EXAMPLE WITHOUT PRECEPT
Waymark was grateful for the help
Mr. Woodstock had given him. Indeed, the two
soon began to get on very well together. In a
great measure, of course, this was due to the change
in Waymark’s philosophy; whereas his early idealism
had been revolted by what he then deemed Mr. Woodstock’s
crass materialism and vulgarity, the tolerance which
had come with widened experience now made him regard
these characteristics with far less certainty of condemnation.
He was often merely amused at what had formerly enraged
and disgusted him. At the same time, there were
changes in Abraham himself, no doubt at
all events in his manner to the young man. He,
on his side, was also far more tolerant than in the
days when he had growled at Osmond for a conceited
young puppy.
One Sunday morning in early July,
Waymark was sitting alone in his room, when he noticed
that a cab stopped before the house. A minute
after, there was a knock at his door, and, to his great
surprise, Mr. Woodstock entered, bearing a huge volume
in his arms. Abraham deposited it on a chair,
wiped his forehead, and looked round the room.
“You smoke poor tobacco,”
was his first remark, as he sniffed the air.
“Good tobacco happens to be
expensive,” was the reply. “Will you
sit down?”
“Yes, I will.” The
chair creaked under him. “And so here you
hang out, eh? Only one room?”
“As you see.”
“Devilish unhealthy, I should think.”
“But economical.”
“Ugh!”
The grunt meant nothing in particular.
Waymark was eyeing the mighty volume on the chair,
and had recognised it Some fortnight previously, he
had come upon Abraham, in the latter’s study,
turning over a collection of Hogarth’s plates,
and greatly amusing himself with the realism which
so distinctly appealed to his taste in art. The
book had been pledged in the shop, and by lapse of
time was become Abraham’s property. It
was the first time that Waymark had had an opportunity
of examining Hogarth; the pictures harmonised with
his mood; they gave him a fresh impulse in the direction
his literary projects were taking. He spent a
couple of hours in turning the leaves, and Mr. Woodstock
had observed his enjoyment. What meant the arrival
of the volume here in Beaufort Street?
Abraham lit a cigar, still looking about the room.
“You live alone?” he asked, in a matter-of-fact
way.
“At present.”
“Ha! Didn’t know
but you might have found it lonely; I used to, at your
age.”
Then, after a short silence
“By-the-by, it’s your birthday.”
“How do you know?”
“Well, I shouldn’t have
done, but for an old letter I turned up by chance
the other day. How old are you?”
“Five-and-twenty.”
“H’m. I am sixty-nine.
You’ll be a wiser man when you get to my age. Well,
if you can find room anywhere for that book there,
perhaps you’d like to keep it!”
Waymark looked up in astonishment.
“A birthday present!”
he exclaimed. “It’s ten years since
I had one. Upon my word, I don’t well know
how to thank you!”
“Do you know what the thing
was published at?” asked Abraham in an off-hand
way.
“No.”
“Fifty pounds.”
“I don’t care about the
value. It’s the kindness. You couldn’t
have given me anything, either, that would have delighted
me so much.”
“All right; keep it, and there’s
an end of the matter. And what do you do with
yourself all day, eh? I didn’t think it
very likely I should find you in.”
“I’m writing a novel.”
“H’m. Shall you get anything for
it?”
“Can’t say. I hope so.”
“Look here. Why don’t you go in for
politics?”
“Neither know nor care anything about them.”
“Would you like to go into Parliament?”
“Wouldn’t go if every borough in England
called upon me to-morrow?”
“Why not?”
“Plainly, I think myself too
good for such occupation. If you once succeed
in getting outside the world, you have little
desire to go back and join in its most foolish pranks.”
“That’s all damned nonsense!
How can any one be too good to be in Parliament?
The better men you have there, the better the country
will be governed, won’t it?”
“Certainly. But the best
man, in this case, is the man who sees the shortest
distance before his nose. If you think the world
worth all the trouble it takes to govern it, go in
for politics neck and crop, by all means, and the
world will no doubt thank you in its own way.”
Abraham looked puzzled, and half disposed to be angry.
“Then you think novel-writing
better than governing the country?” he asked.
“On its own merits, vastly so.”
“And suppose there was no government What about
your novels then?”
“I’d make a magnificent one out of the
spectacle of chaos.”
“But you know very well you’re
talking bosh,” exclaimed Abraham, somewhat discomfited.
“There must be government, and there must be
order, say what you like. Its nature that the
strong should rule over the weak, and show them what’s
for their own good. What else are we here for?
if you’re going to be a parson, well and good;
then cry down the world as much as you please, and
think only about heaven and hell. But as far
as I can make out, there’s government there too.
The devil rebelled and was kicked out. Serve
him right If he wasn’t strong enough to hold
his own, he’d ought to have kept quiet.”
“You’re a Conservative,
of course,” said Waymark, smiling. “You
believe only in keeping the balance. You don’t
are about reform.”
“Don’t be so sure of that
Let me have the chance and he power, and I’d
reform hard enough, many a thing.”
“Well, one might begin on a
small scale. Suppose one took in hand Litany
Lane and Elm Court? Suppose we exert our right
as the stronger, and, to begin with, do a little whitewashing?
Then sundry stairs and ceilings might be looked to.
No doubt there’d be resistance, but on the whole
it would be for the people’s own good. A
little fresh draining mightn’t be amiss, or ”
“What the devil’s all
this to do with politics?” cried Abraham, whose
face had grown dark.
“I should imagine, a good deal,”
returned Waymark, knocking out his pipe. “If
you’re for government, yen mustn’t be above
considering details.”
“And so you think you have a
hit at me, eh? Nothing of the kind. These
are affairs of private contract, and no concern of
government at all. In private contract a man
has only a right to what he’s strong enough
to exact If a tenant tells me my houses ain’t
fit to live in, I tell him to go where he’ll
be better off’ and I don’t hinder him;
I know well enough in a day or two there’ll
come somebody else. Ten to one he can’t
go, and he don’t. Then why should I be at
unnecessary expense in making the places better?
As Boon as I can get no tenants I’ll do so;
not till then.”
“You don’t believe in works of mere humanity?”
“What the devil’s humanity got to do with
business?” cried Abraham.
“True,” was Waymark’s rejoinder.
“See, we won’t talk of
these kind of things,” said Mr. Woodstock.
“That’s just what we always used to quarrel
about, and I’m getting too old for quarrelling.
Got any engagement this afternoon?”
“I thought of looking in to see a friend here
in the street”
“Male or female?”
“Both; man and wife.”
“Oh, then you have got some
friends? So had I when I was your age. They
go somehow when you get old. Your father was the
last of them, I think. But you’re not much
like him, except a little in face. True, he was
a Radical, but you, well, I don’t
know what you are. If you’d been a son
of mine, I’d have had you ill Parliament by now,
somehow or other.”
“I think you never had a son?”
said Way mark, observing the note of melancholy which
every now and then came up in the old man’s talk.
“No.”
“But you had some children, I think?”
“Yes, yes, they’re dead.”
He had walked to the window, and suddenly
turned round with a kind of impatience.
“Never mind the friend to-day;
come and have some dinner with me. I seem to
want a bit of company.”
This was the first invitation of the
kind Waymark had received. He accepted it, and
they went out together.
“It’s a pleasant part
this,” Mr. Woodstock said, as they walked by
the river. “One might build himself a decent
house somewhere about here, eh?”
“Do you think of doing so?”
“I think of doing so! What’s
the good of a house, and nobody to live in it?”
Waymark studied these various traits
of the old man’s humour, and constantly felt
more of kindness towards him.
On the following day, just as he had
collected his rents, and was on his way out of Litany
Lane, Waymark was surprised at coming face to face
with Mrs. Casti; yet more surprised when he perceived
that she had come out from a public-house. She
looked embarrassed, and for a moment seemed about
to pass without recognising him; but he had raised
his hat, and she could not but move her head in reply.
She so obviously wished to avoid speaking, that he
walked quickly on in another direction. He wondered
what he could be doing in such a place as this.
It could hardly be that she had acquaintances or connections
here. Julian had not given him any particulars
of Harriet’s former life, and his friend’s
marriage was still a great puzzle to him. He knew
well that the girl had no liking for himself; it was
not improbable that this casual meeting would make
their intercourse yet more strained. He thought
for a moment of questioning Julian, but decided that
the matter was no business of his.
It was so rare for him to meet an
acquaintance in the streets, that a second chance
of the same kind, only a few minutes later, surprised
him greatly. This time the meeting as a pleasant
one; somebody ran across to him from over the way,
and he saw that it was Sally Fisher. She looked
pleased. The girl had preserved a good deal of
her sea-side complexion through the year and a half
of town life, and, when happy, glowed all over her
cheeks with the healthiest hue. She held out her
hand in the usual frank, impulsive way.
“Oh, I thought it was you!
You won’t see I no more at the old place.”
“No? How’s that?”
“I’m leavin’ un
to-morrow. I’ve got a place in a shop, just
by here, a chandler’s shop, and I’m
going to live in.”
“Indeed? Well, I’m
glad to hear it. I dare say you’ll be better
off.”
“Oh, I say, you know your friend?”
“The Irishman?”
“Yes.”
“What about him?” asked
the other, smiling as he looked into the girl’s
pretty face.
“Well,” said Sally, “I
don’t mind you telling un where I live now, if
you like. Look, there’s the address
on that paper; you can take it.”
“Oh, I see. In point of
fact, you wish me to tell him?”
“Oh, I don’t care.
I dessay he don’t want to know anything about
I. But you can if you like.”
“I will be sure to, and no doubt
he will be delighted. He’s been growing
thin since I told him you declined to renew his acquaintance.”
“Oh, don’t talk!
And now I must be off. Good-bye. I dessay
I shall see you sometimes?”
“Without doubt. We’ll
have another Sunday at Richmond soon. Good-bye.”
It was about four in the afternoon
when Sally reached home, and she ran up at once to
Ida’s room, and burst in, crying out, “I’ve
got it! I’ve got it!” with much dancing
about and joyous singing. Ida rose with a faint
smile of welcome. She had been sitting at the
window, reading a book lent her by Waymark.
“They said they liked my appearance,”
Sally went on, “and ’ud give me a try.
I go in to-morrow. It won’t be a over easy
place, neither. I’ve to do all the cleaning
in the house, and there’s a baby to look after
when I’m not in the shop.”
“And what will they give you?”
“Ten shillings a month for the first half-year;
then a rise.”
“And you’re satisfied?”
“Oh, it’ll do till something
better turns up. Oh, I say, I met your friend
just after I’d come away.”
“Did you?” said Ida quietly.
“Yes; and I told him he could tell his friend
where I was, if he liked.”
“His friend?”
“The Irishman, you know,”
explained Sally, moving about the room. “I
told you he’d been asking after me.”
Ida seemed all at once to awake from
a dream. She uttered a long “Ah!”
under her breath, and for a moment looked at the girl
like one who is struck with an unexpected explanation.
Then she turned away to the window, and again gazed
up at the blue sky, standing so for nearly a minute.
“Are you engaged to-night?” Sally asked
presently.
“No; will you sit with me?”
“You’re not feeling very well to-day,
are you?”
“I think not,” replied
Ida, passing her hand over her forehead. “I’ve
been thinking of going out of London for a few days,
perhaps to the seaside.”
“Go to Weymouth!” cried
Sally, delighted at the thought. “Go and
see my people, and tell un how I’m getting on.
They’ll make you hide with un all the time you’re
there, s’nough. It isn’t a big house,
but it’s comfortable, and see if our mother
wouldn’t look after you! It’s three
weeks since I wrote; if I don’t mind there’ll
be our father up here looking after I. Now, do go!”
“No, it’s too far. Besides, if I
go, I shall want to be quite alone.”
On the following evening Waymark was
expected. At his last visit he had noticed that
Ida was not in her usual spirits. To-night he
saw that something was clearly wrong, and when Ida
spoke of going to the seaside, he strongly urged her
to do so.
“Where should you go to?” he asked.
“I think to Hastings. I
went there once, when I was a child, with my mother I
believe I told you. I had rather go there than
anywhere else.”
“I feel the need of a change
myself,” he said, a moment after, and without
looking at her. “Suppose I were to go to
Hastings, too at the same time that you’re
there would you dislike it?”
She merely shook her head, almost
indifferently. She did not care to talk much
to-night, and frequently nodded instead of replying
with words.
“But you would rather I didn’t?”
he urged.
“No, indeed,” still in
the same indifferent way. “I should have
company, if I found it dull.”
“Then let us go down by the same train will
you, Ida?”
As far as she remembered, it was the
first time that he had ever addressed her thus by
her name. She looked up and smiled slightly.
“If you like,” was her answer.