During the winter of 1869-70 it seems
that Posh conceived the idea that the capital of the
firm of FitzGerald and Fletcher justified the working
partner in increasing the stock-in-trade. A boat-building
company at Southwold put up some craft at auction,
and among them was one which had already seen a good
deal of sea service named the Henrietta.
This Posh bought for about 100 pounds without consulting
his partner. It transpired afterwards that the
sale was not acceptable to all the shareholders of
the company that owned the boat, especially to a Jerry
Cole, one of the principal shareholders, and there
was a good deal of bother for Posh in obtaining delivery
of his purchase. It may be as well to include
all the letters relating to this transaction in one
chapter without regard to dates.
The first is dated February 1st that
is to say, February 1st, 1870 and was written
at Woodbridge by FitzGerald to his partner. The
letter, as handed to me by Posh, was incomplete, and
lacked signature. No doubt the second sheet
had been lost with those “sackfuls.”
“WOODBRIDGE, February
1_st_.
“MY DEAR POSH,
“Mr. Spalding was with me last
night; and I asked him if I was justified in the
scolding I gave you about buying the Lugger and Nets
too; telling him the particulars. He would
not go so far as to say I was wrong; but
he thought that you were not to blame either.
Therefore I consider that I was wrong; and,
as I told you, I am very glad to find myself wrong,
though very sorry to have been so: and I cannot
let a day pass without writing to say so. You
may think that I had better have said nothing to
anybody about it: but I always do ask of another
if I am right. If Mr. Spalding had been at Lowestoft
at the time all this would not have happened:
as it has happened, I wish to take all the
blame on myself.
“All this will make you wish the
more to be quit of such a Partner. I
am sure, however, that I thought myself right:
and am glad to recant. Perhaps another Partner
would not do so much: but you say you will
not have another.
“Mr. Spalding thinks you would
have done better to stick to one Lugger,
considering the double trouble of two. But he
says he is not a proper judge. I think
the chief evil is that this new Boat will keep
you ashore in the Net-room, which I am persuaded hurts
you. I told you I was sure the Dust
of the nets hurt you: and (oddly enough) the
first thing I saw, on opening a Paper here on my return,
was a Report on the influence of Dust in
causing Disease. I hope you have seen the
Doctor and told him all about last Summer’s
Illness. Let me hear what he says. I
should have advised Worthington, but he
is very expensive. One thing I am sure of:
the more you eat, and the less you drink,
the better.”
Even here, when Posh had obviously
gone beyond his rights and bought another boat without
consultation with his capitalist partner, FitzGerald
shows his anxiety and solicitude for the man.
There is a good deal of dust
flying about the net chambers; for the cutch and oil
and thread all shred off and poison the air.
“Why,” said Posh the other day, “he
bought me one o’ them things that goo oover the
mouth” (a respirator), “but lor!
I should ha’ been ashamed ta be seed a
wearin’ on it!”
Dr. Worthington referred to in the
letter is one of a long line of medical practitioners,
and was the Lowestoft medical attendant of FitzGerald
himself. I have experienced great kindness from
both this Dr. Worthington and his son Dr. Dick Worthington.
The former tells me that FitzGerald would never enter
his house, but would stand on the doorstep to consult.
He had no objection to the doctor entering his (FitzGerald’s)
lodgings, and on one occasion when Dr. Worthington
called on him at 12 Marine Terrace the doctor saw
all his medicine bottles unopened in a row.
“You know this isn’t fair to me,”
said the justly irritated doctor. “I do
what I can for you, and you won’t take my medicines.”
“My dear doctor,” said FitzGerald, “it
does me good to see you.”
Dr. Aldis Wright says that this is
merely an instance of FitzGerald’s rule that
he would never enter the house of his equal.
Of course his “social” equal is inferred,
for the rule would have been unnecessary if the “equal”
bore another significance. His inferiors in station
he would visit and charm by his manner and speech.
But the house of a society equal he avoided, lest
he should be compelled, for mere courtesy, to go where
he would not.
I have, of course, chuckled over the
opinion that Dr. Worthington senior was “very
expensive.” But I believe that FitzGerald
was one of those (I might almost say “of us”)
who regarded all doctor’s bills as luxuries!
At all events, if FitzGerald was right, I can say
that Dr. Dick Worthington is not atavistic in this
particular!
Mr. Spalding’s opinion inclined
FitzGerald to make no difficulty about finding the
money for the Henrietta. He lodged it
at his bankers’ for Posh to draw when occasion
required. But Posh seems to have been a little
in advance. There is no heading whatever to the
following letter.
“DEAR POSH,
“I don’t understand your
letter. That which I had on Friday, enclosing
Mr. Craigie’s, said that you had not drawn
the money, your letter of To-day tells me
that you had drawn the money, before the
Letter from Southwold came. Was not that
letter Mr. Craigie’s letter?
“Anyhow, I think you ought not
(after all I have said) to have drawn the money
(to keep in your house) till you wanted it. And
you could have got it at the Bank any morning
on which you got another letter from Southwold,
telling you the business was to be settled.
“Moreover, I think you should have
written me on Saturday, in answer to my
letter. You are very good in attending to any
letters of mine about stores, or fish, which I
don’t care about. But you somehow do not
attend so regularly to things which I do care
about, such as gales of wind in which you are out,
and such directions as I have given over and over
again about money matters.
“However, I don’t mean
to kick up another row; provided you now do,
and at once, what I positively desire.
“Which is; to take the money directly
to Mr. Barnard, and ask him, as from me,
to pay it to my account at Messrs. Bacon and Cobbold’s
Bank at Woodbridge. Then if you tell me the
address of the Auctioneer or Agent, at Southwold
who manage [sic] the business, Bacon and Cobbold
will write to them at once that the money
is ready for them directly the Lugger is ready
for you. And, write me a line to-morrow to say
that this is done.
“This makes a trouble to you,
and to me, and to Bankers, but I think
you must blame yourself for not
attending to my directions. But I am
yours not the less.
“E. FG.
Mr. Craigie was an old Southwold friend
of the Fletcher family, with whom Fletcher senior
(Posh’s father) had spent Christmas for over
forty years. The criticism of Posh’s system
appears, to the impartial critic, to be both painful
and true. But Posh, in this case, was not altogether
to blame. This Mr. Jerry Cole, before mentioned,
was keeping things back. He had a preponderating
interest in that Southwold company, and he thought
that the Henrietta had been sold too cheap,
and that hung up the delivery. At least that’s
what Posh tells me, and at this date I can’t
get any better evidence than his.
Shortly after the last letter FitzGerald
wrote again. Now his kind anxiety about this
man, whom he still loved, outweighed all thought of
money. It was a bitter winter, and Posh, he thought,
was not over-hale.
“WOODBRIDGE, Saturday.
“DEAR CAPTAIN,
“Whatever is to be done about the
money, do not you go over to Southwold while this
weather lasts. I think it is colder than I ever
knew. Don’t go, I say there
can be no hurry for the boat (even if you can
get it) for a a [sic] week or so. Perhaps
it may be as well at Southwold as at Lowestoft.
“I wish you were here to play
Allfours with me To-night.
“Yours,
“E. FG.”
Posh got the lugger in March, 1870, and on March 2nd
FitzGerald wrote to Mr. Spalding: “Posh
has, I believe, gone off to Southwold in hope to bring
his Lugger home. I advised him last night to
ascertain first by letter whether she were ready
for his hands; but you know he will go his own way,
and that generally is as good as anybody’s.
He now works all day in his Net-loft: and I wonder
how he keeps as well as he is, shut up there from
fresh air and among frowsy Nets. . . . I think
he has mistaken in not sending the Meum and Tuum
to the West this spring. . . . But I have not
meddled, nor indeed is it my Business to meddle now.
. . .”
I think this must have been written
about the date of the letter with which I commence
the next chapter, or possibly a little later.
It would, almost certainly, be after the catches
of mackerel mentioned by “Mr. Manby” as
hereinafter appears, and, very likely, after the termination
of the partnership.