Commercial travellers are rather like
bees; they take the seed of a good story from one
district and deposit it in another.
Thus several localities, imperfectly
righteous, have within recent years appropriated this
story to their own annals. I once met an old
herbalist from Wigan-Wigan of all places in beautiful
England!-who positively asserted that the
episode occurred just outside the London and North-Western
main line station at Wigan. This old herbalist
was no judge of the value of evidence. An undertaker
from Hull told me flatly, little knowing who I was
and where I came from, that he was the undertaker
concerned in the episode. This undertaker was
a liar. I use this term because there is no other
word in the language which accurately expresses my
meaning. Of persons who have taken the trouble
to come over from the United States in order to inform
me that the affair happened at Harper’s Ferry,
Poughkeepsie, Syracuse, Allegheny, Indianapolis, Columbus,
Charlotte, Tabernacle, Alliance, Wheeling, Lynchburg,
and Chicago it would be unbecoming to speak-they
are best left to silence themselves by mutual recrimination.
The fact is that the authentic scene of the affair
was a third-class railway carriage belonging to the
North Staffordshire Railway Company, and rolling on
that company’s loop-line between Longshaw and
Hanbridge. The undertaker is now dead-it
is a disturbing truth that even undertakers die sometimes-and
since his widow has given me permission to mention
his name, I shall mention his name. It was Edward
Till. Of course everybody in the Five Towns knows
who the undertaker was, and if anybody in the Five
Towns should ever chance to come across this book,
I offer him my excuses for having brought coals to
Newcastle.
Mr Till used to be a fairly well-known
figure in Hanbridge, which is the centre of undertaking,
as it is of everything else, in the Five Towns.
He was in a small but a successful way of business,
had one leg a trifle shorter than the other (which
slightly deteriorated the majesty of his demeanour
on solemn occasions), played the fiddle, kept rabbits,
and was of a forgetful disposition. It was possibly
this forgetful disposition which had prevented him
from rising into a large way of business. All
admired his personal character and tempered geniality;
but there are some things that will not bear forgetting.
However, the story touches but lightly that side of
his individuality.
One morning Mr Till had to go to Longshaw
to fetch a baby’s coffin which had been ordered
under the mistaken impression that a certain baby
was dead. This baby, I may mention, was the hero
of the celebrated scare of Longshaw about the danger
of being buried alive. The little thing had apparently
passed away; and, what is more, an inquest had been
held on it and its parents had been censured by the
jury for criminal carelessness in overlaying it; and
it was within five minutes of being nailed up, when
it opened its eyes! You may imagine the enormous
sensation that there was in the Five Towns. One
doctor lost his reputation, naturally. He emigrated
to the Continent, and now, practising at Lucerne in
the summer and Mentone in the winter, charges fifteen
shillings a visit (instead of three and six at Longshaw)
for informing people who have nothing the matter with
them that they must take care of themselves.
The parents of the astonished baby moved the heaven
and earth of the Five Towns to force the coroner to
withdraw the stigma of the jury’s censure; but
they did not succeed, not even with the impassioned
aid of two London halfpenny dailies.
To resume, Mr Till had to go to Longshaw.
Now, unless you possess a most minute knowledge of
your native country, you are probably not aware that
in Aynsley Street, Longshaw, there is a provision dealer
whose reputation for cheeses would be national and
supreme if the whole of England thought as the Five
Towns thinks.
‘Teddy,’ Mrs Till said,
as Mr Till was starting, ’you might as well
bring back with you a pound of Gorgonzola.’ (Be
it noted that I had the details of the conversation
from the lady herself.)
‘Yes,’ said he enthusiastically, ‘I
will.’
‘Don’t go and forget it,’ she enjoined
him.
‘No,’ he said. ‘I’ll
tie a knot in my handkerchief.’
‘A lot of good that’ll
do!’ she observed. ’You’d tied
a knot in your handkerchief when you forgot that Councillor
Barker’s wife’s funeral was altered from
Tuesday to Monday.’
‘Ah!’ he replied. ‘But now
I’ve got a bad cold.’
‘So you have!’ she agreed, reassured.
He tied the knot in his handkerchief and went.
Thanks to his cold he did not pass the cheesemonger’s
without entering.
He adored Gorgonzola, and he reckoned
that he knew a bit of good Gorgonzola when he met
with it. Moreover, he and the cheesemonger were
old friends, he having buried three of the cheesemonger’s
children. He emerged from the cheesemonger’s
with a pound of the perfectest Gorgonzola that ever
greeted the senses.
The abode of the censured parents
was close by, and also close to the station.
He obtained the coffin without parley, and told the
mother, who showed him the remarkable child with pride,
that under the circumstances he should make no charge
at all. It was a ridiculously small coffin.
He was quite accustomed to coffins. Hence he did
the natural thing. He tucked the little coffin
under one arm, and, dangling the cheese (neat in brown
paper and string) from the other hand, he hastened
to the station. With his unmatched legs he must
have made a somewhat noticeable figure.
A loop-line train was waiting, and
he got into it, put the cheese on the rack in a corner,
and the coffin next to it, assured himself that he
had not mislaid his return ticket, and sat down under
his baggage. It was the slackest time of day,
and, as the train started at Longshaw, there were
very few passengers. He had the compartment to
himself.
He was just giving way to one of those
moods of vague and pleasant meditation which are perhaps
the chief joy of such a temperament, when he suddenly
sprang up as if in fear. And fear had in fact
seized him. Suppose he forgot those belongings
on the rack? Suppose, sublimely careless, he
descended from the train and left them there?
What a calamity! And similar misadventures had
happened to him before. It was the cheese that
disquieted him. No one would be sufficiently
unprincipled to steal the coffin, and he would ultimately
recover it at the lost luggage office, babies’
coffins not abounding on the North Staffordshire Railway.
But the cheese! He would never see the cheese
again! No integrity would be able to withstand
the blandishments of that cheese. Moreover, his
wife would be saddened. And for her he had a
sincere and profound affection.
His act of precaution was to lift
the coffin down from the rack, and place it on the
seat beside him, and then to put the parcel of cheese
on the coffin. He surveyed the cheese on the coffin;
he surveyed it with the critical and experienced eye
of an undertaker, and he decided that, if anyone else
got into the carriage, it would not look quite decent,
quite becoming-in a word, quite nice.
A coffin is a coffin, and people’s feelings
have to be considered.
So he whipped off the lid of the coffin,
stuck the cheese inside, and popped the lid on again.
And he kept his hand on the coffin that he might not
forget it. When the train halted at Knype, Mr
Till was glad that he had put the cheese inside, for
another passenger got into the compartment. And
it was a clergyman. He recognized the clergyman,
though the clergyman did not recognize him. It
was the Reverend Claud ffolliott, famous throughout
the Five Towns as the man who begins his name with
a small letter, doesn’t smoke, of course doesn’t
drink, but goes to football matches, has an average
of eighteen at cricket, and makes a very pretty show
with the gloves, in spite of his thirty-eight years;
celibate, very High, very natty and learned about vestments,
terrific at sick couches and funerals. Mr Till
inwardly trembled to think what the Reverend Claud
ffolliott might have said had he seen the cheese reposing
in the coffin, though the coffin was empty.
The parson, whose mind was apparently
occupied, dropped into the nearest corner, which chanced
to be the corner farthest away from Mr Till.
He then instantly opened a copy of The Church Times
and began to read it, and the train went forward.
The parson sniffed, absently, as if he had been dozing
and a fly had tickled his nose. Shortly afterwards
he sniffed again, but without looking up from his perusals.
He sniffed a third time, and glanced over the top edge
of the church times at Mr Till.
Calmed by the innocuous aspect of Mr Till, he bent
once more to the paper. But after an interval
he was sniffing furiously. He glanced at the
window; it was open. Finally he lowered The church
times, as who should say: ’I am a long-suffering
man, but really this phenomenon which assaults my
nostrils must be seriously inquired into.’
Then it was that he caught sight of
the coffin, with Mr Till’s hand caressing it,
and Mr Till all in black and carrying a funereal expression.
He straightened himself, pulled himself together on
account of his cloth, and said to Mr Till in his most
majestic and sympathetic graveside voice-
’Ah! my dear friend, I see that
you have suffered a sad, sad bereavement.’
That rich, resonant voice was positively
thrilling when it addressed hopeless grief. Mr
Till did not know what to say, nor where to look.
‘You have, however, one thing
to be thankful for, very thankful for,’ said
the parson after a pause, ’you may be sure the
poor thing is not in a trance.’