Whoever would begin to be worried
with letting Lodgings that wasn’t a lone woman
with a living to get is a thing inconceivable to me,
my dear; excuse the familiarity, but it comes natural
to me in my own little room, when wishing to open
my mind to those that I can trust, and I should be
truly thankful if they were all mankind, but such is
not so, for have but a Furnished bill in the window
and your watch on the mantelpiece, and farewell to
it if you turn your back for but a second, however
gentlemanly the manners; nor is being of your own sex
any safeguard, as I have reason, in the form of sugar-tongs
to know, for that lady (and a fine woman she was)
got me to run for a glass of water, on the plea of
going to be confined, which certainly turned out true,
but it was in the Station-house.
Number Eighty-one Norfolk Street,
Strand situated midway between the City
and St. James’s, and within five minutes’
walk of the principal places of public amusement is
my address. I have rented this house many years,
as the parish rate-books will testify; and I could
wish my landlord was as alive to the fact as I am
myself; but no, bless you, not a half a pound of paint
to save his life, nor so much, my dear, as a tile
upon the roof, though on your bended knees.
My dear, you never have found Number
Eighty-one Norfolk Street Strand advertised in Bradshaw’s
Railway Guide, and with the blessing of Heaven
you never will or shall so find it. Some there
are who do not think it lowering themselves to make
their names that cheap, and even going the lengths
of a portrait of the house not like it with a blot
in every window and a coach and four at the door,
but what will suit Wozenham’s lower down on
the other side of the way will not suit me, Miss Wozenham
having her opinions and me having mine, though when
it comes to systematic underbidding capable of being
proved on oath in a court of justice and taking the
form of “If Mrs. Lirriper names eighteen shillings
a week, I name fifteen and six,” it then comes
to a settlement between yourself and your conscience,
supposing for the sake of argument your name to be
Wozenham, which I am well aware it is not or my opinion
of you would be greatly lowered, and as to airy bedrooms
and a night-porter in constant attendance the less
said the better, the bedrooms being stuffy and the
porter stuff.
It is forty years ago since me and
my poor Lirriper got married at St. Clement’s
Danes, where I now have a sitting in a very pleasant
pew with genteel company and my own hassock, and being
partial to evening service not too crowded.
My poor Lirriper was a handsome figure of a man, with
a beaming eye and a voice as mellow as a musical instrument
made of honey and steel, but he had ever been a free
liver being in the commercial travelling line and
travelling what he called a limekiln road “a
dry road, Emma my dear,” my poor Lirriper says
to me, “where I have to lay the dust with one
drink or another all day long and half the night, and
it wears me Emma” and this led to
his running through a good deal and might have run
through the turnpike too when that dreadful horse that
never would stand still for a single instant set off,
but for its being night and the gate shut and consequently
took his wheel, my poor Lirriper and the gig smashed
to atoms and never spoke afterwards. He was a
handsome figure of a man, and a man with a jovial heart
and a sweet temper; but if they had come up then they
never could have given you the mellowness of his voice,
and indeed I consider photographs wanting in mellowness
as a general rule and making you look like a new-ploughed
field.
My poor Lirriper being behindhand
with the world and being buried at Hatfield church
in Hertfordshire, not that it was his native place
but that he had a liking for the Salisbury Arms where
we went upon our wedding-day and passed as happy a
fortnight as ever happy was, I went round to the creditors
and I says “Gentlemen I am acquainted with the
fact that I am not answerable for my late husband’s
debts but I wish to pay them for I am his lawful wife
and his good name is dear to me. I am going
into the Lodgings gentlemen as a business and if I
prosper every farthing that my late husband owed shall
be paid for the sake of the love I bore him, by this
right hand.” It took a long time to do
but it was done, and the silver cream-jug which is
between ourselves and the bed and the mattress in
my room up-stairs (or it would have found legs so sure
as ever the Furnished bill was up) being presented
by the gentlemen engraved “To Mrs. Lirriper
a mark of grateful respect for her honourable conduct”
gave me a turn which was too much for my feelings,
till Mr. Betley which at that time had the parlours
and loved his joke says “Cheer up Mrs. Lirriper,
you should feel as if it was only your christening
and they were your godfathers and godmothers which
did promise for you.” And it brought me
round, and I don’t mind confessing to you my
dear that I then put a sandwich and a drop of sherry
in a little basket and went down to Hatfield church-yard
outside the coach and kissed my hand and laid it with
a kind of proud and swelling love on my husband’s
grave, though bless you it had taken me so long to
clear his name that my wedding-ring was worn quite
fine and smooth when I laid it on the green green waving
grass.
I am an old woman now and my good
looks are gone but that’s me my dear over the
plate-warmer and considered like in the times when
you used to pay two guineas on ivory and took your
chance pretty much how you came out, which made you
very careful how you left it about afterwards because
people were turned so red and uncomfortable by mostly
guessing it was somebody else quite different, and
there was once a certain person that had put his money
in a hop business that came in one morning to pay his
rent and his respects being the second floor that would
have taken it down from its hook and put it in his
breast-pocket you understand my dear for
the L, he says of the original only there
was no mellowness in his voice and I wouldn’t
let him, but his opinion of it you may gather from
his saying to it “Speak to me Emma!” which
was far from a rational observation no doubt but still
a tribute to its being a likeness, and I think myself
it was like me when I was young and wore that
sort of stays.
But it was about the Lodgings that
I was intending to hold forth and certainly I ought
to know something of the business having been in it
so long, for it was early in the second year of my
married life that I lost my poor Lirriper and I set
up at Islington directly afterwards and afterwards
came here, being two houses and eight-and-thirty years
and some losses and a deal of experience.
Girls are your first trial after fixtures
and they try you even worse than what I call the Wandering
Christians, though why they should roam the
earth looking for bills and then coming in and viewing
the apartments and stickling about terms and never
at all wanting them or dreaming of taking them being
already provided, is, a mystery I should be thankful
to have explained if by any miracle it could be.
It’s wonderful they live so long and thrive
so on it but I suppose the exercise makes it healthy,
knocking so much and going from house to house and
up and down-stairs all day, and then their pretending
to be so particular and punctual is a most astonishing
thing, looking at their watches and saying “Could
you give me the refusal of the rooms till twenty minutes
past eleven the day after to-morrow in the forenoon,
and supposing it to be considered essential by my
friend from the country could there be a small iron
bedstead put in the little room upon the stairs?”
Why when I was new to it my dear I used to consider
before I promised and to make my mind anxious with
calculations and to get quite wearied out with disappointments,
but now I says “Certainly by all means”
well knowing it’s a Wandering Christian and I
shall hear no more about it, indeed by this time I
know most of the Wandering Christians by sight as
well as they know me, it being the habit of each individual
revolving round London in that capacity to come back
about twice a year, and it’s very remarkable
that it runs in families and the children grow up
to it, but even were it otherwise I should no sooner
hear of the friend from the country which is a certain
sign than I should nod and say to myself You’re
a Wandering Christian, though whether they are (as
I have heard) persons of small property with
a taste for regular employment and frequent change
of scene I cannot undertake to tell you.
Girls as I was beginning to remark
are one of your first and your lasting troubles, being
like your teeth which begin with convulsions and never
cease tormenting you from the time you cut them till
they cut you, and then you don’t want to part
with them which seems hard but we must all succumb
or buy artificial, and even where you get a will nine
times out of ten you’ll get a dirty face with
it and naturally lodgers do not like good society
to be shown in with a smear of black across the nose
or a smudgy eyebrow. Where they pick the black
up is a mystery I cannot solve, as in the case of
the willingest girl that ever came into a house half-starved
poor thing, a girl so willing that I called her Willing
Sophy down upon her knees scrubbing early and late
and ever cheerful but always smiling with a black
face. And I says to Sophy, “Now Sophy my
good girl have a regular day for your stoves and keep
the width of the Airy between yourself and the blacking
and do not brush your hair with the bottoms of the
saucepans and do not meddle with the snuffs of the
candles and it stands to reason that it can no longer
be” yet there it was and always on her nose,
which turning up and being broad at the end seemed
to boast of it and caused warning from a steady gentleman
and excellent lodger with breakfast by the week but
a little irritable and use of a sitting-room when
required, his words being “Mrs. Lirriper I have
arrived at the point of admitting that the Black is
a man and a brother, but only in a natural form and
when it can’t be got off.” Well
consequently I put poor Sophy on to other work and
forbid her answering the door or answering a bell
on any account but she was so unfortunately willing
that nothing would stop her flying up the kitchen-stairs
whenever a bell was heard to tingle. I put it
to her “O Sophy Sophy for goodness’ goodness’
sake where does it come from?” To which that
poor unlucky willing mortal bursting out
crying to see me so vexed replied “I took a
deal of black into me ma’am when I was a small
child being much neglected and I think it must be,
that it works out,” so it continuing to work
out of that poor thing and not having another fault
to find with her I says “Sophy what do you seriously
think of my helping you away to New South Wales where
it might not be noticed?” Nor did I ever repent
the money which was well spent, for she married the
ship’s cook on the voyage (himself a Mulotter)
and did well and lived happy, and so far as ever I
heard it was not noticed in a new state of society
to her dying day.
In what way Miss Wozenham lower down
on the other side of the way reconciled it to her
feelings as a lady (which she is not) to entice Mary
Anne Perkinsop from my service is best known to herself,
I do not know and I do not wish to know how opinions
are formed at Wozenham’s on any point.
But Mary Anne Perkinsop although I behaved handsomely
to her and she behaved unhandsomely to me was worth
her weight in gold as overawing lodgers without driving
them away, for lodgers would be far more sparing of
their bells with Mary Anne than I ever knew them to
be with Maid or Mistress, which is a great triumph
especially when accompanied with a cast in the eye
and a bag of bones, but it was the steadiness of her
way with them through her father’s having failed
in Pork. It was Mary Anne’s looking so
respectable in her person and being so strict in her
spirits that conquered the tea-and-sugarest gentleman
(for he weighed them both in a pair of scales every
morning) that I have ever had to deal with and no
lamb grew meeker, still it afterwards came round to
me that Miss Wozenham happening to pass and seeing
Mary Anne take in the milk of a milkman that made
free in a rosy-faced way (I think no worse of him)
with every girl in the street but was quite frozen
up like the statue at Charing-cross by her, saw Mary
Anne’s value in the lodging business and went
as high as one pound per quarter more, consequently
Mary Anne with not a word betwixt us says “If
you will provide yourself Mrs. Lirriper in a month
from this day I have already done the same,”
which hurt me and I said so, and she then hurt me
more by insinuating that her father having failed
in Pork had laid her open to it.
My dear I do assure you it’s
a harassing thing to know what kind of girls to give
the preference to, for if they are lively they get
bell’d off their legs and if they are sluggish
you suffer from it yourself in complaints and if they
are sparkling-eyed they get made love to, and if they
are smart in their persons they try on your Lodgers’
bonnets and if they are musical I defy you to keep
them away from bands and organs, and allowing for
any difference you like in their heads their heads
will be always out of window just the same.
And then what the gentlemen like in girls the ladies
don’t, which is fruitful hot water for all parties,
and then there’s temper though such a temper
as Caroline Maxey’s I hope not often.
A good-looking black-eyed girl was Caroline and a comely-made
girl to your cost when she did break out and laid about
her, as took place first and last through a new-married
couple come to see London in the first floor and the
lady very high and it was supposed not liking
the good looks of Caroline having none of her own to
spare, but anyhow she did try Caroline though that
was no excuse. So one afternoon Caroline comes
down into the kitchen flushed and flashing, and she
says to me “Mrs. Lirriper that woman in the
first has aggravated me past bearing,” I says
“Caroline keep your temper,” Caroline says
with a curdling laugh “Keep my temper?
You’re right Mrs. Lirriper, so I will.
Capital D her!” bursts out Caroline (you might
have struck me into the centre of the earth with a
feather when she said it) “I’ll give her
a touch of the temper that I keep!”
Caroline downs with her hair my dear, screeches and
rushes up-stairs, I following as fast as my trembling
legs could bear me, but before I got into the room
the dinner-cloth and pink-and-white service all dragged
off upon the floor with a crash and the new-married
couple on their backs in the firegrate, him with the
shovel and tongs and a dish of cucumber across him
and a mercy it was summer-time. “Caroline”
I says “be calm,” but she catches off my
cap and tears it in her teeth as she passes me, then
pounces on the new-married lady makes her a bundle
of ribbons takes her by the two ears and knocks the
back of her head upon the carpet Murder screaming all
the time Policemen running down the street and Wozenham’s
windows (judge of my feelings when I came to know
it) thrown up and Miss Wozenham calling out from the
balcony with crocodile’s tears “It’s
Mrs. Lirriper been overcharging somebody to madness she’ll
be murdered I always thought so Pleeseman
save her!” My dear four of them and Caroline
behind the chiffoniere attacking with the poker and
when disarmed prize-fighting with her double fists,
and down and up and up and down and dreadful!
But I couldn’t bear to see the poor young creature
roughly handled and her hair torn when they got the
better of her, and I says “Gentlemen Policemen
pray remember that her sex is the sex of your mothers
and sisters and your sweethearts, and God bless them
and you!” And there she was sitting down on
the ground handcuffed, taking breath against the skirting-board
and them cool with their coats in strips, and all she
says was “Mrs. Lirriper I’m sorry as ever
I touched you, for you’re a kind motherly old
thing,” and it made me think that I had often
wished I had been a mother indeed and how would my
heart have felt if I had been the mother of that girl!
Well you know it turned out at the Police-office
that she had done it before, and she had her clothes
away and was sent to prison, and when she was to come
out I trotted off to the gate in the evening with
just a morsel of jelly in that little basket of mine
to give her a mite of strength to face the world again,
and there I met with a very decent mother waiting
for her son through bad company and a stubborn one
he was with his half-boots not laced. So out
came Caroline and I says “Caroline come along
with me and sit down under the wall where it’s
retired and eat a little trifle that I have brought
with me to do you good,” and she throws her
arms round my neck and says sobbing “O why were
you never a mother when there are such mothers as there
are!” she says, and in half a minute more she
begins to laugh and says “Did I really tear
your cap to shreds?” and when I told her “You
certainly did so Caroline” she laughed again
and said while she patted my face “Then why do
you wear such queer old caps you dear old thing? if
you hadn’t worn such queer old caps I don’t
think I should have done it even then.”
Fancy the girl! Nothing could get out of her
what she was going to do except O she would do well
enough, and we parted she being very thankful and kissing
my hands, and I nevermore saw or heard of that girl,
except that I shall always believe that a very genteel
cap which was brought anonymous to me one Saturday
night in an oilskin basket by a most impertinent young
sparrow of a monkey whistling with dirty shoes on the
clean steps and playing the harp on the Airy railings
with a hoop-stick came from Caroline.
What you lay yourself open to my dear
in the way of being the object of uncharitable suspicions
when you go into the Lodging business I have not the
words to tell you, but never was I so dishonourable
as to have two keys nor would I willingly think it
even of Miss Wozenham lower down on the other side
of the way sincerely hoping that it may not be, though
doubtless at the same time money cannot come from nowhere
and it is not reason to suppose that Bradshaws put
it in for love be it blotty as it may. It is
a hardship hurting to the feelings that Lodgers open
their minds so wide to the idea that you are trying
to get the better of them and shut their minds so
close to the idea that they are trying to get the
better of you, but as Major Jackman says to me, “I
know the ways of this circular world Mrs. Lirriper,
and that’s one of ’em all round it”
and many is the little ruffle in my mind that the
Major has smoothed, for he is a clever man who has
seen much. Dear dear, thirteen years have passed
though it seems but yesterday since I was sitting with
my glasses on at the open front parlour window one
evening in August (the parlours being then vacant)
reading yesterday’s paper my eyes for print being
poor though still I am thankful to say a long sight
at a distance, when I hear a gentleman come posting
across the road and up the street in a dreadful rage
talking to himself in a fury and d’ing and c’ing
somebody. “By George!” says he out
loud and clutching his walking-stick, “I’ll
go to Mrs. Lirriper’s. Which is Mrs. Lirriper’s?”
Then looking round and seeing me he flourishes his
hat right off his head as if I had been the queen
and he says, “Excuse the intrusion Madam, but
pray Madam can you tell me at what number in this
street there resides a well-known and much-respected
lady by the name of Lirriper?” A little flustered
though I must say gratified I took off my glasses
and courtesied and said “Sir, Mrs. Lirriper
is your humble servant.” “Astonishing!”
says he. “A million pardons! Madam,
may I ask you to have the kindness to direct one of
your domestics to open the door to a gentleman in search
of apartments, by the name of Jackman?” I had
never heard the name but a politer gentleman I never
hope to see, for says he, “Madam I am shocked
at your opening the door yourself to no worthier a
fellow than Jemmy Jackman. After you Madam.
I never precede a lady.” Then he comes
into the parlours and he sniffs, and he says “Hah!
These are parlours! Not musty cupboards”
he says “but parlours, and no smell of coal-sacks.”
Now my dear it having been remarked by some inimical
to the whole neighbourhood that it always smells of
coal-sacks which might prove a drawback to Lodgers
if encouraged, I says to the Major gently though firmly
that I think he is referring to Arundel or Surrey or
Howard but not Norfolk. “Madam”
says he “I refer to Wozenham’s lower down
over the way Madam you can form no notion
what Wozenham’s is Madam it is a vast
coal-sack, and Miss Wozenham has the principles and
manners of a female heaver Madam from the
manner in which I have heard her mention you I know
she has no appreciation of a lady, and from the manner
in which she has conducted herself towards me I know
she has no appreciation of a gentleman Madam
my name is Jackman should you require any
other reference than what I have already said, I name
the Bank of England perhaps you know it!”
Such was the beginning of the Major’s occupying
the parlours and from that hour to this the same and
a most obliging Lodger and punctual in all respects
except one irregular which I need not particularly
specify, but made up for by his being a protection
and at all times ready to fill in the papers of the
Assessed Taxes and Juries and that, and once collared
a young man with the drawing-room clock under his
coat, and once on the parapets with his own hands and
blankets put out the kitchen chimney and afterwards
attending the summons made a most eloquent speech
against the Parish before the magistrates and saved
the engine, and ever quite the gentleman though passionate.
And certainly Miss Wozenham’s detaining the
trunks and umbrella was not in a liberal spirit though
it may have been according to her rights in law or
an act I would myself have stooped to, the Major
being so much the gentleman that though he is far
from tall he seems almost so when he has his shirt-frill
out and his frock-coat on and his hat with the curly
brims, and in what service he was I cannot truly tell
you my dear whether Militia or Foreign, for I never
heard him even name himself as Major but always simple
“Jemmy Jackman” and once soon after he
came when I felt it my duty to let him know that Miss
Wozenham had put it about that he was no Major and
I took the liberty of adding “which you are sir”
his words were “Madam at any rate I am not a
Minor, and sufficient for the day is the evil thereof”
which cannot be denied to be the sacred truth, nor
yet his military ways of having his boots with only
the dirt brushed off taken to him in the front parlour
every morning on a clean plate and varnishing them
himself with a little sponge and a saucer and a whistle
in a whisper so sure as ever his breakfast is ended,
and so neat his ways that it never soils his linen
which is scrupulous though more in quality than quantity,
neither that nor his mustachios which to the best of
my belief are done at the same time and which are
as black and shining as his boots, his head of hair
being a lovely white.
It was the third year nearly up of
the Major’s being in the parlours that early
one morning in the month of February when Parliament
was coming on and you may therefore suppose a number
of impostors were about ready to take hold of anything
they could get, a gentleman and a lady from the country
came in to view the Second, and I well remember that
I had been looking out of window and had watched them
and the heavy sleet driving down the street together
looking for bills. I did not quite take to the
face of the gentleman though he was good-looking too
but the lady was a very pretty young thing and delicate,
and it seemed too rough for her to be out at all though
she had only come from the Adelphi Hotel which would
not have been much above a quarter of a mile if the
weather had been less severe. Now it did so
happen my dear that I had been forced to put five
shillings weekly additional on the second in consequence
of a loss from running away full dressed as if going
out to a dinner-party, which was very artful and had
made me rather suspicious taking it along with Parliament,
so when the gentleman proposed three months certain
and the money in advance and leave then reserved to
renew on the same terms for six months more, I says
I was not quite certain but that I might have engaged
myself to another party but would step down-stairs
and look into it if they would take a seat.
They took a seat and I went down to the handle of
the Major’s door that I had already began to
consult finding it a great blessing, and I knew by
his whistling in a whisper that he was varnishing
his boots which was generally considered private, however
he kindly calls out “If it’s you, Madam,
come in,” and I went in and told him.
“Well, Madam,” says the
Major rubbing his nose as I did fear at
the moment with the black sponge but it was only his
knuckle, he being always neat and dexterous with his
fingers “well, Madam, I suppose you
would be glad of the money?”
I was delicate of saying “Yes”
too out, for a little extra colour rose into the Major’s
cheeks and there was irregularity which I will not
particularly specify in a quarter which I will not
name.
“I am of opinion, Madam,”
says the Major, “that when money is ready for
you when it is ready for you, Mrs. Lirriper you
ought to take it. What is there against it,
Madam, in this case up-stairs?”
“I really cannot say there is
anything against it, sir, still I thought I would
consult you.”
“You said a newly-married couple,
I think, Madam?” says the Major.
I says “Ye-es. Evidently.
And indeed the young lady mentioned to me in a casual
way that she had not been married many months.”
The Major rubbed his nose again and
stirred the varnish round and round in its little
saucer with his piece of sponge and took to his whistling
in a whisper for a few moments. Then he says
“You would call it a Good Let, Madam?”
“O certainly a Good Let sir.”
“Say they renew for the additional
six months. Would it put you about very much
Madam if if the worst was to come to the
worst?” said the Major.
“Well I hardly know,”
I says to the Major. “It depends upon
circumstances. Would you object Sir for
instance?”
“I?” says the Major.
“Object? Jemmy Jackman? Mrs. Lirriper
close with the proposal.”
So I went up-stairs and accepted,
and they came in next day which was Saturday and the
Major was so good as to draw up a Memorandum of an
agreement in a beautiful round hand and expressions
that sounded to me equally legal and military, and
Mr. Edson signed it on the Monday morning and the
Major called upon Mr. Edson on the Tuesday and Mr.
Edson called upon the Major on the Wednesday and the
Second and the parlours were as friendly as could
be wished.
The three months paid for had run
out and we had got without any fresh overtures as
to payment into May my dear, when there came an obligation
upon Mr. Edson to go a business expedition right across
the Isle of Man, which fell quite unexpected upon
that pretty little thing and is not a place that according
to my views is particularly in the way to anywhere
at any time but that may be a matter of opinion.
So short a notice was it that he was to go next day,
and dreadfully she cried poor pretty, and I am sure
I cried too when I saw her on the cold pavement in
the sharp east wind it being a very backward
spring that year taking a last leave of
him with her pretty bright hair blowing this way and
that and her arms clinging round his neck and him
saying “There there there. Now let me go
Peggy.” And by that time it was plain that
what the Major had been so accommodating as to say
he would not object to happening in the house, would
happen in it, and I told her as much when he was gone
while I comforted her with my arm up the staircase,
for I says “You will soon have others to keep
up for my pretty and you must think of that.”
His letter never came when it ought
to have come and what she went through morning after
morning when the postman brought none for her the
very postman himself compassionated when she ran down
to the door, and yet we cannot wonder at its being
calculated to blunt the feelings to have all the trouble
of other people’s letters and none of the pleasure
and doing it oftener in the mud and mizzle than not
and at a rate of wages more resembling Little Britain
than Great. But at last one morning when she
was too poorly to come running down-stairs he says
to me with a pleased look in his face that made me
next to love the man in his uniform coat though he
was dripping wet “I have taken you first in the
street this morning Mrs. Lirriper, for here’s
the one for Mrs. Edson.” I went up to
her bedroom with it as fast as ever I could go, and
she sat up in bed when she saw it and kissed it and
tore it open and then a blank stare came upon her.
“It’s very short!” she says lifting
her large eyes to my face. “O Mrs. Lirriper
it’s very short!” I says “My dear
Mrs. Edson no doubt that’s because your husband
hadn’t time to write more just at that time.”
“No doubt, no doubt,” says she, and puts
her two hands on her face and turns round in her bed.
I shut her softly in and I crept down-stairs
and I tapped at the Major’s door, and when the
Major having his thin slices of bacon in his own Dutch
oven saw me he came out of his chair and put me down
on the sofa. “Hush!” says he, “I
see something’s the matter. Don’t
speak take time.” I says “O
Major I’m afraid there’s cruel work up-stairs.”
“Yes yes” says he “I had begun
to be afraid of it take time.”
And then in opposition to his own words he rages
out frightfully, and says “I shall never forgive
myself Madam, that I, Jemmy Jackman, didn’t see
it all that morning didn’t go straight
up-stairs when my boot-sponge was in my hand didn’t
force it down his throat and choke him dead
with it on the spot!”
The Major and me agreed when we came
to ourselves that just at present we could do no more
than take on to suspect nothing and use our best endeavours
to keep that poor young creature quiet, and what I
ever should have done without the Major when it got
about among the organ-men that quiet was our object
is unknown, for he made lion and tiger war upon them
to that degree that without seeing it I could not have
believed it was in any gentleman to have such a power
of bursting out with fire-irons walking-sticks water-jugs
coals potatoes off his table the very hat off his
head, and at the same time so furious in foreign languages
that they would stand with their handles half-turned
fixed like the Sleeping Ugly for I cannot
say Beauty.
Ever to see the postman come near
the house now gave me such I fear that it was a reprieve
when he went by, but in about another ten days or a
fortnight he says again, “Here’s one for
Mrs. Edson. Is she pretty well?”
“She is pretty well postman, but not well enough
to rise so early as she used” which was so far
gospel-truth.
I carried the letter in to the Major
at his breakfast and I says tottering “Major
I have not the courage to take it up to her.”
“It’s an ill-looking villain of a letter,”
says the Major.
“I have not the courage Major”
I says again in a tremble “to take it up to
her.”
After seeming lost in consideration
for some moments the Major says, raising his head
as if something new and useful had occurred to his
mind “Mrs. Lirriper, I shall never forgive myself
that I, Jemmy Jackman, didn’t go straight up-stairs
that morning when my boot-sponge was in my hand and
force it down his throat and choke him dead
with it.”
“Major” I says a little
hasty “you didn’t do it which is a blessing,
for it would have done no good and I think your sponge
was better employed on your own honourable boots.”
So we got to be rational, and planned
that I should tap at her bedroom door and lay the
letter on the mat outside and wait on the upper landing
for what might happen, and never was gunpowder cannon-balls
or shells or rockets more dreaded than that dreadful
letter was by me as I took it to the second floor.
A terrible loud scream sounded through
the house the minute after she had opened it, and
I found her on the floor lying as if her life was gone.
My dear I never looked at the face of the letter
which was lying, open by her, for there was no occasion.
Everything I needed to bring her round
the Major brought up with his own hands, besides running
out to the chemist’s for what was not in the
house and likewise having the fiercest of all his
many skirmishes with a musical instrument representing
a ball-room I do not know in what particular country
and company waltzing in and out at folding-doors with
rolling eyes. When after a long time I saw her
coming to, I slipped on the landing till I heard her
cry, and then I went in and says cheerily “Mrs.
Edson you’re not well my dear and it’s
not to be wondered at,” as if I had not been
in before. Whether she believed or disbelieved
I cannot say and it would signify nothing if I could,
but I stayed by her for hours and then she God ever
blesses me! and says she will try to rest for her
head is bad.
“Major,” I whispers, looking
in at the parlours, “I beg and pray of you don’t
go out.”
The Major whispers, “Madam,
trust me I will do no such a thing. How is she?”
I says “Major the good Lord
above us only knows what burns and rages in her poor
mind. I left her sitting at her window.
I am going to sit at mine.”
It came on afternoon and it came on
evening. Norfolk is a delightful street to lodge
in provided you don’t go lower down but
of a summer evening when the dust and waste paper
lie in it and stray children play in it and a kind
of a gritty calm and bake settles on it and a peal
of church-bells is practising in the neighbourhood
it is a trifle dull, and never have I seen it since
at such a time and never shall I see it evermore at
such a time without seeing the dull June evening when
that forlorn young creature sat at her open corner
window on the second and me at my open corner window
(the other corner) on the third. Something merciful,
something wiser and better far than my own self, had
moved me while it was yet light to sit in my bonnet
and shawl, and as the shadows fell and the tide rose
I could sometimes when I put out my head
and looked at her window below see that
she leaned out a little looking down the street.
It was just settling dark when I saw her in
the street.
So fearful of losing sight of her
that it almost stops my breath while I tell it, I
went down-stairs faster than I ever moved in all my
life and only tapped with my hand at the Major’s
door in passing it and slipping out. She was
gone already. I made the same speed down the
street and when I came to the corner of Howard Street
I saw that she had turned it and was there plain before
me going towards the west. O with what a thankful
heart I saw her going along!
She was quite unacquainted with London
and had very seldom been out for more than an airing
in our own street where she knew two or three little
children belonging to neighbours and had sometimes
stood among them at the street looking at the water.
She must be going at hazard I knew, still she kept
the by-streets quite correctly as long as they would
serve her, and then turned up into the Strand.
But at every corner I could see her head turned one
way, and that way was always the river way.
It may have been only the darkness
and quiet of the Adelphi that caused her to strike
into it but she struck into it much as readily as if
she had set out to go there, which perhaps was the
case. She went straight down to the Terrace
and along it and looked over the iron rail, and I
often woke afterwards in my own bed with the horror
of seeing her do it. The desertion of the wharf
below and the flowing of the high water there seemed
to settle her purpose. She looked about as if
to make out the way down, and she struck out the right
way or the wrong way I don’t know
which, for I don’t know the place before or since and
I followed her the way she went.
It was noticeable that all this time
she never once looked back. But there was now
a great change in the manner of her going, and instead
of going at a steady quick walk with her arms folded
before her, among the dark dismal arches
she went in a wild way with her arms opened wide, as
if they were wings and she was flying to her death.
We were on the wharf and she stopped.
I stopped. I saw her hands at her bonnet-strings,
and I rushed between her and the brink and took her
round the waist with both my arms. She might
have drowned me, I felt then, but she could never
have got quit of me.
Down to that moment my mind had been
all in a maze and not half an idea had I had in it
what I should say to her, but the instant I touched
her it came to me like magic and I had my natural
voice and my senses and even almost my breath.
“Mrs. Edson!” I says “My
dear! Take care. How ever did you lose
your way and stumble on a dangerous place like this?
Why you must have come here by the most perplexing
streets in all London. No wonder you are lost,
I’m sure. And this place too! Why
I thought nobody ever got here, except me to order
my coals and the Major in the parlours to smoke his
cigar!” for I saw that blessed man
close by, pretending to it.
“Hah Hah Hum!” coughs
the Major.
“And good gracious me” I says, “why
here he is!”
“Halloa! who goes there?” says the Major
in a military manner.
“Well!” I says, “if
this don’t beat everything! Don’t
you know us Major Jackman?”
“Halloa!” says the Major.
“Who calls on Jemmy Jackman?” (and more
out of breath he was, and did it less like life than
I should have expected.)
“Why here’s Mrs. Edson
Major” I says, “strolling out to cool her
poor head which has been very bad, has missed her
way and got lost, and Goodness knows where she might
have got to but for me coming here to drop an order
into my coal merchant’s letter-box and you coming
here to smoke your cigar! And you really
are not well enough my dear” I says to her “to
be half so far from home without me. And your
arm will be very acceptable I am sure Major”
I says to him “and I know she may lean upon
it as heavy as she likes.” And now we had
both got her thanks be Above! one
on each side.
She was all in a cold shiver and she
so continued till I laid her on her own bed, and up
to the early morning she held me by the hand and moaned
and moaned “O wicked, wicked, wicked!”
But when at last I made believe to droop my head
and be overpowered with a dead sleep, I heard that
poor young creature give such touching and such humble
thanks for being preserved from taking her own life
in her madness that I thought I should have cried
my eyes out on the counterpane and I knew she was safe.
Being well enough to do and able to
afford it, me and the Major laid our little plans
next day while she was asleep worn out, and so I says
to her as soon as I could do it nicely:
“Mrs. Edson my dear, when Mr.
Edson paid me the rent for these farther six months ”
She gave a start and I felt her large
eyes look at me, but I went on with it and with my
needlework.
“ I can’t say
that I am quite sure I dated the receipt right.
Could you let me look at it?”
She laid her frozen cold hand upon
mine and she looked through me when I was forced to
look up from my needlework, but I had taken the precaution
of having on my spectacles.
“I have no receipt” says she.
“Ah! Then he has got it”
I says in a careless way. “It’s of
no great consequence. A receipt’s a receipt.”
From that time she always had hold
of my hand when I could spare it which was generally
only when I read to her, for of course she and me had
our bits of needlework to plod at and neither of us
was very handy at those little things, though I am
still rather proud of my share in them too considering.
And though she took to all I read to her, I used to
fancy that next to what was taught upon the Mount
she took most of all to His gentle compassion for
us poor women and to His young life and to how His
mother was proud of Him and treasured His sayings in
her heart. She had a grateful look in her eyes
that never never never will be out of mine until they
are closed in my last sleep, and when I chanced to
look at her without thinking of it I would always
meet that look, and she would often offer me her trembling
lip to kiss, much more like a little affectionate
half broken-hearted child than ever I can imagine any
grown person.
One time the trembling of this poor
lip was so strong and her tears ran down so fast that
I thought she was going to tell me all her woe, so
I takes her two hands in mine and I says:
“No my dear not now, you had
best not try to do it now. Wait for better times
when you have got over this and are strong, and then
you shall tell me whatever you will. Shall it
be agreed?”
With our hands still joined she nodded
her head many times, and she lifted my hands and put
them to her lips and to her bosom. “Only
one word now my dear” I says. “Is
there any one?”
She looked inquiringly “Any one?”
“That I can go to?”
She shook her head.
“No one that I can bring?”
She shook her head.
“No one is wanted by me
my dear. Now that may be considered past and
gone.”
Not much more than a week afterwards for
this was far on in the time of our being so together I
was bending over at her bedside with my ear down to
her lips, by turns listening for her breath and looking
for a sign of life in her face. At last it came
in a solemn way not in a flash but like
a kind of pale faint light brought very slow to the
face.
She said something to me that had no sound in it,
but I saw she asked me:
“Is this death?”
And I says:
“Poor dear poor dear, I think it is.”
Knowing somehow that she wanted me
to move her weak right hand, I took it and laid it
on her breast and then folded her other hand upon it,
and she prayed a good good prayer and I joined in
it poor me though there were no words spoke.
Then I brought the baby in its wrappers from where
it lay, and I says:
“My dear this is sent to a childless
old woman. This is for me to take care of.”
The trembling lip was put up towards
my face for the last time, and I dearly kissed it.
“Yes my dear,” I says. “Please
God! Me and the Major.”
I don’t know how to tell it
right, but I saw her soul brighten and leap up, and
get free and fly away in the grateful look.
So this is the why and wherefore of
its coming to pass my dear that we called him Jemmy,
being after the Major his own godfather with Lirriper
for a surname being after myself, and never was a dear
child such a brightening thing in a Lodgings or such
a playmate to his grandmother as Jemmy to this house
and me, and always good and minding what he was told
(upon the whole) and soothing for the temper and making
everything pleasanter except when he grew old enough
to drop his cap down Wozenham’s Airy and they
wouldn’t hand it up to him, and being worked
into a state I put on my best bonnet and gloves and
parasol with the child in my hand and I says “Miss
Wozenham I little thought ever to have entered your
house but unless my grandson’s cap is instantly
restored, the laws of this country regulating the
property of the Subject shall at length decide betwixt
yourself and me, cost what it may.” With
a sneer upon her face which did strike me I must say
as being expressive of two keys but it may have been
a mistake and if there is any doubt let Miss Wozenham
have the full benefit of it as is but right, she rang
the bell and she says “Jane, is there a street-child’s
old cap down our Airy?” I says “Miss
Wozenham before your housemaid answers that question
you must allow me to inform you to your face that
my grandson is not a street-child and is not
in the habit of wearing old caps. In fact”
I says “Miss Wozenham I am far from sure that
my grandson’s cap may not be newer than your
own” which was perfectly savage in me, her lace
being the commonest machine-make washed and torn besides,
but I had been put into a state to begin with fomented
by impertinence. Miss Wozenham says red in the
face “Jane you heard my question, is there any
child’s cap down our Airy?” “Yes
Ma’am” says Jane, “I think I did
see some such rubbish a-lying there.”
“Then” says Miss Wozenham “let these
visitors out, and then throw up that worthless article
out of my premises.” But here the child
who had been staring at Miss Wozenham with all his
eyes and more, frowns down his little eyebrows purses
up his little mouth puts his chubby legs far apart
turns his little dimpled fists round and round slowly
over one another like a little coffee-mill, and says
to her “Oo impdent to mi Gran, me tut oor
hi!” “O!” says Miss Wozenham looking
down scornfully at the Mite “this is not a street-child
is it not! Really!” I bursts out laughing
and I says “Miss Wozenham if this ain’t
a pretty sight to you I don’t envy your feelings
and I wish you good-day. Jemmy come along with
Gran.” And I was still in the best of humours
though his cap came flying up into the street as if
it had been just turned on out of the water-plug,
and I went home laughing all the way, all owing to
that dear boy.
The miles and miles that me and the
Major have travelled with Jemmy in the dusk between
the lights are not to be calculated, Jemmy driving
on the coach-box which is the Major’s brass-bound
writing desk on the table, me inside in the easy-chair
and the Major Guard up behind with a brown-paper
horn doing it really wonderful. I do assure you
my dear that sometimes when I have taken a few winks
in my place inside the coach and have come half awake
by the flashing light of the fire and have heard that
precious pet driving and the Major blowing up behind
to have the change of horses ready when we got to
the Inn, I have half believed we were on the old North
Road that my poor Lirriper knew so well. Then
to see that child and the Major both wrapped up getting
down to warm their feet and going stamping about and
having glasses of ale out of the paper matchboxes
on the chimney-piece is to see the Major enjoying it
fully as much as the child I am very sure, and it’s
equal to any play when Coachee opens the coach-door
to look in at me inside and say “Wery ’past
that ’tage. ’Prightened old
lady?”
But what my inexpressible feelings
were when we lost that child can only be compared
to the Major’s which were not a shade better,
through his straying out at five years old and eleven
o’clock in the forenoon and never heard of by
word or sign or deed till half-past nine at night,
when the Major had gone to the Editor of the Times
newspaper to put in an advertisement, which came out
next day four-and-twenty hours after he was found,
and which I mean always carefully to keep in my lavender
drawer as the first printed account of him.
The more the day got on, the more I got distracted
and the Major too and both of us made worse by the
composed ways of the police though very civil and obliging
and what I must call their obstinacy in not entertaining
the idea that he was stolen. “We mostly
find Mum” says the sergeant who came round to
comfort me, which he didn’t at all and he had
been one of the private constables in Caroline’s
time to which he referred in his opening words when
he said “Don’t give way to uneasiness
in your mind Mum, it’ll all come as right as
my nose did when I got the same barked by that young
woman in your second floor” says
this sergeant “we mostly find Mum as people ain’t
over-anxious to have what I may call second-hand children.
You’ll get him back Mum.”
“O but my dear good sir” I says clasping
my hands and wringing them and clasping them again
“he is such an uncommon child!” “Yes
Mum” says the sergeant, “we mostly find
that too Mum. The question is what his clothes
were worth.” “His clothes”
I says “were not worth much sir for he had only
got his playing-dress on, but the dear child! ”
“All right Mum” says the sergeant.
“You’ll get him back Mum. And even
if he’d had his best clothes on, it wouldn’t
come to worse than his being found wrapped up in a
cabbage-leaf, a shivering in a lane.” His
words pierced my heart like daggers and daggers, and
me and the Major ran in and out like wild things all
day long till the Major returning from his interview
with the Editor of the Times at night rushes
into my little room hysterical and squeezes my hand
and wipes his eyes and says “Joy joy officer
in plain clothes came up on the steps as I was letting
myself in compose your feelings Jemmy’s
found.” Consequently I fainted away and
when I came to, embraced the legs of the officer in
plain clothes who seemed to be taking a kind of a
quiet inventory in his mind of the property in my
little room with brown whiskers, and I says “Blessings
on you sir where is the Darling!” and he says
“In Kennington Station House.” I
was dropping at his feet Stone at the image of that
Innocence in cells with murderers when he adds “He
followed the Monkey.” I says deeming it
slang language “O sir explain for a loving grandmother
what Monkey!” He says “Him in the spangled
cap with the strap under the chin, as won’t
keep on him as sweeps the crossings on a
round table and don’t want to draw his sabre
more than he can help.” Then I understood
it all and most thankfully thanked him, and me and
the Major and him drove over to Kennington and there
we found our boy lying quite comfortable before a
blazing fire having sweetly played himself to sleep
upon a small accordion nothing like so big as a flat-iron
which they had been so kind as to lend him for the
purpose and which it appeared had been stopped upon
a very young person.
My dear the system upon which the
Major commenced and as I may say perfected Jemmy’s
learning when he was so small that if the dear was
on the other side of the table you had to look under
it instead of over it to see him with his mother’s
own bright hair in beautiful curls, is a thing that
ought to be known to the Throne and Lords and Commons
and then might obtain some promotion for the Major
which he well deserves and would be none the worse
for (speaking between friends) L. S. D.-ically.
When the Major first undertook his learning he says
to me:
“I’m going Madam,”
he says “to make our child a Calculating Boy.
“Major,” I says, “you
terrify me and may do the pet a permanent injury you
would never forgive yourself.”
“Madam,” says the Major,
“next to my regret that when I had my boot-sponge
in my hand, I didn’t choke that scoundrel with
it on the spot ”
“There! For Gracious’
sake,” I interrupts, “let his conscience
find him without sponges.”
“ I say next to that
regret, Madam,” says the Major “would be
the regret with which my breast,” which he tapped,
“would be surcharged if this fine mind was not
early cultivated. But mark me Madam,” says
the Major holding up his forefinger “cultivated
on a principle that will make it a delight.”
“Major” I says “I
will be candid with you and tell you openly that if
ever I find the dear child fall off in his appetite
I shall know it is his calculations and shall put
a stop to them at two minutes’ notice.
Or if I find them mounting to his head” I says,
“or striking anyways cold to his stomach or
leading to anything approaching flabbiness in his legs,
the result will be the same, but Major you are a clever
man and have seen much and you love the child and
are his own godfather, and if you feel a confidence
in trying try.”
“Spoken Madam” says the
Major “like Emma Lirriper. All I have to
ask, Madam, is that you will leave my godson and myself
to make a week or two’s preparations for surprising
you, and that you will give me leave to have up and
down any small articles not actually in use that I
may require from the kitchen.”
“From the kitchen Major?”
I says half feeling as if he had a mind to cook the
child.
“From the kitchen” says
the Major, and smiles and swells, and at the same
time looks taller.
So I passed my word and the Major
and the dear boy were shut up together for half an
hour at a time through a certain while, and never could
I hear anything going on betwixt them but talking
and laughing and Jemmy clapping his hands and screaming
out numbers, so I says to myself “it has not
harmed him yet” nor could I on examining the
dear find any signs of it anywhere about him which
was likewise a great relief. At last one day
Jemmy brings me a card in joke in the Major’s
neat writing “The Messrs. Jemmy Jackman”
for we had given him the Major’s other name too
“request the honour of Mrs. Lirriper’s
company at the Jackman Institution in the front parlour
this evening at five, military time, to witness a few
slight feats of elementary arithmetic.”
And if you’ll believe me there in the front
parlour at five punctual to the moment was the Major
behind the Pembroke table with both leaves up and
a lot of things from the kitchen tidily set out on
old newspapers spread atop of it, and there was the
Mite stood upon a chair with his rosy cheeks flushing
and his eyes sparkling clusters of diamonds.
“Now Gran” says he, “oo
tit down and don’t oo touch ler people” for
he saw with every one of those diamonds of his that
I was going to give him a squeeze.
“Very well sir” I says
“I am obedient in this good company I am sure.”
And I sits down in the easy-chair that was put for
me, shaking my sides.
But picture my admiration when the
Major going on almost as quick as if he was conjuring
sets out all the articles he names, and says “Three
saucepans, an Italian iron, a hand-bell, a toasting-fork,
a nutmeg-grater, four potlids, a spice-box, two egg-cups,
and a chopping-board how many?”
and when that Mite instantly cries “Tifteen,
tut down tive and carry ler ’toppin-board”
and then claps his hands draws up his legs and dances
on his chair.
My dear with the same astonishing
ease and correctness him and the Major added up the
tables chairs and sofy, the picters fenders and fire-irons
their own selves me and the cat and the eyes in Miss
Wozenham’s head, and whenever the sum was done
Young Roses and Diamonds claps his hands and draws
up his legs and dances on his chair.
The pride of the Major! ("Here’s
a mind Ma’am!” he says to me behind his
hand.)
Then he says aloud, “We now
come to the next elementary rule, which
is called ”
“Umtraction!” cries Jemmy.
“Right,” says the Major.
“We have here a toasting-fork, a potato in its
natural state, two potlids, one egg-cup, a wooden spoon,
and two skewers, from which it is necessary for commercial
purposes to subtract a sprat-gridiron, a small pickle-jar,
two lemons, one pepper-castor, a blackbeetle-trap,
and a knob of the dresser-drawer what remains?”
“Toatin-fork!” cries Jemmy.
“In numbers how many?” says the Major.
“One!” cries Jemmy.
("Here’s a boy, Ma’am!”
says the Major to me behind his hand.) Then the Major
goes on:
“We now approach the next elementary rule, which
is entitled ”
“Tickleication” cries Jemmy.
“Correct” says the Major.
But my dear to relate to you in detail
the way in which they multiplied fourteen sticks of
firewood by two bits of ginger and a larding needle,
or divided pretty well everything else there was on
the table by the heater of the Italian iron and a
chamber candlestick, and got a lemon over, would make
my head spin round and round and round as it did at
the time. So I says “if you’ll excuse
my addressing the chair Professor Jackman I think
the period of the lecture has now arrived when it becomes
necessary that I should take a good hug of this young
scholar.” Upon which Jemmy calls out from
his station on the chair, “Gran oo open oor
arms and me’ll make a ’pring into ’em.”
So I opened my arms to him as I had opened my sorrowful
heart when his poor young mother lay a dying, and
he had his jump and we had a good long hug together
and the Major prouder than any peacock says to me
behind his hand, “You need not let him know
it Madam” (which I certainly need not for the
Major was quite audible) “but he is a
boy!”
In this way Jemmy grew and grew and
went to day-school and continued under the Major too,
and in summer we were as happy as the days were long,
and in winter we were as happy as the days were short
and there seemed to rest a Blessing on the Lodgings
for they as good as Let themselves and would have
done it if there had been twice the accommodation,
when sore and hard against my will I one day says to
the Major.
“Major you know what I am going
to break to you. Our boy must go to boarding-school.”
It was a sad sight to see the Major’s
countenance drop, and I pitied the good soul with
all my heart.
“Yes Major” I says, “though
he is as popular with the Lodgers as you are yourself
and though he is to you and me what only you and me
know, still it is in the course of things and Life
is made of partings and we must part with our Pet.”
Bold as I spoke, I saw two Majors
and half-a-dozen fireplaces, and when the poor Major
put one of his neat bright-varnished boots upon the
fender and his elbow on his knee and his head upon
his hand and rocked himself a little to and fro, I
was dreadfully cut up.
“But” says I clearing
my throat “you have so well prepared him Major he
has had such a Tutor in you that he will
have none of the first drudgery to go through.
And he is so clever besides that he’ll soon
make his way to the front rank.”
“He is a boy” says the
Major having sniffed “that
has not his like on the face of the earth.”
“True as you say Major, and
it is not for us merely for our own sakes to do anything
to keep him back from being a credit and an ornament
wherever he goes and perhaps even rising to be a great
man, is it Major? He will have all my little
savings when my work is done (being all the world to
me) and we must try to make him a wise man and a good
man, mustn’t we Major?”
“Madam” says the Major
rising “Jemmy Jackman is becoming an older file
than I was aware of, and you put him to shame.
You are thoroughly right Madam. You are simply
and undeniably right. And if you’ll
excuse me, I’ll take a walk.”
So the Major being gone out and Jemmy
being at home, I got the child into my little room
here and I stood him by my chair and I took his mother’s
own curls in my hand and I spoke to him loving and
serious. And when I had reminded the darling
how that he was now in his tenth year and when I had
said to him about his getting on in life pretty much
what I had said to the Major I broke to him how that
we must have this same parting, and there I was forced
to stop for there I saw of a sudden the well-remembered
lip with its tremble, and it so brought back that time!
But with the spirit that was in him he controlled it
soon and he says gravely nodding through his tears,
“I understand Gran I know it must
be, Gran go on Gran, don’t be afraid
of me.” And when I had said all
that ever I could think of, he turned his bright steady
face to mine and he says just a little broken here
and there “You shall see Gran that I can be
a man and that I can do anything that is grateful and
loving to you and if I don’t grow
up to be what you would like to have me I
hope it will be because I shall die.”
And with that he sat down by me and I went on to
tell him of the school of which I had excellent recommendations
and where it was and how many scholars and what games
they played as I had heard and what length of holidays,
to all of which he listened bright and clear.
And so it came that at last he says “And now
dear Gran let me kneel down here where I have been
used to say my prayers and let me fold my face for
just a minute in your gown and let me cry, for you
have been more than father more than mother more
than brothers sisters friends to me!”
And so he did cry and I too and we were both much
the better for it.
From that time forth he was true to
his word and ever blithe and ready, and even when
me and the Major took him down into Lincolnshire he
was far the gayest of the party though for sure and
certain he might easily have been that, but he really
was and put life into us only when it came to the
last Good-bye, he says with a wistful look, “You
wouldn’t have me not really sorry would you
Gran?” and when I says “No dear, Lord forbid!”
he says “I am glad of that!” and ran in
out of sight.
But now that the child was gone out
of the Lodgings the Major fell into a regularly moping
state. It was taken notice of by all the Lodgers
that the Major moped. He hadn’t even the
same air of being rather tall than he used to have,
and if he varnished his boots with a single gleam of
interest it was as much as he did.
One evening the Major came into my
little room to take a cup of tea and a morsel of buttered
toast and to read Jemmy’s newest letter which
had arrived that afternoon (by the very same postman
more than middle-aged upon the Beat now), and the
letter raising him up a little I says to the Major:
“Major you mustn’t get into a moping way.”
The Major shook his head. “Jemmy
Jackman Madam,” he says with a deep sigh, “is
an older file than I thought him.”
“Moping is not the way to grow younger Major.”
“My dear Madam,” says the Major, “is
there any way of growing younger?”
Feeling that the Major was getting
rather the best of that point I made a diversion to
another.
“Thirteen years! Thir-teen
years! Many Lodgers have come and gone, in the
thirteen years that you have lived in the parlours
Major.”
“Hah!” says the Major warming. “Many
Madam, many.”
“And I should say you have been familiar with
them all?”
“As a rule (with its exceptions
like all rules) my dear Madam” says the Major,
“they have honoured me with their acquaintance,
and not unfrequently with their confidence.”
Watching the Major as he drooped his
white head and stroked his black mustachios and moped
again, a thought which I think must have been going
about looking for an owner somewhere dropped into my
old noddle if you will excuse the expression.
“The walls of my Lodgings”
I says in a casual way for my dear it is
of no use going straight at a man who mopes “might
have something to tell if they could tell it.”
The Major neither moved nor said anything
but I saw he was attending with his shoulders my dear attending
with his shoulders to what I said. In fact I
saw that his shoulders were struck by it.
“The dear boy was always fond
of story-books” I went on, like as if I was
talking to myself. “I am sure this house his
own home might write a story or two for
his reading one day or another.”
The Major’s shoulders gave a
dip and a curve and his head came up in his shirt-collar.
The Major’s head came up in his shirt-collar
as I hadn’t seen it come up since Jemmy went
to school.
“It is unquestionable that in
intervals of cribbage and a friendly rubber, my dear
Madam,” says the Major, “and also over
what used to be called in my young times in
the salad days of Jemmy Jackman the social
glass, I have exchanged many a reminiscence with your
Lodgers.”
My remark was I confess
I made it with the deepest and artfullest of intentions “I
wish our dear boy had heard them!”
“Are you serious Madam?”
asked the Major starting and turning full round.
“Why not Major?”
“Madam” says the Major,
turning up one of his cuffs, “they shall be
written for him.”
“Ah! Now you speak”
I says giving my hands a pleased clap. “Now
you are in a way out of moping Major!”
“Between this and my holidays I
mean the dear boy’s” says the Major turning
up his other cuff, “a good deal may be done towards
it.”
“Major you are a clever man
and you have seen much and not a doubt of it.”
“I’ll begin,” says
the Major looking as tall as ever he did, “to-morrow.”
My dear the Major was another man
in three days and he was himself again in a week and
he wrote and wrote and wrote with his pen scratching
like rats behind the wainscot, and whether he had
many grounds to go upon or whether he did at all romance
I cannot tell you, but what he has written is in the
left-hand glass closet of the little bookcase close
behind you.