I. - AN INTERRUPTION:
From Algernon Dexter, writer of
Vers de Societe, London, to Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia.
My dear prince, - Our correspondence
has dwindled of late. Indeed, I do not remember
to have heard from you since I wrote to acknowledge
your kindness in standing godfather to my boy Jack
(now rising two), and the receipt of the beautiful
scimitar which, as a christening present, accompanied
your consent. Still I do not forget the promise
you exacted from “Q.” and myself after
lunch at the Mitre, on the day when we took our bachelors’
degrees together - that if in our paths through
life we happened upon any circumstance that seemed
to throw fresh light on the dark, complex workings
of the human heart, or at least likely to prove of
interest to a student of his fellow men, we would
write it down and despatch it to you, under cover of
The Negus. During the months of my engagement
to Violet these communications of mine (you will allow)
were frequent enough: since our marriage they
have grown shamefully fewer. Possibly I lose
alertness while I put on flesh: it is the natural
hebetudus of happiness. “Q.” - who
is never seen now upon London stones - no
doubt sends you a plenty of what passes for news in
that parish which it is his humour to prefer to the
Imperial City. But, believe me, the very finest
romance is still to be had in London: and to
prove this I am going to tell you a story that, upon
my soul, Prince, will make you sit up.
Until last night the Seely-Hardwickes
were a force in this capital. They were three, - Seely-Hardwicke
himself, who owned a million or more, and to my knowledge
drank Hollands and smoked threepenny Returns in his
Louis Quinze library; Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke, as beautiful
as the moon and clever to sinfulness; and Billy, their
child, aged seven-and-a-half. To-day their whereabouts
would be as difficult to find as that of the boy in
Mrs. Hemans’s ballad. You jump to the guess
that they have lost their money. You are wrong.
It was amassed in the canned-fruit
trade, which, I understand, does not fluctuate severely,
though doubtless in the last instance dependent on
the crops. Seely-Hardwicke and his wife were ready
to lose any amount of it at cards, which accounts
for a measure of their success. It had been found
(with Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke) somewhere on the Pacific
Slope, by a destitute Yorkshireman who had tired of
driving rivets on the Clyde and betaken himself across
the Atlantic, for a change, in front of a furnace
some thirty-odd feet below decks. Of his adventures
in the Great Republic nothing is known but this, that
he drove into the silence of its central plain at the
tail of a traction engine and emerged on its western
shore, three years later, with a wife, a child and
a growing pile. With this pile there grew a desire
to spend it in his own country; and the family landed
at Liverpool on Billy’s sixth birthday.
I think their double-barrelled name must have been
invented by Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke on the voyage.
I first made Billy’s acquaintance
in the Row, where a capable groom was teaching him
to ride a very small skewbald pony. This happened
in the week after our Jack was born, when I was perforce
companionless: but as soon as Violet could ride
again, she too fell a victim to the red curls and
seraphic face of this urchin. And so, when Billy’s
mother began, later in the season, to appear in the
Row, Billy (now promoted to a larger pony) introduced
us in his own fashion and we quickly made friends.
By this time she had been “presented,”
and was fairly on her feet in London: and henceforward
her career resembled not so much a conquest as the
progress of a Roman Emperor. I am not referring
to the vulgar achievements of mere wealth. Wherever
these people went, to be sure, they left outposts - a
Mediterranean villa, a deer forest behind the Grampians,
small Saturday-to-Monday establishments beside the
Thames and the North Sea, and furnished abodes on
short leases near Newmarket and Ascot Heaths; not to
mention nomadic trifles such as houseboats and yachts.
Any one with money can purchase these, and any one
having a cook can fill them with people of a sort.
The quality of Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke’s success
was seen in this, that from the first she knew none
but the right people: and though, as her circle
widened, it included names of higher and yet higher
lustre, yet (if I may press a somewhat confused metaphor)
its rings were concentric and hardly distinct.
She never, I believe, was forced to drop an old acquaintance
because she had found a new one. The just estimate
of our Western manners which you, my dear Prince,
formed at Balliol, will enable you to grasp the singularity
of such a triumph. Its rapidity, I must admit,
perplexes me still. But in those old days we
studied Arnold Toynbee overmuch and neglected the
civilising influences of the card-table. By the
time the Seely-Hardwickes took their house near Hyde
Park Corner, philanthropy was beginning to stale and
our leaders to perceive that the rejuvenation of society
must be effected (if at all) not by bestowing money
on the poor, but by losing it to the rich. Seely-Hardwicke
himself was understood to spend most of his time in
the City, looking after the interests of canned fruits
and making small fortunes out of his redundant cash.
You will readily understand that we
soon came to see little of our new acquaintances.
A small private income and the trivial wage commanded
by society verses in this country (so different in
many respects from Abyssinia) confined us to a much
narrower orbit. But we were invited pretty often
to their dinners, and the notes I have given you were
taken on these occasions. Last night there were
potentates at Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke’s - several
imported, and one of British growth. To-day - but
you shall hear it in the fewest words.
Three days back, Billy failed to turn
up in the Row. We met his mother riding alone
and asked the reason. She told us the child had
a cough and something of a sore throat and she thought
it wiser to keep him at home.
On the next day, and yesterday, he
was still absent. In the evening we went to the
Seely-Hardwicke’s dance. The thing was wonderfully
done. An exuberant vegetation that suggested
a virgin forest was qualified by the presence of several
hundred people. It was impossible to dance or
to feel lonely; and our hostess looked radiant as the
moon in the reflected rays of her success. We
shook hands with her and were swallowed in the crowd.
About half-an-hour later, as I watched
the crush from a recess beside an open window and
listened to the waltz that the band was playing, Seely-Hardwicke
himself thrust his way towards me. He was crumpled
and perspiring copiously: but the glory of it
all sat on his blunt face yet more openly than on
his wife’s lovely features.
“I’ve not been here above
ten minutes,” he explained. “Had to
run down to Liverpool suddenly last night, and only
reached King’s Cross something less ’n
an hour back. Quick work.”
“How’s Billy?” I asked, after a
few commonplace words.
“Off colour, still. I went
up to see him, just now: but the nurse wouldn’t
let him be disturbed; said he was sleepin’.
Best thing for him. You’ll see him out,
as lively as a lark, to-morrow.”
“And getting stopped, as usual,
by the police for expounding his idea of a canter
in the Ladies’ Mile.”
He laughed. “Hey?
I like that. I like spirit. He looks fragile - he’s
like his mother for that - but they’re
game every inch, the pair of ’em. You may
think me silly, but I don’t know that I can last
out this without runnin’ up to have a look at
him. I haven’t seen him for two days.”
I believe he was on the point of launching
out into any number of fatherly confidences.
But at this point he was claimed by an acquaintance
some ten paces off; and, plunging among his guests,
was lost to me.
I cannot tell you, my dear Prince,
how much time elapsed between this and the arrival
of the home-grown Potentate - as you must
allow me to call him until we meet and I can whisper
his august name. But I know that shortly after
his arrival, while I still loafed in my recess and
hoped that Violet would soon drift in my direction
and allow herself to be taken home, the throng around
me began to thin in a most curious manner. How
it happened - whence it started and how it
spread - I cannot tell you. Only it
seemed as if something began to be whispered, and
the whisper melted the crowd like sugar. Almost
before I grew aware of what was happening, I could
see the far side of the room, and the Potentate there
by Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke’s side; and could mark
their faces. His was cast in a polite, but slightly
rigid smile. His eyes wandered. That supernumerary
sense which all his family possesses had warned him
that something was wrong. Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke’s
face was white as chalk, though her eyes returned
his smile.
At this moment Violet came towards me.
“Take me home,” she commanded,
but under her breath. As she said it she shivered.
“What on earth is the matter?” I demanded.
She pulled me by the sleeve.
I looked up and saw a white-haired man, of military
carriage, walking towards His Royal Highness.
He came to a halt, a pace off, and stood as if anxious
to speak. I saw also that Mrs. Seely-Hardwicke
would not allow him a chance, but talked desperately.
I saw groups of people, up and down the room, regarding
her even as we. And then the door was flung open.
Seely-Hardwicke came running in with
Billy in his arms - or rather, with Billy’s
body. The child had died at four that afternoon,
of diphtheria.
I got Violet out of the room as soon
as I could. The man’s language was frightful - filthy. And his
wife straightened herself up and answered him back. It was a babel of
obscene Frisco curses: but I remember one clear sentence of hers from the
din -
“You - , you!
And d’ye think my heart won’t go
to pieces when my stays are cut?”
All the way home Violet kept sobbing
and crying out that she was never driven so slowly.
She was convinced that some harm had happened to her
own Jack. She ran up to the night-nursery at once
and woke your god-child out of a healthy sleep.
And he arose in his full strength and yelled.
II. - THE GREAT FIRE ON FREETHY’S QUAY.
From “Q.”
Troy Town.
New Year’s Eve, 1892.
MY DEAR PRINCE, - The New
Year is upon us, a season which the devout Briton
sets aside for taking stock of his short-comings.
I know not if Prester John introduced this custom
among the Abyssinians: but we find it very convenient
here.
In particular I have been vexing myself
to-day over the gradual desuetude of our correspondence.
Doubtless the fault is mine: and doubtless I
compare very poorly with Dexter, whose letters are
bound to be bright and frequent. But Dexter clings
to London; and from London, as from your own Africa,
semper aliquid novi. But of Troy during
these twelve months there has been little or nothing
to delate. The small port has been enjoying a
period of quiet which even the General Election, last
summer, did not seriously disturb. As you know,
the election turned on the size of mesh proper to be
used in the drift-net fishery. We wore favours
of red, white and blue, symbolising our hatred of
the mesh favoured by Mr. Gladstone; and carried our
man. Had other constituencies as sternly declined
to fritter away their voting strength upon side issues,
Lord Salisbury would now be in power with a solid
majority at his back.
My purpose, however, is not to talk
of politics, but to give you a short description of
an event which has greatly excited us, and redeemed
from monotony (though at the eleventh hour) the year
Eighteen ninety-two. I refer to the great fire
on Freethy’s Quay, where Mr. Wm. Freethy has
of late been improving his timber-store with a number
of the newest mechanical inventions; among others,
with a steam engine which operates on a circular saw,
and impels it to cut up oak poles (our winter fuel)
with incredible rapidity. It was here that the
outbreak occurred, on Christmas Eve - of all
days in the year - between five and six o’clock
in the afternoon.
But I should first tell you that our
town has enjoyed a long immunity from fires; and although
we possess a Volunteer Fire Brigade, at once efficient
and obliging, and commanded by Mr. Patrick Sullivan
(an Irishman), the men have had little or no opportunity
of combating their sworn foe. The Brigade was
founded in the early autumn of 1873, and presented
by public subscription with a handsome manual engine
and a wooden house to contain it. This house,
painted a bright vermilion, is a conspicuous object
at the top of the hill above the town, as you turn
off towards the Rope-walk. The firemen, of course,
wear an appropriate uniform, with brazen helmets and
shoulder-straps and a neat axe apiece, suspended in
a leathern case from the waistband. But the spirit
of make-believe has of necessity animated all their
public exercise, if I except the 13th of April, 1879,
when a fire broke out in the back premises of Mr.
Tippett, carpenter. His shop was (and is) situated
in the middle of the town, and in those days a narrow
gatehouse gave, or rather prevented, access to the
town on either side. These houses stood, one
at the extremity of North Street, beside the Ferry
Slip, the other at the south end of the Fore Street,
where it turns the corner by the Ship Inn and mounts
Lostwithiel Hill. With their low-browed arches,
each surmounted by a little chamber for the toll-keeper,
they recalled in an interesting manner the days when
local traffic was carried on solely by means of pack-horses;
but by an unfortunate oversight their straitness had
been left out of account by the donors of the fire-engine,
which stuck firmly in the passage below Lostwithiel
Hill and could be drawn neither forwards nor back,
thus robbing the Brigade of the result of six years’
practice. For the engine filled up so much of
the thoroughfare that the men could neither climb
over nor round it, but were forced to enter the town
by a circuitous route and find, to their chagrin,
Mr. Tippett’s premises completely gutted.
For three days all our traffic entered and left the
town perforce by the north side; but two years after,
on the completion of the railway line to Troy, these
obstructive gatehouses were removed, to give passage
to the new Omnibus.
Let me proceed to the story of our
more recent alarm. At twenty minutes to five,
precisely, on Christmas Eve, Mr. Wm. Freethy left his
engine-room by the door which opens on the Quay; turned
the key, which he immediately pocketed; and proceeded
towards his mother’s house, at the western end
of the town, where he invariably takes tea. The
wind was blowing strongly from the east, where it
had been fixed for three days, and the thermometer
stood at six degrees below freezing. Indeed,
I had remarked, early in the morning, that an icicle
of quite respectable length (for a small provincial
town), depended from the public water-tap under the
Methodist Chapel. About twenty minutes after
Mr. Freethy’s departure, some children, who were
playing about the Quay, observed dense volumes of
smoke (as they thought) issuing from under the engine-room
door. They gave the alarm. I happened to
be in the street at the time, purchasing muscatels
for the Christmas snap-dragon, and, after rushing
up to the Quay to satisfy myself, proceeded with all
haste to Mr. Sullivan, Captain of the Brigade.
I found him at tea, but behaving in
a somewhat extraordinary manner. It is well known
that Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan suffer occasionally from
domestic disagreement, due, in great measure, to the
lady’s temper. Mr. Sullivan was sitting
at the table with a saucer inverted upon his head,
a quantity of tea-leaves matted in his iron-grey hair,
and their juice trickling down his face. On hearing
my alarming intelligence, he said:
“I had meant to sit there for
some time; indeed, until my little boy returns with
the Vicar, whom I have sent for to witness the effects
of my wife’s temper. I was sitting down
to tea when I heard a voice in the street calling
’Whiting!’ - a fish of which I
am extremely fond - and ran out to procure
threepenny worth. On my return, my wife here - I
suppose, because she objects to clean the fish - assaulted
me in the manner you behold.”
With praiseworthy public spirit, however,
Mr. Sullivan forewent his revenge, and, having cleansed
his hair, ran with all speed to get out the fire-engine.
Returning to the Quay, at about 5
p.m., I found a large crowd assembled before the engine-room
door, from which the vapour was pouring in dense clouds.
The Brigade came rattling up with their manual in
less than ten minutes. As luck would have it,
this was just the hour when the mummers, guise dancers
and darkey-parties were dressing up for their Christmas
rounds; and the appearance presented by the crowd
in the deepening dusk would, in less serious circumstances,
have been extremely diverting. Two of the firemen
wore large moustaches of burnt cork beneath their
helmets, and another (who was cast to play the Turkish
Knight) had found no time to remove the bright blue
dye he had been applying to his face. The pumpmaker
had come as Father Christmas, and the blacksmith (who
was forcing the door) looked oddly in an immense white
hat, a flapping collar and a suit of pink chintz with
white bone buttons. He had not accomplished his
purpose when I heard a shout, and, looking up the street,
saw Mr. Wm. Freethy approaching at a brisk run.
He is forty-three years old, and his figure inclines
to rotundity. The wind, still in the east, combined
with the velocity of his approach to hold his coat-tails
in a line steadily horizontal. In his right hand
he carried a large slice of his mother’s home-made
bread, spread with yellow plum jam; a semicircular
excision of the crumb made it plain that he had been
disturbed in his first mouthful. The crowd parted
and he advanced to the door; laid his slice of bread
and jam upon the threshold; searched in his fob pocket
for the key; produced it; turned it in the lock; picked
up his bread and jam again; opened the door; took a
bite; and plunged into the choking clouds that immediately
enveloped his person.
While the concourse waited, in absolute
silence, the atmosphere of the engine-house cleared
as if by magic, and Mr. Wm. Freethy was visible again
in the converging rays of six bull’s-eye lanterns
held forward by six members of the Fire Brigade.
One hand still held the bread and jam; the other grasped
a stop-cock which he had that instant turned, shutting
off the outpour of steam we had taken for smoke.
Some one tittered; but the general laugh was prevented
by a resounding splash. The recoiling crowd had
backed against the fire-engine outside, and inadvertently
thrust it over the Quay’s edge into two fathoms
of water!
We left it there till the tide should turn, and forming into
procession, marched back through the streets. I never witnessed greater
enthusiasm. I do not believe Troy held a man, woman, or child that did not
turn out of doors to cheer and laugh. Presently a verse sprang up: -
“The smoke came out at Freethy’s
door,
An’ down came Sullivan with his
corps.
‘My dears,’ says Freethy,’
don’t ’ee pour!
For the smoke be steam an nothin more -
But what hav’ ‘ee
done wi’ the En-gine?’”
And the firemen, by shouting it as
heartily as the rest, robbed the epigram of all its
sting.
But the best of it, my dear Prince,
was still to come. For at half-past eight (that
being the time of low water) a salvage corps assembled
and managed to drag the engine ashore by means of stout
tackle hitched round the granite pedestal that stands
on Freethy’s Quay to commemorate the visit of
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, who landed there
on the 8th of September, 1846. The guise-dancers
paraded it through the streets until midnight, when
they gave it over to the carollers, who fed it with
buckets; and as the poor machine was but little damaged,
brisk jets of water were made to salute the citizens’
windows simultaneously with the season’s holy
songs. I, who have a habit of sleeping with my
window open, received an icy shower-bath with the
opening verse of “Christians, awake! Salute
the Happy Morn....”
On Saturday next the Brigade assembles
for a Grand Salvage Banquet in the Town Hall.
There will be speeches. Accept, my dear Prince,
all possible good wishes for the New Year....