I
It was in the train that I learnt
of his death. Although a very greedy eater of
literature, I can only enjoy reading when I have little
time for reading. Give me three hours of absolute
leisure, with nothing to do but read, and I instantly
become almost incapable of the act. So it is
always on railway journeys, and so it was that evening.
I was in the middle of Wordsworth’s Excursion;
I positively gloated over it, wondering why I should
have allowed a mere rumour that it was dull to prevent
me from consuming it earlier in my life. But do
you suppose I could continue with Wordsworth in the
train? I could not. I stared out of the
windows; I calculated the speed of the train by my
watch; I thought of my future and my past; I drew
forth my hopes, examined them, polished them, and
put them back again; I forgave myself for my sins;
and I dreamed of the exciting conquest of a beautiful
and brilliant woman that I should one day achieve.
In short, I did everything that men habitually do
under such circumstances. The Gazette was lying
folded on the seat beside me: one of the two London
evening papers that a man of taste may peruse without
humiliating himself. How appetizing a morsel,
this sheet new and smooth from the press, this sheet
written by an ironic, understanding, small band of
men for just a few thousand persons like me, ruthlessly
scornful of the big circulations and the idols of
the people! If the Gazette and its sole rival
ceased to appear, I do believe that my existence and
many similar existences would wear a different colour.
Could one dine alone in Jermyn Street or Panton Street
without this fine piquant evening commentary on the
gross newspapers of the morning? (Now you perceive
what sort of a man I am, and you guess, rightly, that
my age is between thirty and forty.) But the train
had stopped at Rugby and started again, and more than
half of my journey was accomplished, ere at length
I picked up the Gazette, and opened it with the false
calm of a drunkard who has sworn that he will not
wet his lips before a certain hour. For, well
knowing from experience that I should suffer acute
ennui in the train, I had, when buying the Gazette
at Euston, taken oath that I would not even glance
at it till after Rugby; it is always the final hour
of these railway journeys that is the nethermost hell.
The second thing that I saw in the
Gazette (the first was of course the ‘Entremets’
column of wit, humour, and parody, very uneven in its
excellence) was the death of Simon Fuge. There
was nearly a column about it, signed with initials,
and the subheading of the article ran, ‘Sudden
death of a great painter’. That was characteristic
of the Gazette. That Simon Fuge was indeed a
great painter is now admitted by most dilettantes,
though denied by a few. But to the great public
he was not one of the few great names. To the
great public he was just a medium name. Ten to
one that in speaking of him to a plain person you
would feel compelled to add: ‘The painter,
you know,’ and the plain person would respond:
‘Oh yes,’ falsely pretending that he was
perfectly familiar with the name. Simon Fuge had
many friends on the press, and it was solely owing
to the loyalty of these friends in the matter of obituary
notices that the great public heard more of Simon
Fuge in the week after his death than it had heard
of him during the thirty-five years of his life.
It may be asked: Why, if he had so many and such
loyal friends on the press, these friends did not take
measures to establish his reputation before he died?
The answer is that editors will not allow journalists
to praise a living artist much in excess of the esteem
in which the public holds him; they are timid.
But when a misunderstood artist is dead the editors
will put no limit on laudation. I am not on the
press, but it happens that I know the world.
Of all the obituary notices of Simon
Fuge, the Gazette’s was the first. Somehow
the Gazette had obtained exclusive news of the little
event, and some one high up on the Gazette’s
staff had a very exalted notion indeed of Fuge, and
must have known him personally. Fuge received
his deserts as a painter in that column of print.
He was compared to Sorolla y Bastida for vitality;
the morbidezza of his flesh-tints was stated to be
unrivalled even by-I forget the name, painting
is not my speciality. The writer blandly inquired
why examples of Fuge’s work were to be seen
in the Luxembourg, at Vienna, at Florence, at Dresden;
and not, for instance, at the Tate Gallery, or in the
Chantrey collection. The writer also inquired,
with equal blandness, why a painter who had been on
the hanging committee of the Societe Nationale
des Beaux Arts at Paris should not have been found
worthy to be even an A.R.A. in London. In brief,
old England ‘caught it’, as occurred somewhere
or other most nights in the columns of the Gazette.
Fuge also received his deserts as a man. And
the Gazette did not conceal that he had not been a
man after the heart of the British public. He
had been too romantically and intensely alive for
that. The writer gave a little penportrait of
him. It was very good, recalling his tricks of
manner, his unforgettable eyes, and his amazing skill
in talking about himself and really interesting everybody
in himself. There was a special reference to
one of Fuge’s most dramatic recitals-a
narration of a night spent in a boat on Ham Lake with
two beautiful girls, sisters, natives of the Five
Towns, where Fuge was born. Said the obituarist:
’Those two wonderful creatures who played so
large a part in Simon Fuge’s life.’
This death was a shock to me.
It took away my ennui for the rest of the journey.
I too had known Simon Fuge. That is to say, I
had met him once, at a soiree, and on that single
occasion, as luck had it, he had favoured the company
with the very narration to which the Gazette contributor
referred. I remembered well the burning brilliance
of his blue-black eyes, his touching assurance that
all of us were necessarily interested in his adventures,
and the extremely graphic and convincing way in which
he reconstituted for us the nocturnal scene on Ham
Lake-the two sisters, the boat, the rustle
of trees, the lights on shore, and his own difficulty
in managing the oars, one of which he lost for half-an-hour
and found again. It was by such details as that
about the oar that, with a tint of humour, he added
realism to the romantic quality of his tales.
He seemed to have no réticences concerning himself.
Decidedly he allowed things to be understood...!
Yes, his was a romantic figure, the figure of one to
whom every day, and every hour of the day, was coloured
by the violence of his passion for existence.
His pictures had often an unearthly beauty, but for
him they were nothing but faithful renderings of what
he saw.
My mind dwelt on those two beautiful
sisters. Those two beautiful sisters appealed
to me more than anything else in the Gazette’s
obituary. Surely-Simon Fuge had obviously
been a man whose emotional susceptibility and virile
impulsiveness must have opened the door for him to
multifarious amours-but surely he had not
made himself indispensable to both sisters simultaneously.
Surely even he had not so far forgotten that Ham Lake
was in the middle of a country called England, and
not the ornamental water in the Bois de Boulogne!
And yet.... The delicious possibility of ineffable
indiscretions on the part of Simon Fuge monopolized
my mind till the train stopped at Knype, and I descended.
Nevertheless, I think I am a serious and fairly insular
Englishman. It is truly astonishing how a serious
person can be obsessed by trifles that, to speak mildly,
do not merit sustained attention.
I wondered where Ham Lake was.
I knew merely that it lay somewhere in the environs
of the Five Towns. What put fuel on the fire of
my interest in the private affairs of the dead painter
was the slightly curious coincidence that on the evening
of the news of his death I should be travelling to
the Five Towns-and for the first time in
my life. Here I was at Knype, which, as I had
gathered from Bradshaw, and from my acquaintance Brindley,
was the traffic centre of the Five Towns.
II
My knowledge of industrial districts
amounted to nothing. Born in Devonshire, educated
at Cambridge, and fulfilling my destiny as curator
of a certain department of antiquities at the British
Museum, I had never been brought into contact with
the vast constructive material activities of Lancashire,
Yorkshire, and Staffordshire. I had but passed
through them occasionally on my way to Scotland, scorning
their necessary grime with the perhaps too facile
disdain of the clean-faced southerner, who is apt
to forget that coal cannot walk up unaided out of
the mine, and that the basin in which he washes his
beautiful purity can only be manufactured amid conditions
highly repellent. Well, my impressions of the
platform of Knype station were unfavourable. There
was dirt in the air; I could feel it at once on my
skin. And the scene was shabby, undignified,
and rude. I use the word ‘rude’ in
all its senses. What I saw was a pushing, exclamatory,
ill-dressed, determined crowd, each member of which
was bent on the realization of his own desires by
the least ceremonious means. If an item of this
throng wished to get past me, he made me instantly
aware of his wish by abruptly changing my position
in infinite space; it was not possible to misconstrue
his meaning. So much crude force and naked will-to-live
I had not before set eyes on. In truth, I felt
myself to be a very brittle, delicate bit of intellectual
machinery in the midst of all these physical manifestations.
Yet I am a tallish man, and these potters appeared
to me to be undersized, and somewhat thin too!
But what elbows! What glaring egoistic eyes!
What terrible decisiveness in action!
‘Now then, get in if ye’re
going!’ said a red-haired porter to me curtly.
‘I’m not going. I’ve just got
out,’ I replied.
‘Well, then, why dunna’
ye stand out o’ th’ wee and let them get
in as wants to?’
Unable to offer a coherent answer
to this crushing demand, I stood out of the way.
In the light of further knowledge I now surmise that
that porter was a very friendly and sociable porter.
But at the moment I really believed that, taking me
for the least admirable and necessary of God’s
creatures, he meant to convey his opinion to me for
my own good. I glanced up at the lighted windows
of the train, and saw the composed, careless faces
of haughty persons who were going direct from London
to Manchester, and to whom the Five Towns was nothing
but a delay. I envied them. I wanted to
return to the shelter of the train. When it left,
I fancied that my last link with civilization was broken.
Then another train puffed in, and it was simply taken
by assault in a fraction of time, to an incomprehensible
bawling of friendly sociable porters. Season-ticket
holders at Finsbury Park think they know how to possess
themselves of a train; they are deceived. So this
is where Simon Fuge came from (I reflected)!
The devil it is (I reflected)! I tried to conceive
what the invaders of the train would exclaim if confronted
by one of Simon Fuge’s pictures. I could
imagine only one word, and that a monosyllable, that
would meet the case of their sentiments. And
his dalliance, his tangential nocturnal deviations
in gondolas with exquisite twin odalisques!
There did not seem to be much room for amorous elegance
in the lives of these invaders. And his death!
What would they say of his death? Upon my soul,
as I stood on that dirty platform, in a milieu of
advertisements of soap, boots, and aperients, I began
to believe that Simon Fuge never had lived, that he
was a mere illusion of his friends and his small public.
All that I saw around me was a violent negation of
Simon Fuge, that entity of rare, fine, exotic sensibilities,
that perfectly mad gourmet of sensations, that exotic
seer of beauty.
I caught sight of my acquaintance
and host, Mr Robert Brindley, coming towards me on
the platform. Hitherto I had only met him in London,
when, as chairman of the committee of management of
the Wedgwood Institution and School of Art at Bursley,
he had called on me at the British Museum for advice
as to loan exhibits. He was then dressed like
a self-respecting tourist. Now, although an architect
by profession, he appeared to be anxious to be mistaken
for a sporting squire. He wore very baggy knickerbockers,
and leggings, and a cap. This raiment was apparently
the agreed uniform of the easy classes in the Five
Towns; for in the crowd I had noticed several such
consciously superior figures among the artisans.
Mr Brindley, like most of the people in the station,
had a slightly pinched and chilled air, as though that
morning he had by inadvertence omitted to don those
garments which are not seen. He also, like most
of the people there, but not to the same extent, had
a somewhat suspicious and narrowly shrewd regard, as
who should say: ’If any person thinks he
can get the better of me by a trick, let him try-that’s
all.’ But the moment his eye encountered
mine, this expression vanished from his face, and he
gave me a candid smile.
‘I hope you’re well,’
he said gravely, squeezing my hand in a sort of vice
that he carried at the end of his right arm.
I reassured him.
‘Oh, I’m all right,’ he said, in
response to the expression of my hopes.
It was a relief to me to see him.
He took charge of me. I felt, as it were, safe
in his arms. I perceived that, unaided and unprotected,
I should never have succeeded in reaching Bursley
from Knype.
A whistle sounded.
‘Better get in,’ he suggested;
and then in a tone of absolute command: ‘Give
me your bag.’
I obeyed. He opened the door of a first-class
carriage.
‘I’m travelling second,’ I explained.
‘Never mind. Get in.’
In his tones was a kindly exasperation.
I got in; he followed. The train moved.
‘Ah!’ breathed Mr Brindley,
blowing out much air and falling like a sack of coal
into a corner seat. He was a thin man, aged about
thirty, with brown eyes, and a short blonde beard.
Conversation was at first difficult.
Personally I am not a bubbling fount of gay nothings
when I find myself alone with a comparative stranger.
My drawbridge goes up as if by magic, my postern is
closed, and I peer cautiously through the narrow slits
of my turret to estimate the chances of peril.
Nor was Mr Brindley offensively affable. However,
we struggled into a kind of chatter. I had come
to the Five Towns, on behalf of the British Museum,
to inspect and appraise, with a view to purchase by
the nation, some huge slip-decorated dishes, excessively
curious according to photographs, which had been discovered
in the cellars of the Conservative Club at Bursley.
Having shared in the negotiations for my visit, Mr
Brindley had invited me to spend the night at his
house. We were able to talk about all this.
And when we had talked about all this we were able
to talk about the singular scenery of coal dust, potsherds,
flame and steam, through which the train wound its
way. It was squalid ugliness, but it was squalid
ugliness on a scale so vast and overpowering that it
became sublime. Great furnaces gleamed red in
the twilight, and their fires were reflected in horrible
black canals; processions of heavy vapour drifted
in all directions across the sky, over what acres of
mean and miserable brown architecture! The air
was alive with the most extraordinary, weird, gigantic
sounds. I do not think the Five Towns will ever
be described: Dante lived too soon. As for
the erratic and exquisite genius, Simon Fuge, and
his odalisques reclining on silken cushions on
the enchanted bosom of a lake-I could no
longer conjure them up even faintly in my mind.
‘I suppose you know Simon Fuge is dead?’
I remarked, in a pause.
‘No! Is he?’ said Mr Brindley, with
interest. ‘Is it in the paper?’
He did not seem to be quite sure that it would be
in the paper.
‘Here it is,’ said I, and I passed him
the Gazette.
‘Ha!’ he exclaimed explosively.
This ‘Ha!’ was entirely different from
his ‘Ah!’ Something shot across his eyes,
something incredibly rapid-too rapid for
a wink; yet it could only be called a wink. It
was the most subtle transmission of the beyond-speech
that I have ever known any man accomplish, and it
endeared Mr Brindley to me. But I knew not its
significance.
‘What do they think of Fuge down here?’
I asked.
‘I don’t expect they think of him,’
said my host.
He pulled a pouch and a packet of cigarette papers
from his pocket.
‘Have one of mine,’ I suggested, hastily
producing my case.
He did not even glance at its contents.
‘No, thanks,’ he said curtly.
I named my brand.
‘My dear sir,’ he said,
with a return to his kindly exasperation, ’no
cigarette that is not fresh made can be called a cigarette.’
I stood corrected. ’You may pay as much
as you like, but you can never buy cigarettes as good
as I can make out of an ounce of fresh B.D.V. tobacco.
Can you roll one?’ I had to admit that I could
not, I who in Bloomsbury was accepted as an authority
on cigarettes as well as on porcelain. ‘I’ll
roll you one, and you shall try it.’
He did so.
I gathered from his solemnity that
cigarettes counted in the life of Mr Brindley.
He could not take cigarettes other than seriously.
The worst of it was that he was quite right.
The cigarette which he constructed for me out of his
wretched B.D.V. tobacco was adorable, and I have made
my own cigarettes ever since. You will find B.D.V.
tobacco all over the haunts frequented by us of the
Museum now-a-days, solely owing to the expertise of
Mr Brindley. A terribly capable and positive man!
He knew, and he knew that he knew.
He said nothing further as to Simon
Fuge. Apparently he had forgotten the decease.
‘Do you often see the Gazette?’
I asked, perhaps in the hope of attracting him back
to Fuge.
‘No,’ he said; ‘the musical criticism
is too rotten.’
Involuntarily I bridled. It was
startling, and it was not agreeable, to have one’s
favourite organ so abruptly condemned by a provincial
architect in knickerbockers and a cap, in the midst
of all that industrial ugliness. What could the
Five Towns know about art? Yet here was this
fellow condemning the Gazette on artistic grounds.
I offered no defence, because he was right-again.
But I did not like it.
‘Do you ever see the Manchester
Guardian?’ he questioned, carrying the war into
my camp.
‘No,’ I said.
‘Pity!’ he ejaculated.
‘I’ve often heard that it’s a very
good paper,’ I said politely.
‘It isn’t a very good
paper,’ he laid me low. ’It’s
the best paper in the world. Try it for a month-it
gets to Euston at half-past eight-and then
tell me what you think.’
I saw that I must pull myself together.
I had glided into the Five Towns in a mood of gentle,
wise condescension. I saw that it would be as
well, for my own honour and safety, to put on another
mood as quickly as possible, otherwise I might be
left for dead on the field. Certainly the fellow
was provincial, curt, even brutal in his despisal
of diplomacy. Certainly he exaggerated the importance
of cigarettes in the great secular scheme of evolution.
But he was a man; he was a very tonic dose. I
thought it would be safer to assume that he knew everything,
and that the British Museum knew very little.
Yet at the British Museum he had been quite different,
quite deferential and rather timid. Still, I
liked him. I liked his eyes.
The train stopped at an incredible
station situated in the centre of a rolling desert
whose surface consisted of broken pots and cinders.
I expect no one to believe this.
‘Here we are,’ said he
blithely. ‘No, give me the bag. Porter!’
His summons to the solitary porter
was like a clap of thunder.
III
He lived in a low, blackish-crimson
heavy-browed house at the corner of a street along
which electric cars were continually thundering.
There was a thin cream of mud on the pavements and
about two inches of mud in the roadway, rich, nourishing
mud like Indian ink half-mixed. The prospect
of carrying a pound or so of that unique mud into a
civilized house affrighted me, but Mr Brindley opened
his door with his latchkey and entered the abode as
unconcernedly as if some fair repentent had cleansed
his feet with her tresses.
‘Don’t worry too much
about the dirt,’ he said. ‘You’re
in Bursley.’
The house seemed much larger inside
than out. A gas-jet burnt in the hall, and sombre
portieres gave large mysterious hints of rooms.
I could hear, in the distance, the noise of frizzling
over a fire, and of a child crying. Then a tall,
straight, wellmade, energetic woman appeared like
a conjuring trick from behind a portiere.
‘How do you do, Mr Loring?’
she greeted me, smiling. ’So glad to meet
you.’
‘My wife,’ Mr Brindley explained gravely.
‘Now, I may as well tell you
now, Bob,’ said she, still smiling at me.
’Bobbie’s got a sore throat and it may
be mumps; the chimney’s been on fire and we’re
going to be summoned; and you owe me sixpence.’
‘Why do I owe you sixpence?’
‘Because Annie’s had her baby and it’s
a girl.’
‘That’s all right. Supper ready?’
‘Supper is waiting for you.’
She laughed. ’Whenever
I have anything to tell my husband, I always tell
him at once!’ she said. ‘No matter
who’s there.’ She pronounced ‘once’
with a wholehearted enthusiasm for its vowel sound
that I have never heard equalled elsewhere, and also
with a very magnified ‘w’ at the beginning
of it. Often when I hear the word ‘once’
pronounced in less downright parts of the world, I
remember how they pronounce it in the Five Towns,
and there rises up before me a complete picture of
the district, its atmosphere, its spirit.
Mr Brindley led me to a large bathroom
that had a faint odour of warm linen. In addition
to a lot of assorted white babyclothes there were
millions of towels in that bathroom. He turned
on a tap and the place was instantly full of steam
from a jet of boiling water.
‘Now, then,’ he said, ‘you can start.’
As he showed no intention of leaving
me, I did start. ’Mind you don’t
scald yourself,’ he warned me, ‘that water’s
hot.’ While I was washing, he prepared
to wash. I suddenly felt as if I had been intimate
with him and his wife for about ten years.
‘So this is Bursley!’ I murmured, taking
my mouth out of a towel.
‘Bosley, we call it,’
he said. ’Do you know the limerick-“There
was a young woman of Bosley"?’
‘No.’
He intoned the local limerick.
It was excellently good; not meet for a mixed company,
but a genuine delight to the true amateur. One
good limerick deserves another. It happened that
I knew a number of the unprinted Rossetti limericks,
precious things, not at all easy to get at. I
detailed them to Mr Brindley, and I do not exaggerate
when I say that I impressed him. I recovered
all the ground I had lost upon cigarettes and newspapers.
He appreciated those limericks with a juster taste
than I should have expected. So, afterwards, did
his friends. My belief is that I am to this day
known and revered in Bursley, not as Loring the porcelain
expert from the British Museum, but as the man who
first, as it were, brought the good news of the Rossetti
limericks from Ghent to Aix.
‘Now, Bob,’ an amicable
voice shrieked femininely up from the ground-floor,
’am I to send the soup to the bathroom or are
you coming down?’
A limerick will make a man forget even his dinner.
Mr Brindley performed once more with
his eyes that something that was, not a wink, but
a wink unutterably refined and spiritualized.
This time I comprehended its import. Its import
was to the effect that women are women.
We descended, Mr Brindley still in his knickerbockers.
‘This way,’ he said, drawing
aside a portiere. Mrs Brindley, as we entered
the room, was trotting a male infant round and round
a table charged with everything digestible and indigestible.
She handed the child, who was in its nightdress, to
a maid.
‘Say good night to father.’
‘Good ni’, faver,’ the interesting
creature piped.
‘By-bye, sonny,’ said
the father, stooping to tickle. ‘I suppose,’
he added, when maid and infant had gone, ’if
one’s going to have mumps, they may as well
all have it together.’
‘Oh, of course,’ the mother
agreed cheerfully. ’I shall stick them all
into a room.’
‘How many children have you?’
I inquired with polite curiosity.
‘Three,’ she said; ‘that’s
the eldest that you’ve seen.’
What chiefly struck me about Mrs Brindley
was her serene air of capableness, of having a self-confidence
which experience had richly justified. I could
see that she must be an extremely sensible mother.
And yet she had quite another aspect too-how
shall I explain it?-as though she had only
had children in her spare time.
We sat down. The room was lighted
by four candles, on the table. I am rather short-sighted,
and so I did not immediately notice that there were
low book-cases all round the walls. Why the presence
of these book-cases should have caused me a certain
astonishment I do not know, but it did. I thought
of Knype station, and the scenery, and then the other
little station, and the desert of pots and cinders,
and the mud in the road and on the pavement and in
the hall, and the baby-linen in the bathroom, and
three children all down with mumps, and Mr Brindley’s
cap and knickerbockers and cigarettes; and somehow
the books-I soon saw there were at least
a thousand of them, and not circulating-library books,
either, but books-well, they administered
a little shock to me.
To Mr Brindley’s right hand
was a bottle of Bass and a corkscrew.
‘Beer!’ he exclaimed,
with solemn ecstasy, with an ecstasy gross and luscious.
And, drawing the cork, he poured out a glass, with
fine skill in the management of froth, and pushed
it towards me.
‘No, thanks,’ I said.
‘No beer!’ he murmured, with benevolent,
puzzled disdain. ‘Whisky?’
‘No, thanks,’ I said. ‘Water.’
‘I know what Mr Loring
would like,’ said Mrs Brindley, jumping up.
’I know what Mr Loring would like.’
She opened a cupboard and came back to the table with
a bottle, which she planted in front of me. ’Wouldn’t
you, Mr Loring?’
It was a bottle of mercurey, a wine
which has given me many dreadful dawns, but which
I have never known how to refuse.
‘I should,’ I admitted; ‘but it’s
very bad for me.’
‘Nonsense!’ said she. She looked
at her husband in triumph.
‘Beer!’ repeated Mr Brindley
with undiminished ecstasy, and drank about two-thirds
of a glass at one try. Then he wiped the froth
from his moustache. ‘Ah!’ he breathed
low and soft. ‘Beer!’
They called the meal supper.
The term is inadequate. No term that I can think
of would be adequate. Of its kind the thing was
perfect. Mrs Brindley knew that it was perfect.
Mr Brindley also knew that it was perfect. There
were prawns in aspic. I don’t know why I
should single out that dish, except that it seemed
strange to me to have crossed the desert of pots and
cinders in order to encounter prawns in aspic.
Mr Brindley ate more cold roast beef than I had ever
seen any man eat before, and more pickled walnuts.
It is true that the cold roast beef transcended all
the cold roast beef of my experience. Mrs Brindley
regaled herself largely on trifle, which Mr Brindley
would not approach, preferring a most glorious Stilton
cheese. I lost touch, temporarily, with the intellectual
life. It was Mr Brindley who recalled me to it.
‘Jane,’ he said. (This
was at the beef and pickles stage.)
No answer.
‘Jane!’
Mrs Brindley turned to me. ‘My
name is not Jane,’ she said, laughing, and making
a moue simultaneously. ’He only calls
me that to annoy me. I told him I wouldn’t
answer to it, and I won’t. He thinks I shall
give in because we’ve got “company”!
But I won’t treat you as “company”,
Mr Loring, and I shall expect you to take my side.
What dreadful weather we’re having, aren’t
we?’
‘Dreadful!’ I joined in the game.
‘Jane!’
‘Did you have a comfortable journey down?’
‘Yes, thank you.’
‘Well, then, Mary!’ Mr Brindley yielded.
‘Thank you very much, Mr Loring,
for your kind assistance,’ said his wife.
‘Yes, dearest?’
Mr Brindley glanced at me over his second glass of
beer.
‘If those confounded kids are
going to have mumps,’ he addressed his words
apparently into the interior of the glass, ’it
probably means the doctor, and the doctor means money,
and I shan’t be able to afford the Hortulus
Animoe.’
I opened my ears.
‘My husband goes stark staring
mad sometimes,’ said Mrs Brindley to me.
’It lasts for a week or so, and pretty nearly
lands us in the workhouse. This time it’s
the Hortulus Animoe. Do you know what it
is? I don’t.’
‘No,’ I said, and the
prestige of the British Museum trembled. Then
I had a vague recollection. ’There’s
an illuminated manuscript of that name in the Imperial
Library of Vienna, isn’t there?’
‘You’ve got it in one,’
said Mr Brindley. ‘Wife, pass those walnuts.’
‘You aren’t by any chance buying it?’
I laughed.
‘No,’ he said. ’A
Johnny at Utrecht is issuing a facsimile of it, with
all the hundred odd miniatures in colour. It will
be the finest thing in reproduction ever done.
Only seventy-five copies for England.’
‘How much?’ I asked.
‘Well,’ said he, with
a preliminary look at his wife,’thirty-three
pounds.’
‘Thirty-three pounds!’ she screamed.
‘You never told me.’
‘My wife never will understand,’
said Mr Brindley, ’that complete confidence
between two human beings is impossible.’
‘I shall go out as a milliner,
that’s all,’ Mrs Brindley returned.
‘Remember, the Dictionary of National Biography
isn’t paid for yet.’
’I’m glad I forgot that,
otherwise I shouldn’t have ordered the Hortulus.’
‘You’ve not ordered it?’
‘Yes, I have. It’ll be here tomorrow-at
least the first part will.’
Mrs Brindley affected to fall back dying in her chair.
‘Quite mad!’ she complained to me.
‘Quite mad. It’s a hopeless case.’
But obviously she was very proud of the incurable
lunatic.
‘But you’re a book-collector!’
I exclaimed, so struck by these feats of extravagance
in a modest house that I did not conceal my amazement.
‘Did you think I collected postage-stamps?’
the husband retorted. ’No, I’m
not a book-collector, but our doctor is. He has
a few books, if you like. Still, I wouldn’t
swop him; he’s much too fond of fashionable
novels.’
‘You know you’re always
up his place,’ said the wife; ’and I wonder
what I should do if it wasn’t for the
doctor’s novels!’ The doctor was evidently
a favourite of hers.
‘I’m not always up at
his place,’ the husband contradicted. ’You
know perfectly well I never go there before midnight.
And he knows perfectly well that I only go because
he has the best whisky in the town. By the way,
I wonder whether he knows that Simon Fuge is dead.
He’s got one of his etchings. I’ll
go up.’
‘Who’s Simon Fuge?’ asked Mrs Brindley.
‘Don’t you remember old Fuge that kept
the Blue Bell at Cauldon?’
‘What? Simple Simon?’
‘Yes. Well, his son.’
’Oh! I remember. He
ran away from home once, didn’t he, and his mother
had a port-wine stain on her left cheek? Oh, of
course. I remember him perfectly. He came
down to the Five Towns some years ago for his aunt’s
funeral. So he’s dead. Who told you?’
‘Mr Loring.’
‘Did you know him?’ she glanced at me.
‘I scarcely knew him,’ said I. ‘I
saw it in the paper.’
‘What, the Signal?’
‘The Signal’s the local
rag,’ Mr Brindley interpolated. ’No.
It’s in the Gazette.’
‘The Birmingham Gazette?’
‘No, bright creature-the Gazette,’
said Mr Brindley.
‘Oh!’ She seemed puzzled.
‘Didn’t you know he was
a painter?’ the husband condescendingly catechized.
‘I knew he used to teach at the Hanbridge School
of Art,’ said Mrs
Brindley stoutly. ’Mother wouldn’t
let me go there because of that.
Then he got the sack.’
‘Poor defenceless thing! How old were you?’
‘Seventeen, I expect.’
‘I’m much obliged to your mother.’
‘Where did he die?’ Mrs Brindley demanded.
‘At San Remo,’ I answered.
’Seems queer him dying at San Remo in September,
doesn’t it?’
‘Why?’
‘San Remo is a winter place. No one ever
goes there before December.’
‘Oh, is it?’ the lady
murmured negligently. ’Then that would be
just like Simon Fuge. I was never afraid of
him,’ she added, in a defiant tone, and with
a delicious inconsequence that choked her husband in
the midst of a draught of beer.
‘You can laugh,’ she said sturdily.
At that moment there was heard a series
of loud explosive sounds in the street. They
continued for a few seconds apparently just outside
the dining-room window. Then they stopped, and
the noise of the bumping electric cars resumed its
sway over the ear.
‘That’s Oliver!’
said Mr Brindley, looking at his watch. ’He
must have come from Manchester in an hour and a half.
He’s a terror.’
‘Glass! Quick!’ Mrs
Brindley exclaimed. She sprang to the sideboard,
and seized a tumbler, which Mr Brindley filled from
a second bottle of Bass. When the door of the
room opened she was standing close to it, laughing,
with the full, frothing glass in her hand.
A tall, thin man, rather younger than
Mr Brindley and his wife, entered. He wore a
long dust-coat and leggings, and he carried a motorist’s
cap in a great hand. No one spoke; but little
puffs of laughter escaped all Mrs Brindley’s
efforts to imprison her mirth. Then the visitor
took the glass with a magnificent broad smile, and
said, in a rich and heavy Midland voice-
‘Here’s to moy wife’s husband!’
And drained the nectar.
‘Feel better now, don’t you?’ Mrs
Brindley inquired.
‘Aye, Mrs Bob, I do!’ was the reply.
‘How do, Bob?’
‘How do?’ responded my
host laconically. And then with gravity:
’Mr Loring-Mr Oliver Colclough-thinks
he knows something about music.’
‘Glad to meet you, sir,’
said Mr Colclough, shaking hands with me. He
had a most attractively candid smile, but he was so
long and lanky that he seemed to pervade the room
like an omnipresence.
‘Sit down and have a bit of
cheese, Oliver,’ said Mrs Brindley, as she herself
sat down.
‘No, thanks, Mrs Bob. I must be getting
towards home.’
He leaned on her chair.
‘Trifle, then?’
‘No, thanks.’
‘Machine going all right?’
‘Like oil. Never stopped th’ engine
once.’
‘Did you get the Sinfonia Domestica, Ol?’
Mr Brindley inquired.
‘Didn’t I say as I should get it, Bob?’
‘You said you would.’
‘Well, I’ve got it.’
‘In Manchester?’
‘Of course.’
Mr Brindley’s face shone with
desire and Mr Oliver Colclough’s face shone
with triumph.
‘Where is it?’
‘In the hall.’
‘My hall?’
‘Aye!’
‘We’ll play it, Ol.’
‘No, really, Bob! I can’t stop now.
I promised the wife-’
’We’ll play it, Ol!
You’d no business to make promises. Besides,
suppose you’d had a puncture!’
’I expect you’ve heard
Strauss’s Sinfonia Domestica, Mr Loring,
up in the village?’ Mr Colclough addressed me.
He had surrendered to the stronger will.
‘In London?’ I said. ‘No.
But I’ve heard of it.’
’Bob and I heard it in Manchester
last week, and we thought it ’ud be a bit of
a lark to buy the arrangement for pianoforte duet.’
‘Come and listen to it,’
said Mr Brindley. ’That is, if nobody wants
any more beer.’
IV
The drawing-room was about twice as
large as the dining-room, and it contained about four
times as much furniture. Once again there were
books all round the walls. A grand piano, covered
with music, stood in a corner, and behind was a cabinet
full of bound music.
Mr Brindley, seated on one corner
of the bench in front of the piano, cut the leaves
of the Sinfonia Domestica.
‘It’s the devil!’ he observed.
‘Aye, lad!’ agreed Mr Colclough, standing
over him. ‘It’s difficult.’
‘Come on,’ said Mr. Brindley, when he
had finished cutting.
‘Better take your dust-coat
off, hadn’t you?’ Mrs Brindley suggested
to the friend. She and I were side by side on
a sofa at the other end of the room.
‘I may as well,’ Mr Colclough
admitted, and threw the long garment on to a chair.
‘Look here, Bob, my hands are stiff with steering.’
‘Don’t find fault with
your tools,’ said Mr Brindley; ’and sit
down. No, my boy, I’m going to play the
top part. Shove along.’
‘I want to play the top part
because it’s easiest,’ Mr Colclough grumbled.
’How often have I told you the
top part is never easiest? Who do you suppose
is going to keep this symphony together-you
or me?’
‘Sorry I spoke.’
They arranged themselves on the bench,
and Mr Brindley turned up the lower corners of every
alternate leaf of the music.
‘Now,’ said he. ‘Ready?’
‘Let her zip,’ said Mr Colclough.
They began to play. And then
the door opened, and a servant, whose white apron
was starched as stiff as cardboard, came in carrying
a tray of coffee and unholy liqueurs, which she
deposited with a rattle on a small table near the
hostess.
‘Curse!’ muttered Mr Brindley, and stopped.
‘Life’s very complex, ain’t it,
Bob?’ Mr Colclough murmured.
‘Aye, lad.’ The host
glanced round to make sure that the rattling servant
had entirely gone. ‘Now start again.’
‘Wait a minute, wait a minute!’
cried Mrs Brindley excitedly. ’I’m
just pouring out Mr Loring’s coffee. There!’
As she handed me the cup she whispered, ‘We
daren’t talk. It’s more than our place
is worth.’
The performance of the symphony proceeded.
To me, who am not a performer, it sounded excessively
brilliant and incomprehensible. Mr Colclough
stretched his right hand to turn over the page, and
fumbled it. Another stoppage.
‘Damn you, Ol!’ Mr Brindley
exploded. ’I wish you wouldn’t make
yourself so confoundedly busy. Leave the turning
to me. It takes a great artist to turn over,
and you’re only a blooming chauffeur. We’ll
begin again.’
‘Sackcloth!’ Mr Colclough whispered.
I could not estimate the length of
the symphony; but my impression was one of extreme
length. Halfway through it the players both took
their coats off. There was no other surcease.
‘What dost think of it, Bob?’
asked Mr Colclough in the weird silence that reigned
after they had finished. They were standing up
and putting on their coats and wiping their faces.
‘I think what I thought before,’
said Mr Brindley. ‘It’s childish.’
‘It isn’t childish,’
the other protested. ’It’s ugly, but
it isn’t childish.’
‘It’s childishly clever,’
Mr Brindley modified his description. He did
not ask my opinion.
‘Coffee’s cold,’ said Mrs Brindley.
’I don’t want any coffee.
Give me some Chartreuse, please. Have a drop
o’ green, Ol?’
’A split soda ’ud be more
in my line. Besides, I’m just going to have
my supper. Never mind, I’ll have a drop,
missis, and chance it. I’ve never tried
Chartreuse as an appetizer.’
At this point commenced a sanguinary
conflict of wills to settle whether or not I also
should indulge in green Chartreuse. I was defeated.
Besides the Chartreuse, I accepted a cigar. Never
before or since have I been such a buck.
‘I must hook it,’ said
Mr Colclough, picking up his dust-coat.
‘Not yet you don’t,’
said Mr Brindley. ’I’ve got to get
the taste of that infernal Strauss out of my mouth.
We’ll play the first movement of the G minor?
La-la-la la-la-la la-la-la-ta.’
He whistled a phrase.
Mr Colclough obediently sat down again to the piano.
The Mozart was like an idyll after
a farcical melodrama. They played it with an
astounding delicacy. Through the latter half of
the movement I could hear Mr Brindley breathing regularly
and heavily through his nose, exactly as though he
were being hypnotized. I had a tickling sensation
in the small of my back, a sure sign of emotion in
me. The atmosphere was changed.
‘What a heavenly thing!’
I exclaimed enthusiastically, when they had finished.
Mr Brindley looked at me sharply,
and just nodded in silence. Well, good night,
Ol.’
‘I say,’ said Mr Colclough;
’if you’ve nothing doing later on, bring
Mr Loring round to my place. Will you come, Mr
Loring? Do! Us’ll have a drink.’
These Five Towns people certainly
had a simple, sincere way of offering hospitality
that was quite irresistible. One could see that
hospitality was among their chief and keenest pleasures.
We all went to the front door to see
Mr Colclough depart homewards in his automobile.
The two great acetylene head-lights sent long glaring
shafts of light down the side street. Mr Colclough,
throwing the score of the Sinfonia Domestica
into the tonneau of the immense car, put on a pair
of gloves and began to circulate round the machine,
tapping here, screwing there, as chauffeurs will.
Then he bent down in front to start the engine.
‘By the way, Ol,’ Mr Brindley
shouted from the doorway, ’it seems Simon Fuge
is dead.’
We could see the man’s stooping
form between the two head-lights. He turned his
head towards the house.
‘Who the dagger is Simon Fuge?’
he inquired. ’There’s about five
thousand Fuges in th’ Five Towns.’
‘Oh! I thought you knew him.’
‘I might, and I mightn’t.
It’s not one o’ them Fuge brothers saggar-makers
at Longshaw, is it?’
‘No, It’s-’
Mr Colclough had succeeded in starting
his engine, and the air was rent with gun-shots.
He jumped lightly into the driver’s seat.
‘Well, see you later,’
he cried, and was off, persuading the enormous beast
under him to describe a semicircle in the narrow street
backing, forcing forward, and backing again, to the
accompaniment of the continuous fusillade. At
length he got away, drew up within two feet of an
electric tram that slid bumping down the main street,
and vanished round the corner. A little ragged
boy passed, crying, ‘Signal, extra,’ and
Mr Brindley hailed him.
‘What is Mr Colclough?’ I asked in
the drawing-room.
‘Manufacturer-sanitary
ware,’ said Mr Brindley. ’He’s
got one of the best businesses in Hanbridge.
I wish I’d half his income. Never buys a
book, you know.’
‘He seems to play the piano very well.’
’Well, as to that, he doesn’t
what you may call play, but he’s the best
sight-reader in this district, bar me. I never
met his equal. When you come across any one who
can read a thing like the Domestic Symphony right
off and never miss his place, you might send me a telegram.
Colclough’s got a Steinway. Wish I had.’
Mrs Brindley had been looking through the Signal.
‘I don’t see anything about Simon Fuge
here,’ said she.
‘Oh, nonsense!’ said her
husband. ’Buchanan’s sure to have
got something in about it. Let’s look.’
He received the paper from his wife,
but failed to discover in it a word concerning the
death of Simon Fuge.
’Dashed if I don’t ring
Buchanan up and ask him what he means! Here’s
a paper with an absolute monopoly in the district,
and brings in about five thousand a year clear to
somebody, and it doesn’t give the news!
There never is anything but advertisements and sporting
results in the blessed thing.’
He rushed to his telephone, which
was in the hall. Or rather, he did not rush;
he went extremely quickly, with aggressive footsteps
that seemed to symbolize just retribution. We
could hear him at the telephone.
’Hello! No. Yes.
Is that you, Buchanan? Well, I want Mr Buchanan.
Is that you, Buchanan? Yes, I’m all right.
What in thunder do you mean by having nothing in tonight
about Simon Fuge’s death? Eh? Yes,
the Gazette. Well, I suppose you aren’t
Scotch for nothing. Why the devil couldn’t
you stop in Scotland and edit papers there?’
Then a laugh. ’I see. Yes. What
did you think of those cigars? Oh! See you
at the dinner. Ta-ta.’ A
final ring.
’The real truth is, he wanted
some advice as to the tone of his obituary notice,’
said Mr Brindley, coming back into the drawing-room.
’He’s got it, seemingly. He says he’s
writing it now, for tomorrow. He didn’t
put in the mere news of the death, because it was exclusive
to the Gazette, and he’s been having some difficulty
with the Gazette lately. As he says, tomorrow
afternoon will be quite soon enough for the Five Towns.
It isn’t as if Simon Fuge was a cricket match.
So now you see how the wheels go round, Mr Loring.’
He sat down to the piano and began
to play softly the Castle motive from the Nibelung’s
Ring. He kept repeating it in different keys.
‘What about the mumps, wife?’
he asked Mrs Brindley, who had been out of the room
and now returned.
‘Oh! I don’t think
it is mumps,’ she replied. ‘They’re
all asleep.’
‘Good!’ he murmured, still playing the
Castle motive.
‘Talking of Simon Fuge,’
I said determined to satisfy my curiosity, ‘who
were the two sisters?’
‘What two sisters?’
‘That he spent the night in the boat with, on
Ilam Lake.’
‘Was that in the Gazette? I didn’t
read all the article.’
He changed abruptly into the Sword
motive, which he gave with a violent flourish, and
then he left the piano. ’I do beg you not
to wake my children,’ said his wife.
‘Your children must get used
to my piano,’ said he. ’Now, then,
what about these two sisters?’
I pulled the Gazette from my pocket
and handed it to him. He read aloud the passage
describing the magic night on the lake.
‘I don’t know who
they were,’ he said. ’Probably something
tasty from the Hanbridge Empire.’
We both observed a faint, amused smile
on the face of Mrs Brindley, the smile of a woman
who has suddenly discovered in her brain a piece of
knowledge rare and piquant.
‘I can guess who they were,’
she said. ‘In fact, I’m sure.’
‘Who?’
‘Annie Brett and-you know who.’
‘What, down at the Tiger?’
‘Certainly. Hush!’
Mrs Brindley ran to the door and, opening it, listened.
The faint, fretful cry of a child reached us.
’There! You’ve done it! I told
you you would!’
She disappeared. Mr Brindley whistled.
‘And who is Annie Brett?’ I inquired.
‘Look here,’ said he,
with a peculiar inflection. ’Would you like
to see her?’
‘I should,’ I said with decision.
’Well, come on, then. We’ll
go down to the Tiger and have a drop of something.’
‘And the other sister?’ I asked.
‘The other sister is Mrs Oliver
Colclough,’ he answered. ’Curious,
ain’t it?’
Again there was that swift, scarcely perceptible phenomenon
in his eyes.
V
We stood at the corner of the side-street
and the main road, and down the main road a vast,
white rectangular cube of bright light came plunging-its
head rising and dipping-at express speed,
and with a formidable roar. Mr Brindley imperiously
raised his stick; the extraordinary box of light stopped
as if by a miracle, and we jumped into it, having
splashed through mud, and it plunged off again-bump,
bump, bump-into the town of Bursley.
As Mr Brindley passed into the interior of the car,
he said laconically to two men who were smoking on
the platform-
‘How do, Jim? How do, Jo?’
And they responded laconically-
‘How do, Bob?’
‘How do, Bob?’
We sat down. Mr Brindley pointed to the condition
of the floor.
‘Cheerful, isn’t it?’
he observed to me, shouting above the din of vibrating
glass.
Our fellow-passengers were few and
unromantic, perhaps half-a-dozen altogether on the
long, shiny, yellow seats of the car, each apparently
lost in gloomy reverie.
’It’s the advertisements
and notices in these cars that are the joy of the
super-man like you and me,’ shouted Mr Brindley.
’Look there, “Passengers are requested
not to spit on the floor.” Simply an encouragement
to lie on the seats and spit on the ceiling, isn’t
it? “Wear only Noble’s wonderful
boots.” Suppose we did! Unless they
came well up above the waist we should be prosecuted.
But there’s no sense of humour in this district.’
Greengrocers’ shops and public-houses
were now flying past the windows of the car.
It began to climb a hill, and then halted.
‘Here we are!’ ejaculated Mr Brindley.
And he was out of the car almost before I had risen.
We strolled along a quiet street,
and came to a large building with many large lighted
windows, evidently some result of public effort.
‘What’s that place?’ I demanded.
‘That’s the Wedgwood Institution.’
‘Oh! So that’s the Wedgwood Institution,
is it?’
’Yes. Commonly called the
Wedgwood. Museum, reading-room, public library-dirtiest
books in the world, I mean physically-art
school, science school. I’ve never explained
to you why I’m chairman of the Management Committee,
have I? Well, it’s because the Institution
is meant to foster the arts, and I happen to know
nothing about ’em. I needn’t tell
you that architecture, literature, and music are not
arts within the meaning of the act. Not much!
Like to come in and see the museum for a minute?
You’ll have to see it in your official capacity
tomorrow.’
We crossed the road, and entered an
imposing portico. Just as we did so a thick stream
of slouching men began to descend the steps, like a
waterfall of treacle. Mr Brindley they appeared
to see, but evidently I made no impression on their
retinas. They bore down the steps, hands deep
in pockets, sweeping over me like Fate. Even when
I bounced off one of them to a lower step, he showed
by no sign that the fact of my existence had reached
his consciousness-simply bore irresistibly
downwards. The crowd was absolutely silent.
At last I gained the entrance hall.
‘It’s closing-time for the reading room,’
said Mr Brindley.
‘I’m glad I survived it,’ I said.
‘The truth is,’ said he,
’that people who can’t look after themselves
don’t flourish in these latitudes. But you’ll
be acclimatized by tomorrow. See that?’
He pointed to an alabaster tablet
on which was engraved a record of the historical certainty
that Mr Gladstone opened the Institution in 1868,
also an extract from the speech which he delivered
on that occasion.
‘What do you think of Gladstone down here?’
I demanded.
’In my official capacity I think
that these deathless words are the last utterance
of wisdom on the subject of the influence of the liberal
arts on life. And I should advise you, in your
official capacity, to think the same, unless you happen
to have a fancy for having your teeth knocked down
your throat.’
‘I see,’ I said, not sure how to take
him.
’Lest you should go away with
the idea that you have been visiting a rude and barbaric
people, I’d better explain that that was a joke.
As a matter of fact, we’re rather enlightened
here. The only man who stands a chance of getting
his teeth knocked down his throat here is the ingenious
person who started the celebrated legend of the man-and-dog
fight at Hanbridge. It’s a long time ago,
a very long time ago; but his grey hairs won’t
save him from horrible tortures if we catch him.
We don’t mind being called immoral, we’re
above a bit flattered when London newspapers come
out with shocking details of debauchery in the Five
Towns, but we pride ourselves on our manners.
I say, Aked!’ His voice rose commandingly, threateningly,
to an old bent, spectacled man who was ascending a
broad white staircase in front of us.
‘Sir!’ The man turned.
‘Don’t turn the lights out yet in the
museum.’
‘No, sir! Are you coming up?’ The
accents were slow and tremulous.
’Yes. I have a gentleman
here from the British Museum who wants to look round.’
The oldish man came deliberately down
the steps, and approached us. Then his gaze,
beginning at my waist, gradually rose to my hat.
‘From the British Museum?’
he drawled. ’I’m sure I’m very
glad to meet you, sir. I’m sure it’s
a very great honour.’
He held out a wrinkled hand, which I shook.
‘Mr Aked,’ said Mr Brindley,
by way of introduction. ’Been caretaker
here for pretty near forty years.’
‘Ever since it opened, sir,’ said Aked.
We went up the white stone stairway,
rather a grandiose construction for a little industrial
town. It divided itself into doubling curving
flights at the first landing, and its walls were covered
with pictures and designs. The museum itself,
a series of three communicating rooms, was about as
large as a pocket-handkerchief.
‘Quite small,’ I said.
I gave my impression candidly, because
I had already judged Mr Brindley to be the rare and
precious individual who is worthy of the high honour
of frankness.
‘Do you think so?’ he
demanded quickly. I had shocked him, that was
clear. His tone was unmistakable; it indicated
an instinctive, involuntary protest. But he recovered
himself in a flash. ’That’s jealousy,’
he laughed. ‘All you British Museum people
are the same.’ Then he added, with an unsuccessful
attempt to convince me that he meant what he was saying:
’Of course it is small. It’s nothing,
simply nothing.’
Yes, I had unwittingly found the joint
in the armour of this extraordinary Midland personage.
With all his irony, with all his violent humour, with
all his just and unprejudiced perceptions, he had
a tenderness for the Institution of which he was the
dictator. He loved it. He could laugh like
a god at everything in the Five Towns except this
one thing. He would try to force himself to regard
even this with the same lofty detachment, but he could
not do it naturally.
I stopped at a case of Wedgwood ware,
marked ‘Perkins Collection.’
‘By Jove!’ I exclaimed,
pointing to a vase. ‘What a body!’
He was enchanted by my enthusiasm.
‘Funny you should have hit on
that,’ said he. ’Old Daddy Perkins
always called it his ewe-lamb.’
Thus spoken, the name of the greatest
authority on Wedgwood ware that Europe has ever known
curiously impressed me.
‘I suppose you knew him?’ I questioned.
’Considering that I was one
of the pall-bearers at his funeral, and caught the
champion cold of my life!’
‘What sort of a man was he?’
’Outside Wedgwood ware he wasn’t
any sort of a man. He was that scourge of society,
a philanthropist,’ said Mr Brindley. ’He
was an upright citizen, and two thousand people followed
him to his grave. I’m an upright citizen,
but I have no hope that two thousand people will follow
me to my grave.’
‘You never know what may happen,’ I observed,
smiling.
‘No.’ He shook his
head. ’If you undermine the moral character
of your fellow-citizens by a long course of unbridled
miscellaneous philanthropy, you can have a funeral
procession as long as you like, at the rate of about
forty shillings a foot. But you’ll never
touch the great heart of the enlightened public of
these boroughs in any other way. Do you imagine
anyone cared a twopenny damn for Perkins’s Wedgwood
ware?’
‘It’s like that everywhere,’ I said.
‘I suppose it is,’ he assented unwillingly.
Who can tell what was passing in the
breast of Mr Brindley? I could not. At least
I could not tell with any precision. I could only
gather, vaguely, that what he considered the wrong-headedness,
the blindness, the lack of true perception, of his
public was beginning to produce in his individuality
a faint trace of permanent soreness. I regretted
it. And I showed my sympathy with him by asking
questions about the design and construction of the
museum (a late addition to the Institution), of which
I happened to know that he had been the architect.
He at once became interested and interesting.
Although he perhaps insisted a little too much on
the difficulties which occur when original talent
encounters stupidity, he did, as he walked me up and
down, contrive to convey to me a notion of the creative
processes of the architect in a way that was in my
experience entirely novel. He was impressing
me anew, and I was wondering whether he was unique
of his kind or whether there existed regiments of
him in this strange parcel of England.
‘Now, you see this girder,’ he said, looking
upwards.
That’s surely something of Fuge’s,
isn’t it?’ I asked, indicating a small
picture in a corner, after he had finished his explanation
of the functions of the girder.
As on the walls of the staircase and
corridors, so on the walls here, there were many paintings,
drawings, and engravings. And of course the best
were here in the museum. The least uninteresting
items of the collection were, speaking generally,
reproductions in monotint of celebrated works, and
a few second-or third-rate loan pictures
from South Kensington. Aside from such matters
I had noticed nothing but the usual local trivialities,
gifts from one citizen or another, travel-jottings
of some art-master, careful daubs of apt students
without a sense of humour. The aspect of the place
was exactly the customary aspect of the small provincial
museum, as I have seen it in half-a-hundred towns
that are not among ‘the great towns’.
It had the terrible trite ‘museum’ aspect,
the aspect that brings woe and desolation to the heart
of the stoutest visitor, and which seems to form part
of the purgatorio of Bank-holidays, wide mouths,
and stiff clothes. The movement for opening museums
on Sundays is the most natural movement that could
be conceived. For if ever a resort was invented
and fore-ordained to chime with the true spirit of
the British sabbath, that resort is the average museum.
I ought to know. I do know.
But there was the incomparable Wedgwood
ware, and there was the little picture by Simon Fuge.
I am not going to lose my sense of perspective concerning
Simon Fuge. He was not the greatest painter that
ever lived, or even of his time. He had, I am
ready to believe, very grave limitations. But
he was a painter by himself, as all fine painters are.
He had his own vision. He was Unique. He
was exclusively preoccupied with the beauty and the
romance of the authentic. The little picture
showed all this. It was a painting, unfinished,
of a girl standing at a door and evidently hesitating
whether to open the door or not: a very young
girl, very thin, with long legs in black stockings,
and short, white, untidy frock; thin bare arms; the
head thrown on one side, and the hands raised, and
one foot raised, in a wonderful childish gesture-the
gesture of an undecided fox-terrier. The face
was an infant’s face, utterly innocent; and
yet Simon Fuge had somehow caught in that face a glimpse
of all the future of the woman that the girl was to
be, he had displayed with exquisite insolence the essential
naughtiness of his vision of things. The thing
was not much more than a sketch; it was a happy accident,
perhaps, in some day’s work of Simon Fuge’s.
But it was genius. When once you had yielded to
it, there was no other picture in the room. It
killed everything else. But, wherever it had
found itself, nothing could have killed it.
Its success was undeniable, indestructible. And
it glowed sombrely there on the wall, a few splashes
of colour on a morsel of canvas, and it was Simon Fuge’s
unconscious, proud challenge to the Five Towns.
It was Simon Fuge, at any rate all of Simon Fuge
that was worth having, masterful, imperishable.
And not merely was it his challenge, it was his scorn,
his aristocratic disdain, his positive assurance that
in the battle between them he had annihilated the
Five Towns. It hung there in the very midst thereof,
calmly and contemptuously waiting for the acknowledgement
of his victory.
‘Which?’ said Mr Brindley.
That one.’
‘Yes, I fancy it is,’ he negligently agreed.
‘Yes, it is.’
‘It’s not signed,’ I remarked.
‘It ought to be,’ said Mr Brindley; then
laughed, ‘Too late now!’
‘How did it get here?’
’Don’t know. Oh!
I think Mr Perkins won it in a raffle at a bazaar,
and then hung it here. He did as he liked here,
you know.’
I was just going to become vocal in its praise, when
Mr Brindley said-
’That thing under it is a photograph
of a drinking-cup for which one of our pupils won
a national scholarship last year!’
Mr Aked appeared in the distance.
‘I fancy the old boy wants to
be off to bed,’ Mr Brindley whispered kindly.
So we left the Wedgwood Institution.
I began to talk to Mr Brindley about music. The
barbaric attitude of the Five Towns towards great
music was the theme of some very lively animadversions
on his part.
VI
The Tiger was very conveniently close
to the Wedgwood Institution. The Tiger had a
‘yard’, one of those long, shapeless expanses
of the planet, partly paved with uneven cobbles and
partly unsophisticated planet, without which no provincial
hotel can call itself respectable. We came into
it from the hinterland through a wooden doorway in
a brick wall. Far off I could see one light burning.
We were in the centre of Bursley, the gold angel of
its Town Hall rose handsomely over the roof of the
hotel in the diffused moonlight, but we might have
been in the purlieus of some dubious establishment
on the confines of a great seaport, where anything
may happen. The yard was so deserted, so mysterious,
so shut in, so silent, that, really, infamous characters
ought to have rushed out at us from the obscurity of
shadows, and felled us to the earth with no other
attendant phenomenon than a low groan. There
are places where one seems to feel how thin and brittle
is the crust of law and order. Why one should
be conscious of this in the precincts of such a house
as the Tiger, which I was given to understand is as
respectable as the parish church, I do not know.
But I have experienced a similar feeling in the yards
of other provincial hotels that were also as correct
as parish churches. We passed a dim fly, with
its shafts slanting forlornly to the ground, and a
wheelbarrow. Both looked as though they had been
abandoned for ever. Then we came to the lamp,
which illuminated a door, and on the door was a notice:
’Private Bar. Billiards.’
I am not a frequenter of convivial
haunts. I should not dare to penetrate alone
into a private bar; when I do enter a private bar it
is invariably under the august protection of an habitue,
and it is invariably with the idea that at last I
am going to see life. Often has this illusion
been shattered, but each time it perfectly renewed
itself. So I followed the bold Mr Brindley into
the private bar of the Tiger.
It was a small and low room.
I instinctively stooped, though there was no necessity
for me to stoop. The bar had no peculiarity.
It can be described in a breath: Three perpendicular
planes. Back plane, bottles arranged exactly
like books on bookshelves; middle plane, the upper
halves of two women dressed in tight black; front plane,
a counter, dotted with glasses, and having strange
areas of zinc. Reckon all that as the stage,
and the rest of the room as auditorium. But the
stage of a private bar is more mysterious than the
stage of a theatre. You are closer to it, and
yet it is far less approachable. The edge of the
counter is more sacred than the footlights. Impossible
to imagine yourself leaping over it. Impossible
to imagine yourself in that cloistered place behind
it. Impossible to imagine how the priestesses
got themselves into that place, or that they ever leave
it. They are always there; they are always the
same. You may go into a theatre when it is empty
and dark; but did you ever go into a private bar that
was empty and dark? A private bar is as eternal
as the hills, as changeless as the monomania of a
madman, as mysterious as sorcery. Always the same
order of bottles, the same tinkling, the same popping,
the same time-tables, and the same realistic pictures
of frothing champagne on the walls, the same advertisements
on the same ash-trays on the counter, the same odour
that wipes your face like a towel the instant you
enter; and the same smiles, the same gestures, the
same black fabric stretched to tension over the same
impressive mammiferous phenomena of the same inexplicable
creatures who apparently never eat and never sleep,
imprisoned for life in the hallowed and mystic hollow
between the bottles and the zinc.
In a tone almost inaudible in its
discretion, Mr Brindley let fall to me as he went
in-
This is she.’
She was not quite the ordinary barmaid.
Nor, as I learnt afterwards, was she considered to
be the ordinary barmaid. She was something midway
in importance between the wife of the new proprietor
and the younger woman who stood beside her in the
cloister talking to a being that resembled a commercial
traveller. It was the younger woman who was the
ordinary barmaid; she had bright hair, and the bright
vacant stupidity which, in my narrow experience,
barmaids so often catch like an infectious disease
from their clients. But Annie Brett was different.
I can best explain how she impressed me by saying
that she had the mien of a handsome married woman
of forty with a coquettish and superficially emotional
past, but also with a daughter who is just going into
long skirts. I have known one or two such women.
They have been beautiful; they are still handsome
at a distance of twelve feet. They are rather
effusive; they think they know life, when as a fact
their instinctive repugnance for any form of truth
has prevented them from acquiring even the rudiments
of the knowledge of life. They are secretly preoccupied
by the burning question of obesity. They flatter,
and they will pay any price for flattery. They
are never sincere, not even with themselves; they
never, during the whole of their existence, utter
a sincere word, even in anger they coldly exaggerate.
They are always frothing at the mouth with ecstasy.
They adore everything, including God; go to church
carrying a prayer-book and hymn-book in separate volumes,
and absolutely fawn on the daughter. They are
stylish-and impenetrable. But there
is something about them very wistful and tragic.
In another social stratum, Miss Annie
Brett might have been such a woman. Without doubt
nature had intended her for the rôle. She was
just a little ample, with broad shoulders and a large
head and a lot of dark chestnut hair; a large mouth,
and large teeth. She had earrings, a brooch,
and several rings; also a neat originality of cuffs
that would not have been permitted to an ordinary
barmaid. As for her face, there were crow’s-feet,
and a mole (which had selected with infinite skill
a site on her chin), and a general degeneracy of complexion;
but it was an effective face. The little thing
of twenty-three or so by her side had all the cruel
advantages of youth and was not ugly; but she was
‘killed’ by Annie Brett. Miss Brett
had a maternal bust. Indeed, something of the
maternal resided in all of her that was visible above
the zinc. She must have been about forty; that
is to say, apparently older than the late Simon Fuge.
Nevertheless, I could conceive her, even now, speciously
picturesque in a boat at midnight on a moonstruck
water. Had she been on the stage she would have
been looking forward to ingenue parts for another
five years yet-such was her durable sort
of effectiveness. Yes, she indubitably belonged
to the ornamental half of the universe.
‘So this is one of them!’ I said to myself.
I tried to be philosophical; but at
heart I was profoundly disappointed. I did not
know what I had expected; but I had not expected that.
I was well aware that a thing written always takes
on a quality which does not justly appertain to it.
I had not expected, therefore, to see an odalisque,
a houri, an ideal toy or the remains of an ideal toy;
I had not expected any kind of obvious brilliancy,
nor a subtle charm that would haunt my memory for
evermore. On the other hand, I had not expected
the banal, the perfectly commonplace. And I think
that Miss Annie Brett was the most banal person that
it has pleased Fate to send into my life. I knew
that instantly. She was a condemnation of Simon
Fuge. She, one of the ’wonderful creatures
who had played so large a part’ in the career
of Simon Fuge! Sapristi! Still, she was
one of the wonderful creatures, etc. She
had floated o’er the bosom of the lake
with a great artist. She had received his
homage. She had stirred his feelings.
She had shared with him the magic of the night.
I might decry her as I would; she had known how to
cast a spell over him-she and the other
one! Something there in her which had captured
him and, seemingly, held him captive.
‘Good-evening, Mr Brindley,’
she expanded. ‘You’re quite a stranger.’
And she embraced me also in the largeness of her welcome.
‘It just happens,’ said
Mr Brindley, ’that I was here last night.
But you weren’t.’
‘Were you now!’ she exclaimed,
as though learning a novel fact of the most passionate
interest. The truth is, I had to leave the bar
to Miss Slaney last night. Mrs Moorcroft was
ill-and the baby only six weeks old, you
know-and I wouldn’t leave her.
No, I wouldn’t.’
It was plain that in Miss Annie Brett’s
opinion there was only one really capable intelligence
in the Tiger. This glimpse of her capability,
this out-leaping of the latent maternal in her, completely
destroyed for the moment my vision of her afloat on
the bosom of the lake.
‘I see,’ said Mr Brindley
kindly. Then he turned to me with characteristic
abruptness. ‘Well, give it a name, Mr Loring.’
Such is my simplicity that I did not
immediately comprehend his meaning. For a fraction
of a second I thought of the baby. Then I perceived
that he was merely employing one of the sacred phrases,
sanctified by centuries of usage, of the private bar.
I had already drunk mercurey, green Chartreuse, and
coffee. I had a violent desire not to drink anything
more. I knew my deplorable tomorrows. Still,
I would have drunk hot milk, cold water, soda water,
or tea. Why should I not have had what I did
not object to having? Herein lies another mystery
of the private bar. One could surely order tea
or milk or soda water from a woman who left everything
to tend a mother with a six-weeks-old baby! But
no. One could not. As Miss Annie Brett smiled
at me pointedly, and rubbed her ringed hands, and kept
on smiling with her terrific mechanical effusiveness,
I lost all my self control; I would have resigned
myself to a hundred horrible tomorrows under the omnipotent,
inexplicable influence of the private bar. I ejaculated,
as though to the manner born-
‘Irish.’
It proved to have been rather clever
of me, showing as it did a due regard for convention
combined with a pretty idiosyncrasy. Mr Brindley
was clearly taken aback. The idea struck him as
a new one. He reflected, and then enthusiastically
exclaimed-
‘Dashed if I don’t have Irish too!’
And Miss Brett, delighted by this
unexpected note of Irish in the long, long symphony
of Scotch, charged our glasses with gusto. I sipped,
death in my heart, and rakishness in my face and gesture.
Mr Brindley raised his glass respectfully to Miss
Annie Brett, and I did the same. Those two were
evidently good friends.
She led the conversation with hard,
accustomed ease. When I say ‘hard’
I do not in the least mean unsympathetic. But
her sympathetic quality was toughened by excessive
usage, like the hand of a charwoman. She spoke
of the vagaries of the Town Hall clock, the health
of Mr Brindley’s children, the price of coal,
the incidence of the annual wakes, the bankruptcy
of the draper next door, and her own sciatica, all
in the same tone of metallic tender solicitude.
Mr Brindley adopted an entirely serious attitude towards
her. If I had met him there and nowhere else
I should have taken him for a dignified mediocrity,
little better than a fool, but with just enough discretion
not to give himself away. I said nothing.
I was shy. I always am shy in a bar. Out
of her cold, cold roving eye Miss Brett watched me,
trying to add me up and not succeeding. She must
have perceived, however, that I was not like a fish
in water.
There was a pause in the talk, due,
I think, to Miss Annie Brett’s preoccupation
with what was going on between Miss Slaney, the ordinary
barmaid, and her commercial traveller. The commercial
traveller, if he was one, was reading something from
a newspaper to Miss Slaney in an indistinct murmur,
and with laughter in his voice.
‘By the way,’ said Mr
Brindley, ’you used to know Simon Fuge, didn’t
you?’
‘Old Simon Fuge!’ said
Miss Brett. ’Yes; after the brewery company
took the Blue Bell at Cauldon over from him, I used
to be there. He would come in sometimes.
Such a nice queer old man!’
‘I mean the son,’ said Mr Brindley.
‘Oh yes,’ she answered.
‘I knew young Mr Simon too.’ A slight
hesitation, and then: ‘Of course!’
Another hesitation. ‘Why?’
‘Nothing,’ said Mr Brindley. ‘Only
he’s dead.’
‘You don’t mean to say he’s dead?’
she exclaimed.
‘Day before yesterday, in Italy,’ said
Mr Brindley ruthlessly.
Miss Annie Brett’s manner certainly
changed. It seemed almost to become natural and
unecstatic.
‘I suppose it will be in the papers?’
she ventured.
‘It’s in the London paper.’
‘Well I never!’ she muttered.
‘A long time, I should think,
since he was in this part of the world,’ said
Mr Brindley. ‘When did you last see
him?’
He was exceedingly skilful, I considered.
She put the back of her hand over
her mouth, and bending her head slightly and lowering
her eyelids, gazed reflectively at the counter.
‘It was once when a lot of us
went to Ilam,’ she answered quietly. ’The
St Luke’s lot, you know.’
‘Oh!’ cried Mr Brindley,
apparently startled. ‘The St Luke’s
lot?’
‘Yes.’
‘How came he to go with you?’
‘He didn’t go with us. He was there-stopping
there, I suppose.’
‘Why, I believe I remember hearing
something about that,’ said Mr Brindley cunningly.
‘Didn’t he take you out in a boat?’
A very faint dark crimson spread over
the face of Miss Annie Brett. It could not be
called a blush, but it was as like a blush as was possible
to her. The phenomenon, as I could see from his
eyes, gave Mr Brindley another shock.
‘Yes,’ she replied. ‘Sally
was there as well.’
Then a silence, during which the commercial
traveller could be heard reading from the newspaper.
‘When was that?’ gently asked Mr Brindley.
‘Don’t ask me when
it was, Mr Brindley,’ she answered nervously.
’It’s ever so long ago. What did
he die of?’
‘Don’t know.’
Miss Annie Brett opened her mouth
to speak, and did not speak. There were tears
in her reddened eyes. I felt very awkward, and
I think that Mr Brindley also felt awkward. But
I was glad. Those moist eyes caused me a thrill.
There was after all some humanity in Miss Annie Brett.
Yes, she had after all floated on the bosom of the
lake with Simon Fuge. The least romantic of persons,
she had yet felt romance. If she had touched
Simon Fuge, Simon Fuge had touched her. She had
memories. Once she had lived. I pictured
her younger. I sought in her face the soft remains
of youthfulness. I invented languishing poses
for her in the boat. My imagination was equal
to the task of seeing her as Simon Fuge saw her.
I did so see her. I recalled Simon Fuge’s
excited description of the long night in the boat,
and I could reconstitute the night from end to end.
And there the identical creature stood before me,
the creature who had set fire to Simon Fuge, one of
the ’wonderful creatures’ of the Gazette,
ageing, hardened, banal, but momentarily restored
to the empire of romance by those unshed, glittering
tears. As an experience it was worth having.
She could not speak, and we did not.
I heard the commercial traveller reading: ’"The
motion was therefore carried by twenty-five votes to
nineteen, and the Countess of Chell promised that the
whole question of the employment of barmaids
should be raised at the next meeting of the B.W.T.S.”
There! what do you think of that?’
Miss Annie Brett moved quickly towards
the commercial traveller.
Til tell you what I think of
it,’ she said, with ecstatic resentment.
’I think it’s just shameful! Why should
the Countess of Chell want to rob a lot of respectable
young ladies of their living? I can tell you
they’re just as respectable as the Countess of
Chell is-yes, and perhaps more, by all
accounts. I think people do well to call her
“Interfering Iris”. When she’s
robbed them of their living, what does she expect
them to do? Is she going to keep them? Then
what does she expect them to do?’
The commercial traveller was inept
enough to offer a jocular reply, and then he found
himself involved in the morass of ‘the whole
question’. He, and we also, were obliged
to hear in immense detail Miss Annie Brett’s
complete notions of the movement for the abolition
of barmaids. The subject was heavy on her
mind, and she lifted it off. Simon Fuge was relinquished;
he dropped like a stone into the pool of forgetfulness.
And yet, strange as it seems, she was assuredly not
sincere in the expression of her views on the question
of barmaids. She held no real views.
She merely persuaded herself that she held them.
When the commercial traveller, who was devoid of sense,
pointed out that it was not proposed to rob anybody
of a livelihood, and that existent barmaids would
be permitted to continue to grace the counters of
their adoption, she grew frostily vicious. The
commercial traveller decided to retire and play billiards.
Mr Brindley and I in our turn departed. I was
extremely disappointed by this sequel.
‘Ah!’ breathed Mr Brindley
when we were outside, in front of the Town Hall.
‘She was quite right about that clock.’
After that we turned silently into
a long illuminated street which rose gently.
The boxes of light were flashing up and down it, but
otherwise it seemed to be quite deserted. Mr
Brindley filled a pipe and lit it as he walked.
The way in which that man kept the match alight in
a fresh breeze made me envious. I could conceive
myself rivalling his exploits in cigarette-making,
the purchase of rare books, the interpretation of
music, even (for a wager) the drinking of beer, but
I knew that I should never be able to keep a match
alight in a breeze. He threw the match into the
mud, and in the mud it continued miraculously to burn
with a large flame, as though still under his magic
dominion. There are some things that baffle the
reasoning faculty. ‘Well,’ I said,
’she must have been a pretty woman once.’
‘"Pretty,” by God!’
he replied, ’she was beautiful. She was
considered the finest piece in Hanbridge at one time.
And let me tell you we’re supposed to have more
than our share of good looks in the Five Towns.’
‘What-the women, you mean?’
‘Yes.’
‘And she never married?’
‘No.’
‘Nor-anything?’
‘Oh no,’ he said carelessly.
‘But you don’t mean to
tell me she’s never-’ I was
just going to exclaim, but I did not, I said:
’And it’s her sister who is Mrs Colclough?’
‘Yes.’ He seemed
to be either meditative or disinclined to talk.
However, my friends have sometimes hinted to me that
when my curiosity is really aroused, I am capable
of indiscretions.
’So one sister rattles about
in an expensive motor-car, and the other serves behind
a bar!’ I observed.
He glanced at me.
‘I expect it’s a bit difficult
for you to understand,’ he answered; ’but
you must remember you’re in a democratic district.
You told me once you knew Exeter. Well, this
isn’t a cathedral town. It’s about
a century in front of any cathedral town in the world.
Why, my good sir, there’s practically no such
thing as class distinction here. Both my grandfathers
were working potters. Colclough’s father
was a joiner who finished up as a builder. If
Colclough makes money and chooses to go to Paris and
get the best motor-car he can, why in Hades shouldn’t
his wife ride in it? If he is fond of music and
can play like the devil, that isn’t his sister-in-law’s
fault, is it? His wife was a dressmaker, at least
she was a dressmaker’s assistant. If she
suits him, what’s the matter?’
‘But I never suggested-’
‘Excuse me,’ he stopped
me, speaking with careful and slightly exaggerated
calmness, ’I think you did. If the difference
in the situations of the two sisters didn’t
strike you as very extraordinary, what did you mean?’
‘And isn’t it extraordinary?’ I
demanded.
‘It wouldn’t be considered
so in any reasonable society,’ he insisted.
’The fact is, my good sir, you haven’t
yet quite got rid of Exeter. I do believe this
place will do you good. Why, damn it! Colclough
didn’t marry both sisters. You think he
might keep the other sister? Well, he might.
But suppose his wife had half-a-dozen sisters, should
he keep them all! I can tell you we’re
just like the rest of the world, we find no difficulty
whatever in spending all the money we make. I
dare say Colclough would be ready enough to keep his
sister-in-law. I’ve never asked him.
But I’m perfectly certain that his sister-in-law
wouldn’t be kept. Not much! You don’t
know these women down here, my good sir. She’s
earned her living at one thing or another all her life,
and I reckon she’ll keep on earning it till
she drops. She is, without exception, the most
exasperating female I ever came across, and that’s
saying something; but I will give her that credit:
she’s mighty independent.’
‘How exasperating?’ I
asked, surprised to hear this from him.
’I don’t know.
But she is. If she was my wife I should kill her
one night. Don’t you know what I mean?’
‘Yes, I quite agree with you,’
I said. ’But you seemed to be awfully good
friends with her.’
’No use being anything else.
No woman that it ever pleased Providence to construct
is going to frighten me away from the draught Burton
that you can get at the Tiger. Besides, she can’t
help it. She was born like that.’
‘She talks quite ordinarily,’ I remarked.
’Oh! It isn’t what
she says, particularly. It’s her.
Either you like her or you don’t like her.
Now Colclough thinks she’s all right. In
fact, he admires her.’
‘There’s one thing,’
I said, ‘she jolly nearly cried tonight.’
‘Purely mechanical!’ said
Mr Brindley with cruel curtness.
What seemed to me singular was that
the relations which had existed between Miss Annie
Brett and Simon Fuge appeared to have no interest
whatever for Mr Brindley. He had not even referred
to them.
‘You were just beginning to draw her out,’
I ventured.
‘No,’ he replied; ’I
thought I’d just see what she’d say.
No one ever did draw that woman out.’
I had completely lost my vision of
her in the boat, but somehow that declaration of his,
‘no one ever did draw that woman out’,
partially restored the vision to me. It seemed
to invest her with agreeable mystery.
‘And the other sister-Mrs Colclough?’
I questioned.
‘I’m taking you to see
her as fast as I can,’ he answered. His
tone implied further: ’I’ve just
humoured one of your whims, now for the other.’
‘But tell me something about her.’
’She’s the best bridge-player-woman,
that is-in Bursley. But she will only
play every other night for fear the habit should get
hold of her. There you’ve got her.’
‘Younger than Miss Brett?’
‘Younger,’ said Mr Brindley.
’She isn’t the same sort of person, is
she?’
‘She is not,’ said Mr
Brindley. And his tone implied: ’Thank
God for it!’
Very soon afterwards, at the top of
a hill, he drew me into the garden of a large house
which stood back from the road.
VII
It was quite a different sort of house
from Mr Brindley’s. One felt that immediately
on entering the hall, which was extensive. There
was far more money and considerably less taste at
large in that house than in the other. I noticed
carved furniture that must have been bought with a
coarse and a generous hand; and on the walls a diptych
by Marcus Stone portraying the course of true love
clingingly draped. It was just like Exeter or
Onslow Square. But the middle-aged servant who
received us struck at once the same note as had sounded
so agreeably at Mr Brindley’s. She seemed
positively glad to see us; our arrival seemed to afford
her a peculiar and violent pleasure, as though the
hospitality which we were about to accept was in some
degree hers too. She robbed us of our hats with
ecstasy.
Then Mr Colclough appeared.
‘Delighted you’ve come,
Mr Loring!’ he said, shaking my hand again.
He said it with fervour. He obviously was delighted.
The exercise of hospitality was clearly the chief
joy of his life; at least, if he had a greater it
must have been something where keenness was excessive
beyond the point of pleasure, as some joys are.
’How do, Bob? Your missis has just come.’
He was still in his motoring clothes.
Mr Brindley, observing my gaze transiently
on the Marcus Stones, said: ’I know what
you’re looking for; you’re looking for
“Saul’s Soul’s Awakening”.
We don’t keep it in the window; you’ll
see it inside.’
‘Bob’s always rotting
me about my pictures,’ Mr Colclough smiled indulgently.
He seemed big enough to eat his friend, and his rich,
heavy voice rolled like thunder about the hall.
’Come along in, will you?’
‘Half-a-second, Ol,’ Mr
Brindley called in a conspiratorial tone, and, turning
to me: Tell him the Limerick. You know.’
‘The one about the hayrick?’
Mr Brindley nodded.
There were three heads close together
for a space of twenty seconds or so, and then a fearful
explosion happened-the unique, tremendous
laughter of Mr Colclough, which went off like a charge
of melinite and staggered the furniture.
‘Now, now!’ a feminine voice protested
from an unseen interior.
I was taken to the drawing-room, an
immense apartment with an immense piano black as midnight
in it. At the further end two women were seated
close together in conversation, and I distinctly heard
the name ‘Fuge’. One of them was
Mrs Brindley, in a hat. The other, a very big
and stout woman, in an elaborate crimson garment that
resembled a teagown, rose and came to meet me with
extended hand.
‘My wife-Mr Loring,’ said Mr
Oliver Colclough.
‘So glad to meet you,’
she said, beaming on me with all her husband’s
pleasure. ’Come and sit between Mrs Brindley
and me, near the window, and keep us in order.
Don’t you find it very close? There are
at least a hundred cats in the garden.’
One instantly perceived that ceremonial
stiffness could not exist in the same atmosphere with
Mrs Oliver Colclough. During the whole time I
spent in her house there was never the slightest pause
in the conversation. Mrs Oliver Colclough prevented
nobody from talking, but she would gladly use up every
odd remnant of time that was not employed by others.
No scrap was too small for her.
‘So this is the other one!’
I said to myself. ‘Well, give me this one!’
Certainly there was a resemblance
between the two, in the general formation of the face,
and the shape of the shoulders; but it is astonishing
that two sisters can differ as these did, with a profound
and vital difference. In Mrs Colclough there was
no coquetterie, no trace of that more-than-half-suspicious
challenge to a man that one feels always in the type
to which her sister belonged. The notorious battle
of the sexes was assuredly carried on by her in a spirit
of frank muscular gaiety-she could, I am
sure, do her share of fighting. Put her in a
boat on the bosom of the lake under starlight, and
she would not by a gesture, a tone, a glance, convey
mysterious nothings to you, a male. She would
not be subtly changed by the sensuous influences of
the situation; she would always be the same plump and
earthly piece of candour. Even if she were in
love with you, she would not convey mysterious nothings
in such circumstances. If she were in love with
you she would most clearly convey unmysterious and
solid somethings. I was convinced that the contributing
cause to the presence of the late Simon Fuge in the
boat on Ilam Lake on the historic night was Annie the
superior barmaid, and not Sally of the automobile.
But Mrs Colclough, if not beautiful, was a very agreeable
creation. Her amplitude gave at first sight an
exaggerated impression of her age; but this departed
after more careful inspection. She could not have
been more than thirty. She was very dark, with
plenteous and untidy black hair, thick eyebrows, and
a slight moustache. Her eyes were very vivacious,
and her gestures, despite that bulk, quick and graceful.
She was happy; her ideals were satisfied; it was probably
happiness that had made her stout. Her massiveness
was apparently no grief to her; she had fallen into
the carelessness which is too often the pitfall of
women who, being stout, are content.
‘How do, missis?’ Mr Brindley
greeted her, and to his wife, ’How do, missis?
But, look here, bright star, this gadding about is
all very well, but what about those precious kids
of yours? None of ’em dead yet, I hope.’
‘Don’t be silly, Bob.’
‘I’ve been over to your
house,’ Mrs Colclough put in. ’Of
course it isn’t mumps. The child’s
as right as rain. So I brought Mary back with
me.’
‘Well,’ said Mr Brindley,
’for a woman who’s never had any children
your knowledge of children beggars description.
What you aren’t sure you know about them isn’t
knowledge. However-’
‘Listen,’ Mrs Colclough
replied, with a delightful throwingdown of the glove.
’I’ll bet you a level sovereign that child
hasn’t got the mumps. So there! And
Oliver will guarantee to pay you.’
‘Aye!’ said Mr Colclough; ‘I’ll
back my wife any day.’
‘Don’t bet, Bob,’
Mrs Brindley enjoined her husband excitedly in her
high treble.
‘I won’t,’ said Mr Brindley.
‘Now let’s sit down.’
Mrs Colclough addressed me with particular, confidential
grace.
We three exactly filled the sofa.
I have often sat between two women, but never with
such calm, unreserved, unapprehensive comfortableness
as I experienced between Mrs Colclough and Mrs Brindley.
It was just as if I had known them for years.
‘You’ll make a mess of that, Ol,’
said Mr Brindley.
The other two men were at some distance,
in front of a table, on which were two champagne bottles
and five glasses, and a plate of cakes. ‘Well,’
I said to myself, ’I’m not going to have
any champagne, anyhow. Mercurey! Green Chartreuse!
Irish whisky! And then champagne! And a
morning’s hard work tomorrow! No!’
Plop! A cork flew up and bounced against the
ceiling.
Mr Colclough carefully emptied the
bottle into the glasses, of which Mr Brindley seized
two and advanced with one in either hand for the women.
It was the host who offered a glass to me.
‘No, thanks very much, I really
can’t,’ I said in a very firm tone.
My tone was so firm that it startled
them. They glanced at each other with alarmed
eyes, like simple people confronted by an inexplicable
phenomenon. ‘But look here, mister!’
said Mr Colclough, pained, ’we’ve got
this out specially for you. You don’t suppose
this is our usual tipple, do you?’
I yielded. I could do no less
than sacrifice myself to their enchanting instinctive
kindness of heart. ‘I shall be dead tomorrow,’
I said to myself; ‘but I shall have lived tonight.’
They were relieved, but I saw that I had given them
a shock from which they could not instantaneously
recover. Therefore I began with a long pull, to
reassure them.
‘Mrs Brindley has been telling
me that Simon Fuge is dead,’ said Mrs Colclough
brightly, as though Mrs Brindley had been telling her
that the price of mutton had gone down.
I perceived that those two had been
talking over Simon Fuge, after their fashion.
‘Oh yes,’ I responded.
‘Have you got that newspaper
in your pocket, Mr Loring?’ asked Mrs Brindley.
I had.
‘No,’ I said, feeling
in my pockets; ’I must have left it at your
house.’
‘Well,’ she said, ’that’s
strange. I looked for it to show it to Mrs Colclough,
but I couldn’t see it.’
This was not surprising. I did
not want Mrs Colclough to read the journalistic obituary
until she had given me her own obituary of Fuge.
‘It must be somewhere about,’
I said; and to Mrs Colclough: ’I suppose
you knew him pretty well?’
‘Oh, bless you, no! I only met him once.’
‘At Ilam?’
‘Yes. What are you going to do, Oliver?’
Her husband was opening the piano.
‘Bob and I are just going to have another smack
at that Brahms.’
‘You don’t expect us to listen, do you?’
‘I expect you to do what pleases
you, missis,’ said he. ’I should be
a bigger fool than I am if I expected anything else.’
Then he smiled at me. ’No! Just go
on talking. Ol and I’ll drown you easy enough.
Quite short! Back in five minutes.’
The two men placed each his wine-glass
on the space on the piano designed for a candlestick,
lighted cigars, and sat down to play.
‘Yes,’ Mrs Colclough resumed,
in a lower, more confidential tone, to the accompaniment
of the music. ’You see, there was a whole
party of us there, and Mr Fuge was staying at the
hotel, and of course he knew several of us.’
‘And he took you out in a boat?’
’Me and Annie? Yes.
Just as it was getting dusk he came up to us and asked
us if we’d go for a row. Eh, I can hear
him asking us now! I asked him if he could row,
and he was quite angry. So we went, to quieten
him.’ She paused, and then laughed.
‘Sally!’ Mrs Brindley protested.
‘You know he’s dead!’
‘Yes.’ She admitted
the rightness of the protest. ’But I can’t
help it. I was just thinking how he got his feet
wet in pushing the boat off.’ She laughed
again. ’When we were safely off, someone
came down to the shore and shouted to Mr Fuge to bring
the boat back. You know his quick way of talking.’
(Here she began to imitate Fuge.) ’"I’ve
quarrelled with the man this boat belongs to.
Awful feud! Fact is, I’m in a hostile country
here!” And a lot more like that. It seemed
he had quarrelled with everybody in Ilam. He
wasn’t sure if the landlord of the hotel would
let him sleep there again. He told us all about
all his quarrels, until he dropped one of the oars.
I shall never forget how funny he looked in the moonlight
when he dropped the oar. “There, that’s
your fault!” he said. “You make me
talk too much about myself, and I get excited.”
He kept striking matches to look for the oar, and
turning the boat round and round with the other oar.
“Last match!” he said. “We
shall never see land tonight.” Then he found
the oar again. He considered we were saved.
Then he began to tell us about his aunt. “You
know I’d no business to be here. I came
down from London for my aunt’s funeral, and
here I am in a boat at night with two pretty girls!”
He said the funeral had taught him one thing, and that
was that black neckties were the only possible sort
of necktie. He said the greatest worry of his
life had always been neckties; but he wouldn’t
have to worry any more, and so his aunt hadn’t
died for nothing. I assure you he kept on talking
about neckties. I assure you, Mr Loring, I went
to sleep-at least I dozed-and
when I woke up he was still talking about neckties.
But then his feet began to get cold. I suppose
it was because they were wet. The way he grumbled
about his feet being cold! I remember he turned
his coat collar up. He wanted to get on shore
and walk, but he’d taken us a long way up the
lake by that time, and he saw we were absolutely lost.
So he put the oars in the boat and stood up and stamped
his feet. It might have upset the boat.’
‘How did it end?’ I inquired.
’Well, Annie and I caught the
train, but only just. You see it was a special
train, so they kept it for us, otherwise we should
have been in a nice fix.’
‘So you have special trains in these parts?’
’Why, of course! It was
the annual outing of the teachers of St Luke’s
Sunday School and their friends, you see. So we
had a special train.’
At this point the duettists came to
the end of a movement, and Mr Brindley leaned over
to us from his stool, glass in hand.
‘The railway company practically
owns Ilam,’ he explained, ’and so they
run it for all they’re worth. They made
the lake, to feed the canals, when they bought the
canals from the canal company. It’s an artificial
lake, and the railway runs alongside it. A very
good scheme of the company’s. They started
out to make Ilam a popular resort, and they’ve
made it a popular resort, what with special trains
and things. But try to get a special train to
any other place on their rotten system, and you’ll
soon see!’
‘How big is the lake?’ I asked.
‘How long is it, Ol?’ he demanded of Colclough.
‘A couple of miles?’
‘Not it! About a mile. Adagio!’
They proceeded with Brahms.
‘He ran with you all the way
to the station, didn’t he?’ Mrs Brindley
suggested to Mrs Colclough.
‘I should just say he did!’
Mrs Colclough concurred. ’He wanted to get
warm, and then he was awfully afraid lest we should
miss it.’
‘I thought you were on the lake practically
all night!’ I exclaimed.
’All night! Well, I don’t
know what you call all night. But I was back
in Bursley before eleven o’clock, I’m sure.’
I then contrived to discover the Gazette
in an unsearched pocket, and I gave it to Mrs Colclough
to read. Mrs Brindley looked over her shoulder.
There was no slightest movement of
depreciation on Mrs Colclough’s part. She
amiably smiled as she perused the Gazette’s
version of Fuge’s version of the lake episode.
Here was the attitude of the woman whose soul is like
crystal. It seems to me that most women would
have blushed, or dissented, or simulated anger, or
failed to conceal vanity. But Mrs Coclough might
have been reading a fairy tale, for any emotion she
displayed.
‘Yes,’ she said blandly;
’from the things Annie used to tell me about
him sometimes, I should say that was just how he would
talk. They seem to have thought quite a lot of
him in London, then?’
‘Oh, rather!’ I said.
‘I suppose your sister knew him pretty well?’
‘Annie? I don’t know. She knew
him.’
I distinctly observed a certain self-consciousness
in Mrs Colclough as she made this reply. Mrs
Brindley had risen and with wifely attentiveness was
turning over the music page for her husband.
VIII
Soon afterwards, for me, the night
began to grow fantastic; it took on the colour of
a gigantic adventure. I do not suppose that either
Mr Brindley or Mr Colclough, or the other person who
presently arrived, regarded it as anything but a pleasant
conviviality, but to a man of my constitution and
habits it was an almost incredible occurrence.
The other person was the book-collecting doctor.
He arrived with a discreet tap on the window at midnight,
to spend the evening. Mrs Brindley had gone home
and Mrs Colclough had gone to bed. The book-collecting
doctor refused champagne; he was, in fact, very rude
to champagne in general. He had whisky.
And those astonishing individuals, Messieurs Brindley
and Colclough, secretly convinced of the justice of
the attack on champagne, had whisky too. And
that still most astonishing individual, Loring of
the B.M., joined them. It was the hour of limericks.
Limericks were demanded for the diversion of the doctor,
and I furnished them. We then listened to the
tale of the doctor’s experiences that day amid
the sturdy, natural-minded population of a muling
village not far from Bursley. Seldom have I had
such a bath in the pure fluid of human nature.
All sense of time was lost. I lived in an eternity.
I could not suggest to my host that we should depart.
I could, however, decline more whisky. And I
could, given the chance, discourse with gay despair
concerning the miserable wreck that I should be on
the morrow in consequence of this high living.
I asked them how I could be expected, in such a state,
to judge delicate points of expertise in earthenware.
I gave them a brief sketch of my customary evening,
and left them to compare it with that evening.
The doctor perceived that I was serious. He gazed
at me with pity, as if to say: ’Poor frail
southern organism! It ought to be in bed, with
nothing inside it but tea!’ What he did actually
say was: ’You come round to my place, I’ll
soon put you right!’ ’Can you stop me from
having a headache tomorrow?’ I eagerly asked.
‘I think so,’ he said with calm northern
confidence.
At some later hour Mr Brindley and
I ‘went round’. Mr Colclough would
not come. He bade me good-bye, as his wife had
done, with the most extraordinary kindness, the most
genuine sorrow at quitting me, the most genuine pleasure
in the hope of seeing me again.
‘There are three thousand books
in this room!’ I said to myself, as I stood
in the doctor’s electrically lit library.
‘What price this for a dog?’
Mr Brindley drew my attention to an aristocratic fox-terrier
that lay on the hearth. ’Well, Titus!
Is it sleepy? Well, well! How many firsts
has he won, doctor?’
‘Six,’ said the doctor.
‘I’ll just fix you up, to begin with,’
he turned to me.
After I had been duly fixed up (’This’ll
help you to sleep, and THIS’ll placate your
“god",’ said the doctor), I saw to my intense
surprise that another ‘evening’ was to
be instantly superimposed on the ‘evening’
at Mr Colclough’s. The doctor and Mr Brindley
carefully and deliberately lighted long cigars, and
sank deeply into immense arm-chairs; and so I imitated
them as well as I could in my feeble southern way.
We talked books. We just simply enumerated books
without end, praising or damning them, and arranged
authors in neat pews, like cattle in classes at an
agricultural show. No pastime is more agreeable
to people who have the book disease, and none more
quickly fleets the hours, and none is more delightfully
futile.
Ages elapsed, and suddenly, like a
gun discharging, Mr Brindley said-
‘We must go!’
Of all things that happened this was the most astonishing.
We did go.
‘By the way, doc.,’ said
Mr Brindley, in the doctor’s wide porch, ’I
forgot to tell you that Simon Fuge is dead.’
‘Is he?’ said the doctor.
‘Yes. You’ve got a couple of his
etchings, haven’t you?’
‘No,’ said the doctor. ‘I had.
But I sold them several months ago.’
‘Oh!’ said Mr Brindley negligently; ‘I
didn’t know. Well, so long!’
We had a few hundred yards to walk
down the silent, wide street, where the gas-lamps
were burning with the strange, endless patience that
gas-lamps have. The stillness of a provincial
town at night is quite different from that of London;
we might have been the only persons alive in England.
Except for a feeling of unreality,
a feeling that the natural order of things had been
disturbed by some necromancer, I was perfectly well
the same morning at breakfast, as the doctor had predicted
I should be. When I expressed to Mr Brindley
my stupefaction at this happy sequel, he showed a
polite but careless inability to follow my line of
thought. It appeared that he was always well
at breakfast, even when he did stay up ‘a little
later than usual’. It appeared further that
he always breakfasted at a quarter to nine, and read
the Manchester Guardian during the meal, to which
his wife did or did not descend-according
to the moods of the nursery; and that he reached his
office at a quarter to ten. That morning the
mood of the nursery was apparently unpropitious.
He and I were alone. I begged him not to pretermit
his Guardian, but to examine it and give me the
news. He agreed, scarcely unwilling.
‘There’s a paragraph in
the London correspondence about Fuge,’ he announced
from behind the paper.
‘What do they say about him?’
‘Nothing particular.’
‘Now I want to ask you something,’ I said.
I had been thinking a good deal about
the sisters and Simon Fuge. And in spite of everything
that I had heard-in spite even of the facts
that the lake had been dug by a railway company, and
that the excursion to the lake had been an excursion
of Sunday-school teachers and their friends-I
was still haunted by certain notions concerning Simon
Fuge and Annie Brett. Annie Brett’s flush,
her unshed tears; and the self-consciousness shown
by Mrs Colclough when I had pointedly mentioned her
sister’s name in connection with Simon Fuge’s:
these were surely indications! And then the doctor’s
recitals of manners in the immediate neighbourhood
of Bursley went to support my theory that even in
Staffordshire life was very much life.
‘What?’ demanded Mr Brindley.
‘Was Miss Brett ever Simon Fuge’s mistress?’
At that moment Mrs Brindley, miraculously
fresh and smiling, entered the room.
‘Wife,’ said Mr Brindley,
without giving her time to greet me, ’what do
you think he’s just asked me?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘He’s just asked me if Annie Brett was
ever Simon Fuge’s mistress.’
She sank into a chair.
‘Annie Brett?’ She
began to laugh gently. ’Oh! Mr Loring,
you really are too funny!’ She yielded to her
emotions. It may be said that she laughed as
they can laugh in the Five Towns. She cried.
She had to wipe away the tears of laughter.
‘What on earth made you think so?’ she
inquired, after recovery.
‘I-had an idea,’
I said lamely. ’He always made out that
one of those two sisters was so much to him, and I
knew it couldn’t be Mrs Colclough.’
‘Well,’ she said, ’ask
anybody down here, any-body! And see what
they’ll say.’
‘No,’ Mr Brindley put
in, ’don’t go about asking any-body.
You might get yourself disliked. But you may
take it it isn’t true.’
‘Most certainly,’ his wife concurred with
seriousness.
‘We reckon to know something
about Simon Fuge down here,’ Mr Brindley added.
‘Also about the famous Annie.’
‘He must have flirted with her
a good bit, anyhow,’ I said.
‘Oh, Flirt!’ ejaculated Mr Brindley.
I had a sudden dazzling vision of
the great truth that the people of the Five Towns
have no particular use for half-measures in any department
of life. So I accepted the final judgement with
meekness.
IX
I returned to London that evening,
my work done, and the municipality happily flattered
by my judgement of the slip-decorated dishes.
Mr Brindley had found time to meet me at the midday
meal, and he had left his office earlier than usual
in order to help me to drink his wife’s afternoon
tea. About an hour later he picked up my little
bag, and said that he should accompany me to the little
station in the midst of the desert of cinders and
broken crockery, and even see me as far as Knype,
where I had to take the London express. No, there
are no half-measures in the Five Towns. Mrs Brindley
stood on her doorstep, with her eldest infant on her
shoulders, and waved us off. The infant cried,
expressing his own and his mother’s grief at
losing a guest. It seems as if people are born
hospitable in the Five Towns.
We had not walked more than a hundred
yards up the road when a motor-car thundered down
upon us from the opposite direction. It was Mr
Colclough’s, and Mr Colclough was driving it.
Mr Brindley stopped his friend with the authoritative
gesture of a policeman.
‘Where are you going, Ol?’
‘Home, lad. Sorry you’re leaving
us so soon, Mr Loring.’
‘You’re mistaken, my boy,’
said Mr Brindley. ’You’re just going
to run us down to Knype station, first.’
‘I must look slippy, then,’ said Mr Colclough.
‘You can look as slippy as you like,’
said Mr Brindley.
In another fifteen seconds we were
in the car, and it had turned round, and was speeding
towards Knype. A feverish journey! We passed
electric cars every minute, and for three miles were
continually twisting round the tails of ponderous,
creaking, and excessively deliberate carts that dropped
a trail of small coal, or huge barrels on wheels that
dripped something like the finest Devonshire cream,
or brewer’s drays that left nothing behind them
save a luscious odour of malt. It was a breathless
slither over unctuous black mud through a long winding
canon of brown-red houses and shops, with a glimpse
here and there of a grey-green park, a canal, or a
football field.
‘I daredn’t hurry,’
said Mr Colclough, setting us down at the station.
‘I was afraid of a skid.’ He had not
spoken during the transit.
‘Don’t put on side, Ol,’
said Mr Brindley. ’What time did you get
up this morning?’
‘Eight o’clock, lad. I was at th’
works at nine.’
He flew off to escape my thanks, and
Mr Brindley and I went into the station. Owing
to the celerity of the automobile we had half-an-hour
to wait. We spent it chiefly at the bookstall.
While we were there the extra-special edition of the
Staffordshire Signal, affectionately termed
‘the local rag’ by its readers, arrived,
and we watched a newsboy affix its poster to a board.
The poster ran thus-
Hanbridge rates lively
meeting
Knype F.C. New centre-forward
All-Winnersand S.P.
Now, close by this poster was the
poster of the daily Telegraph, and among
the items offered by the daily Telegraph
was: ’Death of Simon Fuge’.
I could not forbear pointing out to Mr Brindley the
difference between the two posters. A conversation
ensued; and amid the rumbling of trains and the rough
stir of the platform we got back again to Simon Fuge,
and Mr Brindley’s tone gradually grew, if not
acrid, a little impatient.
‘After all,’ he said,
’rates are rates, especially in Hanbridge.
And let me tell you that last season Knype Football
Club jolly nearly got thrown out of the First League.
The constitution of the team for this next season-why,
damn it, it’s a question of national importance!
You don’t understand these things. If Knype
Football Club was put into the League Second Division,
ten thousand homes would go into mourning. Who
the devil was Simon Fuge?’
They joke with such extraordinary
seriousness in the Five Towns that one is somehow
bound to pretend that they are not joking. So
I replied-
’He was a great artist.
And this is his native district. Surely you ought
to be proud of him!’
‘He may have been a great artist,’
said Mr Brindley, ’or he may not. But for
us he was simply a man who came of a family that had
a bad reputation for talking too much and acting the
goat!’
‘Well,’ I said, We shall see-in
fifty years.’
‘That’s just what we shan’t,’
said he. ’We shall be where Simon Fuge
is-dead! However, perhaps we are proud
of him. But you don’t expect us to show
it, do you? That’s not our style.’
He performed the quasi-winking phenomenon
with his eyes. It was his final exhibition of
it to me.
‘A strange place!’ I reflected,
as I ate my dinner in the dining-car, with the pressure
of Mr Brindley’s steely clasp still affecting
my right hand, and the rich, honest cordiality of
his au revoir in my heart. ‘A place
that is passing strange!’
And I thought further: He may
have been a boaster, and a chatterer, and a man who
suffered from cold feet at the wrong moments!
And the Five Towns may have got the better of him,
now. But that portrait of the little girl in
the Wedgwood Institution is waiting there, right in
the middle of the Five Towns. And one day the
Five Towns will have to ’give it best’.
They can say what they like! ... What eyes the
fellow had, when he was in the right company!