Strange it is and wonderful to mark
how upon this planet of ours the smallest and most
insignificant of events set a train of consequences
in motion which act and react until their final results
are portentous and incalculable. Set a force
rolling, however small; and who can say where it shall
end, or what it may lead to! Trifles develop into
tragedies, and the bagatelle of one day ripens into
the catastrophe of the next. An oyster throws
out a secretion to surround a grain of sand, and so
a pearl comes into being; a pearl diver fishes it
up, a merchant buys it and sells it to a jeweller,
who disposes of it to a customer. The customer
is robbed of it by two scoundrels who quarrel over
the booty. One slays the other, and perishes
himself upon the scaffold. Here is a direct chain
of events with a sick mollusc for its first link, and
a gallows for its last one. Had that grain of
sand not chanced to wash in between the shells of
the bivalve, two living breathing beings with all
their potentialities for good and for evil would not
have been blotted out from among their fellows.
Who shall undertake to judge what is really small
and what is great?
Thus when in the year 1821 Don Diego
Salvador bethought him that if it paid the heretics
in England to import the bark of his cork oaks, it
would pay him also to found a factory by which the
corks might be cut and sent out ready made, surely
at first sight no very vital human interests would
appear to be affected. Yet there were poor folk
who would suffer, and suffer acutely women
who would weep, and men who would become sallow and
hungry-looking and dangerous in places of which the
Don had never heard, and all on account of that one
idea which had flashed across him as he strutted,
cigarettiferous, beneath the grateful shadow of his
limes. So crowded is this old globe of ours, and
so interlaced our interests, that one cannot think
a new thought without some poor devil being the better
or the worse for it.
Don Diego Salvador was a capitalist,
and the abstract thought soon took the concrete form
of a great square plastered building wherein a couple
of hundred of his swarthy countrymen worked with deft
nimble fingers at a rate of pay which no English artisan
could have accepted. Within a few months the
result of this new competition was an abrupt fall of
prices in the trade, which was serious for the largest
firms and disastrous for the smaller ones. A
few old-established houses held on as they were, others
reduced their establishments and cut down their expenses,
while one or two put up their shutters and confessed
themselves beaten. In this last unfortunate category
was the ancient and respected firm of Fairbairn Brothers
of Brisport.
Several causes had led up to this
disaster, though Don Diego’s debut as a corkcutter
had brought matters to a head. When a couple of
generations back the original Fairbairn had founded
the business, Brisport was a little fishing town with
no outlet or occupation for her superfluous population.
Men were glad to have safe and continuous work upon
any terms. All this was altered now, for the
town was expanding into the centre of a large district
in the west, and the demand for labour and its remuneration
had proportionately increased. Again, in the old
days, when carriage was ruinous and communication
slow, the vintners of Exeter and of Barnstaple were
glad to buy their corks from their neighbour of Brisport;
but now the large London houses sent down their travellers,
who competed with each other to gain the local custom,
until profits were cut down to the vanishing point.
For a long time the firm had been in a precarious
position, but this further drop in prices settled the
matter, and compelled Mr. Charles Fairbairn, the acting
manager, to close his establishment.
It was a murky, foggy Saturday afternoon
in November when the hands were paid for the last
time, and the old building was to be finally abandoned.
Mr. Fairbairn, an anxious-faced, sorrow-worn man, stood
on a raised dais by the cashier while he handed the
little pile of hardly-earned shillings and coppers
to each successive workman as the long procession
filed past his table. It was usual with the employees
to clatter away the instant that they had been paid,
like so many children let out of school; but to-day
they waited, forming little groups over the great
dreary room, and discussing in subdued voices the misfortune
which had come upon their employers, and the future
which awaited themselves. When the last pile
of coins had been handed across the table, and the
last name checked by the cashier, the whole throng
faced silently round to the man who had been their
master, and waited expectantly for any words which
he might have to say to them.
Mr. Charles Fairbairn had not expected
this, and it embarrassed him. He had waited as
a matter of routine duty until the wages were paid,
but he was a taciturn, slow-witted man, and he had
not foreseen this sudden call upon his oratorical
powers. He stroked his thin cheek nervously with
his long white fingers, and looked down with weak watery
eyes at the mosaic of upturned serious faces.
“I am sorry that we have to
part, my men,” he said at last in a crackling
voice. “It’s a bad day for all of
us, and for Brisport too. For three years we
have been losing money over the works. We held
on in the hope of a change coming, but matters are
going from bad to worse. There’s nothing
for it but to give it up before the balance of our
fortune is swallowed up. I hope you may all be
able to get work of some sort before very long.
Good-bye, and God bless you!”
“God bless you, sir! God
bless you!” cried a chorus of rough voices.
“Three cheers for Mr. Charles Fairbairn!”
shouted a bright-eyed, smart young fellow, springing
up upon a bench and waving his peaked cap in the air.
The crowd responded to the call, but their huzzas wanted
the true ring which only a joyous heart can give.
Then they began to flock out into the sunlight, looking
back as they went at the long deal tables and the
cork-strewn floor above all at the sad-faced,
solitary man, whose cheeks were flecked with colour
at the rough cordiality of their farewell.
“Huxford,” said the cashier,
touching on the shoulder the young fellow who had
led the cheering; “the governor wants to speak
to you.”
The workman turned back and stood
swinging his cap awkwardly in front of his ex-employer,
while the crowd pushed on until the doorway was clear,
and the heavy fog-wreaths rolled unchecked into the
deserted factory.
“Ah, John!” said Mr. Fairbairn,
coming suddenly out of his reverie and taking up a
letter from the table. “You have been in
my service since you were a boy, and you have shown
that you merited the trust which I have placed in
you. From what I have heard I think I am right
in saying that this sudden want of work will affect
your plans more than it will many of my other hands.”
“I was to be married at Shrovetide,”
the man answered, tracing a pattern upon the table
with his horny forefinger. “I’ll have
to find work first.”
“And work, my poor fellow, is
by no means easy to find. You see you have been
in this groove all your life, and are unfit for anything
else. It’s true you’ve been my foreman,
but even that won’t help you, for the factories
all over England are discharging hands, and there’s
not a vacancy to be had. It’s a bad outlook
for you and such as you.”
“What would you advise, then, sir?” asked
John Huxford.
“That’s what I was coming
to. I have a letter here from Sheridan and Moore,
of Montreal, asking for a good hand to take charge
of a workroom. If you think it will suit you,
you can go out by the next boat. The wages are
far in excess of anything which I have been able to
give you.”
“Why, sir, this is real kind
of you,” the young workman said earnestly.
“She my girl Mary, will
be as grateful to you as I am. I know what you
say is right, and that if I had to look for work I
should be likely to spend the little that I have laid
by towards housekeeping before I found it. But,
sir, with your leave I’d like to speak to her
about it before I made up my mind. Could you
leave it open for a few hours?”
“The mail goes out to-morrow,”
Mr. Fairbairn answered. “If you decide to
accept you can write tonight. Here is their letter,
which will give you their address.”
John Huxford took the precious paper
with a grateful heart. An hour ago his future
had been all black, but now this rift of light had
broken in the west, giving promise of better things.
He would have liked to have said something expressive
of his feelings to his employer, but the English nature
is not effusive, and he could not get beyond a few
choking awkward words which were as awkwardly received
by his benefactor. With a scrape and a bow, he
turned on his heel, and plunged out into the foggy
street.
So thick was the vapour that the houses
over the way were only a vague loom, but the foreman
hurried on with springy steps through side streets
and winding lanes, past walls where the fishermen’s
nets were drying, and over cobble-stoned alleys redolent
of herring, until he reached a modest line of whitewashed
cottages fronting the sea. At the door of one
of these the young man tapped, and then without waiting
for a response, pressed down the latch and walked
in.
An old silvery-haired woman and a
young girl hardly out of her teens were sitting on
either side of the fire, and the latter sprang to her
feet as he entered.
“You’ve got some good
news, John,” she cried, putting her hands upon
his shoulders, and looking into his eyes. “I
can tell it from your step. Mr. Fairbairn is
going to carry on after all.”
“No, dear, not so good as that,”
John Huxford answered, smoothing back her rich brown
hair; “but I have an offer of a place in Canada,
with good money, and if you think as I do, I shall
go out to it, and you can follow with the granny whenever
I have made all straight for you at the other side.
What say you to that, my lass?”
“Why, surely, John, what you
think is right must be for the best,” said the
girl quietly, with trust and confidence in her pale
plain face and loving hazel eyes. “But
poor granny, how is she to cross the seas?”
“Oh, never mind about me,”
the old woman broke in cheerfully. “I’ll
be no drag on you. If you want granny, granny’s
not too old to travel; and if you don’t want
her, why she can look after the cottage, and have an
English home ready for you whenever you turn back to
the old country.”
“Of course we shall need you,
granny,” John Huxford said, with a cheery laugh.
“Fancy leaving granny behind! That would
never do! Mary! But if you both come out,
and if we are married all snug and proper at Montreal,
we’ll look through the whole city until we find
a house something like this one, and we’ll have
creepers on the outside just the same, and when the
doors are shut and we sit round the fire on the winter’s
nights, I’m hanged if we’ll be able to
tell that we’re not at home. Besides, Mary,
it’s the same speech out there, and the same
king and the same flag; it’s not like a foreign
country.”
“No, of course not,” Mary
answered with conviction. She was an orphan with
no living relation save her old grandmother, and no
thought in life but to make a helpful and worthy wife
to the man she loved. Where these two were she
could not fail to find happiness. If John went
to Canada, then Canada became home to her, for what
had Brisport to offer when he was gone?
“I’m to write to-night
then and accept?” the young man asked. “I
knew you would both be of the same mind as myself,
but of course I couldn’t close with the offer
until we had talked it over. I can get started
in a week or two, and then in a couple of months I’ll
have all ready for you on the other side.”
“It will be a weary, weary time
until we hear from you, dear John,” said Mary,
clasping his hand; “but it’s God’s
will, and we must be patient. Here’s pen
and ink. You can sit at the table and write the
letter which is to take the three of us across the
Atlantic.” Strange how Don Diego’s
thoughts were moulding human lives in the little Devon
village.
The acceptance was duly despatched,
and John Huxford began immediately to prepare for
his departure, for the Montreal firm had intimated
that the vacancy was a certainty, and that the chosen
man might come out without delay to take over his
duties. In a very few days his scanty outfit
was completed, and he started off in a coasting vessel
for Liverpool, where he was to catch the passenger
ship for Quebec.
“Remember, John,” Mary
whispered, as he pressed her to his heart upon the
Brisport quay, “the cottage is our own, and come
what may, we have always that to fall back upon.
If things should chance to turn out badly over there,
we have always a roof to cover us. There you will
find me until you send word to us to come.”
“And that will be very soon,
my lass,” he answered cheerfully, with a last
embrace. “Good-bye, granny, good-bye.”
The ship was a mile and more from the land before
he lost sight of the figures of the straight slim
girl and her old companion, who stood watching and
waving to him from the end of the grey stone quay.
It was with a sinking heart and a vague feeling of
impending disaster that he saw them at last as minute
specks in the distance, walking townward and disappearing
amid the crowd who lined the beach.
From Liverpool the old woman and her
granddaughter received a letter from John announcing
that he was just starting in the barque St. Lawrence,
and six weeks afterwards a second longer epistle informed
them of his safe arrival at Quebec, and gave them
his first impressions of the country. After that
a long unbroken silence set in. Week after week
and month after month passed by, and never a word came
from across the seas. A year went over their
heads, and yet another, but no news of the absentee.
Sheridan and Moore were written to, and replied that
though John Huxford’s letter had reached them,
he had never presented himself, and they had been
forced to fill up the vacancy as best they could.
Still Mary and her grandmother hoped against hope,
and looked out for the letter-carrier every morning
with such eagerness, that the kind-hearted man would
often make a detour rather than pass the two pale
anxious faces which peered at him from the cottage
window. At last, three years after the young
foreman’s disappearance, old granny died, and
Mary was left alone, a broken sorrowful woman, living
as best she might on a small annuity which had descended
to her, and eating her heart out as she brooded over
the mystery which hung over the fate of her lover.
Among the shrewd west-country neighbours
there had long, however, ceased to be any mystery
in the matter. Huxford arrived safely in Canada so
much was proved by his letter. Had he met with
his end in any sudden way during the journey between
Quebec and Montreal, there must have been some official
inquiry, and his luggage would have sufficed to have
established his identity. Yet the Canadian police
had been communicated with, and had returned a positive
answer that no inquest had been held, or any body
found, which could by any possibility be that of the
young Englishman. The only alternative appeared
to be that he had taken the first opportunity to break
all the old ties, and had slipped away to the backwoods
or to the States to commence life anew under an altered
name. Why he should do this no one professed
to know, but that he had done it appeared only too
probable from the facts. Hence many a deep growl
of righteous anger rose from the brawny smacksmen
when Mary with her pale face and sorrow-sunken head
passed along the quays on her way to her daily marketing;
and it is more than likely that if the missing man
had turned up in Brisport he might have met with some
rough words or rougher usage, unless he could give
some very good reason for his strange conduct.
This popular view of the case never, however, occurred
to the simple trusting heart of the lonely girl, and
as the years rolled by her grief and her suspense
were never for an instant tinged with a doubt as to
the good faith of the missing man. From youth
she grew into middle age, and from that into the autumn
of her life, patient, long-suffering, and faithful,
doing good as far as lay in her power, and waiting
humbly until fate should restore either in this world
or the next that which it had so mysteriously deprived
her of.
In the meantime neither the opinion
held by the minority that John Huxford was dead, nor
that of the majority, which pronounced him to be faithless,
represented the true state of the case. Still
alive, and of stainless honour, he had yet been singled
out by fortune as her victim in one of those strange
freaks which are of such rare occurrence, and so beyond
the general experience, that they might be put by as
incredible, had we not the most trustworthy evidence
of their occasional possibility.
Landing at Quebec, with his heart
full of hope and courage, John selected a dingy room
in a back street, where the terms were less exorbitant
than elsewhere, and conveyed thither the two boxes
which contained his worldly goods. After taking
up his quarters there he had half a mind to change
again, for the landlady and the fellow-lodgers were
by no means to his taste; but the Montreal coach started
within a day or two, and he consoled himself by the
thought that the discomfort would only last for that
short time. Having written home to Mary to announce
his safe arrival, he employed himself in seeing as
much of the town as was possible, walking about all
day, and only returning to his room at night.
It happened, however, that the house
on which the unfortunate youth had pitched was one
which was notorious for the character of its inmates.
He had been directed to it by a pimp, who found regular
employment in hanging about the docks and decoying
new-comers to this den. The fellow’s specious
manner and proffered civility had led the simple-hearted
west-countryman into the toils, and though his instinct
told him that he was in unsafe company, he refrained,
unfortunately, from at once making his escape.
He contented himself with staying out all day, and
associating as little as possible with the other inmates.
From the few words which he did let drop, however,
the landlady gathered that he was a stranger without
a single friend in the country to inquire after him
should misfortune overtake him.
The house had an evil reputation for
the hocussing of sailors, which was done not only
for the purpose of plundering them, but also to supply
outgoing ships with crews, the men being carried on
board insensible, and not coming to until the ship
was well down the St. Lawrence. This trade caused
the wretches who followed it to be experts in the use
of stupefying drugs, and they determined to practise
their arts upon their friendless lodger, so as to
have an opportunity of ransacking his effects, and
of seeing what it might be worth their while to purloin.
During the day he invariably locked his door and carried
off the key in his pocket, but if they could render
him insensible for the night they could examine his
boxes at their leisure, and deny afterwards that he
had ever brought with him the articles which he missed.
It happened, therefore, upon the eve of Huxford’s
departure from Quebec, that he found, upon returning
to his lodgings, that his landlady and her two ill-favoured
sons, who assisted her in her trade, were waiting up
for him over a bowl of punch, which they cordially
invited him to share. It was a bitterly cold
night, and the fragrant steam overpowered any suspicions
which the young Englishman may have entertained, so
he drained off a bumper, and then, retiring to his
bedroom, threw himself upon his bed without undressing,
and fell straight into a dreamless slumber, in which
he still lay when the three conspirators crept into
his chamber, and, having opened his boxes, began to
investigate his effects.
It may have been that the speedy action
of the drug caused its effect to be evanescent, or,
perhaps, that the strong constitution of the victim
threw it off with unusual rapidity. Whatever the
cause, it is certain that John Huxford suddenly came
to himself, and found the foul trio squatted round
their booty, which they were dividing into the two
categories of what was of value and should be taken,
and what was valueless and might therefore be left.
With a bound he sprang out of bed, and seizing the
fellow nearest him by the collar, he slung him through
the open doorway. His brother rushed at him, but
the young Devonshire man met him with such a facer
that he dropped in a heap upon the ground. Unfortunately,
the violence of the blow caused him to overbalance
himself, and, tripping over his prostrate antagonist,
he came down heavily upon his face. Before he
could rise, the old hag sprang upon his back and clung
to him, shrieking to her son to bring the poker.
John managed to shake himself clear of them both, but
before he could stand on his guard he was felled from
behind by a crashing blow from an iron bar, which
stretched him senseless upon the floor.
“You’ve hit too hard,
Joe,” said the old woman, looking down at the
prostrate figure. “I heard the bone go.”
“If I hadn’t fetched him
down he’d ha’ been too many for us,”
said the young villain sulkily.
“Still, you might ha’
done it without killing him, clumsy,” said his
mother. She had had a large experience of such
scenes, and knew the difference between a stunning
blow and a fatal one.
“He’s still breathing,”
the other said, examining him; “the back o’
his head’s like a bag o’ dice though.
The skull’s all splintered. He can’t
last. What are we to do?”
“He’ll never come to himself
again,” the other brother remarked. “Sarve
him right. Look at my face! Let’s see,
mother; who’s in the house?”
“Only four drunk sailors.”
“They wouldn’t turn out
for any noise. It’s all quiet in the street.
Let’s carry him down a bit, Joe, and leave him
there. He can die there, and no one think the
worse of us.”
“Take all the papers out of
his pocket, then,” the mother suggested; “they
might help the police to trace him. His watch,
too, and his money L3 odd; better than
nothing. Now carry him softly and don’t
slip.”
Kicking off their shoes, the two brothers
carried the dying man down stairs and along the deserted
street for a couple of hundred yards. There they
laid him among the snow, where he was found by the
night patrol, who carried him on a shutter to the
hospital. He was duly examined by the resident
surgeon, who bound up the wounded head, but gave it
as his opinion that the man could not possibly live
for more than twelve hours.
Twelve hours passed, however, and
yet another twelve, but John Huxford still struggled
hard for his life. When at the end of three days
he was found to be still breathing, the interest of
the doctors became aroused at his extraordinary vitality,
and they bled him, as the fashion was in those days,
and surrounded his shattered head with icebags.
It may have been on account of these measures, or
it may have been in spite of them, but at the end
of a week’s deep trance the nurse in charge was
astonished to hear a gabbling noise, and to find the
stranger sitting up upon the couch and staring about
him with wistful, wondering eyes. The surgeons
were summoned to behold the phenomenon, and warmly
congratulated each other upon the success of their
treatment.
“You have been on the brink
of the grave, my man,” said one of them, pressing
the bandaged head back on to the pillow; “you
must not excite yourself. What is your name?”
No answer, save a wild stare.
“Where do you come from?”
Again no answer.
“He is mad,” one suggested.
“Or a foreigner,” said another. “There
were no papers on him when he came in. His linen
is marked ‘J. H.’ Let us try
him in French and German.”
They tested him with as many tongues
as they could muster among them, but were compelled
at last to give the matter over and to leave their
silent patient, still staring up wild-eyed at the whitewashed
hospital ceiling.
For many weeks John lay in the hospital,
and for many weeks efforts were made to gain some
clue as to his antecedents, but in vain. He showed,
as the time rolled by, not only by his demeanour, but
also by the intelligence with which he began to pick
up fragments of sentences, like a clever child learning
to talk, that his mind was strong enough in the present,
though it was a complete blank as to the past.
The man’s memory of his whole life before the
fatal blow was entirely and absolutely erased.
He neither knew his name, his language, his home, his
business, nor anything else. The doctors held
learned consultations upon him, and discoursed upon
the centre of memory and depressed tables, deranged
nerve-cells and cerebral congestións, but
all their polysyllables began and ended at the fact
that the man’s memory was gone, and that it was
beyond the power of science to restore it. During
the weary months of his convalescence he picked up
reading and writing, but with the return of his strength
came no return of his former life. England, Devonshire,
Brisport, Mary, Granny the words brought
no recollection to his mind. All was absolute
darkness. At last he was discharged, a friendless,
tradeless, penniless man, without a past, and with
very little to look to in the future. His very
name was altered, for it had been necessary to invent
one. John Huxford had passed away, and John Hardy
took his place among mankind. Here was a strange
outcome of a Spanish gentleman’s tobacco-inspired
meditations.
John’s case had aroused some
discussion and curiosity in Quebec, so that he was
not suffered to drift into utter helplessness upon
emerging from the hospital. A Scotch manufacturer
named M’Kinlay found him a post as porter in
his establishment, and for a long time he worked at
seven dollars a week at the loading and unloading
of vans. In the course of years it was noticed,
however, that his memory, however defective as to
the past, was extremely reliable and accurate when
concerned with anything which had occurred since his
accident. From the factory he was promoted into
the counting-house, and the year 1835 found him a junior
clerk at a salary of L120 a year. Steadily and
surely John Hardy fought his way upward from post
to post, with his whole heart and mind devoted to
the business. In 1840 he was third clerk, in 1845
he was second, and in 1852 he became manager of the
whole vast establishment, and second only to Mr. M’Kinlay
himself.
There were few who grudged John this
rapid advancement, for it was obviously due to neither
chance nor favouritism, but entirely to his marvellous
powers of application and industry. From early
morning until late in the night he laboured hard in
the service of his employer, checking, overlooking,
superintending, setting an example to all of cheerful
devotion to duty. As he rose from one post to
another his salary increased, but it caused no alteration
in his mode of living, save that it enabled him to
be more open-handed to the poor. He signalised
his promotion to the managership by a donation of L1000
to the hospital in which he had been treated a quarter
of a century before. The remainder of his earnings
he allowed to accumulate in the business, drawing
a small sum quarterly for his sustenance, and still
residing in the humble dwelling which he had occupied
when he was a warehouse porter. In spite of his
success he was a sad, silent, morose man, solitary
in his habits, and possessed always of a vague undefined
yearning, a dull feeling of dissatisfaction and of
craving which never abandoned him. Often he would
strive with his poor crippled brain to pierce the
curtain which divided him from the past, and to solve
the enigma of his youthful existence, but though he
sat many a time by the fire until his head throbbed
with his efforts, John Hardy could never recall the
least glimpse of John Huxford’s history.
On one occasion he had, in the interests
of the firm, to journey to Quebec, and to visit the
very cork factory which had tempted him to leave England.
Strolling through the workroom with the foreman, John
automatically, and without knowing what he was doing,
picked up a square piece of the bark, and fashioned
it with two or three deft cuts of his penknife into
a smooth tapering cork. His companion picked it
out of his hand and examined it with the eye of an
expert. “This is not the first cork which
you have cut by many a hundred, Mr. Hardy,” he
remarked. “Indeed you are wrong,”
John answered, smiling; “I never cut one before
in my life.” “Impossible!” cried
the foreman. “Here’s another bit of
cork. Try again.” John did his best
to repeat the performance, but the brains of the manager
interfered with the trained muscles of the corkcutter.
The latter had not forgotten their cunning, but they
needed to be left to themselves, and not directed
by a mind which knew nothing of the matter. Instead
of the smooth graceful shape, he could produce nothing
but rough-hewn clumsy cylinders. “It must
have been chance,” said the foreman, “but
I could have sworn that it was the work of an old
hand!”
As the years passed John’s smooth
English skin had warped and crinkled until he was
as brown and as seamed as a walnut. His hair,
too, after many years of iron-grey, had finally become
as white as the winters of his adopted country.
Yet he was a hale and upright old man, and when he
at last retired from the manager-ship of the firm with
which he had been so long connected, he bore the weight
of his seventy years lightly and bravely. He
was in the peculiar position himself of not knowing
his own age, as it was impossible for him to do more
than guess at how old he was at the time of his accident.
The Franco-German War came round,
and while the two great rivals were destroying each
other, their more peaceful neighbours were quietly
ousting them out of their markets and their commerce.
Many English ports benefited by this condition of
things, but none more than Brisport. It had long
ceased to be a fishing village, but was now a large
and prosperous town, with a great breakwater in place
of the quay on which Mary had stood, and a frontage
of terraces and grand hotels where all the grandees
of the west country came when they were in need of
a change. All these extensions had made Brisport
the centre of a busy trade, and her ships found their
way into every harbour in the world. Hence it
was no wonder, especially in that very busy year of
1870, that several Brisport vessels were lying in
the river and alongside the wharves of Quebec.
One day John Hardy, who found time
hang a little on his hands since his retirement from
business, strolled along by the water’s edge
listening to the clanking of the steam winches, and
watching the great barrels and cases as they were
swung ashore and piled upon the wharf. He had
observed the coming in of a great ocean steamer, and
having waited until she was safely moored, he was
turning away, when a few words fell upon his ear uttered
by some one on board a little weather-beaten barque
close by him. It was only some commonplace order
that was bawled out, but the sound fell upon the old
man’s ears with a strange mixture of disuse
and familiarity. He stood by the vessel and heard
the seamen at their work, all speaking with the same
broad, pleasant jingling accent. Why did it send
such a thrill through his nerves to listen to it?
He sat down upon a coil of rope and pressed his hands
to his temples, drinking in the long-forgotten dialect,
and trying to piece together in his mind the thousand
half-formed nebulous recollections which were surging
up in it. Then he rose, and walking along to
the stern he read the name of the ship, The Sunlight,
Brisport. Brisport! Again that flush and
tingle through every nerve. Why was that word
and the men’s speech so familiar to him?
He walked moodily home, and all night he lay tossing
and sleepless, pursuing a shadowy something which
was ever within his reach, and yet which ever evaded
him.
Early next morning he was up and down
on the wharf listening to the talk of the west-country
sailors. Every word they spoke seemed to him to
revive his memory and bring him nearer to the light.
From time to time they paused in their work, and seeing
the white-haired stranger sitting so silently and
attentively, they laughed at him and broke little jests
upon him. And even these jests had a familiar
sound to the exile, as they very well might, seeing
that they were the same which he had heard in his
youth, for no one ever makes a new joke in England.
So he sat through the long day, bathing himself in
the west-country speech, and waiting for the light
to break.
And it happened that when the sailors
broke off for their mid-day meal, one of them, either
out of curiosity or good nature, came over to the
old watcher and greeted him. So John asked him
to be seated on a log by his side, and began to put
many questions to him about the country from which
he came, and the town. All which the man answered
glibly enough, for there is nothing in the world that
a sailor loves to talk of so much as of his native
place, for it pleases him to show that he is no mere
wanderer, but that he has a home to receive him whenever
he shall choose to settle down to a quiet life.
So the seaman prattled away about the Town Hall and
the Martello Tower, and the Esplanade, and Pitt Street
and the High Street, until his companion suddenly
shot out a long eager arm and caught him by the wrist.
“Look here, man,” he said, in a low quick
whisper. “Answer me truly as you hope for
mercy. Are not the streets that run out of the
High Street, Fox Street, Caroline Street, and George
Street, in the order named?” “They are,”
the sailor answered, shrinking away from the wild
flashing eyes. And at that moment John’s
memory came back to him, and he saw clear and distinct
his life as it had been and as it should have been,
with every minutest detail traced as in letters of
fire. Too stricken to cry out, too stricken to
weep, he could only hurry away homewards wildly and
aimlessly; hurry as fast as his aged limbs would carry
him, as if, poor soul! there were some chance yet of
catching up the fifty years which had gone by.
Staggering and tremulous he hastened on until a film
seemed to gather over his eyes, and throwing his arms
into the air with a great cry, “Oh, Mary, Mary!
Oh, my lost, lost life!” he fell senseless upon
the pavement.
The storm of emotion which had passed
through him, and the mental shock which he had undergone,
would have sent many a man into a raging fever, but
John was too strong-willed and too practical to allow
his strength to be wasted at the very time when he
needed it most. Within a few days he realised
a portion of his property, and starting for New York,
caught the first mail steamer to England. Day
and night, night and day, he trod the quarter-deck,
until the hardy sailors watched the old man with astonishment,
and marvelled how any human being could do so much
upon so little sleep. It was only by this unceasing
exercise, by wearing down his vitality until fatigue
brought lethargy, that he could prevent himself from
falling into a very frenzy of despair. He hardly
dared ask himself what was the object of this wild
journey? What did he expect? Would Mary
be still alive? She must be a very old woman.
If he could but see her and mingle his tears with
hers he would be content. Let her only know that
it had been no fault of his, and that they had both
been victims to the same cruel fate. The cottage
was her own, and she had said that she would wait
for him there until she heard from him. Poor
lass, she had never reckoned on such a wait as this.
At last the Irish lights were sighted
and passed, Land’s End lay like a blue fog upon
the water, and the great steamer ploughed its way along
the bold Cornish coast until it dropped its anchor
in Plymouth Bay. John hurried to the railway
station, and within a few hours he found himself back
once more in his native town, which he had quitted
a poor corkcutter, half a century before.
But was it the same town? Were
it not for the name engraved all over the station
and on the hotels, John might have found a difficulty
in believing it. The broad, well-paved streets,
with the tram lines laid down the centre, were very
different from the narrow winding lanes which he could
remember. The spot upon which the station had
been built was now the very centre of the town, but
in the old days it would have been far out in the
fields. In every direction, lines of luxurious
villas branched away in streets and crescents bearing
names which were new to the exile. Great warehouses,
and long rows of shops with glittering fronts, showed
him how enormously Brisport had increased in wealth
as well as in dimensions. It was only when he
came upon the old High Street that John began to feel
at home. It was much altered, but still it was
recognisable, and some few of the buildings were just
as he had left them. There was the place where
Fairbairn’s cork works had been. It was
now occupied by a great brand-new hotel. And there
was the old grey Town Hall. The wanderer turned
down beside it, and made his way with eager steps
but a sinking heart in the direction of the line of
cottages which he used to know so well.
It was not difficult for him to find
where they had been. The sea at least was as
of old, and from it he could tell where the cottages
had stood. But alas, where were they now!
In their place an imposing crescent of high stone
houses reared their tall front to the beach. John
walked wearily down past their palatial entrances,
feeling heart-sore and despairing, when suddenly a
thrill shot through him, followed by a warm glow of
excitement and of hope, for, standing a little back
from the line, and looking as much out of place as
a bumpkin in a ballroom, was an old whitewashed cottage,
with wooden porch and walls bright with creeping plants.
He rubbed his eyes and stared again, but there it stood
with its diamond-paned windows and white muslin curtains,
the very same down to the smallest details, as it
had been on the day when he last saw it. Brown
hair had become white, and fishing hamlets had changed
into cities, but busy hands and a faithful heart had
kept granny’s cottage unchanged and ready for
the wanderer.
And now, when he had reached his very
haven of rest, John Huxford’s mind became more
filled with apprehension than ever, and he came over
so deadly sick, that he had to sit down upon one of
the beach benches which faced the cottage. An
old fisherman was perched at one end of it, smoking
his black clay pipe, and he remarked upon the wan face
and sad eyes of the stranger.
“You have overtired yourself,”
he said. “It doesn’t do for old chaps
like you and me to forget our years.”
“I’m better now, thank
you,” John answered. “Can you tell
me, friend, how that one cottage came among all those
fine houses?”
“Why,” said the old fellow,
thumping his crutch energetically upon the ground,
“that cottage belongs to the most obstinate woman
in all England. That woman, if you’ll believe
me, has been offered the price of the cottage ten
times over, and yet she won’t part with it.
They have even promised to remove it stone by stone,
and put it up on some more convenient place, and pay
her a good round sum into the bargain, but, God bless
you! she wouldn’t so much as hear of it.”
“And why was that?” asked John.
“Well, that’s just the
funny part of it. It’s all on account of
a mistake. You see her spark went away when I
was a youngster, and she’s got it into her head
that he may come back some day, and that he won’t
know where to go unless the cottage is there.
Why, if the fellow were alive he would be as old as
you, but I’ve no doubt he’s dead long ago.
She’s well quit of him, for he must have been
a scamp to abandon her as he did.”
“Oh, he abandoned her, did he?”
“Yes went off to
the States, and never so much as sent a word to bid
her good-bye. It was a cruel shame, it was, for
the girl has been a-waiting and a-pining for him ever
since. It’s my belief that it’s fifty
years’ weeping that blinded her.”
“She is blind!” cried John, half rising
to his feet.
“Worse than that,” said
the fisherman. “She’s mortal ill,
and not expected to live. Why, look ye, there’s
the doctor’s carriage a-waiting at her door.”
At this evil tidings old John sprang
up and hurried over to the cottage, where he met the
physician returning to his brougham.
“How is your patient, doctor?”
he asked in a trembling voice.
“Very bad, very bad,”
said the man of medicine pompously. “If
she continues to sink she will be in great danger;
but if, on the other hand, she takes a turn, it is
possible that she may recover,” with which oracular
answer he drove away in a cloud of dust.
John Huxford was still hesitating
at the doorway, not knowing how to announce himself,
or how far a shock might be dangerous to the sufferer,
when a gentleman in black came bustling up.
“Can you tell me, my man, if
this is where the sick woman is?” he asked.
John nodded, and the clergyman passed
in, leaving the door half open. The wanderer
waited until he had gone into the inner room, and then
slipped into the front parlour, where he had spent
so many happy hours. All was the same as ever,
down to the smallest ornaments, for Mary had been
in the habit whenever anything was broken of replacing
it with a duplicate, so that there might be no change
in the room. He stood irresolute, looking about
him, until he heard a woman’s voice from the
inner chamber, and stealing to the door he peeped in.
The invalid was reclining upon a couch,
propped up with pillows, and her face was turned full
towards John as he looked round the door. He could
have cried out as his eyes rested upon it, for there
were Mary’s pale, plain, sweet homely features
as smooth and as unchanged as though she were still
the half child, half woman, whom he had pressed to
his heart on the Brisport quay. Her calm, eventless,
unselfish life had left none of those rude traces
upon her countenance which are the outward emblems
of internal conflict and an unquiet soul. A chaste
melancholy had refined and softened her expression,
and her loss of sight had been compensated for by
that placidity which comes upon the faces of the blind.
With her silvery hair peeping out beneath her snow-white
cap, and a bright smile upon her sympathetic face,
she was the old Mary improved and developed, with
something ethereal and angelic superadded.
“You will keep a tenant in the
cottage,” she was saying to the clergyman, who
sat with his back turned to the observer. “Choose
some poor deserving folk in the parish who will be
glad of a home free. And when he comes you will
tell him that I have waited for him until I have been
forced to go on, but that he will find me on the other
side still faithful and true. There’s a
little money too only a few pounds but
I should like him to have it when he comes, for he
may need it, and then you will tell the folk you put
in to be kind to him, for he will be grieved, poor
lad, and to tell him that I was cheerful and happy
up to the end. Don’t let him know that
I ever fretted, or he may fret too.”
Now John listened quietly to all this
from behind the door, and more than once he had to
put his hand to his throat, but when she had finished,
and when he thought of her long, blameless, innocent
life, and saw the dear face looking straight at him,
and yet unable to see him, it became too much for
his manhood, and he burst out into an irrepressible
choking sob which shook his very frame. And then
occurred a strange thing, for though he had spoken
no word, the old woman stretched out her arms to him,
and cried, “Oh, Johnny, Johnny! Oh dear,
dear Johnny, you have come back to me again,”
and before the parson could at all understand what
had happened, those two faithful lovers were in each
other’s arms, weeping over each other, and patting
each other’s silvery heads, with their hearts
so full of joy that it almost compensated for all
that weary fifty years of waiting.
It is hard to say how long they rejoiced
together. It seemed a very short time to them
and a very long one to the reverend gentleman, who
was thinking at last of stealing away, when Mary recollected
his presence and the courtesy which was due to him.
“My heart is full of joy, sir,” she said;
“it is God’s will that I should not see
my Johnny, but I can call his image up as clear as
if I had my eyes. Now stand up, John, and I will
let the gentleman see how well I remember you.
He is as tall, sir, as the second shelf, as straight
as an arrow, his face brown, and his eyes bright and
clear. His hair is well-nigh black, and his moustache
the same I shouldn’t wonder if he
had whiskers as well by this time. Now, sir,
don’t you think I can do without my sight?”
The clergyman listened to her description, and looking
at the battered, white-haired man before him, he hardly
knew whether to laugh or to cry.
But it all proved to be a laughing
matter in the end, for, whether it was that her illness
had taken some natural turn, or that John’s return
had startled it away, it is certain that from that
day Mary steadily improved until she was as well as
ever. “No special license for me,”
John had said sturdily. “It looks as if
we were ashamed of what we are doing, as though we
hadn’t the best right to be married of any two
folk in the parish.” So the banns were
put up accordingly, and three times it was announced
that John Huxford, bachelor, was going to be united
to Mary Howden, spinster, after which, no one objecting,
they were duly married accordingly. “We
may not have very long in this world,” said old
John, “but at least we shall start fair and square
in the next.”
John’s share in the Quebec business
was sold out, and gave rise to a very interesting
legal question as to whether, knowing that his name
was Huxford, he could still sign that of Hardy, as
was necessary for the completion of the business.
It was decided, however, that on his producing two
trustworthy witnesses to his identity all would be
right, so the property was duly realised and produced
a very handsome fortune. Part of this John devoted
to building a pretty villa just outside Brisport,
and the heart of the proprietor of Beach Terrace leaped
within him when he learned that the cottage was at
last to be abandoned, and that it would no longer
break the symmetry and impair the effect of his row
of aristocratic mansions.
And there in their snug new home,
sitting out on the lawn in the summer-time, and on
either side of the fire in the winter, that worthy
old couple continued for many years to live as innocently
and as happily as two children. Those who knew
them well say that there was never a shadow between
them, and that the love which burned in their aged
hearts was as high and as holy as that of any young
couple who ever went to the altar. And through
all the country round, if ever man or woman were in
distress and fighting against hard times, they had
only to go up to the villa to receive help, and that
sympathy which is more precious than help. So
when at last John and Mary fell asleep in their ripe
old age, within a few hours of each other, they had
all the poor and the needy and the friendless of the
parish among their mourners, and in talking over the
troubles which these two had faced so bravely, they
learned that their own miseries also were but passing
things, and that faith and truth can never miscarry,
either in this existence or the next.