HIS PASTORS AND MASTERS
I
For many months after that long afternoon
in the library, Challis was affected with a fever
of restlessness, and his work on the book stood still.
He was in Rome during May, and in June he was seized
by a sudden whim and went to China by the Trans-Siberian
railway. Lewes did not accompany him. Challis
preferred, one imagines, to have no intercourse with
Lewes while the memory of certain pronouncements was
still fresh. He might have been tempted to discuss
that interview, and if, as was practically certain,
Lewes attempted to pour contempt on the whole affair,
Challis might have been drawn into a defence which
would have revived many memories he wished to obliterate.
He came back to London in September-he
made the return journey by steamer-and
found his secretary still working at the monograph
on the primitive peoples of Melanesia.
Lewes had spent the whole summer in
Challis’s town house in Eaton Square, whither
all the material had been removed two days after that
momentous afternoon in the library of Challis Court.
“I have been wanting your help
badly for some time, sir,” Lewes said on the
evening of Challis’s return. “Are
you proposing to take up the work again? If not
...” Gregory Lewes thought he was wasting
valuable time.
“Yes, yes, of course; I am ready
to begin again now, if you care to go on with me,”
said Challis. He talked for a few minutes of the
book without any great show of interest. Presently
they came to a pause, and Lewes suggested that he
should give some account of how his time had been
spent.
“To-morrow,” replied Challis,
“to-morrow will be time enough. I shall
settle down again in a few days.” He hesitated
a moment, and then said: “Any news from
Chilborough?”
“N-no, I don’t think so,”
returned Lewes. He was occupied with his own
interests; he doubted Challis’s intention to
continue his work on the book-the announcement
had been so half-hearted.
“What about that child?” asked Challis.
“That child?” Lewes appeared
to have forgotten the existence of Victor Stott.
“That abnormal child of Stott’s?”
prompted Challis.
“Oh! Of course, yes.
I believe he still goes nearly every day to the library.
I have been down there two or three times, and found
him reading. He has learned the use of the index-catalogue.
He can get any book he wants. He uses the steps.”
“Do you know what he reads?”
“No; I can’t say I do.”
“What do you think will become of him?”
“Oh! these infant prodigies,
you know,” said Lewes with a large air of authority,
“they all go the same way. Most of them
die young, of course, the others develop into ordinary
commonplace men rather under than over the normal
ability. After all, it is what one would expect.
Nature always maintains her average by some means
or another. If a child like this with his abnormal
memory were to go on developing, there would be no
place for him in the world’s economy. The
idea is inconceivable.”
“Quite, quite,” murmured
Challis, and after a short silence he added:
“You think he will deteriorate, that his faculties
will decay prematurely?”
“I should say there could be
no doubt of it,” replied Lewes.
“Ah! well. I’ll go
down and have a look at him, one day next week,”
said Challis; but he did not go till the middle of
October.
The immediate cause of his going was
a letter from Crashaw, who offered to come up to town,
as the matter was one of “really peculiar urgency.”
“I wonder if young Stott has
been blaspheming again,” Challis remarked to
Lewes. “Wire the man that I’ll go
down and see him this afternoon. I shall motor.
Say I’ll be at Stoke about half-past three.”
II
Challis was ushered into Crashaw’s
study on his arrival, and found the rector in company
with another man-introduced as Mr. Forman-a
jolly-looking, high-complexioned man of sixty or so,
with a great quantity of white hair on his head and
face; he was wearing an old-fashioned morning-coat
and grey trousers that were noticeably too short for
him.
Crashaw lost no time in introducing
the subject of “really peculiar urgency,”
but he rambled in his introduction.
“You have probably forgotten,”
he said, “that last spring I had to bring a
most horrible charge against a child called Victor
Stott, who has since been living, practically, as
I may say, under your aegis, that is, he has, at least,
spent a greater part of his day, er-playing
in your library at Challis Court.”
“Quite, quite; I remember perfectly,”
said Challis. “I made myself responsible
for him up to a certain point. I gave him an occupation.
It was intended, was it not, to divert his mind from
speaking against religion to the yokels?”
“Quite a character, if I may
say so,” put in Mr. Forman cheerfully.
Crashaw was seated at his study table;
the affair had something the effect of an examining
magistrate taking the evidence of witnesses.
“Yes, yes,” he said testily;
“I did ask your help, Mr. Challis, and I did,
in a way, receive some assistance from you. That
is, the child has to some extent been isolated by
spending so much of his time at your house.”
“Has he broken out again?” asked Challis.
“If I understand you to mean
has the child been speaking openly on any subject
connected with religion, I must say ‘No,’”
said Crashaw. “But he never attends any
Sunday school, or place of worship; he has received
no instruction in-er-any sacred
subject, though I understand he is able to read; and
his time is spent among books which, pardon me, would
not, I suppose, be likely to give a serious turn to
his thoughts.”
“Serious?” questioned Challis.
“Perhaps I should say ‘religious,’”
replied Crashaw. “To me the two words are
synonymous.”
Mr. Forman bowed his head slightly
with an air of reverence, and nodded two or three
times to express his perfect approval of the rector’s
sentiments.
“You think the child’s
mind is being perverted by his intercourse with the
books in the library where he-he-’plays’
was your word, I believe?”
“No, not altogether,”
replied Crashaw, drawing his eyebrows together.
“We can hardly suppose that he is able at so
tender an age to read, much less to understand, those
works of philosophy and science which would produce
an evil effect on his mind. I am willing to admit,
since I, too, have had some training in scientific
reading, that writers on those subjects are not easily
understood even by the mature intelligence.”
“Then why, exactly, do you wish
me to prohibit the child from coming to Challis Court?”
“Possibly you have not realised
that the child is now five years old?” said
Crashaw with an air of conferring illumination.
“Indeed! Yes. An age
of some discretion, no doubt,” returned Challis.
“An age at which the State requires
that he should receive the elements of education,”
continued Crashaw.
“Eh?” said Challis.
“Time he went to school,”
explained Mr. Forman. “I’ve been after
him, you know. I’m the attendance officer
for this district.”
Challis for once committed a breach
of good manners. The import of the thing suddenly
appealed to his sense of humour: he began to chuckle
and then he laughed out a great, hearty laugh, such
as had not been stirred in him for twenty years.
“Oh! forgive me, forgive me,”
he said, when he had recovered his self-control.
“But you don’t know; you can’t conceive
the utter, childish absurdity of setting that child
to recite the multiplication table with village infants
of his own age. Oh! believe me, if you could
only guess, you would laugh with me. It’s
so funny, so inimitably funny.”
“I fail to see, Mr. Challis,”
said Crashaw, “that there is anything in any
way absurd or-or unusual in the proposition.”
“Five is the age fixed by the
State,” said Mr. Forman. He had relaxed
into a broad smile in sympathy with Challis’s
laugh, but he had now relapsed into a fair imitation
of Crashaw’s intense seriousness.
“Oh! How can I explain?”
said Challis. “Let me take an instance.
You propose to teach him, among other things, the
elements of arithmetic?”
“It is a part of the curriculum,” replied
Mr. Forman.
“I have only had one conversation
with this child,” went on Challis-and
at the mention of that conversation his brows drew
together and he became very grave again; “but
in the course of that conversation this child had
occasion to refer, by way of illustration, to some
abstruse theorem of the differential calculus.
He did it, you will understand, by way of making his
meaning clear-though the illustration was
utterly beyond me: that reference represented
an act of intellectual condescension.”
“God bless me, you don’t say so?”
said Mr. Forman.
“I cannot see,” said Crashaw,
“that this instance of yours, Mr. Challis, has
any real bearing on the situation. If the child
is a mathematical genius-there have been
instances in history, such as Blaise Pascal-he
would not, of course, receive elementary instruction
in a subject with which he was already acquainted.”
“You could not find any subject,
believe me, Crashaw, in which he could be instructed
by any teacher in a Council school.”
“Forgive me, I don’t agree
with you,” returned Crashaw. “He is
sadly in need of some religious training.”
“He would not get that at a
Council school,” said Challis, and Mr. Forman
shook his head sadly, as though he greatly deprecated
the fact.
“He must learn to recognise
authority,” said Crashaw. “When he
has been taught the necessity of submitting himself
to all his governors, teachers, spiritual pastors,
and masters: ordering himself lowly and reverently
to all his betters; when, I say, he has learnt that
lesson, he may be in a fit and proper condition to
receive the teachings of the Holy Church.”
Mr. Forman appeared to think he was
attending divine service. If the rector had said
“Let us pray,” there can be no doubt that
he would immediately have fallen on his knees.
Challis shook his head. “You
can’t understand, Crashaw,” he said.
“I do understand,”
said Crashaw, rising to his feet, “and I intend
to see that the statute is not disobeyed in the case
of this child, Victor Stott.”
Challis shrugged his shoulders; Mr.
Forman assumed an expression of stern determination.
“In any case, why drag me into it?” asked
Challis.
Crashaw sat down again. The flush
which had warmed his sallow skin subsided as his passion
died out. He had worked himself into a condition
of righteous indignation, but the calm politeness of
Challis rebuked him. If Crashaw prided himself
on his devotion to the Church, he did not wish that
attitude to overshadow the pride he also took in the
belief that he was Challis’s social equal.
Crashaw’s father had been a lawyer, with a fair
practice in Derby, but he had worked his way up to
a partnership from the position of office-boy, and
Percy Crashaw seldom forgot to be conscious that he
was a gentleman by education and profession.
“I did not wish to drag
you into this business,” he said quietly, putting
his elbows on the writing-table in front of him, and
reassuming the judicial attitude he had adopted earlier;
“but I regard this child as, in some sense,
your protege.” Crashaw put the tips of his
fingers together, and Mr. Forman watched him warily,
waiting for his cue. If this was to be a case
for prayer, Mr. Forman was ready, with a clean white
handkerchief to kneel upon.
“In some sense, perhaps,”
returned Challis. “I haven’t seen
him for some months.”
“Cannot you see the necessity
of his attending school?” asked Crashaw, this
time with an insinuating suavity; he believed that
Challis was coming round.
“Oh!” Challis sighed with
a note of expostulation. “Oh! the thing’s
grotesque, ridiculous.”
“If that’s so,”
put in Mr. Forman, who had been struck by a brilliant
idea, “why not bring the child here, and let
the Reverend Mr. Crashaw, or myself, put a few general
questions to ’im?”
“Ye-es,” hesitated
Crashaw, “that might be done; but, of course,
the decision does not rest with us.”
“It rests with the Local Authority,”
mused Challis. He was running over three or four
names of members of that body who were known to him.
“Certainly,” said Crashaw,
“the Local Education Authority alone has the
right to prosecute, but -”
He did not state his antithesis. They had come
to the crux which Crashaw had wished to avoid.
He had no influence with the committee of the L.E.A.,
and Challis’s recommendation would have much
weight. Crashaw intended that Victor Stott should
attend school, but he had bungled his preliminaries;
he had rested on his own authority, and forgotten
that Challis had little respect for that influence.
Conciliation was the only card to play now.
“If I brought him, he wouldn’t
answer your questions,” sighed Challis.
“He’s very difficult to deal with.”
“Is he, indeed?” sympathised
Mr. Forman. “I’ve ’ardly seen
’im myself; not to speak to, that is.”
“He might come with his mother,” suggested
Crashaw.
Challis shook his head. “By
the way, it is the mother whom you would proceed against?”
he asked.
“The parent is responsible,”
said Mr. Forman. “She will be brought before
a magistrate and fined for the first offence.”
“I shan’t fine her if
she comes before me,” replied Challis.
Crashaw smiled. He meant to avoid that eventuality.
The little meeting lapsed into a brief
silence. There seemed to be nothing more to say.
“Well,” said Crashaw,
at last, with a rising inflexion that had a conciliatory,
encouraging, now-my-little-man kind of air, “We-ll,
of course, no one wishes to proceed to extremes.
I think, Mr. Challis, I think I may say that you are
the person who has most influence in this matter,
and I cannot believe that you will go against the established
authority both of the Church and the State. If
it were only for the sake of example.”
Challis rose deliberately. He
shook his head, and unconsciously his hands went behind
his back. There was hardly room for him to pace
up and down, but he took two steps towards Mr. Forman,
who immediately rose to his feet; and then turned
and went over to the window. It was from there
that he pronounced his ultimatum.
“Regulations, laws, religious
and lay authorities,” he said, “come into
existence in order to deal with the rule, the average.
That must be so. But if we are a reasoning, intellectual
people we must have some means of dealing with the
exception. That means rests with a consensus of
intelligent opinion strong enough to set the rule upon
one side. In an overwhelming majority of cases
there is no such consensus of opinion, and
the exceptional individual suffers by coming within
the rule of a law which should not apply to him.
Now, I put it to you, as reasoning, intelligent men”
(’ear, ’ear, murmured Mr. Forman automatically),
“are we, now that we have the power to perform
a common act of justice, to exempt an unfortunate
individual exception who has come within the rule
of a law that holds no application for him, or are
we to exhibit a crass stupidity by enforcing that
law? Is it not better to take the case into our
own hands, and act according to the dictates of common
sense?”
“Very forcibly put,” murmured Mr. Forman.
“I’m not finding any fault
with the law or the principle of the law,” continued
Challis; “but it is, it must be, framed for the
average. We must use our discretion in dealing
with the exception-and this is an exception
such as has never occurred since we have had an Education
Act.”
“I don’t agree with you,”
said Crashaw, stubbornly. “I do not consider
this an exception.”
“But you must agree with
me, Crashaw. I have a certain amount of influence
and I shall use it.”
“In that case,” replied
Crashaw, rising to his feet, “I shall fight you
to the bitter end. I am determined”-he
raised his voice and struck the writing-table with
his fist-“I am determined that
this infidel child shall go to school. I am prepared,
if necessary, to spend all my leisure in seeing that
the law is carried out.”
Mr. Forman had also risen. “Very
right, very right, indeed,” he said, and he
knitted his mild brows and stroked his patriarchal
white beard with an appearance of stern determination.
“I think you would be better
advised to let the matter rest,” said Challis.
Mr. Forman looked inquiringly at the
representative of the Church.
“I shall fight,” replied Crashaw, stubbornly,
fiercely.
“Ha!” said Mr. Forman.
“Very well, as you think best,” was Challis’s
last word.
As Challis walked down to the gate,
where his motor was waiting for him, Mr. Forman trotted
up from behind and ranged himself alongside.
“More rain wanted yet for the
roots, sir,” he said. “September was
a grand month for ’arvest, but we want rain
badly now.”
“Quite, quite,” murmured
Challis, politely. He shook hands with Mr. Forman
before he got into the car.
Mr. Forman, standing politely bareheaded,
saw that Mr. Challis’s car went in the direction
of Ailesworth.