“And why Tom Tiddler’s ground?”
said the Traveller.
“Because he scatters halfpence
to Tramps and such-like,” returned the Landlord,
“and of course they pick ’em up.
And this being done on his own land (which it is
his own land, you observe, and were his family’s
before him), why it is but regarding the halfpence
as gold and silver, and turning the ownership of the
property a bit round your finger, and there you have
the name of the children’s game complete.
And it’s appropriate too,” said the Landlord,
with his favourite action of stooping a little, to
look across the table out of window at vacancy, under
the window-blind which was half drawn down. “Leastwise
it has been so considered by many gentlemen which
have partook of chops and tea in the present humble
parlour.”
The Traveller was partaking of chops
and tea in the present humble parlour, and the Landlord’s
shot was fired obliquely at him.
“And you call him a Hermit?” said the
Traveller.
“They call him such,”
returned the Landlord, evading personal responsibility;
“he is in general so considered.”
“What is a Hermit?” asked the Traveller.
“What is it?” repeated the Landlord, drawing
his hand across his chin.
“Yes, what is it?”
The Landlord stooped again, to get
a more comprehensive view of vacancy under the window-blind,
and with an asphyxiated appearance on him
as one unaccustomed to definition made
no answer.
“I’ll tell you what I
suppose it to be,” said the Traveller.
“An abominably dirty thing.”
“Mr. Mopes is dirty, it cannot
be denied,” said the Landlord.
“Intolerably conceited.”
“Mr. Mopes is vain of the life
he leads, some do say,” replied the Landlord,
as another concession.
“A slothful, unsavoury, nasty
reversal of the laws of human mature,” said
the Traveller; “and for the sake of god’s
working world and its wholesomeness, both moral and
physical, I would put the thing on the treadmill (if
I had my way) wherever I found it; whether on a pillar,
or in a hole; whether on Tom Tiddler’s ground,
or the Pope of Rome’s ground, or a Hindoo fakeer’s
ground, or any other ground.”
“I don’t know about putting
Mr. Mopes on the treadmill,” said the Landlord,
shaking his head very seriously. “There
ain’t a doubt but what he has got landed property.”
“How far may it be to this said
Tom Tiddler’s ground?” asked the Traveller.
“Put it at five mile,” returned the Landlord.
“Well! When I have done
my breakfast,” said the Traveller, “I’ll
go there. I came over here this morning, to
find it out and see it.”
“Many does,” observed the Landlord.
The conversation passed, in the Midsummer
weather of no remote year of grace, down among the
pleasant dales and trout-streams of a green English
county. No matter what county. Enough that
you may hunt there, shoot there, fish there, traverse
long grass-grown Roman roads there, open ancient barrows
there, see many a square mile of richly cultivated
land there, and hold Arcadian talk with a bold peasantry,
their country’s pride, who will tell you (if
you want to know) how pastoral housekeeping is done
on nine shillings a week.
Mr. Traveller sat at his breakfast
in the little sanded parlour of the Peal of Bells
village alehouse, with the dew and dust of an early
walk upon his shoes an early walk by road
and meadow and coppice, that had sprinkled him bountifully
with little blades of grass, and scraps of new hay,
and with leaves both young and old, and with other
such fragrant tokens of the freshness and wealth of
summer. The window through which the landlord
had concentrated his gaze upon vacancy was shaded,
because the morning sun was hot and bright on the
village street. The village street was like
most other village streets: wide for its height,
silent for its size, and drowsy in the dullest degree.
The quietest little dwellings with the largest of
window-shutters (to shut up Nothing as carefully as
if it were the Mint, or the Bank of England) had called
in the Doctor’s house so suddenly, that his
brass door-plate and three stories stood among them
as conspicuous and different as the doctor himself
in his broadcloth, among the smock-frocks of his patients.
The village residences seemed to have gone to law
with a similar absence of consideration, for a score
of weak little lath-and-plaster cabins clung in confusion
about the Attorney’s red-brick house, which,
with glaring door-steps and a most terrific scraper,
seemed to serve all manner of ejectments upon them.
They were as various as labourers high-shouldered,
wry-necked, one-eyed, goggle-eyed, squinting, bow-legged,
knock-knee’d, rheumatic, crazy. Some of
the small tradesmen’s houses, such as the crockery-shop
and the harness-maker, had a Cyclops window in the
middle of the gable, within an inch or two of its
apex, suggesting that some forlorn rural Prentice
must wriggle himself into that apartment horizontally,
when he retired to rest, after the manner of the worm.
So bountiful in its abundance was the surrounding
country, and so lean and scant the village, that one
might have thought the village had sown and planted
everything it once possessed, to convert the same into
crops. This would account for the bareness of
the little shops, the bareness of the few boards and
trestles designed for market purposes in a corner of
the street, the bareness of the obsolete Inn and Inn
Yard, with the ominous inscription “Excise Office”
not yet faded out from the gateway, as indicating
the very last thing that poverty could get rid of.
This would also account for the determined abandonment
of the village by one stray dog, fast lessening in
the perspective where the white posts and the pond
were, and would explain his conduct on the hypothesis
that he was going (through the act of suicide) to
convert himself into manure, and become a part proprietor
in turnips or mangold-wurzel.
Mr. Traveller having finished his
breakfast and paid his moderate score, walked out
to the threshold of the Peal of Bells, and, thence
directed by the pointing finger of his host, betook
himself towards the ruined hermitage of Mr. Mopes
the hermit.
For, Mr. Mopes, by suffering everything
about him to go to ruin, and by dressing himself in
a blanket and skewer, and by steeping himself in soot
and grease and other nastiness, had acquired great
renown in all that country-side far greater
renown than he could ever have won for himself, if
his career had been that of any ordinary Christian,
or decent Hottentot. He had even blanketed and
skewered and sooted and greased himself, into the
London papers. And it was curious to find, as
Mr. Traveller found by stopping for a new direction
at this farm-house or at that cottage as he went along,
with how much accuracy the morbid Mopes had counted
on the weakness of his neighbours to embellish him.
A mist of home-brewed marvel and romance surrounded
Mopes, in which (as in all fogs) the real proportions
of the real object were extravagantly heightened.
He had murdered his beautiful beloved in a fit of
jealousy and was doing penance; he had made a vow
under the influence of grief; he had made a vow under
the influence of a fatal accident; he had made a vow
under the influence of religion; he had made a vow
under the influence of drink; he had made a vow under
the influence of disappointment; he had never made
any vow, but “had got led into it” by the
possession of a mighty and most awful secret; he was
enormously rich, he was stupendously charitable, he
was profoundly learned, he saw spectres, he knew and
could do all kinds of wonders. Some said he
went out every night, and was met by terrified wayfarers
stalking along dark roads, others said he never went
out, some knew his penance to be nearly expired, others
had positive information that his seclusion was not
a penance at all, and would never expire but with
himself. Even, as to the easy facts of how old
he was, or how long he had held verminous occupation
of his blanket and skewer, no consistent information
was to be got, from those who must know if they would.
He was represented as being all the ages between five-and-twenty
and sixty, and as having been a hermit seven years,
twelve, twenty, thirty, though twenty,
on the whole, appeared the favourite term.
“Well, well!” said Mr.
Traveller. “At any rate, let us see what
a real live Hermit looks like.”
So, Mr. Traveller went on, and on,
and on, until he came to Tom Tiddler’s Ground.
It was a nook in a rustic by-road,
which the genius of Mopes had laid waste as completely,
as if he had been born an Emperor and a Conqueror.
Its centre object was a dwelling-house, sufficiently
substantial, all the window-glass of which had been
long ago abolished by the surprising genius of Mopes,
and all the windows of which were barred across with
rough-split logs of trees nailed over them on the outside.
A rickyard, hip-high in vegetable rankness and ruin,
contained outbuildings from which the thatch had lightly
fluttered away, on all the winds of all the seasons
of the year, and from which the planks and beams had
heavily dropped and rotted. The frosts and damps
of winter, and the heats of summer, had warped what
wreck remained, so that not a post or a board retained
the position it was meant to hold, but everything was
twisted from its purpose, like its owner, and degraded
and debased. In this homestead of the sluggard,
behind the ruined hedge, and sinking away among the
ruined grass and the nettles, were the last perishing
fragments of certain ricks: which had gradually
mildewed and collapsed, until they looked like mounds
of rotten honeycomb, or dirty sponge. Tom Tiddler’s
ground could even show its ruined water; for, there
was a slimy pond into which a tree or two had fallen one
soppy trunk and branches lay across it then which
in its accumulation of stagnant weed, and in its black
decomposition, and in all its foulness and filth, was
almost comforting, regarded as the only water that
could have reflected the shameful place without seeming
polluted by that low office.
Mr. Traveller looked all around him
on Tom Tiddler’s ground, and his glance at last
encountered a dusky Tinker lying among the weeds and
rank grass, in the shade of the dwelling-house.
A rough walking-staff lay on the ground by his side,
and his head rested on a small wallet. He met
Mr. Traveller’s eye without lifting up his head,
merely depressing his chin a little (for he was lying
on his back) to get a better view of him.
“Good day!” said Mr. Traveller.
“Same to you, if you like it,” returned
the Tinker.
“Don’t you like it? It’s
a very fine day.”
“I ain’t partickler in weather,”
returned the Tinker, with a yawn.
Mr. Traveller had walked up to where
he lay, and was looking down at him. “This
is a curious place,” said Mr. Traveller.
“Ay, I suppose so!” returned
the Tinker. “Tom Tiddler’s ground,
they call this.”
“Are you well acquainted with it?”
“Never saw it afore to-day,”
said the Tinker, with another yawn, “and don’t
care if I never see it again. There was a man
here just now, told me what it was called. If
you want to see Tom himself, you must go in at that
gate.” He faintly indicated with his chin
a little mean ruin of a wooden gate at the side of
the house.
“Have you seen Tom?”
“No, and I ain’t partickler to see him.
I can see a dirty man anywhere.”
“He does not live in the house,
then?” said Mr. Traveller, casting his eyes
upon the house anew.
“The man said,” returned
the Tinker, rather irritably, “him
as was here just now, ’this what you’re
a laying on, mate, is Tom Tiddler’s ground.
And if you want to see Tom,’ he says, ‘you
must go in at that gate.’ The man come
out at that gate himself, and he ought to know.”
“Certainly,” said Mr. Traveller.
“Though, perhaps,” exclaimed
the Tinker, so struck by the brightness of his own
idea, that it had the electric effect upon him of causing
him to lift up his head an inch or so, “perhaps
he was a liar! He told some rum ’uns him
as was here just now, did about this place of Tom’s.
He says him as was here just now ’When
Tom shut up the house, mate, to go to rack, the beds
was left, all made, like as if somebody was a-going
to sleep in every bed. And if you was to walk
through the bedrooms now, you’d see the ragged
mouldy bedclothes a heaving and a heaving like seas.
And a heaving and a heaving with what?’ he says.
’Why, with the rats under ’em.’”
“I wish I had seen that man,” Mr. Traveller
remarked.
“You’d have been welcome
to see him instead of me seeing him,” growled
the Tinker; “for he was a long-winded one.”
Not without a sense of injury in the
remembrance, the Tinker gloomily closed his eyes.
Mr. Traveller, deeming the Tinker a short-winded one,
from whom no further breath of information was to be
derived, betook himself to the gate.
Swung upon its rusty hinges, it admitted
him into a yard in which there was nothing to be seen
but an outhouse attached to the ruined building, with
a barred window in it. As there were traces of
many recent footsteps under this window, and as it
was a low window, and unglazed, Mr. Traveller made
bold to peep within the bars. And there to be
sure he had a real live Hermit before him, and could
judge how the real dead Hermits used to look.
He was lying on a bank of soot and
cinders, on the floor, in front of a rusty fireplace.
There was nothing else in the dark little kitchen,
or scullery, or whatever his den had been originally
used as, but a table with a litter of old bottles
on it. A rat made a clatter among these bottles,
jumped down, and ran over the real live Hermit on his
way to his hole, or the man in his hole would
not have been so easily discernible. Tickled
in the face by the rat’s tail, the owner of Tom
Tiddler’s ground opened his eyes, saw Mr. Traveller,
started up, and sprang to the window.
“Humph!” thought Mr. Traveller,
retiring a pace or two from the bars. “A
compound of Newgate, Bedlam, a Debtors’ Prison
in the worst time, a chimney-sweep, a mudlark, and
the Noble Savage! A nice old family, the Hermit
family. Hah!”
Mr. Traveller thought this, as he
silently confronted the sooty object in the blanket
and skewer (in sober truth it wore nothing else), with
the matted hair and the staring eyes. Further,
Mr. Traveller thought, as the eye surveyed him with
a very obvious curiosity in ascertaining the effect
they produced, “Vanity, vanity, vanity!
Verily, all is vanity!”
“What is your name, sir, and
where do you come from?” asked Mr. Mopes the
Hermit with an air of authority, but in
the ordinary human speech of one who has been to school.
Mr. Traveller answered the inquiries.
“Did you come here, sir, to see me?”
“I did. I heard of you,
and I came to see you. I know you like to
be seen.” Mr. Traveller coolly threw the
last words in, as a matter of course, to forestall
an affectation of resentment or objection that he
saw rising beneath the grease and grime of the face.
They had their effect.
“So,” said the Hermit,
after a momentary silence, unclasping the bars by
which he had previously held, and seating himself behind
them on the ledge of the window, with his bare legs
and feet crouched up, “you know I like to be
seen?”
Mr. Traveller looked about him for
something to sit on, and, observing a billet of wood
in a corner, brought it near the window. Deliberately
seating himself upon it, he answered, “Just so.”
Each looked at the other, and each
appeared to take some pains to get the measure of
the other.
“Then you have come to ask me
why I lead this life,” said the Hermit, frowning
in a stormy manner. “I never tell that
to any human being. I will not be asked that.”
“Certainly you will not be asked
that by me,” said Mr. Traveller, “for I
have not the slightest desire to know.”
“You are an uncouth man,” said Mr. Mopes
the Hermit.
“You are another,” said Mr. Traveller.
The Hermit, who was plainly in the
habit of overawing his visitors with the novelty of
his filth and his blanket and skewer, glared at his
present visitor in some discomfiture and surprise:
as if he had taken aim at him with a sure gun, and
his piece had missed fire.
“Why do you come here at all?” he asked,
after a pause.
“Upon my life,” said Mr.
Traveller, “I was made to ask myself that very
question only a few minutes ago by a Tinker
too.”
As he glanced towards the gate in
saying it, the Hermit glanced in that direction likewise.
“Yes. He is lying on his
back in the sunlight outside,” said Mr, Traveller,
as if he had been asked concerning the man, “and
he won’t come in; for he says and
really very reasonably ’What should
I come in for? I can see a dirty man anywhere.’”
“You are an insolent person.
Go away from my premises. Go!” said the
Hermit, in an imperious and angry tone.
“Come, come!” returned
Mr. Traveller, quite undisturbed. “This
is a little too much. You are not going to call
yourself clean? Look at your legs. And
as to these being your premises: they are
in far too disgraceful a condition to claim any privilege
of ownership, or anything else.”
The Hermit bounced down from his window-ledge,
and cast himself on his bed of soot and cinders.
“I am not going,” said
Mr. Traveller, glancing in after him; “you won’t
get rid of me in that way. You had better come
and talk.”
“I won’t talk,”
said the Hermit, flouncing round to get his back towards
the window.
“Then I will,” said Mr.
Traveller. “Why should you take it ill
that I have no curiosity to know why you live this
highly absurd and highly indecent life? When
I contemplate a man in a state of disease, surely
there is no moral obligation on me to be anxious to
know how he took it.”
After a short silence, the Hermit
bounced up again, and came back to the barred window.
“What? You are not gone?”
he said, affecting to have supposed that he was.
“Nor going,” Mr. Traveller
replied: “I design to pass this summer day
here.”
“How dare you come, sir, upon
my promises ” the Hermit was returning,
when his visitor interrupted him.
“Really, you know, you must
not talk about your premises. I cannot
allow such a place as this to be dignified with the
name of premises.”
“How dare you,” said the
Hermit, shaking his bars, “come in at my gate,
to taunt me with being in a diseased state?”
“Why, Lord bless my soul,”
returned the other, very composedly, “you have
not the face to say that you are in a wholesome state?
Do allow me again to call your attention to your
legs. Scrape yourself anywhere with
anything and then tell me you are in a wholesome
state. The fact is, Mr. Mopes, that you are
not only a Nuisance ”
“A Nuisance?” repeated the Hermit, fiercely.
“What is a place in this obscene
state of dilapidation but a Nuisance? What is
a man in your obscene state of dilapidation but a Nuisance?
Then, as you very well know, you cannot do without
an audience, and your audience is a Nuisance.
You attract all the disreputable vagabonds and prowlers
within ten miles around, by exhibiting yourself to
them in that objectionable blanket, and by throwing
copper money among them, and giving them drink out
of those very dirty jars and bottles that I see in
there (their stomachs need be strong!); and in short,”
said Mr. Traveller, summing up in a quietly and comfortably
settled manner, “you are a Nuisance, and this
kennel is a Nuisance, and the audience that you cannot
possibly dispense with is a Nuisance, and the Nuisance
is not merely a local Nuisance, because it is a general
Nuisance to know that there can be such a Nuisance
left in civilisation so very long after its time.”
“Will you go away? I have
a gun in here,” said the Hermit.
“Pooh!”
“I have!”
“Now, I put it to you.
Did I say you had not? And as to going away,
didn’t I say I am not going away? You have
made me forget where I was. I now remember that
I was remarking on your conduct being a Nuisance.
Moreover, it is in the last and lowest degree inconsequent
foolishness and weakness.”
“Weakness?” echoed the Hermit.
“Weakness,” said Mr. Traveller,
with his former comfortably settled final air.
“I weak, you fool?” cried
the Hermit, “I, who have held to my purpose,
and my diet, and my only bed there, all these years?”
“The more the years, the weaker
you,” returned Mr. Traveller. “Though
the years are not so many as folks say, and as you
willingly take credit for. The crust upon your
face is thick and dark, Mr. Mopes, but I can see enough
of you through it, to see that you are still a young
man.”
“Inconsequent foolishness is
lunacy, I suppose?” said the Hermit.
“I suppose it is very like it,” answered
Mr. Traveller.
“Do I converse like a lunatic?”
“One of us two must have a strong
presumption against him of being one, whether or no.
Either the clean and decorously clad man, or the dirty
and indecorously clad man. I don’t say
which.”
“Why, you self-sufficient bear,”
said the Hermit, “not a day passes but I am
justified in my purpose by the conversations I hold
here; not a day passes but I am shown, by everything
I hear and see here, how right and strong I am in
holding my purpose.”
Mr. Traveller, lounging easily on
his billet of wood, took out a pocket pipe and began
to fill it. “Now, that a man,” he
said, appealing to the summer sky as he did so, “that
a man even behind bars, in a blanket and
skewer should tell me that he can see, from
day to day, any orders or conditions of men, women,
or children, who can by any possibility teach him
that it is anything but the miserablest drivelling
for a human creature to quarrel with his social nature not
to go so far as to say, to renounce his common human
decency, for that is an extreme case; or who can teach
him that he can in any wise separate himself from his
kind and the habits of his kind, without becoming
a deteriorated spectacle calculated to give the Devil
(and perhaps the monkeys) pleasure, is
something wonderful! I repeat,” said Mr.
Traveller, beginning to smoke, “the unreasoning
hardihood of it is something wonderful even
in a man with the dirt upon him an inch or two thick behind
bars in a blanket and skewer!”
The Hermit looked at him irresolutely,
and retired to his soot and cinders and lay down,
and got up again and came to the bars, and again looked
at him irresolutely, and finally said with sharpness:
“I don’t like tobacco.”
“I don’t like dirt,”
rejoined Mr. Traveller; “tobacco is an excellent
disinfectant. We shall both be the better for
my pipe. It is my intention to sit here through
this summer day, until that blessed summer sun sinks
low in the west, and to show you what a poor creature
you are, through the lips of every chance wayfarer
who may come in at your gate.”
“What do you mean?” inquired
the Hermit, with a furious air.
“I mean that yonder is your
gate, and there are you, and here am I; I mean that
I know it to be a moral impossibility that any person
can stray in at that gate from any point of the compass,
with any sort of experience, gained at first hand,
or derived from another, that can confute me and justify
you.”
“You are an arrogant and boastful
hero,” said the Hermit. “You think
yourself profoundly wise.”
“Bah!” returned Mr. Traveller,
quietly smoking. “There is little wisdom
in knowing that every man must be up and doing, and
that all mankind are made dependent on one another.”
“You have companions outside,”
said the Hermit. “I am not to be imposed
upon by your assumed confidence in the people who may
enter.”
“A depraved distrust,”
returned the visitor, compassionately raising his
eyebrows, “of course belongs to your state, I
can’t help that.”
“Do you mean to tell me you have no confederates?”
“I mean to tell you nothing
but what I have told you. What I have told you
is, that it is a moral impossibility that any son or
daughter of Adam can stand on this ground that I put
my foot on, or on any ground that mortal treads, and
gainsay the healthy tenure on which we hold our existence.”
“Which is,” sneered the Hermit, “according
to you ”
“Which is,” returned the
other, “according to Eternal Providence, that
we must arise and wash our faces and do our gregarious
work and act and re-act on one another, leaving only
the idiot and the palsied to sit blinking in the corner.
Come!” apostrophising the gate. “Open
Sesame! Show his eyes and grieve his heart!
I don’t care who comes, for I know what must
come of it!”
With that, he faced round a little
on his billet of wood towards the gate; and Mr. Mopes,
the Hermit, after two or three ridiculous bounces of
indecision at his bed and back again, submitted to
what he could not help himself against, and coiled
himself on his window-ledge, holding to his bars and
looking out rather anxiously.