MY DEAR YOUNG LADY, -
Our postman here does not deliver
parcels until the afternoon - which nobody
grumbles at, because of his infirmity and his long
and useful career. The manuscript, therefore,
of your novel, Sunshine and Shadow, has not
yet reached me. But your letter - in
which, you beg me to send an opinion upon the work,
with some advice upon your chances of success in literature - I
found on my breakfast-table, as well as the photograph
which you desire (perhaps wisely) to face the title-page.
I trust you will forgive the slight stain in the lower
left-hand corner of the portrait, which I return:
for it is the strawberry-season here, and in course
of my reflections I had the misfortune to let the
cardboard slip between my fingers and fall across
the edge of the plate.
I have taken the resolution to send
my advice before it can be shaken by a perusal of
Sunshine and Shadow. But it is difficult
nevertheless. I might say bluntly that, unless
the camera lies, your face is not one to stake against
Fame over a game of hazard. You remember John
Lyly’s “Cupid and my Campaspe"? - and
how Cupid losing,
“down
he throws
The coral of his lip, the rose
Growing on’s cheek (but none lenows
how) ...”
When the Headmaster of the Grammar-School
came to add up the marks for the term’s work
and examination - which he always did without
a mistake - it was discovered that in the
Upper Fourth (the top form) Thompson had beaten Jenkins
major by sixteen. So Thompson received
a copy of the Memoirs of Eminent Etonians, bound
in tree-calf, and took it home under his arm, wondering
what “Etonians” were, but too proud to
ask. And Jenkins major received nothing; and being too weak to
punch Thompsons head (as he desired) waylaid him opposite the cemetery gate on
his way home, and said -
“Parvenu!”
“You’re another!”
Young Jenkins explained the term,
with a wave of his hand towards the cemetery gate.
“You’ll find my family
in there, and inside a rail of their own. And
you needn’t think I wanted that prize. I’ve
got a grandfather.”
So, no doubt, had Thompson; but, to
find him, he must have consulted the parish books
and searched among the graves at the northern end of
the burial-ground for one decorated with a tin label
and the number 2054. He gazed in at the sacred
acre of the Jenkinses and the monuments emblazoned
with “J.P.,” “Recorder of this Borough,”
“Clerk of the Peace for the County,” and
other proud appendices in gilt lettering: and,
in the heat of his heart, turned upon Jenkins major.
“You just wait till we die,
and see which of us two has the finer tombstone!”
Thereupon he stalked home and read
the Memoirs of Eminent Etonians, and learnt
from their perusal that it was indeed possible to earn
a finer tombstone than any Jenkins possessed.
At the end of the Christmas term, too, he acquired
a copy of Dr. Smiles’s famous work on Self-Help,
and this really set his feet in the path to his desire.
He determined, after weighing the
matter carefully, to be a poet: for it seemed
to him that of all the noble professions this was the
only one the initial expense of which could be covered
by his patrimony. The paper, ink, and pens came
cheaply enough (though the waste was excessive); and
for his outfit of high thoughts and emotions he pawned
not merely the possessions that you, my dear young
lady, are so willing to cast on the table - charms
of face and graces of person - for, as a
man, he valued these lightly; but the strength in
his arms, the taste of meat and wine, the cunning of
horsemanship, of boat-sailing, of mountain-climbing,
the breathless joy of the diver, the languid joy of
the dancer, the feel of the canoe-paddle shaken in
the rapid, the delicious lassitude of sleep in wayside-inns,
and lastly the ecstasy of love and fatherhood - all
these he relinquished for a tombstone that should
be handsomer than Jenkins’s. Jenkins, meanwhile,
was articled to his father, and, having passed the
necessary examinations with credit, became a solicitor
and married into a county family.
Thompson, I need hardly tell you,
was by this time settled in London and naturally spent
a good deal of his leisure time in Westminster Abbey.
The monuments there profoundly affected his imagination,
and gave him quite new ambitions with regard to the
tombstone that towered at the back of all his day-dreams.
When first he trod the Embankment, in thin boots with
a few pence in his pocket, it had appeared to him
in slate with a terrific inscription in gilt letters - inscriptions
in which “Benefactor of His Species,”
“Take him for All in All We shall not Look upon
his Like Again” took the place of the pettifogging
“Clerk of the Peace” or “J.P.”
tagged on to the names of the Jenkinses. By degrees,
however, he abated a little of the inscription and
made up for it by trebling the costliness of the stone.
From slate it grew to granite - to
marble - to alabaster, with painted cherubs and a coat of arms. At one
time he brooded, for a whole week, over a flamboyant design with bosses of lapis
lazuli at the four corners; and only gave it up for a life-size recumbent figure
in alabaster with four gryphons supporting the sarcophagus. As the soles
of his boots thickened with prosperity, so did his stone grow in solidity.
Finally an epic of his - Adrastus - took
the town by storm, and three editions were exhausted
in a single week. When this happened, he sat
down with a gigantic sheet of cartridge paper before
him and spent a whole year in setting out the elaborated
design. By his will he left all his money to
pay for the structure: for his father and mother
were dead and he had neither wife nor child.
When all was finished he rubbed his
hands, packed up his bag and took a third-class ticket
down to his native town, to have a contemptuous look
at the Jenkins monuments and see how Jenkins major
was getting on.
Jenkins major was up in the
cemetery, among his fathers. And on top of Jenkins
rested a granite cross - sufficiently handsome, to be sure, for a solicitor, but
nothing out of the way. J.P. was carved upon it; though, as Jenkins had
an absurdly long Christian name (Marmaduke Augustus St. John), these letters
were squeezed a bit in the right arm of the cross. Underneath was engraved
-
“ERECTED BY HIS DISCONSOLATE
WIFE AND CHILDREN.
A Father kind, a Husband dear,
A faithful Friend, lies buried here_.”
Thompson perused the doggerel once,
twice, and a third time; and chuckled contemptuously.
“So Jenkins has come to this. God bless
me, how life in a provincial town does narrow a man!”
“A Father kind, a Husband dear...”
Jenkins slept forgiven beneath his twopenny-halfpenny
tombstone, and Thompson, reflecting that not only was his own monument designed
(with a canopy of Carrara marble), but the cost of it invested in the three per
cents., walked contentedly back to the station, repeating on his way with gentle
scorn -
“A Father kind, a Husband dear,
A faithful Friend, lies buried here.”
The jingle lulled him asleep in his
railway carriage, and he awoke in London. Driving
home, he paid the cabby, rushed up to his room three
stairs at a bound, unlocked his safe and pulled out
the great design. In one corner he had even drawn
up a list of the eminent men who should be his pall-bearers.
Certainly such a tomb would make Jenkins turn in his
grave.
He spread the plan on the table, with
a paper-weight on each corner, and sat down before
it. After considering it for an hour, he arose
dissatisfied.
“Jenkins had a heap of flowers
over him - common flowers, to be sure, but fresh enough. I dare say I
could arrange for a supply, though. Its that confounded doggerel -
‘A Father kind, a Husband dear.’
“That’s Mrs. Jenkins’s
taste, I suppose. Still - of course I
could better the verse; but one can’t stick
up a lie over one’s remains. I wish to
God I had a disconsolate wife, or a child, if only
to spite Jenkins.”
And I believe, my dear young lady,
that underneath his tomb (whereon there now stands
a marble figure of Fame and blows a gilt trumpet) he
is still wishing it.