-NOTE.&mdash;The full manuscript, which may possibly
-be published after some years, is, in the
-meantime placed in safe custody.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY MAITLAND
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It is never an easy thing to write the life, or
-even such a sketch as I propose making, of
-a friend whom one knew well, and in
-Henry Maitland's case it is most uncommonly
-difficult. The usual biographer is content with
-writing panegyric, and as he must depend for
-his material, and even sometimes for his
-eventual remuneration, on the relatives of his
-subject, he is from the start in a hopeless position,
-except, it may be, as regards the public side of
-the life in question. But in the case of a man
-of letters the personal element is the only real
-and valuable one, or so it seems to me, and even
-if I were totally ignorant of Maitland's work I
-think it would yet be possible for me to do a
-somewhat lifelike and live sketch of him. I
-believe, moreover, that it is my duty to do it,
-although no doubt in some ways it must be painful
-to those connected with him. Yet soon after
-his death many came to me desiring me to write
-his biography. It was an understood thing that
-of all his friends I knew him best, and was
-certainly the greatest and chief authority on his
-career from the Moorhampton College days up
-to his final break with his second wife. But in
-1904 there were many obstacles to my doing this
-work. His two sons were young. His sisters
-and his mother were still alive. I say nothing
-of the wife herself, then being taken care of, or
-of a third lady of whom I must speak presently.
-Several people came to me with proposals about
-a book on Henry Maitland. One of the partners
-of a big publishing house made me a definite
-offer for it on behalf of his firm. On the
-other hand one of his executors, Miss Kingdon,
-a most kindly and amiable and very able woman
-employed in a great accountant's office in the
-city, who had done very much for Henry Maitland
-in his later life, begged me not to do the
-book, or if I did it to hold it over until her
-responsibilities as executrix and trustee for the
-sons were at an end. But it is now nearly nine
-years since he died, and I feel that if I do not
-put down at once what I knew of him it never
-will be written, and something will be lost,
-something which has perhaps a little value, even
-though it is not so great as those could wish who
-knew and loved Henry Maitland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is no doubt many people will accuse me
-of desiring to use his memory for my own
-advantage. "My withers are unwrung." Those
-who speak in this way must have little knowledge
-of the poor profit to be derived from writing
-such a book, and the proportion of that
-profit to the labour employed in it. On three
-separate occasions I spoke to Maitland about
-writing his biography, and it was an understood
-thing between us that if he died before me I was
-to write his life and tell the whole and absolute
-truth about him. This he gave me the most
-definite permission to do. I believe he felt that
-it might in some ways be of service to humanity
-for such a book to be written. Only the other
-day, when I wrote to Miss Kingdon concerning
-the biography, she answered me: "If I seem
-lacking in cordiality in this matter do not
-attribute it to any want of sympathy with you. I
-am not attempting to dissuade you. Henry
-Maitland was sent into hell for the purpose of
-saving souls; perhaps it is a necessary thing that
-his story should be written by all sorts of people
-from their different points of view." Once I
-proposed to him to use his character and career
-as the chief figure in a long story. He wrote to
-me, "By all means. Why not?" Had I not the
-letter in which he said this I should myself
-almost doubt my own recollection, but it is certain
-that he knew the value of his own experience,
-and felt that he might perhaps by his example
-save some from suffering as he did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No doubt very much that I say of him will
-not be true to others. To myself it is true at
-any rate. We know very little of each other,
-and after all it is perhaps in biography that one
-is most acutely conscious of the truth in the
-pragmatic view of truth. Those things are true
-in Henry Maitland's life and character which
-fit in wholly with all my experience of him and
-make a coherent and likely theory. I used to
-think I knew him very well, and yet when I
-remember and reflect it seems to me that I know
-exceedingly little about him. And yet again, I
-am certain that of the two people in the world
-that I was best acquainted with he was one.
-We go through life believing that we know
-many, but if we sit down and attempt to draw
-them we find here and there unrelated facts and
-many vague incoherencies. We are in a fog
-about our very dear friend whom but yesterday
-we were ready to judge and criticise with an air
-of final knowledge. There is something
-humiliating in this, and yet how should we, who
-know so little of ourselves, know even those we
-love? To my mind, with all his weaknesses,
-which I shall not extenuate, Maitland was a
-noble and notable character, and if anything I
-should write may endure but a little while it is
-because there is really something of him in my
-words. I am far more concerned to write about
-Henry Maitland for those who loved him than
-for those who loved him not, and I shall be
-much better pleased if what I do about him
-takes the shape of an impression rather than of
-anything like an ordinary biography. Every
-important and unimportant political fool who
-dies nowadays is buried under obituary notices
-and a mausoleum in two volumes&mdash;a mausoleum
-which is, as a rule, about as high a work of art
-as the angels on tombstones in an early
-Victorian cemetery. But Maitland, I think,
-deserves, if not a better, a more sympathetic
-tribute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I left Radford Grammar School my
-father, being in the Civil Service, was sent to
-Moorhampton as Surveyor of Taxes, and his
-family shortly followed him. I continued my
-own education at Moorhampton College, which
-was then beginning to earn a high reputation as
-an educational centre. Some months before I
-met Maitland personally I knew his reputation
-was that of an extraordinary young scholar.
-Even as a boy of sixteen he swept everything
-before him. There was nobody in the place who
-could touch him at classical learning, and
-everybody prophesied the very greatest future for the
-boy. I met him first in a little hotel not very
-far from the College where some of us young
-fellows used to go between the intervals of
-lectures to play a game of billiards. I remember
-quite well seeing him sit on a little table
-swinging his legs, and to this day I can remember
-somewhat of the impression he made upon me.
-He was curiously bright, with a very mobile
-face. He had abundant masses of brown hair
-combed backwards over his head, grey-blue
-eyes, a very sympathetic mouth, an extraordinarily
-well-shaped chin&mdash;although perhaps
-both mouth and chin were a little weak&mdash;and a
-great capacity for talking and laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Henceforth he and I became very firm friends
-at the College, although we belonged to two
-entirely different sets. I was supposed to be an
-extraordinarily rowdy person, and was always
-getting into trouble both with the authorities
-and with my fellows, and he was a man who
-loathed anything like rowdiness, could not fight
-if he tried, objected even then to the Empire,
-hated patriotism, and thought about nothing but
-ancient Greece and Rome, or so it would appear
-to those who knew him at that time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I learnt then a little of his early history.
-Even when he was but a boy of ten or eleven he
-was recognised as a creature of most brilliant
-promise. He always believed that he owed
-most, and perhaps everything, to his father, who
-must have been a very remarkable man. Henry
-never spoke about him in later life without
-emotion and affection. I have often thought
-since that Maitland felt that most of his disasters
-sprang from the premature death of his father,
-whom he loved so tenderly. Indeed the elder
-man must have been a remarkable figure, a
-gentle, courtly, and most kindly man, himself born
-in exile and placed in alien circumstances.
-Maitland often used to speak, with a catch in
-his voice, of the way his father read to him. I
-remember not what books, but they were
-the classic authors of England; Shakespeare,
-Wordsworth, and Tennyson. Some seem to
-imagine that the father had what is called a
-well-stocked library. This was not true, but he
-had many good books and taught his son to love
-them. Among these there was one great
-volume of Hogarth's drawings which came into
-Henry Maitland's personal possession, only, I
-think, when he was finally domiciled in a
-London flat, where he and I often looked at it. It
-is curious that as a boy Hogarth had a fascination
-for him. He sometimes copied these drawings,
-for as a child he had no little skill as a
-draughtsman. What appealed to him in later
-days in Hogarth was the power of the man's
-satire, his painful bitterness, which can only be
-equalled by the ironies of Swift in another
-medium. Although personally I admire Hogarth
-I could never look at him with anything like
-pleasure or, indeed, without acute discomfort.
-I remember that Maitland in later years said in
-his book about the Victorian novelist: "With
-these faces who would spend hours of leisure?
-Hogarth copied in the strict sense of the word.
-He gives us life and we cannot bear it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Maitland's family came, I think, from Worcester,
-but something led the elder Maitland to
-Mirefield's, and there he came in contact with
-a chemist called Lake, whose business he
-presently bought. Perhaps the elder Maitland was
-not a wholly happy man. He was very gentle,
-but not a person of marked religious feeling.
-Indeed I think the attitude of the family at that
-time was that of free thought. From everything
-that Henry said of his father it always
-seemed to me that the man had been an alien in
-the cold Yorkshire town where his son was born.
-And Maitland knew that had his father lived he
-would never have been thrown alone into the
-great city of Moorhampton, "Lord of himself,
-that heritage of woe." Not all women understand
-the dangers that their sons may meet in
-such surroundings, and those who had charge
-of Henry Maitland's future never understood
-or recognized them in his youth. But his father
-would have known. In one chapter of "The
-Vortex," there is very much of Maitland. It is
-a curiously wrought picture of a father and his
-son in which he himself played alternately the
-part of father and child. I knew his anxieties
-for his own children, and on reading that
-chapter one sees them renewed. But in it there
-was much that was not himself. It was drawn
-rather from what he believed his father had felt.
-In "The Vortex" the little boy spends an hour
-alone with his father just before bedtime, and
-he calls it "A golden hour, sacred to memories
-of the world's own childhood."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Maitland went to school in Mirefields and
-this school has been called a kind of "Dotheboys
-Hall," which of course is absolutely ridiculous.
-It was not, in fact, a boarding-school at all, but
-a day school. The man who ran it was called
-Hinkson. Maitland said he was an uneducated
-man, or at any rate uneducated from his point
-of view in later years, yet he was a person of very
-remarkable character, and did very good work,
-taking it all round. A man named Christopher
-started this school and sold it to Hinkson, who
-had, I believe, some kind of a degree obtained
-at Durham. The boys who attended it were
-good middle class and lower middle class, some
-the sons of professional men, some the offspring
-of the richer tradesmen. Upon the whole it
-was a remarkably good school for that time.
-Many of the boys actually left the Grammar
-School at Mirefields to attend it. Henry
-Maitland always owned that Hinkson took great
-pains with his scholars, and affirmed that many
-owed him much. As I said, the general
-religious air of Maitland's home at that time was
-one of free thought. I believe the feminine
-members of the family attended a Unitarian
-Church, but the father did not go to church at
-all. One example of this religious attitude of
-his home came out when Hinkson called on his
-boys to repeat the collect of the day and
-Maitland replied with an abrupt negative that they
-did not do that kind of thing at home. Whereupon
-Hinkson promptly set him to acquire it,
-saying sternly that it would do him no harm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For the most part in those early days the elder
-Maitland and his son spent Sunday afternoon in
-the garden belonging to their Mirefields house.
-Oddly enough this garden was not attached to
-the dwelling but was a kind of allotment. It
-has been photographically reproduced by
-Henry Maitland in the seventh chapter of the
-first volume of "Morning." Very often Henry
-Maitland's father read to him in that garden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One of Maitland's schoolfellows at Hinkson's
-school was the son of the man from whom
-his father had bought the druggist's business.
-The elder Lake was a friend of Barry Sullivan,
-and theatrically mad. He started plays in
-which Henry always took some part, though not
-the prominent part which has been attributed to
-him by some. Nevertheless he was always
-interested in plays and had a very dramatic way
-of reading anything that was capable of
-dramatic interpretation. He always loved the
-sound of words, and even when he was a boy of
-about twelve he took down a German book and
-read some of it aloud to the younger Lake, who
-did not know German and said so. Whereupon
-Maitland shook his fist at him and said: "But
-Lake, listen, listen, listen&mdash;doesn't it sound
-fine?" This endured through all his life. At
-this same time he used to read Oliver Wendell
-Holmes aloud to some of the other boys. This
-was when he was thirteen. Even then he
-always mouthed the words and loved their rhythm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Naturally enough, his father being a poor
-man, there would have been no opportunity of
-Henry Maitland's going to Moorhampton and
-to its great college if he had not obtained some
-scholarship. This, I think, was the notion that
-his father had at the time, and the necessity for
-it became more imperative when his father died.
-He did obtain this scholarship when he was
-somewhere about sixteen, and immediately
-afterwards was sent over to Moorhampton quite
-alone and put into lodgings there. At his
-school in Mirefields he had taken every possible
-prize, and I think it was two exhibitions from
-the London University which enabled him to go
-to Moorhampton. The college was a curious
-institution, one of the earliest endeavours to
-create a kind of university centre in a great
-provincial city. We certainly had a very wonderful
-staff there, especially on the scientific side.
-Among the men of science at the college were
-Sir Henry Bissell; Schorstein, the great
-chemist; Hahn, also a chemist, and Balfour, the
-physicist. On the classical side were Professor
-Little and Professor Henry Parker, who were
-not by any means so eminent as their scientific
-colleagues. The eminence of our scientific
-professors did not matter very much from Henry
-Maitland's point of view, perhaps, for from the
-day of his birth to the day of his death, he took
-no interest whatever in science and loathed all
-forms of speculative thought with a peculiar
-and almost amusing horror. Mathematics he
-detested, and if in later years I ever attempted
-to touch upon metaphysical questions he used to
-shut up, to use an American phrase, just like a
-clam. But on the classical side he was much
-more than merely successful. He took every
-possible prize that was open to him. In his
-book "The Exile," there is a picture of a youth
-on prize day going up to receive prize after
-prize, and I know that this chapter contains
-much of what he himself must have felt when I
-saw him retire to a modest back bench loaded
-with books bound in calf and tooled in gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course a college of this description, which
-was not, properly speaking, a university, could
-only be regarded, for a boy of his culture, as a
-stepping-stone to one of the older universities,
-probably Cambridge, since most of my own
-friends who did go to the university went there
-from Moorhampton. I do not think there was
-a professor or lecturer or a single student in the
-college who did not anticipate for Henry Maitland
-one of the brightest possible futures, so
-far as success at the university could make it so.
-It is possible that I alone out of those who
-regarded him with admiration and affection had
-some doubt of this, and that was not because I
-disagreed as a boy with any of the estimates that
-had been formed of him, but simply because for
-some reason or another he chose me as a
-confidant. Many years afterwards he said to me
-with painful bitterness: "It was a cruel and
-most undesirable thing that I, at the age of
-sixteen, should have been turned loose in a big city,
-compelled to live alone in lodgings, with
-nobody interested in me but those at the college.
-I see now that one of my sisters should certainly
-have been sent with me to Moorhampton."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day he showed me a photograph. It was
-that of a young girl, aged perhaps seventeen&mdash;he
-at the time being very little more&mdash;with her
-hair down her back. She was not beautiful, but
-she had a certain prettiness, the mere prettiness
-of youth, and she was undoubtedly not a lady.
-After some interrogation on my part he told me
-that she was a young prostitute whom he knew,
-and I do not think I am exaggerating my own
-feelings when I say that I recognised instinctively
-and at once that if his relations with her
-were not put an end to some kind of disaster was
-in front of him. It was not that I knew very
-much about life, for what could a boy of less
-than eighteen really know about it?&mdash;but I had
-some kind of instinctive sense in me, and I was
-perfectly aware, even then, that Henry Maitland
-had about as little <i>savoir-vivre</i> as anybody
-I had ever met up to that time, or anybody I
-could ever expect to meet. It may seem strange
-to some that even at that time I had no moral
-views, and extremely little religion, although I
-may say incidentally that I thought about it
-sufficiently to become deliberately a Unitarian,
-refusing to be confirmed in the English Church,
-very much to the rage of the parish clergyman,
-and with the result of much friction with my
-father. Yet although I had no moral views I
-did my best to get Maitland to give up this girl,
-but he would not do it. The thing went on, so
-far as I am aware, for the best part of a year.
-He did all he could, apparently, to get Marian
-Hilton to leave the streets. He even bought a
-sewing machine and gave it to her with this
-view. That was another sample of his early
-idealism.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was in 1876, and the younger Lake, who
-was three years older than Maitland, had by
-then just qualified as a doctor. He was an
-assistant at Darwen and one day went over to
-Moorhampton to see Henry, who told him what
-he had told me about this Marian Hilton. He
-even went so far as to say that he was going to
-marry her. Dr. Lake, of course, being an older
-man, and knowing something of life through his
-own profession, did not approve of this and
-strongly objected. Afterwards he regretted a
-thousand times that he had not written direct to
-Maitland's people to tell them of what was
-going on. Still, although he was the older man,
-he was not so much older as to have got rid of
-the boyish loyalty of one youth to another, and
-he did not do what he knew he ought to have
-done. He found out that Maitland had even
-sold his father's watch to help this girl. This
-affair was also known to a young accountant who
-came from Mirefields whom I did not know,
-and also to another man at the college who is
-now in the Government Service. So far as I
-remember the accountant was not a good influence,
-but his other friend did what he could to
-get Maitland to break off this very undesirable
-relationship, with no more success than myself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have never understood how it was that he
-got into such frightful financial difficulties. I
-can only imagine that Marian must have had, in
-one way or another, the greater portion of the
-income which he got from the scholarships he
-held. I do know that his affection for her
-seemed at this time to be very sincere. And out
-of that affection there grew up, very naturally,
-a horror in his sensitive mind for the life this
-poor child was leading. He haunted the streets
-which she haunted, and sometimes saw her with
-other men. I suppose even then she must have
-been frightfully extravagant, and perhaps given
-to drink, but considering what his income was I
-think he should have been able to give her a
-pound a week if necessary, and yet have had
-sufficient to live on without great difficulty.
-Nevertheless he did get into difficulties, and
-never even spoke to me about it. I was quite
-aware, in a kind of dim way, that he was in
-trouble and looked very ill, but he did not give
-me his fullest confidence, although one day he
-told me, as he had told Lake, that he proposed
-marrying her. I was only a boy, but I was
-absolutely enraged at the notion and used every
-possible means to prevent him committing such
-an absurd act of folly. When I met him I
-discussed it with him. When I was away from
-him I wrote him letters. I suppose I wrote him
-a dozen letters begging that he would do no such
-foolish thing. I told him that he would wrong
-himself, and could do the girl no possible good.
-My instincts told me even then that she would,
-instead of being raised, pull him down. These
-letters of mine were afterwards discovered in
-his rooms when the tragedy had happened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During that time in 1876, we students at
-Moorhampton College were much disturbed by
-a series of thefts in the common room, and from
-a locker room in which we kept our books and
-papers and our overcoats. Books disappeared
-unaccountably and so did coats. Money was
-taken from the pockets of coats left in the room,
-and nobody knew who was to blame for this.
-Naturally enough we suspected a porter or one
-of the lower staff, but we were wrong. Without
-our knowledge the college authorities set a
-detective to discover who was to blame. One
-day I went into the common room, and standing
-in front of the fire found a man, a young fellow
-about my age, called Sarle, with whom I
-frequently played chess&mdash;he was afterwards
-president of the chess club at Oxford&mdash;and he
-said to me: "Have you heard the news?" "What
-news?" I asked. "Your friend, Henry
-Maitland, has been stealing those things that we
-have lost," he said. And when he said it I very
-nearly struck him, for it seemed a gross and
-incredible slander. But unfortunately it was
-true, and at that very moment Maitland was in
-gaol. A detective had hidden himself in the
-small room leading out of the bigger room
-where the lockers were and had caught him in
-the act. It was a very ghastly business and
-certainly the first great shock I ever got in my life.
-I think it was the same for everybody who knew
-the boy. The whole college was in a most
-extraordinary ferment, and, indeed, I may say the
-whole of Moorhampton which took any real
-interest in the college.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Professor Little, who was then the head of the
-college, sent for me and asked me what I knew
-of the matter. I soon discovered that this was
-because the police had found letters from me in
-Maitland's room which referred to Marian Hilton.
-I told the professor with the utmost frankness
-everything that I knew about the affair, and
-maintained that I had done my utmost to get
-him to break with her, a statement which all my
-letters supported. I have often imagined a
-certain suspicion, in the minds of some of those who
-are given to suspicion, that I myself had been
-leading the same kind of life as Henry
-Maitland. This was certainly not true; but I
-believe that one or two of those who did not like
-me&mdash;and there are always some&mdash;threw out
-hints that I knew Maitland had been taking
-these things. Yet after my very painful
-interview with Professor Little, who was a very
-delightful and kindly personality&mdash;though
-certainly not so strong a man as the head of such an
-institution should be&mdash;I saw that he gave me
-every credit for what I had tried to do. Among
-my own friends at the college was a young
-fellow, Edward Wolff, the son of the Rev. Mr. Wolff,
-the Unitarian minister at the chapel in
-Broad Street. Edward was afterwards fifth
-wrangler of his year at Cambridge. He got his
-father to interest himself in Henry Maitland's
-future. Mr. Wolff and several other men of
-some eminence in the city did what they could
-for him. They got together a little money and
-on his release from prison sent him away to
-America. He was met on coming out of prison
-by Dr. Lake's father, who also helped him in
-every possible way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seemed to me then that I had probably seen
-the last of Maitland, and the turn my own career
-took shortly afterwards rendered this even more
-likely. In the middle of 1876 I had a very
-serious disagreement with my father, who was a
-man of great ability but very violent temper,
-and left home. On September 23 of that year I
-sailed for Australia and remained there, working
-mostly in the bush, for the best part of three
-years. During all that time I heard little of
-Henry Maitland, though I have some dim
-remembrance of a letter I received from him
-telling me that he was in America. It was in 1879
-that I shipped before the mast at Melbourne in
-a blackwall barque and came back to England
-as a seaman.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A psychologist or a romancer might
-comment on the matter of the last
-chapter till the sun went down, but the
-world perhaps would not be much further
-advanced. It is better, I think, for the man's
-apology or condemnation to come out of the
-drama that followed. This is where Life mocks
-at Art. The tragic climax and catastrophe are
-in the first act, and the remainder is a long and
-bitter commentary. Maitland and I never
-discussed his early life. Practically we never
-spoke of Moorhampton though we often enough
-touched on ancient things by implication. His
-whole life as I saw it, and as I shall relate it, is
-but a development of the nature which made his
-disaster possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So one comes back to my own return from
-Australia. I had gone out there as a boy, and
-came back a man, for I had had a man's
-experiences; work, adventure, travel, hunger, and
-thirst. All this hardened a somewhat neurotic
-temperament, at any rate for the time, till life
-in a city, and the humaner world of books
-removed the temper which one gets when plunged
-in the baths of the ocean. During some months
-I worked for a position in the Civil Service and
-thought very little of Maitland, for he was lost.
-Yet as I got back into the classics he returned to
-me at times, and I wrote to my own friends in
-Moorhampton about him. They sent me vague
-reports of him in the United States, and then at
-last there came word that he was once more in
-England; possibly, and even probably, in
-London. Soon afterwards I found an advertisement
-in the <i>Athenæum</i> of a book entitled "Children
-of the Dawn," by Henry Maitland. As
-soon as I saw it I went straightway to the firm
-which published it, and being ignorant of the
-ways of publishers, demanded Maitland's
-address, which was promptly and very properly
-refused&mdash;for all they knew I might have been a
-creditor. They promised, however, to send on
-a letter to him, and I wrote one at once, receiving
-an answer the very next day. He appointed
-as our meeting-place the smoking-room of the
-Horse Shoe Hotel at the bottom of Tottenham
-Court Road. Conceivably it was one of the
-most curious meetings that had ever taken place
-in such a locality. We met late at night in the
-crowded smoking-room, and I found him very
-much his old self, for he was still a handsome
-and intelligent boy, though somewhat worn and
-haggard considering his years. As for myself,
-I remember that he told me, chuckling, that I
-looked like a soldier, which was no doubt the
-result of some years on horseback&mdash;possibly I
-walked with a cavalry stride. We sat and
-drank coffee, and had whiskey, and smoked,
-until we were turned out of the hotel at half-past
-twelve. It was perhaps owing to the fact that I
-was ever the greater talker that he learnt more
-of my life in Australia than I learnt of his in the
-United States. He was, in fact, somewhat
-reserved as to his adventures there. And yet,
-little by little, I learnt a great deal&mdash;it was always
-a case of little by little with him. At no time
-did he possess any great fluency or power of
-words when speaking of his own life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seems that friends had given him some
-letters to writers and others in New York, and he
-made the acquaintance there of many whose
-names I forget. I only recollect the name of
-Lloyd Garrison, the poet. Maitland told me
-that upon one occasion Lloyd Garrison induced
-him to go home with him about two o'clock in
-the morning to hear a sonnet on which Garrison
-had been working, as he affirmed almost with
-tears, for three whole months. As Maitland
-said, the result hardly justified the toil. Among
-the friends that he made there were a few artistic
-and literary tendencies who had made a little
-club, where it was <i>de rigueur</i> at certain times to
-produce something in the form of a poem.
-Maitland showed me the set of verses with
-which he had paid his literary footing; they
-were amusing, but of no great importance. So
-long as Maitland's money lasted in New York
-he had not an unpleasant time. It was only
-when he exhausted his means and had to earn a
-living by using his wits that he found himself
-in great difficulties, which were certainly not to
-be mitigated by the production of verse. But
-Maitland never pretended to write poetry,
-though he sometimes tried. I still have a few
-of his poems in my possession, one of them a set
-of love verses which he put into one of his books
-but omitted on my most fervent recommendation.
-I believe, however, that there is still much
-verse by him in existence, if he did not destroy
-it in later years when circumstances, his
-wanderings and his poverty, made it inconvenient
-to preserve comparatively worthless papers.
-And yet, if he did not destroy it, it might now
-be of no small interest to men of letters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When his means were almost exhausted he
-went to Boston, and from there drifted to
-Chicago. With a very few comments and alterations,
-the account given in "Paternoster Row,"
-contains the essence of Maitland's own adventures
-in America. It is, of course, written in a
-very light style, and is more or less tinged with
-humour. This humour, however, is purely literary,
-for he felt very little of it when he was
-telling me the story. He certainly lived during
-two days, for instance, upon peanuts, and he did
-it in a town called Troy. I never gathered
-what actually drove him to Chicago: it was,
-perhaps, the general idea that one gets in America
-that if one goes west one goes to the land of
-chances, but it certainly was not the land for
-Henry Maitland. Nevertheless, as he relates
-in "Paternoster Row," he reached it with less
-than five dollars in his pocket, and with a
-courage which he himself marvelled at, paid four
-and a half dollars for a week's board and
-lodging, which made him secure for the moment.
-This boarding-house he once or twice described
-to me. It was an unclean place somewhere on
-Wabash Avenue, and was occupied very largely
-by small actors and hangers-on at the Chicago
-theatres. The food was poor, the service was
-worse, and there was only one common room, in
-which they ate and lived. It was at this time,
-when he had taken a look round Chicago and
-found it very like Hell or Glasgow, which,
-indeed, it is, that he determined to attack the
-editor of the <i>Chicago Tribune</i>. The description
-he gives of this scene in "Paternoster Row" is
-not wholly accurate. I remember he said that
-he walked to and fro for hours outside the offices
-of the paper before he took what remained of
-his courage in both hands, rushed into the
-elevator, and was carried to an upper story. He
-asked for work, and the accessible and genial
-editor demanded, in return, what experience he
-had had with journalism. He said, with
-desperate boldness, "None whatever," and the
-editor, not at all unkindly, asked him what he
-thought he could do for them. He replied,
-"There is one thing that is wanting in your
-paper." "What is that?" asked the editor.
-"Fiction," said Maitland, "I should like to
-write you some." The editor considered the
-matter, and said that he had no objection to using
-a story provided it was good; it would serve for
-one of the weekly supplements, because these
-American papers at the end of the week have
-amazing supplements, full of all sorts of
-conceivable matter. Maitland asked if he might
-try him with a story of English life, and got
-permission to do so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He went away and walked up and down the
-lake shore for hours in the bitter wind, trying to
-think out a story, and at last discovered one. On
-his way home he bought a pen, ink, and paper,
-which they did not supply at the boarding-house.
-As it was impossible to write in his bedroom,
-where there was, of course, no fire, and no proper
-heating, it being so poor a place, he was
-compelled to write on the table of the common room
-with a dozen other men there, talking, smoking,
-and no doubt quarrelling. He wrote this story
-in a couple of days, and it was long enough to
-fill several columns of the paper. To his
-intense relief it was accepted by the editor after
-a day or two's waiting, and he got eighteen
-dollars according to "Paternoster Row," though I
-believe as a matter of fact it was less in reality.
-He stayed for some time in Chicago working
-for the <i>Tribune</i>, but at last found that he could
-write no more. I believe the editor himself
-suggested that the stories were perhaps not quite
-what he wanted. The one that I saw I only
-remember vaguely. It was, however, a sort of
-psychological love-story placed in London,
-written without much distinction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The account Broughton gives in "Paternoster
-Row" of his visit to Troy is fairly representative
-of Maitland's experiences. It was there that he
-lived for two or three days on peanuts, buying
-five cents' worth in the street now and then at
-some Italian peanut stand. In "Paternoster
-Row" he calls them loathsome, and no doubt
-they soon do become loathsome. A few are
-rather pleasing, more than a few are objectionable;
-and when anybody tries a whole diet of
-them for a day or two there is no doubt
-"loathsome" would be the proper word. After that
-he worked for a photographer for a few days,
-and then, I think, for a plumber, but of this I
-remember very little. It is quite certain that
-he never earned enough money in America to
-enable him to return to England, but who lent
-it to him I have no idea. To have been
-twenty-four hours with no more than a handful of
-peanuts in his pocket was no doubt an unpleasant
-experience, but, as I told him, it seemed very
-little to me. On one occasion in Australia I
-had been rather more than four and a half days
-without food when caught in a flood. Nevertheless
-this starvation was for him one of the
-initiation ceremonies into the mysteries of
-literature, and he was always accustomed to say,
-"How can such an one write? He never
-starved."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless to have been hard up in Chicago
-was a very great experience, as every one knows
-who knows that desperate city of the plains.
-Since that time I myself have known Chicago
-well, and have been there "dead broke." Thus
-I can imagine the state that he must have been
-in, and how desperate he must have become, to
-get out of his difficulties in the way that he
-actually employed. The endeavour to obtain work
-in a hustling country like the United States is
-ever a desperate proceeding for a nervous and
-sensitive man, and what it must have been to
-Henry Maitland to do what he did with the
-editor of the <i>Chicago Tribune</i> can only be
-imagined by those who knew him. In many ways
-he was the most modest and the shyest man who
-ever lived, and yet he actually told this editor:
-"I have come to point out to you there is a
-serious lack in your paper." To those who knew
-Maitland this must seem as surprising as it did
-to myself, and in later years he sometimes
-thought of that incident with inexpressible joy in
-his own courage. Of course the oddest thing
-about the whole affair is that up to that moment
-he had never written fiction at all, and only
-did it because he was driven to desperation. As
-will be seen when I come later to discuss his
-qualifications as a writer this is a curious
-comment on much of his bigger work. To me it
-seems that he should never have written fiction
-at all, although he did it so admirably. I think
-it would be very interesting if some American
-student of Maitland would turn over the files
-of the <i>Tribune</i> in the years 1878 and 1879 and
-disinter the work he did there. This is
-practically all I ever learnt about his life on the
-other side of the Atlantic. I was, indeed, more
-anxious to discover how he lived in London,
-and in what circumstances. I asked him as
-delicately as possible about his domestic
-circumstances, and he then told me that he was
-married, and that his wife was with him in London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is very curious to think that I never actually
-met his first wife. I had, of course, seen her
-photograph, and I have on several occasions
-been in the next room to her. On those occasions
-she was usually unable to be seen, mostly because
-she was intoxicated. When we renewed our
-acquaintance in the Horse Shoe Tavern he was
-then living in mean apartments in one of the
-back streets off Tottenham Court Road not very
-far from the hotel and indeed not far from a
-cellar that he once occupied in a neighbouring
-street. Little by little as I met him again and
-again I began to get some hold upon his actual
-life. Gradually he became more confidential,
-and I gathered from him that the habits of his
-wife were perpetually compelling him to move
-from one house to another. From what he told
-me, sometimes hopefully, and more often in
-desperation, it seems that this poor creature made
-vain and violent efforts to reform, generally
-after some long debauch. And of this I
-am very sure, that no man on earth could have
-made more desperate efforts to help her than he
-made. But the actual fact remains that they
-were turned out of one lodging after the other,
-for even the poorest places, it seems, could
-hardly stand a woman of her character in the
-house. I fear it was not only that she drank,
-but at intervals she deserted him and went back,
-for the sake of more drink, and for the sake of
-money with which he was unable to supply her,
-to her old melancholy trade. And yet she
-returned again with tears, and he took her in,
-doing his best for her. It was six months after our
-first meeting in Tottenham Court Road that he
-asked me to go and spend an evening with him.
-Naturally enough I then expected to make
-Mrs. Maitland's acquaintance, but on my
-arrival he showed some disturbance of mind and
-told me that she was ill and would be unable
-to see me. The house they lived in then was
-not very far from Mornington Crescent. It
-was certainly in some dull neighbourhood not
-half a mile away. The street was, I think, a
-cul-de-sac. It was full of children of the lower
-orders playing in the roadway. Their fathers
-and mothers, it being Saturday night, sat upon
-the doorsteps, or quarrelled, or talked in the
-road. The front room in which he received
-me was both mean and dirty. The servant who
-took me upstairs was a poor foul slut, and I do
-not think the room had been properly cleaned
-or dusted for a very long time. The whole of
-the furniture in it was certainly not worth seven
-and sixpence from the point of view of the
-ordinary furniture dealer. There were signs in
-it that it had been occupied by a woman, and
-one without the common elements of decency
-and cleanliness. Under a miserable and broken
-sofa lay a pair of dirty feminine boots. And
-yet on one set of poor shelves there were, still
-shining with gold, the prizes Maitland had won
-at Moorhampton College, and his painfully
-acquired stock of books that he loved so much.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I came in by arrangement after my own
-dinner, we simply sat and smoked and drank a
-little whiskey. Twice in the course of an hour
-our conversation was interrupted by the servant
-knocking at the door and beckoning to Maitland
-to come out. In the next room I then
-heard voices, sometimes raised, sometimes pleading.
-When Maitland returned the first time he
-said to me, "I am very sorry to have to leave
-you for a few minutes. My wife is really
-unwell." But I knew by now the disease from
-which she suffered. Twice or thrice I was
-within an ace of getting up and saying, "Don't
-you think I'd better go, old chap?" And then
-he was called out again. He came back at last
-in a state of obvious misery and perturbation,
-and said, "My dear man, my wife is so ill that
-I think I must ask you to go." I shook hands
-with him in silence and went, for I understood.
-A little afterwards he told me that that very
-afternoon his wife had gone out, and obtaining
-drink in some way had brought it home with
-her, and that she was then almost insane with
-alcohol. This was the kind of life that Henry
-Maitland, perhaps a great man of letters, lived
-for years. Comfortable people talk of his
-pessimism, and his greyness of outlook, and never
-understand. The man really was a hedonist, he
-loved things beautiful&mdash;beautiful and orderly.
-He rejoiced in every form of Art, in books and
-music, and in all the finer inheritance of the past.
-But this was the life he lived, and the life he
-seemed to be doomed to live from the very first.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When a weak man has a powerful sense of duty
-he is hard to handle by those who have some
-wisdom. In the early days I had done my best
-to induce him to give up this woman, long
-before he married her, when he was but a foolish
-boy. Now I once more did my best to get him
-to leave her, but I cannot pretend for an instant
-that anything I said or did would have had any
-grave effect if it had not been that the poor
-woman was herself doomed to be her own
-destroyer. Her outbreaks became more frequent,
-her departures from his miserable roof more
-prolonged. The windy gaslight of the slums
-appealed to her, and the money that she earned
-therein; and finally when it seemed that she
-would return no more he changed his rooms,
-and through the landlady of the wretched house
-at which he found she was staying he arranged
-to pay her ten shillings a week. As I know, he
-often made much less than ten shillings a week,
-and frequently found himself starving that she
-might have so much more to spend in drink.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This went on for years. It was still going on
-in 1884 when I left England again and went out
-to Texas. I had not succeeded in making a
-successful attack upon the English Civil Service,
-and the hateful work I did afterwards caused
-my health to break down. I was in America for
-three years. During that time I wrote fully
-and with a certain regularity to Maitland.
-When I came back and was writing "The Western
-Trail," he returned me the letters he had
-received from me. Among them I found some,
-frequently dealing with literary subjects,
-addressed from Texas, Minnesota, Iowa, the Rocky
-Mountains, Lower British Columbia, Oregon,
-and California. In his letters to me he never
-referred to Marian, but I gathered that his life
-was very hard, and, of course, I understood,
-without his saying it, that he was still supporting
-her. I found that this was so when I returned
-to England in 1887. At that time, by dint of
-hard, laborious work, which included a great
-deal of teaching, he was making for the first
-time something of a living. He occupied a
-respectable but very dismal flat somewhere at the
-back of Madame Tussaud's, in a place at that
-time called "Cumberland Residences." It was
-afterwards renamed "Cumberland Mansions,"
-and I well remember Maitland's frightful and
-really superfluous scorn of the snobbery which
-spoke in such a change of name. As I said, we
-corresponded the whole of the time I was in
-America. I used to send him a great deal of
-verse, some of which he pronounced actually
-poetry. No doubt this pleased me amazingly,
-and I wish that I still possessed his criticisms
-written to me while I was abroad. It is, from
-any point of view, a very great disaster that in
-some way which I cannot account for I have
-lost all his letters written to me previous to 1894.
-Our prolonged, and practically uninterrupted
-correspondence began in 1884, so I have actually
-lost the letters of ten whole years. They were
-interesting from many points of view. Much
-to my surprise, while I was in America, they
-came to me, not dated in the ordinary way, but
-according to the Comtist calendar. I wrote to
-him for an explanation, because up to that time
-I had never heard of it. In his answering letter
-he told me that he had become a Positivist.
-This was doubtless owing to the fact that he
-had come accidentally under the influence of
-some well-known Positivists.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seems that in desperation at his utter failure
-to make a real living at literature he had taken
-again to a tutor's work, which in a way was
-where he began. I find that in the marriage
-certificate between him and Marian Hilton he
-called himself a teacher of languages. But
-undoubtedly he loathed teaching save in those rare
-instances where he had an intelligent and
-enthusiastic pupil. At the time that I came back
-to England he was teaching Harold Edgeworth's
-sons. Without a doubt Harold Edgeworth
-was extremely kind to Henry Maitland
-and perhaps to some little extent appreciated
-him, in spite of the preface which he wrote in
-later years to the posthumous "Basil." He was
-not only tutor to Harold Edgeworth's sons, but
-was also received at his house as a guest. He met
-there many men of a certain literary eminence;
-Cotter Morrison, for instance, of whom he
-sometimes spoke to me, especially of his once
-characterising a social chatterer as a cloaca maxima
-of small talk. He also met Edmund Roden,
-with whom he remained on terms of friendship
-to the last, often visiting him in his house at
-Felixstowe, which is known to many men of
-letters. I think the fact that Edmund Roden
-was not only a man of letters but also, oddly
-enough, the manager of a great business,
-appealed in some way to Maitland's sense of
-humour. He liked Roden amazingly, and it was
-through him, if I remember rightly, that he
-became socially acquainted with George
-Meredith, whom, however, he had met in a business
-way when Meredith was reading for some firm
-of publishers at a salary of two hundred a year.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless, in spite of his making money by
-some tutorial work, Maitland was still as poor
-as a rat in a cellar, and the absurd antinomy
-between the society he frequented at times and his
-real position, made him sometimes shout with
-laughter which was not always really humorous.
-It was during this period of his life that a lady
-asked him at an "at-home" what his experience
-was in the management of butlers. According
-to what he told me he replied seriously that he
-always strictly refrained from having anything
-to do with men servants, as he much preferred
-a smart-looking young maid. It was during
-this period that he did some work with a man
-employed, I think, at the London Skin Hospital.
-This poor fellow, it seemed, desired to
-rise in life, and possessed ambition. He wanted
-to pass the London matriculation examination
-and thus become, as he imagined, somebody of
-importance. Naturally enough, being but a
-clerk, he lacked time for work, and the
-arrangement come to between him and Maitland was
-that his teacher should go to his lodging at seven
-o'clock in the morning and give him his lesson
-in bed before breakfast. As this was just
-before the time that Maitland worked for
-Mr. Harold Edgeworth, he was too poor, so he said,
-to pay bus fares from the slum in which he
-lived, and as a result he had to rise at six o'clock
-in the morning, walk for a whole hour to his
-pupil's lodging, and then was very frequently
-met with the message that Mr. So-and-so felt
-much too tired that morning to receive him, and
-begged Mr. Maitland would excuse him. It is
-a curious comment on the authority of "The
-Meditations of Mark Sumner," which many
-cling to as undoubtedly authentic, that he
-mentions this incident as if he did not mind it. As
-a matter of fact he was furiously wrath with this
-man for not rising to receive him, and used to go
-away in a state of almost ungovernable rage, as
-he told me many and many a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After my return from America we used to
-meet regularly once a week on Sunday afternoons,
-for I had now commenced my own initiation
-into the mystery of letters, and had become
-an author. By Maitland's advice, and, if I may
-say so, almost by his inspiration&mdash;most certainly
-his encouragement&mdash;I wrote "The Western
-Trail," and having actually printed a book I
-felt that there was still another bond between
-me and Maitland. I used to turn up regularly at
-7K Cumberland Residences at three o'clock on
-Sundays. From then till seven we talked of
-our work, of Latin and of Greek, of French,
-and of everything on earth that touched on
-literature. Long before seven Maitland used to
-apply himself very seriously to the subject of
-cooking. As he could not afford two fires he usually
-cooked his pot on the fire of the sitting-room.
-This pot of his was a great institution. It
-reminds me something of the gypsies' pot in which
-they put everything that comes to hand. Maitland's
-idea of cooking was fatness and a certain
-amount of gross abundance. He used to put
-into this pot potatoes, carrots, turnips, portions
-of meat, perhaps a steak, or on great days a
-whole rabbit, all of which he had bought
-himself, and carried home with his own hands. We
-used to watch the pot boiling, and perhaps about
-seven or half-past he would investigate its
-contents with a long, two-pronged iron fork, and
-finally decide much to our joy and contentment
-that the contents were edible. After our meal,
-for which I was usually ready, as I was
-practically starving much of this time myself, we
-removed the débris, washed up in company, and
-resumed our literary conversation, which
-sometimes lasted until ten or eleven. By that time
-Maitland usually turned me out, although my
-own day was not necessarily done for several
-hours. At those times when I was writing at
-all, I used to write between midnight and six
-o'clock in the morning.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those were great talks that we had, but they
-were nearly always talks about ancient times,
-about the Greeks and Romans, so far as we
-strayed from English literature. It may seem
-an odd thing, and it <i>is</i> odd until it is explained,
-that he had very little interest in the Renaissance.
-There is still in existence a letter of his
-to Edmund Roden saying how much he regretted
-that he took no interest in it. That letter
-was, I think, dated from Siena, a city of the
-Renaissance. The truth of the matter is that he
-was essentially a creature of the Renaissance
-himself, a pure Humanist. For this very
-reason he displayed no particular pleasure in that
-period. He was interested in the time in which
-the men of the Renaissance revelled after its
-rediscovery and the new birth of learning. He
-would have been at his best if he had been born
-when that time was in flower. The fathers of
-the Renaissance rediscovered Rome and Athens,
-and so did he. No one can persuade me that
-if this had been his fate his name would not now
-have been as sacred to all who love literature
-as those of Petrarch and his glorious fellows.
-As a matter of fact it was this very quality of
-his which gave him such a lofty and lordly
-contempt for the obscurantist theologian. In my
-mind I can see him treating with that irony
-which was ever his favourite weapon, some relic
-of the dark ages of the schools. In those hours
-that we spent together it was wonderful to hear
-him talk of Greece even before he knew it, for
-he saw it as it had been, or as his mind made
-him think it had been, not with the modern
-Greek&mdash;who is perhaps not a Greek at
-all&mdash;shouting in the market-place. I think that he
-had a historical imagination of a very high
-order, even though he undoubtedly failed when
-endeavouring to use it. That was because he
-used it in the wrong medium. But when he saw
-the Acropolis in his mind he saw it before the
-Turks had stabled their horses in the Parthenon,
-and before the English, worse vandals than the
-Turks, had brought away to the biting smoke of
-London the marbles of Pheidias. Even as a
-boy he loved the roar and fume of Rome,
-although he had not yet seen it and could only
-imagine it. He saw in Italy the land of Dante and
-Boccaccio, a land still peopled in the south
-towards Sicily with such folks as these and Horace
-had known. My own education had been
-wrought out in strange, rough places in the new
-lands. It was a fresh education for me to come
-back to London and sit with Maitland on these
-marvellous Sunday afternoons and evenings
-when he wondered if the time would ever come
-for him to see Italy and Greece in all reality.
-It was for the little touches of realism, the little
-pictures in the Odes, that he loved Horace, and
-loved still more his Virgil; and, even more,
-Theocritus and Moshos, for Theocritus wrote things
-which were ancient and yet modern, full of
-the truth of humanity. Like all the men of the
-Renaissance he turned his eyes wistfully to the
-immemorial past, renewed in the magic alembic
-of his own mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless, great as these hours were that
-we spent together, they were sometimes deeply
-melancholy, and he had nothing to console him
-for the miseries which were ever in the
-background. It was upon one of these Sundays, I
-think early in January, 1888, that I found him in
-a peculiarly melancholy and desperate condition.
-No doubt he was overworked, for he always
-was overworked; but he said that he could
-stand it no longer, he must get out of London
-for a few days or so. For some reason which I
-cannot for the world understand, he decided to
-go to Eastbourne, and begged me to go with
-him. Why he should have selected, in Christmas
-weather and an east wind, what is possibly
-the coldest town in England in such conditions,
-I cannot say, but I remember that the journey
-down to the sea was mercilessly cold. Of
-course we went third class, and the carriages
-were totally unheated. We were both of us
-practically in extreme poverty. I was living in
-a single room in Chelsea, for which I paid four
-shillings a week, and for many months my total
-weekly expenses were something under twelve
-shillings. At that particular moment he was
-doing extremely badly, and the ten shillings that
-he paid regularly to his wife frequently left him
-with insufficient to live upon. I can hardly
-understand how it was that he determined to
-spend even the little extra money needed for
-such a journey. When we reached Eastbourne
-we walked with our bags in our hands down
-to the sea front, and then, going into a poor back
-street, selected rooms. It was perhaps what he
-and I often called "the native malignity of
-matter," and his extreme ill luck in the matter of
-landladies, which pursued him for ever throughout
-his life in lodgings, that the particular
-landlady of the house in which we took refuge was
-extraordinarily incapable. The dwelling itself
-was miserably draughty and cold, and wretchedly
-furnished. The east wind which blows
-over the flat marshes between Eastbourne and
-the Downs entered the house at every crack, and
-there were many of them. The first night we
-were in the town it snowed very heavily, and in
-our shabby little sitting-room we shivered in
-spite of the starved fire. We sat there with our
-overcoats on and did our best to be cheerful.
-Heaven alone knows what we talked of, but most
-likely, and very possibly, it may have been
-Greek metres, always his great passion. Yet
-neither of us was in good case. We both had
-trouble enough on our shoulders. I remember
-that he spoke very little of his wife, for I would
-not let him do so, although I knew she was most
-tremendously on his mind, and was, in fact, what
-had driven him for the moment out of London.
-Of course, he had a very natural desire that
-she should die and have done with life, with
-that life which must have been a torment to
-herself as it was a perpetual torture and a running
-sore to him. At the same time the poor fellow
-felt that he had no right to wish that she would
-die, but I could see the wish in his eyes, and
-heaven knows that I wished it fervently for him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The next morning we went for a long walk
-across the Downs to the little village of East
-Dean. It was blowing a whole gale from the
-north east, and it was quite impossible to go near
-the steep cliffs. The snow was in places two
-feet deep, and a sunk road across the Downs
-was level with the turf. I think now that none
-but madmen would have gone out on such a day.
-Doubtless we were mad enough; at any rate we
-were writers, and by all traditions had the right to
-be mad. But when we once got started we meant
-going through it at all events. I did not
-remember many colder days, in spite of my travels,
-but we persevered, and at last came to the
-little village and there took refuge in the
-public-house and drank beer. Maitland, with his
-extraordinary mixture of fine taste and something
-which was almost grossness in regard to food,
-loved all malt liquors&mdash;I think partly because
-he felt some strange charm in their being
-historically English drinks. The walk back to
-Eastbourne tried us both hard, for neither of
-us had been well fed for months, and the wind
-and snow in our faces made walking heavy and
-difficult. Nevertheless Maitland was now
-almost boisterously cheerful, as he often was
-outwardly when he had most reason to be the
-opposite. While he walked back the chief topic
-of conversation was the very excellent nature of
-the pudding which he had instructed our
-landlady to prepare against a hungry return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was always extraordinarily fond of rich,
-succulent dishes. A <i>fritto misto</i> for instance,
-made him shout for joy, though he never met
-with it until he went to Italy. With what
-inimitable fervour of the gastronomic mind would
-he declare these preferences! Dr. Johnson said
-that in a haggis there was much "fine, confused
-feeding," and Maitland undoubtedly agreed
-with him, as he always said when he quoted the
-passage. In many of his books there are
-examples of his curious feeling with regard to
-food. They are especially frequent in
-"Paternoster Row"; as, for instance, when one
-character says: "Better dripping this than I've had
-for a long time.... Now, with a little pepper
-and salt, this bread and dripping is as appetising
-a food as I know. I often make a dinner of
-it." To which the other replies: "I have done
-the same myself before now. Do you ever buy
-pease-pudding?" and to this the Irishman's
-reply was enthusiastic. "I should think so! I
-get magnificent pennyworths at a shop in Cleveland
-Street, of a very rich quality indeed. Excellent
-faggots they have there, too. I'll give
-you a supper of them one night before you go." I
-had often heard of this particular shop in
-Cleveland Street, and of one shop where they
-sold beef, kept by a man whose pride was that
-he had been carving beef behind the counter for
-thirty years without a holiday.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now we were hurrying back to Eastbourne,
-Maitland said, not because it was cold;
-not because the north-east wind blew; not
-because we were exposed to the very bitterest
-weather we remembered; but because of an
-exceedingly rich compound known as an apple
-pudding. He and the wind worked me up to
-an almost equal expression of ardour, and thus
-we came back to our poverty-stricken den in
-good spirits. But, alas, the dinner that day was
-actually disastrous. The meat was grossly
-overdone, the vegetables were badly cooked, the beer
-was thin and flat. We were in dismay, but still
-we said to each other hopefully that there was
-the pudding to come. It was brought on and
-looked very fine, and Maitland cut into it with
-great joy and gave me a generous helping. I
-know that I tasted it eagerly, but to my tongue
-there was an alien flavour about it. I looked
-up and said to Maitland, "It is very curious,
-but this pudding seems to me to taste of
-kerosene." Maitland laughed, but when his turn
-came to try he laughed no longer, for the
-pudding actually did taste of lamp oil. It
-appeared, on plaintive and bitter inquiry, that our
-unfortunate landlady after making it had put
-it under the shelf on which she kept her lamp
-gear. We subsided on melancholy and mouldy
-cheese. This disappointment, however childish
-it may appear to the better fed, was to Henry
-Maitland something really serious. Those who
-have read "The Meditations of Mark Sumner,"
-without falling into the error of thinking that
-the talk about food in that melancholy book
-was only his fun, will understand that it was a
-very serious matter with Maitland. It took all
-his philosophy and a very great deal of mine to
-survive the tragedy, and to go on talking as we
-did of new words and the riches of philology.
-And as we talked the wind roared down our
-street in a vicious frenzy. It was a monstrously
-bad time to have come to Eastbourne, and we
-had no compensations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the next night that the great news
-came. In spite of the dreariest weather we had
-spent most of the day in the open air. After
-our dinner, which this time was more of a
-success, or at any rate less of a tragic failure, we
-were sitting hugging the fire to keep warm when
-a telegram was brought in for him. He read it
-in silence and handed it over to me with the
-very strangest look upon his face that I had ever
-seen. It was unsigned, and came from London.
-The message was: "Your wife is dead." There
-was nothing on earth more desirable for
-him than that she should die, the poor wretch
-truly being like a destructive wind, for she had
-torn his heart, scorched his very soul, and
-destroyed him in the beginning of his life. All
-irreparable disasters came from her, and through
-her. Had it not been for her he might then
-have held, or have begun to hope for, a great
-position at one of the universities. And now a
-voice out of the unknown cried that she was dead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He said to me, with a shaking voice and shaking
-hands, "I cannot believe it&mdash;I cannot believe
-it." He was as white as paper; for it meant so
-much&mdash;not only freedom from the disaster and
-shame and misery that drained his life-blood,
-but it would mean a cessation of money
-payments at a time when every shilling was very
-hard to win. And yet this was when he was
-comparatively well known, for it was two years
-after the publication of "The Mob." And still,
-though his books ran into many editions, for
-some inexplicable reason, which I yet hope to
-explain, he sold them one after another for fifty
-pounds. And I knew how he worked; how
-hard, how remorselessly. I knew who the chief
-character was in "Paternoster Row" before
-"Paternoster Row" was written. I knew with
-what inexpressible anguish of soul he laboured,
-with what dumb rage against destiny. And
-now here was something like freedom at last, if
-only it were true.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This message came so late at night that there
-was no possibility of telegraphing to London to
-verify it even if he had been sure that he could
-get to the original sender. It was also much too
-late to go up to town. We sat silently for hours,
-and I knew that he was going back over the
-burning marl of the past. Sometimes he did
-speak, asking once and again if it could be true,
-and I saw that while he was still uncertain he
-was bitter and pitiless. Yet if she were only
-really dead...
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We went up to town together in the morning.
-In the train he told me that while he was still
-uncertain, he could not possibly visit the place
-she lived in, and he begged me to go there
-straight and bring him word as to the truth of
-this report. I was to explore the desperate slum
-in the New Cut in which she had exhausted the
-last dreadful years of her life, and upon leaving
-him I went there at once. With Maitland's full
-permission I described something of the milieu
-in "John Quest." On reaching the New Cut
-I dived into an inner slum from an outer one,
-and at last found myself in a kitchen which was
-only about eight or nine feet square. It was,
-of course, exceedingly dirty. The person in
-charge of it was a cheerful red-headed girl of
-about eighteen years of age. On learning the
-cause of my visit she went out and brought in
-her mother, and I soon verified the fact that
-Marian Maitland was dead. She had died the
-first bitter night we spent at Eastbourne, and was
-found next morning without any blankets, and
-with no covering for her emaciated body but a
-damp and draggled gown.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Presently the neighbours came in to see the
-gentleman who was interested in this woman's
-death. They talked eagerly of the funeral, for,
-as Maitland knew only too well, a funeral, to
-these people, is one of their great irregular but
-recurring festivals. At Maitland's desire I gave
-them carte blanche up to a certain sum, and I
-think they felt that, as the agent of the husband, I
-behaved very well. Of course they knew all about
-the poor girl who lay dead upstairs, and although
-they were honest enough people in their way,
-and though the red-headed girl to whom I first
-talked worked hard in a factory making hooks
-and eyes, as she told me, they seemed to have
-no moral feelings whatever about her very
-obvious profession. I myself did not see the dead
-woman. I was not then acquainted with death,
-save among strangers. I could not bring
-myself to look upon her. Although death is so
-dreadful always, the surroundings of death may
-make things worse. But still, she <i>was</i> dead, and
-I hastened back to Maitland to tell him so. It
-was a terrible and a painful relief to him; and
-when he was sure she was gone, he grieved for
-her, grieved for what she might have been, and
-for what she was. He remembered now that at
-intervals she used to send him heart-breaking
-messages asking to be forgiven, messages that
-even his unwisdom at last could not listen to.
-But he said very little. So far as the
-expression of his emotions went he often had very
-great self-control. It is a pity that his
-self-control so rarely extended itself to acts. But now
-he was free. Those who have forged their own
-chains, and lived in a hell of their own
-dreadful making, can understand what this is and
-what it means. But he did go down to the pit
-in which she died, and when I saw him a day
-or two later he was strangely quiet, even for
-him. He said to me, "My dear chap, she had
-kept my photograph, and a very little engraving
-of the Madonna di San Sisto, all these years of
-horrible degradation." He spoke in the almost
-inaudible tone that was characteristic of him,
-especially at that time. We arranged the
-funeral together, and she was buried. If only all
-the misery that she had caused him could have
-been buried with her, it would have been well.
-She died of what I may call, euphemistically,
-specific laryngitis. Once he told me a dreadful
-story about her in hospital. One of the
-doctors at St. Thomas's had questioned her, and
-after her answers sent for Maitland, and
-speaking to him on the information given him by the
-wife, was very bitter. Henry, even as he told
-me this years after, shook with rage and
-indignation. He had not been able to defend himself
-without exposing his wife's career.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There are many methods of writing
-biography. Each has its advantages,
-even the chronological compilation.
-But chronology is no strong point of mine, and
-in this sketch I shall put but little stress on
-dates. There is great advantage in describing
-things as they impress themselves on the writer.
-A portrait gains in coherency and completeness
-by temporary omissions more than it can ever
-gain by the empty endeavour to handle each
-period fully. In this last chapter I might have
-endeavoured to describe Maitland at work, or to
-speak of his ambitions, or even to criticise what
-he had already done, or to give my own views of
-what he meant to achieve. There is authority
-for every method, and most authorities are bad,
-save Boswell&mdash;and few would pine for Boswell's
-qualities at the price of his failings. Yet one
-gets help from him everywhere, little as it may
-show. Only the other day I came across a
-passage in the "Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides"
-which has some value. Reporting Johnson, he
-writes: "Talking of biography, he said he did
-not think the life of any literary man in England
-had been well written. Besides the common
-incidents of life it should tell us his studies, his
-mode of living, the means by which he attained
-to excellence, and his opinion of his own
-works." Such I shall endeavour to do. Nevertheless
-Johnson was wrong. Good work had then been
-done in biography by Walton, whose Lives, by
-the way, Maitland loved; and Johnson himself
-was not far from great excellence when he
-described his friend Savage in the "Lives of the
-Poets" in spite of its want of colloquial ease.
-There came in then the value of friendship and
-actual personal knowledge, as it did in Boswell's
-"Life," I can only hope that my own deep
-acquaintance with Maitland will compensate for
-my want of skill in the art of writing lives, for
-which novel-writing is but a poor training. Yet
-the deeper one's knowledge the better it is to
-simplify as one goes, taking things by
-themselves, going forwards or backwards as may
-seem best, without care of tradition, especially
-where tradition is mostly bad. We do not write
-biography in England now as Romain Rolland
-writes that of Beethoven. Seldom are we
-grieved for our heroes, or rejoice with them.
-Photography, or the photographic portrait, is
-more in request than an impression. However,
-to resume in my own way, having to be content
-with that, and caring little for opinion, that
-fluctuant critic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long as our friendship existed it is perhaps
-curious that we never called each other, except
-on very rare occasions, by anything but our
-surnames. This, I think, is due to the fact that
-we had been at Moorhampton College together.
-It is, I imagine, the same thing with all
-schoolboys. Provided there is no nickname given,
-men who have been chums at school seem to
-prefer the surname by which they knew their
-friends in the early days. I have often noticed
-there is a certain savage tendency on the part of
-boys to suppress their Christian names, their
-own peculiar mark. And sometimes I have
-wondered whether this is not in some obscure
-way a survival of the savage custom of many
-tribes in which nobody is ever mentioned by his
-right name, because in that name there inheres
-mysteriously the very essence of his being and
-inheritance, the knowledge of which by others
-may expose him to some occult danger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I believe I said above that from the time I
-first met Maitland after my return from
-Australia, until I went away again to Arizona, I was
-working in the Admiralty and the India Office
-as a writer at tenpence an hour. No doubt I
-thought the pay exiguous, and my prospects
-worth nothing. Yet when I came back from
-America and found him domiciled at 7K
-Cumberland Residences, my economic basis in life
-became even more exiguous, whatever hope
-might have said of my literary future. I was,
-in fact, a great deal poorer than Maitland. He
-lived in a flat and had at least two rooms and a
-kitchen. Yet it was a horrible place of
-extraordinary gloom, and its back windows overlooked
-the roaring steam engines of the Metropolitan
-Railway. In some ways no doubt my own
-apartment, when I took to living by myself in
-Chelsea, was superior in cheerfulness to 7K. Shortly
-after my return to England, when I had
-expended the fifty pounds I received for my first
-book, "The Western Trail," I took a single room
-in Chelsea, put in a few sticks of furniture given
-to me by my people, and commenced housekeeping
-on my own account on all I could make and
-the temporary ten shillings a week allowed me
-by my father, who at that time, for all his
-native respect for literature, regarded the practice
-of it with small hope and much suspicion. I
-know that it greatly amused Maitland to hear
-of his views on the subject of the self revelations
-in "The Western Trail," which dealt with my
-life in Western America. After reading that
-book he did not speak to me for three days, and
-told my younger brother, "These are pretty
-revelations about your brother having been a
-common loafer." At this Maitland roared, but he
-roared none the less when he understood that
-three columns of laudation in one of the reviews
-entirely changed my father's view of that
-particular book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I should not trouble to say anything about my
-own particular surroundings if it were not that
-in a sense they also became Maitland's, although
-I went more frequently to him than he came to
-me. Nevertheless he was quite familiar with
-my one room and often had meals there which
-I cooked for him. Of course at that time, from
-one point of view, I was but a literary beginner
-and aspirant, while Maitland was a rising and
-respected man, who certainly might be poor,
-and was poor, but still he had published "The
-Mob" and other books, his name was well
-known, and his prospects, from the literary, if
-not from the financial point of view, seemed very
-good. I was the author of one book, the result
-of three years' bitter hard experience, written
-in twenty-six days as a <i>tour de force</i>, and though
-I had ambition I seemed to have nothing more
-to write about. From my own point of view
-Maitland was, of course, very successful. His
-flat with more rooms than one in it was a
-mansion, and he was certainly making something
-like a hundred a year. Still, I think that when
-he came down to me and found me
-comparatively independent, he rather envied me. At
-any rate I had not to keep an errant wife on the
-money that I made with infinite difficulty. He
-came to see me in Chelsea in my very early days,
-and took great joy in my conditions. For one
-thing I had no attendance with this room. I
-was supposed to look after it for myself in every
-way. This, he assured me, made my estate the
-more gracious, as any one can understand who
-remembers all that he has said about landladies
-and lodging-house servants and charwomen.
-He was overjoyed with the list of things I
-bought: a fender and fire-irons, a coal-scuttle, a
-dust-bin, and blacking brushes. He found me
-one day shaving by the aid of my own dim
-reflection in the glass of an etching which I had
-brought from home, because I had no looking-glass
-and no money to spare to buy one. I remember
-we frequently went together over the
-question of finance. Incidentally I found his
-own habit of buying cooked meat peculiarly
-extravagant. I have a book somewhere among my
-papers in which I kept accounts for my first
-three months in Chelsea to see how I was going
-to live on ten shillings a week, which Maitland
-assured me was preposterous riches, even if I
-managed to make no more.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Naturally enough, seeing that we had been
-friends for so long, and seeing that he had
-encouraged me so greatly to write my first book,
-he took a vast interest in all my proceedings, and
-was very joyous, as he would have said, to
-observe that I could not afford sheets but slept in
-the blankets which I had carried all over America.
-I seek no sympathy on this point, for after
-all it was not a matter of my being unable to
-afford linen; it is impossible for the average
-comfortable citizen to understand how disagreeable
-sheets become after some thousands of nights
-spent camping in mere wool, even of the cheapest.
-It took me years to learn to resign myself
-to cold linen, or even more sympathetic cotton,
-when I became a respectable householder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the neighbourhood where I lived there
-was, of course, a great artistic colony, and as I
-knew one or two artists already, I soon became
-acquainted with all the others. Many of them
-were no richer than myself, and as Bohemia and
-the belief that there was still a Bohemia formed
-one of Maitland's greatest joys, he was always
-delighted to hear of any of our remarkable shifts
-to live. It is an odd thing to reflect that
-A. D. Mack, Frank Wynne, Albert Croft, and three
-other artists whose names I now forget, and I
-once had a glorious supper of fried fish served in
-a newspaper on the floor of an empty studio. The
-only thing I missed on that particular occasion
-was Maitland's presence, but, of course, the
-trouble was that Maitland would seldom
-associate with anybody whom he did not know
-already, and I could rarely get him to make the
-acquaintance of my own friends. Yet such
-experiences as we were sometimes reduced to more than
-proved to him that his dear Bohemia existed,
-though later in his life, as one sees in "Mark
-Sumner," he often seemed to doubt whether it
-was still extant. On this point I used to console
-him, saying that where any two artists butted
-their foolish heads against the economic system,
-there was Bohemia; Bohemia, in fact, was living
-on a course of high ideals, whatever the world
-said of them. At this hour there are writers
-learning their business on a little oatmeal, as
-George Meredith did, or destroying their
-digestions, as I did mine and Henry Maitland's, on
-canned corn beef. Even yet, perhaps, some
-writers and artists are making their one big meal
-a day on fried fish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One Sunday when I missed going to Maitland's,
-because he was then out of town visiting
-his family, I had a tale for him on his return.
-It appeared that I had been writing, and had
-got so disgusted with the result of it that I found
-I could not possibly stay in my room, and so
-determined to go round to my friend Mack. No
-sooner had I made up my mind on this subject
-than there was a knock at the door, and
-presently in came Mack himself. I said promptly,
-"It is no good your coming here, for I was just
-going round to you." Whereupon he replied,
-"It is no good your coming to me because I have
-no coal, no coke, and nobody will give me any
-more because I owe for so much already." I
-replied that I was not going to stay in my room
-in any case, and affirmed that I would rather
-be in his studio in the cold than the room where
-I was. Whereupon he suddenly discovered that
-my scuttle was actually full of coal, and proposed
-to take it round to the studio. This seemed
-a really brilliant idea, and after much
-discussion of ways and means my inventive faculty
-produced an old portmanteau and several
-newspapers, and after wrapping up lumps of coal
-in separate pieces of paper we packed the
-portmanteau with the coal and carried it round to
-the studio in Manresa Road. This seemed to
-Maitland so characteristic of an artist's life that
-he was very much delighted when I told him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is an odd thing that in one matter Maitland
-and I were at that time much alike. From
-most points of view there can hardly have been
-two more different men, for he was essentially a
-man of the study and the cloister, while I was
-far more naturally a man of the open air.
-Nevertheless, when it came to journalism we
-were both of the same mind. While I was away
-from England and he was teaching Harold
-Edgeworth's sons, Edgeworth introduced him
-to John Harley, then editing the <i>Piccadilly
-Gazette</i>, who offered, and would no doubt have
-kept to it, to use as much matter as possible if
-Maitland would supply him with something in
-the journalistic form. Apparently he found it
-too much against his natural grain to do this
-work, and I was now in the same predicament.
-It is true that I had something of a natural
-journalistic flair which he lacked, but my nose
-for a likely article was rendered entirely useless
-to me by the fact that I never could write
-anything until I had thought about it for several
-days, by which time it was stale, and much too
-late from the newspaper point of view.
-Nevertheless Maitland did occasionally do a little odd
-journalism, for I remember once, before I went
-to America, being with him when he received
-the proofs of an article from the <i>St. James'
-Gazette</i>, and picking up "Mark Sumner" one may
-read: "I thought of this as I sat yesterday
-watching a noble sunset, which brought back to
-my memory the sunsets of a London autumn,
-thirty years ago. It happened that, on one such
-evening, I was by the river at Chelsea, with
-nothing to do except to feel that I was hungry, and
-to reflect that, before morning, I should be
-hungrier still. I loitered upon Battersea
-Bridge&mdash;the old picturesque wooden bridge, and there
-the western sky took hold upon me. Half an
-hour later I was speeding home. I sat down,
-and wrote a description of what I had seen, and
-straightway sent it to an evening paper, which,
-to my astonishment, published the thing next
-day&mdash;'On Battersea Bridge.' I have never
-seen that article since I saw the proof of it, but
-there was something so characteristic in it that
-I think it would be worth some one's while to
-hunt up the files of the <i>St. James' Gazette</i> in
-order to find it. It appears that while he was
-leaning over the bridge, enjoying the sunset,
-there was also a workman looking at it. The
-river was at a low stage, for it was at least
-three-quarters-ebb, and on each side of the river there
-were great patches of shining mud, in which the
-glorious western sky was reflected, turning the
-ooze into a mass of most wonderful colour.
-Maitland said to me, "Of course I was pleased
-to see somebody else, especially a poor fellow
-like that, enjoying the beauty of the sunset. But
-presently my companion edged a little closer to
-me, and seeing my eyes directed towards the
-mud which showed such heavenly colouring, he
-remarked to me, with an air of the deepest
-interest, 'Throws up an 'eap of mud, don't she?'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sometimes when Maitland came down to me
-in Danvers Street he used to go over my
-accounts and discuss means of making them less.
-I think his chief joy in them was the feeling
-that some of his more respectable friends, such
-as Harold Edgeworth, would have been horrified
-at my peculiarly squalid existence. In a
-sense it was, no doubt, squalid, and yet in another
-it was perhaps the greatest time in my life, and
-Maitland knew it. In the little book in which
-I kept my expenses he came across one day on
-which I had absolutely spent nothing. This
-was a great joy to him. On another day he
-found a penny put down as "charity." On looking
-up the book I find that a note still declares
-that this penny was given to a little girl to pay
-her fare in the bus. I remember quite well that
-this beneficence on my part necessitated my
-walking all the way to Chelsea from Hyde Park
-Corner. Yet Maitland assured me that,
-compared with himself at times, I was practically a
-millionaire, although he owned that he had very
-rarely beaten my record for some weeks when
-all expenditure on food was but three-and-six-pence.
-One week it actually totalled no more
-than one-and-elevenpence, but I have no doubt
-that I went out to eat with somebody else on
-those days&mdash;unless it was at the time my liver
-protested, and gave me such an attack of gloom
-that I went to bed and lay there for three days
-without eating, firmly determined to die and
-have done with the literary struggle. This fast
-did me a great deal of good. On the fourth day
-I got up and rustled vigorously for a meal, and
-did some financing with the admirable result of
-producing a whole half-crown.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whenever Maitland came to me I cooked his
-food and my own on a little grid, or in a
-frying-pan, over the fire in my one room. This fire
-cost me on an average a whole shilling a week,
-or perhaps a penny or two more if the coals,
-which I bought in the street, went up in price.
-This means that I ran a fire on a hundredweight
-of coal each week, or sixteen pounds of coal a
-day. Maitland, who was an expert on coal,
-assured me that I was extremely extravagant, and
-that a fire could be kept going for much less.
-On trying, I found out that when I was exceedingly
-hard up I could keep in a very little fire
-for several hours a day on only eight pounds
-of coal, but sometimes I had to let it go out, and
-run round to a studio to get warm by some
-artist's stove,&mdash;provided always that the
-merchant in coke who supplied him had not refused
-my especial friend any further credit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time Maitland and I were both
-accustomed to work late, although he was just then
-beginning to labour at more reasonable times,
-though not to write fewer hours. As for me, I
-used to find getting up in the morning at a
-proper hour quite impossible. Probably this
-was due to some inherited gout, to poisonous
-indigestion from my own cooking, or to a continued
-diet of desiccated soups and "Jungle" beef
-from Chicago. However, it seemed to Maitland
-that I was quite in the proper tradition of
-letters while I was working on a long novel,
-only published years afterwards, which I used
-to begin at ten or eleven o'clock at night,
-frequently finishing at six o'clock in the morning
-when the sparrows began to chirp outside my
-window.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a result of this night-work I used to get up
-at four o'clock in the afternoon, sometimes even
-later, to make my own breakfast. Afterwards
-I would go out to see some of my friends in their
-studios, and at the time most people were
-thinking of going to bed I sat down to the
-wonderfully morbid piece of work which I believed
-was to bring me fame. This was a rather odd
-book, called "The Fate of Hilary Dale." It
-has no claim whatever to any immortality, and
-from my point of view its only value lies in the
-fact that there is a very brief sketch of Maitland
-in it. He is described in these words: "Will
-Curgenven, writer, teacher, and general apostle
-of culture, as it is understood by the elect, had
-been hard at work for some hours on an essay
-on Greek metres, and was growing tired of it.
-His dingy subject and dingy Baker Street flat
-began to pall on him, and he rose to pace his
-narrow room." Now Will Curgenven, of course,
-was Maitland and the dingy Baker Street flat
-was 7K. "'Damn the nature of things,' as
-Porson said when he swallowed embrocation instead
-of whisky!" was what I went on to put into his
-mouth. This, indeed, was one of Maitland's
-favourite exclamations. It stood with him for
-all the strange and blasphemous and eccentric
-oaths with which I then decorated my language,
-the result of my experiences in the back blocks
-of Australia and the Pacific Slope of America.
-In this book I went on to make a little fun of his
-great joy in Greek metres. I remember that
-once he turned to me with an assumed air of
-strange amazement and exclaimed: "Why, my
-dear fellow, do you know there are actually
-miserable men who do not know&mdash;who have
-never even heard of&mdash;the minuter differences
-between Dochmiacs and Antispasts!" That,
-again, reminds me of a passage in "Paternoster
-Row," which always gives me acute pleasure
-because it recalls Maitland so wonderfully. It
-is where one of the characters came in to the
-hero and wanted his opinion on the scansion of
-a particular chorus in the "Œdipus Rex." Maydon
-laid hold of the book, thought a bit,
-and began to read the chorus aloud.
-Whereupon the other one cried: "Choriambics, eh?
-Possible, of course; but treat them as Ionics a
-minore with an anacrusis, and see if they don't
-go better." Now in this passage the speaker is
-really Maitland, for he involved himself in
-terms of pedantry with such delight that his
-eyes gleamed. No doubt it was an absurd
-thing, but Greek metres afforded so bright a
-refuge from the world of literary struggle and
-pressing financial difficulty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Damn the nature of things!" was Porson's
-oath. Now Maitland had a very peculiar
-admiration for Porson. Porson was a Grecian.
-He loved Greek. That was sufficient for
-Maitland. In addition to that claim on his love, it
-is obvious that Porson was a man of a certain
-Rabelaisian turn of mind, and that again was a
-sufficient passport to his favour. No doubt if
-Porson had invited Maitland to his rooms, and
-had then got wildly drunk, it would have
-annoyed Maitland greatly; but the picture of
-Porson shouting Greek and drinking heavily
-attracted him immensely. He often quoted all
-the little stories told of Porson, such as the very
-well-known one of another scholar calling on
-him by invitation late one evening, and finding
-the room in darkness and Porson on the floor.
-This was when his visitor called out: "Porson,
-where are the candles, and where's the whiskey?"
-and Porson answered, still upon the floor,
-but neither forgetful of Greek nor of his native
-wit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When any man of our acquaintance was alluded
-to with hostility, or if one animadverted on some
-popular person who was obviously uneducated,
-Maitland always vowed that he did not know
-Greek, and probably or certainly had never
-starved. His not knowing Greek was, of course,
-a very great offence to Maitland, for he used to
-quote Porson on Hermann:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "The Germans in Greek<br />
- Are far to seek.<br />
- Not one in five score,<br />
- But ninety-nine more.<br />
- All save only Hermann,<br />
- And Hermann's a German."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Of course a man who lacked Greek, and had not
-starved, was anathema&mdash;not to be considered.
-And whatever Porson may have done he did
-know Greek, and that saved his soul. Maitland
-often quoted very joyfully what he declared to
-be some of the most charming lines in the
-English language:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "I went to Strasburg, and there got drunk<br />
- With the most learned Professor Runck.<br />
- I went to Wortz, and got more drunken<br />
- With the more learned Professor Runcken."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-But if the spirit was willing, the flesh was weak.
-I never saw Maitland drunk in his life. Indeed
-he was no real expert in drinking. He had
-never had any education in the wines he loved.
-Any amateur of the product of the vine will
-know how to estimate his actual qualifications
-as a judge, when I say that Asti, Capri, and
-especially Chianti seemed to him the greatest
-wines in the world, since by no means could he
-obtain the right Falernian of Horace, which, by
-the way, was probably a most atrocious vintage.
-As it happened I had been employed for many
-months on a great vineyard in California, and
-there had learnt not a little about the making
-and blending of wine. Added to this I had
-some natural taste in it, and had read a great
-deal about wine-making and the great vintages
-of France and Germany. One could always
-interest Maitland by telling him something about
-wine, provided one missed out the scientific side
-of it. But it was sad that I lacked, from his
-point of view, the proper enthusiasm for
-Chianti. Yet, indeed, one knows what was in
-his classic mind, from the fact that a poor
-vintage in a real Italian flask, or in something
-shaped like an amphora, would have made him
-chuckle with joy far more readily than if a rich
-man had offered him in a bottle some glorious
-first growth of the Medoc, Laflitte, Latour, or
-Haut-Brion. But, indeed, he and I, even when
-I refused indignantly to touch the Italians, and
-declared with resolution for a wine of Burgundy
-or the Médoc, rarely got beyond a Bourgeois
-vintage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless though I aspired to be his tutor
-in wines I owed him more than is possible to say
-in the greater matters of education. My debt
-to him is really very big. It was, naturally
-enough, through his influence, that while I was
-still in my one room in Danvers Street I
-commenced to read again all the Greek tragedies.
-By an odd chance I came across a clergyman's
-son in Chelsea who also had a certain passion for
-Greek. He used to come to my room and there
-we re-read the tragedies. Oddly enough I think
-my new friend never met Maitland, for Maitland
-rarely came to my room save on Sundays,
-and those days I reserved specially for him.
-But whenever we met, either there or at 7K, we
-always read or recited Greek to each other, and
-then entered into a discussion of the metrical
-value of the choruses&mdash;in which branch of
-learning I trust I showed proper humility, for in
-prosody he was remarkably learned. As for me,
-I knew nothing of it beyond what he told me,
-and cared very little, personally, for the technical
-side of poetry. Nevertheless it was not easy
-to resist Maitland's enthusiasm, and I succumbed
-to it so greatly that I at last imagined that I was
-really interested in what appealed so to him.
-Heaven knows, in those days I did at least learn
-something of the matter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We talked of rhythm, and of Arsis or Ictus.
-Pyrrhics we spoke of, and trochees and spondees
-were familiar on our lips. Especially did he
-declare that he had a passion for anapæsts, and
-when it came to the actual metres, Choriambics
-and Galliambics were an infinite joy to him.
-He explained to me most seriously the differences
-between trimeter Iambics when they were
-catalectic, acatalectic, hypercatalectic. What he
-knew about comic tetrameter was at my service,
-and in a short time I knew, as I imagined, almost
-all that he did about Minor Ionic, Sapphic, and
-Alcaic verse. Once more these things are to me
-little more than words, and yet I never hear one
-of them mentioned&mdash;as one does occasionally
-when one comes across a characteristic enthusiast&mdash;but
-I think of Henry Maitland and his gravely
-joyous lectures to me on that vastly important
-subject. No doubt many people will think that
-such little details as these are worth nothing,
-but I shall have failed greatly in putting
-Maitland down if they do not seem something in the
-end. These trifles are, after all, touches in the
-portrait as I see the man, and that they all meant
-much to him I know very well. To get through
-the early days of literary poverty one must have
-ambition and enthusiasm of many kinds. Enthusiasm
-alone is nothing, and ambition by itself
-is too often barren, but the two together are
-something that the gods may fight against in vain. I
-know that this association with him, when I was
-his only friend, and he was my chief friend, was
-great for both of us, for he had much to endure,
-and I was not without my troubles. Yet we
-made fun together of our squalor, and rejoiced
-in our poverty, so long as it did not mean acute
-suffering; and when it did mean that, we often-times
-got something out of literature to help us
-to forget. On looking back, I know that many
-things happened which seem to me dreadful, but
-then they appeared but part of the day's work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It rarely happened that I went to him without
-some story of the week's happenings, to be told
-again in return something which had occurred to
-him. For instance, there was that story of the
-lady who asked him his experience with regard
-to the management of butlers. In return I could
-tell him of going out to dinner at houses where
-people would have been horrified to learn that I
-had eaten nothing that day, and possibly nothing
-the day before. For us to consort with the
-comfortably situated sometimes seemed to both of us
-an intolerably fine jest, which was added to by
-the difference of these comfortable people from
-the others we knew. Here and there we came
-across some fatly rich person who, by accident,
-had once been deprived of his usual dinner. It
-seemed to give him a sympathetic feeling for the
-very poor. But, after all, though I did
-sometimes associate with such people, I was happier
-in my own room with Maitland, or in his flat,
-where we discussed our Æschylus, or wrought
-upon metres or figures of speech&mdash;always a great
-joy to us. Upon these, too, Maitland was really
-quite learned. He was full of examples of
-brachyology. Anacoluthon he was well
-acquainted with. Not even Farrar, in his "Greek
-Syntax," or some greater man, knew more
-examples of chiasmus, asyndeton, or hendiadys.
-In these byways he generally rejoiced, and we
-were never satisfied unless at each meeting,
-wherever it might be, we discovered some new
-phrase, or new word, or new quotation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once at 7K I quoted to him from Keats'
-"Endymion" the lines about those people who
-"unpen their baaing vanities to browse away the
-green and comfortable juicy hay of human
-pastures." All that evening he was denouncing
-various comfortable people who fed their baaing
-vanity on everything delightful. He declared
-they browsed away all that made life worth
-while, and in return for my gift to him of this
-noble quotation he produced something rather
-more astounding, and perhaps not quite so
-quotable, out of Zola's "Nana." We had been
-talking of realism, and of speaking the truth, of
-being direct, of not being mealy-mouthed; in
-fact, of not letting loose "baaing vanities," and
-suddenly he took down "Nana" and said, "Here
-Zola has put a phrase in her mouth which rejoices
-me exceedingly. It is a plain, straight-forward,
-absolutely characteristic sentiment,
-such as we in England are not allowed to
-represent. Nana, on being remonstrated with by her
-lover-in-chief for her infidelities, returns him the
-plain and direct reply, 'Quand je vois un homme
-qui me plait, je couche avec.' He went on to
-declare that writing any novels in England was
-indeed a very sickening business, but he added,
-"I really think we begin to get somewhat better
-in this. However, up to the last few years, it
-has been practically impossible to write anything
-more abnormal about a man's relations with
-women than a mere bigamy." Things have
-certainly altered, but I think he was one of those
-who helped to break down that undue sense of
-the value of current morality which has done so
-much harm to the study of life in general, and
-indeed to life itself. His general rage and
-quarrel with that current morality, for which he had
-not only a contempt, but a loathing which often
-made him speechless, comes out well in what he
-thought and expressed about the Harold Frederick
-affair. There was, of course, as everybody
-knows, a second illegitimate family. While
-the good and orthodox made a certain amount
-of effort to help the wife and the legal children,
-they did their very best to ignore the second
-family. However, to Maitland's great joy, there
-were certain people, notably Mrs. Stephens, who
-did their very best for the other children and for
-the poor mother. Maitland himself subscribed,
-before he knew the actual position, to both
-families, and betrayed extraordinary rage when he
-learnt how that second family had been treated,
-and heard of the endeavours of the "unco' guid"
-to ignore them wholly. But then such actions
-and such hypocrisy are characteristic of the
-middle class in this country and not in this country
-alone. He loathed their morals which became
-a system of cruelty; their greed and its
-concomitant selfishness: their timidity which grows
-brutal in defence of a position to which only
-chance and their rapacity have entitled them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apropos of his hatred of current morality, it is
-a curious thing that the only quarrel I ever had
-with him showed his early point of view rather
-oddly. Among the few men he knew there was
-one, with whom I was a little acquainted, who
-had picked up a young girl in a tavern and taken
-her to live with him. My own acquaintance
-with her led to some jealousy between me and
-the man who was keeping her, and he wrote to
-Maitland complaining of me, and telling him
-many things which were certainly untrue.
-Maitland when he considered the fact of his
-having ruined his own life for ever and ever by
-his relations with a woman of this order, had
-naturally built up a kind of theory of these things
-as a justification for himself. This may seem a
-piece of extravagant psychology, but I have not
-the least doubt that it is true. Without asking
-my view of the affair he wrote to me very
-angrily, and declared that I had behaved badly.
-He added that he wished me to understand that
-he considered an affair of that description as
-sacred as any marriage. Though he was young,
-and in these matters no little of a prig, I was
-also young, and of a hot temper. That he had
-not made any inquiries of me, or even asked my
-version of the circumstances, so angered me that
-I wrote back to him saying that if he spoke to
-me in that way I should decline to have
-anything more to do with him. As he was
-convinced, most unjustly, that his view was entirely
-sound, this naturally enough led to an estrangement
-which lasted for the best part of a year,
-but I am glad to remember that I myself made
-it up by writing to him about one of his books.
-This was before I went to America, and
-although I was working, it was a great grief to me
-that we did not meet during this estrangement
-for any of our great talks, which, both then and
-afterwards, were part of my life, and no little
-part of it. Often when I think of him I recollect
-those lines of Callimachus to Heracleitus
-in Corey's "Ionica":
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "They told me, Heracleitus, they told me you were dead;<br />
- They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed.<br />
- I wept as I remembered how often you and I<br />
- Had tired the sun with talking, and sent him down the sky."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In the last chapter I quoted from Boswell,
-always a favourite of Maitland's, as he is
-of all true men of letters. But there is yet
-another quotation from the same work which
-might stand as a motto for this book, as it might
-for the final and authoritative biography of
-Maitland which perhaps will some day be done:
-"He asked me whether he had mentioned, in any
-of the papers of the 'Rambler,' the description
-in Virgil of the entrance into Hell, with an
-application to the Press; 'for,' said he, 'I do not
-much remember them.' I told him,
-'No.' Upon which he repeated it:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>'Vestlbulum ante ipsum primisque in faucibus Orci,<br />
- Lucius et ultrices posuere cubilia Curæ;<br />
- Pallentesque habitant Morbi, tristisque Senectus,<br />
- Et Metus, et malesuada Fames, ac turpis Egestas;<br />
- Terribiles vis formæ: Letumque, Labosque.'</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-'Now,' said he, 'almost all these apply exactly
-to an author; all these are the concomitants of
-a printing-house.'" Nevertheless, although
-cares, and sometimes sullen sorrows, want and
-fear, still dwelt with Maitland, a little time now
-began for him in which he had some peace of
-mind, if not happiness. That was a plant he
-never cultivated. One of his favourite passages
-from Charlotte Brontë, whose work was in many
-ways a passion to him, is that in which she
-exclaims: "Cultivate happiness! Happiness is
-not a potato," and indeed he never grew it. Still
-there were two periods in his life in which he
-had some peace, and the first period now began.
-I speak of the time after the death of his first
-wife. The drain of ten shillings a week&mdash;which
-must seem so absurdly little to many&mdash;had been
-far more than he could stand, and many times he
-had gone without the merest necessities of life
-so that the poor alien in the New Cut should
-have money, even though he knew that she
-spent it at once upon drink and forgetfulness.
-Ten shillings a week was very much to him.
-For one thing it might mean a little more food
-and better food. It meant following up his one
-great hobby of buying books. Those who know
-"The Meditations," know what he thought of
-books, for in that respect this record is a true
-guide, even if it should be read with caution in
-most things. Nevertheless although he was
-happier and easier, it is curious that his most
-unhappy and despairing books were written during
-this particular period. "In the Morning," it
-is true, was done before his wife died, and some
-people who do not know the inner history of the
-book may not regard it as a tragedy. In one
-sense, however, it was one of the greatest literary
-tragedies of Henry Maitland's life, according
-to his own statement to me.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At that time he was publishing books with the
-firm of Miller and Company, and, of course, he
-knew John Glass, who read for them, very well
-indeed. It seems that Glass, who had naturally
-enough, considering his period, certain
-old-fashioned ideas on the subject of books and their
-endings, absolutely and flatly declined to
-recommend his firm to publish "In the Morning,"
-unless Maitland re-wrote the natural tragic end
-of the book and made it turn out happily. I
-think nothing on earth, or in some hell for men
-of letters, could have made Maitland more angry
-and wretched. If there was one thing that he
-clung to during the whole of his working time, it
-was sincerity, and sincerity in literary work
-implies an absolute freedom from alien and
-extrinsic influence. I can well remember what he
-said to me about Glass' suggestion. He abused
-him and the publishers; the public, England,
-the world, and the very universe. He almost
-burst into tears as he explained to me what he
-had been obliged to do for the sake of the great
-fifty pounds he was to get for the book. For
-at this time he only got fifty pounds for a long
-three-volume novel. He always wrote with the
-greatest pain and labour, but I do not suppose
-he ever put anything on paper in his life which
-cost him such acute mental suffering as the last
-three chapters of this book which were written
-to John Glass' barbaric order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After his wife's death he wrote "The Under-World,"
-"Bond and Free," "Paternoster Row,"
-and "The Exile." It is a curious fact, although
-it was not always obvious even to himself, and
-is not now obvious to anybody but me, that I
-stood as a model to him in many of these books,
-especially, if I remember rightly, for one
-particular character in "Bond and Free." Some of
-these sketches are fairly complimentary, and
-many are much the reverse. The reason of this
-use of me was that till much later he knew very
-few men intimately but myself; and when he
-wanted anybody in his books of a more or less
-robust character, and sometimes more or less of a
-kind that he did not like, I, perforce, had to stand
-for him. On one occasion he acknowledged
-this to me, and once he was not at all sure how
-I should take it. As a matter of fact the most
-life-like portrait of me ends as a villain, and, as
-he had touched me off to the very life in the first
-volume, it did make me a little sorer than I
-acknowledged. I leave the curious to discover
-this particular scoundrel. Of course it was only
-natural that my wild habits and customs, the
-relics of Australia and America, afforded him
-a great deal of amusement and study. On one
-occasion they cost him, temporarily, the very
-large sum of three pounds. As he said, he used
-to look upon me as a kind of hybrid, a very
-ridiculous wild man with strong literary
-leanings, with an enormous amount of general and
-unrelated knowledge; and at the same time as a
-totally unregulated or ill-regulated ruffian.
-This was a favourite epithet of his, for which I
-daresay there was something to be said. Now
-one Sunday it happened that I was going up to
-see him at 7K, and came from Chelsea with
-two or three books in my hand, and, as it
-happened, a pair of spectacles on my nose. At that
-time I sometimes carried an umbrella, and no
-doubt looked exceedingly peaceful. As a
-result of this a young man, who turned out
-afterwards to be a professional cricketer, thought I
-was a very easy person to deal with, and to
-insult. As I came to York Place, which was then
-almost empty of passers by, I was walking close
-to the railings and this individual came up and
-pushing rudely past me, stepped right in front
-of me. Now this was a most outrageous
-proceeding, because he had fifteen free feet of
-pavement, and I naturally resented it. I made a
-little longer step than I should otherwise have
-done and "galled his kibe." He turned round
-upon me and, using very bad language, asked
-me where I was going to, who I thought I was,
-and what I proposed to do about it. I did not
-propose to do anything, but did it. I smote
-him very hard with the umbrella, knocking him
-down. He remained on the pavement for a
-considerable time, and then only got up at the
-third endeavour, and promptly gave me into
-custody. The policeman, who had happened
-to see the whole affair, explained to me, with
-that civility common among the custodians of
-order to those classes whose dress suggests they
-are their masters, that he was compelled to take
-the charge. I was removed to Lower Seymour
-Street and put in a cell for male prisoners only,
-where I remained fully half an hour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While I was in this cell a small boy of about
-nine was introduced and left there. I went
-over to him and said, "Hullo, my son, what's
-brought you here?" Naturally enough he
-imagined that I was not a prisoner but a powerful
-official, and bursting into tears he said, "Oh,
-please, sir, it warn't me as nicked the steak!" I
-consoled him to the best of my ability until I
-was shortly afterwards invited down to
-Marlborough Street Police Court, where Mr. De
-Rutzen, now Sir Albert De Rutzen, was sitting.
-As I had anticipated the likelihood of my being
-fined, and as I had no more than a few shillings
-with me, I had written a letter to Maitland, and
-procuring a messenger through the police, had
-sent it up to him. He came down promptly
-and sat in the court while I was being tried for
-this assault. After hearing the case Mr. De
-Rutzen decided to fine me three pounds, which
-Maitland paid, with great chuckles at the
-incident, even though he considered his prospect of
-getting the money back for some months was
-exceedingly vague. It was by no means the
-first time that he had gone to the police court
-for copy which "is very pretty to observe," as
-Pepys said, when after the Fire of London it
-was discovered that as many churches as public
-houses were left standing in the city. That
-such a man should have had to pursue his studies
-of actual life in the police courts and the slums
-was really an outrage, another example of the
-native malignity of matter. For, as I have
-insisted, and must insist again, he was a scholar
-and a dreamer. But his pressing anxieties for
-ever forbade him to dream, or to pursue scholarship
-without interruption. He desired time to
-perfect his control of the English tongue, and
-he wanted much that no man can ever get. It
-is my firm conviction that if he had possessed
-the smallest means he would never have thought
-himself completely master of the medium in
-which he worked. He often spoke of poor
-Flaubert saying: "What an accursed language
-is French!" He was for ever dissatisfied with
-his work, as an artist should be, and I think he
-attained seldom, if ever, the rare and infrequent
-joy that an artist has in accomplishment. It
-was not only his desire of infinite perfection as a
-writer pure and simple, which affected and
-afflicted him. It was the fact that he should never
-have written fiction at all. He often destroyed
-the first third of a book. I knew him to do so
-with one three times over. This, of course, was
-not always out of the cool persuasion that what
-he had done was not good, for it often was good
-in its way, but frequently he began, in a hurry,
-in despair, and with the prospects of starvation,
-something that he knew not to be his own true
-work, or something which he forced without
-adequate preparation. Then I used to get a
-dark note saying, "I have destroyed the whole of
-the first volume and am, I hope, beginning to
-see my way." It was no pleasant thing to be a
-helpless spectator of these struggles, in which
-he found no rest, when I knew his destiny was
-to have been a scholar at a great university.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When one understands his character, or even
-begins to understand it, it is easy enough to
-comprehend that the temporary ease with regard to
-money which came after his wife's death did not
-last so very long. The pressure of her immediate
-needs and incessant demands being at last
-relaxed he himself relaxed his efforts in certain
-directions and presently was again in difficulties.
-I know that it will sound very extraordinary to
-all but those who know the inside of literary life
-that this should have been so. A certain amount
-of publicity is almost always associated in the
-minds of the public with monetary success of a
-kind. Yet one very well-known acquaintance
-of mine, an eminent if erratic journalist, one day
-had a column of favourable criticism in a big
-daily, and after reading it went out and bought
-a red herring with his last penny and cooked it
-over the fire in his solitary room. It was the
-same with myself. It was almost the same with
-Maitland even at this time. No doubt the
-worst of his financial difficulties were before I
-returned from America, and even before his wife
-died, but never, till the end of his life, was he at
-ease with regard to money. He never attained
-the art of the pot-boiler by which most of us
-survive, even when he tried short stories, which
-he did finally after I had pressed him to attempt
-them for some years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In many ways writing to him was a kind of
-sacred mission. It was not that he had any
-faith in great results to come from it, but the
-profession of a writer was itself sacred, and even
-the poorest sincere writer was a <i>sacer vates</i>. He
-once absolutely came down all the way to me in
-Chelsea to show me a well-known article in
-which Robert Louis Stevenson denied, to my
-mind not so unjustly, that a writer could claim
-payment at all, seeing that he left the world's
-work to do what he chose to do for his own
-pleasure. Stevenson went on to compare such a
-writer to a <i>fille de joie</i>. This enraged Maitland
-furiously. I should have been grieved if he and
-Stevenson had met upon that occasion. I really
-think something desperate might have happened,
-little as one might expect violence from such a
-curious apostle of personal peace as Maitland.
-Many years afterwards I related this little
-incident to Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa, but I
-think by that time Maitland himself was half
-inclined to agree with his eminent brother
-author. And yet, as I say, writing was a mission,
-even if it was with him an acquired passion; but
-his critical faculties, which were so keenly
-developed, almost destroyed him. There can be
-no stronger proof that he was not one of those
-happy beings who take to the telling of stories
-because they must, and because it is in them.
-There was no time that he was not obliged to do
-his best, though every writer knows to his grief
-that there are times when the second best must
-do. And thus it was that John Glass so enraged
-him. All those things which are the care of the
-true writer were of most infinite importance to
-him. A misprint, a mere "literal," gave him
-lasting pain. He desired classic perfection,
-both of work and the mere methods of production.
-He would have taken years over a book
-if fear and hunger and poverty had permitted
-him to do so. And yet he wrote "Isabel," "The
-Mob," and "In the Morning," all in seven
-months, even while he read through the whole
-of Dante's "Divina Commedia," for recreation,
-and while he toiled at the alien labour of
-teaching. Yet this was he who wrote to one friend:
-"Would it not be delightful to give up a year or
-so to the study of some old period of English
-history?" When he was thirty-six he said: "The
-four years from now to forty I should like to
-devote to a vigorous apprenticeship in English." But
-this was the man who year after year was
-compelled to write books which the very essence
-of his being told him would work no good.
-Sometimes I am tempted to think that the only
-relief he got for many, many years came out of
-the hours we spent in company, either in his
-room or mine. We read very much together,
-and it was our delight, as I have said, to
-exchange quotations, or read each other passages
-which we had discovered during the week. He
-recited poetry with very great feeling and skill,
-and was especially fond of much of Coleridge.
-I can hear him now reading those lines of
-Coleridge to his son which end:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Therefore all seasons shall be sweet to thee<br />
- Whether the summer clothe the general earth<br />
- With greenness, or the redbreast sit and sing<br />
- Betwixt the tufts of snow on the bare branch<br />
- Of mossy apple-tree, while the nigh thatch<br />
- Smokes in the sun-thaw; whether the eave-drops fall<br />
- Heard only in the trances of the blast,<br />
- Or if the secret ministry of frost<br />
- Shall hang them up in silent icicles,<br />
- Quietly shining to the quiet Moon."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And to hear him chant the mighty verse of the
-great Greeks who were dead, and yet were most
-alive to him, was always inspiring. The time
-was to come, though not yet, when he was to see
-Greece, and when he had entered Piræus and
-seen the peopled mountains of that country
-Homer became something more to him than he
-had been, and the language of Æschylus and
-Sophocles took on new glories and clothed itself
-in still more wondrous emotions. He knew a
-hundred choruses of the Greek tragedies by
-heart, and declaimed them with his wild hair
-flung back and his eyes gleaming as if the old
-tragedians, standing in the glowing sun of the
-Grecian summer, were there to hear him, an alien
-yet not an alien, using the tongue that gave its
-chiefest glories to them for ever. But he had
-been born in exile, and had made himself an outcast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Those who have read so far, and are interested
-in him, will see that I am much more concerned
-to say what I felt about him than to relate mere
-facts and dates. I care little or nothing that in
-some ways others know more or less of him, or
-know it differently. I try to build up my little
-model of him, try to paint my picture touch by
-touch; often, it may be, by repetition, for so a
-man builds himself for his friends in his life. I
-must paint him as a whole, and put him down,
-here and there perhaps with the grain of the
-canvas showing through the paint, or perhaps
-with what the worthy critics call a rich impasto,
-which may be compiled of words. Others may
-criticise, and will criticise, what I write. No
-doubt they will find much of it wrong, or
-wrong-headed, and will attribute to me other motives
-than those which move me, but if it leads them
-to bring out more of his character than I know
-or remember, I shall be content. For the more
-that is known of him, the more he will be loved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was somewhere about this time that I
-undertook to write one of two or three articles
-which I have done about him for periodicals,
-and the remembrance of that particular piece of
-work reminds me very strongly of his own ideas
-of his own humour in writing. There have
-been many discussions, wise and otherwise, as
-to whether he possessed any at all, and I think
-the general feeling that he was very greatly
-lacking in this essential part of the equipment of a
-writer, to be on the whole true. Among my
-lost letters there was one which I most especially
-regret not to be able to quote, for it was very
-long, perhaps containing two thousand words,
-which he sent to me when he knew I had been
-asked to do this article. Now the purport of
-Maitland's letter was to prove to me that every
-one was wrong who said he had no humour.
-In one sense there can be no greater proof that
-anybody who said so was right. He enumerated
-carefully all the characters in all the books he
-had hitherto written in whom he thought there
-was real humour. He gave me a preposterous
-list of these individuals, with his comments, and
-appealed to me in all deadly seriousness to know
-whether I did not agree with him that they were
-humorous. But the truth is that, save as a talker,
-he had very little humour, and even then it was
-frequently verbal. It was, however, occasionally
-very grim, and its strength, oddly enough,
-was of the American kind, since it consisted of
-managed exaggeration. He had a certain joy
-in constructing more or less humorous nicknames
-for people. Sometimes these were good,
-and sometimes bad, but when he christened them
-once he kept to it always. I believe the only
-man of his acquaintance who had no nickname
-at all was George Meredith, but then he loved
-and admired Meredith in no common fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In some of his books he speaks, apparently not
-without some learning, of music, but there are,
-I fancy, signs that his knowledge of it was more
-careful construction than actual knowledge or
-deep feeling. Nevertheless he did at times
-discover a real comprehension of the greater
-musicians, especially of Chopin. Seeing that this
-was so, it is very curious, and more than curious
-in a writer, that he had a measureless adoration
-of barrel organs. He delighted in them
-strangely, and when any Italian musician came
-into his dingy street or neighbourhood, he would
-set the window open and listen with ardour.
-Being so poor, he could rarely afford to give
-away money even in the smallest sum. Pennies
-were indeed pennies to him. But he did
-sometimes bestow pence on wandering Italians
-who ground out Verdi in the crowded streets.
-Among the many languages which he knew was,
-of course, Italian; for, as I have said, he read
-the "Divina Commedia" easily, reading it for
-relaxation as he did Aristophanes. It was a
-great pleasure to him, even before he went to
-Italy, to speak a few words in their own tongue
-to these Italians of the English streets. He
-remembered that this music came from the south,
-the south that was always his Mecca, the Kibleh
-of the universe. Years afterwards, when he had
-been in the south, and knew Naples and the
-joyous crowds of the Chaiaja&mdash;long before I
-had been there and had listened to its uproar
-from the Belvidere of San Martino&mdash;he found
-Naples chiefly a city of this joyous popular
-music. Naples, he said, was the most interesting
-modern city in Europe; and yet I believe the
-chief joy he had there was hearing its music, and
-the singing of the lazzaroni down by Santa
-Lucia. "Funiculi, Funicula," he loved as much
-as if it were the work of a classic, and "Santa
-Lucia" appealed to him like a Greek chorus. I
-remember that, years later, he wrote to me a
-letter of absurd and exaggerated anger, which was
-yet perfectly serious, about the action of the
-Neapolitan municipality in forbidding street organs
-to play in the city. Sometimes, though rarely,
-seeing that he could not often afford a shilling,
-he went to great concerts in London. Certainly
-he spoke as one not without instruction in musical
-subjects in "The Vortex," but I fancy that musical
-experts might find flaws in his nomenclature.
-Nevertheless he did love music with a certain
-ardent passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a man not without a certain sensuality,
-but it was his sensuousness which was in
-many ways the most salient point in his
-character. As I often told him, he was a kind of
-incomplete Rabelaisian. That was suggested to
-me by his delighted use of Gargantuan epithets
-with regard to the great recurrent subject of
-food. He loved all things which were redolent
-of oil and grease and fatness. The joy of great
-abundance appealed to him, and I verily believe
-that to him the great outstanding characteristic
-of the past in England was its abundant table.
-Indeed, in all things but rowdy indecency, he
-was a Rabelaisian, and being such, he yet had to
-put up with poor and simple food. However,
-provided it was at hand in large quantities, he
-was ready to feed joyously. He would exclaim:
-"Now for our squalid meal! I wonder what
-Harold Edgeworth, or good old Edmund Roden
-would say to this?" When I think of the
-meagre preface that Harold Edgeworth wrote in
-later years for "Basil," when that done by
-G.H. Rivers&mdash;afterwards published separately&mdash;did
-not meet with the approval of Maitland's
-relatives and executors, I feel that Edgeworth
-somewhat deserved the implied scorn of Maitland's
-words. As for Edmund Roden, he often spoke
-of him affectionately. In later years he
-sometimes went down to Felixstowe to visit him. He
-liked his house amazingly, and was very much
-at home in it. It was there that he met Grant
-Allen, and Sir Luke Redburn, whom he declared
-to be the most interesting people that he saw in
-Felixstowe at that time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I am not sure whether it was on this particular
-occasion, perhaps in 1895, that he went down to
-Essex with a great prejudice against Grant
-Allen. The reason of this was curious. He
-was always most vicious when any writer who
-obviously lived in comfort, complained loudly
-and bitterly of the pittance of support given
-him by the public, and the public's faithful
-servants, the publishers. When Allen growled
-furiously on this subject in a newspaper
-interview Maitland recalled to me with angry
-amusement a certain previous article in which, if
-I remember rightly, Grant Allen proclaimed his
-absolute inability to write if he were not in a
-comfortable room with rose-coloured curtains.
-"Rose-coloured curtains!" said Maitland
-contemptuously, and looking round his own room
-one certainly found nothing of that kind. It
-was perhaps an extraordinary thing, one of the
-many odd things in his character, that the man
-who loved the south so, who always dreamed of
-it, seemed to see everything at that period of his
-life in the merest black and white. There was
-not a spark or speck of colour in his rooms.
-Now in my one poor room in Chelsea I had hung
-up all sorts of water-colours acquired by various
-means from artists who were friends of mine.
-By hook or by crook I got hold of curtains with
-colour in them, and carpets, too, and Japanese
-fans. My room was red and yellow and scarlet,
-while his were a dingy monochrome, as if they
-sympathised with the outlook at the back of his
-flat, which stared down upon the inferno of the
-Metropolitan Railway. But to return to Grant
-Allen. Maitland now wrote: "However, I like
-him very much. He is quite a simple, and very
-gentle fellow, crammed with multifarious knowledge,
-enthusiastic in scientific pursuits. With
-fiction and that kind of thing he ought never to
-have meddled; it is the merest pot-boiling. He
-reads nothing whatever but books of scientific
-interest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was at Felixstowe, too, that he met Carew
-Latter who induced him to write twenty papers
-in one of the journals Latter conducted. They
-were to be of more or less disreputable London
-life. Some of them at least have been reprinted
-in his volumes of short stories. There is certainly
-no colour in them; in some ways they resemble
-sketches with the dry-point. Of course after he
-had once been on the continent, and had got south
-to Marseilles and the Cannebiere, he learnt to
-know what colour was, and wrote of it in a way
-he had never done before, as I noticed
-particularly in one paragraph about Capri seen at sunset
-from Naples. In this sudden discovery of colour
-he reminded me, oddly enough, of my old
-acquaintance Wynne, the now justly celebrated
-painter, who, up to a certain time in his life, had
-painted almost in monochrome, and certainly in
-a perpetual grey chord. Then he met Marvell,
-the painter, who was, if anything, a colourist. I
-do not think Marvell influenced Wynne in
-anything but colour, but from that day Wynne was
-a colourist, and so remains, although to it he has
-added a great and real power of design and
-decoration. It is true that Maitland never became
-a colourist in writing, but those who have read
-his work with attention will observe that after a
-certain date he was much more conscious of the
-world's colour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In those days our poverty and our ambition
-made great subjects for our talks. I myself had
-been writing for some years with no more than a
-<i>succès d'estime</i>, and I sometimes thought that I
-would throw up the profession and go back to
-Australia or America, or to the sea, or would try
-Africa at last. But Maitland had no such
-possibilities within him. He maintained grimly,
-though not without humour, that his only
-possible refuge when war, or some other final
-disaster made it impossible for writers to earn their
-difficult living, was a certain block of buildings
-opposite 7K. This, however, was not Madame
-Tussaud's as the careless might imagine, it was
-the Marylebone workhouse, which he said he
-regarded with a proprietary eye. It always
-afforded him a subject for conversation when his
-prospects seemed rather poorer than usual. It
-was, at any rate, he declared, very handy for him
-when he became unable to do more work. No
-doubt this was his humour, but there was
-something in this talk which was more than half
-serious. He always liked to speak of the gloomy
-side of things, and I possess many letters of his
-which end with references to the workhouse, or
-to some impending, black disaster. In one he
-said: "I wish I could come up, but am too low
-in health and spirits to move at present. A cold
-clings about me, and the future looks dark." Again
-he said: "No, I shall never speak of my
-work. It has become a weariness and
-toil&mdash;nothing more." And again: "It is a bad, bad
-business, that of life at present." And yet once
-more: "It is idle to talk about occupation&mdash;by
-now I have entered on the last stage of life's
-journey." This was by no means when he had
-come towards the end of his life. However,
-the workhouse does come up, even at the end,
-in a letter written about two months before his
-death. He wrote to me: "I have been turning
-the pages with great pleasure, to keep my
-thoughts from the workhouse." Those who did
-not know him would not credit him with the
-courage of desperation which he really possessed,
-if they saw his letters and knew nothing more of
-the man.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The art of portraiture, whether in words
-or paint, is very difficult, and appears
-less easy as I attempt to draw Maitland.
-Nevertheless the time comes when the artist
-seems to see his man standing on his feet before
-him, put down in his main planes, though not
-yet, perhaps, with any subtlety. The anatomy is
-suggested at any rate, if there are bones in the
-subject or in the painter. As it seems to me,
-Maitland should now stand before those who
-have read so far with sympathy and understanding.
-I have not finished my drawing, but it
-might even now suffice as a sketch, and seem
-from some points of view to be not wholly
-inadequate. It is by no means easy to put him down in
-a few words, but patience and the addition of
-detail reach their end, it may be not without
-satisfaction&mdash;for "with bread and steel one gets
-to China." It is not possible to etch Maitland
-in a few lines, for as it seems to me it is the little
-details of his character with which I am most
-concerned that give him his greatest value. It
-is not so much the detail of his actual life, but the
-little things that he said, and the way he seemed
-to think, or even the way that he avoided thinking,
-which I desire to put down. And when I
-say those things he wished not to think of, I am
-referring more especially to his views of the
-universe, and of the world itself, those views which
-are a man's philosophy, and not less his philosophy
-when of set purpose he declines to think
-of them at all, for this Maitland did without any
-doubt. Goethe said, when he spoke, if I
-remember rightly, about all forms of religious and
-metaphysical speculation, "Much contemplation,
-or brooding over these things is disturbing to the
-spirit." Unfortunately I do not know German
-so I cannot find the reference to this, but
-Maitland, who knew the language very thoroughly
-and had read nearly everything of great importance
-in it, often quoted this passage, having
-naturally a great admiration for Goethe. I do not
-mean that he admired him merely for his position
-in the world of letters. What he did admire
-in Goethe was what he himself liked and desired
-so greatly. He wished for peace, for calmness
-of spirit. He did not like to be disturbed in any
-way whatsoever. He would not disturb himself.
-He wished people to be reasonable, and
-thought this was a reasonable request to make of
-them. I remember on one occasion when I had
-been listening to him declaiming about some
-one's peculiar lack of reasonableness, which
-seemed to him the one great human quality, that
-I said: "Maitland, what would you do if you
-were having trouble with a woman who was in a
-very great rage with you?" He replied, with an
-air of surprise, "Why, of course, I should reason
-with her." I said shortly, "Don't ever get
-married again! " Nevertheless he was a wonderfully
-patient and reasonable man himself, and
-truly lacked everything characteristic of the
-combatant. He would discuss, he would never
-really argue. I do not suppose that he was
-physically a coward, but his dread of scenes and
-physical violence lay very deep in his organisation.
-Although he used me as a model I never really
-drew him at length in any of my own books, but
-naturally he was a subject of great psychological
-interest to me. Pursuing my studies in him I
-said, one day, "Maitland, what would you do if
-a man disagreed with you, got outrageously and
-unreasonably angry, and slapped you in the
-face?" He replied, in his characteristically low
-and concentrated voice, "Do? I should look at
-him with the most infinite disgust, and turn away."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His horror of militarism was something almost
-comic, for it showed his entire incapacity
-for grasping the world's situation as it shows
-itself to any real and ruthless student of political
-sociology who is not bogged in the mud flats of
-some Utopian island. Once we were together on
-the Horse Guards' Parade and a company of the
-Guards came marching up. We stood to watch
-them pass, and when they had gone by he turned
-to me and said, "Mark you, my dear man, this,
-<i>this</i> is the nineteenth century!" In one of his
-letters written to me after his second marriage
-he said of his eldest son: "I hope to send him
-abroad, to some country where there is no possibility
-of his having to butcher or be butchered." This,
-of course, was his pure reason pushed to the
-point where reason becomes mere folly, for such
-is the practical antinomy of pure reason in life.
-It was in this that he showed his futile idealism,
-which was in conflict with what may be
-called truly his real pessimism. That he did good
-work in many of his books dealing with the lower
-classes is quite obvious, and cannot be denied.
-He showed us the things that exist. It is
-perfectly possible, and even certainly true, that many
-of the most pessimistic writers are in reality
-optimists. They show us the grey in order that we
-may presently make it rose. But Maitland wrote
-absolutely without hope. He took his subjects
-as mere subjects, and putting them on the table,
-lectured in pathology. He made books of his
-dead-house experiences, and sold them, but never
-believed that he, or any other man, could really
-do good by speaking of what he had seen and
-dilated upon. The people as a body were vile
-and hopeless. He did not even inquire how they
-became so. He thought nothing could be done,
-and did not desire to do it. His future was in
-the past. The world's great age would never
-renew itself, and only he and a few others really
-understood the desperate state into which things
-had drifted. Since his death there has been
-some talk about his religion. I shall speak of
-this later, on a more fitting occasion; but, truly
-speaking, he had no religion. When he gave up
-his temporary Positivist pose, which was entirely
-due to his gratitude to Harold Edgeworth for
-helping him, he refused to think of these things
-again. They disturbed the spirit. If I ever
-endeavoured to inveigle him into a discussion or an
-argument upon any metaphysical subject he grew
-visibly uneasy. He declined to argue, or even to
-discuss, and though I know that in later life he
-admitted that even immortality was possible I
-defy any one to bring a tittle of evidence to show
-that he ever went further. This attitude to all
-forms of religious and metaphysical thought was
-very curious to me. It was, indeed, almost
-inexplicable, as I have an extreme pleasure in
-speculative inquiry of all kinds. The truth is that on
-this side of his nature he was absolutely wanting.
-Such things interested him no more than music
-interests a tone-deaf man who cannot distinguish
-the shriek of a tom-cat from the sound of a violin.
-If I did try to speak of such things he listened
-with an air of outraged and sublime patience
-which must have been obvious to any one but a
-bore. Whether his philosophy was sad or not,
-he would not have it disturbed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His real interest in religion seemed to lie in his
-notion that it was a curious form of delusion
-almost ineradicable from the human mind.
-There is a theory, very popular among votaries of
-the creeds, which takes the form of denying that
-any one can really be an atheist. This is certainly
-not true, but it helps one to understand the
-theologic mind, which has an imperative desire
-to lay hold of something like an inclusive
-hypothesis to rest on. So far as Maitland was
-concerned there was no more necessity to have an
-hypothesis about God than there was to have one
-about quaternions, and quaternions certainly did
-not interest him. He shrugged his shoulders
-and put these matters aside, for in many things
-he had none of the weaknesses of humanity,
-though in others he had more than his share. In
-his letters to G.H. Rivers, which I have had the
-privilege of reading, there are a few references to
-Rivers' habits and powers of speculation. I think
-it was somewhere in 1900 or 1901 that he read
-"Forecasts." By this time he had a strong
-feeling of affection for Rivers, and a very great
-admiration for him. His references to him in the
-"Meditations" are sufficiently near the truth to
-corroborate this. Nevertheless his chief feeling
-towards Rivers and his work, beyond the mere
-fact that it was a joy to him that a man could
-make money by doing good stuff, was one of
-amazement and surprise that any one could be
-deeply interested in the future, and could give
-himself almost wholly or even with partial
-energy, to civic purposes. And so he wrote to
-Rivers: "I must not pretend to care very much
-about the future of the human race. Come what
-may, folly and misery are sure to be the prevalent
-features of life, but your ingenuity in speculation,
-the breadth of your views, and the vigour of your
-writing, make this book vastly enjoyable. The
-critical part of it satisfies, and often delights me.
-Stupidity should have a sore back for some time
-to come, and many a wind-bag will be uneasily
-aware of collapse."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is interesting to note, now that I am speaking
-of his friendship for Rivers, and apropos of
-what I shall have to say later about his religious
-views, that he wrote to Rivers: "By the bye, you
-speak of God. Well, I understand what you
-mean, but the word makes me stumble rather. I
-have grown to shrink utterly from the use of such
-terms, and though I admit, perforce, a universal
-law, I am so estranged by its unintelligibility
-that not even a desire to be reverent can make
-those old names in any way real to me." So
-later he said that he was at a loss to grasp what
-Rivers meant when he wrote: "There stirs
-something within us now that can never die
-again." I think Maitland totally misinterpreted
-the passage, which was rather apropos of the
-awakening of the civic spirit in mankind than of
-anything else, but he went on to say that he put
-aside the vulgar interpretation of such words.
-However, was it Rivers' opinion that the
-material doom of the earth did not involve the doom
-of earthly life? He added that Rivers' declared
-belief in the coherency and purpose of things was
-pleasant to him, for he himself could not doubt
-for a moment that there <i>was</i> some purpose. This
-is as far as he ever went. On the other hand, he
-did doubt whether we, in any sense of the
-pronoun, should ever be granted understanding of
-that purpose. Of course all this shows that he
-possessed no metaphysical endowments or
-apparatus. He loved knowledge pure and simple, but
-when it came to the exercises of the metaphysical
-mind he was pained and puzzled. He lacked
-any real education in philosophy, and did not
-even understand its peculiar vocabulary.
-However vain those of us who have gone through the
-metaphysical mill may think it in actual products,
-we are all yet aware that it helps greatly
-to formulate our own philosophy, or even our
-own want of it. For it clears the air. It cuts
-away all kinds of undergrowth. It at any rate
-shows us that there is no metaphysical way out,
-for the simple reason that there has never existed
-one metaphysician who did not destroy another.
-They are all mutually destructive. But Maitland
-had no joy in construction or destruction;
-and, as I have said, he barely understood the
-technical terms of metaphysics. There was a
-great difference with regard to these inquiries
-between him and Rivers. The difference was
-that Rivers enjoyed metaphysical thinking and
-speculation where Maitland hated it. But all
-the same Rivers took it up much too late in life,
-and about the year 1900 made wonderful
-discoveries which had been commonplaces to
-Aristotle. A thing like this would not have
-mattered much if he had regarded it as education.
-However, he regarded it as discovery, and wrote
-books about it which inspired debates, and
-apparently filled the metaphysicians with great joy.
-It is always a pleasure to the evil spirit that for
-ever lives in man to see the ablest people of the
-time showing that they are not equally able in
-some other direction than that in which they have
-gained distinction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is curious how this native dislike of
-Maitland to being disturbed by speculative thought
-comes out in a criticism he made of Thomas
-Hardy. He had always been one of this writer's
-greatest admirers, and I know he especially loved
-"The Woodlanders," but he wrote in a letter to
-Dr. Lake something very odd about "Jude the
-Obscure." He calls it: "a sad book! Poor
-Thomas is utterly on the wrong tack, and I fear
-he will never get back into the right one. At his
-age, a habit of railing at the universe is not
-overcome." Of course this criticism is wholly
-without any value as regards Hardy's work, but it is
-no little side light on Maitland's own peculiar
-habits of thought, or of persistent want of
-thought, on the great matters of speculation.
-His objection was not to anything that Hardy
-said, but to the fact that the latter's work, filled
-with what Maitland calls "railing at the
-universe," personally disturbed him. Anything
-which broke up his little semi-classic universe,
-the literary hut which he had built for himself as
-a shelter from the pitiless storm of cosmic
-influences, made him angry and uneasy for days
-and weeks. He never lived to read Hardy's
-"Dynasts," a book which stands almost alone in
-literature, and is to my mind a greater book than
-Goethe's "Faust," but if he had read it I doubt if
-he would have forgiven Thomas Hardy for
-disturbing him. He always wanted to be left alone.
-He had constructed his pattern of the universe,
-and any one who shook it he denounced with,
-"Confound the fellow! He makes me
-unhappy." The one book that he did read, which
-is in itself essentially a disturbing book to many
-people, and apparently read with some pleasure,
-was the earliest volume of Dr. Frazer's "Golden
-Bough"; but it is a curious thing that what
-interested him, and indeed actually pleased him,
-was Frazer's side attacks upon the dogmas of
-Christianity. He said: "The curious thing
-about Frazer's book is, that in illustrating the old
-religious usages connected with tree-worship and
-so on, he throws light upon every dogma of
-Christianity. This by implication; he never
-does it expressly. Edmund Roden has just
-pointed this out to the Folk-lore Society, with
-the odd result that Gladstone wrote at once
-resigning membership." This was written after
-Gladstone died, but it reads as if Maitland was
-not aware that he was dead. Odd as it may
-seem, it is perfectly possible that he did not know
-it. He cared very little for the newspapers, and
-sometimes did not read any for long periods.
-It is rather curious that when I proved to him
-in later years that he had once dated his letters
-according to the Positivist Calendar, he seemed
-a little disturbed and shocked. Still, it was very
-natural that when exposed to Positivist
-influences he should have become a Positivist, for
-among the people of that odd faith, if faith it
-can be called, he found both kindness and
-intellectual recognition. But when his mind became
-clearer and calmer, and something of the storm
-and stress had passed by, he was aware that his
-attitude had been somewhat pathologic, and did
-not like to recall it. This became very much
-clearer to him, and indeed to me, when another
-friend of ours, a learned and very odd German
-who lived and starved in London, went
-completely under in the same curious religious way.
-His name was Schmidt. He remained to the
-day of Maitland's death a very great friend of
-his, and I believe he possesses more letters from
-Henry Maitland than any man living&mdash;greatly
-owing to his own vast Teutonic energy and
-industry in writing to his friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in London Schmidt came to absolute
-destitution. I myself got to know him through
-Maitland. It appeared that he owned a collie dog,
-which he found at last impossible to feed, even
-though he starved himself to do so. Maitland
-told me of this, and introduced me to Schmidt.
-On hearing his story, and seeing the dog, I went
-to my own people, who were then living in
-Clapham, and asked them if they would take the
-animal from Schmidt and keep it. When I saw
-the German again I was given the dog, together
-with a paper on which were written all Don's
-peculiar tricks, most of which had been taught
-to him by his master and needed the German
-language for their words of command. Soon
-after this Schmidt fell into even grimmer
-poverty, and was rescued from the deepest gulf by
-some religious body analogous in those days to
-the Salvation Army of the present time. Of
-this Maitland knew nothing, until one day going
-down the Strand he found his friend giving away
-religious pamphlets at the door of Exeter Hall.
-When he told me this he said he went next day
-to see the man in his single room lodging and
-found him sitting at the table with several open
-Bibles spread out before him. He explained
-that he was making a commentary on the Bible
-at the instigation of one of his new friends, and
-he added: "Here, <i>here</i> is henceforth my life's
-work." Shortly after this, I believe through
-Harold Edgeworth or some one else to whom
-Maitland appealed, the poor German was given
-work in some quasi-public institution, and with
-better fare and more ease his brain recovered.
-He never mentioned religion again. It was thus
-that Maitland himself recovered from similar
-but less serious influences in somewhat similar
-conditions. For some weeks in 1885 I was
-myself exposed to such influences in Chicago, in
-even bitterer conditions than those from which
-Schmidt and Maitland had suffered, but not for
-one moment did I alter my opinions. As a kind
-of final commentary on this chapter and this side
-of Maitland's mind, one might quote from a
-letter to Rivers: "Seeing that mankind cannot
-have done altogether with the miserable mystery
-of life, undoubtedly it behoves us before all else
-to enlighten as we best can the lot of those for
-whose being we are responsible. This for the
-vast majority of men&mdash;a few there are, I think,
-who are justified in quite neglecting that view
-of life, and, by the bye, Marcus Aurelius was
-one of them. Nothing he could have done
-would have made Commodus other than he was&mdash;I
-use, of course, the everyday phrases, regardless
-of determinism&mdash;and then one feels pretty
-sure that Commodus was not his son at all. For
-him, life was the individual, and whether he has
-had any true influence or not, I hold him
-absolutely justified in thinking as he did." There
-again comes out Maitland's view, his anti-social
-view, the native egoism of the man, his peculiar
-solitude of thought.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-To have seen "Shelley plain" once only is
-to put down a single point on clear
-paper. To have seen him twice gives his
-biographer the right to draw a line. Out of
-three points may come a triangle. Out of the
-many times in many years that I saw Maitland
-comes the intricate pattern of him. I would
-rather do a little book like "Manon Lescaut"
-than many biographical quartos lying as heavy
-on the dead as Vanbrugh's mansions. If there
-are warts on Maitland so there were on
-Cromwell. I do not invent like the old
-cartographers, who adorned their maps with legends
-saying, "Here is much gold," or "Here are found
-diamonds." Nor have I put any imaginary
-"Mountains of the Moon" into his map, or
-adorned vacant parts of ocean with whales or
-wonderful monsters. I put down nothing
-unseen, or most reasonably inferred. In spite of
-my desire, which is sincere, to say as little as
-possible about myself, I find I have to speak
-sometimes of things primarily my own. There is no
-doubt it did Maitland a great deal of good to
-have somebody to interest himself in, even if it
-were no one of more importance than myself.
-Although he was so singularly a lonely man, he
-could not always bury himself in the classics, or
-even in his work, done laboriously in eight
-prodigious hours. We for ever talked about what
-we were going to do, and there was very little
-that I wrote, up to the time of his leaving
-London permanently, which I did not discuss with
-him. Yet I was aware that with much I wrote
-he was wholly dissatisfied. I remember when I
-was still living in Chelsea, not in Danvers Street
-but in Redburn Street, where I at last attained
-the glory of two rooms, he came to me one Sunday
-in a very uneasy state of mind. He looked
-obviously worried and troubled, and was for a
-long time silent as he sat over the fire. I asked
-him again and again what was the matter,
-because, as can be easily imagined, I always had
-the notion that something must be the matter
-with him, or soon would be. In answer to my
-repeated importunities he said, at last: "Well,
-the fact of the matter is, I want to speak to you
-about your work." It appeared that I and my
-affairs were at the bottom of his discomfort.
-He told me that he had been thinking of my
-want of success, and that he had made up his
-mind to tell me the cause of it. He was nervous
-and miserable, though I begged him to speak
-freely, but at last got out the truth. He told
-me that he did not think I possessed the qualities
-to succeed at the business I had so rashly
-commenced. He declared that it was not that
-he had not the very highest opinion of such a
-book as "The Western Trail," but as regards
-fiction he felt I was bound to be a failure.
-Those who knew him can imagine what it cost
-him to say as much as this. I believe he would
-have preferred to destroy half a book and begin
-it again. Naturally enough what he said I
-found very disturbing, but I am pleased to say
-that I took it in very good part, and told him
-that I would think it over seriously. As may be
-imagined, I did a great deal of thinking on
-the subject, but the result of my cogitations
-amounted to this: I had started a thing and
-meant to go through with it at all costs. I wrote
-this to him later, and the little incident never
-made any difference whatever to our affectionate
-friendship. I reminded him many years
-after of what he had said, and he owned then
-that I had done something to make him revise
-his former opinion. When I come to speak of
-some of his letters to me about my later books it
-will be seen how generous he could be to a friend
-who, for some time then, had not been very
-enthusiastic about his own work. I have said
-before, and I always believed, that it was he and
-not myself who was at the wrong kind of task.
-Fiction, even as he understood it, was not for a
-man of his nature and faculties. He would
-have been in his true element as a don of a
-college, and much of his love of the classics was a
-mystery to me, as it would have been to most
-active men of the world, however well educated.
-I did understand his passion for the Greek
-tragedies, but he had almost more delight in the
-Romans; and, with the exception of Catullus and
-Lucretius, the Latin classics are to me without
-any savour. There is no doubt that in many
-ways I was but a barbarian to him. For one
-thing, at that time I was something of a fanatical
-imperialist. He took no more interest in the
-Empire, except as literary material, than he did
-in Nonconformist theology. Then I was
-certainly highly patriotic as regards England, but
-he was very cosmopolitan. It was no doubt a
-very strange thing that he should have spoken
-to me about my having little faculty for writing
-fiction when I had so often come to the same
-silent conclusion about himself. Naturally
-enough I did not dare to tell him so, for if such
-a pronouncement had distressed me a little it
-would distress him very much more. Yet I
-think he did sometimes understand his real
-limitations, especially in later years, when he wrote
-more criticism. The man who could say that
-he was prepared to spend the years from thirty-six
-to forty in a vigorous apprenticeship to
-English, was perfectly capable of continuing
-that apprenticeship until he died.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He took a critical and wonderful interest in
-the methods of all men of letters, and that
-particular interest with regard to Balzac, which
-was known to many, has sometimes been mistaken.
-Folks have said, and even written, that
-he meant to write an English "Comedie
-Humaine." There is, no doubt, a touch of truth in
-this notion, but no more than a touch. He
-would have liked to follow in Balzac's mighty
-footsteps, and do something for England which
-would possibly be inclusive of all social grades.
-At any rate he began at the bottom and worked
-upwards. It is quite obvious to me that what
-prevented him from going further in any such
-scheme was not actually a want of power or any
-failure of industry, it was a real failure of
-knowledge and of close contact with the classes
-composing the whole nation. Beyond the lower middle
-class his knowledge was not very deep. He was
-mentally an alien, and a satiric if interested
-intruder. He had been exiled for the unpardonable
-sins of his youth. It is impossible for any man
-of intellect not to suspect his own limitations, and
-I am sure he knew that he should have been a
-pure child of books, for as soon as he got beyond
-the pale of his own grim surroundings, those
-surroundings which had been burnt, and were still
-being burnt into his soul, he apparently lost
-interest. Though two or three of these later books
-have indeed much merit, such novels as "The
-Vortex" and "The Best of All Things" are really
-failures. I believe he felt it. Anthony Hope
-Hawkins once wrote to me apropos of something,
-that there were very few men writing who
-really knew that all real knowledge had to be
-"bought." Maitland had bought his knowledge
-of sorrow and suffering and certain surroundings
-at a personal price that few can pay and not be
-bankrupt. But while I was associating with
-almost every class in the world he lived truly
-alone. There were, indeed, long months when he
-actually saw no one, and there were other
-periods when his only friend besides myself was
-that philosophic German whose philosophy put
-its lofty tail between its legs on a prolonged
-starvation diet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As one goes on talking of him and considering
-his nature there are times when it seems amazing
-that he did not commit suicide and have done
-with it. Certainly there were days and seasons
-when I thought this might be his possible end.
-But some men break and others bend, and in him
-there was undoubtedly some curious strength
-though it were but the Will to Live of Schopenhauer,
-the one philosopher he sometimes read.
-I myself used to think that it was perhaps his
-native sensuousness which kept him alive in spite
-of all his misery. No man ever lived who
-enjoyed things that were even remotely enjoyable
-more acutely than himself, though I think his
-general attitude towards life was like his attitude
-towards people and the world. For so many
-good men Jehovah would have spared the Cities
-of the Plains. So in a certain sense the few good
-folk that he perceived in any given class made
-him endure the others that he hated, while he
-painted those he loved against their dingy and
-dreadful background. The motto on the
-original title-page of "The Under World" was
-a quotation from a speech by Renan delivered at
-the Académie Française in 1889: "La peinture
-d'un fumier peut être justifiée pourvu qu'il y
-pousse une belle fleur; sans cela, le fumier n'est
-que repoussant." The few beautiful flowers of
-the world for Henry Maitland were those who
-hated their surroundings and desired vainly to
-grow out of them. Such he pitied, hopeless as
-he believed their position, and vain as he knew
-to be their aspirations. In a way all this was
-nothing but translated self-pity. Had he been
-more fortunate in his youth I do not believe he
-would have ever turned his attention in any way
-towards social affairs, in which he took no native
-interest. His natural sympathy was only for
-those whom he could imagine to be his mental
-fellows. Almost every sympathetic character in
-all his best books was for him like the starling
-in the cage of Sterne&mdash;the starling that cried, "I
-can't get out! I can't get out!" Among the
-subjects that he refused to speak of or to discuss
-was one which for a long time greatly interested
-me, and interests me still&mdash;I refer to Socialism.
-But then Socialism, after all, is nothing but a
-more or less definitive view of a definite
-organisation with perfectly recognised ends, and he
-saw no possibility of any organisation doing
-away with the things he loathed. That is to say,
-he was truly hopeless, most truly pessimistic.
-He was a sensuous and not a scientific thinker,
-and to get on with him for any length of time it
-was necessary for me to suppress three-quarters
-of the things I wished to speak about. He was
-a strange egoist, though truly the hateful world
-was not his own. It appeared to me that he
-prayed, or strove, for the power to ignore it. It
-is for this reason that it seems to me now that all
-his so-called social work and analysis were in
-the nature of an alien <i>tour de force</i>. He bent
-his intellect in that direction, and succeeded even
-against his nature. He who desired to be a
-Bentley or a Porson wrote bitterly about the
-slums of Tottenham Court Road. With Porson
-he damned the nature of things, and wrote
-beautifully about them. I remember on one occasion
-telling him of a piece of script in the handwriting
-of the great surgeon, John Hunter, which
-ran: "Damn civilisation! It makes cats eat
-their kittens, sows eat their young, and women
-send their children out to nurse." I think that
-gave him more appreciation of science than
-anything he had ever heard. For it looked back
-into the past, and for Henry Maitland the past
-was the age of gold. In life, as he had to live
-it, it was impossible to ignore the horrors of the
-present time. He found it easier to ignore the
-horrors of the past, and out of ancient history he
-made his great romance, which, truly, he never
-wrote.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is a curious thing that a man who was thus
-so essentially romantic should have been
-mistaken, not without great reason, for a realist.
-In one sense he was a realist, but this was the
-fatal result of his nature and his circumstances.
-Had he lived in happier surroundings, still
-writing fiction, I am assured it would have been
-romance. And yet, curiously enough, I doubt if
-any of his ideas concerning women were at all
-romantic. His disaster with his first wife was
-due to early and unhappily awakened sex feeling,
-but I think he believed that his marrying
-her was due to his desire to save somebody whom
-he considered to be naturally a beautiful
-character from the dunghill in which he found her.
-This poor girl was his first <i>belle fleur</i>. In all
-his relations with women it seems as if his own
-personal loneliness was the dominating factor.
-So much did he feel these things that it was
-rarely possible to discuss them with him.
-Nevertheless it was the one subject, scientifically
-treated, on which I could get him to listen to
-me. In the first five years of my literary
-apprenticeship I began a book, which is still
-unfinished, and never will be finished, called
-"Social Pathology." So far as it dealt with sex
-and sex deprivation, he was much interested in
-it. In all his books there is to be found the
-misery of the man who lives alone and yet cannot
-live alone. I do not think that in any book but
-"The Unchosen," he ever made a study of that
-from the woman's side. But it is curiously
-characteristic of his sex view that the chief feminine
-character of that book apparently knew not love
-even when she thought that she knew it, but was
-only aware of awakened senses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One might have imagined, considering his
-early experiences, that he would have led the
-ordinary life of man, and associated, if only
-occasionally, with women of the mercenary type.
-This, I am wholly convinced, was a thing he
-never did, though I possess one poem which
-implies the possible occurrence of such a passing
-liaison. There was, however, another incident
-in his life which occurred not long before I went
-to America. He was then living in one room in
-the house of a journeyman bookbinder. On
-several occasions when I visited him there I saw
-his landlady, a young and not unpleasing woman,
-who seemed to take great interest in him, and
-did her very best to make him comfortable in
-narrow, almost impossible, surroundings. Her
-husband, a man a great deal older than herself,
-drank, and not infrequently ill-treated her.
-This was not wholly Maitland's story, for I saw
-the man myself, as well as his wife. It appears
-she went for sympathy to her lodger, and he told
-her something of his own troubles. Their
-common griefs threw them together. She was
-obviously of more than the usual intelligence of
-her class. It appeared that she desired to learn
-French, or made Maitland believe so; my own
-view being that she desired his company. The
-result of this was only natural, and soon
-afterwards Maitland was obliged to leave the house
-owing to the jealousy of her husband, who for
-many years had already been suspicious of her
-without any cause. But this affair was only
-passing. He took other rooms, and so far as I
-know never saw her again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While I was in America he was living at 7K,
-and in that gloomy flat there was an affair of
-another order, an incident not without many
-parallels in the lives of poor artists and writers.
-It seems that a certain lady not without
-importance in society, the wife of a rich husband,
-wrote to him about one of his books, and
-having got into correspondence with him allowed
-her curiosity to overcome her discretion. She
-visited him very often in his chambers, and
-though he told me but little I gathered what the
-result was. Oddly enough, by a curious chain of
-reasoning and coincidence, I afterwards discovered
-this woman's name, which I shall, of course,
-suppress. So far as I am aware these were the
-only two romantic or quasi-romantic incidents in
-Maitland's life until towards the end of it.
-When I came back from America he certainly
-had no mistress, and beyond an occasional visit
-from the sons of Harold Edgeworth, he
-practically received no one but myself. His poverty
-forbade him entertaining any but one of his
-fellows who was as poor as he was, and the few
-acquaintances he had once met in better
-surroundings than his own gradually drifted away
-from him, or died as Cotter Morison died.
-Although he spoke so very little about these matters
-of personal loneliness and deprivation I was yet
-conscious from the general tenor of his writing
-and an occasional dropped word, how bitterly he
-felt it personally. It had rejoiced my
-unregenerate heart in America to learn that he was
-not entirely without feminine companionship at
-a time when the horror of his life was only
-partially mitigated by the preference of his mad and
-wretched wife for the dens and slums of the New
-Cut. This woman of the upper classes had come
-to him like a star, and had been a lamp in his
-darkness. I wonder if she still retains within
-her heart some memories of those hours.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have not been able to discover whether it is
-true, as has been said, that some of Maitland's
-ancestors were originally German. He himself
-thought this was so, without having anything
-definite that I remember to go upon. If it were
-true I wonder whether it was his Teutonic
-ancestry which made him turn with a certain joy
-to the German ideal of woman, that of the
-haus-frau. If little or nothing were known about
-him, or only so much as those know who have
-already written of him, it might, in some ways,
-be possible to reconstruct him by a process of
-deductive analysis, by what the school logicians
-call the <i>regressus a principiatis ad principia</i>.
-This is always a fascinating mental exercise, and
-indeed I think, with a very little light on
-Maitland's life, it should not have been difficult for
-some to build up a picture not unlike the man.
-For instance, no one with a gleam of intelligence,
-whether a critic or not, could read some portions
-of the chapter in "Victorian Novelists" on
-"Women and Dickens" without coming to the
-inevitable conclusion that Maitland's fortune
-with regard to the women with whom he had
-been thrown in contact must have been most
-lamentably unfortunate. Although Dickens drew
-certain offensive women with almost unequalled
-power, he treats them so that one becomes oblivious
-of their very offensiveness, as Maitland points
-out. Maitland's own commentary on such
-women is ten thousand times more bitter, and it
-is <i>felt</i>, not observed, as in Dickens' books. He
-calls them "these remarkable creatures," and
-declares they belong mostly to one rank of life, the
-lower middle class. "In general their circumstances
-are comfortable .... nothing is asked
-of them but a quiet and amiable discharge of
-their household duties; they are treated by their
-male kindred with great, often with extraordinary
-consideration. Yet their characteristic is
-acidity of temper and boundless licence of querulous
-or insulting talk. The real business of
-their lives is to make all about them as
-uncomfortable as they can. Invariably, they are
-unintelligent and untaught; very often they are
-fragrantly imbecile. Their very virtues (if
-such persons can be said to have any) become a
-scourge. In the highways and byways of life,
-by the fireside, and in the bed-chamber, their
-voices shrill upon the terrified ear." He adds
-that no historical investigation is needed to
-ascertain the truthfulness of these presentments.
-Indeed Maitland required no historical
-investigation, he had his personal experience to go
-upon; but this, indeed, is obvious. Nevertheless
-one cannot help feeling in reading this appalling
-indictment, that something might be said upon
-the other side, and that Maitland's attitude was
-so essentially male as to vitiate many of his conclusions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A few pages further on in this book he says:
-"Another man, obtaining his release from these
-depths, would have turned away in loathing;
-Dickens found therein matter for his mirth,
-material for his art." But Maitland knew that
-Dickens had not suffered in the way he himself
-had done. Thus it was that he rejoiced in the
-punishment which Mrs. Joe Gargery received.
-Maitland writes: "Mrs. Joe Gargery shall be
-brought to quietness; but how? By a half-murderous
-blow on the back of her head, from which
-she will never recover. Dickens understood
-by this time that there is no other efficacious way
-with these ornaments of their sex."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having spoken of Dickens it may be as well to
-dispose of him, with regard to Maitland, in this
-particular chapter. It seems to be commonly
-thought that Maitland wrote his book about the
-Victorian novelists not only with the sympathy
-which he expressed, but with considerable joy in
-the actual work. This is not true, for he
-regarded it essentially as a pot-boiler, and did it
-purely for the money. By some strange kink in
-his mind he chose to do it in Italy, far from any
-reference library. He wrote: "My little
-novelist book has to be written before Christmas, and
-to do this I must get settled at the earliest
-possible date in a quiet north Italian town. I think
-I shall choose Siena." On what principle he
-decided to choose a quiet north Italian town to
-write a book about Victorian novelists I have
-never been able to determine. It was certainly
-a very curious proceeding, especially as he had
-no overwhelming love of North Italy, which was
-for him the Italy of the Renaissance. As I have
-said, he actually disliked the work, and had no
-desire to do it, well as it was done. It is,
-however, curious, to me, in considering this book,
-to find that neither he nor any other critic of
-Dickens that I have ever read seems to give a
-satisfactory explanation of the great, and at times
-overwhelming, attraction that Dickens has for
-many. And yet on more than one occasion I
-discussed Dickens with him, and in a great
-measure he agreed with a theory I put forth with
-some confidence. I think it still worth
-considering. For me the great charm of Dickens lies
-not wholly in his humour or even greatly in his
-humour. It is not found in his characterisation,
-nor in his underlying philosophy of revolt,
-although almost every writer of consequence is a
-revolutionist. It results purely and simply
-from what the critics of the allied art of painting
-describe as "quality." This is a word exceedingly
-difficult to define. It implies more or less
-the characteristic way in which paint is put upon
-the canvas. A picture may be practically
-worthless from the point of view of subject or
-composition, it may even be comparatively poor in
-colouring, and yet it may have an extreme interest
-of surface. One finds, I think, the same thing
-in Dickens' writings. His page is full. It is
-fuller than the page of any other English writer.
-There are, so to speak, on any given page by any
-man a certain number of intellectual and
-emotional stimuli. Dickens' page is full of these
-stimuli to a most extreme degree. It is like a
-small mosaic, and yet clear. It has cross meanings,
-cross lights, reflections, suggestions. Compare
-a page of Dickens with a page, say, of
-Thackeray. Take a pencil and write down the
-number of mental suggestions given by a sentence
-of Thackeray. Take, again, a sentence of
-Dickens, and see how many more there are to be
-found. It is this tremendous and overflowing
-fulness which really constitutes Dickens' great
-and peculiar power.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But all this is anticipation. Not yet was he to
-write of Dickens, Thackeray, and the Brontës,
-for much was to befall him before he went to
-Italy again. He was once more alone, and I
-think I knew that this loneliness would not last
-for long. I have often regretted that I did not
-foresee what I might have foreseen if I had
-considered the man and his circumstances with the
-same fulness which comes to one in later years
-after Fate has wrought itself out. Had I known
-all that I might have known, or done all that I
-might have done, I could perhaps have saved
-him from something even worse than his first
-marriage. Yet, after all, I was a poor and busy
-man, and while living in Chelsea had many
-companions, some of them men who have now made
-a great name in the world of Art. The very
-nature of Maitland and his work, the dreadful
-concentration he required to do something which
-was, as I insist again, alien from his true nature,
-forbade my seeing him very often, or even often
-enough to gather from his reticence what was
-really in his mind. Had I gone to see him
-without any warning, it would, I knew, have utterly
-destroyed his whole day's work. But this solitude,
-this enforced and appalling loneliness,
-which seemed to him necessary for work if he
-was to live, ate into him deeply. It destroyed
-his nerve and what judgment he ever had which,
-heaven knows, was little enough. What it means
-to some men to live in such solitude only those
-who know can tell, and they never tell. To
-Maitland, with his sensual and sensuous nature,
-it was most utter damnation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By now he had come out of the pit of his first
-marriage, and gradually the horrors he had
-passed through became dim to his eyes. They
-were like a badly toned photograph, and faded.
-I did foresee that something would happen
-sooner or later to alter the way in which he lived,
-but I know I did not foresee, and could not have
-foreseen or imagined what was actually coming,
-for no one could have prophesied it. It was
-absurd, impossible, monstrous, and almost bathos.
-And yet it fits in with the character of the man as
-it had been distorted by circumstance. One Sunday
-when I visited him he told me, with a strange
-mixture of abruptness and hesitation, that he had
-made the acquaintance of a girl in the Marylebone
-road. Naturally enough I thought at first
-that his resolution and his habits had broken
-down and that he had picked up some prostitute
-of the neighbourhood. But it turned out that
-the girl was "respectable." He said to me: "I
-could stand it no longer, so I rushed out and
-spoke to the very first woman I came across." It
-was an unhappy inspiration of the desperate,
-and was the first act of a prolonged drama of pain
-and misery. It took me some time and many
-questions to find out what this meant, and what
-it was to lead to, but presently he replied sullenly
-that he proposed to marry the girl if she would
-marry him. On hearing this, I fell into silence
-and we sat for a long time without speaking.
-Knowing him as I did, it was yet a great shock
-to me. For I would rather have seen him in the
-physical clutches of the biggest harpy in the
-Strand&mdash;knowing that such now could not long
-hold him. I had done my best, as a mere boy,
-to prevent him marrying his first wife, and had
-failed with the most disastrous results. I now
-determined to stop this marriage if I could. I
-ventured to remind him of the past, and the part
-I had played in it when I implored him to have
-no more to do with Marian Hilton long before
-he married her. I told him once more, trying
-to renew it in him, of the relief it had been when
-his first wife died, but nothing that I could say
-seemed to move, or even to offend him. His
-mind recognised the truth of everything, but his
-body meant to have its way. He was quiet,
-sullen, set&mdash;even when I told him that he would
-repent it most bitterly. The only thing I could
-at last get him to agree to was that he would take
-no irrevocable step for a week.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I asked him questions about the girl. He
-admitted that he did not love her in any sense of
-the word love. He admitted that she had no
-great powers of attraction, that she seemed to
-possess no particularly obvious intellect. She
-had received his advances in the street in the way
-that such girls, whose courtship is traditionally
-carried on in the open thoroughfare, do receive
-them. But when he asked her to visit him in his
-chambers she replied to that invitation with all
-the obvious suspicion of a lower-class girl from
-whom no sex secrets were hidden. From the
-very start the whole affair seemed hopeless,
-preposterous, intolerable, and I went away from him
-in despair. It was a strange thing that Maitland
-did not seem to know what love was. If I have
-not before this said something about his essential
-lack of real passion in his dealings with women
-it must be said now. Of course, it is quite
-obvious that he had a boyish kind of passion for
-Marian Hilton, but it was certainly not that kind
-of passion which mostly keeps boys innocent.
-Indeed those calf loves which afflict youths are
-at the same time a great help to them, for a boy
-is really as naturally coy as any maiden. If by
-any chance Maitland, instead of coming into
-the hands of a poor girl of the streets of
-Moorhampton, had fallen in love with some young
-girl of decent character and upbringing, his
-passions would not have been so fatally roused.
-I think it was probably the whole root of his
-disaster that this should have occurred at all.
-Possibly it was the horror and rage and anger
-connected with this first affair, combined with
-the fact that it became actually sensual, which
-prevented him having afterwards what one might
-without priggishness describe as a pure passion.
-At any rate I never saw any signs of his being
-capable of the overwhelming passion which
-might under other circumstances drive a man
-down to hell, or raise him to heaven. To my
-mind all his books betray an extreme lack of this.
-His characters in all their love-affairs are
-essentially too reasonable. A man wishes to marry a
-girl, not because he desires her simply and
-overwhelmingly, but because she is a fitting person,
-or the kind of woman of whom he has been able
-to build up certain ideas which suit his mind.
-In fact the love of George Hardy for Isabel in
-"The Exile" is somewhat typical of the whole
-attitude he had towards affairs of passion. Then
-again in "Paternoster Row" there is the suicide
-of Gifford which throws a very curious light on
-Maitland's nature. Apparently Gifford did not
-commit suicide because of his failure, or because
-he was half starving, it was because he was
-weakly desirous of a woman like Anne&mdash;not
-necessarily Anne herself. In Maitland's phrase, he
-desired her to complete his manhood, to my mind
-the most ridiculous way of putting the affair.
-It is in this, I think, that Maitland showed his
-essential lack of knowledge of the other sex. A
-man does not captivate women by going to them
-and explaining, with more or less periphrasis,
-that they are required to complete his manhood,
-that he feels a rather frustrate male individual
-without them. And if he has these ideas at the
-back of his head and goes courting, the result is
-hardly likely to be successful. Maitland never
-understood the passion in the man that sweeps a
-woman off her feet. One finds this lack in all
-his men who live celibate lives. They suffer
-physically, or they suffer to a certain degree from
-loneliness, but one never feels that only one
-woman could cure their pain, or alleviate their
-desolation. At times Maitland seemed, as it
-were, to be in love with the sex but not with the
-woman. Of course he had a bitter hatred of
-the general prejudices of morality, a thing which
-was only natural to any one who had lived his
-life and thought what he thought. It is a
-curious thing to note that his favourite poem in the
-whole English language was perhaps the least
-likely one that could be picked out. This was
-Browning's "Statue and the Bust," which is
-certainly of a teaching not Puritan in its essence.
-The Puritan ideal Maitland loathed with a
-fervour which produced the nearest I have ever seen
-in him to actual rage and madness. He roared
-against it if he did not scoff. He sometimes
-quoted the well-known lines from the unknown
-Brathwait:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Where I saw a Puritane one<br />
- Hanging of his Cat on Monday,<br />
- For killing of a Mouse on Sonday."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I remember very well his taking down Browning
-when I was with him one afternoon at 7K. He
-read a great portion of "The Statue and the
-Bust" out aloud, and we discussed it afterwards,
-of course pointing out to each other with emphasis
-its actual teaching, its loathing of futility.
-It teaches that the two people who loved each
-other but never achieved love were two
-weaklings, who ought to have acted, and should not
-have allowed themselves to be conquered by the
-lordly husband. Maitland said: "Those
-people who buy Browning and think they
-understand it&mdash;oh, if they really knew what he meant
-they would pick him up with a pair of tongs,
-and take him out, and burn him in their back
-yards&mdash;in their back yards!" It strikes one that
-Maitland, in his haste, seemed to imagine that
-the kind of bourgeois or bourgeoise whom he
-imagined thus destroying poor Browning with the
-aid of tongs, possessed such things as back yards,
-and, perhaps, frequented them on Sunday
-afternoons. But he had lived for so many years in
-houses which had not a garden, or anything but
-a small, damp yard behind, that he began to
-think, possibly, that all houses were alike. I
-roared with laughter at his notion of what these
-prosperous Puritans would do. I had a picture
-in my mind of some well-dressed woman of the
-upper middle-class bringing out "The Statue
-and the Bust" with a pair of tongs, and burning
-it in some small and horrible back yard belonging
-to a house in the slums between Tottenham
-Court Road and Fitzroy Square. And yet,
-although he understood Browning's sermon against
-the passive futility of these weak and unfortunate
-lovers he could not, I think, have understood
-wholly, or in anything but a literary sense the
-enormous power of passion which Browning
-possessed. This lack in him is one of the keys
-to his character, and it unlocks much. When I
-left him after he told me about this new affair,
-I went back to my own rooms and sat thinking
-it over, wondering if it were possible even now to
-do anything to save him from his own nature,
-and the catastrophe his nature was preparing.
-Without having seen the girl I felt sure that it
-would be a catastrophe, for I knew him too well.
-Nevertheless on reflecting over the matter it did
-seem to me that there was one possible chance of
-saving him from himself. It was a very unlikely
-thing that I should succeed, but at any rate I
-could try.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have said that we rarely spoke of his early
-life, and never of what had happened in
-Moorhampton. Nevertheless I was, of course, aware
-that it dominated the whole of his outlook and
-all of his thoughts in any way connected with
-ordinary social life, especially with regard to
-intercourse with those who might know something
-about his early career. At this time I do not
-think that he actually blamed himself much for
-what had happened. Men die many times in
-life and are born again, and by this time he must
-have looked on the errant youth who had been
-himself as little more than an ancestor. He
-himself had died and risen again, and if he was not
-the man he might have been, he was certainly
-not the man he had been. Nevertheless he was
-perpetually alive to what other people might
-possibly think of him. I believe that the real
-reason for his almost rigid seclusion from
-society was that very natural fear that some brute,
-and he knew only too well that there are such
-brutes, might suddenly and unexpectedly expose
-his ancient history. It is true that even in our
-society in England, which is not famous all the
-world over for tact, it was not very likely to
-happen. Nevertheless the bare possibility that
-it might occur absolutely dominated him. It
-requires very little sympathy or understanding
-of his character to see that this must have been
-so. No doubt it was mainly from this cause that
-he considered he had no right to approach
-women of his own class, seeing that he had
-declassed himself, without telling the whole truth.
-But this was quite impossible for him to do, and
-I knew it. In some cases it would have been
-wise, in some unwise, but Henry Maitland was
-unable to do such a thing. The result was this
-sudden revolt, and the madness which led him
-to speak to this girl of the Marylebone Road,
-whom I had not yet met but whom I pictured,
-not inadequately, in my mind. At the first
-glance it seemed that nothing could possibly be
-done, that the man must be left to "dree his
-weird," to work out his fate and accomplish his
-destiny. And yet I lay awake for a very long
-time that night thinking of the whole situation,
-and I at last determined to take a step on his
-behalf which, at any rate, had the merit of some
-originality and courage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Years ago in Moorhampton, when he was a
-boy, before the great disaster came, Maitland
-had visited my uncle's house, and had obviously
-pleased every one he met there. He was bright,
-not bad looking, very cheerful and enthusiastic,
-and few that met him did not like him. Among
-those whose acquaintance he made at that house
-were two of my own cousins. In later years
-they often spoke of him to me, even although
-they had not seen him since he was a boy of
-seventeen. I now went to both of them and told
-them the whole affair in confidence, speaking
-quite openly of his character, and the impossibility
-he discovered within himself of living in
-the desolation which fate had brought upon him.
-They understood his character, and were
-acquainted with his reputation. He was a man of
-genius, if not a man of great genius, and occupied
-a certain position in literature which would one
-day, we all felt assured, be still a greater position.
-They were obviously exceedingly sorry for him,
-and not the less sorry when I told them of the
-straits in which he sometimes found himself.
-Nevertheless it seemed to me, as I explained to
-them, that if he had been lucky enough to marry
-some one in sympathy with him and his work,
-some one able to help in a little way to push him
-forward on the lines on which he might have
-attained success, there was yet great hope for him
-even in finance, or so I believed. Then I asked
-them whether it would not be possible to stop
-this proposed outrageous marriage, a thing
-which seemed to me utterly unnatural. They
-were, however, unable to make any suggestion,
-and certainly did not follow what was in my
-mind. Then I opened what I had to say, and
-asked them abruptly if it were not possible for
-one of them to consider whether she would
-marry him if the present affair could be brought
-decently to an end. They were both educated
-women, and knew at least two foreign languages.
-They were accustomed to books, and appreciated
-his work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No doubt my proposal sounded absurd, unconventional,
-and perhaps not a little horrifying.
-Nevertheless when I have had anything to do in
-life I have not been accustomed to let convention
-stand in my way. Such marriages have been
-arranged and have not been unsuccessful. There
-was, I thought, a real possibility of such a
-marriage as I proposed being anything but a failure.
-Our conversation ended at last in both of them
-undertaking to consider the matter if, after
-meeting Maitland again, they still remained of the
-same mind, and if he found that such a step was
-possible. I have often wondered since whether
-any situation exactly like this ever occurred
-before. I own that I found it somewhat interesting,
-and when at last I went back to Maitland I
-felt entitled to tell him that he could do much
-better than marrying an unknown girl of the
-lower classes whom he had accosted in the streets
-in desperation. But he received what I had to
-say in a very curious manner. It seemed to
-depress him profoundly. Naturally enough, I did
-not tell him the names of those who were
-prepared to make his acquaintance, but I did
-tell him that I had been to a lady who had once
-met him and greatly admired his work, who
-would be ready to consider the possibility of her
-becoming his wife if on meeting once again they
-proved sympathetic. He shook his head grimly,
-and, after a long silence, he told me that he had
-not kept his word, and that he had asked Ada
-Brent to marry him. He had, he said, gone too
-far to withdraw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is such a thing in life as the tyranny of
-honour, and personally I cared very little for this
-point of honour when I thought of his future.
-It was not as if this girl's affections were in any
-way engaged. If they had been I would have
-kept silence, bitterly as I regretted the whole
-affair. She was curious about him, and that was
-all. It would do her no harm to lose him, and,
-indeed, as the event proved, it would have been
-better if she had not married at all. Therefore
-I begged him to shut up the flat and leave
-London at once. I even offered to try and find the
-money for him to do so. But, like all weak
-people, he was peculiarly obstinate, and nothing that
-I could urge had the least effect upon him. I
-have often thought it was his one great failure
-in rectitude which occurred at Moorhampton
-that made him infinitely more tenacious of doing
-nothing which might seem in any way dishonourable,
-however remotely. I did not succeed
-in moving him, with whatever arguments I plied
-him, and the only satisfaction I got out of it was
-the sense that he knew I was most deeply
-interested in him, and had done everything, even
-much more than might have been expected, to
-save him from what I thought must lead to
-irreparable misery. Certainly the whole incident
-was remarkable. There was, perhaps, a little
-air of curiously polite comedy about it, and yet
-it was the prelude to a tragedy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was soon after this, in fact it was on the
-following Sunday, that I made the acquaintance
-of the young woman who was to be his second
-wife, to bear his children, to torture him for
-years, to drive him almost mad, and once more
-make a financial slave of him. We three met in
-the gloomy sitting-room at 7K. My first
-impression of this girl was more unfavourable than
-I had expected. She was the daughter of a
-small tradesman but little removed from an artisan,
-and she looked it. In the marriage certificate
-her father is described as a carver, for what
-reason I am unable to determine, for I have a
-very distinct recollection that Maitland told me
-he was a bootmaker, probably even a cobbler.
-I disliked the young woman at first sight, and
-never got over my early impression. From the
-very beginning it seemed impossible that she
-could ever become in any remote degree what he
-might justifiably have asked for in a wife. Yet
-she was not wholly disagreeable in appearance.
-She was of medium height and somewhat
-dark. She had not, however, the least pretence
-to such beauty as one might hope to find even in
-a slave of the kitchen. She possessed neither
-face nor figure, nor a sweet voice, nor any
-charm&mdash;she was just a female. And this was she that
-the most fastidious man in many ways, that I
-knew, was about to marry. I went away with a
-sick heart, for it was nothing less than a frightful
-catastrophe, and I had to stand by and see it
-happen. He married her on March 20, 1891, and
-went to live near Exeter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For many months after he left London I
-did not see Maitland, although we
-continued to correspond, somewhat irregularly.
-He was exceedingly reticent as to the
-results of his marriage, and I did not discover
-definitely for some time to what extent it was
-likely to prove a failure. Indeed, I had many
-things to do, and was both financially and in
-other matters in a parlous condition. In some
-ways it was a relief to me that he should be
-living in the country, as I always felt, rightly or
-wrongly, a certain feeling of responsibility with
-regard to him when he was close at hand.
-Marriage always takes one's friends away from one,
-and for a time he was taken from me. But as I
-am not anxious to write in great detail about the
-more sordid facts of his life, especially when
-they do not throw light on his character, I am
-not disturbed at knowing little of the earlier days
-of his second marriage. The results are
-sufficient, and they will presently appear. For
-Maitland remained Maitland, and his character
-did not alter now. So I may return for a little
-while to matters more connected with his literary
-life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have, I think, before this endeavoured to
-describe or suggest his personal appearance, but
-whenever I think of him I regret deeply that no
-painter ever made an adequate portrait of the
-man. He was especially interesting-looking,
-and most obviously lovable and sympathetic
-when any of his feelings were roused. His grey
-eyes were very bright and intelligent, his
-features finely cut, and at times he was almost
-beautiful; although his skin was not always in such
-a good condition as it should have been, and he
-was always very badly freckled. For those who
-have never seen him a photograph published in
-a dull literary journal, which is now defunct, is
-certainly the most adequate and satisfying
-presentment of him in existence. On a close
-inspection of this photograph it will be observed
-that he brushed his hair straight backward from
-his forehead without any parting. He had a
-curious way of dressing his hair, about which he
-was very particular. It was very fine hair of a
-brown colour, perhaps of a rather mousy tint,
-and it was never cut except at the ends at the
-nape of his neck. Whenever he washed his face
-he used to fasten this hair back with an elastic
-band which he always carried in his waistcoat
-pocket. On some occasions, when I have stayed
-the night at 7K and seen him at his toilette, this
-elastic band gave him a very odd appearance,
-almost as if he wore, for the time being, a very
-odd halo; but as his hair was so long in front it
-would otherwise have fallen into the basin of
-water. He told me that once in Germany a
-waiter entered the room while he was washing
-his face, and on perceiving this peculiar
-head-dress betrayed signs of mixed amusement and
-alarm. As Maitland said, "I believe he thought
-I was mad."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His forehead was high, his head exceedingly
-well shaped but not remarkably large. He
-always wore a moustache. Considering his very
-sedentary life his natural physique was extremely
-good, and he was capable of walking great
-distances if he were put to it and was in condition.
-Seen nude, he had the figure of a possible athlete.
-I used to tell him that he might be an exceedingly
-strong man if he cared to take the trouble to
-become one, but his belief, which is to be found
-expressed in one passage of "The Meditations,"
-was that no one in our times could be at once
-intellectually and physically at his best. Indeed,
-he had in a way a peculiar contempt for mere
-strength, and I do not doubt that much of his
-later bodily weakness and illness might have been
-avoided if he had thought more of exercise and
-open air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In no way was he excessive, in spite of his
-jocular pretence of a monstrous addiction to
-"strong waters" as he always called them. He
-did love wine, as I have written, but he loved it
-with discretion, although not with real
-knowledge. It was a case of passion and faith with
-him. I could imagine that in some previous
-incarnation&mdash;were there such things as
-reincarnations&mdash;he must have been an Italian writer of the
-South he loved so well. A little while ago I
-spoke of the strange absence of colour in his
-rooms. On rereading "The Meditations," I find
-some kind of an explanation, or what he
-considered an explanation, of this fact, to which I
-myself drew his attention. He seemed to imagine
-that his early acquaintance with his father's
-engravings inspired him with a peculiar love of
-black and white. More probably the actual
-truth is that his father's possible love of colour
-had never been developed any more than his
-son's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His fantastic attempts at times to make one
-believe that he was a great drinker, when a bottle
-of poor and common wine served him and me for
-a dinner and made us joyous, were no more true
-than that he was a great smoker. He had a
-prodigious big pot of tobacco in his rooms in the
-early days, a pot containing some form of mild
-returns which to my barbaric taste suggested
-nothing so much as hay that had been stored next
-some mild tobacco. It was one of my grievances
-against him that when I visited his rooms hard
-up for tobacco, a thing which frequently
-occurred in those days, I was almost unable to use
-his. But it was always a form of joke with him
-to pretend that his habits were monstrously
-excessive. As I have said, one of his commonest
-forms of humour was exaggeration. Many people
-misunderstood that his very expressions of
-despair were all touched with a grim humour.
-Nevertheless he and his rooms were grim
-enough. On his shelves there was a French
-book, the title of which I forget, dealing
-without any reticence with the lives of the band of
-young French writers under the Second Empire,
-who perished miserably in the conditions to
-which they were exposed. This book is a series
-of short and bitter biographies, ending for the
-most part with, "mourut à l'hôpital," or "brûlait
-la cervelle." We were by no means for ever
-cheerful in these times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not think I have said very much, except
-by bitter implication, of his financial position, or
-what he earned. But his finances were a part of
-his general life's tragedy. There is a passage
-somewhere at the end of a chapter in "In the
-Morning" which says: "Put money in thy
-purse; and again, put money in thy purse; for,
-as the world is ordered, to lack current coin is to
-lack the privileges of humanity, and indigence is
-the death of the soul." I have been speaking
-wholly in vain if it is not understood that he was
-a man extremely difficult to influence, even for
-his own good. This was because he was weak,
-and his weakness came out with most exceeding
-force in all his dealings with publishers and
-editors. For the most part he was atrociously paid,
-but the fact remains that he was paid, and his
-perpetual fear was that his books would presently
-be refused, and that he would get no one to take
-them if he remonstrated with those who were his
-taskmasters. In such an event he gloomily
-anticipated, not so much the workhouse, but once
-more a cellar off the Tottenham Court Road, or
-some low, poverty-stricken post as a private tutor
-or the usher of a poor school. Sometimes when
-we were together he used to talk with a certain
-pathetic jocosity, or even jealousy, of Coleridge's
-luck in having discovered his amiable patron,
-Gillman. He did not imagine that nowadays
-any Gillmans were to be found, nor do I think
-that any Gillman would have found Maitland
-possible. One night after we had been talking
-about Coleridge and Gillman he sat down and
-wrote a set of poor enough verses, which are not
-without humour, and certainly highly characteristic,
-that ran as follows:
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- THE HUMBLE ASPIRATION OF H.M., NOVELIST<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- "Hoc erat in votis."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Oh could I encounter a Gillman,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who would board me and lodge me for aye,<br />
- With what intellectual skill, man,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My life should be frittered away!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- What visions of study methodic<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My leisurely hours would beguile!&mdash;<br />
- I would potter with details prosodic,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would ponder perfections of style.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- I would joke in a vein pessimistic<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At all the disasters of earth;<br />
- I would trifle with schemes socialistic,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And turn over matters for mirth.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- From the quiddities quaint of Quintilian<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would flit to the latest critiques;&mdash;<br />
- I would visit the London Pavilion,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And magnify lion-comiques.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- With the grim ghastly gaze of a Gorgon<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would cut Hendersonian bores&mdash;<br />
- I would follow the ambulant organ<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That jingles at publicans' doors.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- In the odorous alleys of Wapping<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would saunter on evenings serene;<br />
- When the dews of the Sabbath were dropping<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;You would find me on Clerkenwell Green.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- At the Hall Scientific of Bradlaugh<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would revel in atheist rant,<br />
- Or enjoy an attack on some bad law<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By the notable Mrs. Besant.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- I would never omit an oration<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of Cunninghame Graham or Burns;<br />
- And the Army miscalled of Salvation<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Should furnish me frolic by turns.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Perchance I would muse o'er a mystic;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perchance I would booze at a bar;<br />
- And when in the mind journalistic<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I would read the "Pall Mall" and the "Star."<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Never more would I toil with my quill, man,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or plead for the publishers' pay.&mdash;<br />
- Oh where and O where is the Gillman,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who will lodge me and board me for aye?<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Now as to his actual earnings. His first book
-"Children of the Dawn," was published by
-Hamerton's. So far as I am aware it brought him in
-nothing. The book, naturally enough, was a
-dead failure; nobody perceived its promise, and
-it never sold. I do not think he received a penny
-on account for it. He got little more for
-"Outside the Pale," which was published in 1884, the
-year I went to America, and was dedicated to me,
-as the initials J.C.H. on the dedication page of
-the first edition testify. At that time I still
-retained in signature my second initial. This
-book was published by Andrews and Company,
-and it was through it that he first made
-acquaintance in a business way with George Meredith,
-then quite a poor man, and working for the firm
-as a reader just before he went to Chapman and Hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In "Outside the Pale," as a manuscript there
-was a chapter, or part of a chapter, of a
-curiously romantic kind. It was some such theme
-as that which I myself treated in a romantic
-story called "The Purification." Hilda Moon,
-the idealised heroine of the streets, washed
-herself pure of her sins in the sea at midnight, if I
-remember the incident rightly, for I never
-actually read it. It appears that George Meredith
-was much taken with the book, but found his
-sense of fitness outraged by the introduction of
-this highly romantic incident. It seemed out of
-tone with the remainder of the book and the way
-in which it was written. He begged Maitland
-to eliminate it. Now as a rule Maitland, being
-a young writer, naturally objected to altering
-anything, but he knew that Meredith was right.
-At any rate, even at that period, the older man
-had had such an enormous experience that
-Maitland accepted his opinion and acted upon it.
-He told me that George Meredith came downstairs
-with him into the street, and standing on
-the doorstep once more reiterated his advice as
-to this particular passage. He said in the
-peculiar way so characteristic of him, "My dear
-sir, I beg you to believe, it made me <i>shiver</i>!" That
-passage is missing in the published book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Outside the Pale" had a kind of <i>succès
-d'estime</i>. Certain people read it, and certain
-people liked it. It was something almost fresh
-in English. Nevertheless he made little or
-nothing out of it. Few, indeed, were those who made
-money out of Andrews and Company at that
-time. The business was run by Harry Andrews,
-known in the trade as "the liar," a man who
-notoriously never spoke the truth if a lie would
-bring him in a penny. I afterwards published
-a book with the same firm, and had to deal with
-the same man. After "Outside the Pale" came
-"Isabel," which, as I have said, was obviously
-written under the influence of Tourgeniev. So
-far as I am aware this influence has not been
-noted, even by so acute a critic as Thomas Sackville,
-but I myself was at that time a great reader
-of Tourgeniev, partly owing to Maitland's
-recommendation and insistence upon the man, and
-I recognised his influence at once. Maitland
-openly acknowledged it, a thing no writer does
-without very strong reason. This book, of
-course, was not a success. That, I believe, was
-the last work he published with Andrews and
-Company. So far as he was concerned the firm
-had not been a success. He was still compelled
-to earn his bread and cheese and rent by teaching.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although Tourgeniev was the earliest great
-influence upon Maitland, his influence was very
-largely that of form. So far as feeling was
-concerned his god for many years was undoubtedly
-Dostoievsky. That Russian writer himself
-suffered and had been down into the depths like the
-modern writer Gorki, which was what appealed
-to Maitland. Indeed he says somewhere:
-"Dostoievsky, a poor and suffering man, gives
-us with immense power his own view of penury
-and wretchedness." It was Maitland who first
-introduced "Crime and Punishment," to me.
-There is no doubt, when one comes to think of it
-seriously, a certain likeness between the modern
-Russian school and Maitland's work, and that
-likeness is perhaps founded on something deeper
-than mere community of subject which shows
-itself here and there. Perhaps there is something
-essentially Slav-like in Maitland's attitude
-to life. He was a dreamer, rebellious and
-unable. If, indeed, his ancestry was partly
-Teutonic, he might have been originally as much
-Slav as German.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1886, while I was still in America, he began
-"The Mob." At that time, just when he had
-almost done the first two volumes, there occurred
-the Trafalgar Square Riots, in which John
-Burns, Hyndman, and Henry Hyde Champion,
-were concerned. Fool as Maitland was about
-his own affairs, he yet saw that it was a wonderful
-coincidence from his point of view that he
-should have been dealing with labour matters
-and the nature of the mob at this juncture.
-Some rare inspiration or suggestion led him to
-rush down with the first two volumes to
-Messrs. Miller and Company, where they were seen by
-John Glass, who said to him, "Give us the rest
-at once and we will begin printing it now." He
-went home and wrote the third volume in a
-fortnight while the other two volumes were in the
-press. This book was published anonymously,
-as it was thought, naturally enough, that this
-would give it a greater chance of success. It
-might reasonably be attributed to any one, and
-Maitland's name at that time, or indeed at any
-time afterwards, was very little help towards
-financial success. Now I am of opinion,
-speaking from memory, that this book was bought
-out and out by the publishing firm for fifty
-pounds. To a young writer who had never
-made so much fifty pounds was a large sum. In
-Maitland's exaggerated parlance it was "gross
-and riotous wealth."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having succeeded in getting hold of a good
-firm of notable and well-known publishers, he
-dreaded leaving them, even though he very soon
-discovered that fifty pounds for a long
-three-volume novel was most miserable pay. That he
-wrote books rapidly at times was no guarantee
-that he would always write them as rapidly.
-For once in his life he had written a whole
-volume in a fortnight, but it might just as well take
-him many months. There are, indeed, very few
-of his books of which most of the first volume
-was not destroyed, rewritten, and sometimes
-destroyed and again rewritten. Nevertheless he
-discovered a tremendous reluctance to ask for
-better terms. It was not only his fear of returning
-to the old irremediable poverty which made
-him dread leaving a firm who were not all they
-might have been, but he was cursed with a most
-unnecessary tenderness for them. He actually
-dreaded hurting the feelings of a publishing firm
-which had naturally all the qualities and defects
-of a corporation. The reason that he did at last
-leave this particular firm was rather curious. It
-shows that what many might think a mere
-coincidence may prejudice a fair man's mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have said, he had been in the habit of
-selling his books outright for fifty pounds.
-After this had gone on for many books I suggested
-to him, as everything he wrote went into
-several editions under the skilful management
-of the firm, that it might be as well to sell them
-the first edition only and ask for a royalty on the
-succeeding ones. Now this would never have
-occurred to him, and he owned that it was a good
-idea. So when "The Flower," was finished he
-sold the first edition for forty pounds, and
-arranged for a percentage on succeeding editions.
-He went on with the next book at once. Now
-as it happened, curiously enough, there was no
-second edition of "The Flower" called for, and
-this so disheartened poor Maitland that he sold
-his two next novels outright for the usual sum.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day when I was with him he spoke of the
-bad luck of "The Flower," which seemed to him
-almost inexplicable. It was so very unlucky
-that it had not done well, for the loss of the extra
-ten pounds was not easy for him to get over in
-his perpetual and grinding poverty. When we
-had discussed the matter he determined to ask
-the firm what they would give him for all further
-rights in the book. He did this, and they were
-kind enough to pay the sum of ten pounds for
-them, making up the old price of fifty pounds
-for the whole book. Then, by one of those
-chances which only business men are capable of
-thoroughly appreciating, a demand suddenly
-sprang up for the story and the publishers were
-enabled to bring out a new edition at once.
-Some time later it went into a third edition, and,
-I believe, even into a fourth. Now it will hardly
-be credited that Maitland was very sore about
-this, for he was usually a very just man; and when
-I suggested, for the hundredth time but now at
-the psychological moment, that the firm of Bent
-and Butler who were then publishing for me,
-might give him very good terms, he actually had
-the courage to leave his own publishers, and
-never went back to them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have insisted time and again upon Maitland's
-weakness and his inability to move.
-Nothing, I believe, but a sense of rankling
-injustice would have made him move. I had been
-trying for three years to get him to go to my
-publishing friends, and I have heard his conduct in
-the matter described as obstinacy. But to speak
-truly it was sheer weakness and nervousness.
-The older firm at any rate gave him fifty pounds
-for a book, and they were wealthy people, likely
-to last. My own friends were new men, and
-although they gave him a hundred pounds on
-account of increasing royalties, it was conceivably
-possible that they might be a failure and
-presently go out of business. His notion was that
-the firm he had left would then refuse to have
-anything more to do with him, that he would get
-no other firm to publish his work, and that he
-would be thrown back into the ditch from which
-he had crawled with so much difficulty. It is
-an odd comment on himself where he makes one
-man say to another in "Paternoster Row": "You
-are the kind of man who is roused by necessity.
-I am overcome by it. My nature is feeble and
-luxurious. I never in my life encountered and
-overcame a practical difficulty." He spoke
-afterwards somewhat too bitterly of his earlier
-publishing experiences, and was never tired of
-quoting Mrs. Gaskell to show how Charlotte
-Brontë had fared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In "The Meditations" he says: "Think of
-that grey, pinched life, the latter years of which
-would have been so brightened had Charlotte
-Brontë received but, let us say, one-third of what,
-in the same space of time, the publisher gained
-by her books. I know all about this; alas! no
-man better." There was no subject on which
-he was more bitterly vocal. Mr. Jones-Brown,
-the senior partner of Messrs. Miller and
-Company, I knew myself, for after I wrote "The
-Wake of the Sun," it was read by Glass and sold
-to them for fifty pounds. When this bargain
-was finally struck Mr. Jones-Brown said to me:
-"Now, Mr. H., as the business is all done, would
-you mind telling me quite frankly to what
-extent this book of yours is true?" I replied:
-"It is as true in every detail as it can possibly
-be." "Then you mean to say," he asked, "that
-you actually did starve as you relate?" I said:
-"Certainly I did, and I might have made it a
-deal blacker if I had chosen." He fell into a
-momentary silent reverie and shaking his head,
-murmured: "Ah, hunger is a dreadful thing;&mdash;I
-once went without dinner myself!" This
-was a favourite story of Henry Maitland's. It
-was so characteristic of the class he chiefly
-loathed. Those who have gathered by now what
-his satiric and ironic tendencies were, can
-imagine his bitter, and at the same time
-uproariously jocular comments on such a statement.
-For he was the man who had stood cursing outside
-a cookshop without even a penny to satisfy
-his raging hunger, as he truly relates under cover
-of "The Meditations."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is an odd, and perhaps even remarkable
-fact, that the man who had suffered in this way,
-and was so wonderfully conscious of the
-absurdities and monstrosities of our present social
-system, working by the pressure of mere
-economics, should have regarded all kinds of
-reform not merely without hope, but with an
-actual terror. He had once, as he owned, been
-touched by Socialism, probably of a purely
-academic kind; and yet, when he was afterwards
-withdrawn from such stimuli as had influenced
-him to think for once in terms of sociology, he
-went back to his more natural depairing
-conservative frame of mind. He lived in the past,
-and was conscious every day that something in
-the past that he loved was dying and must
-vanish. No form of future civilisation, whatever
-it might be, which was gained by means
-implying the destruction of what he chiefly loved,
-could ever appeal to him. He was not even
-able to believe that the gross and partial
-education of the populace was better than no
-education at all, in that it must some day inevitably
-lead to better education and a finer type of
-society. It was for that reason that he was a
-Conservative. But he was the kind of Conservative
-who would now be repudiated by those who
-call themselves such, except perhaps in some
-belated and befogged country house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A non-combative Tory seems a contradiction
-in words, but Maitland's loathing of disturbance
-in any form, or of any solution of any question
-by means other than the criticism of the Pure
-Reason, was most extreme. As for his feelings
-towards the Empire and all that it implied, that
-is best put in a few words he wrote to me about
-my novel "In the Sun": "Yes, this is good, but
-you know that I loathe the Empire, and that
-India and Africa are abomination to me." To
-anticipate as I tell his story I may quote again on
-the same point from a letter written to me in
-later years when he was in Paris: "I am very
-seriously thinking of trying to send my boy to
-some part of the world where there is at least
-a chance of his growing up an honest farmer
-without obvious risk of his having to face the
-slavery of military service. I would greatly
-rather never see him again than foresee his
-marching in ranks; butchering, or to be butchered."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This implies, of course, as I have said before,
-that he failed for ever to grasp the world as it
-was. He clung passionately and with revolt to
-his own ideas of what it ought to be, and
-protested with a curious feeble violence against the
-actual world as he would not see it. It is a
-wonder that he did any work at all. If he had
-had fifty pounds a year of his own he would have
-retreated into a cottage and asphyxiated himself
-with books.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have often thought that the most painful
-thing in all his work was what he insisted on so
-often in "Paternoster Row" with regard to the
-poor novelist there depicted. The man was
-always destroying commenced work. Once he
-speaks about "writing a page or two of manuscript
-daily, with several holocausts to retard
-him." Within my certain knowledge this
-happened scores of times to Maitland. He
-destroyed a quarter of a volume, half a volume,
-three quarters of a volume, a whole volume, and
-even more, time and time again. He did this, to
-my mind, because he fancied nervously that he
-must write, that he had to write, and began
-without adequate preparation. It became
-absolutely tragic, for he commenced work
-knowing that he would destroy it, and knowing the
-pain such destruction would cost him, when a
-little rest might have enabled him to begin
-cheerfully with a fresh mind. I used to suggest this
-to him, but it was entirely useless. He would
-begin, and destroy, and begin again, and then
-only partially satisfy himself at last when he
-was in a state of financial desperation, with the
-ditch or the workhouse in front of him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this he never seemed to learn by experience.
-It was a curious futility, which was all
-the odder because he was so peculiarly conscious
-of a certain kind of futility exhibited by our
-friend Schmidt. He used to write to Maitland
-at least a dozen times a year from Potsdam.
-These letters were all almost invariably read
-to me. They afforded Maitland extraordinary
-amusement and real pleasure, and yet great pain.
-Schmidt used to begin the letter with something
-like this: "I have been spending the last
-month or two in deep meditation on the work
-which it lies in my power to do. I have now
-discovered that I was not meant to write fiction.
-I am therefore putting it resolutely aside, and
-am turning to history, to which I shall
-henceforward devote my life." About two months
-later Maitland would read me a portion of a
-letter which began: "I have been much
-troubled these last two months, and have been
-considering my own position and my own
-endowments with the greatest interest. I find that
-I have been mistaken in thinking that I had
-any powers which would enable me to write
-history in a satisfactory manner. I see that I am
-essentially a philosopher. Henceforth I shall
-devote myself to philosophy." Again, a month
-or two after, there would come a letter from
-him, making another statement as if he had
-never made one before: "I am glad to say that
-I have at last discovered my own line. After
-much thought I am putting aside philosophy.
-Henceforward I devote myself to fiction." This
-kind of thing occurred not once but twenty
-or thirty times, and the German for ever wrote
-as if he had never written anything before with
-regard to his own powers and capabilities. One
-is reminded forcibly of a similar case in
-England, that of J.K. Stephen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have been speaking of "Paternoster
-Row," it is very interesting to observe that
-Maitland was frequently writing most directly of
-himself in that book. It is curious that in this,
-one of his most successful novels, he should have
-recognised his own real limitations. He says
-that "no native impulse had directed him to
-novel-writing. His intellectual temper was
-that of the student, the scholar, but strongly
-blended with a love of independence which had
-always made him think with detestation of a
-teacher's life." He goes on to speak of the
-stories which his hero wrote, "scraps of
-immature psychology, the last thing a magazine would
-accept from an unknown man." It may be that
-he was thinking here of some of his own short
-stories, for which I was truly responsible. Year
-after year I suggested that he should do some,
-as they were, on the whole, the easiest way of
-making a little money. Naturally I had amazing
-trouble with him because it was a new line,
-but I returned to the charge in season and out
-of season, every Sunday and every week-day that
-I saw him, and every time I wrote. We were
-both perfectly conscious that he had not the art
-of writing dramatic short stories which were
-essentially popular. There is no doubt that he
-did not possess this faculty. When one goes
-through his shorter work one discovers few
-indeed which are stories or properly related to the
-<i>conte</i>. They are, indeed, often scraps of
-psychology, sometimes perhaps a little crude, but
-the crudeness is mostly in the construction.
-They are in fact rather possible passages from a
-book than short stories. Nevertheless he did
-fairly well with these when he worked with
-an agent, which he did finally and at last on
-continued pressure from me. I notice, however,
-that in his published volumes of short
-stories there are several missing which I should
-like to see again. I do not know whether they
-are good, but two or three that I remember
-vaguely were published, I believe, in the old
-"Temple Bar." One was a story about a
-donkey, which I entirely forget, and another was
-called "Mr. Why." It was about a poor man,
-not wholly sane, who lived in one room and left
-all that that room contained to some one else
-upon his death. On casual search it seemed that
-the room contained nothing, but the heir or
-heiress discovered at last on the top of an old
-cupboard Why's name written large in piled
-half-crowns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may have been noticed by some that he
-spoke in the little "Gillman" set of verses which
-I have quoted, of "Hendersonian bores." This
-perhaps requires comment. For one who loved
-his Rabelais and the free-spoken classics of our
-own tongue, Maitland had an extreme purity of
-thought and speech, a thing which one might
-not, in some ways, have looked for. No one, I
-think, would have dared to tell him a gross story,
-which did not possess remarkable wit or
-literary merit, more than once. His reception of
-such tales was never cordial, and I remember
-his peculiar and astounding indignation at one
-incident. Somehow or another he had become
-acquainted with an East End clergyman named
-Henderson. This Henderson had, I believe,
-read "The Under World," or one of the books
-dealing with the kind of parishioner that he was
-acquainted with, and had written to Maitland.
-In a way they became friends, or at any rate
-acquaintances, for the clergyman too was a
-peculiarly lonely man. He occasionally came to
-7K, and I myself met him there. He was a
-man wholly misplaced, in fact he was an absolute
-atheist. Still, he had a cure of souls somewhere
-the other side of the Tower, and laboured,
-as I understood, not unfaithfully. He frequently
-discussed his mental point of view with
-Maitland and often used to write to him. By some
-native kink in his mind he used to put into these
-letters indecent words. I suppose he thought
-it was a mere outspoken literary habit. As
-a matter of fact this enraged Maitland so
-furiously that he brought the letters to me, and
-showing them demanded my opinion as to what
-he should do. He said: "This kind of
-conduct is outrageous! What am I to do about
-it?" Now, it never occurred to Maitland in a
-matter like this, or indeed in any matter, to be
-absolutely outspoken and straightforward. He
-was always so afraid of hurting people's
-feelings. I said: "It is perfectly obvious what to
-do. My good man, if you don't like it, write
-and tell him that you don't." This was to him
-a perfectly impossible solution of a very great
-difficulty. How it was solved I do not exactly
-remember, but I do know that we afterwards
-saw very little of Mr. Henderson, who is
-embalmed, like a poor fly, in the "Gillman" poem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was characteristic, and one of the causes of
-his continued disastrous troubles, that Maitland
-was incapable of being abruptly or strenuously
-straightforward. A direct "No," or "This shall
-not be done," seemed to him, no doubt, to invite
-argument and struggle, the one thing he invariably
-procured for himself by invariably avoiding it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Paternoster Row," was written, if I remember
-rightly, partly in 1890, and finished in 1891,
-in which year it was published. It is an odd
-thing to think of that he was married to his
-second wife in March 1891, shortly before this
-book came out. In the third volume there is
-practically a strange and bitter, and very
-remarkable, forecast of the result of that marriage,
-showing that whilst Maitland's instincts and
-impulses ran away with him, his intellect was yet
-clear and cold. It is the passage where the
-hero suggests that he should have married some
-simple, kind-hearted work-girl. He says, "We
-should have lived in a couple of poor rooms
-somewhere, and&mdash;we should have loved each other." Whereupon
-Gifford&mdash;here Maitland's intellect&mdash;exclaims
-upon him for a shameless idealist,
-and sketches, most truly the likely issue of such
-a marriage, given Maitland or Reardon. He
-says: "To begin with, the girl would have
-married you in firm persuasion that you were a
-'gentleman' in temporary difficulties, and that
-before long you would have plenty of money to
-dispose of. Disappointed in this hope, she
-would have grown sharp-tempered, querulous,
-selfish. All your endeavours to make her
-understand you would only have resulted in widening
-the impassable gulf. She would have
-misconstrued your every sentence, found food for
-suspicion in every harmless joke, tormented you
-with the vulgarest forms of jealousy. The
-effect upon your nature would have been
-degrading." Never was anything more true.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Whatever kind of disaster his marriage
-was to be for Maitland, there is
-no doubt that it was for me also something
-in the nature of a catastrophe. There are
-marriages and marriages. By some of them a
-man's friend gains, and by others he loses, and
-they are the more frequent, for it is one of the
-curiosities of human life that a man rarely finds
-his friend's wife sympathetic. As it was, I knew
-that in a sense I had now lost Henry Maitland,
-or had partially lost him, to say the least of it.
-Unfair as it was to the woman, I felt very
-bitter against her, and he knew well what I felt.
-Thinking of her as I did, anything like free
-human intercourse with his new household would
-be impossible, unless, indeed, the affair turned
-out other than I expected. And then he had
-left London and gone to his beloved Devonshire.
-How much he loved it those who have read "The
-Meditations" can tell, for all that is said there
-about that county was very sincere, as I can
-vouch for. Born himself in a grim part of
-Yorkshire, and brought up in Mirefields and
-Moorhampton, that rainy and gloomy city of the
-north, he loved the sweet southern county. And
-yet it is curious to recognise what a strange
-passion was his for London. He had something
-of the same passion for it as Johnson had,
-although the centre of London for him was not
-Fleet Street but the British Museum and its
-great library. He wrote once to his doctor
-friend: "I dare not settle far from London, as
-it means ill-health to me to be out of reach of
-the literary 'world'&mdash;a small world enough,
-truly." But, of course, it was most extraordinarily
-his world. He was a natural bookworm
-compelled to spin fiction. And yet he did love
-the country, though he now found no peace
-there. With his wife peace was impossible, and
-this I soon learnt from little things that he wrote
-to me, though he was for the first few months
-of his marriage exceedingly delicate on this
-subject, as if he were willing to give her every
-possible chance. I was only down in Devonshire
-once while he was there with his wife. I
-went a little trip in a steamship to Dartmouth,
-entering its narrow and somewhat hazardous
-harbour in the middle of the great blizzard
-which that year overwhelmed the south of England,
-and especially the south of Devon, in the
-heaviest snow drifts. When I did at last get
-away from Dartmouth, I found things obviously
-not all they should be, though very little was
-said about it between us. I remember we went
-out for a walk together, going through paths
-cut in snow drifts twelve or even fifteen feet in
-depth. Though such things had been a common
-part of some of my own experiences they were
-wonderfully new to Maitland, and made him
-for a time curiously exhilarated. I did not stay
-long in Devon, nor, as a matter of fact, did he.
-For though he had gone there meaning to
-settle, he found the lack of the British Museum
-and his literary world too much for him, and
-besides that his wife, a girl of the London streets
-and squares, loathed the country, and whined in
-her characteristic manner about its infinite
-dulness. Thus it was that he soon left the west and
-took a small house in Ewell, about which he
-wrote me constant jeremiads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He believed, with no rare ignorance, as those
-who are acquainted with the methods of the old
-cathedral builders will know, that all honest
-work had been done of old, that all old builders
-were honourable men, and that modern work
-was essentially unsound. He had never learned
-that the first question the instructed ask the
-attendant verger on entering a cathedral is:
-"When did the tower fall down?" It rarely
-happens that one is not instantly given a date,
-not always very long after that particular tower
-was completed. I remember that it annoyed
-him very much when I proved to him by
-documentary evidence that a great portion of the
-work in Peterborough Cathedral was of the most
-shocking and scandalous description. Nevertheless
-these facts do not excuse the modern jerry-builder,
-and the condition of his house was one,
-though only one, of the perpetual annoyances he
-had to encounter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But, after all, though pipes break and the roof
-leaks, that is nothing if peace dwells in a house.
-There could be no peace in Maitland's house,
-for his wife had neither peace nor any
-understanding. Naturally enough she was an
-uneducated woman. She had read nothing but what
-such people read. It is true she did not speak
-badly. For some reason which I cannot
-understand she was not wholly without aspirates.
-Nevertheless many of her locutions were
-vulgar, and she had no natural refinement. This,
-I am sure, would have mattered little, and
-perhaps nothing, if she had been a simple
-housewife, some actual creature of the kitchen like
-Rousseau's Thérèse. As I have said, I think
-that Maitland was really incapable of a great
-passion, and I am sure that he would have put
-up with the merest haus-frau, if she had known
-her work and possessed her patient soul in quiet
-without any lamentations. If there was any
-lamenting to be done Maitland himself might
-have done it in choice terms not without
-humour. And indeed he did lament, and not
-without cause. On my first visit to Ewell after
-his return from Devon I again met Mrs. Maitland.
-She made me exceedingly uneasy, both
-personally, as I had no sympathy for her, and
-also out of fear for his future. It did not take
-me long to discover that they were then living
-on the verge of a daily quarrel, that a dispute
-was for ever imminent, and that she frequently
-broke out into actual violence and the smashing
-of crockery. While I was with them she
-perpetually made whining and complaining
-remarks to me about him in his very presence.
-She said: "Henry does not like the way I do
-this, or the way I say that." She asked thus for
-my sympathy, casting bitter looks at her
-husband. On one occasion she even abused him to
-my face, and afterwards I heard her anger in the
-passage outside, so that I actually hated her and
-found it very hard to be civil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time I had established a habit of never
-spending any time in the company of folks who
-neither pleased nor interested me. I commend
-this custom to any one who has any work to do
-in the world. Thus my forthcoming refusal to
-see any more of her was anticipated by Maitland,
-who had a powerful intuition of the
-feelings I entertained for his wife. In fact, things
-soon became so bad that he found it necessary
-to speak to me on the subject, as it was soon
-nearly impossible for any one to enter his house
-for fear of an exhibition of rage, or even of
-possible incivility to the guest himself. As he said,
-she developed the temper of a devil, and began
-to make his life not less wretched, though it
-was in another way, than the poor creature had
-done who was now in her grave. Naturally,
-however, as we had been together so much, I
-could not and would not give up seeing him.
-But we had to meet at the station, and going to
-the hotel would sit in the smoking-room to have
-our talk. These talks were now not wholly of
-books or of our work, but often of his miseries.
-One day when I found him especially depressed
-he complained that it was almost impossible for
-him to get sufficient peace to do any of his work.
-On hearing this the notion came to me that,
-though I had been unable to prevent him marrying
-this woman, I might at any rate make the
-suggestion that he should take his courage in
-both his hands and leave her. But I was in no
-hurry to put this into his head so long as there
-seemed any possibility of some kind of peace
-being established. However, she grew worse
-daily, or so I heard, and at last I spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He answered my proposal in accents of
-despair, and I found that he was now expecting
-within a few months his first child's birth.
-Under many conditions this might have been a
-joy to him, but now it was no joy. And yet
-there was, he said, some possibility that after
-this event things might improve. I recognised
-such a possibility without much hope of its ever
-becoming a reality. Indeed it was a vain hope.
-It is true enough that for a time, the month or
-so while she was still weak after childbirth, she
-was unable to be actively offensive; but,
-honestly, I think the only time he had any peace
-was before she was able to get up and move about
-the house. During the last weeks of her
-convalescence she vented her temper and exercised
-her uncivil tongue upon the nurses, more than
-one of whom left the house, finding it impossible
-to stay with her. However he was at any
-rate more or less at peace in his own writing
-room during this period. When she again
-became well I gathered the real state of the case
-from him both from letters and conversations,
-and I saw that eventually he would and must
-leave her. Knowing him as I did, I was aware
-that there would be infinite trouble, pain, and
-worry before this was accomplished, and yet the
-symptoms of the whole situation pointed out the
-inevitable end. I had not the slightest remorse
-in doing my best to bring this about, but in those
-days I had trouble enough of my own upon my
-shoulders, and found it impossible to see him
-so often as I wished; especially as a visit from
-me, or from anybody else, always meant the loss
-of a day's work to him. Yet I know that he
-bore ten thousand times more than I myself
-would have borne in similar circumstances, and
-I shall give a wrong impression of him if any
-one thinks that most of his complaints and
-confessions were not dragged out of him by me. He
-did not always complain readily, but one saw
-the trouble in his eyes. Yet now it became
-evident that he would and must revolt at last. It
-grew so clear at last, that I wanted him to do
-it at once and save himself years of misery, but
-to act like that, not wholly out of pressing and
-urgent necessity but out of wisdom and
-foresight, was wholly beyond Henry Maitland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in such conditions that the child was
-born and spent the first months of its life. Those
-who have read his books, and have seen the
-painful paternal interest he has more than once
-depicted, will understand how bitterly he felt that
-his child, the human being for whose existence
-he was responsible, should be brought up in such
-conditions by a mother whose temper and
-conduct suggested almost actual madness. He
-wrote to me: "My dire need at present is for
-a holiday. It is five years since I had a real
-rest from writing, and I begin to feel worn out.
-It is not only the fatigue of inventing and
-writing; at the same time I keep house and bring
-up the boy, and the strain, I can assure you, is
-rather severe. What I am now trying to do
-is to accumulate money enough to allow of my
-resting, at all events from this ceaseless production,
-for half a year or so. It profits me nothing
-to feel that there is a market for my work,
-if the work itself tells so severely upon me.
-Before long I shall really be unable to write at all.
-I am trying to get a few short stories done, but
-the effort is fearful. The worst of it is, I
-cannot get away by myself. It makes me very
-uncomfortable to leave the house, even for a day.
-I foresee that until the boy is several years older
-there will be no possibility of freedom for me.
-Of one thing I have very seriously thought, and
-that is whether it would be possible to give up
-housekeeping altogether, and settle as boarders
-in some family on the Continent. The servant
-question is awful, and this might be an escape
-from it, but of course there are objections. I
-might find all my difficulties doubled."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I do not think that this letter requires much
-comment or illustration. Although it is written
-soberly enough, and without actual accusation,
-its meaning is as plain as daylight. His wife
-was alternately too familiar, or at open hostility
-with the servant; none could endure her
-temper. She complained to him, or the servant
-complained to him, and he had to make peace,
-or to try to make it&mdash;mostly in vain. And then
-the quarrel broke out anew, and the servant left.
-The result was that Maitland himself often did
-the household work when he should have been
-writing. He was dragged away from his
-ordinary tasks by an uproar in the kitchen; or
-perhaps one or both of the angry women came
-to him for arbitration about some point of
-common decency. There is a phrase of his in "The
-Meditations" which speaks of poor Hooker,
-whose prose he so much admired, being
-"vixen-haunted." This epithet of his is a reasonable
-and admirable one, but how bitter it was few
-know so well as myself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this place it does not seem to me unnatural
-or out of place to comment a little on Raymond,
-the chief character in "The Vortex." He was
-undoubtedly in a measure the later Maitland.
-His idea was to present a man whose character
-developed with somewhat undue slowness. He
-said that Raymond would probably never have
-developed at all after a certain stage but for the
-curious changes wrought in his views and sentiments
-by the fact of his becoming a father. Of
-course it must be obvious to any one, from what
-I have said, that Maitland himself would never
-have remained so long with his second wife after
-the first few months if it had not been that she
-was about to become a mother. The earlier
-passages in "The Vortex" where he speaks about
-children, or where Raymond himself speaks
-about them, are meant to contrast strongly with
-his way of thinking in the later part of the book
-when this particular character had children of
-his own. The author declared that Raymond,
-as a bachelor, was largely an egoist. Of course
-the truth of the matter is that Maitland himself
-was essentially an egoist. I once suggested to
-him that he came near being a solipsist, a word
-he probably had never heard of till then, as he
-never studied psychology, modern or otherwise.
-However, when Raymond grew riper in
-the experience which killed his crude egoism,
-he became another man. Maitland, in writing
-about this particular book, said: "That Raymond
-does nothing is natural to the man. The
-influences of the whirlpool&mdash;that is London&mdash;and
-its draught on the man's vitality embarrass
-any efficiency there might have been in
-him." Through the whole story of Maitland one feels
-that everything that was in any way hostile to
-his own views of life did essentially embarrass,
-and almost make impossible, anything that was
-in him. He had no strength to draw nutriment
-by main force from everything around him, as
-a strong man does. He was not so fierce a fire
-as to burn every kind of fuel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I remember in this connection a very
-interesting passage in Hamley's "Operations of
-War": "When a general surveying the map of
-the theatre finds direct obstacles in the path he
-must advance by, he sees in them, if he be
-confident of his skill in manoeuvring, increased
-opportunities for obtaining strategical successes
-... in fact, like any other complications in a
-game, they offer on both sides additional
-opportunities to skill and talent, and additional
-embarrassments to incapacity." But then Maitland
-loathed and hated and feared obstacles of every
-kind. He was apt to sit down before them
-wringing his hands, and only desperation moved
-him, not to attack, but to elude them. It is
-an odd thing in this respect to note that he
-played no games, and despised them with
-peculiar vigour. There is a passage in one of his
-letters to Rivers about a certain Evans,
-mentioned with a note of exclamation, and thus
-kindly embalmed: "Evans, strange being!
-Yet, if his soul is satisfied with golf and bridge,
-why should he not go on golfing and bridging?
-At all events he is working his way to sincerity."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long letter I quoted from above was written,
-I believe, in 1895, when the boy was nearly
-three years old. I have not attempted, and shall
-not attempt, to give any detailed account month
-by month, or even year by year, of his domestic
-surroundings. It was a wonder to me that the
-marriage lasted, but still it did last, and all one
-knew was that some day it must come to an end.
-The record of his life in these days would be
-appalling if I remembered it sufficiently, or had
-kept a diary&mdash;as no doubt I ought to have
-done&mdash;or had all the documents which may be in
-existence dealing with that time. That he
-endured so many years was incredible, and still
-he did endure, and the time went on, and he
-worked; mostly, as he said to me, against time,
-and a good deal on commission. He wrote:
-"The old fervours do not return to me, and I
-have got into the very foolish habit of perpetually
-writing against time and to order. The
-end of this is destruction." But still I think he
-knew within him that it could not last. Had it
-not been for the boy, and, alas, for the birth of
-yet another son, he would now have left her.
-He acknowledged it to me&mdash;if he could not fight
-he would have to fly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This extraordinary lack of power to deal with
-any obstacle must seem strange to most men,
-though no doubt many are weak. Yet few are
-so weak as Maitland. Oddly enough I have
-heard the idea expressed that there was more
-power of fight in Maitland than he ever
-possessed, and on inquiry I have learned that this
-notion was founded on a partial, or perhaps
-complete misunderstanding of certain things he
-expressed in the latter part of "The Vortex." Towards
-the end of the book it seems to be suggested
-that Maitland, or Raymond, tended
-really towards what he calls in one of his letters
-a "barrack-room" view of life. Some people
-seem to think that the man who was capable
-of writing what he did in that book really meant
-it, and must have had a little touch of that
-native and natural brutality which makes Englishmen
-what they are. But Maitland himself, in
-commenting on this particular attitude of
-Raymond, declared that this quasi or semi-ironic
-imperialism of the man was nothing but his
-hopeless recognition of facts which filled him
-with disgust. The world was going in a certain
-way. There was no refusing to see it. It
-stared every one in the eyes. Then he adds:
-"But <i>what</i> a course for things to take!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Raymond in fact talks with a little throwing
-up of the arm, and in a voice of quiet sarcasm,
-"Go ahead&mdash;I sit by and watch, and wonder
-what will be the end of it all." This was his
-own habit of mind in later years. He had come
-at last and at long last, to recognise a course
-of things which formerly he could not, or would
-not, perceive; and he recognised it with just that
-tossing of arm or head, involuntary of course.
-I do not think that at this time he would have
-seen a battalion of Guards go by and have
-turned to me saying: "And this, <i>this</i> is the
-nineteenth century!" He once wrote to Rivers,
-what he had said a hundred times to me:
-"I have a conviction that all I love and believe
-in is going to the devil. At the same time I
-try to watch with interest this process of
-destruction, admiring any bit of sapper work that is
-well done." It is rather amusing to note that
-in the letter, written in the country, which puts
-these things most dolefully, he adds: "The life
-here shows little trace of vortical influence." Of
-course this is a reference to the whirlpool of
-London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1896 I was myself married, and went to
-live in a little house in Fulham. I understood
-what peace was, and he had none. As Maitland
-had not met my wife for some years I asked
-him to come and dine with us. It was not the
-least heavy portion of his burden that he always
-left his own house with anxiety and returned to
-it with fear and trembling. This woman of his
-home was given to violence, even with her own
-young children. It was possible, as he knew,
-for he often said so to me, that he might
-return and find even the baby badly injured. And
-yet at last he made up his mind to accept my
-invitation. Whether it was the fact that he had
-accepted one from me&mdash;and I often fancy that
-his wife had a grudge against me because I
-would not go to her house any more&mdash;I do not
-know, but when I met him in the hall of my
-own house I found him in the most extraordinary
-state of nervous and physical agitation.
-Though usually of a remarkable, if healthy,
-pallor, he was now almost crimson, and his eyes
-sparkled with furious indignation. He was hot,
-just as if he had come out of an actual physical
-struggle. What he must have looked like when
-he left Ewell I do not know, for he had had
-all the time necessary to travel from there to
-Fulham to cool down in. After we shook hands
-he asked me, almost breathlessly, to allow him to
-wash his face, so I took him into the bathroom.
-He removed his coat, and producing his elastic
-band from his waistcoat pocket, put it about his
-hair like a fillet, and began to wash his face in
-cold water. As he was drying himself he broke
-out suddenly: "I can't stand it any more. I
-have left her for ever." I said: "Thank
-heaven that you have. I am very glad of it&mdash;and
-for every one's sake don't go back on it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever the immediate cause of this outburst
-was, it seems that that afternoon the whole
-trouble came to a culmination. The wife
-behaved like a maniac; she shrieked, and struck
-him. She abused him in the vilest terms, such
-as he could not or would not repeat to me. It
-was with the greatest difficulty that I at last
-got him calm enough to meet any one else.
-When he did calm down after he had had something
-to eat and a little to drink, the prospect
-of his freedom, which he believed had come to
-him once more, inspired him with pathetic and
-peculiar exhilaration. In one sense I think he
-was happy that night. He slept in London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I should have given a wholly false impression
-of Maitland if any one now imagined that
-I believed that the actual end had come to his
-marriage. No man knew his weakness better
-than I did, and I moved heaven and earth in
-my endeavours to keep him to his resolution, to
-prevent him going back to Epsom on any
-pretext, and all my efforts were vain. In three
-days I learned that his resolution had broken
-down. By the help of some busybody who had
-more kindness than intelligence, they patched
-up a miserable peace, and he went back to Ewell.
-And yet that peace was no peace. Maitland,
-perhaps the most sensitive man alive, had to
-endure the people in the neighbouring houses
-coming out upon the doorstep, eager to inquire what
-disaster was occurring in the next house. There
-were indeed legends in the Epsom Road that the
-mild looking writer beat and brutalised his wife,
-though most knew, by means of servants' chatter,
-what the actual facts were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in this year that he did at last take an
-important step which cost him much anxiety before
-putting it through. His fears for his eldest
-child were so extreme that he induced his
-people in the north to give the child a home&mdash;the
-influence and example of the mother he could
-no longer endure for the boy. His wife parted
-with the child without any great difficulty,
-though of course she made it an occasion for
-abusing her husband in every conceivable way.
-He wrote to me in the late summer of that year:
-"I much want to see you, but just now it is
-impossible for me to get to town, and the present
-discomfort of everything here forbids me to ask
-you to come. I am straining every nerve to get
-some work done, for really it begins to be a
-question whether I shall ever again finish a book.
-Interruptions are so frequent and so serious.
-The so-called holiday has been no use to me; a
-mere waste of time&mdash;but I was obliged to go,
-for only in that way could I have a few weeks
-with the boy who, as I have told you, lives now
-at Mirefields and will continue to live there. I
-shall never let him come back to my own dwelling.
-Have patience with me, old friend, for I
-am hard beset." He ends this letter with: "If
-the boy grows up in clean circumstances, that
-will be my one satisfaction."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether he had peace or not he still worked
-prodigiously, though not perhaps for so many
-hours as was his earlier custom. But his health
-about this time began to fail. Much of this
-came from his habits of work, which were
-entirely incompatible with continued health of
-brain and body. He once said to Rivers:
-"Visitors&mdash;I fall sick with terror in thinking of
-them. If by rare chance any one comes here it
-means to me the loss of a whole day, a most
-serious matter." And his whole day was, of
-course, a long day. No man of letters can
-possibly sit for ever at the desk during eight hours,
-as was frequently "his brave custom" as he
-phrased it somewhere. If he had worked in a
-more reasonable manner, and had been satisfied
-with doing perhaps a thousand words a day,
-which is not at all an unreasonably small amount
-for a man who works steadily through most of
-the year, his health might never have broken
-down in the way it did. He had been moved
-in a way towards these hours, partly by actual
-desperation; partly by the great loneliness
-which had been thrust upon him; very largely
-by the want of money which prevented him
-from amusing himself in the manner of the average
-man, but chiefly by his sense of devotion to
-what he was doing. One of his favourite stories
-was that of Heyne, the great classical scholar,
-who was reported to work sixteen hours a day.
-This he did, according to the literary tradition,
-for the whole of his working life, except upon
-the day when he was married. He made, for
-that occasion only, a compact with the bride that
-he was to be allowed to work half his usual
-stint. And half Heyne's usual amount was
-Maitland's whole day, which I maintain was at
-least five hours too much. This manner of
-working, combined with his quintessential and
-habitual loneliness made it very hard, not only
-upon him, but also on his friends. It was quite
-impossible to see him, even about matters of
-comparative urgency, unless a meeting had been
-arranged beforehand. For even after his work
-was done, it was never done. He started
-preparing for the next day, turning over phrases
-in his mind, and considering the next chapter.
-I believe that in one point I was very useful to
-him in this matter, for I suggested to him, as
-I have done to others, that my own practice of
-finishing a chapter and then writing some two
-or three lines of the next one while my mind was
-warm upon the subject, was a vast help for the
-next day's labour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the way he worked was this. After
-breakfast, at nine o'clock, he sat down and
-worked till one. Then he had his midday meal,
-and took a little walk. In the afternoon, about
-half-past three, he sat down again and wrote
-till six o'clock or a little after. Then he worked
-again from half-past seven to ten. I very much
-doubt whether there is any modern writer who
-has ever tried to keep up work at this rate who
-did not end in a hospital or a lunatic asylum,
-or die young. To my mind it shows, in a way
-that nothing else can, that he had no earthly
-business to be writing novels and spinning things
-largely out of his subjective mind, when he
-ought to have been dealing with the objective
-world, or with books. I myself write with a
-certain amount of ease. It may, indeed, be
-difficult to start, but when a thing is begun I go
-straight ahead, writing steadily for an hour, or
-perhaps an hour and a half&mdash;rarely any more.
-I have then done my day's work, which is now
-very seldom more than two thousand words,
-although on one memorable occasion I actually
-wrote thirteen thousand words with the pen in
-ten hours. Maitland used to write three or four
-of his slips, as he called them, which were
-small quarto pages of very fine paper, and on
-each slip there were twelve hundred words.
-Whether he wrote one, or two, or three slips in
-the day he took an equal length of time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among my notes I find one about a letter of
-his written in June 1895 to Mrs. Lake, declining
-an invitation to visit Dr. Lake's house which,
-no doubt, would have done him a great deal
-of good. He says: "Let me put before you
-an appalling list of things that have to be done,
-(1) Serial story (only begun) of about eighty
-thousand words. (2) Short novel for Cassell's
-to be sent in by end of October. Neither
-begun nor thought of. (3) Six short stories for
-the <i>English Illustrated</i>&mdash;neither begun nor
-thought of. (4) Twenty papers for <i>The
-Sketch</i> of a thousand words each. Dimly
-foreseen." Now to a man who had the natural gift
-of writing fiction and some reasonable time to
-do it in, this would seem no such enormous
-amount of work. For Maitland it was appalling,
-not so much, perhaps, on account of the actual
-amount of labour&mdash;if it had been one book&mdash;but
-for its variousness. He moved from one
-thing to another in fiction with great slowness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have said, his health was not satisfactory.
-I shall have something to say about this in
-detail a little later. It was his own opinion, and
-that of certain doctors, that his lung was really
-affected by tuberculosis. Of this I had then
-very serious doubts. But he wrote in January
-1897: "The weather and my lung are keeping
-me indoors at present, but I should much like
-to come to you. Waterpipes freezing&mdash;a five-pound
-note every winter to the plumber. Of
-course this is distinctly contrived by the building
-fraternity."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But things were not always as bad as may be
-gathered from a casual consideration of what I
-have said. In writing a life events come too
-thickly. For instance in 1897 he wrote to me:
-"Happily things are far from being as bad as
-last year." It appears that a certain lady, a
-Miss Greathead, about whom I really know
-nothing but what he told me, interested herself
-with the utmost kindness in his domestic affairs.
-He wrote to me: "Miss Greathead has been
-of very great use, and will continue to be so, I
-think. This house is to be given up in any case
-at Michaelmas, and another will not be taken
-till I see my way more clearly. Where I
-myself shall live during the autumn is uncertain.
-We must meet in the autumn. Work on&mdash;I
-have plans for seven books."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-What dismal catastrophe or prolonged
-domestic uproar led to the final end of
-his married life in 1897 I do not know.
-Nor have I cared to inquire very curiously.
-The fact remains, and it was inevitable.
-Towards the end of the summer he made up his
-mind to go to Italy in September. He wrote
-to me: "All work in England is at an end for
-me just now. I shall be away till next
-spring&mdash;looking forward with immense delight to
-solitude. Of course I have a great deal to do as
-soon as I can settle, which I think will be at
-Siena first." As a matter of fact the very next
-letter of his which I possess came to me from
-Siena. He said: "I am so confoundedly hard
-at work upon the Novelists book that I find it
-very difficult to write my letters. Thank
-heaven, more than half is done. I shall go
-south about the tenth of November. It is dull
-here, and I should not stay for the pleasure of it.
-You know that I do not care much for Tuscany.
-The landscape is never striking about here, and
-one does not get the glorious colour of the
-south." So one sees how Italy had awakened
-his colour sense. As I have said, it was after
-his first visit to Italy that I noted, both in his
-books and his conversation, an acute awakening
-passion for colour. I think it grew in him to
-the end of his life. He ended this last letter
-to me with: "Well, well, let us get as soon as
-possible into Magna Graecia and the old dead
-world."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I said some time ago that I had finished all I
-had to write about the Victorian novelists, and
-yet I find there is something still to say of
-Dickens, and it is not against the plan of such a
-rambling book as this to put it down here and now.
-When he went to Siena to write his book of
-criticism it seemed to me a very odd choice of a
-place for such a piece of work, and indeed I
-wondered at his undertaking it at any price. It
-is quite obvious to all those who really
-understand his attitude towards criticism of modern
-things that great as his interest was in Dickens
-it would never have impelled him to write a
-strong, rough, critical book mostly about him
-had it not been for the necessity of making
-money. Indeed he expressed so much to me,
-and I find again in a letter that he wrote to
-Mrs. Rivers, with whom he was now on very friendly
-terms, "I have made a good beginning with my
-critical book, and long to have done with it, for
-of course it is an alien subject." No doubt there
-are at least two classes of Maitland's readers,
-those who understand the man and love his
-really characteristic work, and those who have
-no understanding of him at all, or any deep
-appreciation, but probably profess a great
-admiration for this book which they judge by the
-part on Dickens. I think that Andrew Lang
-was one of these, judging from a criticism that
-he once wrote on Maitland. I know that I
-have often heard people of intelligence express
-so high an opinion of the "Victorian Novelists"
-as to imply a lack of appreciation of his other
-work. The study is no doubt written with much
-skill, and with a good writer's command of his
-subject, and command of himself. That is to
-say, he manages by skill to make people believe
-he was sufficiently interested in his subject to
-write about it. To speak plainly he thought it
-a pure waste of time, except from the mere financial
-point of view, just as he did his cutting down
-of Mayhew's "Life of Dickens"&mdash;which, indeed,
-he considered a gross outrage, but professed his
-inability to refuse the "debauched temptation" of
-the hundred and fifty pounds offered him for the
-work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would be untrue if I seemed to suggest that
-he was not enthusiastic about Dickens, even more
-so than I am myself save at certain times and
-seasons. For me Dickens is a man for times and
-periods. I cannot read him for years, and then
-I read him all. What I do mean is that Maitland's
-love of this author, or of Thackeray, say,
-would never have impelled him to write. Yet
-there is much in the book which is of great interest,
-if it were only as matter of comment on Maitland's
-own self. The other day I came across
-one sentence which struck me curiously. It was
-where Maitland asked the reader to imagine
-Charles Dickens occupied in the blacking
-warehouse for ten years. He said: "Picture him
-striving vainly to find utterance for the thoughts
-that were in him, refused the society of any but
-boors and rascals, making perhaps futile attempts
-to succeed as an actor, and in full manhood
-measuring the abyss which sundered him from all he
-had hoped." When I came to the passage I put
-the book down and pondered for a while,
-knowing well that as Maitland wrote these words he
-was thinking even more of himself than of
-Dickens, and knowing that what was not true of his
-subject was most bitterly true of the writer.
-There is another passage somewhere in the book
-in which he says that Dickens could not have
-struggled for long years against lack of
-appreciation. This he rightly puts down to Dickens'
-essentially dramatic leanings. The man needed
-immediate applause. But again Maitland was
-thinking of himself, for he had indeed struggled
-many years without any appreciation save that
-of one or two friends and some rare birds among
-the public. I sometimes think that one of Maitland's
-great attractions to Dickens lay in the fact,
-which he himself mentions and enlarges on, that
-Dickens treated of the lower middle class and the
-class immediately beneath it. This is where the
-great novelist was at his best, and in the same
-way these were the only classes that Maitland
-really knew well. There is in several things a
-curious likeness between Dickens and Maitland,
-though it lies not on the surface. He says that
-Dickens never had any command of a situation
-although he was so very strong in incident. This
-was also a great weakness of Henry Maitland.
-It rarely happens that he works out a powerful
-and dramatic situation to its final limits, though
-sometimes he does succeed in doing so. This
-failure in dealing with great situations is peculiarly
-characteristic of most English novelists. I
-have frequently noticed in otherwise admirable
-books by men of very considerable abilities and
-attainments, with tolerable command of their
-own language, that they have on every occasion
-shirked the great dramatic scene just when it
-was expected and needed. Perhaps this is due
-to the peculiar <i>mauvaise honte</i> of the English
-mind. To write, and yet not to give oneself
-away, seems to be the aim of too many writers,
-though the great aim of all great writing is to do,
-or to try to do, what they avoid. The final
-analysis of dreadful passion and pain comes,
-perhaps, too close to them. They feel the glow but
-also a sensation of shame in the great emotions.
-There are times that Maitland felt this, though
-perhaps unconsciously. It is at any rate certain
-that, like so many people, he never actually
-depicted with blood and tears the frightful
-situations in which his life was so extraordinarily
-full.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is an interesting passage in this book in
-which Maitland declares that great popularity
-was never yet attained by any one deliberately
-writing down to a low ideal. Above all men he
-knew that the artist was necessarily sincere,
-however poor an artist he might be. So Rousseau in
-his "Confessions" asserts that nothing really great
-can come from an entirely venal pen. I remember
-Maitland greatly enjoyed a story I told him
-about myself. While I was still a poverty-stricken
-and struggling writer my father, who
-had no knowledge whatever of the artistic
-temperament, although he had a very great appreciation
-of the best literature of the past, came to me
-and said seriously: "My boy, if you want money
-and I know you do, why do you not write 'Bow
-Bells Novelettes'? They will give you fifteen
-pounds for each of them." I replied to him,
-not I think without a tinge of bitterness at
-being so misunderstood: "My dear sir, it is
-as much a matter of natural endowment to be a
-damned fool as to be a great genius, and I am
-neither."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have said that Maitland was most essentially
-a conservative, indeed in many ways a reactionary,
-if one so passive can be called that. I think
-the only actual revolutionary utterance of his
-mind which stands on record is in the "Victorian
-Novelists." It is when he is speaking of
-Mr. Casby of the shorn locks. He wrote: "This
-question of landlordism should have been treated
-by Dickens on a larger scale. It remains one of
-the curses of English life, and is likely to do so
-till the victims of house-owners see their way to
-cutting, not the hair, but the throats, of a few
-selected specimens."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It may seem a hard thing to say, but it is a fact,
-that any revolutionary sentiment there was in
-Maitland was excited, not by any native liberalism
-of his mind, or even by his sympathy for the
-suffering of others, but came directly out of his
-own personal miseries and trials. He had had to
-do with landlords who refused to repair their
-houses, and with houses which he looked upon
-as the result of direct and wicked conspiracy
-between builders and plumbers. But his words
-are capable of a wider interpretation than he
-might have given them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If I had indeed been satisfied that this
-departure of Maitland's to Italy had meant the end
-of all the personal troubles of his marriage, I
-should have been highly satisfied, and not
-displeased with any part I might have taken in
-bringing about so desirable a result. But I must
-say that, knowing him as I did, I had very
-serious doubts. I was well aware of what a little
-pleading might do with him. It was in fact
-possible that one plaintive letter from his wife
-might have brought him back again. Fortunately
-it was never written. The woman was
-even then practically mad, and though
-immensely difficult to manage by those friends,
-such as Miss Greathead and Miss Kingdon, who
-interested themselves in his affairs and did much
-more for him at critical times than I had been
-able to do, she never, I think, appealed to her
-husband. But it was extraordinary, before he
-went to Italy, to observe the waverings of his
-mind. When he was keeping his eldest boy at
-Mirefields, supplying his wife with money for
-the house and living in lodgings at Salcombe, he
-wrote giving a rough account of what he might
-do, or might have to do, and ended up by saying:
-"Already, lodgings are telling on my nerves. I
-almost think I suffer less even from yells and
-insults in a house of my own." He even began
-to forget "the fifth-rate dabblers in the British
-gravy," for which fine phrase T.E. Brown is
-responsible. Maitland ought to have known it
-and did not. It was this perpetual wavering
-and weakness in him which perplexed his
-friends, and would indeed have alienated at last
-very many of them had it not been for the
-enduring charm in all his weakness. Nevertheless he
-was now out of England, and those who knew
-him were glad to think it was so. He was,
-perhaps, to have a better time. Nevertheless, even
-so, he wrote to his friend Lake: "Yes, it is true
-that I am going to glorious scenes, but do not
-forget that I go with much anxiety in my
-mind&mdash;anxiety about the little children, the chances
-of life and death, &amp;c., &amp;c. It is not like my
-Italian travel eight years ago, when&mdash;save for
-cash&mdash;I was independent. I have to make a
-good two hundred a year apart from my own
-living and casual expenses. If I live I think I
-shall do it&mdash;but there's no occasion for
-merriment." Yet if it was no occasion for mere
-merriment it was an occasion for joy. He knew it
-well, and so did those know who understand the
-description that Maitland gave in "Paternoster
-Row," of the sunset at Athens. It is very
-wonderfully painted, and as he describes it he makes
-Gifford say: "Stop, or I shall clutch you by the
-throat. I warned you before that I cannot
-stand these reminiscences." And this reminds
-me that when I wrote to him once from Naples,
-he replied: "You fill me with envious gloom." But
-now, when he had finished his pot-boiler of
-Siena, he was going south to Naples, his "most
-interesting city of the modern world," and
-afterwards farther south to the Calabrian Hills, and
-the old dead world of Magna Graecia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a result of that journey he gave us "Magna
-Graecia." This book of itself is a sufficient
-proof that he was by nature a scholar, an
-inhabitant of the very old world, a discoverer of
-the time of the Renaissance, a Humanist, a pure
-man of letters, and not by nature a writer of
-novels or romances. Although Maitland's
-scholarship was rather wide than deep save in
-one or two lines of investigation, yet his feeling
-for all those matters with which a sympathetic
-scholarship can deal was amazingly deep and
-true. Once in Calabria and the south he made
-and would make great discoveries. In spite of
-his poverty, which comes out so often in the
-description of his conditions upon this journey, he
-loved everything he found there with a strange
-and wonderful and almost pathetic passion. I
-remember on his return how he talked to me of
-the far south, and of his studies in Cassiodorus.
-One incident in "Magna Graecia," which is
-related somewhat differently from what he
-himself told me at the time, pleased him most
-especially. It was when he met two men and
-mentioned the name of Cassiodorus, whereupon
-they burst out with amazement, "Cassiodoria,
-why we know Cassiodoria!" That the name
-should be yet familiar to these live men of the
-south gratified his historic sense amazingly, and
-I can well remember how he threw his head back
-and shook his long hair with joy, and burst into
-one of his most characteristic roars of laughter.
-It was a simple incident, but it brought back the
-past to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of all his books I think I love best "Magna
-Graecia." I always liked it much better than
-"The Meditations of Mark Sumner," and for a
-thousand reasons. For one thing it is a wholly
-true book. In "The Meditations," he falsified,
-in the literary sense, very much that he wrote.
-As I have said, it needs to be read with a
-commentary or guide. But "Magna Graecia" is
-pure Maitland; it is absolutely himself. It is,
-indeed, very nearly the Maitland who might
-have been if ill luck had not pursued him from
-his boyhood. Had he been a successful man on
-the lines that fate pointed out to him; had he
-succeeded greatly&mdash;or nobly, as he would have
-said&mdash;at the University; had he become a tutor, a
-don, a notable man among men of letters, still
-would he have travelled in southern Italy, and
-made his great pilgrimage to the Fonte di
-Cassiodorio. Till he knew south Italy his greatest
-joy had been in books. That he loved books we
-all know. There, of a certainty, "The
-Meditations" is a true witness. But how much more
-he loved the past and the remains of Greece and
-old, old Italy, "Magna Graecia" proves to us
-almost with tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have said that Maitland was perhaps not a
-deep scholar, for scholarship nowadays must
-needs be specialised if it is to be deep. He had
-his odd prejudices, and hugged them. The
-hypothesis of Wolf concerning Homer visibly
-annoyed him. He preferred to think of the
-Iliad and the Odyssey as having been written by
-one man. This came out of his love of
-personality&mdash;the great ones of the past were as gods to
-him. All works of art, or books, or great events
-were wholly theirs, for they made even the world,
-and the world made them not. Though I know
-that he would have loved, in many ways, a book
-such as Gilbert Murray's "Rise of the Greek
-Epic," yet Murray's fatally decisive analysis of
-the Homeric legend would have pained him
-deeply. On one occasion I remember sending
-to him, partly as some reasonable ground for my
-own scepticism, but more, I think, out of some
-mischievous desire to plague him, a cleverly
-written pamphlet by a barrister which threw
-doubts upon the Shakespearean legend. He
-wrote to me: "I have read it with great
-indignation. Confound the fellow!&mdash;he disturbs
-me." But then he was essentially a conservative,
-and he lived in an alien time.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-What he suffered, endured, and
-enjoyed in Magna Graecia and his old
-dead world, those know who have read
-with sympathy and understanding. It was truly
-as if the man, born in exile, had gone home at
-last&mdash;so much he loved it, so well he understood
-the old days. And now once more he came back
-to England to a happier life, even though great
-anxieties still weighed him down. Yet with
-some of these anxieties there was joy, for he loved
-his children and thought very much of them,
-hoping and fearing. One of the very first letters
-I received from him on his return from Italy
-is dated May 7, 1898, and was written from
-Henley in Arden: "You have it in your power to
-do me a most important service. Will you on
-every opportunity industriously circulate the
-news that I am going to live henceforth in
-Warwickshire? It is not strictly true, but a very
-great deal depends on my real abode being
-protected from invasion. If you could inspire a
-newspaper paragraph.... I should think it
-impudent to suppose that newspapers cared
-about the matter but that they have so often
-chronicled my movements, and if by any chance
-the truth got abroad it would mean endless
-inconvenience and misery to me. You shall hear
-more in detail when I am less be-devilled." All
-this requires little comment. Every one can
-understand how it was with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Later in the year he wrote to me: "My behaviour
-is bestial, but I am so hard driven that
-it is perhaps excusable. All work impossible
-owing to ceaseless reports of mad behaviour in
-London. That woman was all but given in
-charge the other day for assaulting her landlady
-with a stick. My solicitor is endeavouring to
-get the child out of her hands. I fear its life is
-endangered, but of course the difficulty of
-coming to any sort of arrangement with such a
-person is very great.... Indeed I wish we
-could have met before your departure for South
-Africa. My only consolation is the thought that
-something or other decisive is bound to have
-happened before you come back, and then we
-will meet as in the old days, please heaven.
-As for me, my literary career is at an end, and
-the workhouse looms larger day by day. I
-should not care, of course, but for the boys. A
-bad job, a bad job." But better times were
-perhaps coming for him. The child that he refers
-to as still in the hands of his mother was his
-youngest boy. Much of his life at this time is
-lost to me because much happened while I was
-absent in South Africa, where I spent some
-months in travel. I remember it pleased him
-to get letters from me from far-off places such as
-Buluwayo. He always had the notion that I
-was an extraordinarily capable person, an idea
-which only had some real truth if my practical
-capacities were compared with his strange want
-of them. By now he was not living in Warwickshire;
-indeed, if I remember rightly, on my
-return from Africa I found him at Godalming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I left Cape Town I was very seriously
-ill, and I remained ill for some months after my
-return home. Therefore it was some time till
-we met again. But when we did meet it was at
-Leatherhead, where he was in lodgings, pleased
-to be not very far from George Meredith, who
-indeed, I think, loved him. It was, of course,
-as I have said, through Maitland that I first met
-Meredith. For some reason which I do not
-know, Maitland gave him a volume of mine,
-"The Western Trail," which the old writer was
-much pleased with. Indeed it was in consequence
-of his liking for that book that he asked
-me to dine with him just before I went to Africa.
-Maitland was not present at this dinner, he was
-then still in Warwickshire; but Meredith spoke
-very affectionately of him, and said many things
-not unpleasing about his work. But probably
-Meredith, like myself, thought more of the man
-than he did of his books, which is indeed from
-my point of view a considerable and proper
-tribute to any writer. Sometimes the work of a
-man is greater than himself, and it seems a pity
-when one meets him; but if a man is greater than
-what he does one may always expect more, and
-some day may get it. It was apropos of Maitland,
-in some way which I cannot exactly recall,
-that Meredith, who was in great form that night,
-and wonderful in monologue&mdash;as he always was,
-more especially after he became so deaf that it
-was hard to make him hear&mdash;told us an admirably
-characteristic story about two poor schoolboys.
-It appeared, said Meredith, that these
-two boys, who came of a clever but poverty-stricken
-house, did very badly at their school
-because they were underfed. As Meredith
-explained this want of food led to a poor
-circulation. What blood these poor boys had was
-required for the animal processes of living, and did
-not enable them to carry on the work of the brain
-in the way that it should have done. However,
-it one day happened that during play one of
-these boys was induced to stand upon his head,
-with the result that the blood naturally
-gravitated to that unaccustomed quarter. His ideas
-instantly became brilliant&mdash;so brilliant, indeed,
-that a great idea struck him. He resumed his
-feet, rushed home, and communicated his
-discovery to his brother, and henceforward they
-conducted their studies standing upon their
-heads, and became brilliant and visibly
-successful men. Of course it was a curious thing,
-though not so curious when one reflects on the
-nature of men who are really men of letters, that
-Meredith and Henry Maitland had one thing
-tremendously in common, their love of words.
-In my conversation with Meredith that day I
-mentioned the fact that I had read a certain
-interview with him. I asked him whether it
-conveyed his sentiments with any accuracy. He
-replied mournfully: "Yes, yes,&mdash;no doubt the
-poor fellow got down more or less what I meant,
-but he used none of my beautiful words, none of
-my beautiful words!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It does not seem unnatural to me to say
-something of George Meredith, since he had in many
-ways an influence on Maitland. Certainly when
-it came to the question of beautiful words they
-were on the same ground, if not on the same
-level. I myself have met during my literary
-life, and in some parts of the world where
-literature is little considered, many men who were
-reputed great, and indeed were great, it may be,
-in some special line, yet Meredith was the only
-man I ever knew to whom I would have allowed
-freely the word "great" the moment I met him,
-without any reservation. This I said to Maitland
-and he smiled, feeling that it was true. I
-remember he wrote to Lake about Meredith,
-saying: "You ought to read 'Richard Feverel,'
-'Evan Harrington,' 'The Egoist,' and 'Diana of
-the Crossways.' These, in my opinion, are
-decidedly his best books, but you won't take up
-anything of his without finding strong work." And
-"strong work" with Maitland was very high
-praise indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By now, when he was once more in Surrey, we
-did not meet so infrequently as had been the case
-after his second marriage and before the
-separation. It is true that his living out of
-London made a difference. Still I now went down
-sometimes and stayed a day with him. We
-talked once more in something of our old
-manner about books and words, the life of men of
-letters, and literary origins or pedigrees, always
-a strong point in him. It was ever a great joy
-to Maitland when he discovered the influence of
-one writer upon another. For instance, it was
-he who pointed out to me first that Balzac was
-the literary parent of Murger, as none indeed
-can deny who have read the chapter in "Illusions
-Perdues" where Lucien Rubempré writes and
-sings the drinking song with tears in his eyes as
-he sits by the bedside of Coralie, his dead
-mistress. This he did, as will be remembered, to
-obtain by the sale of the song sufficient money
-to bury her. From that chapter undoubtedly
-sprang the whole of the "Vie de Bohème,"
-though to it Murger added much, and not least
-his livelier sense of humour. Again, I well
-remember how Maitland took down Tennyson&mdash;ever
-a joy to him, because Tennyson was a master
-of words though he had little enough to say&mdash;and
-showed me the influence that the "Wisdom
-of Solomon," in the Apocrypha, had upon
-some of the last verses of "The Palace of Art." No
-doubt some will not see in a mere epithet or
-two that Solomon's words had any connection
-with the work of the Poet-Laureate, whom I
-nicknamed, somewhat to Maitland's irritation,
-"the bourgeois Chrysostom." Yet I myself have
-no doubt that Maitland was right; but even if
-he were not he would still have taken wonderful
-joy in finding out the words of the two verses
-which run: "Whether it were a whistling wind,
-or a melodious noise of birds among the spreading
-branches, or a pleasant fall of water running
-violently, or a terrible sound of stones cast down,
-or a running that could not be seen of skipping
-beasts, or a roaring voice of most savage wild
-beasts, or a rebounding echo from the hollow
-mountains; these things made them swoon for
-fear." Of course he loved all rhythm, and
-found it sometimes in unexpected places, even in
-unconsidered writers. There was one passage
-he used to quote from Mrs. Ewing, who, indeed,
-was no small writer, which he declared to be
-wonderful, and in its way quite perfect: "He
-sat, patient of each succeeding sunset, until this
-aged world should crumble to its close." Then,
-again, he rejoiced when I discovered, though no
-doubt it had been discovered many times before,
-that his musical Keats owed so much to Fletcher's
-"Faithful Shepherdess."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would be a very difficult question to ask, in
-some examination concerning English literature,
-what book in English by its very nature and
-style appealed most of all to Henry Maitland.
-I think I am not wrong when I say that it was
-undoubtedly Walter Savage Landor's "Imaginary
-Conversations." That book possesses to
-the full the two great qualities which most
-delighted him. It is redolent of the past, and
-those classic conversations were his chief joy; but
-above and beyond this true and great feeling of
-Landor's for the past classic times there was the
-most eminent quality of Landor's rhythm. I
-have many times heard Maitland read aloud
-from "Æsop and Rhodope," and I have even
-more often heard him quote without the book
-the passage which runs: "There are no fields
-of amaranth on this side of the grave; there are
-no voices, O Rhodope, that are not soon mute,
-however tuneful; there is no name, with
-whatever emphasis of passionate love repeated of
-which the echo is not faint at last." Maitland
-knew, and none knew better, that in a triumphant
-passage there is triumphant rhythm, and in a
-passage full of mourning or melancholy the
-accompanying and native rhythm is both
-melancholy and mournful. How many times, too, I
-have heard him quote, again from Landor,
-"Many flowers must perish ere a grain of corn
-be ripened."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All this time the wife was I know not where,
-nor did I trouble much to inquire. Miss
-Kingdon and Miss Greathead looked after her very
-patiently, and did good work for their friend
-Maitland, as he well knew. But although he
-was rejoiced to be alone for a time, or at any rate
-relieved from the violent misery of her presence,
-I came once more to discern, both from things
-he said and from things he wrote to me, that a
-celibate life began again to oppress him gravely.
-Yet it was many months before he at last confided
-in me fully, and then I think he only did it
-because he was certain that I was the one friend
-he possessed with whom he could discuss any
-question without danger of moral theories or
-prepossessions interfering with the rightful
-solution. Over and beyond this qualification for his
-confidence there was the fact that I knew him,
-whereas no one else did. To advise any man it
-is necessary to know the man who is to be advised,
-for wisdom <i>in vacuo</i> or <i>in vitro</i> may be
-nothing but foolishness. Others would have said to
-him, "Look back on your experience and reflect.
-Have no more to do with women in any way." No
-doubt it would have been good advice, but it
-would have been impossible for him to act on it.
-Therefore when he at last opened his mind to me
-and told me of certain new prospects which were
-disclosing themselves to him, I was not only
-sympathetic but encouraging. It seems that in
-the year 1898 he first met a young French lady
-of Spanish origin with whom he had previously
-corresponded for some little time. Her name
-was Thérèse Espinel. She belonged to a very
-good family, perhaps somewhat above the <i>haute
-bourgeoisie</i>, and was a woman of high education
-and extreme Gallic intelligence. As I came to
-know her afterwards I may also say that she was
-a very beautiful woman, and possessed, what I
-know to have been a very great charm to
-Maitland, as it always was to me, a very sweet and
-harmonious voice&mdash;it was perhaps the most
-beautiful human voice for speaking that I have
-ever heard. Years afterwards I took her to see
-George Meredith. He kissed her hand and told
-her she had beautiful eyes. As she was partly
-Spanish she knew Spanish well. Her German
-was excellent, her English that of an educated
-Englishwoman. It appears that she came across
-Maitland's "Paternoster Row," and it occurred
-to her that it should be translated into French.
-She got into correspondence with him about this
-book, and in 1898 came over to England and
-made his acquaintance. It is curious to
-remember that on one other occasion Maitland got into
-correspondence with another French lady, who
-insisted emphatically that he was the one person
-whom she could trust to direct her aright in
-life&mdash;a notion at the time not a little comical to me,
-and also to the man who was to be this soul's
-director.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When these two people met and proved
-mutually sympathetic it was not unnatural that
-he should tell her something of his own life,
-especially when one knows that so much of their
-earlier talks dealt with "Paternoster Row" and
-with its chief character, so essentially Henry
-Maitland. He gave her, indeed, very much of
-his story, yet not all of it, not, indeed, the chief
-part of it, since the greatest event in his life was
-the early disaster which had maimed and
-distorted his natural career and development. Yet
-even so much as he told her of his first and
-second marriage&mdash;for he by no means concealed
-from the beginning that he was yet
-married&mdash;very naturally engaged her womanly compassion.
-Adding this to her real and fervent admiration
-of his literary powers, his personality and story
-seem to have inclined her to take an even
-tenderer interest in him. She was certainly a
-bright and wonderful creature, although not
-without a certain native melancholy, and
-possessed none of those conventional ideas which
-wreck some lives and save others from disaster.
-Therefore I was not much surprised, although
-I had not been told everything that had
-happened, when Maitland wrote to me that he
-contemplated taking a very serious step. It was
-indeed a very serious one, but so natural in the
-circumstances, as I came to hear of them, that I
-myself made no strictures on his scheme. It
-was no other than the proposal that he and this
-new acquaintance of his should cast in their lot
-together and make the world and her relatives
-believe that they were married. No doubt when
-I was consulted I found it in some ways difficult
-to give a decision. What might be advisable for
-the man might not be so advisable for his
-proposed partner. He was making no sacrifice,
-and she was making many. Nevertheless, I
-hold the view that these matters are matters for
-the people concerned and are nobody else's
-business. The thing to be considered from my point
-of view was whether Maitland would be able to
-support her, and whether she was the kind of
-woman who would retain her hold upon him and
-give him some peace and happiness towards the
-end of his life. In thinking over these things I
-remembered that the other two women had not
-been ladies. They had not been educated.
-They understood nothing of the world which
-was Maitland's world, and, as I knew, a disaster
-was bound to come in both cases. But now
-it appeared to me that there was a possible hope
-for the man, and a hope that such a step might
-almost certainly end in happiness, or at any rate
-in peace. That something of the kind would
-occur I knew, and even if this present affair went
-no farther, yet some other woman would have to
-be dealt with even if she did not come into his
-life for a long while. Thérèse Espinel was at
-any rate, as I have said, beautiful and
-accomplished, essentially of the upper classes, and,
-what was no small thing from Maitland's point
-of view, a capable and feeling musician. Of
-such a woman Maitland had had only a few
-weeks' experience many years before. I thought
-the situation promised much, and raised no
-moral objection to the step he proposed to take
-as soon as I saw he was strongly bent in one
-direction. For one thing I was sure of, and it was
-that anything whatever which put a definite
-obstacle in the way of his returning to his wife was
-a thing to be encouraged. It was, in fact,
-absolutely a duty; and I care not what comments
-may be made upon my attitude or my morals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That Maitland would have gone back to his
-wife eventually I have very little doubt, and of
-course nothing but disaster and new rage and
-misery would have come of his doing so. For
-these reasons I did everything in my power to
-help and encourage him in a matter which gave
-him extreme nervousness and anxiety. I know
-he said to me that the step he proposed to take
-early in 1899 grew more and more serious the
-more he thought of it. Again, I think there was
-no overwhelming passion at the back of his
-mind. Yet it was a true and sincere affection,
-of that I am sure. But there were many
-difficulties. It appears that the girl's father had
-died a few months before, and as there was some
-money in the family this fact involved certain
-serious difficulties about the future signing of
-names when all the legal questions concerned
-with the little property that there was came to
-be settled. Then he asked me what sort of hope
-was there that this pretended marriage would not
-become known in England. He said: "I fear
-it certainly would." When I reflect now upon
-the innumerable lies and subterfuges that I
-myself indulged in with the view of preventing
-anybody knowing of this affair in London, I can
-see he was perfectly justified in his fears, for
-when the step was at last taken I was continually
-being asked about Maitland's wife. Naturally
-enough, it was said by one set of people that she
-was with him in France; while it was said by
-others, much better informed, that she was still
-in England. I was sometimes requested to settle
-this difficult matter, and I did find it so
-difficult that at times I was compelled to state the
-actual truth on condition that what I said was
-regarded as absolutely confidential.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He and Thérèse did, indeed, discuss the possibility
-of braving the world with the simple truth,
-but that he knew would have been a very
-tremendous step for her. The mother was yet
-living, and she played a strange part in this
-little drama&mdash;a part not so uncommonly played as
-many might think. She became at last her
-daughter's <i>confidante</i> and learned the whole of
-Maitland's story, and although she opposed their
-solution of the trouble to the very best of her
-power, when it became serious she at last gave
-way and consented to any step that her daughter
-wished to take, provided that there was no public
-scandal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course, many people will regard with
-horror the part that her mother played in this
-drama, imputing much moral blame. There
-are, however, times when current morality has
-not the value which it is commonly given, and I
-think Madame Espinel acted with great wisdom,
-seeing that nothing she could have pleaded
-would have altered matters. Her daughter was
-no longer a child; she was a grown-up woman,
-not without determination, and entirely without
-religious prejudice, a thing not so uncommon
-with the intellectual Frenchwoman. Certainly
-there are some who will say that a public scandal
-was better than secrecy, and in this I am at one
-with them. Nevertheless there was much to
-consider, for there would certainly have been
-what Henry himself called "a horrific scandal,"
-seeing that the family had many aristocratic
-relatives. Maitland, in fact, stated that it would
-be taking an even greater responsibility than he
-was prepared to shoulder if this were done. He
-wrote to me asking for my opinion and counsel,
-especially at the time when there was a vague
-and probably unfounded suggestion that he
-might be able to get a divorce from his wife. It
-appears more than one person wrote to him
-anonymously about her. I am sure he never
-believed what they told him, nor do I. No doubt
-from some points of view I have been very
-unjust to his wife, though I have tried to hold the
-balance true, but I never saw, or heard from
-Maitland, anything to suggest that his wife was
-not all that she should have been in one way, just
-as she was everything she should not have been
-in another. Seeing that Maitland would have
-given ten years of his life and every penny he
-possessed to secure a divorce, it is certain that he
-absolutely disbelieved what he was told. In
-fact, if he could have got a divorce by consent or
-collusion he would have gladly engaged to pay
-her fifty pounds a year during his life, whatever
-happened and whatever she did. But of course
-this could not be said openly, either by myself or
-by him, and nothing came out of the suggestion,
-whoever made it first.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I proposed to him one afternoon when I was
-with him that he should make some inquiries as
-to what an American divorce would do for him.
-Whether it were valid or not, it might perhaps
-make things technically easier and enable him to
-marry in France with some show of legality. At
-the moment he paid no attention to what I said,
-or seemed to pay no attention, but it must have
-sunk into his mind, for a few days afterwards he
-wrote to me and said: "Is it a possible thing to
-get a divorce in some other country as things are?&mdash;a
-divorce which would allow of a legal marriage,
-say, in that same country. I have vaguely
-heard such stories, especially of Heligoland.
-The German novelist, Sacher Masoch, is said to
-have done it&mdash;said so by his first wife, who now
-lives in Paris." Upon receiving this letter of his
-I wrote and reminded him of what I had said
-about American divorces, and gave him all the
-information that I had in my mind and could
-collect at the moment, especially mentioning Dakota
-or Nevada as two States of the United States
-which had the most reasonable and wide-minded
-views of marriage and divorce. For this letter
-he wrote and thanked me heartily, but quoted
-from a letter of Thérèse which seemed to indicate,
-not unclearly, that she preferred him to take
-no steps which might lead to long legal processes.
-They should join their fortunes together, taking
-their chance as to the actual state of affairs being
-discovered afterwards. His great trouble, of
-course, was the absolute necessity of seeming in
-Paris to be legally married, out of regard for her
-relatives. Besides these connections of her
-family, she knew a very great number of important
-people in Paris and Madrid, and many of them
-should receive by custom the <i>lettres de faire part</i>.
-With some little trouble the financial difficulties
-with regard to the signing of documents were got
-over for the moment by a transfer of investments
-from Thérèse to her mother. On this being done
-their final determination was soon taken, and they
-determined, after this "marriage" was completed,
-to leave Paris and live somewhere in the
-mountains, perhaps in Savoy; and he then wrote
-to me: "You will be the only man in London
-who knows this story. Absolute silence&mdash;it goes
-without saying. If ever by a slip of the tongue
-you let a remark fall that my wife was dead, <i>tant
-mieux</i>; only no needless approach of the topic.
-A grave, grave responsibility mine. She is a
-woman to go through fire for, as you saw. An
-incredible woman to one who has spent his life
-with such creatures.... I have lately paid a
-bill of one pound for damage done by my wife,
-damage in a London house where she lived till
-turned out by the help of the police. Incredible
-stories about her. She attacked the landlord
-with a stick, and he had seriously to defend
-himself. Then she tore up shrubs and creepers in
-the garden. No, I have had my time of misery.
-It must come to an end."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the first part of this letter which I have just
-quoted he says, "She is a woman to go through
-fire for, as you saw." This expression does not
-mean that I had ever met her, but that I had seen
-sufficient of her letters to recognise the essential
-fineness of her character. I urged him once
-more to a rapid decision, and he promised that
-he would let nothing delay it. Nevertheless it
-is perfectly characteristic of him that, having
-now finally decided there should be no attempt
-at any divorce, he proceeded instantly to play
-with the idea again. No doubt he was being
-subjected to many influences of different kinds,
-for I find that he sent me a letter in which he told
-me that it seemed to be ascertained that an
-American divorce and remarriage would satisfy
-French law. If that was so, he would move
-heaven and earth to get all the necessary details
-of the procedure. He had written to a friend in
-Baltimore who knew all about such matters, but
-he implored me to find out if there were not some
-book which gave all possible information about
-the marriage and divorce laws of all the separate
-States of North America. He asked: "Do you
-really think that I can go and present myself for
-a divorce without the knowledge of the other
-person? The proceedings must be very
-astounding." His knowledge of America was not equal
-to my own, much as I had spoken to him about
-that country. The proceedings in divorce courts
-in some of the United States have long ceased to
-astonish anybody. He told me, however, that he
-had actually heard of American lawyers advertising
-for would-be divorcers, and he prayed
-devoutly that he could get hold of such a man. I
-did my best to rake up for him every possible
-piece of information on the subject, and no doubt
-his friend in Baltimore, of whom I know nothing,
-on his part sent him information. It seemed,
-however, that any proceeding would involve
-some difficulties, and on discovering this he
-instantly dropped the whole scheme. I find that
-he wrote to me afterwards, saying: "It is
-probable that I leave England at the end of April.
-Not one syllable about me to any one, of course.
-The step is so bold as to be really impudent, and
-I often have serious fears, not, of course, on my
-own account. You shall hear from abroad....
-If some day one could know tranquillity and all
-meet together decently."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After many qualms, hot and cold fits, despondency,
-and inspirations of courage, he at last took
-the decisive step. In May he was in Paris, and I
-think it was in that month that the "marriage"
-took place. I am singularly ignorant of the
-details, for he seemed to be somewhat reluctant to
-speak of them, and I do not even know whether
-any actual ceremony took place or not, nor am I
-much concerned to know. They were at any rate
-together, and no doubt tolerably happy. He
-wrote me nothing either about this subject or
-anything else for some time, and I was content to
-hear nothing. I do know, however, that they
-spent the summer together in Switzerland,
-moving from Trient, near the Col de Balme, to
-Locarno, on Lago Maggiore. He wrote to me once
-from the Rhône Valley saying that as a result of
-his new domestic peace and comfort, even though
-it were but the comfort of Swiss hotels, and
-owing also to the air of the mountains, which
-always suited him very well, he was in much better
-health than he had been for years past. His
-lung, the perpetual subject of his preoccupation,
-appears to have given him little trouble,
-although, knowing that its state was attributable
-in some measure to emphysema, he wrote to me
-for detailed explanations of that particular
-complaint. During the whole of this time, the only
-honeymoon he had ever had, he was, however,
-obliged to work very hard, for he was in ceaseless
-trouble about money. In his own words, he
-had to "publish furiously" in order to keep pace
-with his expenses. There was his wife in
-England, and there were also his children to be
-partially provided for. But for the time all went
-well with him. There were fears of all sorts, he
-told me, but they were to be forgotten as much
-as possible. He and Thérèse returned to Paris
-for the winter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During this time, or just about this time,
-which was when the South African War was
-raging, I wrote for a weekly journal, which I
-used to send regularly to Paris with my own
-contributions marked in it. This temporary
-aberration into journalism so late in my literary life
-interested him much. He wrote to me: "In
-the old garret days who would have imagined
-the strange present? I suppose you have now a
-very solid footing in journalism as well as in
-fiction. Of course it was wise to get it, as it seems
-more than probable that the novelists will be
-starved out very soon. With Europe in a state
-of war, which may last for a decennium, there
-will be little chance for story-tellers." Then, in
-spite of his new happiness, his inherited or
-acquired pessimism got the worst of him. He
-adds: "I wish I had died ten years ago. I
-should have gone away with some hope for
-civilisation, of which I now have none. One's
-choice seems to be between death in the workhouse,
-or by some ruffian's bullet. As for those
-who come after one, it is too black to think
-about."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No doubt this was only his fun, or partly such.
-There is one phrase in Boswell's "Johnson" that
-he always loved amazingly; it is where Johnson
-declares that some poor creature had "no skill in
-inebriation." Maitland perhaps had no skill in
-inebriation when he drank at the fountain of
-literary pessimism, for indeed when he did drink
-there his views were fantastic and preposterous.
-As a matter of fact he was doing very well, in
-spite of the workhouse in Marylebone Road,
-from which he was now far enough. There
-might be little chance for story-tellers, yet his
-financial position, for the first time in his life,
-was tolerably sound. One publisher even gave
-him three hundred pounds on account for a book
-which I think was "The Best of all Things." For
-this book he also received five hundred
-dollars from America; so, for him, or indeed for
-almost any writer, he was very well paid. Little
-as the public may believe it, a sum of three
-hundred pounds on account of royalties is as much as
-any well-known man gets&mdash;unless by some chance
-he happens to be one of the half-dozen amazingly
-successful writers in the country, and they
-are by no means the best. It has been at my
-earnest solicitation that he had at last employed an
-agent, though, with his peculiar readiness to
-receive certain impressions, he had not gone to one
-I recommended, but to another, suddenly mentioned
-to him when he was just in the mood to
-act as I suggested. This agent worked for him
-very well, and Maitland was now getting five
-guineas a thousand words for stories, which is
-also a very good price for a man who does really
-good work. It is true that very bad work is not
-often well paid, but the very best work of all is
-often not to be sold at any price. About this time
-I obtained for him a very good offer for a book,
-and he wrote to me: "It is good to know that
-people care to make offers for my work. What
-I aim at is to get a couple of thousand pounds
-safely invested for my two boys. Probably I
-shall not succeed&mdash;and if I get the money, what
-security have I that it will be safe in a year or
-two? As likely as not the Bank of England will
-lie in ruins." After all, I must confess that he
-was skilful in the inebriation of his pessimism,
-for to me these phrases are delightful, in spite of
-the half-belief with which they were uttered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During the last winter of 1900 he wrote to me
-from Paris that he proposed to be in London for
-a few days in the spring of 1901, but much
-depended on the relation, which seemed to him
-highly speculative, between the money he
-received and the money he was obliged to spend.
-Apparently he found Paris anything but cheap.
-According to his own account, he was therefore
-in perpetual straits, in spite of the good prices he
-now obtained for his work. He added in this
-letter: "I hope to speak with you once more,
-before we are both shot or starved." This
-proposal to come across the Channel in the spring
-ended in smoke. He was not able to afford it, or
-was reluctant to move, or more likely reluctant
-to expose himself to any of the troubles still
-waiting for him in England. So long as his good
-friends who were looking after his wife, and
-more or less looking after his children, could do
-their work and save him from anxiety, he was not
-likely to wish his peace disturbed by any
-discussions on the subject. When he had decided not
-to come he sent me a letter in which one of the
-paragraphs reads: "I am still trying to believe
-that there is a King of England, and cannot take
-to the idea, any more than to the moral and
-material ruin which seems to be coming upon the
-old country. Isn't it astounding that we have
-the courage to write books? We shall do so, I
-suppose, until the day when publishers find their
-business at an end. I fear it may not be far off." At
-this moment, being more or less at peace, and
-working with no peculiar difficulty, he declared
-himself in tolerable health, although he affirmed
-he coughed a great deal. It seemed to me that
-he did not think so much about his health as he
-had done before and was to do later, and he
-displayed something like his old real nature with
-regard to literary enterprise. It was just about
-this time that he reminded me of his cherished
-project for a story of the sixth century A.D. This,
-of course, was the book published after his death,
-"Basil." He had then begun to work upon it,
-and said he hoped to finish it that summer. This
-cheered him up wonderfully, and he ended one
-letter to me with: "Well, well, let us be glad
-that again we exchange letters with address other
-than that of workhouse or hospital. It is a great
-demand, this, to keep sane and solvent&mdash;I dare
-hope for nothing more." Occasionally in his
-letters there seemed to me to be slight indications
-that he was perhaps not quite so happy as he
-wished to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During that summer my wife and I were in
-Switzerland, and he wrote to me, while we were
-on the Lake of Geneva, from Vernet-les-Bains in
-the Eastern Pyrenees. By this time Thérèse and
-I, although we had never met, were accustomed
-to send messages to each other. It was a comfort
-to me to feel that he was with some one of whom
-I could think pleasantly, and whom I much
-wished to know. We had, indeed, proposed to
-meet somewhere on the Continent, but that fell
-through, partly because we were obliged to
-return to England earlier than we had proposed.
-Nevertheless, although we did not meet, and
-though I had some fears for him, I was tolerably
-happy about him and his affairs, and certainly
-did not anticipate the new crisis which was
-approaching, nor the form it would take.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It was Maitland's custom to rely for advice
-and assistance on particular people at
-certain crises. In some cases he now appealed
-to Rivers; in very many he appealed to me; but
-when his health was particularly involved it was
-his custom to relapse desperately on his friend
-Dr. Lake. He even came to Lake on his return
-from Magna Graecia when he had taken Potsdam
-on his way home to England. He had gone
-there at Schmidt's strong invitation and
-particular desire that he should taste for once a real
-Westphalian ham. It is a peculiarly savage and
-not wholly safe custom of Germans to eat such
-hams uncooked, and Maitland, having fallen in
-with this custom, though he escaped trichinosis,
-procured for himself a peculiarly severe attack of
-indigestion. He came over from Folkestone to
-Lake in order to get cured. The ham apparently
-had not given him the lasting satisfaction which
-he usually got out of fine fat feeding. As I have
-said, Lake and Maitland had been friends from
-the time that Maitland's father bought his chemist's
-business from the Doctor's father. For they
-had been schoolfellows together at Hinkson's
-school in Mirefields. Nevertheless it was only
-in 1894 that they renewed their old acquaintance.
-Dr. Lake saw him once at Ewell, soon after a
-local practitioner had frightened Maitland very
-seriously by diagnosing phthisis and giving a
-gloomy prognosis. On that occasion Lake went
-over Maitland's chest and found very little
-wrong. Technically speaking, there was
-perhaps a slight want of expansion at the apex of
-each lung, and apparently some emphysema at
-the base of the left one, but certainly no active
-tubercular mischief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I speak of these things more or less in detail
-because health played so great a part in the
-drama of his life; as, indeed, it does in most lives.
-It is not the casual thing that novelists mostly
-make of it. It is a perpetually acting cause.
-Steady ill-health, even more than actually acute
-disease, is what helps to bring about most
-tragedies. When Lake made his diagnosis, with
-which I agree, though there is something else I
-must presently add to it, he took him to London,
-that he might see a notable physician, in order to
-reassure Maitland's mind thoroughly. They
-went together to Dr. Prior Smithson. I have
-never noted that it was Maitland who introduced
-Dr. Lake to Rivers. When Lake had arranged
-this London visit Maitland wrote to Rivers
-saying: "I am coming up to town to see a scoundrel
-specialist in diseases of the lung, who is as
-likely as not to upset all my plans of life. But
-don't be afraid of my company; you shall have
-no pathology. There will be with me an old
-schoolfellow of mine, a country surgeon, in
-whose house I am staying at present. He would
-think it very delightful to meet you." They did
-meet upon that occasion, when Dr. Smithson
-confirmed Lake's diagnosis and temporarily did a
-great deal to reassure Maitland. From my own
-medical knowledge and my general study of
-Maitland, combined with what some of his doctors
-have told me, I have come to the conclusion
-that he did suffer from pulmonary tuberculosis,
-but that it was practically arrested at an early
-stage. However, even arrested tuberculosis in
-many cases leaves a very poor state of nutrition.
-That his joy in food remained with him, though
-with a few lapses, points strongly to the conclusion
-that at this time tuberculosis was certainly
-not very active in him. He always needed much
-food, and food, especially, which he liked and
-desired. To want it was a tragedy, as I shall
-show presently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1897 when he went down to Salcombe he
-reported to Lake a great improvement in health,
-saying that his cough was practically gone, and
-that of course the wonderful weather accounted
-for it. He ate heartily, and even walked five
-miles a day without fatigue. He added: "The
-only difficulty is breathing through the nose.
-The other day a traction engine passed me on the
-road, and the men upon it looked about them
-wondering where the strange noises came from.
-It was my snoring! All the nasal cavities are
-excoriated! But I shall get used to this. I have
-a suspicion that it is <i>not</i> the lung that accounts for
-this difficulty, for it has been the same ever since
-I can remember." By this he probably meant
-merely that it had lasted a long time. There was
-a specific reason for it. From Salcombe he
-reported to Lake that he had recovered a great
-deal of weight, but that for some time his
-wheezing had been worse than ever when the weather
-got very bad. He wrote: "Then again a practical
-paradox that frenzies one, for sleep came
-when bad weather prevented me from being so
-much out of doors!" All this he did not understand,
-but it is highly probable that at that time
-he had a little actual tubercular mischief, and a
-slight rise of temperature. As frequently happens,
-enforced rest in the house did for him what
-nothing else could do. But his health certainly
-was something of a puzzle. In 1898, when he
-was in Paris with Thérèse, he saw a Dr. Piffard,
-apparently not a lung specialist, but, as I am told,
-a physician of high standing. This doctor spoke
-rather gravely to him, and of course told him
-that he was working much too hard, for he was
-still keeping up his ridiculous habit of writing
-eight hours a day. He said that there was a
-moist spot in the right lung, with a little chronic
-bronchitis, and that the emphysema was very
-obvious. He had, too, some chronic rheumatism,
-and also on the right side of his forehead
-what Maitland described as a patch of psoriasis.
-Psoriasis, however, is not as a rule unilateral,
-and it was due to something else. This patch
-had been there for about a year, and was slowly
-getting worse. Dr. Piffard prescribed touching
-him under the right clavicle with the actual
-cautery, and for the skin gave him some subcutaneous
-injections of an arsenical preparation. He
-fed him with eggs, milk, and cod-liver oil,
-ordering much sleep and absolute rest. During this
-treatment he improved somewhat, and owned
-that he was really better. The cough had
-become trifling, his breath was easier and his sleep
-very good. His strength had much increased.
-He also declared that he saw a slight amelioration
-in the patch of so-called psoriasis. The
-truth is, I think, that nearly all this improvement
-was due to making him rest and eat. No doubt
-very much of his ill-health was the result of his
-abnormal habits, although there was something
-else at the back of it. For one thing he had
-rarely taken sufficient exercise, the exercise
-necessary for his really fine physique. As I have said,
-he never played a game in his life after he left
-Hinkson's school in Mirefields. Cricket he
-knew not. Football was a mystery to him, and
-a brutal mystery at that. It is true that
-occasionally he rowed in a boat at the seaside, for he did
-so at Salcombe when his eldest boy was there
-with him, but any kind of game or sport he
-actually loathed. It was a surprise to me to find
-out that Rivers, while he was at Folkestone,
-actually persuaded him to take to a bicycle. He
-even learned to like it. Rivers told Lake that
-he rode not badly, and with great dignity; and as
-Rivers rode beside him he heard him murmur:
-"Marvellous proceedings! Was the like ever
-seen?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, the time was now coming when he
-was to appeal to Lake once more. In 1901 he
-had proposed to come over to England and see
-me, but he said that the doctor in Paris had
-forbidden him to go north, rather indicating the
-south for him. He wrote to me: "Now I must
-go to the centre of France&mdash;I don't think the
-Alps are possible&mdash;and vegetate among things
-which serve only to remind me that here is <i>not</i>
-England. Then, again, I had thought night
-and day of an English potato, of a slice of English
-meat, of tarts and puddings, and of teacakes.
-Night and day had I looked forward to ravening
-on these things. Well, well!" But he did at
-last come back to England for some time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There is no doubt that the feeding in his
-French home was not fat, or fine, or confused
-feeding. Probably the notion of a Scotch haggis
-would give any French cook a fit of apoplexy.
-Just before he did come over from Paris, Lake
-had a letter from him which was much like the
-one he wrote to me: "Best wishes for the merry,
-merry time,&mdash;if merriment can be in the evil
-England of these days. I wish I could look in
-upon you at Christmas. I should roar with joy
-at an honest bit of English roast beef. Could
-you post a slice in a letter?&mdash;with gravy?" Lake
-said to his wife when he received this letter:
-"Why, this is written by a starving man!" Naturally
-enough, although I heard from him comparatively
-seldom, I had always been aware of
-these hankerings of his for England and English
-food. He did not take kindly to exile, or to the
-culinary methods of a careful French interior.
-Truly as he loved the Latin countries, there was
-much in their customs which troubled him
-greatly, and the food was his especial trouble
-when he was not being fed in Italy with oil and
-Chianti. I find occasional melancholy letters of
-his upon the subject, when he indulged in dithyrambs
-about the fine abundance of feeding in
-England&mdash;eggs and bacon and beer. There was
-no doubt he was not living in the way he should
-have lived. At any rate, it was about this
-time&mdash;although I did not know it, as I was either in
-the North of England or abroad, I forget which&mdash;that
-he came once more to Lake, and was found
-standing on his doorstep tolerably early in the
-morning. According to the doctor, on his
-arrival from Paris he was in the condition of a
-starved man. The proof of this is very simple.
-At that time, and for long after, Rivers was
-living at Folkestone, and as Lake's house was at
-that time full he was unable to entertain Maitland
-for long, and it was proposed that he should
-go over for a time and stay at Folkestone. When
-Lake examined Maitland he was practically no
-more than a skeleton, but after one week in
-Rivers' house he had picked up no less than
-seven pounds weight. There were then no physical
-signs of active mischief in the lungs except
-the remaining and practically incurable patch of
-emphysema. Although this sudden increase of
-weight does not entirely exclude tuberculosis, it
-is yet rather uncommon for so rapid an increase
-to take place in such cases, and it rather puts
-tuberculosis out of court as being in any way the
-real cause of much of his ill-health. Now of all
-this I knew very little, or next door to nothing,
-until afterwards. Although I was aware that
-he was uneasy about many things, I had not
-gathered that there was anything seriously wrong
-with him except his strong and almost irresistible
-desire to return to England. I now know that
-his reticence in speaking to me was due to his
-utter inability to confess that his third venture
-had almost come to disaster over the mere matter
-of the dining-table. I knew so much of the past
-that he feared to tell me of the present, though I
-do not think he could have imagined that I
-should say anything to make him feel that he had
-once again been a sad fool for not insisting
-good-humouredly on having the food he wanted. But
-he was ashamed to speak to me of his difficulties,
-fearing, perhaps, that I might not understand, or
-understand too well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now he and Thérèse lived together with Madame
-Espinel. The old lady, a very admirable
-and delicate creature of an aristocratic type, was
-no longer young, and was typically French. She
-was in a poor state of health, and lived, like
-Cornaro, on next to nothing. Her views on food
-were what Maitland would have described as
-highly exiguous. She stood bravely by the
-French breakfast, a thing Maitland could endure
-with comfort for no more than a week or two at
-a time. Her notions as to the midday meal and
-dinner were not characterised by that early
-English abundance which he so ardently desired.
-After a long period of subdued friction on the
-subject it appears that his endurance of what he
-called prolonged starvation actually broke down.
-He demanded something for breakfast,
-something fat, something in the nature of bacon.
-How this was procured I do not know; I presume
-that bacon can be bought in Paris, though
-I do not remember having ever seen it there;
-perhaps it was imported from England for his
-especial benefit. However pleasing for the
-moment the result may have been to him from the
-gastronomic point of view, it led Madame
-Espinel to make as he alleged, uncalled-for and
-bitter remarks upon the English grossness of his
-tastes. As he was certainly run down and much
-underfed, his nerves were starved too, and he got
-into one of his sudden rages and practically ran
-away from France. I hinted, or said, not long
-ago that he was in a way an intellectual coward
-because he would never entertain any question
-as to the nature of the universe, or of our human
-existence in it. Things were to be taken as they
-stood, and not examined, for fear of pain or
-mental disturbance. It was a little later than this
-that Rivers said acutely to Lake: "Why, the
-man is a moral coward. He stands things up to
-a certain point and then runs away." So now he
-ran away from French feeding to Lake's doorstep,
-and Lake, as I have said, sent him to Rivers
-with the very best results, for Mrs. Rivers took a
-great interest in him, looking on him no doubt
-as a kind of foolish child of genius, and fed him,
-by Lake's direction, for all that she was worth.
-As soon as he was in anything like condition, or
-getting on towards it, he was unable to remain
-any longer at Folkestone and proposed to return
-once more to France. This, however, the doctor
-forbade, and thinking that a prolonged course of
-feeding and rest was the one thing he required,
-induced him to go to a sanatorium in the east of
-England. At this time Lake had practically no
-belief whatever in the man being tuberculous,
-but he used Maitland's firm conviction that he
-was in that condition to induce him to enter this
-establishment. It was perhaps the best thing
-which could be done for him. He was looked
-after very well, and the doctor at the sanatorium
-agreed with Lake in finding no evidence of active
-pulmonary trouble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have said, Maitland kept much, or most,
-of this from me&mdash;it was very natural. He wrote
-to me from the sanatorium very many letters,
-from which I shall not quote, as they were after
-all only the natural moans of a solitary invalid.
-But he forbade me to come to him, and I did not
-insist on making the visit which I proposed. I
-was quite aware, if it were only by instinct and
-intuition, that he had no desire for me to discover
-exactly how things had been going with him in
-France. Nevertheless I did understand vaguely,
-though it was not till afterwards that I
-discovered there had been a suggestion made that
-he should not return there, or, indeed, go back to
-the circumstances which had proved so nearly
-disastrous. I do not think that this suggestion
-was ever made personally to him, although I
-understand it was discussed by some of his friends.
-It appears that a year or so afterwards when he
-was talking to Miss Kingdon, she told him that
-it had been thought possible that he might not
-return to France. This he received with much
-amazement and indignation, for certainly he did
-go back, and henceforth I believe the management
-of the kitchen was conducted on more
-reasonable lines. Certainly he recovered his
-normal weight, and soon after his return was
-actually twelve stone. As a matter of fact, even
-before he left the sanatorium, he protested that
-he was actually getting obese.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was perfectly conscious after these experiences
-at Folkestone, and the east of England, that
-he owed very much both to Lake and Rivers. In
-fact he wrote to the doctor afterwards, saying
-that he and Rivers had picked him out of a very
-swampy place. He had always a great admiration
-for Rivers as a writer, and used to marvel
-wonderfully at his success. It seemed an
-extraordinary thing to Maitland that a man could do
-good work and succeed by it in England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in 1902 that Maitland and Thérèse took
-up their abode in St. Pée d'Ascain, under the
-shadow of the Pyrenees. From there he wrote
-me very frequently, and seemed to be doing a
-great deal of work. He liked the place, and, as
-there was an English colony in the town, had
-made not a few friends or acquaintances. By
-now it was a very long time since I had seen him,
-for we had not met during the time of his illness
-in England; and as I had been very much
-overworked, it occurred to me that three or four
-days at sea, might do something for me, and that
-I could combine this with a visit to my old friend.
-I did not, however, write to him that I was
-coming. Knowing his ways and his peculiar
-nervousness, which at this time most visibly grew
-upon him, I thought it best to say nothing until
-I actually came to Bordeaux. When I reached
-the city on the Gironde I put up at a hotel and
-telegraphed to know whether he could receive
-me. The answer I got was one word only,
-"Venez," and I went down by the early train,
-through the melancholy Landes, and came at last
-to St. Pée by the way of Bayonne. He met me
-at the station&mdash;which, by the way, has one of the
-most beautiful views I know&mdash;and I found him
-looking almost exactly as he had looked before,
-save that he wore his hair for the time a little
-differently from his custom in order to hide a
-fading scar upon his forehead, the result of that
-mysterious skin trouble. We were, I know,
-very glad to meet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I stayed at a little hotel by myself as he could
-not put me up, but went later to his house. It
-was now that I at last met Thérèse. As I have
-said, she was a very beautiful woman, tall and
-slender, of a pale, but clear complexion, very
-melancholy lovely eyes, and a voice that was
-absolute music. I could not help thinking that
-he had at last come home, for at that time my
-knowledge of their little domestic difficulties
-owing to the warring customs of their different
-countries was very vague, and she impressed me
-greatly. And yet I knew before I left that night
-that all was not well with Maitland, though it
-seemed so well with him. He complained to
-me when we were alone about his health, and
-even then protested somewhat forcibly against
-the meals. The house itself, or their apartment,
-was&mdash;from the foreign point of view&mdash;quite
-comfortable, but it did not suggest the kind of
-surroundings which I knew Maitland loved.
-There is, save in the best, a certain air of cold
-barrenness about so many foreign houses. The
-absence of rugs or carpets and curtains, the
-polish and exiguity of the furniture, the general air
-of having no more in the rooms than that which
-will just serve the purposes of life did not suit
-his sense of abundance and luxury.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Blake has said, though I doubt if I quote with
-accuracy: "We do not know that we have
-enough until we have had too much," and this is
-a saying of wisdom as well concerning the things
-of the mind as those of the body. He had had
-at last a little too much domesticity, and,
-besides that, his desires were set towards London
-and the British Museum, with possibly half the
-year spent in Devonshire. He yearned to get
-away from the little polished French home he
-had made for himself and take Thérèse back to
-England with him. But this was impossible,
-for her mother still lived with them and naturally
-would not consent to expatriate herself at her
-age from her beloved France. It had been
-truly no little sacrifice for her, a very gentle and
-delicate woman even then suffering from
-cardiac trouble, to leave Paris and its
-neighbourhood and stay with her child nigh upon the
-frontier of Spain, almost beyond the borders of
-French civilisation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I stayed barely a week in St. Pée d'Ascain,
-but during that time we talked much both of his
-work and of mine. Once more his romance of
-the sixth century was in his mind and on his
-desk, though he worked more, perhaps, at
-necessary pot-boilers than at this long pondered
-task. Although he did not write so much as of
-old I found it almost impossible to get him to go
-out with me, save now and again for half an
-hour in the warmest and quietest part of the day.
-He had developed a great fear of death, and life
-seemed to him extraordinarily fragile. Such a
-feeling is ever the greatest warning to those who
-know, and yet I think if he had been rather more
-courageous and had faced the weather a little
-more, it might have been better for him.
-During these few days I became very friendly with
-Madame Espinel and her daughter, but more
-especially with the latter, because she spoke
-English, and my French has never been very
-fluent. It requires at least a month's painful
-practice for me to become more or less intelligible
-to those who speak it by nature. As I
-went away he gave me a copy of his new book
-"The Meditations of Mark Sumner." It is one
-of those odd things which occur so frequently in
-literary life that I myself had in a way given to
-him the notion of this book. It was not that I
-suggested that he should write it, indeed I had
-developed the idea of such a book to him upon
-my own account, for I proposed at that time
-to write a short life of an imaginary man of
-letters to whom I meant to attribute what I
-afterwards published in "Apteryx." Perhaps this
-seed had lain dormant in Maitland's mind for
-years, and when he at last wrote the book he had
-wholly forgotten that it was I who first
-suggested the idea. Certainly no two books could
-have been more different, although my own plan
-was originally much more like his. In the same
-way I now believe that my story "The Purification"
-owed its inception without my being aware
-of it to the suppressed passage in "Outside the
-Pale" of which I spoke some time ago. This
-passage I never read; but, when Maitland told
-me of it, it struck me greatly and remained in
-my mind. These influences are one of the great
-uses of literary companionship among men of
-letters. As Henry Maitland used to say:
-"We come together and strike out sparks."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I went north by train from St. Pée d'Ascain
-to Bordeaux, passing ancient Dax and all the
-sombre silences of the wounded serried rows of
-pines which have made an infertile soil yield
-something to commerce, Maitland's spirit, his
-wounded and often sickly spirit, was with me.
-I say "sickly" with a certain reluctance, and
-yet that is what I felt, for I know I read "The
-Meditations" with great revolt in spite of its
-obvious beauty and literary sincerity. Life, as
-I know well, is hard and bitter enough to break
-any man's spirit, and I knew that Maitland had
-been through a fire that not many men had
-known, yet as I read I thought, and still think,
-that in this book he showed an undue failure of
-courage. If he had been through so many
-disasters yet there was still much left for him,
-or should have been. He had not suffered the
-greatest disaster of all, for since the death of his
-father in his early youth he had lost none that
-he loved. The calculated dispirited air of the
-book afflicted me, and yet, naturally enough, I
-found it wonderfully interesting; for here was
-so much of my lifelong friend, even though now
-and again there are little lapses in sincerity when
-he put another face on things, and pretended,
-even to himself, that he had felt in one way and
-not in another. There is in it only a brief
-mention of myself, when he refers to the one solitary
-friend he possessed in London through so many
-years which were only not barren to him in the
-acquisition of knowledge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But even as I read in the falling night I came
-to the passage in which he speaks of the Anabasis.
-It is curious to think of, but I doubt if he had
-ever heard that modern scholarship refuses to
-believe it was Xenophon who wrote this book.
-Most assuredly had he heard it he would have
-rejected so revolutionary a notion with rage and
-indignation, for to him Xenophon and the
-Anabasis were one. In speaking of the march of
-the Greeks he quotes the passage where they
-rewarded and dismissed the guide who had led
-them through very dangerous country. The
-text says: "when evening came he took leave of
-us, and went his way by night." On reaching
-Bordeaux I surprised and troubled the telegraph
-clerk at the railway station by telegraphing to
-Henry Maitland those words in the original
-Greek, though naturally I had to write them in
-common script. Often-times I had been his
-guide but had never led him in safety.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I reached England again I wrote him
-a very long letter about "The Meditations," and
-in answer received one which I may here quote:
-"My dear old boy, it is right and good that the
-first word about 'Mark Sumner' should come
-from you. I am delighted that you find it
-readable. For a good ten years I had this book in
-mind vaguely, and for two years have been
-getting it into shape. You will find that there is
-not very much reminiscence; more philosophising.
-Why, of course, the solitary friend is you.
-Good old Schmidt is mentioned later. But the
-thing is a curious blend, of course, of truth and
-fiction. Why, it's just because the world is
-'inexplicable' that I feel my interest in it and its
-future grows less and less. I am a little
-oppressed by 'the burden of the mystery'; not
-seldom I think with deep content of the time when
-speculation will be at an end. But my delight
-in the beauty of the visible world, and my
-enjoyment of the great things of literature, grow
-stronger. My one desire now is to <i>utter</i> this
-passion&mdash;yet the result of one's attempt is rather
-a poor culmination for Life."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-During this year, and indeed during the
-greater part of 1902, I was myself very ill and
-much troubled, though I worked exceedingly
-hard upon my longest book, "Rachel." In
-consequence of all I went through during the year
-I wrote to him very seldom until the beginning
-of the following spring I was able to send him
-the book. For a long time after discovering the
-almost impossibility of making more than a mere
-living out of fiction, I had in a sense given up
-writing for the public, as every man is more or
-less bound to do at last if he be not gratified with
-commercial success. Indeed for many years I
-wrote for some three people: for my wife; for
-Rawson, the naturalist, my almost lifelong
-friend; and for Maitland, the only man I had
-known longer than Rawson. Provided they
-approved, and were a little enthusiastic, I thought
-all was well, even though I could earn no more
-than a mere living. And yet I was conscious
-through all these working years that I had never
-actually conquered Maitland's utmost approval.
-For I knew what his enthusiasm was when he was
-really roused; how obvious, how sincere, and
-how tremendous. When I reflect that I did at
-last conquer it just before he died I have a
-certain melancholy pleasure in thinking of that
-book of mine, which indeed in many ways means
-very much to me, much more than I can put
-down, or would put down for any one now
-living. Were this book which I am now doing a
-life of myself rather than a sketch of him, I
-should certainly put in the letter, knowing that
-I should be forgiven for inserting it because it
-was a letter of Maitland's. It was, indeed, a
-highly characteristic epistle, for when he praised
-he praised indeed, and his words carried conviction
-to me, ever somewhat sceptical of most men's
-approval. He did even more than write to me,
-for I learnt that he spoke about this book to other
-friends of his, especially, as I know, to Edmund
-Roden; and also to George Meredith, who talked
-to me about it with obvious satisfaction when I
-next met him. Nothing pleased Maitland better
-than that any one he loved should do good
-work. If ever a man lived who was free from
-the prevalent vices of artistic and literary
-jealousy, it was Maitland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now his time was drawing to an end. He
-and Thérèse and Madame Espinel left St. Pée
-d'Ascain in June 1903 and went thirty miles
-further into the Pyrenees. He wrote to me a
-few days after reaching the little mountain town
-of St. Christophe. The change apparently did
-him good. He declared that he had now no
-more sciatica, of which disease, by the way, I had
-not previously heard, and he admitted that his
-general health was improving. St. Christophe
-is very picturesquely situated, and Maitland
-loved it not the less for its associations in ancient
-legend, since it is not very far from the Port or
-Col de Roncesvalles, where the legendary
-Roland was slain fighting in the rearguard to
-protect Charlemagne's army. He and Thérèse went
-once further down the valley and stayed a night
-at Roncesvalles. If any man's live imagination
-heard the horn of Roland blow I think it should
-be Maitland. And yet though he took a great
-pleasure in this country of his, it was not
-England, nor had he all things at his command which
-he desired. I find that he now greatly missed
-the British Museum, which readers of "The
-Meditations" will know he much frequented in
-those old days. For he was once more hard at
-work upon "Basil," and wrote to me that he was
-greatly in want of exact knowledge as to the
-procedure in the execution of wills under the later
-Roman Empire. This was a request for information,
-and such requests I not infrequently received,
-always doing my best to tell him what I
-could discover, or to give him the names of
-authorities not known to himself. He frequently
-referred to me about points of difficulty, even
-when he was in England but away from London.
-At that time, naturally enough, I knew nothing
-whatever about wills under the Roman Empire,
-but in less than a week after he had written to
-me I think it highly probable that I knew more
-than any lawyer in London who was not actually
-lecturing on the subject to some pupils. I sent
-him a long screed on the matter. Before this
-reached him I got another letter giving me more
-details of what he required, and since this is
-certainly of some interest as showing his literary
-methods and conscientiousness I think it may be
-quoted. He says: "And now, hearty thanks
-for troubling about the legal question. The
-time with which I am concerned is about A.D. 540.
-I know, of course, that degeneration and the
-Gothic War made semi-chaos of Roman civilisation;
-but as a matter of fact the Roman law still
-existed. The Goths never interfered with it, and
-portions even have been handed down. Now
-the testator is a senator. He has one child only,
-a daughter, and to her leaves most of his estate.
-There are legacies to two nephews, and to a
-sister. A very simple will, you see&mdash;no difficulty
-about it. But he dying, all the legatees being
-with him at the time, how, as a matter of fact,
-were things settled? Was an executor
-appointed? Might an executor be a legatee?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Probate, I think, as you say, there was none, but
-who inherited? Still fantastic things were done
-in those times, but what would the law have
-dictated? Funny, too, that this is the only real
-difficulty which bothers me in the course of my
-story. As regards all else that enters into the
-book I believe I know as much as one can
-without being a Mommsen. The senator owns
-property in Rome and elsewhere. I rather suppose
-it was a case of taking possession if you could,
-and holding if no one interfered with you.
-Wills of this date were frequently set aside on the
-mere assertion of a powerful senator that the
-testator had verbally expressed a wish to benefit
-him.... It is a glorious age for the romancer." As
-a full answer to this letter I borrowed and sent
-to him Saunders' "Justinian," and received
-typically exaggerated thanks.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Now again he and I were but correspondents,
-and I do not think that in those
-days when I had so much to do, and had
-also very bad health, I was a very good
-correspondent. Maitland, although he sometimes
-apologised humorously, or even nervously, for
-writing at great length, was an admirable letter
-writer. He practised a lost art. Sometimes he
-put into his letters very valuable sketches of
-people. He did so both to me and to Rivers, and to
-others, and frequently made sharply etched
-portraits of people whom he knew at St Pée. He
-had a curious habit of nicknaming everybody.
-These nicknames were perhaps not the highest
-form of art, nor were they even always humorous,
-still it was a practice of his. He had a peculiarly
-verbal humor in these matters. Never by any
-chance, unless he was exceedingly serious, did he
-call any man by his actual name. Rawson, my
-most particular friend, whom he knew well, and
-whose books he admired very much for their
-style, was always known as "The Rawsonian,"
-and I myself was referred to by a similarly
-formed name. These are matters of no particular
-importance, but still they show the man in his
-familiar moods and therefore have a kind of
-value&mdash;as if one were to show a score of
-photographs or sketches that were serious and then
-insert one where the wise man plays the child, or
-even the fool. There was not a person of any
-importance in St. Pée d'Ascain, although nobody
-knew it, who did not rejoice in some absurd nickname.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However he went further than mere nicknames,
-and there is in one letter of his to Rivers
-a very admirable sketch of a certain personage:
-"one of the most cantankerous men I ever came
-across; fierce against the modern tendencies of
-science, especially in England; an anti-Darwinite
-&amp;c. He rages against Huxley, accusing him of
-having used his position for personal vanity and
-gain, and of ruining the scientific and industrial
-prospects of England; charges of the paltriest
-dishonesty against H. and other such men abound
-in his conversation. X., it seems, was one of the
-original students of the Jermyn Street School of
-Mines, and his root grievance is the transformation
-of that establishment&mdash;brought about, he
-declares, for the personal profit of Huxley and
-of&mdash;the clerks of the War Office! <i>You</i>, he regards
-as a most valuable demonstration of the evils
-resulting from the last half-century of 'progress,'
-protesting loudly that every one of your books is
-a bitter satire on Huxley, his congeners, and his
-disciples. The man tells me that no scientific
-papers in England will print his writing, merely
-from personal enmity. He has also quarrelled
-with the scientific societies of France, and now,
-being a polyglot, he writes for Spain and
-Germany&mdash;the only two countries in Europe where
-scientific impartiality is to be found."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In another letter of his he says: "By the bye,
-an English paper states that Henley died worth
-something more than eight hundred pounds." One
-might imagine that he would then proceed
-to condole with him on having had so little to
-leave, but that was not our Maitland. He went
-on: "Amazing! How on earth did he amass
-that wealth? I am rejoiced to know that his
-latter years have been passed without struggle for
-bread."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long letter about the Roman Empire and
-Roman law from which I quoted in the last
-chapter, was dated August 6, 1903, and I did not
-hear again from Maitland until November 1. I
-had written to him proposing to pay another visit
-to the south-west of France in order to see him
-in his Pyrenean home, but he replied very gloomily,
-saying that he was in evil case, that Thérèse
-had laryngitis, and that everything was made
-worse by incredibly bad weather. The
-workhouse&mdash;still the workhouse&mdash;was staring him in
-the face. He had to labour a certain number of
-hours each day in direly unfavourable conditions.
-If he did not finish his book at the end of the
-year sheer pauperdom would come upon him.
-In these circumstances I was to see that he
-dreaded a visit from any friend, indeed he was
-afraid that they would not be able to stay in
-St. Christophe on account of its excessive dampness.
-According to this pathetically exaggerated
-account they lived in a thick mist day and night.
-How on earth it came to be thought that such a
-dreadful country was good for consumptive
-people he could not imagine; though he owned,
-somewhat grudgingly, that he himself had got a
-good deal of strength there. He told me that
-as soon as the eternal rain ceased they were going
-down to Bayonne to see a doctor, and if he did
-no good Thérèse would go to the south of France.
-Finally, he was hanged if he knew how it would
-be managed. He ended up with: "In short I
-have not often in my life been nearer to an
-appalling crisis." At the end of this dismal letter,
-which did not affect me so much as might be
-thought, he spoke to me of my book, "Rachel,"
-and said: "I have been turning the pages with
-great pleasure to keep my thoughts from the
-workhouse."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As I have hinted, those will have gathered
-very little of Maitland who imagine that I took
-this <i>au pied de lettre</i>. Maitland had cried
-"Wolf!" so often, that I had almost ceased to
-believe that there were wolves, even in the
-Pyrenees. All things had gradually become
-appalling crises and dreadful disasters. A mere
-disturbance and an actual catastrophe were alike
-dire and irremediable calamities. And yet, alas,
-there was more truth underlying his words than
-even he knew. If a man lives for ever in shadow
-the hour comes at last when there is no more
-light; and even for those who look forward, one
-would think with a certain relief, to the
-workhouse, there comes a day that they shall work no
-more. I smiled when I read this letter, but, of
-course, telegraphed to him deferring my visit
-until the rain had ceased, or laryngitis had
-departed from his house, or until his spirits
-recovered their tone on the completion of his great
-romance. One could do no other, much as I
-desired to see him and have one of our prodigious
-and preposterously long talks in his new home.
-I do not think that I wrote to him after this
-lamentable reply of his, but on November 16 I
-received my last communication from him. It
-was three lines on a post-card, still dated from
-St. Christophe. He referred in it once more to
-my book, and said: "Delighted to see the
-advertisement in &mdash;&mdash;&mdash; to-day, especially after
-their very base notice last week. Hurrah! Illness
-and struggle still going on here." The
-struggle I believed in, but, as ever with one's
-friends, one doubted if the illness were serious.
-And yet the catastrophe was coming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time I was myself seriously ill. A
-chronic disease which had not been diagnosed
-resulted in a more or less serious infection of
-my own lungs, and, if I recollect truly, I had
-been in bed for nearly a fortnight. During the
-early days of my convalescence I went down to
-my club, and there one afternoon got this
-telegram from Rivers: "Have received following
-telegram from Maitland, 'Henry dying. Entreat
-you to come. In greatest haste.' I cannot
-go, can you?" This message to me was dated
-Folkestone, where Rivers was then living. Now
-at this time I was feeling very ill and utterly
-unfit to travel. I hardly knew what to do, but
-thought it best to go home and consult with my
-wife before I replied to Rivers. Anxious as she
-was to do everything possible for Maitland, she
-implored me not to venture on so long a journey,
-especially as it was mid-winter, just at
-Christmas-time. If I had not felt really ill she
-would not have placed any obstacles in my path,
-of that I am sure. She would, indeed, have
-urged me to go. After a little reflection I therefore
-replied to Rivers that I was myself very ill,
-but added that if he could not possibly go I
-would. At the same time I telegraphed to Maitland,
-or rather to Thérèse, saying that I was ill,
-but that I would come if she found it absolutely
-necessary. I do not think I received any answer
-to this message, a fact one easily understands
-when one learns how desperate things really
-were; but on December 26 I got another telegram
-from Rivers. I found that he had gone
-to St. Christophe in spite of not being well. He
-wired to me: "No nurse. Nursing help may
-save Maitland. Come if possibly can. Am
-here but ill." Such an appeal could not be
-resisted. I went straight home, and showing this
-telegram to my wife she agreed with me that I
-ought to go. If Rivers was ill at St. Christophe
-it now seemed my absolute duty to go, whatever
-my own state of health.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I left London that night by the late train,
-crossing to Paris by way of Newhaven and
-Dieppe in order that I might get at least three
-hours of rest in a recumbent position in the
-steamer, as I did not at that time feel justified in
-going all the way first class and taking a sleeper.
-I did manage to obtain some rest during the
-sea-passage, but on reaching Paris early in the
-morning I felt exceedingly unwell, and at the Gare
-St.-Lazare found at that hour no means of
-obtaining even a cup of coffee. I drove over to the
-Quai d'Orsay, and spent an hour or two in the
-coffee-room waiting for the departure of the
-express to Bordeaux. Ill as I was, and full of
-anxiety about Maitland, and now about Rivers, that
-journey was one long nightmare to me. I had
-not been able to take the Sud Express, and when
-at last, late in the evening, I reached Bayonne, I
-found that the last train to St. Christophe in its
-high Pyrenean valley had already gone hours
-before my arrival. While I was on my journey I
-had again telegraphed from Morcenx to Rivers
-or to Thérèse asking them to telegraph to me at
-the Hotel du Commerce, Bayonne, in case I was
-unable to get on that night, as I had indeed
-feared, although I was unable to get accurate
-information. On reaching this hotel I found
-waiting for me a telegram, which I have now
-lost, that was somehow exceedingly obscure but
-yet portended disaster. That I expected the
-worst I know, for I telegraphed to my wife the
-news in code that Maitland was dying and that
-the doctor gave no hope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If I had been a rich man, or even moderately
-furnished with money on that journey, I should
-have taken a motor-car if it could have been
-obtained, and have gone on at once without
-waiting for the morning. But now I was obliged to
-spend the night in that little old-fashioned hotel
-in the old English city of Bayonne, the city whose
-fortress bears the proud emblem "Nunquam
-polluta." I wondered much if I should yet see
-my old friend alive. It was possible, and I
-hoped. At any rate, he must know that I was
-coming and was near at hand if only he were yet
-conscious. How much I was needed I did not
-know till afterwards, for even as I was going
-south Rivers was once more returning to Paris
-on his homeward journey. As I learnt afterwards,
-he was far too unwell to stay. In the
-morning I took the first train to St. Christophe,
-passing Cambo, where Rostand, the poet, makes
-his home. On reaching the town where Maitland
-lived I found no one waiting for me as I
-had expected; for, naturally enough, I thought
-it possible that unless Rivers were very ill he
-would be able to meet me. It was a cold and
-gloomy morning when I left the station.
-Taking my bag in my hand, I hired a small boy to
-show me the house in which Maitland lived on
-the outskirts of the little Pyrenean town. This
-house, it seems, was let in flats, and the
-Maitlands occupied the first floor. On entering the
-hall I found a servant washing down the stone
-flooring. I said to her, "Comment Monsieur se
-porte-t-il?" and she replied, "Monsieur est
-mort." I then asked her where I should find the
-other Englishman. She answered that he had
-gone back to England the day before, and then
-took me upstairs and went in to tell Thérèse that
-I had come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I found her with her mother. She was the
-only woman who had given him any happiness.
-Now she was completely broken down by the
-anxiety and distress which had come upon her so
-suddenly. For indeed it seems that it had been
-sudden. Only four or five days ago Maitland
-had been working hard upon "Basil," the book
-from which he hoped so much, and in which he
-believed so fervently. Then it seems that he
-developed what he called a cold, some slight
-affection of the lungs which raised his temperature
-a little. Strangely enough he did not take the
-care of himself that he should have taken, or that
-care which I should have expected him to use,
-considering his curiously expressed nervousness
-about himself. By some odd fatality he became
-suddenly courageous at the wrong time, and went
-out for a walk in desperately bad weather. On
-the following day he was obviously very seriously
-ill, and sent for the doctor, who suspended
-judgment but feared that he had pneumonia.
-On the day succeeding this yet another doctor
-was called into consultation, and the diagnosis
-of pneumonia was confirmed without any doubt.
-But that was not, perhaps, what actually killed
-him. There was a very serious complication,
-according to Maitland's first physician, with
-whom I afterwards had a long conversation,
-partly through the intermediary of the nurse,
-an Englishwoman from Bayonne, who talked
-French more fluently than myself. He considered
-that Maitland also had myocarditis.
-I certainly did not think, and do not think, that
-he was right in this. Myocarditis is rarely
-accompanied with much or severe pain, while the
-anguish of violent pericarditis is often very
-great, and Maitland had suffered most
-atrociously. He was not now a strong man, not one
-with big reserves and powers of passive endurance,
-and in his agony he cried aloud for death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In these agonies there were periods of
-comparative ease when he rested and was quiet, and
-even spoke a little. In one of these intermissions
-Thérèse came to him and told him that I
-was now actually on my way. There is no
-reason, I think, why I should not write what he
-said. It was simply, "Good old H&mdash;&mdash;." By
-this time Rivers had gone; but before his
-departure he had, I understand, procured the
-nurse. The last struggle came early that
-morning, December 28, while I was at the Bayonne
-hotel preparing to catch the early train. He
-died quietly just before dawn, I think at six
-o'clock.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I was taken in to see Thérèse, who was still in
-bed, and found her mother with her. They
-were two desolate and lonely women, and I had
-some fears that Thérèse would hardly recover
-from the blow, so deeply did his death affect
-her. She was always a delicate woman, and
-came from a delicate, neurotic stock, as one
-could see so plainly in the elder woman. I did
-my best to say what one could say, though all
-that can possibly be said in such cases is nothing
-after all. There is no physic for grief but the
-slow, inevitable years. I stayed not long, but
-went into the other chamber and saw my dead
-friend. The bed on which he lay stood in a
-little alcove at the end of the room farthest from
-the window. I remember that the nurse, who
-behaved most considerately to me, stood by the
-window while I said farewell to him. He
-looked strangely and peculiarly intellectual, as
-so often happens after death. The final
-relaxation of the muscles about his chin and mouth
-accentuated most markedly the strong form of
-the actual skull. Curiously enough, as he had
-grown a little beard in his last illness, it seemed
-to me that he resembled very strongly another
-English writer not yet dead, one whom nature
-had, indeed, marked out as a story-teller, but
-who lacked all those qualities which made
-Maitland what he was. As I stood by this dead-bed
-knowing, as I did know, that he had died at
-last in the strange anguish which I was aware
-he had feared, it seemed to me that here was a
-man who had been born to inherit grief. He
-had never known pure peace or utter joy as even
-some of the very humblest know it. I looked
-back across the toilsome path by which he had
-come hither to the end, and it seemed to me
-that from the very first he had been doomed.
-In other times or some other age he might have
-had a better fate, but he was born out of his
-time and died in exile doubly. I put my hand
-upon his forehead and said farewell to him and
-left the room, for I knew that there was much
-to do and that in some way I had to do it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thérèse was most anxious that he should not
-be buried in St. Christophe, of which she had
-conceived a natural horror. There was at this
-time an English clergyman in the village, the
-chaplain of the English church at St. Pée, about
-whom I shall have something to say later.
-With him I concerted what was to be done, and
-he obtained the necessary papers from the
-<i>mairie</i>. And all this time, across the road from
-the stone house in which Henry Maitland lay
-dead, I heard the sound of his coffin being made
-in the little carpenter's shop which stood there.
-When all was done that could be done, and
-everything was in order, I went to the little
-hotel and had my lunch all alone, and afterwards
-dined alone and slept that night in the same
-hotel. The next day, late in the afternoon, I went
-down to St. Pée d'Ascain in charge of his body.
-During this journey the young doctor who had
-attended Maitland accompanied me part of the
-way, and for the rest of it his nurse was my
-companion. At St. Pée d'Ascain, where it was then
-quite dark, we were received by the clergyman,
-who had preceded us, and by a hearse, into which
-we carried Maitland's body. I accompanied it
-to the English chapel, where it remained all
-night before the altar. I slept at my old hotel,
-where I was known, as I had stayed there at the
-time I last saw Maitland alive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the morning a service was held for him
-according to the rites of the English Church. This
-was the desire of Thérèse and Madame Espinel,
-who, if it had been possible, I think would have
-desired to bury him according to the rites of the
-Catholic Church. Maitland, of course, had no
-orthodox belief. He refused to think of these
-things, for they were disturbing and led
-no-whither. Attending this service there were many
-English people, some who knew him, and some
-again who did not know him but went there out
-of respect for his name and reputation, and perhaps
-because they felt that they and he were alike
-in exile. We buried him in the common cemetery
-of St. Pée, a place not unbeautiful, nor
-unbeautifully situated. And while the service
-went on over his grave I was somehow reminded
-of the lovely cemetery at Lisbon where another
-English man of letters lies in a tomb far from
-his own country. I speak of Fielding.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I left Thérèse and Madame Espinel still at
-St. Christophe, and did not see them again before I
-started for England. They, I knew, would
-probably return to Paris, or perhaps would go to
-relatives of theirs in Spain. I could help them
-no more, and by now I discovered that my winter
-journey, or perhaps even my short visit to the
-death-chamber of Henry Maitland, had given
-me some kind of pulmonary catarrh which in
-my overwrought and nervous state seemed likely,
-perhaps, to result in something more serious.
-Therefore, having done all that I could, and
-having seen him put in the earth, I returned home
-hurriedly. On reaching England I was very ill
-for many days, but recovered without any serious
-results. Soon afterwards some one, I know not
-who it was, sent me a paragraph published in a
-religious paper which claimed Maitland as a
-disciple of the Church, for it said that he had
-died "in the fear of God's holy name, and with
-the comfort and strength of the Catholic faith." When
-some men die there are for ever crows and
-vultures about. Although I was very loath to
-say anything which would raise an angry
-discussion, I felt that this could not be passed by
-and that he would not have wished it to be passed
-by. Had he not written of a certain character
-in one of his books "that he should be buried as a
-son of the Church, to whom he had never
-belonged, was a matter of indignation"? That
-others felt as I did is proved by a letter I got
-from his friend Edmund Roden, who wrote to
-me: "You have seen the report that the
-ecclesiastical buzzards have got hold of Henry
-Maitland in articulo mortis and dragged him into the
-fold."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My own views upon religion did not matter.
-They were stronger and more pronounced, and,
-it may be, more atheistical than his own.
-Nevertheless I knew what he felt about these things,
-and in consequence wrote the following letter to
-the editor of the paper which had claimed him
-for the Church: "My attention has been drawn
-to a statement in your columns that Henry
-Maitland died in communion with the Church of
-England, and I shall be much obliged if you will
-give to this contradiction the same publicity you
-granted, without investigation, to the calumny.
-I was intimate with Maitland for thirty years,
-and had every opportunity of noting his attitude
-towards all theological speculation. He not
-only accepted none of the dogmas formulated in
-the creeds and articles of the Church of England,
-but he considered it impossible that any Church's
-definition of the undefinable could have any
-significance for any intelligent man. During the
-whole of our long intimacy I never knew him to
-waver from that point of view.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What communication may have reached you
-from any one who visited Maitland during his
-illness I do not know. But I presume you do
-not maintain that a change in his theological
-standpoint can reasonably be inferred from any
-words which he may have been induced to speak
-in a condition in which, according to the law of
-every civilised country, he would have been
-incompetent to sign a codicil to his will.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The attempt to draw such a deduction will
-seem dishonest to every fair-minded man; and
-I rely upon your courtesy to publish this
-vindication of the memory of an honest and
-consistent thinker which you have, however
-unintentionally, aspersed."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course this letter was refused publication.
-The editor answered it in a note in which he
-maintained the position that the paper had taken
-up, stating that he was thoroughly satisfied with
-the sources of his information. Naturally
-enough I knew what those sources were, and I
-wrote a letter in anger to the chaplain of St. Pée,
-which, I fear, was full of very gross insults.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seeing that the paper refused my letter admission
-to its columns, on the advice of certain other
-people I wrote to a London daily saying: "As
-the intimate friend of Henry Maitland for thirty
-years, I beg to state definitely that he had not the
-slightest intellectual sympathy with any creed
-whatsoever. From his early youth he had none,
-save for a short period when, for reasons other
-than intellectual, he inclined to a vague and
-nebulous Positivism. His mental attitude
-towards all theological explanations was more than
-critical, it was absolutely indifferent; he could
-hardly understand how any one in the full
-possession of his faculties could subscribe to any
-formulated doctrines. No more than John
-Stuart Mill or Herbert Spencer could he have
-entered into communion with any Church."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of course I knew, as any man must know who
-is acquainted with humanity and its frailties, that
-it was possible for Maitland, during the last few
-poisoned hours of his life, to have gone back in
-his delirium upon the whole of his previous
-convictions. He knew that he was dying. When
-he asked to know the truth he had been told it.
-In such circumstances some men break down.
-There are what people call death-bed repentances.
-Therefore I did my best to satisfy myself
-as to whether anything whatever had occurred
-which would give any colour to these theologic
-lies. I could not trouble Thérèse upon this
-particular point, but it occurred to me that the nurse,
-who was a very intelligent woman, must be in a
-position to know something of the matter, and I
-therefore wrote to her asking her to tell me all
-she knew. She replied to me about the middle
-of January, telling me that she had just then had
-a long talk with Mrs. Maitland, and giving me
-the following facts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It appears that on Monday, December 21,
-Maitland was so ill that a consultation was
-thought necessary, and that both the doctors
-agreed that it was impossible for the patient to
-live through the night, though in fact he did not
-die till nearly a week afterwards. On Thursday,
-December 24, the chaplain was sent for, not for
-any religious reasons, or because Maitland had
-called for him, but simply because Thérèse
-thought that he might find some pleasure in
-seeing an English face. When the clergyman came
-it did indeed have this effect, for Maitland's face
-lit up and he shook him heartily by the hand.
-At this moment the young doctor came in and
-told the clergyman privately that Maitland had
-no chance whatever, and that it was a wonder
-that he was still alive. It is quite certain that
-there was no religious conversation between the
-clergyman and the patient at this time. The
-nurse arrived at eleven o'clock on Sunday
-morning, and insisted on absolute quietness in the
-room. The clergyman simply peeped in at the
-door to say good-bye, for at that time
-Mr. Rivers was in charge in the bedroom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The chaplain did not see Maitland again until
-the day I myself came to St. Christophe, when
-all was over. While Maitland was delirious it
-appears that he chanted some kind of <i>Te Deum</i>
-repeatedly. To what this was attributable no
-man can say with certainty, but it is a curious
-thing to reflect upon that "Basil" was about the
-time of Gregory, and that Maitland had been
-studying most minutely the history of the early
-Church in many ecclesiastical works. According
-to those who heard his delirious talk, it
-seems that all he did say had reference to
-"Basil," the book about which he had been so
-anxious, and was never to finish. At any rate
-it is absolutely certain that Maitland never
-accepted the offices of the Church before his
-death, even in delirium. Before I leave this
-matter I may mention that the chaplain
-complicated matters in no small degree before he
-retired from the scene, by declaring most
-disingenuously that he had not written the notice
-which appeared in print. Now this was perfectly
-true. He did not write it. He had asked
-a friend of his to do so. When he learnt the
-truth this friend very much regretted having
-undertaken the task. I understand that though
-the editor refused to withdraw this statement
-the authorities of the paper wrote to the chaplain
-in no pleased spirit after they had received
-my somewhat severely phrased communication.
-It is a sad and disagreeable subject, and I am
-glad to leave it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For ever on looking backwards one is
-filled with regrets, and one thing I
-regret greatly about Henry Maitland is
-that, though I might perhaps have purchased
-his little library, the books he had accumulated
-with so much joy and such self-sacrifice, I never
-thought of this until it was too late. Books
-made up so much of his life, and few of his had
-not been bought at the cost of what others would
-consider pleasure, or by the sacrifice of some
-sensation which he himself would have enjoyed
-at the time. Now I possess none of his books
-but those he gave me, save only the little
-"Anthologia Latina" which Thérèse herself sent
-to me. This was a volume in which he took
-peculiar delight, perhaps even more delight
-than he did in the Greek anthology, which I
-myself preferred so far as my Greek would then
-carry me. Many times I have seen him take
-down the little Eton anthology and read aloud.
-Now I myself may quote:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- <i>Animula vagula, blandula,<br />
- Hospes comesque corporis,<br />
- Qua nunc abibis in loca<br />
- Pallidula, rigida, nudula&mdash;&mdash;</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-I believe his library was sold in Paris, for
-now that Thérèse had no settled home it was
-impossible to carry it about with her. Among
-these books were all those beautifully bound
-volumes which he had obtained as prizes at
-Moorhampton College, and others which he had
-picked up at various times in the various
-bookshops of London, so many of which he speaks
-of in "The Meditations"&mdash;his old Gibbon in
-quarto, and some hundreds of others chosen with
-joy because they appealed to him in a way only
-a book-lover can understand. He had a strange
-pleasure in buying old copies of the classics,
-which shows that he was perhaps after all more
-of a bookman than a scholar. He would
-perhaps have rather possessed such a copy of
-Lucretius as is on my own shelves, which has
-no notes but is wonderfully printed, than the
-newest edition by the newest editor. He was
-conscious that his chief desire was literature
-rather than scholarship. Few indeed there are
-who know the classics as well as he did, who
-read them for ever with so much delight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Maitland, for an Englishman, knew many
-languages. His Greek, though not extraordinarily
-deep, was most familiar. He could read
-Aristophanes lying on the sofa, thoroughly
-enjoying it, and rarely rising to consult Liddell
-and Scott, a book which he adored in the most
-odd fashion, perhaps because it knew so much
-Greek. There was no Latin author whom he
-could not read fluently. I myself frequently
-took him up a difficult passage in Juvenal and
-Persius, and rarely, if ever, found him at fault,
-or slow to give me help. French he knew very
-nearly as well as a Frenchman, and spoke it very
-fluently. His Italian was also very good, and
-he spoke that too without hesitation. Spanish
-he only read; I do not think he often attempted
-to speak it. Nevertheless he read "Don Quixote"
-in the original; and his Italian can be
-judged by the fact that he read Dante's
-"Divina Commedia" almost as easily as he read
-his Virgil. German too was an open book to
-him, and he had read most of the great men who
-wrote in it, understanding even the obscurities
-of "Titan." I marked down the other day
-many of the books in which he chiefly delighted,
-or rather, let me say, many of the authors.
-Homer, of course, stood at the head of the list,
-for Homer he knew as well as he knew Shakespeare.
-His adoration for Shakespeare was, indeed,
-I think, excessive, but the less said of that
-the better, for I have no desire to express fully
-what I think concerning the general English
-over-estimation of that particular author. I do,
-however, understand how it was that Maitland
-worshipped him so, for whatever may be thought
-of Shakespeare's dramatic ability, or his
-characterisation, or his general psychology, there
-can be no dispute about his having been a
-master of "beautiful words." Milton he loved
-marvellously, and sometimes he read his sonnets
-to me. Much of "Lycidas" he knew by heart,
-and some of "Il Penseroso." Among the Latins,
-Virgil, Catullus, and Tibullus were his
-favourites, although he took a curious interest in
-Cicero, a thing in which I was never able to
-follow him. I once showed to Maitland in the
-"Tusculan Disputations" what Cicero seemed
-to think a good joke. It betrayed such an
-extraordinary lack of humour that I was satisfied
-to leave the "Disputations" alone henceforth.
-The only Latin book which I myself introduced
-to Maitland was the "Letters" of Pliny. They
-afterwards became great favourites with him
-because some of them dealt with his beloved
-Naples and Vesuvius. Lucian's "Dialogues" he
-admired very much, finding them, as indeed
-they are, always delightful; and it was very
-interesting to him when I showed him to what
-extent Disraeli was indebted to Lucian in those
-clever <i>jeux d'esprit</i> "Ixion in Heaven,"
-"Popanilla," and "The Infernal Marriage." The
-"Golden Ass" of Apuleius he knew almost by
-heart. Petronius he read very frequently; it
-contained some of the actual life of the old
-world. He knew Diogenes Laertius very well,
-though he read that author, as Montaigne did,
-rather for the light he throws upon the private
-life of the Greeks than for the philosophy in the
-book; and he frequently dipped into Athenæus
-the Deipnosophist. Occasionally, but very
-occasionally, he did read some ancient metaphysics,
-for Plato was a favourite of his&mdash;not, I think, on
-account of his philosophy, but because he wrote
-so beautifully. Aristotle he rarely touched,
-although he knew the "Poetics." He had a peculiar
-admiration for the Stoic Marcus Aurelius, in
-which I never followed him because the Stoic
-philosophy is so peculiarly inhuman. But, after
-all, among the Greeks his chief joy was the
-tragedians, and there was no single play or
-fragment of Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides that
-he did not know almost by heart. Among the
-Frenchmen his great favourites were Rabelais
-and Montaigne and, later, Flaubert,
-Maupassant, Victor Hugo, Zola, Balzac, and the
-Goncourts. As I have said before, he had a great
-admiration for the Russian writers of eminence,
-and much regretted that he did not know
-Russian. He once even attempted it, but put it
-aside. I think Balzac was the only writer of
-importance that he read much of who did not
-possess a style; he owned that he found him on
-that account at times almost impossible to read.
-Nevertheless he did read him, and learnt much
-from him; but his chief admiration among the
-French on the ground of their being artists was
-for Flaubert and Maupassant. Zola's style did
-not appeal to him; in fact in many of his books it
-is little better than Balzac's. Maitland's love of
-beautiful words and the rhythms of prose was
-as deep as that of Meredith; and as I have said,
-his adoration of Shakespeare was founded on the
-fact that Shakespeare still remains the great
-enchanter in the world of phrases. He read
-English very deeply. There was little among the
-fields of English prose that he did not know
-well; but again he loved best those who had a
-noble style of their own, notably Sir Thomas
-Browne. If a man had something to say and did
-not say it well, Maitland read him with
-difficulty and held him at a discount. That is why
-he loved Landor at his best, why he loved
-Meredith, and why he often adored Hardy, especially
-in Hardy's earlier works, before he began to
-"rail at the universe" and disturb him. I think
-among other living writers of English fiction I
-can hardly mention more than one of whom he
-spoke with much respect, and he was Henry
-James. As he was a conservative he was
-especially a conservative critic. He found it
-difficult to appreciate anything which was wholly
-new, and the rising school of Celtic literature,
-which means much, and may mean more, in
-English literature, did not appeal to him greatly.
-He lived in the past, even in English, and often
-went back to Chaucer and drank at his well and
-at the everlasting fountain of Malory. So, as I
-have said, he loved old Walton. Boswell he read
-yearly at least, for he had an amazing admiration
-for old Johnson, a notable truth-teller.
-The man who could say what he thought, and
-say it plainly, was ever his favourite, although I
-could never induce him to admire Machiavelli,
-for the coldness of Machiavelli's intellect was a
-little too much for him. The pure intellect
-never appealed to Maitland. I think if he had
-attempted "The Critique of Pure Reason" he
-would have died before he had learnt Kant's
-vocabulary. Yet I once gave him a copy of it in
-the original. The only very modern writer that
-he took to was Walt Whitman, and the trouble
-I had in getting him to see anything in him was
-amazing, though at last he succumbed and was
-characteristically enthusiastic.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What he wanted in literature was emotion,
-feeling, and humour&mdash;literature that affected
-him sensuously, and made him happy, and made
-him forget. For it is strange when one looks
-back at his books to think how much he loved
-pure beauty, though he found himself compelled
-to write, only too often, of the sheer brutality of
-modern civilisation and the foulest life of
-London. Of course he loved satire, and his own
-mind was essentially in some ways satiric. His
-greatest gift was perhaps that of irony, which he
-frequently exercised at the expense of his public.
-I remember very well his joy when something
-he had written which was ironically intended
-from the first word to the last was treated
-seriously by the critics. He was reminded, as he
-indeed reminded me, of Samuel Butler's
-"Fairhaven," that book on Christianity which was
-reviewed by one great religious paper as an
-essay in religious apologetics. This recalls to
-my mind the fact that I have forgotten to say
-how much he loved Samuel Butler's books, or
-those with which he was more particularly
-acquainted, "Erewhon" and "Erewhon Revisited." Anything
-which dug knives into the gross stupidity
-of the mass of English opinion afforded
-him the intensest gratification. If it attacked
-their religion or their vanity he was equally
-delighted, and when it came to their hypocrisy&mdash;in
-spite of the defence he made later in "The
-Meditations" of English hypocrisy&mdash;he was
-equally pleased. In this connection I am
-reminded of a very little thing of no particular
-importance which occurred to him when he was
-upon one occasion at the Royal Academy. That
-year Sir Frederick Leighton exhibited a very
-fine decorative panel of a nude figure. While
-Maitland was looking at it a typical English
-matron with three young flappers of daughters
-passed him. One of the girls stood in front of
-this nude and said, "Oh, mamma, what is
-this?" Whereupon her mother replied hurriedly, "Only
-a goddess, my dear, only a goddess! Come
-along,&mdash;only a goddess." And he quoted to
-himself and afterwards to me, from "Roman
-Women": "And yet I love you not, nor ever
-can, Distinguished woman on the Pincian!" If
-I remember rightly, the notable address to
-Englishwomen in T.E. Brown's poem was published
-separately in a magazine which I brought to
-him. It gave great occasion for chuckling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have not attempted to give any far-reaching
-notion of all Maitland's reading, but I think
-what I have said will indicate not unfairly what
-its reach was. What he desired was to read the
-best that had been written in all western
-languages; and I think, indeed, that very few men
-have read so much, although he made, in some
-ways, but little use of it. Nevertheless this life
-among books was his true life. Among books
-he lived, and among them he would have died.
-Had any globe-trotting Gillman offered to show
-him the world, he would have declined, I think,
-to leave the littoral of the Mediterranean,
-though with a book-loving Gillman he might
-have explored all literature.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-There have been few men so persecuted
-by Fortune as to lead lives of unhappiness,
-lighted only by transient gleams of
-the sun, who are yet pursued beyond the grave
-by outcries and misfortune, but this was
-undoubtedly the case with Maitland. Of course
-he always had notable ill luck, as men might say
-and indeed do say, but his ill luck sprang from
-his nature as well as from the nature of things.
-When a man puts himself into circumstances to
-which he is equal he may have misfortunes, or
-sometimes disasters, but he has not perpetual
-adversity. Maitland's nature was for ever
-thrusting him into positions to which he was not
-equal. His disposition, his very heredity, seems
-to have invited trouble. So out of his first great
-disaster sprang all the rest. He had not been
-equal to the stress laid upon him, and in later
-life he was never equal to the stress he laid upon
-himself. This is what ill luck is. It is an
-instinctive lack of wisdom. I think I said some
-chapters ago that I had not entirely disposed of
-the question of his health. I return to the
-subject with some reluctance. Nevertheless I think
-what I have to say should be said. It at any
-rate curiously links the last days of Maitland's
-life to the earlier times of his trouble, or so it
-will seem to physicians. I shall do no more
-than quote a few lines from a letter which he
-wrote to Lake. He says: "You remember that
-patch of skin disease on my forehead? Nothing
-would touch it; it had lasted for more than two
-years, and was steadily extending itself. At last
-a fortnight ago I was advised to try iodide of
-potassium. Result&mdash;perfect cure after week's
-treatment! I had resigned myself to being
-disfigured for the rest of my life; the rapidity of
-the cure is extraordinary. I am thinking of
-substituting iodide of potassium for coffee at
-breakfast and wine at the other meals. I am
-also meditating a poem in its praise&mdash;which may
-perhaps appear in the <i>Fortnightly Review</i>."
-Dr. Lake replied to these dithyrambs with a
-letter which Maitland did not answer. There is no
-need to comment upon this more particularly;
-it will at any rate be clear to those who are not
-uninstructed in medicine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His ill luck began early. It lasted even
-beyond the grave. Some men have accounted it a
-calamity to have a biography written of them.
-The first who said so must have been English,
-for in this country the absence of biographic art
-is rendered the more peculiarly dreadful by the
-existence in our language of one or two
-masterpieces. In some ways I would very willingly
-cease to speak now, for I have written nearly all
-that I had in my mind, and I know that I have
-spoken nothing which would really hurt him.
-As I have said in the very first chapter, he had
-an earnest desire that if anything were written
-about him after his death it should be something
-true. Still there are some things yet to be put
-down, especially about "Basil" and its publication.
-He left this book unfinished: it still
-lacked some few chapters which would have
-dealt with the final catastrophe. It fell to the
-executors to arrange for the publication of the
-incomplete book. As Maitland had left no
-money, certainly not that two thousand pounds
-which he vainly hoped for, there were still his
-children to consider; and it was thought necessary,
-for reasons I do not appreciate, to get a
-preface written for the book with a view, which
-seemed to me idle, of procuring it a great sale.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It appears that Rivers offered to write this
-preface if it were wanted. What he wrote was
-afterwards published. The executors did not
-approve it, again for reasons which I do not
-appreciate, for I think that it was on the whole a
-very admirable piece of work. Yet I do not
-believe Rivers was sincere in the view he took
-of "Basil" as a work of art. In later years he
-acknowledged as much to me, but he thought it
-was his duty to say everything that could
-possibly be said with a view of imposing it on a
-reluctant public. The passage in this article
-mainly objected to was that which speaks
-obscurely of his early life at Moorhampton
-College and refers as obscurely to his initial great
-disaster. The reference was needed, and could
-hardly be avoided. Rivers said nothing openly
-but referred to "an abrupt incongruous reaction
-and collapse." This no doubt excited certain
-curiosities in certain people, but seeing that so
-many already knew the truth, I cannot perceive
-what was to be gained by entire silence.
-However, this preface was rejected and Mr. Harold
-Edgeworth was asked to write another. This
-he did, but it was a frigid performance. The
-writer acknowledged his ignorance of much that
-Maitland had written, and avowed his want of
-sympathy with most of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Naturally enough, the trouble growing out of
-this dispute gave rise to considerable comment.
-As some theological buzzards had dropped out
-of a murky sky upon Maitland's corpse, so some
-literary kites now found a subject to gloat upon.
-Nevertheless the matter presently passed.
-"Basil," unhappily, was no success; and if one
-must speak the truth, it was rightly a failure.
-It is curious and bitter to think of that when he
-was dealing at the last in some kind of peace and
-quiet with his one chosen subject, that he had
-thought of for so many years and prepared for
-so carefully, it should by no means have proved
-what he believed it. There is, indeed, no such
-proof as "Basil" in the whole history of letters
-that the writer was not doing the work that his
-nature called for. Who that knows "Magna
-Graecia," and who, indeed, that ever spoke with
-him, will not feel that if he had visited one by
-one all the places that he mentions in the book,
-and had written about them and about the
-historical characters that he hoped to realise, the
-book might have been as great or even greater
-than the shining pages of "Magna Graecia"?
-It was in the consideration of these things, while
-reviving the aspects of the past that he felt so
-deeply and loved so much, that his native and
-natural genius came out. In fiction it was only
-when rage and anger and disgust inspired him
-that he could hope to equal anything of the
-passion which he felt about his temperamental and
-proper work. Those books in which he let
-himself go perfectly naturally, and those books
-which came out of him as a terrible protest
-against modern civilisation, are alone great.
-Yet it is hard to speak without emotion and
-without pain of "Basil." He believed in it so
-greatly, and yet believed in it no more than any
-writer must while he is at work. The artist's
-own illusion of a book's strength and beauty is
-necessary to any accomplishment. He must believe
-with faith or do nothing. Maitland failed
-because it was not his real work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one sense the great books of his middle
-period were what writers and artists know as
-"pot-boilers." They were, indeed, written for
-an actual living, for bread and for cheese and
-occasionally a very little butter. But they had
-to be written. He was obliged to do something,
-and did these best; he could do no other. He
-was always in exile. That was the point in my
-mind when I wrote one long article about him
-in a promising but passing magazine which
-preened its wings in Bond Street and died before
-the end of its first month. This article I called
-"The Exile of Henry Maitland." There is
-something of the same feeling in much that has
-been written of him by men perhaps qualified in
-many ways better than myself had they known
-him as well as I did. I have, I believe, spoken
-of the able criticism Thomas Sackville wrote of
-him in the foreword of the book of short stories
-which was published after Maitland's death.
-In the <i>Fortnightly Review</i> Edwin Warren wrote
-a feeling and sympathetic article about him.
-Jacob Levy wrote not without discernment of
-the man. And of one thing all these men
-seemed tolerably sure, that in himself Maitland
-stood alone. But he only stood alone, I think,
-in the best work of his middle period. And
-even that work was alien from his native mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In an early article written about him while he
-yet lived I said that he stood in a high and
-solitary place, because he belonged to no school, and
-most certainly not to any English school. No
-one could imitate, and no one could truly even
-caricature him. The essence of his best work
-was that it was founded on deep and accurate
-knowledge and keen observation. Its power lay
-in a bent, in a mood of mind, not by any means
-in any subject, even though his satiric discussion
-of what he called the "ignobly decent" showed
-his strength, and indirectly his inner character.
-His very repugnance to his early subjects led
-him to choose them. He showed what he
-wished the world to be by declaring and proving
-that it possessed every conceivable opposite to
-his desires. I pointed out some time ago, but
-should like to insist upon it again, that in one
-sense he showed an instinctive affinity for the
-lucid and subtle Tourgeniev. There is no more
-intensely depressing book in the entire English
-language than "Isabel." The hero's desires
-reached to the stars, but he was not able to steal
-or take so much as a farthing rushlight. Not
-even Demetri Roudine, that futile essence of
-futility, equals this, Maitland's literary child of
-bitter, unable ambitions. These Russians
-indeed were the writers with whom Maitland had
-most sympathy. They moved what Zola had
-never been able to stir in him, for he was never
-a Zolaist, either in mind or method. No man
-without a style could really influence him for
-more than a moment. Even his beloved Balzac,
-fecund and insatiable, had no lasting hold upon
-him, much as he admired the man's ambitions,
-his unparalleled industry, his mighty construction.
-For Balzac was truly architectonic, even
-if barbarous, and though these constructions of
-his are often imaginary and his perspectives a
-mystery. But great construction is obviously
-alien from Maitland. He wanted no elaborate
-architecture to do his thinking in. He would
-have been contented in a porch, or preferably in
-a cloister.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have declared that his greatest book is "The
-Exile"&mdash;I mean his greatest book among his
-novels. To say it is a masterpiece is for once
-not to abuse the word; for it is intense,
-deeply psychological, moving, true.
-"<i>L'anatomia presuppone il cadavere</i>," says Gabriele
-D'Annunzio, but "The Exile" is intolerable and
-wonderful vivisection. Yet men do bleed and
-live, and the protagonist in this book&mdash;in much,
-in very much, Henry Maitland&mdash;bleeds but will
-not die. He was born out of the leisured classes
-and resented it with an incredible bitterness,
-with a bitterness unparalleled in literature. I
-know that on one occasion Maitland spoke to me
-with a certain joy of somebody who had written
-to him about his books and had selected "The
-Exile" as the greatest of them. I think he knew
-it was great. It was, of course, an ineffable
-failure from the commercial point of view.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On more than one occasion, as it was known
-that I was acquainted with Maitland, men asked
-me to write about him. I never did so without
-asking his permission to do it. This happened
-once in 1895. He answered me: "What objection
-could I possibly have, unless it were that
-I should not like to hear you reviled for
-log-rolling? But it seems to me that you might well
-write an article which would incur no such
-charge; and indeed, by so doing, you would
-render me a very great service. For I have in
-mind at present a careful and well-written
-attack in the current <i>Spectator</i>. Have you seen
-it? Now I will tell you what my feelings are
-about this frequent attitude in my critics."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Maitland's views upon critics and reviewing
-were often somewhat astounding. He resented
-their folly very bitterly. Naturally enough, we
-often spoke of reviewers, for both of us, in a
-sense, had some grievances. Mine, however,
-were not bitter. Luckily for me, I sometimes
-did work which appealed more to the general,
-while his appeal was always to the particular.
-Apropos of a review of one of Rivers' books he
-says: "I have also, unfortunately, seen the
-&mdash;&mdash;. Now, can you tell me (in moments of
-extreme idleness one wishes to know such things)
-who the people are who review fiction for the
-&mdash;&mdash;? Are they women, soured by celibacy,
-and by ineffectual attempts to succeed as
-authors? Even as they treat you this time they
-have consistently treated me&mdash;one continuous
-snarl and sneer. They are beastly creatures&mdash;I
-can think of no other term."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was unfortunate that he took these things so
-seriously, for nobody knows so well as the
-reviewers that their work is not serious. Yet,
-according to them the general effect of Maitland's
-books, especially "Jubilee," was false, misleading,
-and libellous; and was in essence caricature.
-One particular critic spoke of "the brutish
-stupefaction of his men and women," and said, "his
-realism inheres only in his rendering of detail." Now
-Maitland declared that the writer exhibited
-a twofold ignorance&mdash;first of the life he
-depicted, and again of the books in which he
-depicted it. Maitland went on to say: "He&mdash;the
-critic&mdash;speaks specially of 'Jubilee,' so for
-the moment we will stick to that. I have
-selected from the great mass of lower middle-class
-life a group of people who represent certain of
-its grossnesses, weaknesses, &amp;c., peculiar to our
-day. Now in the first place, this group of
-people, on its worst side, represents a degradation
-of which the critic has obviously no idea. In
-the second place, my book, if properly read,
-contains abundant evidence of good feeling and
-right thinking in those members of the group
-who are not hopelessly base. Pass to instances:
-'The seniors live a ... life unglorified by a
-single fine emotion or elevating instinct.' Indeed?
-What about Mr. Ward, who is there
-precisely to show that there can be, and are,
-these emotions and instincts in individuals? Of
-the young people (to say not a word about
-Nancy, at heart an admirable woman), how is it
-possible to miss the notes of fine character in
-poor Halley? Is not the passionate love of
-one's child an 'elevating instinct'? nor yet a fine
-emotion? Why, even Nancy's brother shows
-at the end that favourable circumstances could
-bring out in him gentleness and goodness."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There indeed spoke Maitland. He felt that
-everything was circumstance, and that for nine
-hundred and ninety-nine out of a thousand
-circumstance was truly too much, as it had been
-for him. It appears that the critic added that
-the general effect of the book was false; and
-Maitland replied that it would be so to a very
-rapid skimmer of the book, precisely as the
-general effect upon a rapid observer of the people
-themselves would be false. He was enraged to
-think that though people thought it worth while
-to write at length about his books, they would
-not take the trouble to study them seriously.
-He added: "In this section of the lower middle
-class the good is not on the surface; neither
-will it be found on the surface of my narrative."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this letter he went on to say something more
-of his books in general. Apropos of a
-paragraph written by Mr. Glass about his work as
-a whole, he said: "My books deal with people
-of many social strata; there are the vile working
-class, the aspiring and capable working class,
-the vile lower middle, the aspiring and capable
-lower middle, and a few representatives of the
-upper middle class. My characters range from
-the vileness of 'Arry Parson to the genial and
-cultured respectability of Mr. Comberbatch.
-There are books as disparate as 'The Under
-World' and 'The Unchosen.' But what I desire
-to insist upon is this, that the most characteristic,
-the most important, part of my work is that
-which deals with a class of young men distinctive
-of our time&mdash;well-educated, fairly bred, <i>but
-without money</i>. It is this fact, as I gather from
-reviews and conversation, of the poverty of my
-people which tells against their recognition as
-civilised beings. 'Oh,' said some one to Butler,
-'do ask Mr. Maitland to make his people a little
-better off.' There you have it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And there one has also the source of Maitland's
-fountain of bitterness. He went on to
-say: "Now think of some of these young men,
-Hendon, Gifford, Medwin, Pick, Early, Hillward,
-Mallow. Do you mean to say that books
-containing such a number of such men deal, first
-and foremost, with the commonplace and the
-sordid? Why, these fellows are the very
-reverse of commonplace; most of them are
-martyred by the fact of possessing uncommon
-endowments. Is it not so? This side of my
-work, to me the most important, I have never
-yet seen recognised. I suppose Glass would
-class these men as 'at best genteel, and not so
-very genteel.' Why, 'ods bodikins! there's
-nothing in the world so hateful to them as gentility.
-But you know all this, and can you not write of
-it rather trenchantly? I say nothing about my
-women. That is a moot point. But surely
-there are some of them who help to give colour
-to the groups I draw." The end of the letter
-was: "I write with a numbed hand. I haven't
-been warm for weeks. This weather crushes
-me. Let me have a line about this letter."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sort of poverty which crushed the aspiring
-is the keynote to the best work he did. He
-knew it, and was right in knowing it. He
-played all these parts himself. In many
-protean forms Maitland himself is discerned under
-the colour and character of his chosen names;
-and so far as he depicted a class hitherto
-untouched, or practically untouched, in England,
-as he declares, he was a great writer of fiction.
-But he was not a romantic writer. There were
-some books of romance he loved greatly. We
-often and often spoke of Murger's "Vie de
-Bohème." I do not think there was any passage
-in that book which so appealed to him as when
-Rodolphe worked in his adventitious fur-coat in
-his windy garret, declaring genially:
-"Maintenant le thermomètre va être furieusement
-vexé." Nevertheless, as I have said before, he
-knew, and few knew so well, the very bitter truth
-that Murger only vaguely indicated here and
-there in scattered passages. In the "Vie de
-Bohème" these characters "range" themselves at
-last; but mostly such men did not. They went
-under, they died in the hospital, they poisoned
-themselves, they blew out their brains, they sank
-and became degraded parasites of an uncomprehending
-bourgeoisie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I spoke some time back of the painful hour
-when Maitland came to me to declare his
-considered opinion that I myself could not write
-successful fiction. It is an odd thing that I
-never returned the compliment in any way, for
-though I knew he could, and did, write great
-fiction, I knew his best work would not have been
-fiction in other circumstances. Out of martyrdom
-may come great things, but not out of
-martyrdom spring the natural blossoms of the
-natural mind. That he lived in the devil's
-twilight between the Dan of Camberwell and the
-Beersheba of Camden Town, when his natural
-environment should have been Italy, and Rome,
-or Sorrento, is an unfading tragedy. Only once
-or twice in his life did a spring or summer come
-to him in which he might grow the flowers he
-loved best and knew to be his natural destiny.
-The greatest tragedy of all, to my mind, is that
-final tragedy of "Basil" where at last, after long
-years of toil in fiction while fiction was yet
-necessary to his livelihood, he was compelled by his
-training to put into the form of a novel a theme
-not fit for such treatment save in the hands of a
-native and easy story-teller.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-I have said nothing, or little except by implication,
-of the man's style. In many ways it was
-notable and even noble. To such a literary
-intelligence, informed with all the learning of the
-past towards which he leant, much of his style
-was inevitable; it was the man and his own. For
-the greater part it is lucid rather than sparkling,
-clear, if not cold; yet with a subdued rhythm,
-the result of much Latin and more Greek, for
-the metres of the Greek tragedies always inspired
-him with their noble rhythms. Though he was
-often cold and bitter, especially in his
-employment of irony, of which he is the only complete
-master in English literature except Samuel Butler,
-he could rise to heights of passionate description;
-and here and there a sense of luxury tinges
-his words with Tyrian purple&mdash;and this in spite
-of all his sense of restraint, which was more
-marked than that of almost any living writer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When I think of it all, and consider his partly
-wasted years, I even now wonder how it was he
-induced himself to deal with the life he knew so
-well; but while that commercialism exists which
-he abhorred as much as he abhorred the society
-in which it flourishes, there seems no other
-practicable method for a man of letters to attain
-speech and yet to live. I often declared that
-fiction as we wrote it was truly diagnostic of a
-disordered and unnecessarily degraded form of
-civilisation; and he replied with deep feeling
-that to him the idylls of Theocritus, of Moschus,
-the simple tragedies, the natural woes and joys
-of men who ploughed the soil or worked at the
-winepress, were the truest and most vivid forms
-and subjects of Art. Neither before his death
-nor after did he attain the artist's true and great
-reward of recognition in the full sense that
-would have satisfied him even if he had
-remained poor. Nevertheless there were some
-who knew. There are perhaps a few more who
-know now that he is gone and cannot hear them.
-Popularity he never hoped for, and never will
-attain, but he has a secure place in the hierarchy
-of the literature of England which he loved.
-But he appeals now, as he appealed while he
-lived, not to the idle and the foolish, not to the
-fashionable mob, but to the more august tribunal
-of those who have the sympathy which comes
-from understanding.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
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