HIS DEPARTURE FROM STOKE-UNDERHILL
I
The village of Stoke was no whit intimidated
by the news that Mrs. Reade sowed abroad. The
women exclaimed and chattered, the men gaped and shook
their heads, the children hung about the ruinous gate
that shut them out from the twenty-yard strip of garden
which led up to Stott’s cottage. Curiosity
was the dominant emotion. Any excuse was good
enough to make friendly overtures, but the baby remained
invisible to all save Mrs. Reade; and the village
community kept open ears while the lust of its eyes
remained, perforce, unsatisfied. If Stott’s
gate slammed in the wind, every door that commanded
a view of that gate was opened, and heads appeared,
and bare arms-the indications of women who
nodded to each other, shook their heads, pursed their
lips and withdrew for the time to attend the pressure
of household duty. Later, even that gate slamming
would reinvigorate the gossip of backyards and front
doorways.
The first stranger to force an entry
was the rector. He was an Oxford man who, in
his youth, had been an ardent disciple of the school
that attempts the reconciliation of Religion and Science.
He had been ambitious, but nature had predetermined
his career by giving him a head of the wrong shape.
At Oxford his limitations had not been clearly defined,
and on the strength of a certain speech at the Union,
he crept into a London west-end curacy. There
he attempted to demonstrate the principle of reconciliation
from the pulpit, but his vicar and his bishop soon
recognised that excellent as were his intentions, he
was doing better service to agnosticism than to his
own religion. As a result of this clerical intrigue
he was vilely marooned on the savage island of Stoke-Underhill,
where he might preach as much science as he would
to the natives, for there was no fear of their comprehending
him. Fifteen years of Stoke had brought about
a reaction. Nature had made him a feeble fanatic,
and he was now as ardent an opponent of science as
he had once been a defender. In his little mind
he believed that his early reading had enabled him
to understand all the weaknesses of the scientific
position. His name was Percy Crashaw.
Mrs. Stott could not deny her rector
the right of entry, and he insisted on seeing the
infant, who was not yet baptised-a shameful
neglect, according to Crashaw, for the child was nearly
six weeks old. Nor had Mrs. Stott been “churched.”
Crashaw had good excuse for pressing his call.
Mrs. Stott refused to face the village.
She knew that the place was all agape, eager to stare
at what they considered some “new kind of idiot.”
Let them wait, was Ellen Mary’s attitude.
Her pride was a later development. In those early
weeks she feared criticism.
But she granted Crashaw’s request
to see the child, and after the interview (the term
is precise) the rector gave way on the question of
a private ceremony, though he had indignantly opposed
the scheme when it was first mooted. It may be
that he conceived an image of himself with that child
in his arms, the cynosure of a packed congregation....
Crashaw was one of the influences
that hastened the Stotts’ departure from Stoke.
He was so indiscreet. After the christening he
would talk. His attitude is quite comprehensible.
He, the lawgiver of Stoke, had been thwarted.
He had to find apology for the private baptism he had
denied to many a sickly infant. Moreover, the
Stotts had broken another of his ordinances, for father
and mother had stood as godparents to their own child,
and Crashaw himself had been the second godfather
ordained as necessary by the rubric. He had given
way on these important points so weakly; he had to
find excuse, and he talked himself into a false belief
with regard to the child he had baptised.
He began with his wife. “I
would allow more latitude to medical men,” he
said. “In such a case as this child of the
Stotts, for instance; it becomes a burden on the community,
I might say a danger, yes, a positive danger.
I am not sure whether I was right in administering
the holy sacrament of baptism....”
“Oh! Percy! Surely ...” began
Mrs. Crashaw.
“One moment, my dear,”
protested the rector, “I have not fully explained
the circumstances of the case.” And as he
warmed to his theme the image of Victor Stott grew
to a fearful grotesqueness. It loomed as a threat
over the community and the church. Crashaw quoted,
inaccurately, statistics of the growth of lunacy,
and then went off at a tangent into the theory of
possession by evil spirits. Since his rejection
of science, he had lapsed into certain forms of mediaevalism,
and he now began to dally with the theory of a malign
incarnation which he elaborated until it became an
article of his faith.
To his poorer parishioners he spoke
in vague terms, but he changed their attitude; he
filled them with overawed terror. They were intensely
curious still, but, now, when the gate was slammed,
one saw a face pressed to the window, the door remained
fast; and the children no longer clustered round that
gate, but dared each other to run past it; which they
did, the girls with a scream, the boys with a jeering
“Yah-ah!” a boast of intrepidity.
This change of temper was soon understood
by the persons most concerned. Stott grumbled
and grew more morose. He had never been intimate
with the villagers, and now he avoided any intercourse
with them. His wife kept herself aloof, and her
child sheltered from profane observation. Naturally,
this attitude of the Stotts fostered suspicion.
Even the hardiest sceptic in the taproom of the Challis
Arms began to shake his head, to concede that there
“moight be soomething in it.”
Yet the departure from Stoke might
have been postponed indefinitely, if it had not been
for another intrusion. Both Stott and his wife
were ready to take up a new idea, but they were slow
to conceive it.
II
The intruder was the local magnate,
the landlord of Stoke, Wenderby, Chilborough, a greater
part of Ailesworth, two or three minor parishes, and,
incidentally, of Pym.
This magnate, Henry Challis, was a
man of some scholarship, whose ambition had been crushed
by the weight of his possessions. He had a remarkably
fine library at Challis Court, but he made little use
of it, for he spent the greater part of his time in
travel. In appearance he was rather an ungainly
man; his great head and the bulk of his big shoulders
were something too heavy for his legs.
Crashaw regarded his patron with mixed
feelings. For Challis, the man of property, the
man of high connections, of intimate associations with
the world of science and letters, Crashaw had a feeling
of awed respect; but in private he inveighed against
the wickedness of Challis, the agnostic, the decadent.
When Victor Stott was nearly three
months old, the rector met his patron one day on the
road between Chilborough and Stoke. It was three
years since their last meeting, and Crashaw noticed
that in the interval Challis’s pointed beard
had become streaked with grey.
“Hallo! How d’ye
do, Crashaw?” was the squire’s casual greeting.
“How is the Stoke microcosm?”
Crashaw smiled subserviently; he was
never quite at his ease in Challis’s presence.
“Rari nantes in gurgite vasto,” was
the tag he found in answer to the question put.
However great his contempt for Challis’s way
of life, in his presence Crashaw was often oppressed
with a feeling of inferiority, a feeling which he
fought against but could not subdue. The Latin
tag was an attempt to win appreciation, it represented
a boast of equality.
Challis correctly evaluated the rector’s
attitude; it was with something of pity in his mind
that he turned and walked beside him.
There was but one item of news from
Stoke, and it soon came to the surface. Crashaw
phrased his description of Victor Stott in terms other
than those he used in speaking to his wife or to his
parishioners; but the undercurrent of his virulent
superstition did not escape Challis, and the attitude
of the villagers was made perfectly plain.
“Hm!” was Challis’s
comment, when the flow of words ceased, “nigroque
simillima cygno, eh?”
“Ah! of course, you sneer at
our petty affairs,” said Crashaw.
“By no means. I should
like to see this black swan of Stoke,” replied
Challis. “Anything so exceptional interests
me.”
“No doubt Mrs. Stott would be
proud to exhibit the horror,” said Crashaw.
He had a gleam of satisfaction in the thought that
even the great Henry Challis might be scared.
That would, indeed, be a triumph.
“If Mrs. Stott has no objection,
of course,” said Challis. “Shall we
go there, now?”
III
The visit of Henry Challis marked
the first advent of Ellen Mary’s pride in the
exhibition of her wonder. After the King and the
Royal Family-superhuman beings, infinitely
remote-the great landlord of the neighbourhood
stood as a symbol of temporal power to the whole district.
The budding socialist of the taproom might sneer, and
make threat that the time was coming when he, the
boaster, and Challis, the landlord, would have equal
rights; but in public the socialist kow-towed to his
master with a submission no less obsequious than that
of the humblest conservative on the estate.
Mrs. Stott dropped a deep curtsy when,
opening the door to the autocratic summons of Crashaw’s
rat-a-tat, she saw the great man of the district at
her threshold. Challis raised his hat. Crashaw
did not imitate his example; he was all officiousness,
he had the air of a chief superintendent of police.
“Oh! Mrs. Stott, we should
like to come in for a few minutes. Mr. Challis
would like to see your child.”
“Damn the fool!” was Challis’s
thought, but he gave it less abrupt expression.
“That is, of course, if it is quite convenient
to you, Mrs. Stott. I can come at some other
time....”
“Please walk in, sir,”
replied Mrs. Stott, and curtsied again as she stood
aside.
Superintendent Crashaw led the way....
Challis called again next day, by
himself this time; and the day after he dropped in
at six o’clock while Mr. and Mrs. Stott were
at tea. He put them at their ease by some magic
of his personality, and insisted that they should
continue their meal while he sat among the collapsed
springs of the horsehair armchair. He leaned forward,
swinging his stick as a pendulum between his knees,
and shot out questions as to the Stotts’ relations
with the neighbours. And always he had an attentive
eye on the cradle that stood near the fire.
“The neighbours are not highly
intelligent, I suspect,” said Challis.
“Even Mr. Crashaw, I fancy, does not appreciate
the-peculiarities of the situation.”
“He’s worse than any,”
interpolated Stott. Ellen Mary sat in the shadow;
there was a new light in her eyes, a foretaste of glory.
“Ah! a little narrow, a little
dogmatic, no doubt,” replied Challis. “I
was going to propose that you might prefer to live
at Pym.”
“Much farther for me,”
muttered Stott. He had mixed with nobility on
the cricket field, and was not overawed.
“No doubt; but you have other
interests to consider, interests of far greater importance.”
Challis shifted his gaze from the cradle, and looked
Stott in the face. “I understand that Mrs.
Stott does not care to take her child out in the village.
Isn’t that so?”
“Yes, sir,” replied Ellen,
to whom this question was addressed. “I
don’t care to make an exhibition of ’im.”
“Quite right, quite right,”
went on Challis, “but it is very necessary that
the child should have air. I consider it very
necessary, a matter of the first importance that the
child should have air,” he repeated. His
gaze had shifted back to the cradle again. The
child lay with open eyes, staring up at the ceiling.
“Now, there is an excellent
cottage at Pym which I will have put in repair for
you at once,” continued Challis. “It
is one of two together, but next door there are only
old Metcalfe and his wife and daughter, who will give
you no trouble. And really, Mrs. Stott,”
he tore his regard from the cradle for a moment, “there
is no reason in the world why you should fear the
attention of your neighbours. Here, in Stoke,
I admit, they have been under a complete misapprehension,
but I fancy that there were special reasons for that.
In Pym you will have few neighbours, and you need
not, I’m sure, fear their criticism.”
“They got one idiot there, already,”
Stott remarked somewhat sulkily.
“You surely do not regard your
own child as likely to develop into an idiot, Stott!”
Challis’s tone was one of rebuke.
Stott shifted in his chair and his
eyes flickered uncertainly in the direction of the
cradle. “Dr. O’Connell says ’twill,”
he said.
“When did he see the child last?” asked
Challis.
“Not since ’twere a week old, sir,”
replied Ellen.
“In that case his authority
goes for nothing, and, then, by the way, I suppose
the child has not been vaccinated?”
“Not yet, sir.”
“Better have that done.
Get Walters. I’ll make myself responsible.
I’ll get him to come.”
Before Challis left, it was decided
that the Stotts should move to Pym in February.
When the great landowner had gone,
Mrs. Stott looked wistfully at her husband.
“You ain’t fair to the
child, George,” she said. “There’s
more than you or any one sees, more than Mr. Challis,
even.”
Stott stared moodily into the fire.
“And it won’t be so out
of the way far for you, at Pym, with your bike,”
she continued; “and we can’t stop
’ere.”
“We might ’a took a place in Ailesworth,”
said Stott.
“But it’ll be so much
’ealthier for ’im up at Pym,” protested
Ellen. “It’ll be fine air up there
for ’im.”
“Oh! ’im.
Yes, all right for ’im,” said Stott,
and spat into the fire. Then he took his cap
and went out. He kept his eyes away from the
cradle.
IV
Harvey Walters lived in Wenderby,
but his consulting-rooms were in Harley Street, and
he did not practise in his own neighbourhood; nevertheless
he vaccinated Victor Stott to oblige Challis.
“Well?” asked Challis
a few days later, “what do you make of him,
Walters? No cliches, now, and no professional
jargon.”
“Candidly, I don’t know,”
replied Walters, after a thoughtful interval.
“How many times have you seen him?”
“Four, altogether.”
“Good patient? Healthy flesh and that sort
of thing?”
“Splendid.”
“Did he look you in the eyes?”
“Once, only once, the first time I visited the
house.”
Challis nodded. “My own
experience, exactly. And did you return that
look of his?”
“Not willingly. It was,
I confess, not altogether a pleasant experience.”
“Ah!”
Challis was silent for a few moments,
and it was Walters who took up the interrogatory.
“Challis!”
“Yes?”
“Have you, now, some feeling
of, shall I say, distaste for the child? Do you
feel that you have no wish to see it again?”
“Is it that exactly?” parried Challis.
“If not, what is it?” asked Walters.
“In my own case,” said
Challis, “I can find an analogy only in my attitude
towards my ‘head’ at school. In his
presence I was always intimidated by my consciousness
of his superior learning. I felt unpleasantly
ignorant, small, negligible. Curiously enough,
I see something of the same expression of feeling
in the attitude of that feeble Crashaw to myself.
Well, one makes an attempt at self-assertion, a kind
of futile bragging; and one knows the futility of it-at
the time. But, afterwards, one finds excuse and
seeks to belittle the personality and attainment of
the person one feared. At school we did not love
the ‘head,’ and, as schoolboys will, we
were always trying to run him down. ‘Next
time he rags me, I’ll cheek him,’ was our
usual boast-but we never did. Let’s
be honest, Walters, are not you and I exhibiting much
the same attitude towards this extraordinary child?
Didn’t he produce the effect upon you that I’ve
described? Didn’t you have a little of
the ‘fifth form’ feeling,-a
boy under examination?”
Walters smiled and screwed his mouth
on one side. “The thing is so absurd,”
he said.
“That is what we used to say at school,”
replied Challis.
V
The Stotts’ move to Pym was
not marked by any incident. Mrs. Stott and her
boy were not unduly stared upon as they left Stoke-the
children were in school-and their entry
into the new cottage was uneventful.
They moved on a Thursday. On
Sunday morning they had their first visitor.
He came mooning round the fence that
guarded the Stotts’ garden from the little lane-it
was hardly more than a footpath. He had a great
shapeless head that waggled heavily on his shoulders,
his eyes were lustreless, and his mouth hung open,
frequently his tongue lagged out. He made strange,
inhuman noises. “A-ba-ba,”
was his nearest approach to speech.
“Now, George,” called
Mrs. Stott, “look at that. It’s Mrs.
’Arrison’s boy what Mrs. Reade’s
spoke about. Now, is ’e anythink like ...”
she paused, “anythink like ’im?”
and she indicated the cradle in the sitting-room.
“What’s ’e want,
‘angin’ round ’ere?” replied
Stott, disregarding the comparison. “’Ere,
get off,” he called, and he went into the garden
and picked up a stick.
The idiot shambled away.