“‘Friend Sancho,’
said Don Quixote, ’this Island that I promised
you can neither stir nor fly.’” CERVANTES.
“Now what precisely did your
sister mean by that?” asked the artist, withdrawing
his gaze and fixing it on Arthur Miles.
“She is not my sister,” said the boy.
The artist he was an extraordinarily
tall young man, with a keen hatchet face, restless
brown eyes, and straight auburn hair parted accurately
in the middle considered for a moment, then
nodded.
“That’s so. It comes
out, soon as you talk . . . Well, see here now,
we’ll start right away. That’s how
Art hits me once I take hold of a notion,
I must sling in and get going. It’s my
temperament; and what’s Art right
there, please what’s Art, after
all, but expressed temperament? You catch the
idea? You’re the Infant Shakespeare, the
youth to fortune and to fame unknown ”
’His listless length
at noontide would he stretch’
“Stretch what you have of it ”
‘And pore upon the brook
that babbles by.’
“But I don’t want you to paint me,”
rebelled the boy.
“Goodness! Why not?”
For a moment or two Arthur Miles faced the question
almost sullenly.
“I don’t want my likeness taken,”
he explained at length.
“My young friend,” the
artist cheerfully assured him, “if that’s
your trouble, dismiss it. I can’t paint
a likeness for nuts.”
“You are sure?”
“Well, I should say I have a
grounded expectation, seeing that I claim a bigger
circle of friends than any other fellow that ever studied
with Carolus; and apart from their liking for me,
their conviction that never under any circumstances
could I catch a likeness is about the only thing they
have in common. I don’t say it’s
the cement of their friendship; but, anyway, it’s
an added tie.”
“If Tilda doesn’t mind ”
The boy hesitated, with a glance over his shoulder.
“We’ll consult the lady
when the portrait’s finished. If she
recognises you, I’ll destroy the canvas; and
I can’t say fairer than that . . . No,
I shan’t regret it. We’ll call it
an offering to the gods . . . And now,”
pursued the young man, flinging in a charcoal outline
in fiery haste, “we’ll consider the brakes
open.”
It took him perhaps thirty seconds
to block in the figure, and at once he fell to mixing
his palette, his fingers moving with a nervous, delicate
haste. He held a brush between his teeth during
the operation; but no sooner was it over, and the
gag removed, than his speech began to gush in quick,
impetuous jerks, each jerk marking an interval as,
after flinging a fresh splash of paint upon the canvas,
he stepped back half a pace to eye its effect.
“That’s my theory what’s
Art but temperament? expressed temperament? Now
I’m a fellow that could never stick long to a
thing never in my life. I’ve
not told you that I’m American, by the way.
My name’s Jessup George Pulteney
Jessup, of Boise City, Idaho. My father he’s
about the most prominent citizen in the State of Idaho.
You don’t get any ways far west of the Rockies
before you bump against Nahum P. Jessup and
you’ll be apt to hurt yourself by bumping too
hard. . . . My father began by setting it down
to fickleness. He said it came of having too
much money to play with. Mind you, he didn’t
complain. He sent for me into his office, and
‘George,’ he said, ’there’s
some fathers, finding you so vola_tile_, would
take the line of cutting down your allowance; but
that’s no line for me. To begin with,’
he said, ’it would set up a constraint between
us, and constraint in my family relations is what,
God helping me, I’ll never allow. And next,
whatever I saved on you I’d just have to re-invest,
and I’m over-capitalised as it is you
’d never guess the straits I’m put to daily
in keeping fair abreast of fifteen per cent., which
is my notion of making two ends meet. And, lastly,
it ain’t natural. If a man’s born
vola_tile_, vola_tile_ he is; and the sensible
plan, I take it, is to lean your ear to Nature, the
Mighty Mother, and find a career that has some use
for that kind of temperament. Now,’ said
my father, ’I know a little about most legitimate
careers, from ticket-punching up to lobbying, and
there’s not one in which a man would hand in
testimonials that he was vola_tile_. But,’
says my father, ’what about Art? I’ve
never taken stock of that occupation, myself:
I never had time. But I remember once in New
York going to a theatre and seeing Booth act William
Shakespeare’s Macbeth; and not twenty
minutes later, after all the ghosts and murderings,
I happened into a restaurant, and saw the same man
drinking cocktails and eating Blue Point oysters with
twice my appetite too. And Booth was at the
very top of his profession.’”
“Yes,” said Arthur Miles,
by this time greatly interested. “That’s
like Mr. Mortimer, too.”
“Mortimer?” Mr. Jessup
queried; and then, getting no answer, “Is he
an actor?”
The boy nodded.
“A prominent one?”
“I I believe so. I mean, he
says he ought to be.”
“I’d like to make his
acquaintance. It’s queer, too, a child
like you knowing about actors. What’s
your name?”
“I don’t know,”
said Arthur Miles, with another glance in the direction
of the inn, “that Tilda would like me to tell.”
The young artist eyed him.
“Well, never mind; we were talking
about my father. That’s how he came to
send me to Paris to study Art. And since then
I’ve done some thinking. It works out
like this,” he pursued, stepping back and studying
his daub between half-closed eyes, “the old man
had struck ore as usual. I never knew a mind
fuller of common sense just homely common
sense but he hadn’t the time to work
it. Yet it works easy enough if you keep hold
of the argument. The Old Masters we’re
always having it dinned into us didn’t
hustle; they mugged away at a Saint, or a Virgin and
Child, and never minded if it took ’em half a
lifetime. Well, putting aside their being paid
by time and not by the job because comparisons
on a monetary basis ain’t fair, one way or another for
better or worse, Carpaccio hadn’t a dad in the
Oil Trust I say, putting this aside, the
credit goes to their temperament, or, if you like,
part to that and part to their environment.
It wasn’t in them to hustle: they
felt no call for it, but just sat and painted and took
their meals regular. Now that spacious holy
sauntering don’t figure in my bill. When
I get hold of a notion same as this Infant
Shakespeare, f’r instance it’s
apt to take hold on me as a mighty fine proposition;
and then, before I can slap it on canvas, the thing’s
gone, faded, extinct, like a sunset.”
He paused and snapped his fingers expressively.
“I paint like Hades, but it beats me by a head
every time.”
“And what’s
the reason? I’m fickle, you say.
But that’s my temperament, and before a man
kicks against that he ought to be clear whether
it’s original sin or the outcome of his environment.
See what I mean?”
Arthur Miles was too truthful to say
that he did. Indeed, he understood next to nothing
of this harangue. But the young American’s
manner, so eager, so boyishly confidential, set him
at his ease; while beneath this voluble flow of talk
there moved a deeper current for which, all unconsciously,
the child’s spirit thirsted. He did not
realise this at all, but his eyes shone while he listened.
“I’ll put it this way:
We’re in the twentieth century. Between
the old masters and us something has happened.
What? Why Speed, sir modern civilisation
has discovered Speed. Railways telegraphs ’phones
elevators automobiles Atlantic
records. These inventions, sir” here
as will happen to Americans when they philosophise,
Mr. Jessup slipped into an oratorical style “have
altered man’s whole environment. Velasquez,
sir, was a great artist, and Velasquez could paint,
in his day, to beat the band. But I argue that,
if you resurrected Velasquez to-day, he’d have
to alter his outlook, and everything along with it,
right away down to his brush-work. And I go on
to argue that if I can’t paint like Velasquez which
is a cold fact it’s equally a fact
that, if I could, I oughtn’t. Speed, sir:
that’s the great proposition the
principles of Speed as applied to the Fine Arts ”
Here he glanced towards the clearing
between the willows, where at this moment Tilda reappeared
in a hurry, followed at a sedater pace by
a young woman in a pale blue sunbonnet.
“Oh, Arthur Miles, it’s
just splendid!” she announced, waving a letter
in her hand. And with that, noting the boy’s
attitude, she checked herself and stared suspiciously
from him to the artist. “Wot yer doin’
to ’im?” she demanded.
“Painting his portrait.”
“Then you didn’t ought, an’ ’e’d
no business to allow it!”
She stepped to the canvas, examined
it quickly, anxiously, then with a puzzled frown that
seemed to relax in a sigh of relief
“Well, it don’t seem as
you’ve done much ’arm as yet. But
all the same, you didn’t ought.”
“I want to know what’s
splendid?” the artist inquired, looking from
her to the girl in the sun-bonnet, who blushed rosily.
Tilda, for her part, looked at Arthur
Miles and to him addressed her answer
“’Enery’s broke it off!”
“Oh!” said the boy.
He reflected a moment, and added with a bright smile,
“And what about Sam?”
“It’s all ‘ere” she
held out the letter; “an’ we got to take
it to ’im. ’Enery says that waitin’s
a weary business, but ’e leaves it to ’er;
on’y ‘e’s just found out there’s
insanity on ’is side o’ the family.
That’s a bit ‘ard on Sam, o’ course;
but ‘Enery doesn’ know about Sam’s
feelin’s. ‘E was just tryin’
to be tactful.”
“You’ll pardon my curiosity,”
put in young Mr. Jessup; “but I don’t seem
to get the hang of this. So far as I figure it
up, you two children jump out of nowhere and find
yourselves here for the first time in your lives;
and before I can paint one of you and I’m
no snail the other walks into a public-house,
freezes on to an absolute stranger, bustles her through
one matrimonial affair and has pretty well fixed her
with another. As a student of locomotion” he
turned and stared down upon Tilda “I’d
like you to tell me how you did it.”
“Well,” she answered,
“I felt a bit nervous at startin’.
So I walked straight in an’ ordered two-penn’orth
o’ beer an’ then it all came
out.”
“Was that so?” He perpended
this, and went on, “I remember reading somewhere
in Ruskin that the more a man can do his job the more
he can’t say how. It’s rough on
learners.”
But Tilda was not to be drawn into a disputation on
Art.
“Come along,” she called to the boy.
“You mean to take him from me
in this hurry? . . . Well, that breaks another
record. I never up to now lost a model before
I’d weakened on him: it’s not their
way.”
“That young man,” said
Tilda as, holding Arthur Miles by the hand, she drew
him away and left the pair standing where the level
sun slanted through the willows “that
young man,” she repeated, turning for a last
wave of the hand to the girl in the sunbonnet, “is
’e a bit touched in ’is ’ead, now?”
The dusk gathered as they retraced
their way along Avon bank, and by the time they reached
the fair meadow the shows were hanging out their lights.
The children gave the field a wide berth, and fetching
a circuit, reached a grey stone bridge over which
the road led into the town.
They crossed it. They were now
in Stratford, in a street lit with gas-lamps and lined
with bright shop-windows; and Tilda had scarcely proceeded
a dozen yards before she turned, aware of something
wrong with the boy. In truth, he had never before
made acquaintance with a town at night. Lamps
and shop-fronts alike bewildered him. He had
halted, irresolute. He needed her hand to pilot
him.
She gave it, puzzled; for this world
so strange to him was the world she knew best.
She could not understand what ailed him. But
it was characteristic of Tilda that she helped first
and asked questions afterwards, if she asked them
at all. Usually she found that, given time,
they answered themselves. It was well, perhaps,
that she asked none now. For how could the boy
have explained that he seriously believed these shops
and lighted windows to be Eastcheap, Illyria, Verona,
and these passers-by, brushing briskly along the pavements,
to be Shakespeare’s people the authentic
persons of the plays? He halted, gazing, striving
to identify this figure and that as it hurried between
the lights. Which was Mercutio ruffling to meet
a Capulet? Was this the watch passing? Dogberry’s
watch? That broad-shouldered man could
he be Antonio, Sebastian’s friend, lurking by
to his seaport lodging? . . .
They were deep in the town, when he
halted with a gasp and a start that half withdrew
his hand from her clasp. A pale green light shone
on his face. It shone out on the roadway from
a gigantic illuminated bottle in a chemist’s
shop; and in the window stood three similar bottles,
each with a gas-jet behind it one yellow,
one amethystine violet, one ruby red.
His grip, relaxed for a second, closed
on her fingers again. He was drawing her towards
the window. They stared through it together,
almost pressing their faces to the pane.
Beyond it, within the shop, surrounded
by countless spotlessly polished bottles, his features
reflected in a flashing mirror, stood an old man,
bending over a mahogany counter, while with delicate
fingers he rearranged a line of gallipots in a glass-covered
case.
“Is is he ”
The boy paused, and Tilda heard him gulp down something
in his throat.
“Suppose,” he whispered, “if if
it should be God?”
“Ga’r’n!” said Tilda, pulling
herself together.
“You’re sure it’s only Prospero?”
he asked, still in a whisper.
Before she could answer him but
indeed she could have found no answer, never having
heard of Prospero the boy had dragged her
forward and thrust open one of the glass swing-doors.
It was he who now showed the courage.
“My lord!”
“Hey?” The old chemist
looked up over his spectacles, held for an instant
a gallipot suspended between finger and thumb, and
set it down with nice judgment. He was extremely
bald, and he pushed his spectacles high up on his
scalp. Then he smiled benevolently. “What
can I do for you, my dears?”
The boy stepped forward bravely, while
Tilda the game for once taken out of her
hands could only admire.
“If you would tell us where
the Island is it is called Holmness ”
Tilda caught her breath. But
the old chemist still bent forward, and still with
his kindly smile.
“Holmness? an
island?” he repeated in a musing echo.
“Let me see ”
“We ain’t sure
it’s an island, sir,” put in Tilda, plucking
up her courage a little.
“It will be in the Gazetteer,
of course,” said the old chemist with a happy
thought; “and you’ll find that in the Free
Library.”
“Gazetteer” “Free
Library.” To Tilda these were strange words names
of wide oceans, perhaps, or of far foreign countries.
But the boy caught at the last word: he remembered
Próspero’s
“Me, poor man,
my library
Was dukedom large enough,”
And this made him more confident than ever.
“But why do you want to know?”
the old chemist went on. “Is it home lessons?”
“’E,” said Tilda,
indicating Arthur Miles, “’e wants to find
a relation ’e’s got there a
kind of uncle in ’Olmness, w’ich
is in the Gazetteer,” she repeated, as though
the scent lay hidden in a nest of boxes, “’w’ich
is in the Free Library.”
“If you don’t mind waiting
a moment, I’ll take you there.”
The children gasped.
He turned and trotted around the back
of his mirrored screen. They heard him call and
announce to someone in the back parlour but
the boy made sure that it was to Miranda in her inner
cave that he was going out for a few minutes;
and by and by he reappeared, wearing a dark skull-cap,
with an Inverness cape about his shoulders, and carrying
in his hand a stout staff. He joined them by
lifting another marvel a mahogany
flap and walking straight through the counter! and
so led the way out of the shop and up the street to
the right, while the children in delicious terror
trotted at his heels.
They came to an open doorway, with
a lamp burning above it. Dark wavering shadows
played within, across the threshold; but the old man
stepped through these boldly, and pushed open the door
of a lighted room. The children followed, and
stood for a moment blinking.
The room was lined with books shelves
upon shelves of books; and among their books a dozen
men sat reading in total silence. Some held thin,
unbound pages of enormous size Arthur Miles
was unacquainted with newspapers open before
them; all were of middle age or over; and none of
them showed surprise at the new-comers. The old
chemist nodded to one or two, who barely returned
his nod and forthwith resumed their studies.
He walked straight across the room this
was wonderful too, that he should know, among so many
books, exactly where to search adjusted
his spectacles, stooped with palms on knees, peered
for ten seconds or so along the backs of a row of
tall volumes, drew forth one, and bearing it to the
table, laid it open under the lamplight.
“Let me see let me
see,” he muttered, turning the pages rapidly.
“H H.O. here we are!
Hockley Hoe no.”
He turned another three or four pages. “Holbeach Hollington Hollingwood Holme ah,
here we have it! Holmfirth, Holme Fell,
Holme Moss, HOLMNESS.”
He paused for a moment, scanning the
page while they held their breath. Then he read
aloud, yet not so as to disturb the other students
“‘Holmness.
An Island or Islet in the Bristol Channel ’”
“Ah!” The boy let his breath escape almost
in a sob.
“‘Uninhabited ’”
The old chemist looked up over the
rims of his spectacles; but whether questioning or
because the sound had interrupted him, Tilda could
not determine.
“Yes,” said the boy eagerly.
“They thought that about about the
other Island, sir. Didn’t they?”
The old man, either not hearing or
not understanding, looked down at the page again.
He read out the latitude and longitude words
and figures which neither of the children understood.
“’Extreme length, three-quarters
of a mile; width at narrowest point, 165 yards.
It contains 356 acres, all of short grass, and affords
pasturage in summer for a few sheep from the mainland.
There is no harbour; but the south side affords fair
anchorage for vessels sheltering from N.W. winds.
The distance from nearest point of coast is three
and three-quarter miles. Reputed to have served
anciently as rendezvous for British pirates,
and even in the last century as a smugglers’
entrepôt. Geological formation ’”
“Is that all?” asked Tilda
as the old man ceased his reading.
“That is all.”
“But the river will take us to it,” said
the boy confidently.
“Hey? What river?”
“Why this river the Avon.
It leads down to it of course it must!”
“Why, yes,” answered the
old chemist after considering a while. “In
a sense, of course, it does. I hadn’t
guessed at your age you’d be so good at geography.
The Avon runs down to Tewkesbury, and there it joins
the Severn; and the Severn leads down past Gloucester
and into the Bristol Channel.”
“I was sure!”
The boy said it in no very loud tone:
but something shook in his voice, and at the sound
of it all the readers looked up with curiosity which
changed, however, to protest at sight of the boy’s
rags.
“S sh sh!” said
two or three.
The old chemist gazed around apologetically,
closed the volume, replaced it, and shepherded the
children forth.