CHAPTER I
I had done a few things and earned
a few pence I had perhaps even had time
to begin to think I was finer than was perceived by
the patronising; but when I take the little measure
of my course (a fidgety habit, for it’s none
of the longest yet) I count my real start from the
evening George Corvick, breathless and worried, came
in to ask me a service. He had done more things
than I, and earned more pence, though there were chances
for cleverness I thought he sometimes missed.
I could only however that evening declare to him that
he never missed one for kindness. There was almost
rapture in hearing it proposed to me to prepare for
__The Middle__, the organ of our lucubrations, so called
from the position in the week of its day of appearance,
an article for which he had made himself responsible
and of which, tied up with a stout string, he laid
on my table the subject. I pounced upon my opportunity that
is on the first volume of it and paid scant
attention to my friend’s explanation of his
appeal. What explanation could be more to the
point than my obvious fitness for the task? I
had written on Hugh Vereker, but never a word in The
Middle, where my dealings were mainly with the
ladies and the minor poets. This was his new novel,
an advance copy, and whatever much or little it should
do for his reputation I was clear on the spot as to
what it should do for mine. Moreover, if I always
read him as soon as I could get hold of him, I had
a particular reason for wishing to read him now:
I had accepted an invitation to Bridges for the following
Sunday, and it had been mentioned in Lady Jane’s
note that Mr. Vereker was to be there. I was young
enough to have an emotion about meeting a man of his
renown, and innocent enough to believe the occasion
would demand the display of an acquaintance with his
“last.”
Corvick, who had promised a review
of it, had not even had time to read it; he had gone
to pieces in consequence of news requiring as
on precipitate reflection he judged that
he should catch the night-mail to Paris. He had
had a telegram from Gwendolen Erme in answer to his
letter offering to fly to her aid. I knew already
about Gwendolen Erme; I had never seen her, but I
had my ideas, which were mainly to the effect that
Corvick would marry her if her mother would only die.
That lady seemed now in a fair way to oblige him;
after some dreadful mistake about some climate or
some waters, she had suddenly collapsed on the return
from abroad. Her daughter, unsupported and alarmed,
desiring to make a rush for home but hesitating at
the risk, had accepted our friend’s assistance,
and it was my secret belief that at the sight of him
Mrs. Erme would pull round. His own belief was
scarcely to be called secret; it discernibly at any
rate differed from mine. He had showed me Gwendolen’s
photograph with the remark that she wasn’t pretty
but was awfully interesting; she had published at
the age of nineteen a novel in three volumes, “Deep
Down,” about which, in The Middle, he
had been really splendid. He appreciated my present
eagerness and undertook that the periodical in question
should do no less; then at the last, with his hand
on the door, he said to me: “Of course you’ll
be all right, you know.” Seeing I was a
trifle vague he added: “I mean you won’t
be silly.”
“Silly about Vereker!
Why, what do I ever find him but awfully clever?”
“Well, what’s that but
silly? What on earth does ‘awfully clever’
mean? For God’s sake try to get at
him. Don’t let him suffer by our arrangement.
Speak of him, you know, if you can, as should have
spoken of him.”
I wondered an instant. “You
mean as far and away the biggest of the lot that
sort of thing?”
Corvick almost groaned. “Oh,
you know, I don’t put them back to back that
way; it’s the infancy of art! But he gives
me a pleasure so rare; the sense of “ he
mused a little “something or other.”
I wondered again. “The sense, pray, of
what?”
“My dear man, that’s just what I want
you to say!”
Even before Corvick had banged the
door I had begun, book in hand, to prepare myself
to say it. I sat up with Vereker half the night;
Corvick couldn’t have done more than that.
He was awfully clever I stuck to that,
but he wasn’t a bit the biggest of the lot.
I didn’t allude to the lot, however; I flattered
myself that I emerged on this occasion from the infancy
of art. “It’s all right,” they
declared vividly at the office; and when the number
appeared I felt there was a basis on which I could
meet the great man; It gave me confidence for a day
or two, and then that confidence dropped. I had
fancied him reading it with relish, but if Corvick
was not satisfied how could Vereker himself be?
I reflected indeed that the heat of the admirer was
sometimes grosser even than the appetite of the scribe.
Corvick at all events wrote me from Paris a little
ill-humouredly. Mrs. Erme was pulling round, and
I hadn’t at all said what Vereker gave him the
sense of.
CHAPTER II
The effect of my visit to Bridges
was to turn me out for more profundity. Hugh
Vereker, as I saw him there, was of a contact so void
of angles that I blushed for the poverty of imagination
involved in my small precautions. If he was in
spirits it was not because he had read my review;
in fact on the Sunday morning I felt sure he hadn’t
read it, though The Middle had been out three
days and bloomed, I assured myself, in the stiff garden
of periodicals which gave one of the ormolu tables
the air of a stand at a station. The impression
he made on me personally was such that I wished him
to read it, and I corrected to this end with a surreptitious
hand what might be wanting in the careless conspicuity
of the sheet. I am afraid I even watched the result
of my manouvre, but up to luncheon I watched in vain.
When afterwards, in the course of
our gregarious walk, I found myself for half an hour,
not perhaps without another manoeuvre, at the great
man’s side, the result of his affability was
a still livelier desire that he should not remain
in ignorance of the peculiar justice I had done him.
It was not that he seemed to thirst for justice; on
the contrary I had not yet caught in his talk the
faintest grunt of a grudge a note for which
my young experience had already given me an ear.
Of late he had had more recognition, and it was pleasant,
as we used to say in The Middle, to see that
it drew him out. He wasn’t of course popular,
but I judged one of the sources of his good humour
to be precisely that his success was independent of
that. He had none the less become in a manner
the fashion; the critics at least had put on a spurt
and caught up with him. We had found out at last
how clever he was, and he had had to make the best
of the loss of his mystery. I was strongly tempted,
as I walked beside him, to let him know how much of
that unveiling was my act; and there was a moment
when I probably should have done so had not one of
the ladies of our party, snatching a place at his
other elbow, just then appealed to him in a spirit
comparatively selfish. It was very discouraging:
I almost felt the liberty had been taken with myself.
I had had on my tongue’s end,
for my own part, a phrase or two about the right word
at the right time; but later on I was glad not to have
spoken, for when on our return we clustered at tea
I perceived Lady Jane, who had not been out with us,
brandishing The Middle with her longest arm.
She had taken it up at her leisure; she was delighted
with what she had found, and I saw that, as a mistake
in a man may often be a felicity in a woman, she would
practically do for me what I hadn’t been able
to do for myself. “Some sweet little truths
that needed to be spoken,” I heard her declare,
thrusting the paper at rather a bewildered couple
by the fireplace. She grabbed it away from them
again on the reappearance of Hugh Vereker, who after
our walk had been upstairs to change something.
“I know you don’t in general look at this
kind of thing, but it’s an occasion really for
doing so. You haven’t seen it?
Then you must. The man has actually got at
you, at what I always feel, you know.”
Lady Jane threw into her eyes a look evidently intended
to give an idea of what she always felt; but she added
that she couldn’t have expressed it. The
man in the paper expressed it in a striking manner.
“Just see there, and there, where I’ve
dashed it, how he brings it out.” She had
literally marked for him the brightest patches of my
prose, and if I was a little amused Vereker himself
may well have been. He showed how much he was
when before us all Lady Jane wanted to read something
aloud. I liked at any rate the way he defeated
her purpose by jerking the paper affectionately out
of her clutch. He would take it upstairs with
him, would look at it on going to dress. He did
this half an hour later I saw it in his
hand when he repaired to his room. That was the
moment at which, thinking to give her pleasure, I mentioned
to Lady Jane that I was the author of the review.
I did give her pleasure, I judged, but perhaps not
quite so much as I had expected. If the author
was “only me” the thing didn’t seem
quite so remarkable. Hadn’t I had the effect
rather of diminishing the lustre of the article than
of adding to my own? Her ladyship was subject
to the most extraordinary drops. It didn’t
matter; the only effect I cared about was the one it
would have on Vereker up there by his bedroom fire.
At dinner I watched for the signs
of this impression, tried to fancy there was some
happier light in his eyes; but to my disappointment
Lady Jane gave me no chance to make sure. I had
hoped she would call triumphantly down the table,
publicly demand if she hadn’t been right.
The party was large there were people from
outside as well, but I had never seen a table long
enough to deprive Lady Jane of a triumph. I was
just reflecting in truth that this interminable board
would deprive me of one, when the guest next
me, dear woman she was Miss Poyle, the
vicar’s sister, a robust, unmodulated person had
the happy inspiration and the unusual courage to address
herself across it to Vereker, who was opposite, but
not directly, so that when he replied they were both
leaning forward. She inquired, artless body, what
he thought of Lady Jane’s “panegyric,”
which she had read not connecting it however
with her right-hand neighbour; and while I strained
my ear for his reply I heard him, to my stupefaction,
call back gaily, with his mouth full of bread:
“Oh, it’s all right it’s
the usual twaddle!”
I had caught Vereker’s glance
as he spoke, but Miss Poyle’s surprise was a
fortunate cover for my own. “You mean he
doesn’t do you justice?” said the excellent
woman.
Vereker laughed out, and I was happy
to be able to do the same. “It’s a
charming article,” he tossed us.
Miss Poyle thrust her chin half across the cloth.
“Oh you’re so deep!” she drove home.
“As deep as the ocean! All I pretend is,
the author doesn’t see ”
A dish was at this point passed over
his shoulder, and we had to wait while he helped himself.
“Doesn’t see what?” my neighbour
continued.
“Doesn’t see anything.”
“Dear me how very stupid!”
“Not a bit,” Vereker laughed again.
“Nobody does.”
The lady on his further side appealed
to him, and Miss Poyle sank back to me. “Nobody
sees anything!” she cheerfully announced; to
which I replied that I had often thought so too, but
had somehow taken the thought for a proof on my own
part of a tremendous eye. I didn’t tell
her the article was mine; and I observed that Lady
Jane, occupied at the end of the table, had not caught
Vereker’s words.
I rather avoided him after dinner,
for I confess he struck me as cruelly conceited, and
the revelation was a pain. “The usual twaddle” my
acute little study! That one’s admiration
should have had a reserve or two could gall him to
that point? I had thought him placid, and he was
placid enough; such a surface was the hard, polished
glass that encased the bauble of his vanity.
I was really ruffled, the only comfort was that if
nobody saw anything George Corvick was quite as much
out of it as I. This comfort however was not sufficient,
after the ladies had dispersed, to carry me in the
proper manner I mean in a spotted jacket
and humming an air into the smoking-room.
I took my way in some dejection to bed; but in the
passage I encountered Mr. Vereker, who had been up
once more to change, coming out of his room. He
was humming an air and had on a spotted jacket, and
as soon as he saw me his gaiety gave a start.
“My dear young man,” he
exclaimed, “I’m so glad to lay hands on
you! I’m afraid I most unwittingly wounded
you by those words of mine at dinner to Miss Poyle.
I learned but half an hour ago from Lady Jane that
you wrote the little notice in The Middle.”
I protested that no bones were broken;
but he moved with me to my own door, his hand on my
shoulder, kindly feeling for a fracture; and on hearing
that I had come up to bed he asked leave to cross my
threshold and just tell me in three words what his
qualification of my remarks had represented.
It was plain he really feared I was hurt, and the sense
of his solicitude suddenly made all the difference
to me. My cheap review fluttered off into space,
and the best things I had said in it became flat enough
beside the brilliancy of his being there. I can
see him there still, on my rug, in the firelight and
his spotted jacket, his fine, clear face all bright
with the desire to be tender to my youth. I don’t
know what he had at first meant to say, but I think
the sight of my relief touched him, excited him, brought
up words to his lips from far within. It was
so these words presently conveyed to me something
that, as I afterwards knew, he had never uttered to
any one. I have always done justice to the generous
impulse that made him speak; it was simply compunction
for a snub unconsciously administered to a man of
letters in a position inferior to his own, a man of
letters moreover in the very act of praising him.
To make the thing right he talked to me exactly as
an equal and on the ground of what we both loved best.
The hour, the place, the unexpectedness deepened the
impression: he couldn’t have done anything
more exquisitely successful.
CHAPTER III.
“I don’t quite know how
to explain it to you,” he said, “but it
was the very fact that your notice of my book had
a spice of intelligence, it was just your exceptional
sharpness that produced the feeling a very
old story with me, I beg you to believe under
the momentary influence of which I used in speaking
to that good lady the words you so naturally resent.
I don’t read the things in the newspapers unless
they’re thrust upon me as that one was it’s
always one’s best friend that does it!
But I used to read them sometimes ten years
ago. I daresay they were in general rather stupider
then; at any rate it always seemed to me that they
missed my little point with a perfection exactly as
admirable when they patted me on the back as when
they kicked me in the shins. Whenever since I’ve
happened to have a glimpse of them they were still
blazing away still missing it, I mean,
deliciously. You miss it, my dear fellow, with
inimitable assurance; the fact of your being awfully
clever and your article’s being awfully nice
doesn’t make a hair’s breadth of difference.
It’s quite with you rising young men,”
Vereker laughed, “that I feel most what a failure
I am!”
I listened with intense interest;
it grew in-tenser as he talked. “You
a failure heavens! What then may your
‘little point’ happen to be?”
“Have I got to tell you,
after all these years and labours?” There was
something in the friendly reproach of this jocosely
exaggerated that made me, as an ardent
young seeker for truth, blush to the roots of my hair.
I’m as much in the dark as ever, though I’ve
grown used in a sense to my obtuseness; at that moment,
however, Vereker’s happy accent made me appear
to myself, and probably to him, a rare donkey.
I was on the point of exclaiming, “Ah, yes,
don’t tell me: for my honour, for that of
the craft, don’t!” when he went on in a
manner that showed he had read my thought and had
his own idea of the probability of our some day redeeming
ourselves. “By my little point I mean what
shall I call it? the particular thing I’ve
written my books most for. Isn’t
there for every writer a particular thing of that
sort, the thing that most makes him apply himself,
the thing without the effort to achieve which he wouldn’t
write at all, the very passion of his passion, the
part of the business in which, for him, the flame
of art burns most intensely? Well, it’s
that!”
I considered a moment. I was
fascinated easily, you’ll say; but
I wasn’t going after all to be put off my guard.
“Your description’s certainly beautiful,
but it doesn’t make what you describe very distinct.”
“I promise you it would be distinct
if it should dawn on you at all.” I saw
that the charm of our topic overflowed for my companion
into an emotion as lively as my own. “At
any rate,” he went on, “I can speak for
myself: there’s an idea in my work without
which I wouldn’t have given a straw for the
whole job. It’s the finest, fullest intention
of the lot, and the application of it has been, I
think, a triumph of patience, of ingenuity. I
ought to leave that to somebody else to say; but that
nobody does say it is precisely what we’re talking
about. It stretches, this little trick of mine,
from book to book, and everything else, comparatively,
plays over the surface of it. The order, the form,
the texture of my books will perhaps some day constitute
for the initiated a complete representation of it.
So it’s naturally the thing for the critic to
look for. It strikes me,” my visitor added,
smiling, “even as the thing for the critic to
find.”
This seemed a responsibility indeed.
“You call it a little trick?”
“That’s only my little
modesty. It’s really an exquisite scheme.”
“And you hold that you’ve carried the
scheme out?”
“The way I’ve carried
it out is the thing in life I think a bit well of
myself for.”
I was silent a moment. “Don’t
you think you ought just a trifle to
assist the critic?”
“Assist him? What else
have I done with every stroke of my pen? I’ve
shouted my intention in his great blank face!”
At this, laughing out again, Vereker laid his hand
on my shoulder to show that the allusion was not to
my personal appearance.
“But you talk about the initiated.
There must therefore, you see, be initiation.”
“What else in heaven’s
name is criticism supposed to be?” I’m
afraid I coloured at this too; but I took refuge in
repeating that his account of his silver lining was
poor in something or other that a plain man knows
things by. “That’s only because you’ve
never had a glimpse of it,” he replied.
“If you had had one the element in question would
soon have become practically all you’d see.
To me it’s exactly as palpable as the marble
of this chimney. Besides, the critic just isn’t
a plain man: if he were, pray, what would he
be doing in his neighbour’s garden? You’re
anything but a plain man yourself, and the very raison
d’etre of you all is that you’re little
demons of subtlety. If my great affair’s
a secret, that’s only because it’s a secret
in spite of itself the amazing event has
made it one. I not only never took the smallest
precaution to do so, but never dreamed of any such
accident. If I had I shouldn’t in advance
have had the heart to go on. As it was I only
became aware little by little, and meanwhile I had
done my work.”
“And now you quite like it?” I risked.
“My work?”
“Your secret. It’s the same thing.”
“Your guessing that,”
Vereker replied, “is a proof that you’re
as clever as I say!” I was encouraged by this
to remark that he would clearly be pained to part
with it, and he confessed that it was indeed with him
now the great amusement of life. “I live
almost to see if it will ever be detected.”
He looked at me for a jesting challenge; something
at the back of his eyes seemed to peep out. “But
I needn’t worry it won’t!”
“You fire me as I’ve never
been fired,” I returned; “you make me
determined to do or die.” Then I asked:
“Is it a kind of esoteric message?”
His countenance fell at this he
put out his hand as if to bid me good-night.
“Ah, my dear fellow, it can’t be described
in cheap journalese!”
I knew of course he would be awfully
fastidious, but our talk had made me feel how much
his nerves were exposed. I was unsatisfied I
kept hold of his hand. “I won’t make
use of the expression then,” I said, “in
the article in which I shall eventually announce my
discovery, though I daresay I shall have hard work
to do without it. But meanwhile, just to hasten
that difficult birth, can’t you give a fellow
a clue?” I felt much more at my ease.
“My whole lucid effort gives
him a clue every page and line and letter.
The thing’s as concrete there as a bird in a
cage, a bait on a hook, a piece of cheese in a mouse-trap.
It’s stuck into every volume as your foot is
stuck into your shoe. It governs every line, it
chooses every word, it dots every i, it places every
comma.”
I scratched my head. “Is
it something in the style or something in the thought?
An element of form or an element of feeling?”
He indulgently shook my hand again,
and I felt my questions to be crude and my distinctions
pitiful. “Good-night, my dear boy don’t
bother about it. After all, you do like a fellow.”
“And a little intelligence might
spoil it?” I still detained him.
He hesitated. “Well, you’ve
got a heart in your body. Is that an element
of form or an element of feeling? What I contend
that nobody has ever mentioned in my work is the organ
of life.”
“I see it’s
some idea about life, some sort of philosophy.
Unless it be,” I added with the eagerness of
a thought perhaps still happier, “some kind
of game you’re up to with your style, something
you’re after in the language. Perhaps it’s
a preference for the letter P!” I ventured profanely
to break out. “Papa, potatoes, prunes that
sort of thing?” He was suitably indulgent:
he only said I hadn’t got the right letter.
But his amusement was over; I could see he was bored.
There was nevertheless something else I had absolutely
to learn. “Should you be able, pen in hand,
to state it clearly yourself to name it,
phrase it, formulate it?”
“Oh,” he almost passionately
sighed, “if I were only, pen in hand, one of
you chaps!”
“That would be a great chance
for you of course. But why should you despise
us chaps for not doing what you can’t do yourself?”
“Can’t do?” He opened
his eyes. “Haven’t I done it in twenty
volumes? I do it in my way,” he continued.
“You don’t do it in yours.”
“Ours is so devilish difficult,” I weakly
observed.
“So is mine. We each choose
our own. There’s no compulsion. You
won’t come down and smoke?”
“No. I want to think this thing out.”
“You’ll tell me then in the morning that
you’ve laid me bare?”
“I’ll see what I can do;
I’ll sleep on it. But just one word more,”
I added. We had left the room I walked
again with him a few steps along the passage.
“This extraordinary ‘general intention,’
as you call it for that’s the most
vivid description I can induce you to make of it is
then generally a sort of buried treasure?”
His face lighted. “Yes,
call it that, though it’s perhaps not for me
to do so.”
“Nonsense!” I laughed.
“You know you’re hugely proud of it.”
“Well, I didn’t propose
to tell you so; but it is the joy of my soul!”
“You mean it’s a beauty so rare, so great?”
He hesitated a moment. “The
loveliest thing in the world!” We had stopped,
and on these words he left me; but at the end of the
corridor, while I looked after him rather yearningly,
he turned and caught sight of my puzzled face.
It made him earnestly, indeed I thought quite anxiously,
shake his head and wave his finger. “Give
it up give it up!”
This wasn’t a challenge it
was fatherly advice. If I had had one of his
books at hand I would have repeated my recent act of
faith I would have spent half the night
with him. At three o’clock in the morning,
not sleeping, remembering moreover how indispensable
he was to Lady Jane, I stole down to the library with
a candle. There wasn’t, so far as I could
discover, a line of his writing in the house.
CHAPTER IV
Returning to town I feverishly collected
them all; I picked out each in its order and held
it up to the light. This gave me a maddening month,
in the course of which several things took place.
One of these, the last, I may as well immediately
mention, was that I acted on Vereker’s advice:
I renounced my ridiculous attempt. I could really
make nothing of the business; it proved a dead loss.
After all, before, as he had himself observed, I liked
him; and what now occurred was simply that my new
intelligence and vain preoccupation damaged my liking.
I not only failed to find his general intention I
found myself missing the subordinate intentions I
had formerly found. His books didn’t even
remain the charming things they had been for me; the
exasperation of my search put me out of conceit of
them. Instead of being a pleasure the more they
became a resource the less; for from the moment I was
unable to follow up the author’s hint I of course
felt it a point of honour not to make use professionally
of my knowledge of them. I had no knowledge nobody
had any. It was humiliating, but I could bear
it they only annoyed me now. At last
they even bored me, and I accounted for my confusion perversely,
I confess by the idea that Vereker had made
a fool of me. The buried treasure was a bad joke,
the general intention a monstrous pose.
The great incident of the time however
was that I told George Corvick all about the matter
and that my information had an immense effect upon
him. He had at last come back, but so, unfortunately,
had Mrs. Erme, and there was as yet, I could see,
no question of his nuptials. He was immensely
stirred up by the anecdote I had brought from Bridges;
it fell in so completely with the sense he had had
from the first that there was more in Vereker than
met the eye. When I remarked that the eye seemed
what the printed page had been expressly invented to
meet he immediately accused me of being spiteful because
I had been foiled. Our commerce had always that
pleasant latitude. The thing Vereker had mentioned
to me was exactly the thing he, Corvick, had wanted
me to speak of in my review. On my suggesting
at last that with the assistance I had now given him
he would doubtless be prepared to speak of it himself
he admitted freely that before doing this there was
more he must understand. What he would have said,
had he reviewed the new book, was that there was evidently
in the writer’s inmost art something to be
understood. I hadn’t so much as hinted
at that: no wonder the writer hadn’t been
flattered! I asked Corvick what he really considered
he meant by his own supersubtlety, and, unmistakably
kindled, he replied: “It isn’t for
the vulgar it isn’t for the vulgar!”
He had hold of the tail of something; he would pull
hard, pull it right out. He pumped me dry on Vereker’s
strange confidence and, pronouncing me the luckiest
of mortals, mentioned half a dozen questions he wished
to goodness I had had the gumption to put. Yet
on the other hand he didn’t want to be told too
much it would spoil the fun of seeing what
would come. The failure of my fun was at the moment
of our meeting not complete, but I saw it ahead, and
Corvick saw that I saw it. I, on my side, saw
likewise that one of the first things he would do
would be to rush off with my story to Gwendolen.
On the very day after my talk with
him I was surprised by the receipt of a note from
Hugh Vereker, to whom our encounter at Bridges had
been recalled, as he mentioned, by his falling, in
a magazine, on some article to which my signature
was appended. “I read it with great pleasure,”
he wrote, “and remembered under its influence
our lively conversation by your bedroom fire.
The consequence of this has been that I begin to measure
the temerity of my having saddled you with a knowledge
that you may find something of a burden. Now that
the fit’s over I can’t imagine how I came
to be moved so much beyond my wont. I had never
before related, no matter in what expansion, the history
of my little secret, and I shall never speak of the
business again. I was accidentally so much more
explicit with you than it had ever entered into my
game to be, that I find this game I mean
the pleasure of playing it suffers considerably.
In short, if you can understand it, I’ve spoiled
a part of my fun. I really don’t want to
give anybody what I believe you clever young men call
the tip. That’s of course a selfish solicitude,
and I name it to you for what it may be worth to you.
If you’re disposed to humour me, don’t
repeat my revelation. Think me demented it’s
your right; but don’t tell anybody why.”
The sequel to this communication was
that as early on the morrow as I dared I drove straight
to Mr. Vereker’s door. He occupied in those
years one of the honest old houses in Kensington-square.
He received me immediately, and as soon as I came
in I saw I had not lost my power to minister to his
mirth. He laughed out at the sight of my face,
which doubtless expressed my perturbation. I had
been indiscreet my compunction was great.
“I have told somebody,” I panted,
“and I’m sure that, person will by this
time have told somebody else! It’s a woman,
into the bargain.”
“The person you’ve told?”
“No, the other person. I’m quite
sure he must have told her.”
“For all the good it will do
her or do me! A woman will never
find out.”
“No, but she’ll talk all
over the place: she’ll do just what you
don’t want.”
Vereker thought a moment, but he was
not so disconcerted as I had feared: he felt
that if the harm was done it only served him right.
“It doesn’t matter don’t
worry.”
“I’ll do my best, I promise
you, that your talk with me shall go no further.”
“Very good; do what you can.”
“In the meantime,” I pursued,
“George Cor-vick’s possession of the tip
may, on his part, really lead to something.”
“That will be a brave day.”
I told him about Corvick’s cleverness,
his admiration, the intensity of his interest in my
anecdote; and without making too much of the divergence
of our respective estimates mentioned that my friend
was already of opinion that he saw much further into
a certain affair than most people. He was quite
as fired as I had been at Bridges. He was moreover
in love with the young lady: perhaps the two together
would puzzle something out.
Vereker seemed struck with this.
“Do you mean they’re to be married?”
“I daresay that’s what it will come to.”
“That may help them,” he conceded, “but
we must give them time!”
I spoke of my own renewed assault
and confessed my difficulties; whereupon he repeated
his former advice: “Give it up, give it
up!” He evidently didn’t think me intellectually
equipped for the adventure. I stayed half an
hour, and he was most good-natured, but I couldn’t
help pronouncing him a man of shifting moods.
He had been free with me in a mood, he had repented
in a mood, and now in a mood he had turned indifferent.
This general levity helped me to believe that, so far
as the subject of the tip went, there wasn’t
much in it. I contrived however to make him answer
a few more questions about it, though he did so with
visible impatience. For himself, beyond doubt,
the thing we were all so blank about was vividly there.
It was something, I guessed, in the primal plan, something
like a complex figure in a Persian carpet. He
highly approved of this image when I used it, and he
used another himself. “It’s the very
string,” he said, “that my pearls are strung
on!” The reason of his note to me had been that
he really didn’t want to give us a grain of
succour our destiny was a thing too perfect
in its way to touch. He had formed the habit
of depending upon it, and if the spell was to break
it must break by some force of its own. He comes
back to me from that last occasion for
I was never to speak to him again as a
man with some safe secret for enjoyment. I wondered
as I walked away where he had got his tip.
CHAPTER V
When I spoke to George Corvick of
the caution I had received he made me feel that any
doubt of his delicacy would be almost an insult.
He had instantly told Gwendolen, but Gwendolen’s
ardent response was in itself a pledge of discretion.
The question would now absorb them, and they would
enjoy their fun too much to wish to share it with the
crowd. They appeared to have caught instinctively
Vereker’s peculiar notion of fun. Their
intellectual pride, however, was not such as to make
them indifferent to any further light I might throw
on the affair they had in hand. They were indeed
of the “artistic temperament,” and I was
freshly struck with my colleague’s power to
excite himself over a question of art. He called
it letters, he called it life it was all
one thing. In what he said I now seemed to understand
that he spoke equally for Gwendolen, to whom, as soon
as Mrs. Erme was sufficiently better to allow her
a little leisure, he made a point of introducing me.
I remember our calling together one Sunday in August
at a huddled house in Chelsea, and my renewed envy
of Corvick’s possession of a friend who had
some light to mingle with his own. He could say
things to her that I could never say to him.
She had indeed no sense of humour and, with her pretty
way of holding her head on one side, was one of those
persons whom you want, as the phrase is, to shake,
but who have learnt Hungarian by themselves.
She conversed perhaps in Hungarian with Corvick; she
had remarkably little English for his friend.
Corvick afterwards told me that I had chilled her
by my apparent indisposition to oblige her with the
detail of what Vereker had said to me. I admitted
that I felt I had given thought enough to this exposure:
hadn’t I even made up my mind that it was hollow,
wouldn’t stand the test? The importance
they attached to it was irritating it rather
envenomed my dissent.
That statement looks unamiable, and
what probably happened was that I felt humiliated
at seeing other persons derive a daily joy from an
experiment which had brought me only chagrin.
I was out in the cold while, by the evening fire,
under the lamp, they followed the chase for which
I myself had sounded the horn. They did as I had
done, only more deliberately and sociably they
went over their author from the beginning. There
was no hurry, Corvick said the future was
before them and the fascination could only grow; they
would take him page by page, as they would take one
of the classics, inhale him in slow draughts and let
him sink deep in. I doubt whether they would have
got so wound up if they had not been in love:
poor Vereker’s secret gave them endless occasion
to put their young heads together. None the less
it represented the kind of problem for which Corvick
had a special aptitude, drew out the particular pointed
patience of which, had he lived, he would have given
more striking and, it is to be hoped, more fruitful
examples. He at least was, in Vereker’s
words, a little demon of subtlety. We had begun
by disputing, but I soon saw that without my stirring
a finger his infatuation would have its bad hours.
He would bound off on false scents as I had done he
would clap his hands over new lights and see them
blown out by the wind of the turned page. He was
like nothing, I told him, but the maniacs who embrace
some bedlamitical theory of the cryptic character
of Shakespeare. To this he replied that if we
had had Shakespeare’s own word for his being
cryptic he would immediately have accepted it.
The case there was altogether different we
had nothing but the word of Mr. Snooks. I rejoined
that I was stupefied to see him attach such importance
even to the word of Mr. Vereker. He inquired
thereupon whether I treated Mr. Vereker’s word
as a lie. I wasn’t perhaps prepared, in
my unhappy rebound, to go as far as that, but I insisted
that till the contrary was proved I should view it
as too fond an imagination. I didn’t, I
confess, say I didn’t at that time
quite know all I felt. Deep down,
as Miss Erme would have said, I was uneasy, I was
expectant. At the core of my personal confusion for
my curiosity lived in its ashes was the
sharpness of a sense that Corvick would at last probably
come out somewhere. He made, in defence of his
credulity, a great point of the fact that from of
old, in his study of this genius, he had caught whiffs
and hints of he didn’t know what, faint wandering
notes of a hidden music. That was just the rarity,
that was the charm: it fitted so perfectly into
what I reported.
If I returned on several occasions
to the little house in Chelsea I daresay it was as
much for news of Vereker as for news of Miss Erme’s
mamma. The hours spent there by Corvick were present
to my fancy as those of a chessplayer bent with a
silent scowl, all the lamplit winter, over his board
and his moves. As my imagination filled it out
the picture held me fast. On the other side of
the table was a ghostlier form, the faint figure of
an antagonist good-humouredly but a little wearily
secure an antagonist who leaned back in
his chair with his hands in his pockets and a smile
on his fine clear face. Close to Corvick, behind
him, was a girl who had begun to strike me as pale
and wasted and even, on more familiar view, as rather
handsome, and who rested on his shoulder and hung
upon his moves. He would take up a chessman and
hold it poised a while over one of the little squares,
and then he would put it back in its place with a long
sigh of disappointment. The young lady, at this,
would slightly but uneasily shift her position and
look across, very hard, very long, very strangely,
at their dim participant. I had asked them at
an early stage of the business if it mightn’t
contribute to their success to have some closer communication
with him. The special circumstances would surely
be held to have given me a right to introduce them.
Corvick immediately replied that he had no wish to
approach the altar before he had prepared the sacrifice.
He quite agreed with our friend both as to the sport
and as to the honour he would bring down
the animal with his own rifle. When I asked him
if Miss Erme were as keen a shot he said after an
hesitation: “No; I’m ashamed to say
she wants to set a trap. She’d give anything
to see him; she says she requires another tip.
She’s really quite morbid about it. But
she must play fair she shan’t
see him!” he emphatically added. I had
a suspicion that they had even quarrelled a little
on the subject a suspicion not corrected
by the way he more than once exclaimed to me:
“She’s quite incredibly literary, you know quite
fantastically!” I remember his saying of her
that she felt in italics and thought in capitals.
“Oh, when I’ve run him to earth,”
he also said, “then, you know, I shall knock
at his door. Rather I beg you to believe.
I’ll have it from his own lips: ’Right
you are, my boy; you’ve done it this time!’
He shall crown me victor with the critical
laurel.”
Meanwhile he really avoided the chances
London life might have given him of meeting the distinguished
novelist; a danger however that disappeared with Vereker’s
leaving England for an indefinite absence, as the
newspapers announced going to the south
for motives connected with the health of his wife,
which had long kept her in retirement. A year more
than a year had elapsed since the incident
at Bridges, but I had not encountered him again.
I think at bottom I was rather ashamed I
hated to remind him that though I had irremediably
missed his point a reputation for acuteness was rapidly
overtaking me. This scruple led me a dance; kept
me out of Lady Jane’s house, made me even decline,
when in spite of my bad manners she was a second time
so good as to make me a sign, an invitation to her
beautiful seat. I once saw her with Vereker at
a concert and was sure I was seen by them, but I slipped
out without being caught. I felt, as on that
occasion I splashed along in the rain, that I couldn’t
have done anything else; and yet I remember saying
to myself that it was hard, was even cruel. Not
only had I lost the books, but I had lost the man
himself: they and their author had been alike
spoiled for me. I knew too which was the loss
I most regretted. I had liked the man still better
than I had liked the books.
CHAPTER VI
Six months after Vereker had left
England George Corvick, who made his living by his
pen, contracted for a piece of work which imposed on
him an absence of some length and a journey of some
difficulty, and his undertaking of which was much
of a surprise to me. His brother-in-law had become
editor of a great provincial paper, and the great provincial
paper, in a fine flight of fancy, had conceived the
idea of sending a “special commissioner”
to India. Special commissioners had begun, in
the “metropolitan press,” to be the fashion,
and the journal in question felt that it had passed
too long for a mere country cousin. Corvick had
no hand, I knew, for the big brush of the correspondent,
but that was his brother-in-law’s affair, and
the fact that a particular task was not in his line
was apt to be with himself exactly a reason for accepting
it. He was prepared to out-Herod the metropolitan
press; he took solemn precautions against priggishness,
he exquisitely outraged taste. Nobody ever knew
it the taste was all his own. In addition
to his expenses he was to be conveniently paid, and
I found myself able to help him, for the usual fat
book, to a plausible arrangement with the usual fat
publisher. I naturally inferred that his obvious
desire to make a little money was not unconnected
with the prospect of a union with Gwendolen Erme.
I was aware that her mother’s opposition was
largely addressed to his want of means and of lucrative
abilities, but it so happened that, on my saying the
last time I saw him something that bore on the question
of his separation from our young lady, he exclaimed
with an emphasis that startled me: “Ah,
I’m not a bit engaged to her, you know!”
“Not overtly,” I answered,
“because her mother doesn’t like you.
But I’ve always taken for granted a private
understanding.”
“Well, there was one.
But there isn’t now.” That was all
he said, except something about Mrs. Erme’s
having got on her feet again in the most extraordinary
way a remark from which I gathered he wished
me to think he meant that private understandings were
of little use when the doctor didn’t share them.
What I took the liberty of really thinking was that
the girl might in some way have estranged him.
Well, if he had taken the turn of jealousy for instance
it could scarcely be jealousy of me. In that
case (besides the absurdity of it) he wouldn’t
have gone away to leave us together. For some
time before his departure we had indulged in no allusion
to the buried treasure, and from his silence, of which
mine was the consequence, I had drawn a sharp conclusion.
His courage had dropped, his ardour had gone the way
of mine this inference at least he left
me to enjoy. More than that he couldn’t
do; he couldn’t face the triumph with which
I might have greeted an explicit admission. He
needn’t have been afraid, poor dear, for I had
by this time lost all need to triumph. In fact
I considered that I showed magnanimity in not reproaching
him with his collapse, for the sense of his having
thrown up the game made me feel more than ever how
much I at last depended on him. If Corvick had
broken down I should never know; no one would be of
any use if he wasn’t. It wasn’t
a bit true that I had ceased to care for knowledge;
little by little my curiosity had not only begun to
ache again, but had become the familiar torment of
my consciousness. There are doubtless people
to whom torments of such an order appear hardly more
natural than the contortions of disease; but I don’t
know after all why I should in this connection so
much as mention them. For the few persons, at
any rate, abnormal or not, with whom my anecdote is
concerned, literature was a game of skill, and skill
meant courage, and courage meant honour, and honour
meant passion, meant life. The stake on the table
was of a different substance, and our roulette was
the revolving mind, but we sat round the green board
as intently as the grim gamblers at Monte Carlo.
Gwendolen Erme, for that matter, with her white face
and her fixed eyes, was of the very type of the lean
ladies one had met in the temples of chance.
I recognised in Corvick’s absence that she made
this analogy vivid. It was extravagant, I admit,
the way she lived for the art of the pen. Her
passion visibly preyed upon her, and in her presence
I felt almost tepid. I got hold of “Deep
Down” again: it was a desert in which she
had lost herself, but in which too she had dug a wonderful
hole in the sand a cavity out of which Corvick
had still more remarkably pulled her.
Early in March I had a telegram from
her, in consequence of which I repaired immediately
to Chelsea, where the first thing she said to me was:
“He has got it, he has got it!”
She was moved, as I could see, to
such depths that she must mean the great thing.
“Vereker’s idea?”
“His general intention. George has cabled
from Bombay.”
She had the missive open there; it
was emphatic, but it was brief. “Eureka.
Immense.” That was all he had
saved the money of the signature. I shared her
emotion, but I was disappointed. “He doesn’t
say what it is.”
“How could he in a telegram?
He’ll write it.”
“But how does he know?”
“Know it’s the real thing?
Oh, I’m sure when you see it you do know. Vera
incessu patuit dea!”
“It’s you, Miss Erme,
who are a dear for bringing me such news!” I
went all lengths in my high spirits. “But
fancy finding our goddess in the temple of Vishnu!
How strange of George to have been able to go into
the thing again in the midst of such different and
such powerful solicitations!”
“He hasn’t gone into it,
I know; it’s the thing itself, let severely
alone for six months, that has simply sprung out at
him like a tigress out of the jungle. He didn’t
take a book with him on purpose; indeed
he wouldn’t have needed to he knows
every page, as I do, by heart. They all worked
in him together, and some day somewhere, when he wasn’t
thinking, they fell, in all their superb intricacy,
into the one right combination. The figure in
the carpet came out. That’s the way he knew
it would come and the real reason you didn’t
in the least understand, but I suppose I may tell
you now why he went and why I consented
to his going. We knew the change would do it,
the difference of thought, of scene, would give the
needed touch, the magic shake. We had perfectly,
we had admirably calculated. The elements were
all in his mind, and in the secousse of a new
and intense experience they just struck light.”
She positively struck light herself she
was literally, facially luminous. I stammered
something about unconscious cerebration, and she continued:
“He’ll come right home this
will bring him.”
“To see Vereker, you mean?”
“To see Vereker and to see me.
Think what he’ll have to tell me!”
I hesitated. “About India?”
“About fiddlesticks! About Vereker about
the figure in the carpet.”
“But, as you say, we shall surely have that
in a letter.”
She thought like one inspired, and
I remembered how Corvick had told me long before that
her face was interesting. “Perhaps it won’t
go in a letter if it’s ‘immense.’”
“Perhaps not if it’s immense
bosh. If he has got something that won’t
go in a letter he hasn’t got the thing.
Vereker’s own statement to me was exactly that
the ‘figure’ would go in a letter.”
“Well, I cabled to George an hour ago two
words,” said Gwendolen.
“Is it indiscreet of me to inquire what they
were?”
She hung fire, but at last she brought them out. “‘Angel,
write.’”
“Good!” I exclaimed. “I’ll
make it sure I’ll send him the same.”
CHAPTER VII
My words however were not absolutely
the same I put something instead of “angel”;
and in the sequel my epithet seemed the more apt, for
when eventually we heard from Corvick it was merely,
it was thoroughly to be tantalised. He was magnificent
in his triumph, he described his discovery as stupendous;
but his ecstasy only obscured it there were
to be no particulars till he should have submitted
his conception to the supreme authority. He had
thrown up his commission, he had thrown up his book,
he had thrown up everything but the instant need to
hurry to Rapallo, on the Genoese shore, where Vereker
was making a stay. I wrote him a letter which
was to await him at Aden I besought him
to relieve my suspense. That he found my letter
was indicated by a telegram which, reaching me after
weary days and without my having received an answer
to my laconic dispatch at Bombay, was evidently intended
as a reply to both communications. Those few
words were in familiar French, the French of the day,
which Corvick often made use of to show he wasn’t
a prig. It had for some persons the opposite
effect, but his message may fairly be paraphrased.
“Have patience; I want to see, as it breaks on
you, the face you’ll make!” “Tellement
envie de voir ta tete!” that was
what I had to sit down with. I can certainly
not be said to have sat down, for I seem to remember
myself at this time as rushing constantly between
the little house in Chelsea and my own. Our impatience,
Gwendolen’s and mine, was equal, but I kept
hoping her light would be greater. We all spent
during this episode, for people of our means, a great
deal of money in telegrams, and I counted on the receipt
of news from Rapallo immediately after the junction
of the discoverer with the discovered. The interval
seemed an age, but late one day I heard a hansom rattle
up to my door with a crash engendered by a hint of
liberality. I lived with my heart in my mouth
and I bounded to the window a movement which
gave me a view of a young lady erect on the footboard
of the vehicle and eagerly looking up at my house.
At sight of me she flourished a paper with a movement
that brought me straight down, the movement with which,
in melodramas, handkerchiefs and reprieves are flourished
at the foot of the scaffold.
“Just seen Vereker not
a note wrong. Pressed me to bosom keeps
me a month.” So much I read on her paper
while the cabby dropped a grin from his perch.
In my excitement I paid him profusely and in hers she
suffered it; then as he drove away we started to walk
about and talk. We had talked, ’heaven
knows, enough before, but this was a wondrous lift.
We pictured the whole scene at Rapallo, where he would
have written, mentioning my name, for permission to
call; that is I pictured it, having more material
than my companion, whom I felt hang on my lips as
we stopped on purpose before shop-windows we didn’t
look into. About one thing we were clear:
if he was staying on for fuller communication we should
at least have a letter from him that would help us
through the dregs of delay. We understood his
staying on, and yet each of us saw, I think, that
the other hated it. The letter we were clear about
arrived; it was for Gwendolen, and I called upon her
in time to save her the trouble of bringing it to
me. She didn’t read it out, as was natural
enough; but she repeated to me what it chiefly embodied.
This consisted of the remarkable statement that he
would tell her when they were married exactly what
she wanted to know.
“Only when we’re married not
before,” she explained. “It’s
tantamount to saying isn’t it? that
I must marry him straight off!” She smiled at
me while I flushed with disappointment, a vision of
fresh delay that made me at first unconscious of my
surprise. It seemed more than a hint that on
me as well he would impose some tiresome condition.
Suddenly, while she reported several more things from
his letter, I remembered what he had told me before
going away. He found Mr. Vereker deliriously
interesting and his own possession of the secret a
kind of intoxication. The buried treasure was
all gold and gems. Now that it was there it seemed
to grow and grow before him; it was in all time, in
all tongues, one of the most wonderful flowers of
art. Nothing, above all, when once one was face
to face with it, had been more consummately done.
When once it came out it came out, was there with
a splendour that made you ashamed; and there had not
been, save in the bottomless vulgarity of the age,
with every one tasteless and tainted, every sense stopped,
the smallest reason why it should have been overlooked.
It was immense, but it was simple it was
simple, but it was immense, and the final knowledge
of it was an experience quite apart. He intimated
that the charm of such an experience, the desire to
drain it, in its freshness, to the last drop, was
what kept him there close to the source. Gwendolen,
frankly radiant as she tossed me these fragments, showed
the elation of a prospect more assured than my own.
That brought me back to the question of her marriage,
prompted me to ask her if what she meant by what she
had just surprised me with was that she was under an
engagement.
“Of course I am!” she
answered. “Didn’t you know it?”
She appeared astonished; but I was still more so,
for Corvick had told me the exact contrary. I
didn’t mention this, however; I only reminded
her that I had not been to that degree in her confidence,
or even in Corvick’s, and that moreover I was
not in ignorance of her mother’s interdict.
At bottom I was troubled by the disparity of the two
assertions; but after a moment I felt that Corvick’s
was the one I least doubted. This simply reduced
me to asking myself if the girl had on the spot improvised
an engagement vamped up an old one or dashed
off a new in order to arrive at the satisfaction
she desired. I reflected that she had resources
of which I was destitute; but she made her case slightly
more intelligible by rejoining presently: “What
the state of things has been is that we felt of course
bound to do nothing in mamma’s lifetime.”
“But now you think you’ll
just dispense with your mother’s consent?”
“Ah, it may not come to that!”
I wondered what it might come to, and she went on:
“Poor dear, she may swallow the dose. In
fact, you know,” she added with a laugh, “she
really must!” a proposition
of which, on behalf of every one concerned, I fully
acknowledged the force.
CHAPTER VIII
Nothing more annoying had ever happened
to me than to become aware before Corvick’s
arrival in England that I should not be there to put
him through. I found myself abruptly called to
Germany by the alarming illness of my younger brother,
who, against my advice, had gone to Munich to study,
at the feet indeed of a great master, the art of portraiture
in oils. The near relative who made him an allowance
had threatened to withdraw it if he should, under
specious pretexts, turn for superior truth to Paris Paris
being somehow, for a Cheltenham aunt, the school of
evil, the abyss. I deplored this prejudice at
the time, and the deep injury of it was now visible first
in the fact that it had not saved the poor boy, who
was clever, frail and foolish, from congestion of
the lungs, and second in the greater remoteness from
London to which the event condemned me. I am afraid
that what was uppermost in my mind during several
anxious weeks was the sense that if we had only been
in Paris I might have run over to see Corvick.
This was actually out of the question from every point
of view: my brother, whose recovery gave us both
plenty to do, was ill for three months, during which
I never left him and at the end of which we had to
face the absolute prohibition of a return to England.
The consideration of climate imposed itself, and he
was in no state to meet it alone. I took him
to Meran and there spent the summer with him,
trying to show him by example how to get back to work
and nursing a rage of another sort that I tried not
to show him.
The whole business proved the first
of a series of phenomena so strangely combined that,
taken together (which was how I had to take them)
they form as good an illustration as I can recall of
the manner in which, for the good of his soul doubtless,
fate sometimes deals with a man’s avidity.
These incidents certainly had larger bearings than
the comparatively meagre consequence we are here concerned
with though I feel that consequence also
to be a thing to speak of with some respect.
It’s mainly in such a light, I confess, at any
rate, that at this hour the ugly fruit of my exile
is present to me. Even at first indeed the spirit
in which my avidity, as I have called it, made me regard
this term owed no element of ease to the fact that
before coming back from Rapallo George Corvick addressed
me in a way I didn’t like. His letter had
none of the sedative action that I must to-day profess
myself sure he had wished to give it, and the march
of occurrences was not so ordered as to make up for
what it lacked. He had begun on the spot, for
one of the quarterlies, a great last word on Vereker’s
writings, and this exhaustive study, the only one
that would have counted, have existed, was to turn
on the new light, to utter oh, so quietly! the
unimagined truth. It was in other words to trace
the figure in the carpet through every convolution,
to reproduce it in every tint. The result, said
Corvick, was to be the greatest literary portrait ever
painted, and what he asked of me was just to be so
good as not to trouble him with questions till he
should hang up his masterpiece before me. He
did me the honour to declare that, putting aside the
great sitter himself, all aloft in his indifference,
I was individually the connoisseur he was most working
for. I was therefore to be a good boy and not
try to peep under the curtain before the show-was ready:
I should enjoy it all the more if I sat very still.
I did my best to sit very still, but
I couldn’t help giving a jump on seeing in The
Times after I had been a week or two in Munich
and before, as I knew, Corvick had reached London,
the announcement of the sudden death of poor Mrs.
Erme. I instantly wrote to Gwendolen for particulars,
and she replied that her mother had succumbed to long-threatened
failure of the heart. She didn’t say, but
I took the liberty of reading into her words, that
from the point of view of her marriage and also of
her eagerness, which was quite a match for mine, this
was a solution more prompt than could have been expected
and more radical than waiting for the old lady to
swallow the dose. I candidly admit indeed that
at the time for I heard from her repeatedly I
read some singular things into Gwendolen’s words
and some still more extraordinary ones into her silences.
Pen in hand, this way, I live the time over, and it
brings back the oddest sense of my having been for
months and in spite of myself a kind of coerced spectator.
All my life had taken refuge in my eyes, which the
procession of events appeared to have committed itself
to keep astare. There were days when I thought
of writing to Hugh Vereker and simply throwing myself
on his charity. But I felt more deeply that I
hadn’t fallen quite so low, besides which, quite
properly, he would send me about my business.
Mrs. Erme’s death brought Corvick straight home,
and within the month he was united “very quietly” as
quietly I suppose as he meant in his article to bring
out his trouvaille to the young
lady he had loved and quitted. I use this last
term, I may parenthetically say, because I subsequently
grew sure that at the time he went to India, at the
time of his great news from Bombay, there was no engagement
whatever. There was none at the moment she affirmed
the opposite. On the other hand he certainly became
engaged the day he returned. The happy pair went
down to Torquay for their honeymoon, and there, in
a reckless hour, it occurred to poor Corvick to take
his young bride a drive. He had no command of
that business: this had been brought home to
me of old in a little tour we had once made together
in a dogcart. In a dogcart he perched his companion
for a rattle over Devonshire hills, on one of the
likeliest of which he brought his horse, who, it was
true, had bolted, down with such violence that the
occupants of the cart were hurled forward and that
he fell horribly on his head. He was killed on
the spot; Gwendolen escaped unhurt.
I pass rapidly over the question of
this unmitigated tragedy, of what the loss of my best
friend meant for me, and I complete my little history
of my patience and my pain by the frank statement of
my having, in a postscript to my very first letter
to her after the receipt of the hideous news, asked
Mrs. Corvick whether her husband had not at least
finished the great article on Vereker. Her answer
was as prompt as my inquiry: the article, which
had been barely begun, was a mere heartbreaking scrap.
She explained that Corvick had just settled down to
it when he was interrupted by her mother’s death;
then, on his return, he had been kept from work by
the engrossments into which that calamity plunged
them. The opening pages were all that existed;
they were striking, they were promising, but they
didn’t unveil the idol. That great intellectual
feat was obviously to have formed his climax.
She said nothing more, nothing to enlighten me as
to the state of her own knowledge the knowledge
for the acquisition of which I had conceived her doing
prodigious things. This was above all what I wanted
to know: had she seen the idol unveiled?
Had there been a private ceremony for a palpitating
audience of one? For what else but that ceremony
had the previous ceremony been enacted? I didn’t
like as yet to press her, though when I thought of
what had passed between us on the subject in Corvick’s
absence her reticence surprised me. It was therefore
not till much later, from Meran, that I risked
another appeal, risked it in some trepidation, for
she continued to tell me nothing. “Did you
hear in those few days of your blighted bliss,”
I wrote, “what we desired so to hear?”
I said “we” as a little hint; and she showed
me she could take a little hint. “I heard
everything,” she replied, “and I mean to
keep it to myself!”
CHAPTER IX
It was impossible not to be moved
with the strongest sympathy for her, and on my return
to England I showed her every kindness in my power.
Her mother’s death had made her means sufficient,
and she had gone to live in a more convenient quarter.
But her loss had been great and her visitation cruel;
it never would have occurred to me moreover to suppose
she could come to regard the enjoyment of a technical
tip, of a piece of literary experience, as a counterpoise
to her grief. Strange to say, none the less,
I couldn’t help fancying after I had seen her
a few times that I caught a glimpse of some such oddity.
I hasten to add that there had been other things I
couldn’t help fancying; and as I never felt I
was really clear about these, so, as to the point I
here touch on, I give her memory the benefit of every
doubt. Stricken and solitary, highly accomplished
and now, in her deep mourning, her maturer grace,
and her uncomplaining sorrow incontestably handsome,
she presented herself as leading a life of singular
dignity and beauty. I had at first found a way
to believe that I should soon get the better of the
reserve formulated the week after the catastrophe
in her reply to an appeal as to which I was not unconscious
that it might strike her as mistimed. Certainly
that reserve was something of a shock to me certainly
it puzzled me the more I thought of it, though I tried
to explain it, with moments of success, by the supposition
of exalted sentiments, of superstitious scruples,
of a refinement of loyalty. Certainly it added
at the same time hugely to the price of Vereker’s
secret, precious as that mystery already appeared.
I may as well confess abjectly that Mrs. Corvick’s
unexpected attitude was the final tap on the nail that
was to fix, as they say, my luckless idea, convert
it into the obsession of which I am for ever conscious.
But this only helped me the more to be artful, to
be adroit, to allow time to elapse before renewing
my suit. There were plenty of speculations for
the interval, and one of them was deeply absorbing.
Corvick had kept his information from his young friend
till after the removal of the last barriers to their
intimacy; then he had let the cat out of the bag.
Was it Gwendolen’s idea, taking a hint from
him, to liberate this animal only on the basis of the
renewal of such a relation? Was the figure in
the carpet traceable or describable only for husbands
and wives for lovers supremely united?
It came back to me in a mystifying manner that in
Kensington-square, when I told him that Corvick would
have told the girl he loved, some word had dropped
from Vereker that gave colour to this possibility.
There might be little in it, but there was enough
to make me wonder if I should have to marry Mrs. Corvick
to get what I wanted. Was I prepared to offer
her this price for the blessing of her knowledge?
Ah! that way madness lay so I said to myself
at least in bewildered hours. I could see meanwhile
the torch she refused to pass on flame away in her
chamber of memory pour through her eyes
a light that made a glow in her lonely house.
At the end of six months I was fully sure of what
this warm presence made up to her for. We had
talked again and again of the man who had brought us
together, of his talent, his character, his personal
charm, his certain career, his dreadful doom, and
even of his clear purpose in that great study which
was to have been a supreme literary portrait, a kind
of critical Vandyke or Velasquez. She had conveyed
to me in abundance that she was tongue-tied by her
perversity, by her piety, that she would never break
the silence it had not been given to the “right
person,” as she said, to break. The hour
however finally arrived. One evening when I had
been sitting with her longer than usual I laid my hand
firmly on her arm.
“Now, at last, what is it?”
She had been expecting me; she was
ready. She gave a long, slow, soundless headshake,
merciful only in being inarticulate. This mercy
didn’t prevent its hurling at me the largest,
finest, coldest “Never!” I had yet, in
the course of a life that had known denials, had to
take full in the face. I took it and was aware
that with the hard blow the tears had come into my
eyes. So for a while we sat and looked at each
other; after which I slowly rose. I was wondering
if some day she would accept me; but this was not
what I brought out. I said as I smoothed down
my hat: “I know what to think then; it’s
nothing!”
A remote, disdainful pity for me shone
out of her dim smile; then she exclaimed in a voice
that I hear at this moment: “It’s
my life!” As I stood at the door she
added: “You’ve insulted him!”
“Do you mean Vereker?”
“I mean the Dead!”
I recognised when I reached the street
the justice of her charge. Yes, it was her life I
recognised that too; but her life none the less made
room with the lapse of time for another interest.
A year and a half after Corvick’s death she
published in a single volume her second novel, “Overmastered,”
which I pounced on in the hope of finding in it some
tell-tale echo or some peeping face. All I found
was a much better book than her younger performance,
showing I thought the better company she had kept.
As a tissue tolerably intricate it was a carpet with
a figure of its own; but the figure was not the figure
I was looking for. On sending a review of it
to The Middle I was surprised to learn from
the office that a notice was already in type.
When the paper came out I had no hesitation in attributing
this article, which I thought rather vulgarly overdone,
to Drayton Deane, who in the old days had been something
of a friend of Corvick’s, yet had only within
a few weeks made the acquaintance of his widow.
I had had an early copy of the book, but Deane had
evidently had an earlier. He lacked all the same
the light hand with which Corvick had gilded the gingerbread he
laid on the tinsel in splotches.
CHAPTER X
Six months later appeared “The
Right of Way,” the last chance, though we didn’t
know it, that we were to have to redeem ourselves.
Written wholly during Vereker’s absence, the
book had been heralded, in a hundred paragraphs, by
the usual ineptitudes. I carried it, as early
a copy as any, I this time flattered myself, straightway
to Mrs. Corvick. This was the only use I had
for it; I left the inevitable tribute of The Middle
to some more ingenious mind and some less irritated
temper. “But I already have it,”
Gwendolen said. “Drayton Deane was so good
as to bring it to me yesterday, and I’ve just
finished it.”
“Yesterday? How did he get it so soon?”
“He gets everything soon. He’s to
review it in The Middle.”
“He Drayton Deane review
Vereker?” I couldn’t believe my ears.
“Why not? One fine ignorance is as good
as another.”
I winced, but I presently said: “You ought
to review him yourself!”
“I don’t ‘review,’”
she laughed. “I’m reviewed!”
Just then the door was thrown open.
“Ah yes, here’s your reviewer!”
Drayton Deane was there with his long legs and his
tall forehead: he had come to see what she thought
of “The Right of Way,” and to bring news
which was singularly relevant. The evening papers
were just out with a telegram on the author of that
work, who, in Rome, had been ill for some days with
an attack of malarial fever. It had at first not
been thought grave, but had taken in consequence of
complications a turn that might give rise to anxiety.
Anxiety had indeed at the latest hour begun to be
felt.
I was struck in the presence of these
tidings with the fundamental detachment that Mrs.
Cor-vick’s public regret quite failed to conceal:
it gave me the measure of her consummate independence.
That independence rested on her knowledge, the knowledge
which nothing now could destroy and which nothing
could make different. The figure in the carpet
might take on another twist or two, but the sentence
had virtually been written. The writer might
go down to his grave: she was the person in the
world to whom as if she had been his favoured
heir his continued existence was least
of a need. This reminded me how I had observed
at a particular moment after Corvick’s
death the drop of her desire to see him
face to face. She had got what she wanted without
that. I had been sure that if she hadn’t
got it she wouldn’t have been restrained from
the endeavour to sound him personally by those superior
reflections, more conceivable on a man’s part
than on a woman’s, which in my case had served
as a deterrent. It wasn’t however, I hasten
to add, that my case, in spite of this invidious comparison,
wasn’t ambiguous enough. At the thought
that Vereker was perhaps at that moment dying there
rolled over me a wave of anguish a poignant
sense of how inconsistently I still depended on him.
A delicacy that it was my one compensation to suffer
to rule me had left the Alps and the Apennines between
us, but the vision of the waning opportunity made
me feel as if I might in my despair at last have gone
to him. Of course I would really have done nothing
of the sort. I remained five minutes, while my
companions talked of the new book, and when Drayton
Deane appealed to me for my opinion of it I replied,
getting up, that I detested Hugh Vereker simply
couldn’t read him. I went away with the
moral certainty that as the door closed behind me
Deane would remark that I was awfully superficial.
His hostess wouldn’t contradict him.
I continue to trace with a briefer
touch our intensely odd concatenation. Three
weeks after this came Vereker’s death, and before
the year was out the death of his wife. That poor
lady I had never seen, but I had had a futile theory
that, should she survive him long enough to be decorously
accessible, I might approach her with the feeble flicker
of my petition. Did she know and if she knew would
she speak? It was much to be presumed that for
more reasons than one she would have nothing to say;
but when she passed out of all reach I felt that renouncement
was indeed my appointed lot. I was shut up in
my obsession for ever my gaolers had gone
off with the key. I find myself quite as vague
as a captive in a dungeon about the time that further
elapsed before Mrs. Corvick became the wife of Drayton
Deane. I had foreseen, through my bars, this
end of the business, though there was no indecent
haste and our friendship had rather fallen off.
They were both so “awfully intellectual”
that it struck people as a suitable match, but I knew
better than any one the wealth of understanding the
bride would contribute to the partnership. Never,
for a marriage in literary circles so the
newspapers described the alliance had a
bride been so handsomely dowered. I began with
due promptness to look for the fruit of their union that
fruit, I mean, of which the premonitory symptoms would
be peculiarly visible in the husband. Taking for
granted the splendour of the lady’s nuptial
gift, I expected to see him make a show commensurate
with his increase of means. I knew what his means
had been his article on “The Right
of Way” had distinctly given one the figure.
As he was now exactly in the position in which still
more exactly I was not I watched from month to month,
in the likely periodicals, for the heavy message poor
Corvick had been unable to deliver and the responsibility
of which would have fallen on his successor.
The widow and wife would have broken by the rekindled
hearth the silence that only a widow and wife might
break, and Deane would be as aflame with the knowledge
as Cor-vick in his own hour, as Gwendolen in hers
had been. Well, he was aflame doubtless, but the
fire was apparently not to become a public blaze.
I scanned the periodicals in vain: Drayton Deane
filled them with exuberant pages, but he withheld
the page I most feverishly sought. He wrote on
a thousand subjects, but never on the subject of Vereker.
His special line was to tell truths that other people
either “funked,” as he said, or overlooked,
but he never told the only truth that seemed to me
in these days to signify. I met the couple in
those literary circles referred to in the papers:
I have sufficiently intimated that it was only in
such circles we were all constructed to revolve.
Gwendolen was more than ever committed to them by
the publication of her third novel, and I myself definitely
classed by holding the opinion that this work was
inferior to its immediate predecessor. Was it
worse because she had been keeping worse company?
If her secret was, as she had told me, her life a
fact discernible in her increasing bloom, an air of
conscious privilege that, cleverly corrected by pretty
charities, gave distinction to her appearance it
had yet not a direct influence on her work. That
only made everything only made one
yearn the more for it, rounded it off with a mystery
finer and subtler.
CHAPTER XI
It was therefore from her husband
I could never remove my eyes: I hovered about
him in a manner that might have made him uneasy.
I went even so far as to engage him in conversation.
Didn’t he know, hadn’t he come
into it as a matter of course? that question
hummed in my brain. Of course he knew; otherwise
he wouldn’t return my stare so queerly.
His wife had told him what I wanted, and he was amiably
amused at my impotence. He didn’t laugh he
was not a laugher: his system was to present
to my irritation, so that I should crudely expose myself,
a conversational blank as vast as his big bare brow.
It always happened that I turned away with a settled
conviction from these unpeopled expanses, which seemed
to complete each other geographically and to symbolise
together Drayton Deane’s want of voice, want
of form. He simply hadn’t the art to use
what he knew; he literally was incompetent to take
up the duty where Corvick had left it. I went
still further it was the only glimpse of
happiness I had. I made up my mind that the duty
didn’t appeal to him. He wasn’t interested,
he didn’t care. Yes, it quite comforted
me to believe him too stupid to have joy of the thing
I lacked. He was as stupid after as before, and
that deepened for me the golden glory in which the
mystery was wrapped. I had of course however
to recollect that his wife might have imposed her conditions
and exactions. I had above all to recollect that
with Vereker’s death the major incentive dropped.
He was still there to be honoured by what might be
done he was no longer there to give it his
sanction. Who, alas, but he had the authority?
Two children were born to the pair,
but the second cost the mother her life. After
this calamity I seemed to see another ghost of a chance.
I jumped at it in thought, but I waited a certain
time for manners, and at last my opportunity arrived
in a remunerative way. His wife had been dead
a year when I met Drayton Deane in the smoking-room
of a small club of which we both were members, but
where for months perhaps because I rarely
entered it I had not seen him. The
room was empty and the occasion propitious. I
deliberately offered him, to have done with the matter
for ever, that advantage for which I felt he had long
been looking.
“As an older acquaintance of
your late wife’s than even you were,” I
began, “you must let me say to you something
I have on my mind. I shall be glad to make any
terms with you that you see fit to name for the information
she had from George Corvick the information,
you know, that he, poor fellow, in one of the happiest
hours of his life, had straight from Hugh Vereker.”
He looked at me like a dim phrenological
bust. “The information ?”
“Vereker’s secret, my
dear man the general intention of his books:
the string the pearls were strung on, the buried treasure,
the figure in the carpet.”
He began to flush the numbers
on his bumps to come out. “Vereker’s
books had a general intention?”
I stared in my turn. “You
don’t mean to say you don’t know it?”
I thought for a moment he was playing with me.
“Mrs. Deane knew it; she had it, as I say, straight
from Corvick, who had, after infinite search and to
Vereker’s own delight, found the very mouth of
the cave. Where is the mouth? He
told after their marriage and told alone the
person who, when the circumstances were reproduced,
must have told you. Have I been wrong in taking
for granted that she admitted you, as one of the highest
privileges of the relation in which you stood to her,
to the knowledge of which she was after Corvick’s
death the sole depositary? All I know
is that that knowledge is infinitely precious, and
what I want you to understand is that if you will
in your turn admit me to it you will do me
a kindness for which I shall be everlastingly grateful.”
He had turned at last very red; I
daresay he had begun by thinking I had lost my wits.
Little by little he followed me; on my own side I stared
with a livelier surprise. “I don’t
know what you’re talking about,” he said.
“Nothing about Hugh Vereker.”
I was stupefied; the room went round.
It had been too good even for that! “Upon
your honour?”
“Upon my honour. What the
devil’s the matter with you?” he demanded.
“I’m astounded I’m
disappointed. I wanted to get it out of you.”
“It isn’t in me!”
he awkwardly laughed. “And even if it were ”
“If it were you’d let
me have it oh yes, in common humanity.
But I believe you. I see I see!”
I went on, conscious, with the full turn of the wheel,
of my great delusion, my false view of the poor man’s
attitude. What I saw, though I couldn’t
say it, was that his wife hadn’t thought him
worth enlightening. This struck me as strange
for a woman who had thought him worth marrying.
At last I explained it by the reflection that she
couldn’t possibly have married him for his understanding.
She had married him for something else. He was
to some extent enlightened now, but he was even more
astonished, more disconcerted: he took a moment
to compare my story with his quickened memories.
The result of his meditation was his presently saying
with a good deal of rather feeble form:
“This is the first I hear of
what you allude to. I think you must be mistaken
as to Mrs. Drayton Deane’s having had any unmentioned,
and still less any unmentionable, knowledge about
Hugh Vereker. She would certainly have wished
it if it bore on his literary character to
be used.”
“It was used. She
used it herself. She told me with her own lips
that she ‘lived’ on it.”
I had no sooner spoken than I repented
of my words; he grew so pale that I felt as if I had
struck him. “Ah, ’lived’ !”
he murmured, turning short away from me.
My compunction was real; I laid my
hand on his shoulder. “I beg you to forgive
me I’ve made a mistake. You don’t
know what I thought you knew. You could, if I
had been right, have rendered me a service; and I
had my reasons for assuming that you would be in a
position to meet me.”
“Your reasons?” he asked. “What
were your reasons?”
I looked at him well; I hesitated;
I considered. “Come and sit down with me
here, and I’ll tell you.” I drew him
to a sofa, I lighted another cigarette and, beginning
with the anecdote of Vereker’s one descent from
the clouds, I gave him an account of the extraordinary
chain of accidents that had in spite of it kept me
till that hour in the dark. I told him in a word
just what I’ve written out here. He listened
with deepening attention, and I became aware, to my
surprise, by his ejaculations, by his questions, that
he would have been after all not unworthy to have
been trusted by his wife. So abrupt an experience
of her want of trust had an agitating effect on him,
but I saw that immediate shock throb away little by
little and then gather again into waves of wonder
and curiosity waves that promised, I could
perfectly judge, to break in the end with the fury
of my own highest tides. I may say that to-day
as victims of unappeased desire there isn’t a
pin to choose between us. The poor man’s
state is almost my consolation; there are indeed moments
when I feel it to be almost my revenge.
Yes indeed, I say to myself, pen in
hand, I can keep hold of the thread and let it lead
me back to the first impression. The little story
is all there, I can touch it from point to point;
for the thread, as I call it, is a row of coloured
beads on a string. None of the beads are missing at
least I think they’re not: that’s
exactly what I shall amuse myself with finding out.