Near as we lived to Coltham, I had
only been there once in my life; but John Halifax
knew the town pretty well, having latterly in addition
to his clerkship been employed by my father in going
about the neighbourhood buying bark. I was amused
when the coach stopped at an inn, which bore the ominous
sign of the “Fleece,” to see how well
accustomed he seemed to be to the ways of the place.
He deported himself with perfect self-possession;
the waiter served him respectfully. He had evidently
taken his position in the world at least,
our little world he was no longer a boy,
but a man. I was glad to see it; leaving everything
in his hands, I lay down where he placed me in the
inn parlour, and watched him giving his orders and
walking about. Sometimes I thought his eyes
were restless and unquiet, but his manner was as composed
as usual.
Mr. Charles had left us, appointing
a meeting at Coffee-house Yard, where the theatre
then was.
“A poor barn-like place, I believe,”
said John, stopping in his walk up and down the room
to place my cushions more easy; “they should
build a new one, now Coltham is growing up into such
a fashionable town. I wish I could take you
to see the “Well-walk,” with all the fine
people promenading. But you must rest, Phineas.”
I consented, being indeed rather weary.
“You will like to see Mrs. Siddons,
whom we have so often talked about? She is not
young now, Mr. Charles says, but magnificent still.
She first came out in this same theatre more than
twenty years ago. Yates saw her. I wonder,
Phineas, if your father ever did.”
“Oh, no my father would not
enter a play-house for the world.”
“What!”
“Nay, John, you need not look
so troubled. You know he did not bring me up
in the Society, and its restrictions are not binding
upon me.”
“True, true.” And
he resumed his walk, but not his cheerfulness.
“If it were myself alone, now, of course what
I myself hold to be a lawful pleasure I have a right
to enjoy; or, if not, being yet a lad and under a
master well, I will bear the consequences,”
added he, rather proudly; “but to share them Phineas,”
turning suddenly to me, “would you like to go
home? I’ll take you.”
I protested earnestly against any
such thing; told him I was sure we were doing nothing
wrong which was, indeed, my belief; entreated
him to be merry and enjoy himself, and succeeded so
well, that in a few minutes we had started in a flutter
of gaiety and excitement for Coffee-house Yard.
It was a poor place little
better than a barn, as Mr. Charles had said built
in a lane leading out of the principal street.
This lane was almost blocked up with play-goers of
all ranks and in all sorts of équipages, from
the coach-and-six to the sedan-chair, mingled with
a motley crowd on foot, all jostling, fighting, and
screaming, till the place became a complete bear-garden.
“Oh, John! take care!” and I clung to
his arm.
“Never mind! I’m
big enough and strong enough for any crowd. Hold
on, Phineas.” If I had been a woman, and
the woman that he loved, he could not have been more
tender over my weakness. The physical weakness which,
however humiliating to myself, and doubtless contemptible
in most men’s eyes was yet dealt by
the hand of Heaven, and, as such, regarded by John
only with compassion.
The crowd grew denser and more formidable.
I looked beyond it, up towards the low hills that
rose in various directions round the town; how green
and quiet they were, in the still June evening!
I only wished we were safe back again at Norton Bury.
But now there came a slight swaying
in the crowd, as a sedan-chair was borne through or
attempted to be for the effort failed.
There was a scuffle, one of the bearers was knocked
down and hurt. Some cried “shame!”
others seemed to think this incident only added to
the frolic. At last, in the midst of the confusion,
a lady put her head out of the sedan and gazed around
her.
It was a remarkable countenance; once
seen, you could never forget it. Pale, rather
large and hard in outline, an aquiline nose full,
passionate, yet sensitive lips and very
dark eyes. She spoke, and the voice belonged
naturally to such a face. “Good people,
let me pass I am Sarah Siddons.”
The crowd divided instantaneously,
and in moving set up a cheer that must have rang through
all the town. There was a minute’s pause,
while she bowed and smiled such a smile! and
then the sedan curtain closed.
“Now’s the time only
hold fast to me!” whispered John, as he sprang
forward, dragging me after him. In another second
he had caught up the pole dropped by the man who was
hurt; and before I well knew what we were about we
both stood safe inside the entrance of the theatre.
Mrs. Siddons stepped out, and turned
to pay her bearers a most simple action but
so elevated in the doing that even it, I thought, could
not bring her to the level of common humanity.
The tall, cloaked, and hooded figure, and the tones
that issued thence, made her, even in that narrow
passage, under the one flaring tallow-candle, a veritable
Queen of tragedy at least so she seemed
to us two.
The one man was paid over-paid,
apparently, from his thankfulness and she
turned to John Halifax.
“I regret, young man, that you
should have had so much trouble. Here is some
requital.”
He took the money, selected from it
one silver coin, and returned the rest.
“I will keep this, madam, if
you please, as a memento that I once had the honour
of being useful to Mrs. Siddons.”
She looked at him keenly, out of her
wonderful dark eyes, then curtsied with grave dignity “I
thank you, sir,” she said, and passed on.
A few minutes after some underling
of the theatre found us out and brought us, “by
Mrs. Siddons’ desire,” to the best places
the house could afford.
It was a glorious night. At
this distance of time, when I look back upon it my
old blood leaps and burns. I repeat, it was a
glorious night!
Before the curtain rose we had time
to glance about us on that scene, to both entirely
new the inside of a theatre. Shabby
and small as the place was, it was filled with all
the beau monde of Coltham, which then, patronized
by royalty, rivalled even Bath in its fashion and
folly. Such a dazzle of diamonds and spangled
turbans and Prince-of-Wales’ plumes. Such
an odd mingling of costume, which was then in a transition
state, the old ladies clinging tenaciously to the
stately silken petticoats and long bodices, surmounted
by the prim and decent bouffantes, while the
younger belles had begun to flaunt in the French fashions
of flimsy muslins, shortwaisted narrow-skirted.
These we had already heard Jael furiously inveighing
against: for Jael, Quakeress as she was, could
not quite smother her original propensity towards
the decoration of “the flesh,” and betrayed
a suppressed but profound interest in the same.
John and I quite agreed with her,
that it was painful to see gentle English girls clad,
or rather un-clad, after the fashion of our enemies
across the Channel; now, unhappy nation! sunk to zero
in politics, religion, and morals where
high-bred ladies went about dressed as heathen goddesses,
with bare arms and bare sandalled feet, gaining none
of the pure simplicity of the ancient world, and losing
all the decorous dignity of our modern times.
We two who had all a boy’s
mysterious reverence for womanhood in its most ideal,
most beautiful form, and who, I believe, were, in our
ignorance, expecting to behold in every woman an Imogen,
a Juliet, or a Desdemona felt no particular
attraction towards the ungracefully attired, flaunting,
simpering belles of Coltham.
But the play began.
I am not going to follow it:
all the world has heard of the Lady Macbeth of Mrs.
Siddons. This, the first and last play I ever
witnessed, stands out to my memory, after more than
half a century, as clear as on that night. Still
I can see her in her first scene, “reading a
letter” that wondrous woman, who,
in spite of her modern black velvet and point lace,
did not act, but was, Lady Macbeth: still
I hear the awe-struck, questioning, weird-like tone,
that sent an involuntary shudder through the house,
as if supernatural things were abroad “They
made themselves air!”
And still there quivers through the silence that
piteous cry of a strong heart broken “All
the perfumes of Arabia will
never Sweeten this little hand!”
Well, she is gone, like the brief
three hours when we hung on her every breath, as if
it could stay even the wheels of time. But they
have whirled on whirled her away with them
into the infinite, and into earthly oblivion!
People tell me that a new generation only smiles at
the traditional glory of Sarah Siddons. They
never saw her. For me, I shall go down to the
grave worshipping her still.
Of him whom I call Mr. Charles I have
little to say. John and I both smiled when we
saw his fine, frank face and manly bearing subdued
into that poor, whining, sentimental craven, the stage
Macbeth. Yet I believe he acted it well.
But we irresistibly associated his idea with that
of turnip munching and hay-cart oratory. And
when, during the first colloquy of Banquo with the
witches, Macbeth took the opportunity of winking privately
at us over the foot-lights, all the paraphernalia
of the stage failed to make the murderous Thane of
Cawdor aught else than our humorous and good-natured
Mr. Charles. I never saw him after that night.
He is still living may his old age have
been as peaceful as his youth was kind and gay!
The play ended. There was some
buffoonery still to come, but we would not stay for
that. We staggered, half-blind and dazzled, both
in eyes and brain, out into the dark streets, John
almost carrying me. Then we paused, and leaning
against a post which was surmounted by one of the
half-dozen oil lamps which illumined the town, tried
to regain our mental equilibrium.
John was the first to do it.
Passing his hand over his brow he bared it to the
fresh night-air, and drew a deep, hard breath.
He was very pale, I saw.
“John?”
He turned, and laid a hand on my shoulder.
“What did you say? Are you cold?”
“No.” He put his
arm so as to shield the wind from me, nevertheless.
“Well,” said he, after
a pause, “we have had our pleasure, and it is
over. Now we must go back to the old ways again.
I wonder what o’clock it is?”
He was answered by a church clock
striking, heard clearly over the silent town.
I counted the strokes eleven!
Horrified, we looked at one another
by the light of the lamp. Until this minute
we had taken no note of time. Eleven o’clock!
How should we get home to Norton Bury that night?
For, now the excitement was over,
I turned sick and faint; my limbs almost sank under
me.
“What must we do, John?”
“Do! oh! ’tis quite easy.
You cannot walk you shall not walk we
must hire a gig and drive home. I have enough
money all my month’s wages see!”
He felt in his pockets one after the other; his countenance
grew blank. “Why! where is my money gone
to?”
Where, indeed! But that it was
gone, and irretrievably most likely stolen
when we were so wedged in the crowd there
could be no manner of doubt. And I had not a
groat. I had little use for money, and rarely
carried any.
“Would not somebody trust us?” suggested
I.
“I never asked anybody for credit
in my life and for a horse and gig they’d
laugh at me. Still yes stay
here a minute, and I’ll try.”
He came back, though not immediately,
and took my arm with a reckless laugh.
“It’s of no use, Phineas I’m
not so respectable as I thought. What’s
to be done?”
Ay! what indeed! Here we were,
two friendless youths, with not a penny in our pockets,
and ten miles away from home. How to get there,
and at midnight too, was a very serious question.
We consulted a minute, and then John said firmly:
“We must make the best of it
and start. Every instant is precious. Your
father will think we have fallen into some harm.
Come, Phineas, I’ll help you on.”
His strong, cheery voice, added to
the necessity of the circumstances, braced up my nerves.
I took hold of his arm, and we marched on bravely
through the shut-up town, and for a mile or two along
the high-road leading to Norton Bury. There
was a cool fresh breeze: and I often think one
can walk so much further by night than by day.
For some time, listening to John’s talk about
the stars he had lately added astronomy
to the many things he tried to learn and
recalling with him all that we had heard and seen
this day, I hardly felt my weariness.
But gradually it grew upon me; my
pace lagged slower and slower even the
scented air of the midsummer-night imparted no freshness.
John wound his young arm, strong and firm as iron,
round my waist, and we got on awhile in that way.
“Keep up, Phineas. There’s
a hayrick near. I’ll wrap you in my coat,
and you shall rest there: an hour or two will
not matter now we shall get home by daybreak.”
I feebly assented; but it seemed to
me that we never should get home at least
I never should. For a short way more, I dragged
myself or rather, was dragged along;
then the stars, the shadowy fields, and the winding,
white high-road mingled and faded from me. I
lost all consciousness.
When I came to myself I was lying
by a tiny brook at the roadside, my head resting on
John’s knees. He was bathing my forehead:
I could not see him, but I heard his smothered moan.
“David, don’t mind. I shall be well
directly.”
“Oh! Phineas Phineas; I thought
I had killed you.”
He said no more; but I fancied that
under cover of the night he yielded to what his manhood
might have been ashamed of yet need not a
few tears.
I tried to rise. There was a
faint streak in the east. “Why, it is
daybreak! How far are we from Norton Bury?”
“Not very far. Don’t stir a step.
I shall carry you.”
“Impossible!”
“Nonsense; I have done it for
half-a-mile already. Come, mount! I am
not going to have Jonathan’s death laid at David’s
door.”
And so, masking command with a jest,
he had his way. What strength supported him
I cannot tell, but he certainly carried me with
many rests between, and pauses, during which I walked
a quarter of a mile or so the whole way
to Norton Bury.
The light broadened and broadened.
When we reached my father’s door, haggard and
miserable, it was in the pale sunshine of a summer
morning.
“Thank God!” murmured
John, as he set me down at the foot of the steps.
“You are safe at home.”
“And you. You will come in you
would not leave me now?”
He thought a moment then said, “No!”
We looked up doubtfully at the house;
there were no watchers there. All the windows
were closed, as if the whole peaceful establishment
were taking its sleep, prior to the early stirring
of Norton Bury households. Even John’s
loud knocking was some time before it was answered.
I was too exhausted to feel much;
but I know those five awful minutes seemed interminable.
I could not have borne them, save for John’s
voice in my ear.
“Courage! I’ll bear
all the blame. We have committed no absolute
sin, and have paid dearly for any folly. Courage!”
At the five minutes’ end my
father opened the door. He was dressed as usual,
looked as usual. Whether he had sat up watching,
or had suffered any anxiety, I never found out.
He said nothing; merely opened the
door, admitted us, and closed it behind us.
But we were certain, from his face, that he knew all.
It was so; some neighbour driving home from Coltham
had taken pains to tell Abel Fletcher where he had
seen his son at the very last place a Friend’s
son ought to be seen the play-house.
We knew that it was by no means to learn the truth,
but to confront us with it, that my father reaching
the parlour, and opening the shutters that the hard
daylight should shame us more and more asked
the stern question
“Phineas, where hast thee been?”
John answered for me. “At
the theatre at Coltham. It was my fault.
He went because I wished to go.”
“And wherefore didst thee wish to go?”
“Wherefore?” the answer
seemed hard to find. “Oh! Mr Fletcher,
were you never young like me?”
My father made no reply; John gathered courage.
“It was, as I say, all my fault.
It might have been wrong I think now that
it was but the temptation was hard.
My life here is dull; I long sometimes for a little
amusement a little change.”
“Thee shall have it.”
That voice, slow and quiet as it was, struck us both
dumb.
“And how long hast thee planned this, John Halifax?”
“Not a day not an
hour! it was a sudden freak of mine.” (My father
shook his head with contemptuous incredulity.) “Sir! Abel
Fletcher did I ever tell you a lie?
If you will not believe me, believe your own son.
Ask Phineas No, no, ask him nothing!”
And he came in great distress to the sofa where I
had fallen. “Oh, Phineas! how cruel I
have been to you!”
I tried to smile at him, being past
speaking but my father put John aside.
“Young man, I can take
care of my son. Thee shalt not lead him into
harm’s way any more. Go I have
been mistaken in thee!”
If my father had gone into a passion,
had accused us, reproached us, and stormed at us with
all the ill-language that men of the world use! but
that quiet, cold, irrevocable, “I have been mistaken
in thee!” was ten times worse.
John lifted to him a mute look, from
which all pride had ebbed away.
“I repeat, I have been mistaken
in thee! Thee seemed a lad to my mind; I trusted
thee. This day, by my son’s wish, I meant
to have bound thee ’prentice to me, and in good
time to have taken thee into the business. Now ”
There was silence. At last John
muttered, in a low broken-hearted voice, “I
deserve it all. I can go away. I might
perhaps earn my living elsewhere; shall I?”
Abel Fletcher hesitated, looked at
the poor lad before him (oh, David! how unlike to
thee), then said, “No I do not wish
that. At least, not at present.”
I cried out in the joy and relief
of my heart. John came over to me, and we clasped
hands.
“John, you will not go?”
“No, I will stay to redeem my
character with your father. Be content, Phineas I
won’t part with you.”
“Young man, thou must,” said my father,
turning round.
“But ”
“I have said it, Phineas.
I accuse him of no dishonesty, no crime, but of weakly
yielding, and selfishly causing another to yield, to
the temptation of the world. Therefore, as my
clerk I retain him; as my son’s companion never!”
We felt that “never” was irrevocable.
Yet I tried, blindly and despairingly,
to wrestle with it; I might as well have flung myself
against a stone wall.
John stood perfectly silent.
“Don’t, Phineas,”
he whispered at last; “never mind me. Your
father is right at least so far as he sees.
Let me go perhaps I may come back to you
some time. If not ”
I moaned out bitter words I
hardly knew what I was saying. My father took
no notice of them, only went to the door and called
Jael.
Then, before the woman came, I had
strength enough to bid John go.
“Good-bye don’t forget me,
don’t!”
“I will not,” he said;
“and if I live we shall be friends again.
Good-bye, Phineas.” He was gone.
After that day, though he kept his
word, and remained in the tan-yard, and though from
time to time I heard of him always accidentally, after
that day for two long years I never once saw the face
of John Halifax.