THE FAMILY HISTORY PROGRESSES
What could possess John Hewett that,
after resting from the day’s work, he often
left his comfortable room late in the evening and rambled
about the streets of that part of London which had
surely least interest for him, the streets which are
thronged with idlers, with carriages going homeward
from the theatres, with those who can only come forth
to ply their business when darkness has fallen?
Did he seek food for his antagonism in observing the
characteristics of the world in which he was a stranger,
the world which has its garners full and takes its
ease amid superfluity? It could scarcely be that,
for since his wife’s death an indifference seemed
to be settling upon him; he no longer cared to visit
the Green or his club on Sunday, and seldom spoke
on the subjects which formerly goaded him to madness.
He appeared to be drawn forth against his will, in
spite of weariness, and his look as he walked on was
that of a man who is in search of some one. Yet
whom could he expect to meet in these highways of
the West End?
Oxford Street, Regent Street, Piccadilly,
the Strand, the ways about St. James’s Park;
John Hewett was not the only father who has come forth
after nightfall from an obscure home to look darkly
at the faces passing on these broad pavements.
At times he would shrink into a shadowed corner, and
peer thence at those who went by under the gaslight.
When he moved forward, it was with the uneasy gait
of one who shuns observation; you would have thought,
perchance, that he watched an opportunity of begging
and was shamefaced: it happened now and then
that he was regarded suspiciously. A rough-looking
man, with grizzled beard, with eyes generally bloodshot,
his shoulders stooping naturally the miserable
are always suspected where law is conscious of its
injustice.
Two years ago he was beset for a time
with the same restlessness, and took night-walks in
the same directions; the habit wore away, however.
Now it possessed him even more strongly. Between
ten and eleven o’clock, when the children were
in bed, he fell into abstraction, and presently, with
an unexpected movement, looked up as if some one had
spoken to him just the look of one who hears
a familiar voice; then he sighed, and took his hat
and went forth. It happened sometimes when he
was sitting with his friends Mr. and Mrs. Eagles; in
that case he would make some kind of excuse.
The couple suspected that his business would take
him to the public-house, but John never came back with
a sign about him of having drunk; of that failing
he had broken himself. He went cautiously down
the atone stairs, averting his face if anyone met
him; then by cross-ways he reached Gray’s Inn
Road, and so westwards.
He had a well-ordered home, and his
children were about him, but these things did not
compensate him for the greatest loss his life had
suffered. The children, in truth, had no very
strong hold upon his affections. Sometimes, when
Amy sat and talked to him, he showed a growing nervousness,
an impatience, and at length turned away from her
as if to occupy himself in some manner. The voice
was not that which had ever power to soothe him when
it spoke playfully. Memory brought back the tones
which had been so dear to him, and at times something
more than memory; he seemed really to hear them, as
if from a distance. And then it was that he went
out to wander in the streets.
Of Bob in the meantime he saw scarcely
anything. That young man presented himself one
Sunday shortly after his father had become settled
in the new home, but practically he was a stranger.
John and he had no interests in common; there even
existed a slight antipathy on the father’s part
of late years. Strangely enough this feeling
expressed itself one day in the form of a rebuke to
Bob for neglecting Pennyloaf Pennyloaf,
whom John had always declined to recognise.
‘I hear no good of your goin’s
on,’ remarked Hewett, on a casual encounter
in the street. ’A married man ought to give
up the kind of company as you keep.’
‘I do no harm,’ replied
Bob bluntly. ’Has my wife been complaining
to you?’
‘I’ve nothing to do with her; it’s
what I’m told.’
’By Kirkwood, I suppose?
You’d better not have made up with him again,
if he’s only making mischief.’
‘No, I didn’t mean Kirkwood.’
And John went his way. Odd thing,
was it not, that this embittered leveller should himself
practise the very intolerance which he reviled in
people of the upper world. For his refusal to
recognise Pennyloaf he had absolutely no grounds,
save I use the words advisedly an
aristocratic prejudice. Bob had married deplorably
beneath him; it was unpardonable, let the character
of the girl be what it might. Of course you recognise
the item in John Hewett’s personality which serves
to explain this singular attitude. But, viewed
generally, it was one of those bits of human inconsistency
over which the observer smiles, and which should be
recommended to good people in search of arguments for
the equality of men.
After that little dialogue, Bob went
home in a disagreeable temper. To begin with,
his mood had been ruffled, for the landlady at his
lodgings the fourth to which he had removed
this year was ‘nasty’ about
a week or two of unpaid rent, and a man on whom he
had counted this evening for the payment of a debt
was keeping out of his way. He found Pennyloaf
sitting on the stairs with her two children, as usual;
poor Pennyloaf had not originality enough to discover
new expressions of misery, and that one bright idea
of donning her best dress was a single instance of
ingenuity. In obedience to Jane Snowdon, she kept
herself and the babies and the room tolerably clean,
but everything was done in the most dispirited way.
‘What are you kicking about
here for?’ asked Bob impatiently. ’That’s
how that kid gets its cold of course it
is! Ger out!’
The last remark was addressed to the
elder child, who caught at his legs as he strode past.
Bob was not actively unkind to the little wretches
for whose being he was responsible; he simply occupied
the natural position of unsophisticated man to children
of that age, one of indifference, or impatience.
The infants were a nuisance; no one desired their
coming, and the older they grew the more expensive
they were.
It was a cold evening of October;
Pennyloaf had allowed the fire to get very low (she
knew not exactly where the next supply of coals was
to come from), and her husband growled as he made
a vain endeavour to warm his hands.
‘Why haven’t you got tea ready?’
he asked,
‘I couldn’t be sure as
you was comin’, Bob; how could I? But I’ll
soon get the kettle boilin’.’
’Couldn’t be sure as I
was coming? Why, I’ve been back every night
this week except two or three.’
It was Thursday, but Bob meant nothing jocose.
‘Look here!’ he continued,
fixing a surly eye upon her. ’What do you
mean by complaining about me to people? Just mind
your own business. When was that girl Jane Snowdon
here last?’
‘Yesterday, Bob.’
‘I thought as much, Did she
give you anything?’ Ho made this inquiry in
rather a shamefaced way.
‘No, she didn’t.’
’Well, I tell you what it is.
I’m not going to have her coming about the place,
so understand that. When she comes next, you’ll
just tell her she needn’t come again.’
Pennyloaf looked at him with dismay.
For the delivery of this command Bob had seated himself
on the corner of the table and crossed his arms.
But for the touch of black-guardism in his appearance,
Bob would have been a very good-looking fellow; his
face was healthy, by no means commonplace in its mould,
and had the peculiar vividness which indicates ability so
impressive, because so rarely seen, in men of his
level. Unfortunately his hair was cropped all
but to the scalp, in the fashionable manner; it was
greased, too, and curled up on one side of his forehead
with a peculiarly offensive perkishness. Poor
Pennyloaf was in a great degree responsible for the
ills of her married life; not only did she believe
Bob to be the handsomest man who walked the earth
but in her weakness she could not refrain from telling
him as much. At the present moment he was intensely
self-conscious; with Pennyloaf’s eye upon him,
he posed for effect. The idea of forbidding future
intercourse with Jane had come to him quite suddenly;
it was by no means his intention to make his order
permanent, for Jane had now and then brought little
presents which were useful, but just now he felt a
satisfaction in asserting authority. Jane should
understand that he regarded her censure of him with
high displeasure.
‘You don’t mean that, Bob?’ murmured
Pennyloaf.
’Of course I do. And let
me catch you disobeying me! I should think you
might find better friends than a girl as used to be
the Peckovers’ dirty little servant.’
Bob turned up his nose and sniffed
the air. And Pennyloaf, in spite of the keenest
distress, actually felt that there was something in
the objection, thus framed! She herself had never
been a servant never; she had never sunk
below working with the needle for sixteen hours a
day for a payment of ninepence. The work-girl
regards a domestic slave as very distinctly her inferior.
‘But that’s a long while
ago,’ she ventured to urge, after reflection.
‘That makes no difference.
Do as I tell you, and don’t argue.’
It was not often that visitors sought
Bob at his home of an evening, but whilst this dialogue
was still going on an acquaintance made his arrival
known by a knock at the door. It was a lank and
hungry individual, grimy of face and hands, his clothing
such as in the country would serve well for a scarecrow.
Who could have recognised in him the once spruce and
spirited Mr. Jack Bartley, distinguished by his chimney-pot
hat at the Crystal Palace on Bob’s wedding-day?
At the close of that same day, as you remember, he
and Bob engaged in terrific combat, the outcome of
earlier rivalry for the favour of Clem Peckover.
Notwithstanding that memory, the two were now on very
friendly terms. You have heard from Clem’s
lips that Jack Bartley, failing to win herself, ended
by espousing Miss Susan Jollop; also what was the result
of that alliance. Mr. Bartley was an unhappy man.
His wife had a ferocious temper, was reckless with
money, and now drank steadily; the consequence was,
that Jack had lost all regular employment, and only
earned occasional pence in the most various ways.
Broken in spirit, he himself first made advances to
his companion of former days, and Bob, flattered by
the other’s humility, encouraged him as a hanger-on. Really,
we shall soon be coming to a conclusion that the differences
between the nether and the upper world are purely
superficial.
Whenever Jack came to spend an hour
with Mr. and Mrs. Hewett, he was sure sooner or later
to indulge the misery that preyed upon him and give
way to sheer weeping. He did so this evening,
almost as soon as he entered.
‘I ain’t had a mouthful
past my lips since last night, I ain’t!’
he sobbed. ’It’s ’ard on a
feller as used to have his meals regular. I’ll
murder Suke yet, see if I don’t! I’ll
have her life! She met me last night and gave
me this black eye as you see she did!
It’s ’ard on a feller.’
’You mean to say as she ‘it you?’
cried Pennyloaf.
Bob chuckled, thrust his hands into
his pockets, spread himself out. His own superiority
was so gloriously manifest.
‘Suppose you try it on with me,
Penny!’ he cried.
‘You’d give me something
as I should remember,’ she answered, smirking,
the good little slavey.
‘Shouldn’t wonder if I did,’ assented
Bob.
Mr. Bartley’s pressing hunger
was satisfied with some bread and butter and a cup
of tea. Whilst taking a share of the meal, Bob
brought a small box on to the table; it had a sliding
lid, and inside were certain specimens of artistic
work with which he was wont to amuse himself when
tired of roaming the streets in jovial company.
Do you recollect that, when we first made Bob’s
acquaintance, he showed Sidney Kirkwood a medal of
his own design and casting? His daily work at
die-sinking had of course supplied him with this suggestion,
and he still found pleasure in work of the same kind.
In days before commercialism had divorced art and
the handicrafts, a man with Bob’s distinct faculty
would have found encouragement to exercise it for
serious ends; as it was, he remained at the semi-conscious
stage with regard to his own aptitudes, and cast leaden
medals just as a way of occupying his hands when a
couple of hours hung heavy on them. Partly with
the thought of amusing the dolorous Jack, yet more
to win laudation, he brought forth DOW a variety of
casts and moulds and spread them on the table.
His latest piece of work was a medal in high relief
bearing the heads of the Prince and Princess of Wales
surrounded with a wreath. Bob had no political
convictions; with complacency he drew these royal
features, the sight of which would have made his father
foam at the mouth. True, he might have found subjects
artistically more satisfying, but he belonged to the
people, and the English people.
Jack Bartley, having dried his eyes
and swallowed his bread and butter, considered the
medal with much attention.
‘I say,’ he remarked at
length, ‘will you give me this, Bob?’
‘I don’t mind, You can take it if you
like.’
‘Thanks!’
Jack wrapped it up and put it in his
waistcoat pocket, and before long rose to take leave
of his friends.
‘I only wish I’d got a
wife like you,’ he observed at the door, as he
saw Pennyloaf bending over the two children, recently
put to bed.
Pennyloaf’s eyes gleamed at
the compliment, and she turned them to her husband.
‘She’s nothing to boast
of,’ said Bob, judicially and masculinely.
’All women are pretty much alike.’
And Pennyloaf tried to smile at the snub.
Having devoted one evening to domestic
quietude, Bob naturally felt himself free to dispose
of the next in a manner more to his taste. The
pleasures which sufficed to keep him from home had
the same sordid monotony which characterises life
in general for the lower strata of society. If
he had money, there was the music-hall; if he had none,
there were the streets. Being in the latter condition
to-night, he joined a company of male and female intimates,
and with them strolled aimlessly from one familiar
rendezvous to another. Would that it were possible
to set down a literal report of the conversation which
passed during hours thus spent! Much of it, of
course, would be merely revolting, but for the most
part it would consist of such wearying, such incredible
imbecilities as no human patience could endure through
five minutes’ perusal. Realise it, however,
and you grasp the conditions of what is called the
social problem. As regards Robert Hewett in particular,
it would help you to understand the momentous change
in his life which was just coming to pass.
On his reaching home at eleven o’clock,
Pennyloaf met him with the news that Jack Bartley
had looked in twice and seemed very anxious to see
him. To-morrow being Saturday, Jack would call
again early in the afternoon. When the time came,
he presented himself, hungry and dirty as ever, but
with an unwonted liveliness in his eye.
‘I’ve got something to
say to you,’ he began, in a low voice, nodding
significantly towards Pennyloaf.
‘Go and buy what you want for
to-morrow,’ said Bob to his wife, giving her
some money out of his wages. ‘Take the kids.’
Disappointed in being thus excluded
from confidence, but obedient as ever, Pennyloaf speedily
prepared herself and the children, the younger of
whom she still had to carry. When she was gone
Mr. Bartley assumed a peculiar attitude and began
to speak in an undertone.
‘You know that medal as you gave me the other
night?’
‘What about it?’
’I sold it for fourpence to
a chap I know. It got me a bed at the lodgings
in Pentonville Road.’
‘Oh, you did! Well, what else?’
Jack was writhing in the most unaccountable
way, peering hither and thither out of the corners
of his eyes, seeming to have an obstruction in his
throat.
’It was in a public-house as
I sold it a chap I know. There was
another chap as I didn’t know standing just by see?
He kep’ looking at the medal, and he kep’
looking at me. When I went out the chap as I
didn’t know followed behind me. I didn’t
see him at first, but he come up with me just at the
top of Rosoman Street a red-haired chap,
looked like a corster. “Hollo!” says
he. “Hollo!” says I. “Got
any more o’ them medals?” he says, in
a quiet way like. “What do you want to know
for?” I says ’cos you see he
was a bloke as I didn’t know nothing about,
and there’s no good being over-free with your
talk. He got me to walk on a bit with him, and
kept talking. “You didn’t buy that
nowhere,” he says, with a sort of wink.
“What if I didn’t?” I says.
“There’s no harm as I know.”
Well, he kept on with his sort o’ winks, and
then he says, “Got any queer to put round?"’
At this point Jack lowered his voice
to a whisper and looked timorously towards the door.
‘You know what he meant, Bob?’
Bob nodded and became reflective.
‘Well, I didn’t say nothing.’
pursued Bartley, ’but the chap stuck to me.
“A fair price for a fair article,” he says.
“You’ll always find me there of a Thursday
night, if you’ve got any business going.
Give me a look round,” he says. “It
ain’t in my line,” I says. So he gave
a grin like, and kep’ on talking. “If
you want a four-half shiner,” he says,
“you know where to come. Reasonable with
them as is reasonable. Thursday night,”
he says, and then he slung his hook round the corner.’
‘What’s a four-half shiner?’
inquired Bob, looking from under his eyebrows.
’Well, I didn’t know myself,
just then: but I’ve found out. It’s
a public-house pewter see?’
A flash of intelligence shot across Bob’s face.
When Pennyloaf returned she found
her husband with his box of moulds and medals on the
table. He was turning over its contents, meditatively.
On the table there also lay a half crown and a florin,
as though Bob had been examining these products of
the Royal Mint with a view to improving the artistic
quality of his amateur workmanship. He took up
the coins quietly as his wife entered and put them
in his pocket.
‘Mrs. Rendal’s been at
me again, Bob,’ Pennyloaf said, as she set down
her market-basket. ‘You’ll have to
give her something to-day.’
He paid no attention, and Pennyloaf
had a difficulty in bringing him to discuss the subject
of the landlady’s demands. Ultimately, however,
he admitted with discontent the advisability of letting
Mrs. Rendal have something on account. Though
it was Saturday night, he let hour after hour go by
and showed no disposition to leave home; to Pennyloaf’s
surprise, he sat almost without moving by the fire,
absorbed in thought.
Genuine respect for law is the result
of possessing something which the law exerts itself
to guard. Should it happen that you possess nothing,
and that your education in metaphysics has been grievously
neglected, the strong probability is, that your mind
will reduce the principle of society to its naked
formula: Get, by whatever means, so long as with
impunity. On that formula Bob Hewett was brooding;
in the hours of this Saturday evening he exerted his
mind more strenuously than ever before in the course
of his life. And to a foregone result. Here
is a man with no moral convictions, with no conscious
relations to society save those which are hostile,
with no personal affections; at the same time, vaguely
aware of certain faculties in himself for which life
affords no scope and encouraged in various kinds of
conceit by the crass stupidity of all with whom he
associates. It is suggested to him all at once
that there is a very easy way of improving his circumstances,
and that by exercise of a certain craft with which
he is perfectly familiar; only, the method happens
to be criminal. ’Men who do this kind of
thing are constantly being caught and severely punished.
Yes; men of a certain kind; not Robert Hewett.
Robert Hewett is altogether an exceptional being;
he is head and shoulders above the men with whom he
mixes; he is clever, he is remarkably good-looking.
If anyone in this world, of a truth Robert Hewett
may reckon on impunity when he sets his wits against
the law. Why, his arrest and punishment is an
altogether inconceivable thing; he never in his life
had a charge brought against him.’
Again and again it came back to that.
Every novice in unimpassioned crime has that thought,
and the more self-conscious the man, the more impressed
with a sense of his own importance, so much the weightier
is its effect with him.
We know in what spirit John Hewett
regarded rebels against the law. Do not imagine
that any impulse of that nature actuated his son.
Clara alone had inherited her father’s instinct
of revolt. Bob’s temperament was, in a
certain measure, that of the artist; he felt without
reasoning; he let himself go whither his moods propelled
him. Not a man of evil propensities; entertain
no such thought for a moment. Society produces
many a monster, but the mass of those whom, after creating
them, it pronounces bad are merely bad from the conventional
point of view; they are guilty of weaknesses, not
of crimes. Bob was not incapable of generosity;
his marriage had, in fact, implied more of that quality
than you in the upper world can at all appreciate.
He neglected his wife, of course, for he had never
loved her, and the burden of her support was too great
a trial for his selfishness. Weakness, vanity,
a sense that he has not satisfactions proportionate
to his desert, a strong temptation here
are the data which, in ordinary cases, explain a man’s
deliberate attempt to profit by criminality.
In a short time Pennyloaf began to
be aware of peculiarities of behaviour in her husband
for which she could not account. Though there
appeared no necessity for the step, he insisted on
their once more seeking new lodgings, and, before
the removal, he destroyed all his medals and moulds.
‘What’s that for, Bob?’ Pennyloaf
inquired.
’I’ll tell you, and mind
you hold your tongue about it. Somebody’s
been saying as these things might get me into trouble.
Just you be careful not to mention to people that
I used to make these kind of things.’
‘But why should it get you into trouble?’
’Mind what I tell you, and don’t
ask questions. You’re always too ready
at talking.’
His absences of an evening were nothing
new, but his manner on returning was such as Pennyloaf
had never seen in him. He appeared to be suffering
from some intense excitement; his hands were unsteady;
he showed the strangest nervousness if there were
any unusual sounds in the house. Then he certainly
obtained money of which his wife did not know the
source; he bought new articles of clothing, and in
explanation said that he had won bets. Pennyloaf
remarked these things with uneasiness; she had a fear
during her lonely evenings for which she could give
no reason. Poor slowwitted mortal though she was,
a devoted fidelity attached her to her husband, and
quickened wonderfully her apprehension in everything
that concerned him.
‘Miss Snowdon came to-day, Bob,’
she had said, about a week after his order with regard
to Jane.
‘Oh, she did? And did you
tell her she’d better keep away?’
‘Yes,’ was the dispirited answer.
‘Glad to hear it.’
As for Jack Bartley, he never showed himself at the
new lodgings.
Bob shortly became less regular in
his attendance at the workshop. An occasional
Monday he had, to be sure, been in the habit of allowing
himself, but as the winter wore on he was more than
once found straying about the streets in midweek.
One morning towards the end of November, as he strolled
along High Holborn, a hand checked his progress; he
gave almost a leap, and turned a face of terror upon
the person who stopped him. It was Clem Mrs.
Snowdon. They had, of course, met casually since
Bob’s marriage, and in progress of time the ferocious
glances they were wont to exchange had softened into
a grin of half-friendly recognition; Clem’s
behaviour at present was an unexpected revival of familiarity.
When he had got over his shock Bob felt surprised,
and expressed the feeling in a ’Well,
what have you got to say for yourself?’
‘You jumped as if I’d
stuck a pin in you,’ replied Clem. ’Did
you think it was a copper?’
Bob looked at her with a surly smile.
Though no one could have mistaken the class she belonged
to, Clem was dressed in a way which made her companionship
with Bob in his workman’s clothing somewhat incongruous;
she wore a heavily trimmed brown hat, a long velveteen
jacket, and carried a little bag of imitation fur.
‘Why ain’t you at work?’
she added. ’Does Mrs. Pennyloaf Hewett know
how you spend your time?’
‘Hasn’t your husband taught
you to mind your own business?’
Clem took the retort good-humouredly,
and they walked on conversing. Not altogether
at his ease thus companioned, Bob turned out of the
main street, and presently they came within sight
of the British Museum.
‘Ever been in that place?’ Clem asked.
‘Of course I have,’ he replied, with his
air of superiority.
‘I haven’t. Is there anything to
pay? Let’s go in for half an hour.’
It was an odd freak, but Bob began
to have a pleasure in this renewal of intimacy; he
wished he had been wearing his best suit. Years
ago his father had brought him on a public holiday
to the Museum, and his interest was chiefly excited
by the collection of the Royal Seals. To that
quarter he first led his companion, and thence directed
her towards objects more likely to supply her with
amusement; he talked freely, and was himself surprised
at the show of information his memory allowed him
to make desperately vague and often ludicrously
wide of the mark, but still a something of knowledge,
retained from all sorts of chance encounters by his
capable mind. Had the British Museum been open
to visitors in the hours of the evening, or on Sundays,
Bob Hewitt would possibly have been employing his
leisure nowadays in more profitable pursuits.
Possibly; one cannot say more than that; for the world
to which he belonged is above all a world of frustration,
and only the one man in half a million has fate for
his friend.
Much Clem cared for antiquities; when
she had wearied herself in pretending interest, a
seat in an unvisited corner gave her an opportunity
for more congenial dialogue.
‘How’s Mrs. Pennyloaf?’
she asked, with a smile of malice.
‘How’s Mr. What’s-his-name Snowdon?’
was the reply.
‘My husband’s a gentleman. Good thing
for me I had the sense to wait.’
‘And for me too, I dare say.’
‘Why ain’t you at work? Got the sack?’
‘I can take a day off if I like, can’t
I?’
’And you’ll go ’ome
and tell your wife as you’ve been working.
I know what you men are. What ’ud Mrs.
Pennyloaf say if she knew you was here with me?
You daren’t tell her; you daren’t!’
’I’m not doing any harm
as I know of. I shall tell her if I choose, and
if I choose I shan’t. I don’t ask
her what I’m to do.’
’I dare say. And how does
that mother of hers get on? And her brother at
the public? Nice relations for Mr. Bob Hewett.
Do they come to tea on a Sunday?’
Bob glared at her, and Clem laughed,
showing all her teeth. From this exchange of
pleasantries the talk passed to various subjects the
affairs of Jack Bartley and his precious wife, changes
in Clerkenwell Close, then to Clem’s own circumstances;
she threw out hints of brilliant things in store for
her.
‘Do you come here often?’ she asked at
length.
‘Can’t say I do.’
‘Thought p’r’aps you brought Mrs.
Pennyloaf. When’ll you be here again?’
‘Don’t know,’ Bob replied, fidgeting
and looking to a distance.
‘I shouldn’t wonder if
I’m here this day next week,’ said Clem,
after a pause. ‘You can bring Pennyloaf
if you like.’
It was dinner-time, and they left the building together.
At the end of
Museum Street they exchanged a careless nod and went
their several ways.