OF THE GLORY AND GOODNESS AND THE
EVIL THAT GO TO THE MAKING OF LOVE.
During my time of struggle I had avoided
all communication with old Hasluck. He was not
a man to sympathise with feelings he did not understand.
With boisterous good humour he would have insisted
upon helping me. Why I preferred half starving
with Lott and Co. to selling my labour for a fair
wage to good-natured old Hasluck, merely because I
knew him, I cannot explain. Though the profits
may not have been so large, Lott and Co.’s dealings
were not one whit more honest: I do not believe
it was that which decided me. Nor do I think it
was because he was Barbara’s father. I
never connected him, nor that good old soul, his vulgar,
homely wife, in any way with Barbara. To me she
was a being apart from all the world. Her true
Parents! I should have sought them rather amid
the sacred groves of vanished lands, within the sky-domed
shrines of banished gods. There are instincts
in us not easily analysed, not to be explained by
reason. I have always preferred the finding sometimes
the losing of my way according to the map,
to the surer and simpler method of vocal enquiry;
working out a complicated journey, and running the
risk of never arriving at my destination, by aid of
a Continental Bradshaw, to putting myself into the
hands of courteous officials maintained and paid to
assist the perplexed traveller. Possibly a far-off
progenitor of mine may have been some morose “rogue”
savage with untribal inclinations, living in his cave
apart, fashioning his own stone hammer, shaping his
own flint arrow-heads, shunning the merry war-dance,
preferring to caper by himself.
But now, having gained my own foothold,
I could stretch out my hand without fear of the movement
being mistaken for appeal. I wrote to old Hasluck;
and almost by the next post received from him the friendliest
of notes. He told me Barbara had just returned
from abroad, took it upon himself to add that she
also would be delighted to see me, and, as I knew
he would, threw his doors open to me.
Of my boyish passion for Barbara never
had I spoken to a living soul, nor do I think, excepting
Barbara herself, had any ever guessed it. To
my mother, though she was very fond of her, Barbara
was only a girl, with charms but also with faults,
concerning which my mother would speak freely; hurting
me, as one unwittingly might hurt a neophyte by philosophical
discussion of his newly embraced religion. Often,
choosing by preference late evening or the night,
I would wander round and round the huge red-brick
house standing in its ancient garden on the top of
Stamford Hill; descending again into the noisome streets
as one returning to the world from praying at a shrine,
purified, filled with peace, all noble endeavour,
all unselfish aims seeming within my grasp.
During Barbara’s four years’
absence my adoration had grown and strengthened.
Out of my memory of her my desire had evolved its ideal;
a being of my imagination, but by reason of that,
to me the more real, the more present. I looked
forward to seeing her again, but with no impatience,
revelling rather in the anticipation than eager for
the realisation. As a creature of flesh and blood,
the child I had played with, talked with, touched,
she had faded further and further into the distance;
as the vision of my dreams she stood out clearer day
by day. I knew that when next I saw her there
would be a gulf between us I had no wish to bridge.
To worship her from afar was a sweeter thought to me
than would have been the hope of a passionate embrace.
To live with her, sit opposite to her while she ate
and drank, see her, perhaps, with her hair in curl-papers,
know possibly that she had a corn upon her foot, hear
her speak maybe of a decayed tooth, or of a chilblain,
would have been torture to me. Into such abyss
of the commonplace there was no fear of my dragging
her, and for this I was glad. In the future she
would be yet more removed from me. She was older
than I was; she must be now a woman. Instinctively
I felt that in spite of years I was not yet a man.
She would marry. The thought gave me no pain,
my feeling for her was utterly devoid of appetite.
No one but myself could close the temple I had built
about her, none deny to me the right of entry there.
No jealous priest could hide her from my eyes, her
altar I had reared too high. Since I have come
to know myself better, I perceive that she stood to
me not as a living woman, but as a symbol; not a fellow
human being to be walked with through life, helping
and to be helped, but that impalpable religion of
sex to which we raise up idols of poor human clay,
alas, not always to our satisfaction, so that foolishly
we fall into anger against them, forgetting they were
but the work of our own hands; not the body, but the
spirit of love.
I allowed a week to elapse after receiving
old Hasluck’s letter before presenting myself
at Stamford Hill. It was late one afternoon in
early summer. Hasluck had not returned from the
City, Mrs. Hasluck was out visiting, Miss Hasluck
was in the garden. I told the supercilious footman
not to trouble, I would seek her there myself.
I guessed where she would be; her favourite spot had
always been a sunny corner, bright with flowers, surrounded
by a thick yew hedge, cut, after the Dutch fashion,
into quaint shapes of animals and birds. She was
walking there, as I had expected, reading a book.
And again, as I saw her, came back to me the feeling
that had swept across me as a boy, when first outlined
against the dusty books and papers of my father’s
office she had flashed upon my eyes: that all
the fairy tales had suddenly come true, only now,
instead of the Princess, she was the Queen. Taller
she was, with a dignity that formerly had been the
only charm she lacked. She did not hear my coming,
my way being across the soft, short grass, and for
a little while I stood there in the shadow of the
yews, drinking in the beauty of her clear-cut profile,
bent down towards her book, the curving lines of her
long neck, the wonder of the exquisite white hand against
the lilac of her dress.
I did not speak; rather would I have
remained so watching; but turning at the end of the
path, she saw me, and as she came towards me held out
her hand. I knelt upon the path, and raised it
to my lips. The action was spontaneous, till
afterwards I was not aware of having done it.
Her lips were smiling as I raised my eyes to them,
the faintest suggestion of contempt mingling with
amusement. Yet she seemed pleased, and her contempt,
even if I were not mistaken, would not have wounded
me.
“So you are still in love with
me? I wondered if you would be.”
“Did you know that I was in love with you?”
“I should have been blind if I had not.”
“But I was only a boy.”
“You were not the usual type
of boy. You are not going to be the usual type
of man.”
“You do not mind my loving you?”
“I cannot help it, can I? Nor can you.”
She seated herself on a stone bench
facing a sun-dial, and leaning hack, her hands clasped
behind her head, looked at me and laughed.
“I shall always love you,”
I answered, “but it is with a curious sort of
love. I do not understand it myself.”
“Tell me,” she commanded,
still with a smile about her lips, “describe
it to me.”
I was standing over against her, my
arm resting upon the dial’s stone column.
The sun was sinking, casting long shadows on the velvety
grass, illuminating with a golden light her upturned
face.
“I would you were some great
queen of olden days, and that I might be always near
you, serving you, doing your bidding. Your love
in return would spoil all; I shall never ask it, never
desire it. That I might look upon you, touch
now and then at rare intervals with my lips your hand,
kiss in secret the glove you had let fall, the shoe
you had flung off, know that you knew of my love,
that I was yours to do with as you would, to live
or die according to your wish. Or that you were
priestess in some temple of forgotten gods, where
I might steal at daybreak and at dusk to gaze upon
your beauty; kneel with clasped hands, watching your
sandalled feet coming and going about the altar steps;
lie with pressed lips upon the stones your trailing
robes had touched.”
She laughed a light mocking laugh.
“I should prefer to be the queen. The rôle
of priestess would not suit me. Temples are so
cold.” A slight shiver passed through her.
She made a movement with her hand, beckoning me to
her feet. “That is how you shall love me,
Paul,” she said, “adoring me, worshipping
me blindly. I will be your queen and
treat you as it chooses me. All I
think, all I do, I will tell you, and you shall tell
me it is right. The queen can do no wrong.”
She took my face between her hands,
and bending over me, looked long and steadfastly into
my eyes. “You understand, Paul, the queen
can do no wrong never, never.”
There had crept into her voice a note of vehemence,
in her face was a look almost of appeal.
“My queen can do no wrong,”
I repeated. And she laughed and let her hands
fall back upon her lap.
“Now you may sit beside me.
So much honour, Paul, shall you have to-day, but it
will have to last you long. And you may tell me
all you have been doing, maybe it will amuse me; and
afterwards you shall hear what I have done, and shall
say that it was right and good of me.”
I obeyed, sketching my story briefly,
yet leaving nothing untold, not even the transit of
the Lady ’Ortensia, ashamed of the
episode though I was. At that she looked a little
grave.
“You must do nothing again,
Paul,” she commanded, “to make me feel
ashamed of you, or I shall dismiss you from my presence
for ever. I must be proud of you, or you shall
not serve me. In dishonouring yourself you are
dishonouring me. I am angry with you, Paul.
Do not let me be angry with you again.”
And so that passed; and although my
love for her as I know well she wished
and sought it should failed to save me at
all times from the apish voices whispering ever to
the beast within us, I know the desire to be worthy
of her, to honour her with all my being, helped my
life as only love can. The glory of the morning
fades, the magic veil is rent; we see all things with
cold, clear eyes. My love was a woman. She
lies dead. They have mocked her white sweet limbs
with rags and tatters, but they cannot cheat love’s
eyes. God knows I loved her in all purity!
Only with false love we love the false. Beneath
the unclean clinging garments she sleeps fair.
My tale finished, “Now I will
tell you mine,” she said. “I am going
to be married soon. I shall be a Countess, Paul,
the Countess Huescar I will teach you how
to pronounce it and I shall have a real
castle in Spain. You need not look so frightened,
Paul; we shall not live there. It is a half-ruined,
gloomy place, among the mountains, and he loves it
even less than I do. Paris and London will be
my courts, so you will see me often. You shall
know the great world, Paul, the world I mean to conquer,
where I mean to rule.”
“Is he very rich?” I asked.
“As poor,” she laughed,
“as poor as a Spanish nobleman. The money
I shall have to provide, or, rather, poor dear Dad
will. He gives me title, position. Of course
I do not love him, handsome though he is. Don’t
look so solemn, Paul. We shall get on together
well enough. Queens, Paul, do not make love matches,
they contract alliances. I have done well, Paul;
congratulate me. Do you hear, Paul? Say that
I have acted rightly.”
“Does he love you?” I asked.
“He tells me so,” she
answered, with a laugh. “How uncourtier-like
you are, Paul! Do you suggest that any man could
see me and not love me?”
She sprang to her feet. “I
do not want his love,” she cried; “it would
bore me. Women hate love they cannot return.
I don’t mean love like yours, devout little
Paul,” she added, with a laugh. “That
is sweet incense wafted round us that we like to scent
with our noses in the air. Give me that, Paul;
I want it, I ask for it. But the love of a hand,
the love of a husband that one does not care for it
would be horrible!”
I felt myself growing older.
For the moment my goddess became a child needing help.
“But have you thought ” I commenced.
“Yes, yes,” she interrupted
me quickly, “I have thought and thought till
I can think no more. There must be some sacrifice;
it must be as little as need be, that is all.
He does not love me; he is marrying me for my money I
know that, and I am glad of it. You do not know
me, Paul. I must have rank, position. What
am I? The daughter of rich old Hasluck, who began
life as a butcher in the Mile End Road. As the
Princess Huescar, society will forget, as Mrs.” it
seemed to me she checked herself abruptly “Jones
or Brown it would remember, however rich I might be.
I am vain, Paul, caring for power ambition.
I have my father’s blood in me. All his
nights and days he has spent in gaining wealth; he
can do no more. We upstarts have our pride of
race. He has done his share, I must do mine.”
“But you need not be mere Mrs.
anybody commonplace,” I argued. “Why
not wait? You will meet someone who can give
you position and whom at the same time you can love.
Would that not be better?”
“He will never come, the man
I could love,” she answered. “Because,
my little Paul, he has come already. Hush, Paul,
the queen can do no wrong.”
“Who is he?” I asked. “May
I not know?”
“Yes, Paul,” she answered,
“you shall know; I want you to know, then you
shall tell me that I have acted rightly. Do you
hear me, Paul? quite rightly that
you still respect me and honour me. He could not
help me. As his wife, I should be less even than
I am, a mere rich nobody, giving long dinner-parties
to other rich nobodies, living amongst City men, retired
trades-people; envied only by their fat, vulgarly dressed
wives, courted by seedy Bohemians for the sake of
my cook; with perhaps an opera singer or an impecunious
nobleman or two out of Dad’s City list for my
show-guests. Is that the court, Paul, where you
would have your queen reign?”
“Is he so commonplace a man,”
I answered, “the man you love? I cannot
believe it.”
“He is not commonplace,”
she answered. “It is I who am commonplace.
The things I desire, they are beneath him; he will
never trouble himself to secure them.”
“Not even for love of you?”
“I would not have him do so
even were he willing. He is great, with a greatness
I cannot even understand. He is not the man for
these times. In old days, I should have married
him, knowing he would climb to greatness by sheer
strength of manhood. But now men do not climb;
they crawl to greatness. He could not do that.
I have done right, Paul.”
“What does he say?” I asked.
“Shall I tell you?” She
laughed a little bitterly. “I can give you
his exact words, ’You are half a woman and half
a fool, so woman-like you will follow your folly.
But let your folly see to it that your woman makes
no fool of herself.’”
The words were what I could imagine
his saying. I heard the strong ring of his voice
through her mocking mimicry.
“Hal!” I cried. “It is he.”
“So you never guessed even that,
Paul. I thought at times it would be sweet to
cry it out aloud, that it could have made no difference,
that everyone who knew me must have read it in my
eyes.”
“But he never seemed to take much notice of
you,” I said.
She laughed. “You needn’t
be so unkind, Paul. What did I ever do for you
much more than snub you? We boys and girls; there
is not so much difference between us: we love
our masters. Yet you must not think so poorly
of me. I was only a child to him then, but we
were locked up in Paris together during the entire
siege. Have not you heard? He did take a
little notice of me there, Paul, I assure you.”
Would it have been better, I wonder,
had she followed the woman and not the fool?
It sounds an easy question to answer; but I am thinking
of years later, one winter’s night at Tiefenkasten
in the Julier Pass. I was on my way from San
Moritz to Chur. The sole passenger, I had just
climbed, half frozen, from the sledge, and was thawing
myself before the stove in the common room of the
hotel when the waiter put a pencilled note into my
hand:
“Come up and see me. I
am a prisoner in this damned hole till the weather
breaks. Hal.”
I hardly recognised him at first.
Only the poor ghost he seemed of the Hal I had known
as a boy. His long privations endured during the
Paris siege, added to the superhuman work he had there
put upon himself, had commenced the ruin of even his
magnificent physique a ruin the wild, loose
life he was now leading was soon to complete.
It was a gloomy, vaulted room that once had been a
chapel, lighted dimly by a cheap, evil-smelling lamp,
heated to suffocation by one of those great green-tiled
German ovens now only to be met with in rare out-of-the-way
world corners. He was sitting propped up by pillows
on the bed, placed close to one of the high windows,
his deep eyes flaring like two gleaming caverns out
of his drawn, haggard face.
“I saw you from the window,”
he explained. “It is the only excitement
I get, twice a day when the sledges come in. I
broke down coming across the Pass a fortnight ago,
on my way from Davos. We were stuck in a drift
for eighteen hours; it nearly finished my last lung.
And I haven’t even a book to read. By God!
lad, I was glad to see your frosted face ten minutes
ago in the light of the lantern.”
He grasped me with his long bony hand.
“Sit down, and let me hear my voice using again
its mother tongue you were always a good
listener for the last eight years I have
hardly spoken it. Can you stand the room?
The windows ought to be open, but what does it matter?
I may as well get accustomed to the heat before I
die.”
I drew my chair close to the bed,
and for awhile, between his fits of coughing, we talked
of things that were outside our thoughts, or, rather,
Hal talked, continuously, boisterously, meeting my
remonstrances with shouts of laughter, ending in wild
struggles for breath, so that I deemed it better to
let him work his mad mood out.
Then suddenly: “What is
she doing?” he asked. “Do you ever
see her?”
“She is playing in ”
I mentioned the name of a comic opera then running
in Paris. “No; I have not seen her for some
time.”
He laid his white, wasted hand on
mine. “What a pity you and I could not
have rolled ourselves into one, Paul you,
the saint, and I, the satyr. Together we should
have made her perfect lover.”
There came back to me the memory of
those long nights when I had lain awake listening
to the angry voices of my father and mother soaking
through the flimsy wall. It seemed my fate to
stand thus helpless between those I loved, watching
them hurting one another against their will.
“Tell me,” I asked “I
loved her, knowing her: I was not blind.
Whose fault was it? Yours or hers?”
He laughed. “Whose fault, Paul? God
made us.”
Thinking of her fair, sweet face,
I hated him for his mocking laugh. But the next
moment, looking into his deep eyes, seeing the pain
that dwelt there, my pity was for him. A smile
came to his ugly mouth.
“You have been on the stage,
Paul; you must have heard the saying often: ‘Ah,
well, the curtain must come down, however badly things
are going.’ It is only a play, Paul.
We do not choose our parts. I did not even know
I was the villain, till I heard the booing of the gallery.
I even thought I was the hero, full of noble sentiment,
sacrificing myself for the happiness of the heroine.
She would have married me in the beginning had I plagued
her sufficiently.”
I made to speak, but he interrupted
me, continuing: “Ah, yes, it might have
been better. That is easy to say, not knowing.
So, too, it might have been worse in all
probability much the same. All roads lead to
the end. You know I was always a fatalist, Paul.
We tried both ways. She loved me well enough,
but she loved the world also. I thought she loved
it better, so I kissed her on her brow, mumbled a prayer
for her happiness and made my exit to a choking sob.
So ended the first act. Wasn’t I the hero
throughout that, Paul? I thought so; slapped myself
upon the back, told myself what a fine fellow I had
been. Then you know what followed.
She was finer clay than she had fancied. Love
is woman’s kingdom, not the world. Even
then I thought more of her than of myself. I
could have borne my share of the burden had I not seen
her fainting under hers, shamed, degraded. So
we dared to think for ourselves, injuring nobody but
ourselves, played the man and woman, lost the world
for love. Wasn’t it brave, Paul? Were
we not hero and heroine? They had printed the
playbill wrong, Paul, that was all. I was really
the hero, but the printing devil had made a slip,
so instead of applauding you booed. How could
you know, any of you? It was not your fault.”
“But that was not the end,”
I reminded him. “If the curtain had fallen
then, I could have forgiven you.”
He grinned. “That fatal
last act. Even yours don’t always come right,
so the critics tell me.”
The grin faded from his face.
“We may never see each other again, Paul,”
he went on; “don’t think too badly of me.
I found I had made a second mistake or
thought I had. She was no happier with me after
a time than she had been with him. If all our
longings were one, life would be easy; but they are
not. What is to be done but toss for it?
And if it come down head we wish it had been tail,
and if tail we think of what we have lost through
its not coming down head. Love is no more the
whole of a woman’s life than it is of a man’s.
He did not apply for a divorce: that was smart
of him. We were shunned, ignored. To some
women it might not have mattered; but she had been
used to being sought, courted, feted. She made
no complaint did worse: made desperate
effort to appear cheerful, to pretend that our humdrum
life was not boring her to death. I watched her
growing more listless, more depressed; grew angry with
her, angrier with myself. There was no bond between
us except our passion; that was real enough ’grand,’
I believe, is the approved literary adjective.
It is good enough for what nature intended it, a summer
season in a cave. It makes but a poor marriage
settlement in these more complicated days. We
fell to mutual recriminations, vulgar scenes.
Ah, most of us look better at a little distance from
one another. The sordid, contemptible side of
life became important to us. I was never rich;
by contrast with all that she had known, miserably
poor. The mere sight of the food our twelve-pound-a-year
cook put upon the table would take away her appetite.
Love does not change the palate, give you a taste
for cheap claret when you have been accustomed to dry
champagne. We have bodies to think of as well
as souls; we are apt to forget that in moments of
excitement.
“She fell ill, and it seemed
to me that I had dragged her from the soil where she
had grown only to watch her die. And then he came,
precisely at the right moment. I cannot help
admiring him. Most men take their revenge clumsily,
hurting themselves; he was so neat, had been so patient.
I am not even ashamed of having fallen into his trap;
it was admirably baited. Maybe I had despised
him for having seemed to submit meekly to the blow.
What cared he for me and my opinion? It was she
was all he cared for. He knew her better than
I, knew that sooner or later she would tire, not of
love but of the cottage; look back with longing eyes
towards all that she had lost. Fool! Cuckold!
What was it to him that the world would laugh at him,
despise him? Love such as his made fools of men.
Would I not give her back to him?
“By God! It was fine acting;
half into the night we talked, I leaving him every
now and again to creep to the top of the stairs and
listen to her breathing. He asked me my advice,
I being the hard-headed partner of cool judgment.
What would be the best way of approaching her after
I was gone? Where should he take her? How
should they live till the nine days’ talk had
died away? And I sat opposite to him how
he must have longed to laugh in my silly face advising
him! We could not quite agree as to details of
a possible yachting cruise, and I remember hunting
up an atlas, and we pored over it, our heads close
together. By God! I envy him that night!”
He sank back on his pillows and laughed
and coughed, and laughed and coughed again, till I
feared that wild, long, broken laugh would be his
last. But it ceased at length, and for awhile,
exhausted, he lay silent before continuing.
“Then came the question:
how was I to go? She loved me still. He was
sure of it, and, for the matter of that, so was I.
So long as she thought that I loved her, she would
never leave me. Only from her despair could fresh
hope arise for her. Would I not make some sacrifice
for her sake, persuade her that I had tired of her?
Only by one means could she be convinced. My
going off alone would not suffice; my reason for that
she might suspect she might follow.
It would be for her sake. Again it was the hero
that I played, the dear old chuckle-headed hero, Paul,
that you ought to have cheered, not hooted. I
loved her as much as I ever loved her in my life,
that night I left her. I took my boots off in
the passage and crept up in my stockinged feet.
I told him I was merely going to change my coat and
put a few things into a bag. He gripped my hand,
and tears were standing in his eyes. It is odd
that suppressed laughter and expressed grief should
both display the same token, is it not? I stole
into her room. I dared not kiss her for fear
of waking her; but a stray lock of her hair you
remember how long it was fell over the
pillow, nearly reaching to the floor. I pressed
my lips against it, where it trailed over the bedstead,
till they bled. I have it still upon my lips,
the mingling of the cold iron and the warm, soft silken
hair. He told me, when I came down again, that
I had been gone three-quarters of an hour. And
we went out of the house together, he and I. That
is the last time I ever saw her.”
I leant across and put my arms around
him; I suppose it was un-English; there are times
when one forgets these points. “I did not
know! I did not know,” I cried.
He pressed me to him with his feeble
arms. “What a cad you must have thought
me, Paul,” he said. “But you might
have given me credit for better taste. I was
always rather a gourmet than a gourmand where women
were concerned.”
“You have never seen him either again?”
I asked.
“No,” he answered; “I
swore to kill him when I learnt the trick he had played
me. He commenced the divorce proceedings against
her the very morning after I had left her. Possibly,
had I succeeded in finding him within the next six
months, I should have done so. A few newspaper
proprietors would have been the only people really
benefited. Time is the cheapest Bravo; a little
patience is all he charges. All roads lead to
the end, Paul.”
But I tell my tale badly, marring
effects of sunlight with the memory of shadows.
At the time all promised fair. He was a handsome,
distinguished-looking man. Not every aristocrat,
if without disrespect to one’s betters a humble
observer may say so, suggests his title; this man
would have suggested his title, had he not possessed
it. I suppose he must have been about fifty at
the time; but most men of thirty would have been glad
to exchange with him both figure and complexion.
His behaviour to his fiancee was the essence
of good taste, affectionate devotion, carried to the
exact point beyond which, having regard to the disparity
of their years, it would have appeared ridiculous.
That he sincerely admired her, was fully content with
her, there could be no doubt. I am even inclined
to think he was fonder of her than, divining her feelings
towards himself, he cared to show. Knowledge of
the world must have told him that men of fifty find
it easier to be the lovers of women young enough to
be their daughters, than girls find it to desire the
affection of men old enough to be their fathers; and
he was not the man to allow impulse to lead him into
absurdity.
From my own peculiar point of view
he appeared the ideal prince consort. It was
difficult for me to imagine my queen in love with any
mere man. This was one beside whom she could
live, losing in my eyes nothing of her dignity.
My feelings for her he guessed at our first interview.
Most men in his position would have been amused, and
many would have shown it. For what reason I cannot
say, but with a tact and courtesy that left me only
complimented, he drew from me, before I had met him
half-a-dozen times, more frank confession than a month
previously I should have dreamt of my yielding to
anything than my own pillow. He laid his hand
upon my shoulder.
“I wonder if you know, my friend,
how wise you are,” he said. “We all
of us at your age love an image of our own carving.
Ah, if only we could be content to worship the white,
changeless statute! But we are fools. We
pray the gods to give her life, and under our hot kisses
she becomes a woman. I also loved when I was
your age, Paul. Your countrymen, they are so
practical, they know only one kind of love. It
is business-like, rich how puts it your
poet? ‘rich in saving common sense.’
But there are many kinds, you understand that, my
friend. You are wise, do not confuse them.
She was a child of the mountains. I used to walk
three leagues to Mass each day to worship her.
Had I been wise had I so left it, the memory
of her would have coloured all my life with glory.
But I was a fool, my friend; I turned her into a woman.
Ah!” he made a gesture of disgust “such
a fat, ugly woman, Paul, I turned her into. I
had much difficulty in getting rid of her. We
should never touch things in life that are beautiful;
we have such clumsy hands, we spoil whatever we touch.”
Hal did not return to England till
the end of the year, by which time the Count and Countess
Huescar though I had her permission still
to call her Barbara, I never availed myself of it;
the “Countess” fitted my mood better had
taken up residence in the grand Paris house old Hasluck
had bought for them.
It was the high-water mark of old
Hasluck’s career, and, if anything, he was a
little disappointed that with the dowry he had promised
her Barbara had not done even better for herself.
“Foreign Counts,” he grumbled
to me laughingly, one day, “well, I hope they’re
worth more in Society than they are in the City.
A hundred guineas is their price there, and they’re
not worth that. Who was that American girl that
married a Russian Prince only last week? A million
dollars was all she gave for him, and she a wholesale
boot-maker’s daughter into the bargain!
Our girls are not half as smart.”
But that was before he had seen his
future son-in-law. After, he was content enough,
and up to the day of the wedding, childishly elated.
Under the Count’s tuition he studied with reverential
awe the Huescar history. Princes, statesmen,
warriors, glittered, golden apples, from the spreading
branches of its genealogical tree. Why not again!
its attenuated blue sap strengthened with the rich,
red blood, brewed by toil and effort in the grim laboratories
of the under world. In imagination, old Hasluck
saw himself the grandfather of Chancellors, the great-grandfather
of Kings.
“I have laid the foundation,
you shall raise the edifice,” so he told her
one evening I was spending with them, caressing her
golden hair with his blunt, fat fingers. “I
am glad you were not a boy. A boy, in all probability,
would have squandered the money, let the name sink
back again into the gutter. And even had he been
the other sort, he could only have been another business
man, keeping where I had left him. You will call
your first boy Hasluck, won’t you? It must
always be the first-born’s name. It shall
be famous in the world yet, and for something else
than mere money.”
I began to understand the influences
that had gone towards the making or marring of
Barbara’s character. I had never guessed
he had cared for anything beyond money and the making
of money.
It was, of course, a wedding as ostentatious
as possible. Old Hasluck knew how to advertise,
and spared neither expense nor labour, with the result
that it was the event of the season, at least according
to the Society papers. Mrs. Hasluck was the type
of woman to have escaped observation, even had the
wedding been her own; that she was present at her
daughter’s, “becomingly dressed in grey
veiling spotted white, with an encrustation of mousseline
de soie,” I learnt the next day from
the Morning Post. Old Hasluck himself
had to be fetched every time he was wanted. At
the conclusion of the ceremony, seeking him, I found
him sitting on the stairs leading to the crypt.
“Is it over?” he asked.
He was mopping his face on a huge handkerchief, and
had a small looking-glass in his hand.
“All over,” I answered,
“they are waiting for you to start.”
“I always perspire so when I’m
excited,” he explained. “Keep me out
of it as much as possible.”
But the next time I saw him, which
was two or three days later, the reaction had set
in. He was sitting in his great library, surrounded
by books he would no more have thought of disturbing
than he would of strumming on the gorgeous grand piano
inlaid with silver that ornamented his drawing-room.
A change had passed over him. His swelling rotundity,
suggestive generally of a bladder inflated to its extremest
limits by excess of self-importance, appeared to be
shrinking. I put the idea aside as mere fancy
at the time, but it was fact; he became a mere bag
of bones before he died. He was wearing an old
pair of carpet slippers and smoking a short clay pipe.
“Well,” I said, “everything went
off all right.”
“Everybody’s gone off
all right, so far,” he grunted. He was crouching
over the fire, though the weather was still warm, one
hand spread out towards the blaze. “Now
I’ve got to go off, that’s the only thing
they’re waiting for. Then everything will
be in order.”
“I don’t think they are
wanting you to go off,” I answered, with a laugh.
“You mean,” he answered,
“I’m the goose that lays the golden eggs.
Ah, but you see, so many of the eggs break, and so
many of them are bad.”
“Some of them hatch all right,”
I replied. The simile was becoming somewhat confused:
in conversation similes are apt to.
“If I were to die this week,”
he said he paused, completing mental calculations,
“I should be worth, roughly speaking, a couple
of million. This time next year I may be owing
a million.”
I sat down opposite to him. “Why
run risks?” I suggested. “Surely you
have enough. Why not give it up retire?”
He laughed. “Do you think
I haven’t said that to myself, lad sworn
I would a dozen times a year? I can’t do
it; I’m a gambler. It’s the earliest
thing I can recollect doing, gambling with brace buttons.
There are men, Paul, now dying in the workhouse men
I once knew well; I think of them sometimes, and wish
I didn’t who any time during half
their life might have retired on twenty thousand a
year. If I were to go to any one of them, and
settle an annuity of a hundred a year upon him, the
moment my back was turned he’d sell it out and
totter up to Threadneedle Street with the proceeds.
It’s in our blood. I shall gamble on my
death-bed, die with the tape in my hand.”
He kicked the fire into a blaze.
A roaring flame made the room light again.
“But that won’t be just
yet awhile,” he laughed, “and before it
does, I’ll be the richest man in Europe.
I keep my head cool that’s the great
secret.” Leaning over towards me, he sunk
his voice to a whisper, “Drink, Paul so
many of them drink. They get worried; fifty things
dancing round and round at the same time in their heads.
Fifty questions to be answered in five minutes.
Tick, tick, tick, taps the little devil at their elbow.
This going down, that going up. Rumor of this,
report of that. A fortune to be lost here, a
fortune to be snatched there. Everything in a
whirl! Tick, tick, tick, like nails into a coffin.
God! for five minutes’ peace to think.
Shut the door, turn the key. Out comes the bottle.
That’s the end. All right so long as you
keep away from that. Cool, quick brain, clear
judgment that’s the secret.”
“But is it worth it all?”
I suggested. “Surely you have enough?”
“It means power, Paul.”
He slapped his trousers pocket, making the handful
of gold and silver he always carried there jingle musically.
“It is this that rules the world. My children
shall be big pots, hobnob with kings and princes,
slap them on the back and call them by their Christian
names, be kings themselves why not?
It’s happened before. My children, the
children of old Noel Hasluck, son of a Whitechapel
butcher! Here’s my pedigree!” Again
be slapped his tuneful pocket. “It’s
an older one than theirs! It’s coming into
its own at last! It’s money we
men of money that are the true kings now.
It’s our family that rules the world the
great money family; I mean to be its head.”
The blaze died out, leaving the room
almost in darkness, and for awhile we sat in silence.
“Quiet, isn’t it?” said old Hasluck,
raising his head.
The settling of the falling embers was the only sound
about us.
“Guess we’ll always be
like this, now,” continued old Hasluck.
“Old woman goes to bed, you see, immediately
after dinner. It used to be different when she
was about. Somehow, the house and the lackeys
and all the rest of it seemed to be a more natural
sort of thing when she was the centre of it.
It frightens the old woman now she’s gone.
She likes to get away from it. Poor old Susan!
A little country inn with herself as landlady and
me fussing about behind the bar; that was always her
ambition, poor old girl!”
“You will be visiting them,”
I suggested, “and they will be coming to stop
with you.”
He shook his head. “They
won’t want me, and it isn’t my game to
hamper them. I never mix out of my class.
I’ve always had sense enough for that.”
I laughed, wishing to cheer him, though
I knew he was right. “Surely your daughter
belongs to your own class,” I replied.
“Do you think so?” he
asked, with a grin. “That’s not a
pretty compliment to her. She was my child when
she used to cling round my neck, while I made the
sausages, calling me her dear old pig. It didn’t
trouble her then that I dropped my aitches and had
a greasy skin. I was a Whitechapel butcher, and
she was a Whitechapel brat. I could have kept
her if I’d liked, but I was set upon making a
lady of her, and I did it. But I lost my child.
Every time she came back from school I could see she
despised me a little more. I’m not blaming
her; how could she help it? I was making a lady
of her, teaching her to do it; though there were moments
when I almost hated her, felt tempted to snatch her
back to me, drag her down again to my level, make
her my child again, before it was too late. Oh,
it wasn’t all unselfishness; I could have done
it. She would have remained my class then, would
have married my class, and her children would have
been my class. I didn’t want that.
Everything’s got to be paid for. I got
what I asked for; I’m not grumbling at the price.
But it ain’t cheap.”
He rose and knocked the ashes from
his pipe. “Ring the bell, Paul, will you?”
he said. “Let’s have some light and
something to drink. Don’t take any notice
of me. I’ve got the hump to-night.”
It was a minute or two before the
lamp came. He put his arm upon my shoulder, leaning
upon me somewhat heavily.
“I used to fancy sometimes,
Paul,” he said, “that you and she might
have made a match of it. I should have been disappointed
for some things. But you’d have been a
bit nearer to me, you two. It never occurred to
you, that, I suppose?”