I
It is the greatest mistake in the
world to imagine that, because the Five Towns is an
industrial district, devoted to the manufacture of
cups and saucers, marbles and door-knobs, therefore
there is no luxury in it.
A writer, not yet deceased, who spent
two nights there, and wrote four hundred pages about
it, has committed herself to the assertion that there
are no private carriages in its streets-only
perambulators and tramcars.
That writer’s reputation is
ruined in the Five Towns. For the Five Towns,
although continually complaining of bad times, is immensely
wealthy, as well as immensely poor-a country
of contrasts, indeed-and private carriages,
if they do not abound, exist at any rate in sufficient
numbers.
Nay, more, automobiles of the most
expensive French and English makes fly dashingly along
its hilly roads and scatter in profusion the rich
black mud thereof.
On a Saturday afternoon in last spring,
such an automobile stood outside the garden entrance
of Bleakridge House, just halfway between Hanbridge
and Bursley. It belonged to young Harold Etches,
of Etches, Limited, the great porcelain manufacturers.
It was a 20 h.p. Panhard, and
was worth over a thousand pounds as it stood there,
throbbing, and Harold was proud of it.
He was also proud of his young wife,
Maud, who, clad in several hundred pounds’ worth
of furs, had taken her seat next to the steering-wheel,
and was waiting for Harold to mount by her side.
The united ages of this handsome and gay couple came
to less than forty-five.
And they owned the motor-car, and
Bleakridge House with its ten bedrooms, and another
house at Llandudno, and a controlling interest in
Etches, Limited, that brought them in seven or eight
thousand a year. They were a pretty tidy example
of what the Five Towns can do when it tries to be
wealthy.
At that moment, when Harold was climbing
into the car, a shabby old man who was walking down
the road, followed by a boy carrying a carpet-bag,
stopped suddenly and touched Harold on the shoulder.
‘Bless us!’ exclaimed
the old man. And the boy and the carpet-bag halted
behind him.
‘What? Uncle Dan?’ said Harold.
‘Uncle Dan!’ cried Maud,
springing up with an enchanting smile. ’Why,
it’s ages since-’
‘And what d’ye reckon
ye’n gotten here?’ demanded the old man.
‘It’s my new car,’ Harold explained.
‘And ca’st drive it, lad?’ asked
the old man.
‘I should think I could!’ said Harold
confidently.
‘H’m!’ commented
the old man, and then he shook hands, and thoroughly
scrutinized Maud.
Now, this is the sort of thing that
can only be seen and appreciated in a district like
the Five Towns, where families spring into splendour
out of nothing in the course of a couple of generations,
and as often as not sink back again into nothing in
the course of two generations more.
The Etches family is among the best
known and the widest spread in the Five Towns.
It originated in three brothers, of whom Daniel was
the youngest. Daniel never married; the other
two did. Daniel was not very fond of money; the
other two were, and they founded the glorious firm
of Etches. Harold was the grandson of one brother,
and Maud was the Granddaughter of the other.
Consequently, they both stood in the same relation
to Dan, who was their great-uncle-addressed
as uncle ’for short’.
There is a good deal of snobbery in
the Five Towns, but it does not exist between relatives.
The relatives in danger of suffering by it would never
stand it. Besides, although Dan’s income
did not exceed two hundred a year, he was really richer
than his grandnephew, since Dan lived on half his
income, whereas Harold, aided by Maud, lived on all
of his.
Consequently, despite the vast difference
in their stations, clothes, and manners, Daniel and
his young relatives met as equals. It would have
been amusing to see anyone-even the Countess
of Chell, who patronized the entire district-attempt
to patronize Dan.
In his time he had been the greatest
pigeon-fancier in the country.
‘So you’re paying a visit to Bursley,
uncle?’ said Maud.
‘Aye!’ Dan replied.
‘I’m back i’ owd Bosley. Sarah-my
housekeeper, thou know’st-’
‘Not dead?’
‘No. Her inna’ dead;
but her sister’s dead, and I’ve give her
a week’s play [holiday], and come away.
Rat Edge’ll see nowt o’ me this side Easter.’
Rat Edge was the name of the village,
five miles off, which Dan had honoured in his declining
years.
‘And where are you going to now?’ asked
Harold.
‘I’m going to owd Sam Shawn’s, by
th’ owd church, to beg a bed.’
‘But you’ll stop with us, of course?’
said Harold.
‘Nay, lad,’ said Dan.
‘Oh yes, uncle,’ Maud insisted.
‘Nay, lass,’ said Dan.
‘Indeed, you will, uncle,’
said Maud positively. ’If you don’t,
I’ll never speak to you again.’
She had a charming fire in her eyes, had Maud.
Daniel, the old bachelor, yielded at once, but in
his own style.
‘I’ll try it for a night, lass,’
said he.
Thus it occurred that the carpet-bag
was carried into Bleakridge House, and that after
some delay Harold and Maud carried off Uncle Dan with
them in the car. He sat in the luxurious tonneau
behind, and Maud had quitted her husband in order
to join him. Possibly she liked the humorous
wrinkles round his grey eyes. Or it may have been
the eyes themselves. And yet Dan was nearer seventy
than sixty.
The car passed everything on the road;
it seemed to be overtaking electric trams all the
time.
‘So ye’n been married a year?’ said
Uncle Dan, smiling at Maud.
‘Oh yes; a year and three days. We’re
quite used to it.’
‘Us’n be in h-ll in a
minute, wench!’ exclaimed Dan, calmly changing
the topic, as Harold swung the car within an inch of
a brewer’s dray, and skidded slightly in the
process. No anti-skidding device would operate
in that generous, oozy mud.
And, as a matter of fact, they were
in Hanbridge the next minute-Hanbridge,
the centre of the religions, the pleasures, and the
vices of the Five Towns.
‘Bless us!’ said the old
man. ’It’s fifteen year and more since
I were here.’
‘Harold,’ said Maud, ’let’s
stop at the Piccadilly Cafe and have some tea.’
‘Cafe?’ asked Dan. ‘What be
that?’
‘It’s a kind of a pub.’
Harold threw the explanation over his shoulder as
he brought the car up with swift dexterity in front
of the Misses Callear’s newly opened afternoon
tea-rooms.
‘Oh, well, if it’s a pub,’
said Uncle Dan, ‘I dunna’ object.’
He frankly admitted, on entering,
that he had never before seen a pub full of little
tables and white cloths, and flowers, and young women,
and silver teapots, and cake-stands. And though
he did pour his tea into his saucer, he was sufficiently
at home there to address the younger Miss Callear
as ‘young woman’, and to inform her that
her beverage was lacking in Orange Pekoe. And
the Misses Callear, who conferred a favour on
their customers in serving them, didn’t like
it.
He became reminiscent.
‘Aye!’ he said, ‘when
I left th’ Five Towns fifty-two years sin’
to go weaving i’ Derbyshire wi’ my mother’s
brother, tay were ten shilling a pun’.
Us had it when us were sick-which wasna’
often. We worked too hard for be sick. Hafe
past five i’ th’ morning till eight of
a night, and then Saturday afternoon walk ten mile
to Glossop with a week’s work on ye’ back,
and home again wi’ th’ brass.
‘They’ve lost th’
habit of work now-a-days, seemingly,’ he went
on, as the car moved off once more, but slowly, because
of the vast crowds emerging from the Knype football
ground. ’It’s football, Saturday;
bands of a Sunday; football, Monday; ill i’ bed
and getting round, Tuesday; do a bit o’ work
Wednesday; football, Thursday; draw wages Friday night;
and football, Saturday. And wages higher than
ever. It’s that as beats me-wages
higher than ever-
‘Ye canna’ smoke with
any comfort i’ these cars,’ he added, when
Harold had got clear of the crowds and was letting
out. He regretfully put his pipe in his pocket.
Harold skirted the whole length of
the Five Towns from south to north, at an average
rate of perhaps thirty miles an hour; and quite soon
the party found itself on the outer side of Turnhill,
and descending the terrible Clough Bank, three miles
long, and of a steepness resembling the steepness
of the side of a house.
The car had warmed to its business,
and Harold took them down that declivity in a manner
which startled even Maud, who long ago had resigned
herself to the fact that she was tied for life to a
young man for whom the word ‘danger’ had
no meaning.
At the bottom they had a swerve skid;
but as there was plenty of room for eccentricities,
nothing happened except that the car tried to climb
the hill again.
‘Well, if I’d known,’
observed Uncle Dan, ’if I’d guessed as
you were reservin’ this treat for th’
owd uncle, I’d ha’ walked.’
The Etches blood in him was pretty
cool, but his nerve had had a shaking.
Then Harold could not restart the
car. The engine had stopped of its own accord,
and, though Harold lavished much physical force on
the magic handle in front, nothing would budge.
Maud and the old man got down, the latter with relief.
‘Stuck, eh?’ said Dan. ‘No
steam?’
‘That’s it!’ Harold
cried, slapping his leg. ’What an ass I
am! She wants petrol, that’s all.
Maud, pass a couple of cans. They’re under
the seat there, behind. No; on the left, child.’
However, there was no petrol on the car.
‘That’s that cursed Durand’
(Durand being the new chauffeur-French,
to match the car). ’I told him not to forget.
Last thing I said to the fool! Maud, I shall
chuck that chap!’
‘Can’t we do anything?’
asked Maud stiffly, putting her lips together.
‘We can walk back to Turnhill
and buy some petrol, some of us!’ snapped Harold.
‘That’s what we can do!’
‘Sithee,’ said Uncle Dan.
‘There’s the Plume o’ Feathers half-a-mile
back. Th’ landlord’s a friend o’
mine. I can borrow his mare and trap, and drive
to Turnhill and fetch some o’ thy petrol, as
thou calls it.’
‘It’s awfully good of you, uncle.’
‘Nay, lad, I’m doing it
for please mysen. But Maud mun come wi’
me. Give us th’ money for th’ petrol,
as thou calls it.’
‘Then I must stay here alone?’ Harold
complained.
‘Seemingly,’ the old man agreed.
After a few words on pigeons, and
a glass of beer, Dan had no difficulty whatever in
borrowing his friend’s white mare and black
trap. He himself helped in the harnessing.
Just as he was driving triumphantly away, with that
delicious vision Maud on his left hand and a stable-boy
behind, he reined the mare in.
‘Give us a couple o’ penny
smokes, matey,’ he said to the landlord, and
lit one.
The mare could go, and Dan could make
her go, and she did go. And the whole turn-out
looked extremely dashing when, ultimately, it dashed
into the glare of the acetylene lamps which the deserted
Harold had lighted on his car.
The red end of a penny smoke in the
gloom of twilight looks exactly as well as the red
end of an Havana. Moreover, the mare caracolled
ornamentally in the rays of the acetylene, and the
stable-boy had to skip down quick and hold her head.
‘How much didst say this traction-engine
had cost thee?’ Dan asked, while Harold was
pouring the indispensable fluid into the tank.
‘Not far off twelve hundred,’
answered Harold lightly. ’Keep that cigar
away from here.’
‘Fifteen pun’ ud buy this
mare,’ Dan announced to the road.
‘Now, all aboard!’ Harold
commanded at length. ’How much shall I give
to the boy for the horse and trap, uncle?’
‘Nothing,’ said Dan.
‘I havena’ finished wi’ that mare
yet. Didst think I was going to trust mysen i’
that thing o’ yours again? I’ll meet
thee at Bleakridge, lad.’
‘And I think I’ll go with uncle too, Harold,’
said Maud.
Whereupon they both got into the trap.
Harold stared at them, astounded.
‘But I say-’ he protested,
beginning to be angry.
Uncle Dan drove away like the wind,
and the stable-boy had all he could do to clamber
up behind.
II
Now, at dinner-time that night, in
the dining-room of the commodious and well-appointed
mansion of the youngest and richest of the Etches,
Uncle Dan stood waiting and waiting for his host and
hostess to appear. He was wearing a Turkish tasselled
smoking-cap to cover his baldness, and he had taken
off his jacket and put on his light, loose overcoat
instead of it, since that was a comfortable habit of
his.
He sent one of the two parlourmaids
upstairs for his carpet slippers out of the carpet-bag,
and he passed part of the time in changing his boots
for his slippers in front of the fire. Then at
length, just as a maid was staggering out under the
load of those enormous boots, Harold appeared, very
correct, but alone.
‘Awfully sorry to keep you waiting,
uncle,’ said Harold, ’but Maud isn’t
well. She isn’t coming down tonight.’
‘What’s up wi’ Maud?’
‘Oh, goodness knows!’
responded Harold gloomily. ’She’s
not well-that’s all.’
‘H’m!’ said Dan. ‘Well,
let’s peck a bit.’
So they sat down and began to peck
a bit, aided by the two maids. Dan pecked with
prodigious enthusiasm, but Harold was not in good pecking
form. And as the dinner progressed, and Harold
sent dish after dish up to his wife, and his wife
returned dish after dish untouched, Harold’s
gloom communicated itself to the house in general.
One felt that if one had penetrated
to the farthest corner of the farthest attic, a little
parcel of spiritual gloom would have already arrived
there. The sense of disaster was in the abode.
The cook was prophesying like anything in the kitchen.
Durand in the garage was meditating upon such of his
master’s pithy remarks as he had been able to
understand.
When the dinner was over, and the
coffee and liqueurs and cigars had been served,
and the two maids had left the dining-room, Dan turned
to his grandnephew and said-
’There’s things as has
changed since my time, lad, but human nature inna’
one on em.’
‘What do you mean, uncle?’
Harold asked awkwardly, self-consciously.
‘I mean as thou’rt a dashed foo’!’
‘Why?’
‘But thou’lt get better o’ that,’
said Dan.
Harold smiled sheepishly.
‘I don’t know what you’re driving
at, uncle,’ said he.
‘Yes, thou dost, lad. Thou’st
been and quarrelled wi’ Maud. And I say
thou’rt a dashed foo’!’
‘As a matter of fact-’ Harold
stammered.
‘And ye’ve never quarrelled
afore. This is th’ fust time. And so
thou’st under th’ impression that th’
world’s come to an end. Well, th’
fust quarrel were bound to come sooner or later.’
‘It isn’t really a quarrel-it’s
about nothing-’
‘I know-I know,’
Dan broke in. ’They always are. As
for it not being a quarrel, lad, call it a picnic
if thou’st a mind. But heir’s sulking
upstairs, and thou’rt sulking down here.’
‘She was cross about the petrol,’
said Harold, glad to relieve his mind. ’I
hadn’t a notion she was cross till I went up
into the bedroom. Not a notion! I explained
to her it wasn’t my fault. I argued it out
with her very calmly. I did my best to reason
with her-’
’Listen here, young ‘un,’
Dan interrupted him. ‘How old art?’
‘Twenty-three.’
’Thou may’st live another
fifty years. If thou’st a mind to spend
’em i’ peace, thoud’st better give
up reasoning wi’ women. Give it up right
now! It’s worse nor drink, as a habit.
Kiss ’em, cuddle ’em, beat ’em.
But dunna’ reason wi’ ’em.’
‘What should you have done in my place?’
Harold asked.
‘I should ha’ told Maud her was quite
right.’
‘But she wasn’t.’
‘Then I should ha’ winked
at mysen i’ th’ glass,’ continued
Dan, ’and kissed her.’
‘That’s all very well-’
‘Naturally,’ said Dan,
‘her wanted to show off that car i’ front
o’ me. That was but natural. And her
was vexed when it went wrong.’
‘But I told her-I explained to her.’
‘Her’s a handsome little
wench,’ Dan proceeded. ’And a good
heart. But thou’st got ten times her brains,
lad, and thou ought’st to ha’ given in.’
‘But I can’t always be-’
’It’s allus them
as gives in as has their own way. I remember her
grandfather-he was th’ eldest o’
us-he quarrelled wi’ his wife afore
they’d been married a week, and she raced him
all over th’ town wi’ a besom-’
‘With a besom, uncle?’
exclaimed Harold, shocked at these family disclosures.
‘Wi’ a besom,’ said
Dan. That come o’ reasoning wi’ a
woman. It taught him a lesson, I can tell thee.
And afterwards he always said as nowt was worth a
quarrel-nowt! And it isna’.’
‘I don’t think Maud will
race me all over the town with a besom,’ Harold
remarked reflectively.
‘There’s worse things
nor that,’ said Dan. ‘Look thee here,
get out o’ th’ house for a’ ‘our.
Go to th’ Conservative Club, and then come back.
Dost understand?’
‘But what-’
‘Hook it, lad!’ said Dan curtly.
And just as Harold was leaving the
room, like a school-boy, he called him in again.
‘I havena’ told thee,
Harold, as I’m subject to attacks. I’m
getting up in years. I go off like. It isna’
fits, but I go off. And if it should happen while
I’m here, dunna’ be alarmed.’
‘What are we to do?’
‘Do nothing. I come round
in a minute or two. Whatever ye do, dunna’
give me brandy. It might kill me-so
th’ doctor says. I’m only telling
thee in case.’
‘Well, I hope you won’t have an attack,’
said Harold.
‘It’s a hundred to one I dunna’,’
said Dan.
And Harold departed.
Soon afterwards Uncle Dan wandered into a kitchen
full of servants.
‘Show me th’ missis’s bedroom, one
on ye,’ he said to the crowd.
And presently he was knocking at Maud’s door.
‘Maudie!’
‘Who is it?’ came a voice.
‘It’s thy owd uncle. Can’st
spare a minute?’
Maud appeared at the door, smiling, and arrayed in
a peignoir.
‘He’s gone out,’
said Dan, implying scorn of the person who had gone
out. ‘Wilt come down-stairs?’
‘Where’s he gone to?’ Maud demanded.
She didn’t even pretend she was ill.
‘Th’ Club,’ said Dan.
And in about a hundred seconds or
so he had her in the drawing-room, and she was actually
pouring out gin for him. She looked ravishing
in that peignoir, especially as she was munching an
apple, and balancing herself on the arm of a chair.
‘So he’s been quarrelling with ye, Maud?’
Dan began.
‘No; not quarrelling, uncle.’
‘Well, call it what ye’n
a mind,’ said Dan. ’Call it a prayer-meeting.
I didn’t notice as ye came down for supper-dinner,
as ye call it.’
‘It was like this, uncle,’
she said. ’Poor Harry was very angry with
himself about that petrol. Of course, he wanted
the car to go well while you were in it; and he came
up-stairs and grumbled at me for leaving him all alone
and driving home with you.’
‘Oh, did he?’ exclaimed Dan.
’Yes. I explained to him
that of course I couldn’t leave you all alone.
Then he got hot. I kept quite calm. I reasoned
it out with him as quietly as I could-’
‘Maudie, Maudie,’ protested
the old man, ‘thou’rt th’ prettiest
wench i’ this town, though I am thy great-uncle,
and thou’st got plenty o’ brains-a
sight more than that husband o’ thine.’
‘Do you think so, uncle?’
‘Aye, but thou hasna’
made use o’ ’em tonight. Thou’rt
a foolish wench, wench. At thy time o’
life, and after a year o’ th’ married state,
thou ought’st to know better than reason wi’
a man in a temper.’
‘But, really, uncle, it was
so absurd of Harold, wasn’t it?’
‘Aye!’ said Dan.
‘But why didst-na’ give in and kiss
him, and smack his face for him?’
‘There was nothing to give in about, uncle.’
‘There never is,’ said
Dan. ’There never is. That’s
the point. Still, thou’rt nigh crying,
wench.’
‘I’m not, uncle,’
she contradicted, the tears falling on to the apple.
‘And Harold’s using bad
language all up Trafalgar Road, I lay,’ Dan
added.
‘It was all Harold’s fault,’ said
Maud.
’Why, in course it were Harold’s
fault. But nowt’s worth a quarrel, my dear-nowt.
I remember Harold’s grandfeyther-he
were th’ second of us, your grandfeyther were
the eldest, and I were the youngest-I remember
Harold’s grandfeyther chasing his wife all over
th’ town wi’ a besom a week after they
were married.’
‘With a besom!’ murmured
Maud, pained and forgetting to cry. ’Harold’s
grandfather, not mine?’
‘Wi’ a besom,’ Dan
repeated, nodding. ’They never quarrelled
again-ne’er again. Th’
old woman allus said after that as quarrels were
for fools. And her was right.’
‘I don’t see Harold chasing
me across Bursley with a besom,’ said Maud primly.
’But what you say is quite right, you dear old
uncle. Men are queer-I mean husbands.
You can’t argue with them. You’d much
better give in-’
‘And have your own way after all.’
‘And perhaps Harold was-’
Harold’s step could be heard in the hall.
‘Oh, dear!’ cried Maud. ‘What
shall I do?’
‘I’m not feeling very
well,’ whispered Uncle Dan weakly. ’I
have these ’ere attacks sometimes. There’s
only one thing as’ll do me any good-brandy.’
And his head fell over one side of
the chair, and he looked precisely like a corpse.
‘Maud, what are you doing?’
almost shouted Harold, when he came into the room.
She was putting a liqueur-glass to Uncle Dan’s
lips.
‘Oh, Harold,’ she cried,
’uncle’s had an attack of some sort.
I’m giving him some brandy.’
‘But you mustn’t give
him brandy,’ said Harold authoritatively to her.
‘But I must give him brandy,’
said Maud. ’He told me that brandy was
the only thing to save him.’
‘Nonsense, child!’ Harold
persisted. ’Uncle told me all about
these attacks. They’re perfectly harmless
so long as he doesn’t have brandy. The
doctors have warned him that brandy will be fatal.’
’Harold, you are absolutely
mistaken. Don’t you understand that uncle
has only this minute told me that he must have
brandy?’
And she again approached the glass
to the pale lips of the old man. His tasselled
Turkish smoking-cap had fallen to the floor, and the
hemisphere of his bald head glittered under the gas.
‘Maud, I forbid you!’
And Harold put a hand on the glass. ’It’s
a matter of life and death. You must have misunderstood
uncle.’
‘It was you who misunderstood
uncle,’ said Maud. ’Of course, if
you mean to prevent me by brute force-’
They both paused and glanced at Daniel,
and then at each other.
‘Perhaps you are right, dearest,’
said Harold, in a new tone.
‘No, dearest,’ said Maud,
also in a new tone. ’I expect you are right.
I must have misunderstood.’
’No, no, Maud. Give him
the brandy by all means. I’ve no doubt you’re
right.’
‘But if you think I’d better not give
it him-’
’But I would prefer you to give
it him, dearest. It isn’t likely you would
be mistaken in a thing like that.’
‘I would prefer to be guided by you, dearest,’
said Maud.
So they went on for several minutes,
each giving way to the other in the most angelic manner.
‘And meantime I’m
supposed to be dying, am I?’
roared Uncle Dan, suddenly sitting up. ‘You’d
let th’ old uncle peg out while you practise
his precepts! A nice pair you make! I thought
for see which on ye’ ud’ give way to th’
other, but I didna’ anticipate as both on ye
‘ud be ready to sacrifice my life for th’
sake o’ domestic peace.’
‘But, uncle,’ they both
said later, amid the universal and yet rather shamefaced
peace rejoicings, ‘you said nothing was worth
a quarrel.’
‘And I was right,’ answered
Dan; ‘I was right. Th’ Divorce Court
is full o’ fools as have begun married life
by trying to convince the other fool, instead o’
humouring him-or her. Kiss us, Maud.’