HOW THE MAN IN GREY MADE READY FOR HIS GOING.
The eighteen months that followed for
the end came sooner than we had expected were,
I think, the happiest days my father and mother had
ever known; or if happy be not altogether the right
word, let me say the most beautiful, and most nearly
perfect. To them it was as though God in His
sweet thoughtfulness had sent death to knock lightly
at the door, saying: “Not yet. You
have still a little longer to be together. In
a little while.” In those last days all
things false and meaningless they laid aside.
Nothing was of real importance to them but that they
should love each other, comforting each other, learning
to understand each other. Again we lived poorly;
but there was now no pitiful straining to keep up
appearances, no haunting terror of what the neighbours
might think. The petty cares and worries concerning
matters not worth a moment’s thought, the mean
desires and fears with which we disfigure ourselves,
fell from them. There came to them broader thought,
a wider charity, a deeper pity. Their love grew
greater even than their needs, overflowing towards
at things. Sometimes, recalling these months,
it has seemed to me that we make a mistake seeking
to keep Death, God’s go-between, ever from our
thoughts. Is it not closing the door to a friend
who would help us would we let him (for who knows life
so well), whispering to us: “In a little
while. Only a little longer that you have to
be together. Is it worth taking so much thought
for self? Is it worth while being unkind?”
From them a graciousness emanated
pervading all around. Even my aunt Fan decided
for the second time in her career to give amiability
a trial. This intention she announced publicly
to my mother and myself one afternoon soon after our
return from Devonshire.
“I’m a beast of an old woman,” said
my aunt, suddenly.
“Don’t say that, Fan,” urged my
mother.
“What’s the good of saying
‘Don’t say it’ when I’ve just
said it,” snapped back my aunt.
“It’s your manner,”
explained my mother; “people sometimes think
you disagreeable.”
“They’d be daft if they
didn’t,” interrupted my aunt. “Of
course you don’t really mean it,” continued
my mother.
“Stuff and nonsense,”
snorted my aunt; “does she think I’m a
fool. I like being disagreeable. I like
to see ’em squirming.”
My mother laughed.
“I can be agreeable,” continued my aunt,
“if I choose. Nobody more so.”
“Then why not choose?”
suggested my mother. “I tried it once,”
said my aunt, “and it fell flat. Nothing
could have fallen flatter.”
“It may not have attracted much
attention,” replied my mother, with a smile,
“but one should not be agreeable merely to attract
attention.”
“It wasn’t only that,”
returned my aunt, “it was that it gave no satisfaction
to anybody. It didn’t suit me. A disagreeable
person is at their best when they are disagreeable.”
“I can hardly agree with you there,” answered
my mother.
“I could do it again,”
communed my aunt to herself. There was a suggestion
of vindictiveness in her tones. “It’s
easy enough. Look at the sort of fools that are
agreeable.”
“I’m sure you could be if you tried,”
urged my mother.
“Let ’em have it,”
continued my aunt, still to herself; “that’s
the way to teach ’em sense. Let ’em
have it.”
And strange though it may seem, my
aunt was right and my mother altogether wrong.
My father was the first to notice the change.
“Nothing the matter with poor
old Fan, is there?” he asked. It was one
evening a day or two after my aunt had carried her
threat into effect. “Nothing happened,
has there?”
“No,” answered my mother, “nothing
that I know of.”
“Her manner is so strange,” explained
my father, “so so weird.”
My mother smiled. “Don’t
say anything to her. She’s trying to be
agreeable.”
My father laughed and then looked
wistful. “I almost wish she wouldn’t,”
he remarked; “we were used to it, and she was
rather amusing.”
But my aunt, being a woman of will,
kept her way; and about the same time that occurred
tending to confirm her in her new departure. This
was the introduction into our small circle of James
Wellington Gadley. Properly speaking, it should
have been Wellington James, that being the order in
which he had been christened in the year 1815.
But in course of time, and particularly during his
school career, it had been borne in upon him that
Wellington is a burdensome name for a commonplace mortal
to bear, and very wisely he had reversed the arrangement.
He was a slightly pompous but simpleminded little
old gentleman, very proud of his position as head
clerk to Mr. Stillwood, the solicitor to whom my father
was now assistant. Stillwood, Waterhead and Royal
dated back to the Georges, and was a firm bound up
with the history occasionally shady of
aristocratic England. True, in these later years
its glory was dwindling. Old Mr. Stillwood, its
sole surviving representative, declined to be troubled
with new partners, explaining frankly, in answer to
all applications, that the business was a dying one,
and that attempting to work it up again would be but
putting new wine into worn-out skins. But though
its clientele was a yearly diminishing quantity, much
business yet remained to it, and that of a good class,
its name being still a synonym for solid respectability;
and my father had deemed himself fortunate indeed
in securing such an appointment. James Gadley
had entered the firm as office boy in the days of its
pride, and had never awakened to the fact that it was
not still the most important legal firm within the
half mile radius from Lombard Street. Nothing
delighted him more than to discuss over and over again
the many strange affairs in which Stillwood, Waterhead
and Royal had been concerned, all of which he had
at his tongue’s tip. Could he find a hearer,
these he would reargue interminably, but with professional
reticence, personages becoming Mr. Y. and Lady X.;
and places, “the capital of, let us say, a foreign
country,” or “a certain town not a thousand
miles from where we are now sitting.” The
majority of his friends, his methods being somewhat
forensic, would seek to discourage him, but my aunt
was a never wearied listener, especially if the case
were one involving suspicion of mystery and crime.
When, during their very first conversation, he exclaimed:
“Now why why, after keeping away
from his wife for nearly eighteen years, never even
letting her know whether he was alive or dead, why
this sudden resolve to return to her? That is
what I want explained to me!” he paused, as was
his wont, for sympathetic comment, my aunt, instead
of answering as others, with a yawn: “Oh,
I’m sure I don’t know. Felt he wanted
to see her, I suppose,” replied with prompt
intelligence:
“To murder her by slow poison.”
“To murder her! But why?”
“In order to marry the other woman.”
“What other woman?”
“The woman he had just met and
fallen in love with. Before that it was immaterial
to him what had become of his wife. This woman
had said to him: ‘Come back to me a free
man or never see my face again.’”
“Dear me! Now that’s very curious.”
“Nothing of the sort. Plain common sense.”
“I mean, it’s curious
because, as a matter of fact, his wife did die a little
later, and he did marry again.”
“Told you so,” remarked my aunt.
In this way every case in the Stillwood
annals was reviewed, and light thrown upon it by my
aunt’s insight into the hidden springs of human
action. Fortunate that the actors remained mere
Mr. X. and Lady Y., for into the most innocent seeming
behaviour my aunt read ever dark criminal intent.
“I think you are a little too
severe,” Mr. Gadley would now and then plead.
“We’re all of us miserable
sinners,” my aunt would cheerfully affirm; “only
we don’t all get the same chances.”
An elderly maiden lady, a Miss Z.,
residing in “a western town once famous as the
resort of fashion, but which we will not name,”
my aunt was convinced had burnt down a house containing
a will, and forged another under which her children should
she ever marry and be blessed with such would
inherit among them on coming of age a fortune of seven
hundred pounds.
The freshness of her views on this,
his favourite topic, always fascinated Mr. Gadley.
“I have to thank you, ma’am,”
he would remark on rising, “for a most delightful
conversation. I may not be able to agree with
your conclusions, but they afford food for reflection.”
To which my aunt would reply, “I
hate talking to any one who agrees with me. It’s
like taking a walk to see one’s own looking-glass.
I’d rather talk to somebody who didn’t,
even if he were a fool,” which for her was gracious.
He was a stout little gentleman with
a stomach that protruded about a foot in front of
him, and of this he appeared to be quite unaware.
Nor would it have mattered had it not been for his
desire when talking to approach as close to his listener
as possible. Gradually in the course of conversation,
his stomach acting as a gentle battering ram, he would
in this way drive you backwards round the room, sometimes,
unless you were artful, pinning you hopelessly into
a corner, when it would surprise him that in spite
of all his efforts he never succeeded in getting any
nearer to you. His first evening at our house
he was talking to my aunt from the corner of his chair.
As he grew more interested so he drew his chair nearer
and nearer, till at length, having withdrawn inch
by inch to avoid his encroachments, my aunt was sitting
on the extreme edge of her own. His next move
sent her on to the floor. She said nothing, which
surprised me; but on the occasion of his next visit
she was busy darning stockings, an unusual occupation
for her. He approached nearer and nearer as before;
but this time she sat her ground, and it was he who
in course of time sprang back with an exclamation
foreign to the subject under discussion.
Ever afterwards my aunt met him with
stockings in her hand, and they talked with a space
between their chairs.
Nothing further came of it, though
his being a widower added to their intercourse that
spice of possibility no woman is ever too old to relish;
but that he admired her intellectually was evident.
Once he even went so far as to exclaim: “Miss
Davies, you should have been a solicitor’s wife!”
to his thinking the crown of feminine ambition.
To which my aunt had replied: “Chances
are I should have been if one had ever asked me.”
And warmed by appreciation, my aunt’s amiability
took root and flourished, though assuming, as all
growth developed late is apt to, fantastic shape.
There came to her the idea, by no
means ill-founded, that by flattery one can most readily
render oneself agreeable; so conscientiously she set
to work to flatter in season and out. I am sure
she meant to give pleasure, but the effect produced
was that of thinly veiled sarcasm.
My father would relate to us some
trifling story, some incident noticed during the day
that had seemed to him amusing. At once she would
break out into enthusiasm, holding up her hands in
astonishment.
“What a funny man he is!
And to think that it comes to him naturally without
an effort. What a gift it is!”
On my mother appearing in a new bonnet,
or an old one retrimmed, an event not unfrequent;
for in these days my mother took more thought than
ever formerly for her appearance (you will understand,
you women who have loved), she would step back in
simulated amazement.
“Don’t tell me it’s
a married woman with a boy getting on for fourteen.
It’s a girl. A saucy, tripping girl.
That’s what it is.”
Persons have been known, I believe,
whose vanity, not checked in time, has grown into
a hopeless disease. But I am inclined to think
that a dose of my aunt, about this period, would have
cured the most obstinate case.
So also, and solely for our benefit,
she assumed a vivacity and spriteliness that ill suited
her, that having regard to her age and tendency towards
rheumatism must have cost her no small effort.
From these experiences there remains to me the perhaps
immoral opinion that Virtue, in common with all other
things, is at her best when unassuming.
Occasionally the old Adam or
should one say Eve would assert itself in
my aunt, and then, still thoughtful for others, she
would descend into the kitchen and be disagreeable
to Amy, our new servitor, who never minded it.
Amy was a philosopher who reconciled herself to all
things by the reflection that there were only twenty-four
hours in a day. It sounds a dismal theory, but
from it Amy succeeded in extracting perpetual cheerfulness.
My mother would apologise to her for my aunt’s
interference.
“Lord bless you, mum, it don’t
matter. If I wasn’t listening to her something
else worse might be happening. Everything’s
all the same when it’s over.”
Amy had come to us merely as a stop
gap, explaining to my mother that she was about to
be married and desired only a temporary engagement
to bridge over the few weeks between then and the
ceremony.
“It’s rather unsatisfactory,”
had said my mother. “I dislike changes.”
“I can quite understand it,
mum,” had replied Amy; “I dislike ’em
myself. Only I heard you were in a hurry, and
I thought maybe that while you were on the lookout
for somebody permanent ”
So on that understanding she came.
A month later my mother asked her when she thought
the marriage would actually take place.
“Don’t think I’m
wishing you to go,” explained my mother, “indeed
I’d like you to stop. I only want to know
in time to make my arrangements.”
“Oh, some time in the spring,
I expect,” was Amy’s answer.
“Oh!” said my mother,
“I understood it was coming off almost immediately.”
Amy appeared shocked.
“I must know a little bit more
about him before I go as far as that,” she said.
“But I don’t understand,”
said my mother; “you told me when you came to
me that you were going to be married in a few weeks.”
“Oh, that one!” Her tone
suggested that an unfair strain was being put upon
her memory. “I didn’t feel I wanted
him as much as I thought I did when it came to the
point.”
“You had meantime met the other
one?” suggested my mother, with a smile.
“Well, we can’t help our
feelings, can we, mum?” admitted Amy, frankly,
“and what I always say is” she
spoke as one with experience even then “better
change your mind before it’s too late afterwards.”
Amiable, sweet-faced, broad-hearted
Amy! most faithful of friends, but oh! most faithless
of lovers. Age has not withered nor custom staled
her liking for infinite variety. Butchers, bakers,
soldiers, sailors, Jacks of all trades! Does
the sighing procession never pass before you, Amy,
pointing ghostly fingers of reproach! Still Amy
is engaged. To whom at the particular moment
I cannot say, but I fancy to an early one who has
lately become a widower. After more exact knowledge
I do not care to enquire; for to confess ignorance
on the subject, implying that one has treated as a
triviality and has forgotten the most important detail
of a matter that to her is of vital importance, is
to hurt her feelings; while to angle for information
is but to entangle oneself. To speak of Him as
“Tom,” when Tom has belonged for weeks
to the dead and buried past, to hastily correct oneself
to “Dick” when there hasn’t been
a Dick for years, clearly not to know that he is now
Harry, annoys her even more. In my mother’s
time we always referred to him as “Dearest.”
It was the title with which she herself distinguished
them all, and it avoided confusion.
“Well, and how’s Dearest?”
my mother would enquire, opening the door to Amy on
the Sunday evening.
“Oh, very well indeed, mum,
thank you, and he sends you his respects,” or,
“Well, not so nicely as I could wish. I’m
a little anxious about him, poor dear!”
“When you are married you will
be able to take good care of him.”
“That’s really what he
wants some one to take care of him.
It’s what they all want, the poor dears.”
“And when is it coming off?”
“In the spring, mum.” She always
chose the spring when possible.
Amy was nice to all men, and to Amy
all men were nice. Could she have married a dozen,
she might have settled down, with only occasional
regrets concerning those left without in the cold.
But to ask her to select only one out of so many “poor
dears” was to suggest shameful waste of affection.
We had meant to keep our grim secret
to ourselves; but to hide one’s troubles long
from Amy was like keeping cold hands from the fire.
Very soon she knew everything that was to be known,
drawing it all from my mother as from some overburdened
child. Then she put my mother down into a chair
and stood over her.
“Now you leave the house and
everything connected with it to me, mum,” commanded
Amy; “you’ve got something else to do.”
And from that day we were in the hands
of Amy, and had nothing else to do but praise the
Lord for His goodness.
Barbara also found out (from Washburn,
I expect), though she said nothing, but came often.
Old Hasluck would have come himself, I am sure, had
he thought he would be welcome. As it was, he
always sent kind messages and presents of fruit and
flowers by Barbara, and always welcomed me most heartily
whenever she allowed me to see her home.
She brought, as ever, sunshine with
her, making all trouble seem far off and shadowy.
My mother tended to the fire of love, but Barbara lit
the cheerful lamp of laughter.
And with the lessening days my father
seemed to grow younger, life lying lighter on him.
One summer’s night he and I
were walking with Barbara to Poplar station, for sometimes,
when he was not looking tired, she would order him
to fetch his hat and stick, explaining to him with
a caress, “I like them tall and slight and full
grown. The young ones, they don’t know how
to flirt! We will take the boy with us as gooseberry;”
and he, pretending to be anxious that my mother did
not see, would kiss her hand, and slip out quietly
with her arm linked under his. It was admirable
the way he would enter into the spirit of the thing.
The last cloud faded from before the
moon as we turned the corner, and even the East India
Dock Road lay restful in front of us.
“I have always regarded myself,”
said my father, “as a failure in life, and it
has troubled me.” I felt him pulled the
slightest little bit away from me, as though Barbara,
who held his other arm, had drawn him towards her
with a swift pressure. “But do you know
the idea that has come to me within the last few months?
That on the whole I have been successful. I am
like a man,” continued my father, “who
in some deep wood has been frightened, thinking he
has lost his way, and suddenly coming to the end of
it, finds that by some lucky chance he has been guided
to the right point after all. I cannot tell you
what a comfort it is to me.
“What is the right point?” asked Barbara.
“Ah, that I cannot tell you,”
answered my father, with a laugh. “I only
know that for me it is here where I am. All the
time I thought I was wandering away from it I was
drawing nearer to it. It is very wonderful.
I am just where I ought to be. If I had only known
I never need have worried.”
Whether it would have troubled either
him or my mother very much even had it been otherwise
I cannot say, for Life, so small a thing when looked
at beside Death, seemed to have lost all terror for
them; but be that as it may, I like to remember that
Fortune at the last was kind to my father, prospering
his adventures, not to the extent his sanguine nature
had dreamt, but sufficiently: so that no fear
for our future marred the peaceful passing of his
tender spirit.
Or should I award thanks not to Fate,
but rather to sweet Barbara, and behind her do I not
detect shameless old Hasluck, grinning good-naturedly
in the background?
“Now, Uncle Luke, I want your
advice. Dad’s given me this cheque as a
birthday present. I don’t want to spend
it. How shall I invest it?”
“My dear, why not consult your father?”
“Now, Uncle Luke, dad’s
a dear, especially after dinner, but you and I know
him. Giving me a present is one thing, doing business
for me is another. He’d unload on me.
He’d never be able to resist the temptation.”
My father would suggest, and Barbara
would thank him. But a minute later would murmur:
“You don’t know anything about Argentinos.”
My father did not, but Barbara did;
to quite a remarkable extent for a young girl.
“That child has insisted on
leaving this cheque with me and I have advised her
to buy Argentinos,” my father would observe after
she was gone. “I am going to put a few
hundreds into them myself. I hope they will turn
out all right, if only for her sake. I have a
presentiment somehow that they will.”
A month later Barbara would greet
him with: “Isn’t it lucky we bought
Argentinos!”
“Yes; they haven’t turned
out badly, have they? I had a feeling, you know,
for Argentinos.”
“You’re a genius, Uncle
Luke. And now we will sell out and buy Calcuttas,
won’t we?”
“Sell out? But why?”
“You said so. You said,
’We will sell out in about a month and be quite
safe.’”
“My dear, I’ve no recollection of it.”
But Barbara had, and before she had
done with him, so had he. And the next day Argentinos
would be sold not any too soon and
Calcuttas bought.
Could money so gained bring a blessing
with it? The question would plague my father.
“It’s very much like gambling,”
he would mutter uneasily to himself at each success,
“uncommonly like gambling.”
“It is for your mother,”
he would impress upon me. “When she is gone,
Paul, put it aside, Keep it for doing good; that may
make it clean. Start your own life without any
help from it.”
He need not have troubled. It
went the road that all luck derived however indirectly
from old Hasluck ever went. Yet it served good
purpose on its way.
But the most marvellous feat, to my
thinking, ever accomplished by Barbara was the bearing
off of my father and mother to witness “A Voice
from the Grave, or the Power of Love, New and Original
Drama in five acts and thirteen tableaux.”
They had been bred in a narrow creed,
both my father and my mother. That Puritan blood
flowed in their veins that throughout our land has
drowned much harmless joyousness; yet those who know
of it only from hearsay do foolishly to speak but
ill of it. If ever earnest times should come
again, not how to enjoy but how to live being the question,
Fate demanding of us to show not what we have but
what we are, we may regret that they are fewer among
us than formerly, those who trained themselves to
despise all pleasure, because in pleasure they saw
the subtlest foe to principle and duty. No graceful
growth, this Puritanism, for its roots are in the
hard, stern facts of life; but it is strong, and from
it has sprung all that is worth preserving in the Anglo-Saxon
character. Its men feared and its women loved
God, and if their words were harsh their hearts were
tender. If they shut out the sunshine from their
lives it was that their eyes might see better the
glory lying beyond; and if their view be correct,
that earth’s threescore years and ten are but
as preparation for eternity, then who shall call them
even foolish for turning away their thoughts from
its allurements.
“Still, I think I should like
to have a look at one, just to see what it is like,”
argued my father; “one cannot judge of a thing
that one knows nothing about.”
I imagine it was his first argument
rather than his second that convinced my mother.
“That is true,” she answered.
“I remember how shocked my poor father was when
he found me one night at the bedroom window reading
Sir Walter Scott by the light of the moon.”
“What about the boy?”
said my father, for I had been included in the invitation.
“We will all be wicked together,” said
my mother.
So an evening or two later the four
of us stood at the corner of Pigott Street waiting
for the ’bus.
“It is a close evening,”
said my father; “let’s go the whole hog
and ride outside.”
In those days for a lady to ride outside
a ’bus was as in these days for a lady to smoke
in public. Surely my mother’s guardian angel
must have betaken himself off in a huff.
“Will you keep close behind
and see to my skirt?” answered my mother, commencing
preparations. If you will remember that these
were the days of crinolines, that the “knife-boards”
of omnibuses were then approached by a perpendicular
ladder, the rungs two feet apart, you will understand
the necessity for such precaution.
Which of us was the most excited throughout
that long ride it would be difficult to say.
Barbara, feeling keenly her responsibility as prompter
and leader of the dread enterprise, sat anxious, as
she explained to us afterwards, hoping there would
be nothing shocking in the play, nothing to belie
its innocent title; pleased with her success so far,
yet still fearful of failure, doubtful till the last
moment lest we should suddenly repent, and stopping
the ’bus, flee from the wrath to come.
My father was the youngest of us all. Compared
with him I was sober and contained. He fidgeted:
people remarked upon it. He hummed. But for
the stern eye of a thin young man sitting next to him
trying to read a paper, I believe he would have broken
out into song. Every minute he would lean across
to enquire of my mother: “How are you feeling all
right?” To which my mother would reply with a
nod and a smile, She sat very silent herself, clasping
and unclasping her hands. As for myself, I remember
feeling so sorry for the crowds that passed us on their
way home. It was sad to think of the long dull
evening that lay before them. I wondered how
they could face it.
Our seats were in the front row of
the upper circle. The lights were low and the
house only half full when we reached them.
“It seems very orderly and and
respectable,” whispered my mother. There
seemed a touch of disappointment in her tone.
“We are rather early,”
replied Barbara; “it will be livelier when the
band comes in and they turn up the gas.”
But even when this happened my mother
was not content. “There is so little room
for the actors,” she complained.
It was explained to her that the green
curtain would go up, that the stage lay behind.
So we waited, my mother sitting stiffly
on the extreme edge of her seat, holding me tightly
by the hand; I believe with some vague idea of flight,
should out of that vault-scented gloom the devil suddenly
appear to claim us for his own. But before the
curtain was quite up she had forgotten him.
You poor folk that go to the theatre
a dozen times a year, perhaps oftener, what do you
know of plays? You see no drama, you see but
middle-aged Mr. Brown, churchwarden, payer of taxes,
foolishly pretending to be a brigand; Miss Jones,
daughter of old Jones the Chemist, making believe
to be a haughty Princess. How can you, a grown
man, waste money on a seat to witness such tomfoolery!
What we saw was something very different. A young
and beautiful girl true, not a lady by
birth, being merely the daughter of an honest yeoman,
but one equal in all the essentials of womanhood to
the noblest in the land suffered before
our very eyes an amount of misfortune that, had one
not seen it for oneself, one would never have believed
Fate could have accumulated upon the head of any single
individual. Beside her woes our own poor troubles
sank into insignificance. We had used to grieve,
as my mother in a whisper reminded my father, if now
and again we had not been able to afford meat for
dinner. This poor creature, driven even from her
wretched attic, compelled to wander through the snow
without so much as an umbrella to protect her, had
not even a crust to eat; and yet never lost her faith
in Providence. It was a lesson, as my mother remarked
afterwards, that she should never forget. And
virtue had been triumphant, let shallow cynics say
what they will. Had we not proved it with our
own senses? The villain I think his
Christian name, if one can apply the word “Christian”
in connection with such a fiend, was Jasper had
never really loved the heroine. He was incapable
of love. My mother had felt this before he had
been on the stage five minutes, and my father in
spite of protests from callous people behind who appeared
to be utterly indifferent to what was going on under
their very noses had agreed with her.
What he was in love with was her fortune the
fortune that had been left to her by her uncle in
Australia, but about which nobody but the villain knew
anything. Had she swerved a hair’s breadth
from the course of almost supernatural rectitude,
had her love for the hero ever weakened, her belief
in him in spite of damning evidence to
the contrary for a moment wavered, then
wickedness might have triumphed. How at times,
knowing all the facts but helpless to interfere, we
trembled, lest deceived by the cruel lies the villain
told her; she should yield to importunity. How
we thrilled when, in language eloquent though rude,
she flung his false love back into his teeth.
Yet still we feared. We knew well that it was
not the hero who had done the murder. “Poor
dear,” as Amy would have called him, he was
quite incapable of doing anything requiring one-half
as much smartness. We knew that it was not he,
poor innocent lamb! who had betrayed the lady with
the French accent; we had heard her on the subject
and had formed a very shrewd conjecture. But appearances,
we could not help admitting, were terribly to his disfavour.
The circumstantial evidence against him would have
hanged an Archbishop. Could she in face of it
still retain her faith? There were moments when
my mother restrained with difficulty her desire to
rise and explain.
Between the acts Barbara would whisper
to her that she was not to mind, because it was only
a play, and that everything would be sure to come
right in the end.
“I know, my dear,” my
mother would answer, laughing, “it is very foolish
of me; I forget. Paul, when you see me getting
excited, you must remind me.”
But of what use was I in such case!
I, who only by holding on to the arms of my seat could
keep myself from swarming down on to the stage to
fling myself between this noble damsel and her persecutor this
fair-haired, creamy angel in whose presence for the
time being I had forgotten even Barbara.
The end came at last. The uncle
from Australia was not dead. The villain bungler
as well as knave had killed the wrong man,
somebody of no importance whatever. As a matter
of fact, the comic man himself was the uncle from
Australia had been so all along. My
mother had had a suspicion of this from the very first.
She told us so three times, to make up, I suppose,
for not having mentioned it before. How we cheered
and laughed, in spite of the tears in our eyes.
By pure accident it happened to be
the first night of the piece, and the author, in response
to much shouting and whistling, came before the curtain.
He was fat and looked commonplace; but I deemed him
a genius, and my mother said he had a good face, and
waved her handkerchief wildly; while my father shouted
“Bravo!” long after everybody else had
finished; and people round about muttered “packed
house,” which I didn’t understand at the
time, but came to later.
And stranger still, it happened to
be before that very same curtain that many years later
I myself stepped forth to make my first bow as a playwright.
I saw the house but dimly, for on such occasion one’s
vision is apt to be clouded. All that I saw clearly
was in the front row of the second circle a
sweet face laughing though the tears were in her eyes;
and she waved to me a handkerchief. And on one
side of her stood a gallant gentleman with merry eyes
who shouted “Bravo!” and on the other
a dreamy-looking lad; but he appeared disappointed,
having expected better work from me. And the
fourth face I could not see, for it was turned away
from me.
Barbara, determined on completeness,
insisted upon supper. In those days respectability
fed at home; but one resort possible there was, an
eating-house with some pretence to gaiety behind St.
Clement Danes, and to that she led us. It was
a long, narrow room, divided into wooden compartments,
after the old coffee-house plan, a gangway down the
centre. Now we should call it a dismal hole, and
closing the door hasten away. But to Adam, Eve
in her Sunday fig-leaves was a stylishly dressed woman;
and to my eyes, with its gilded mirrors and its flaring
gas, the place seemed a palace.
Barbara ordered oysters, a fish that
familiarity with its empty shell had made me curious
concerning. Truly no spot on the globe is so rich
in oyster shells as the East End of London. A
stranger might be led to the impression (erroneous)
that the customary lunch of the East End labourer
consists of oysters. How they collect there in
such quantities is a mystery, though Washburn, to
whom I once presented the problem, found no difficulty
in solving it to his own satisfaction: “To
the rich man the oyster; to the poor man the shell;
thus are the Creator’s gifts divided among all
His creatures; none being sent empty away.”
For drink the others had stout and I had ginger beer.
The waiter, who called me “Sir,” advised
against this mixture; but among us all the dominating
sentiment by this time was that nothing really mattered
very much. Afterwards my father called for a
cigar and boldly lighted it, though my mother looked
anxious; and fortunately perhaps it would not draw.
And then it came out that he himself had once written
a play.
“You never told me of that,” complained
my mother.
“It was a long while ago,” replied my
father; “nothing came of it.”
“It might have been a success,”
said my mother; “you always had a gift for writing.”
“I must look it over again,”
said my father; “I had quite forgotten it.
I have an impression it wasn’t at all bad.”
“It can be of much help,”
said my mother, “a good play. It makes one
think.”
We put Barbara into a cab and rode
home ourselves inside a ’bus. My mother
was tired, so my father slipped his arm round her,
telling her to lean against him, and soon she fell
asleep with her head upon his shoulder. A coarse-looking
wench sat opposite, her man’s arm round her
likewise, and she also fell asleep, her powdered face
against his coat.
“They can do with a bit of nursing,
can’t they?” said the man with a grin
to the conductor.
“Ah, they’re just kids,”
agreed the conductor, sympathetically, “that’s
what they are, all of ’em, just kids.”
So the day ended. But oh, the
emptiness of the morrow! Life without a crime,
without a single noble sentiment to brighten it! no
comic uncles, no creamy angels! Oh, the barrenness
and dreariness of life! Even my mother at moments
was quite irritable.
We were much together again, my father
and I, about this time. Often, making my way
from school into the City, I would walk home with him,
he leaning on each occasion a little heavier upon
my arm. To this day I can always meet and walk
with him down the Commercial Road. And on Saturday
afternoons, crossing the river to Greenwich, we would
climb the hill and sit there talking, or sometimes
merely thinking together, watching the dim vast city
so strangely still and silent at our feet.
At first I did not grasp the fact
that he was dying. The “year to two”
of life that Washburn had allowed to him had somehow
become converted in my mind to vague years, a fate
with no immediate meaning; the meanwhile he himself
appeared to grow from day to day in buoyancy.
How could I know it was his great heart rising to
his need.
The comprehension came to me suddenly.
It was one afternoon in early spring. I was on
my way to the City to meet him. The Holborn Viaduct
was then in building, and the traffic round about
was in consequence always much disorganised.
The ’bus on which I was riding became entangled
in a block at the corner of Snow Hill, and for ten
minutes we had been merely crawling, one joint of
a long, sinuous serpent moving by short, painful jerks.
It came to me while I was sitting there with a sharp
spasm of physical pain. I jumped from the ’bus
and began to run, and the terror and the hurt of it
grew with every step. I ran as if I feared he
might be dead before I could reach the office.
He was waiting for me with a smile as usual, and I
flung myself sobbing into his arms.
I think he understood, though I could
explain nothing, but that I had had a fear something
had happened to him, for from that time forward he
dropped all reserve with me, and talked openly of our
approaching parting.
“It might have come to us earlier,
my dear boy,” he would say with his arm round
me, “or it might have been a little later.
A year or so one way or the other, what does it matter?
And it is only for a little while, Paul. We shall
meet again.”
But I could not answer him, for clutch
them to me as I would, all my beliefs the
beliefs in which I had been bred, the beliefs that
until then I had never doubted, in that hour of their
first trial, were falling from me. I could not
even pray. If I could have prayed for anything,
it would have been for my father’s life.
But if prayer were all powerful, as they said, would
our loved ones ever die? Man has not faith enough,
they would explain; if he had there would be no parting.
So the Lord jests with His creatures, offering with
the one hand to snatch back with the other. I
flung the mockery from me. There was no firm
foothold anywhere. What were all the religions
of the word but narcotics with which Humanity seeks
to dull its pain, drugs in which it drowns its terrors,
faith but a bubble that death pricks.
I do not mean my thoughts took this
form. I was little more than a lad, and to the
young all thought is dumb, speaking only with a cry.
But they were there, vague, inarticulate. Thoughts
do not come to us as we grow older. They are
with us all our lives. We learn their language,
that is all.
One fair still evening it burst from
me. We had lingered in the Park longer than usual,
slowly pacing the broad avenue leading from the Observatory
to the Heath. I poured forth all my doubts and
fears that he was leaving me for ever,
that I should never see him again, I could not believe.
What could I do to believe?
“I am glad you have spoken,
Paul,” he said, “it would have been sad
had we parted not understanding each other. It
has been my fault. I did not know you had these
doubts. They come to all of us sooner or later.
But we hide them from one another. It is foolish.”
“But tell me,” I cried,
“what can I do? How can I make myself believe?”
“My dear lad,” answered
my father, “how can it matter what we believe
or disbelieve? It will not alter God’s
facts. Would you liken Him to some irritable
schoolmaster, angry because you cannot understand him?”
“What do you believe,” I asked, “father,
really I mean.”
The night had fallen. My father put his arm round
me and drew me to him.
“That we are God’s children,
little brother,” he answered, “that what
He wills for us is best. It may be life, it may
be sleep; it will be best. I cannot think that
He will let us die: that were to think of Him
as without purpose. But His uses may not be our
desires. We must trust Him. ‘Though
He slay me yet will I trust in Him.’”
We walked awhile in silence before my father spoke
again.
“’Now abideth these three,
Faith, Hope and Charity’ you remember
the verse Faith in God’s goodness
to us, Hope that our dreams may be fulfiled.
But these concern but ourselves the greatest
of all is Charity.”
Out of the night-shrouded human hive
beneath our feet shone here and there a point of light.
“Be kind, that is all it means,”
continued my father. “Often we do what
we think right, and evil comes of it, and out of evil
comes good. We cannot understand maybe
the old laws we have misread. But the new Law,
that we love one another all creatures He
has made; that is so clear. And if it be that
we are here together only for a little while, Paul,
the future dark, how much the greater need have we
of one another.”
I looked up into my father’s
face, and the peace that shone from it slid into my
soul and gave me strength.