‘Farmiloe. Chemist by Examination.’
So did the good man proclaim himself to a suburb of
a city in the West of England. It was one of those
pretty, clean, fresh-coloured suburbs only to be found
in the west; a few dainty little shops, everything
about them bright or glistening, scattered among pleasant
little houses with gardens eternally green and all
but perennially in bloom; every vista ending in foliage,
and in one direction a far glimpse of the Cathedral
towers, sending forth their music to fall dreamily
upon these quiet roads. The neighbourhood seemed
to breathe a tranquil prosperity. Red-cheeked
emissaries of butcher, baker, and grocer, order-book
in hand, knocked cheerily at kitchen doors, and went
smiling away; the ponies they drove were well fed
and frisky, their carts spick and span. The church
of the parish, an imposing edifice, dated only from
a few years ago, and had cost its noble founder a
sum of money which any church-going parishioner would
have named to you with proper awe. The population
was largely female, and every shopkeeper who knew his
business had become proficient in bowing, smiling,
and suave servility.
Mr. Farmiloe, it is to be feared,
had no very profound acquaintance with his business
from any point of view. True, he was ‘chemist
by examination,’ but it had cost him repeated
efforts to reach this unassailable ground and more
than one pharmaceutist with whom he abode as assistant
had felt it a measure of prudence to dispense with
his services. Give him time, and he was generally
equal to the demands of suburban customers; hurry or
interrupt him, and he showed himself anything but the
man for a crisis. Face and demeanour were against
him. He had exceedingly plain features, and a
persistently sour expression; even his smile suggested
sarcasm. He could not tune his voice to the tradesman
note, and on the slightest provocation he became,
quite unintentionally, offensive. Such a man had
no chance whatever in this flowery and bowery little
suburb.
Yet he came hither with hopes.
One circumstance seemed to him especially favourable:
the shop was also a post-office, and no one could fail
to see (it was put most impressively by the predecessor
who sold him the business) how advantageous was this
blending of public service with commercial interest;
especially as there was no telegraphic work to make
a skilled assistant necessary. As a matter of
course, people using the post-office would patronise
the chemist; and a provincial chemist can add to his
legitimate business sundry pleasant little tradings
which benefit himself without provoking the jealousy
of neighbour shopmen. ’It will be your own
fault, my dear sir, if you do not make a very good
thing of it indeed. The sole and sufficient explanation
of of the decline during this last year
or two is my shocking health. I really have not
been able to do justice to the business.’
Necessarily, Mr. Farmiloe entered
into negotiation with the postal authorities; and
it was with some little disappointment that he learnt
how very modest could be his direct remuneration for
the responsibilities and labours he undertook.
The Post-Office is a very shrewdly managed department
of the public service; it has brought to perfection
the art of obtaining maximum results with a
minimum expenditure. But Mr. Farmiloe remembered
the other aspect of the matter; he would benefit so
largely by this ill-paid undertaking that grumbling
was foolish. Moreover, the thing carried dignity
with it; he served his Majesty, he served the nation.
And ha, ha! how very odd it would
be to post one’s letters in one’s own
post-office. One might really get a good deal
of amusement out of the thought, after business hours.
His age was eight-and-thirty. For some years
he had pondered matrimony, though without fixing his
affections on any particular person. It was plain,
indeed, that he ought to marry. Every tradesman
is made more respectable by wedlock, and a chemist
who, in some degree, resembles a medical man, seems
especially to stand in need of the matrimonial guarantee.
Had it been feasible, Mr. Farmiloe would have brought
a wife with him from the town where he had lived for
the past few years, but he was in the difficult position
of knowing not a single marriageable female to whom
he could address himself with hope or with self-respect.
Natural shyness had always held him aloof from reputable
women; he felt that he could not recommend himself
to them he who had such an unlucky aptitude
for saying the wrong word or keeping silence when
speech was demanded. With the men of his acquaintance
he could relieve his sense of awkwardness and deficiency
by becoming aggressive; in fact, he had a reputation
for cantankerousness, for pugnacity, which kept most
of his equals in some awe of him, and to perceive
this was one solace amid many discontents. Nicely
dressed and well-spoken and good-looking women above
the class of domestic servants he worshipped from afar,
and only in vivacious moments pictured himself as
the wooer of such a superior being.
It seemed as though fate could do
nothing with Mr. Farmiloe. At six-and-thirty
he suffered the shock of learning that a relative an
old woman to whom he had occasionally written as a
matter of kindness (Farmiloe could do such things) had
left him by will the sum of L600. It was strictly
a shock; it upset his health for several days, and
not for a week or two could he realise the legacy
as a fact. Just when he was beginning to look
about him with a new air of confidence, the solicitors
who were managing the little affair for him drily
acquainted him with the fact that his relative’s
will was contested by other kinsfolk whom the old woman
had passed over, on the ground that she was imbecile
and incapable of conducting her affairs. There
followed a law-suit, which consumed many months and
cost a good deal of money; so that, though he won his
case, Mr. Farmiloe lost all satisfaction in his improved
circumstances, and was only more embittered against
the world at large.
Then, no sooner had he purchased his
business, than he learnt from smiling neighbours that
he had paid considerably too much for it. His
predecessor, beyond a doubt, would have taken very
much less; had, indeed, been on the point of doing
so just when Mr. Farmiloe appeared. This kind
of experience is a trial to any man. It threw
Mr. Farmiloe into a silent rage, with the result that
two or three customers who chanced to enter his shop
declared that they would never have anything more
to do with such a surly creature.
And now began his torment a
form of exasperation peculiar to his dual capacity
of shopkeeper and manager of a post-office. All
day long he stood on the watch for customers literally
stood, now behind the counter, now in front of it,
his eager and angry eyes turning to the door whenever
the steps of a passer-by sounded without. If
the door opened his nerves began to tingle, and he
straightened himself like a soldier at attention.
For a moment he suffered an agony of doubt. Would
the person entering turn to the counter or to the
post-office? And seldom was his hope fulfilled;
not one in four of the people who came in was a genuine
customer; the post-office, always the post-office.
A stamp, a card, a newspaper wrapper, a postal-order,
a letter to be registered anything but an
honest purchase across the counter or the blessed
tendering of a prescription to make up. From
vexation he passed to annoyance, to rage, to fury;
he cursed the post-office, and committed to eternal
perdition the man who had waxed eloquent upon its
advantages.
Of course, he had hired an errand-boy,
and never had errand-boy so little legitimate occupation.
Resolved not to pay him for nothing, Mr. Farmiloe
kept him cleaning windows, washing bottles, and the
like, until the lad fairly broke into rebellion.
If this was the sort of work he was engaged for he
must have higher wages; he wasn’t over strong
and his mother said he must lead an open-air life that
was why he had taken the place. To be bearded
thus in his own shop was too much for Mr. Farmiloe,
he seized the opportunity of giving his wrath full
swing, and burst into a frenzy of vilification.
Just as his passion reached its height (he stood with
his back to the door) there entered a lady who wished
to make a large purchase of disinfectants. Alarmed
and scandalised at what was going on, she had no sooner
crossed the threshold than she turned again, and hurried
away. Her friends were not long in learning from
her that the new chemist was a most violent man, a
most disagreeable person the very last man
one could think of doing business with.
The home was but poorly furnished,
and Mr. Farmiloe had engaged a very cheap general
servant, who involved him in dirt and discomfort.
It was a matter of talk among the neighbouring tradesmen
that the chemist lived in a beggarly fashion.
When the dismissed errand-boy spread the story of how
he had been used, people jumped to the conclusion
that Mr. Farmiloe drank. Before long there was
a legend that he had been suffering from an acute
attack of delirium tremens.
The post-office, always the post-office.
If he sat down at a meal the shop-bell clanged, and
hope springing eternal, he hurried forth in readiness
to make up a packet or concoct a mixture; but it was
an old lady who held him in talk for ten minutes about
rates of postage to South America. When, by rare
luck, he had a prescription to dispense (the hideous
scrawl of that pestilent Dr. Bunker) in came somebody
with letters and parcels which he was requested to
weigh; and his hand shook so with rage that he could
not resume his dispensing for the next quarter of an
hour. People asked extraordinary questions, and
were surprised, offended, when he declared he could
not answer them. When could a letter be delivered
at a village on the north-west coast of Ireland?
Was it true that the Post-Office contemplated a reduction
of rates to Hong-Kong? Would he explain in detail
the new system of express delivery? Invariably
he betrayed impatience, and occasionally he lost his
temper; people went away exclaiming what a horrid
man he was!
‘Mr. What’s-your-name,’
said a shopkeeper one day, after receiving a short
answer, ’I shall make it my business to complain
of you to the Postmaster-General. I don’t
come here to be insulted.’
‘Who insulted you?’ returned
Farmiloe like a sullen schoolboy.
‘Why, you did. And you are always doing
it.’
‘I’m not.’
‘You are.’
’If I did’ terror
stole upon the chemist’s heart ’I
didn’t mean it, and
I I’m sure I apologise. It’s
a way I have.’
‘A damned bad way, let me tell you. I advise
you to get out of it.’
‘I’m sorry ’
‘So you should be.’
And the tradesman walked off, only half appeased.
Mr. Farmiloe could have shed tears
in his mortification, and for some minutes he stood
looking at a bottle of laudanum, wishing he had the
courage to have done with life. Plainly he could
not live very long unless things improved. His
ready money was coming to an end, rents and taxes
loomed before him. An awful thought of bankruptcy
haunted him in the early morning hours.
The most frequent visitor to the post-office
was a well-dressed, middle-aged man, who spoke civilly,
and did his business in the fewest possible words.
Mr. Farmiloe rather liked the look of him, and once
or twice made conversational overtures, but with no
encouraging result. One day, feeling bolder than
usual the chemist ventured to speak what he had in
mind. After supplying the grave gentleman with
stamps and postal-orders, he said, in a tone meant
to be conciliatory
‘I don’t know whether you ever have need
of mineral waters, sir?’
‘Why, yes, sometimes. My ordinary tradesman
supplies them.’
‘I thought I’d just mention that I keep
them in stock.’
‘Ah thank you ’
‘I’ve noticed,’
went on the luckless apothecary, his bosom heaving
with a sense of his wrongs, ’that you’re
a pretty large customer of the post-office, and it
seems to me’ he meant to speak jocosely ’that
it would be only fair if you gave me a turn
now and then. I get next to nothing out of this,
you know. I should be much obliged if you ’
The man of few words was looking at
him, half in surprise, half in indignation, and when
the chemist blundered into silence he spoke:
’I really have nothing to do
with that. As a matter of fact, I was on the
point of making a little purchase in your shop, but
I decidedly object to this kind of behaviour, and
shall make my purchase elsewhere.’
He strode solemnly into the street,
and Mr. Farmiloe, unconscious of all about him, glared
at vacancy.
Whether from the angry tradesman,
or from some lady with whom Mr. Farmiloe had been
abrupt, a complaint did presently reach the postal
authorities, with the result that an official called
at the chemist’s shop. The interview was
unpleasant. It happened that Mr. Farmiloe (not
for the first time) had just then allowed himself
to run out of certain things always in demand by the
public halfpenny stamps, for instance.
Moreover, his accounts were not in perfect order.
This, he had to hear, was emphatically unbusinesslike,
and, in brief, would not do.
‘It shall not occur again, sir,’
mumbled the unhappy man. ’But, if you consider
my position ’
’Mr. Farmiloe, allow me to tell
you that this is a matter for your own consideration,
and no one else’s.’
’True, sir, quite true.
Still, when you come to think of it I assure
you ’
’The only assurance I want is
that the business of the post-office will be properly
attended to, and that assurance I must have. I
shall probably call again before long. Good morning.’
It was always with a savage satisfaction
that Mr. Farmiloe heard the clock strike eight on
Saturday evening. His shop remained open till
ten, but at eight came the end of the post-office
business. If, as happened, any one entered five
minutes too late, it delighted him to refuse their
request. These were the only moments in which
he felt himself a free man. After eating his
poor supper, he smoked a pipe or two of cheap tobacco,
brooding; or he fingered the pages of his menacing
account-books; or, very rarely, he walked about the
dark country roads, asking himself, with many a tragi-comic
gesture and ejaculation, why he could not get on like
other men.
One afternoon it seemed that he, at
length, had his chance. There entered a maidservant
with a prescription to be made up and sent as soon
as possible. A glance at the name delighted Mr.
Farmiloe; it was that of the richest family in the
suburbs. The medicine, to be sure, was only for
a governess, but his existence was recognised, and
the patronage of such people would do him good.
But for the never-sufficiently-to-be-condemned handwriting
of Dr. Bunker, the prescription offered no difficulty.
Rubbing his palms together, and smiling as he seldom
smiled, he told the domestic that the medicine should
be delivered in less than half an hour.
Scarcely had he begun upon it, when
a lady came in, a lady whom he knew well. Her
business was at the post-office side, and she looked
a peremptory demand for his attention. Inwardly
furious, he crossed the shop.
‘Be so good as to tell me what
this will cost by book-post.’
It seemed to be a pamphlet. Giving
a glance at one of the open ends, Mr. Farmiloe saw
handwriting within, and his hostility to the woman
found vent in a sharp remark.
‘There’s a written communication
in this. It will be letter rate.’
The lady eyed him with terrible scorn.
’You will oblige me by minding
your own business. Your remark is the merest
impertinence. That packet consists of MS., and
will, therefore, go at book rate. Be so good
as to weigh it at once.’
Mr. Farmiloe lost all control of himself,
and well-nigh screamed.
’No, madam, I will not
weigh it. And let me inform you, as you are so
ignorant, that to weigh packets is not part of my duty.
I do it merely to oblige civil persons, and you, madam,
are not one of them.’
The lady instantly turned and withdrew.
‘Damn the post-office!’
yelled Mr. Farmiloe, alone with his errand-boy, and
shaking his fist in the air. ’This very
day I write to give it up. I say damn
the post-office.’
He returned to his dispensing, completed
it, wrapped up the bottle in the customary manner,
and despatched the boy to the house.
Five minutes later a thought flashed
through his mind which put him in a cold sweat.
He happened to glance along the shelf from which he
had taken the bottle containing the last ingredient
of the mixture, and it struck him, with all the force
of a horrible doubt, that he had made a mistake.
In the irate confusion of his thoughts, he had done
the dispensing almost mechanically. The bottle
he ought to have taken down was that, but had
he not actually poured from that other? Of poisoning
there was no fear, but, if indeed he had made a slip,
the result would be a very extraordinary mixture;
so surprising, in fact, that the patient would be sure
to speak to Dr. Bunker about it. Good heavens!
He felt sure he had made the mistake.
Any other man would have taken down
the two bottles in question, and have examined the
mouths of them for traces of moisture. Mr. Farmiloe,
a victim of destiny, could do nothing so reasonable.
Heedless of the fact that his shop remained unguarded,
he seized his hat and rushed after the errand-boy.
If he could only have a sniff at the mixture it would
either confirm his fear or set his mind at rest.
He tore along the road and was too late.
The boy met him, having just completed his errand.
With a wild curse he sped to the house,
he rushed to the tradesman’s door. The
medicine just delivered! He must examine it he
feared there was a mistake an extraordinary
oversight.
The bottle had not yet been upstairs.
Mr. Farmiloe tore off the wrapper, wrenched out the
cork, sniffed and smiled feebly.
’Thank you. I’m glad
to find there was no mistake. I’ll
take it back, and have it wrapped up again, and send
it immediately immediately. And, by
the bye’ he fumbled in his pocket
for half-a-crown, still smiling like a detected culprit ’I’m
sure you won’t mention this little affair.
A new assistant of mine stupid fellow I
am going to get rid of him at once. Thank you,
thank you.’
Notwithstanding that half-crown the
incident was, of course, talked of through the house
before a quarter of an hour had elapsed. Next
day it was the gossip of the suburbs; and the day
after the city itself heard the story. People
were alarmed and scandalised. Why, such a chemist
was a public danger! One lady declared that he
ought at once to be ’struck off the roll!’
And so in a sense he was. Another
month and the flowery, bowery little suburb knew him
no more. He hid himself in a great town, living
on the wreck of his fortune whilst he sought a place
as an assistant. A leaky pair of boots and a
bad east wind found the vulnerable spot of his constitution.
After all, there was just enough money left to bury
him.