OF MR. JOHN HERITAGE AND THE DIFFERENCE IN POINTS OF VIEW
Dickson McCunn was never to forget
the first stage in that pilgrimage. A little
after midday he descended from a grimy third-class
carriage at a little station whose name I have forgotten.
In the village nearby he purchased some new-baked
buns and ginger biscuits, to which he was partial,
and followed by the shouts of urchins, who admired
his pack “Look at the auld man gaun
to the schule” he emerged into open
country. The late April noon gleamed like a
frosty morning, but the air, though tonic, was kind.
The road ran over sweeps of moorland where curlews
wailed, and into lowland pastures dotted with very
white, very vocal lambs. The young grass had
the warm fragrance of new milk. As he went he
munched his buns, for he had resolved to have no plethoric
midday meal, and presently he found the burnside nook
of his fancy, and halted to smoke. On a patch
of turf close to a grey stone bridge he had out his
Walton and read the chapter on “The Chavender
or Chub.” The collocation of words delighted
him and inspired him to verse. “Lavender
or Lub” “Pavender or Pub"-"Gravender
or Grub” but the monosyllables proved
too vulgar for poetry. Regretfully he desisted.
The rest of the road was as idyllic
as the start. He would tramp steadily for a
mile or so and then saunter, leaning over bridges to
watch the trout in the pools, admiring from a dry-stone
dyke the unsteady gambols of new-born lambs, kicking
up dust from strips of moor-burn on the heather.
Once by a fir-wood he was privileged to surprise
three lunatic hares waltzing. His cheeks glowed
with the sun; he moved in an atmosphere of pastoral,
serene and contented. When the shadows began
to lengthen he arrived at the village of Cloncae, where
he proposed to lie. The inn looked dirty, but
he found a decent widow, above whose door ran the
legend in home-made lettering, “Mrs. brockie
tea and Coffee,” and who was willing to give
him quarters. There he supped handsomely off
ham and eggs, and dipped into a work called Covenanting
Worthies, which garnished a table decorated with sea-shells.
At half-past nine precisely he retired to bed and
unhesitating sleep.
Next morning he awoke to a changed
world. The sky was grey and so low that his
outlook was bounded by a cabbage garden, while a surly
wind prophesied rain. It was chilly, too, and
he had his breakfast beside the kitchen fire.
Mrs. Brockie could not spare a capital letter for
her surname on the signboard, but she exalted it in
her talk. He heard of a multitude of Brockies,
ascendant, descendant, and collateral, who seemed
to be in a fair way to inherit the earth. Dickson
listened sympathetically, and lingered by the fire.
He felt stiff from yesterday’s exercise, and
the edge was off his spirit.
The start was not quite what he had
pictured. His pack seemed heavier, his boots
tighter, and his pipe drew badly. The first miles
were all uphill, with a wind tingling his ears, and
no colours in the landscape but brown and grey.
Suddenly he awoke to the fact that he was dismal,
and thrust the notion behind him. He expanded
his chest and drew in long draughts of air.
He told himself that this sharp weather was better
than sunshine. He remembered that all travellers
in romances battled with mist and rain. Presently
his body recovered comfort and vigour, and his mind
worked itself into cheerfulness.
He overtook a party of tramps and
fell into talk with them. He had always had
a fancy for the class, though he had never known anything
nearer it than city beggars. He pictured them
as philosophic vagabonds, full of quaint turns of
speech, unconscious Borrovians. With these samples
his disillusionment was speedy. The party was
made up of a ferret-faced man with a red nose, a draggle-tailed
woman, and a child in a crazy perambulator.
Their conversation was one-sided, for it immediately
resolved itself into a whining chronicle of misfortunes
and petitions for relief. It cost him half a
crown to be rid of them.
The road was alive with tramps that
day. The next one did the accosting. Hailing
Mr. McCunn as “Guv’nor,” he asked
to be told the way to Manchester. The objective
seemed so enterprising that Dickson was impelled to
ask questions, and heard, in what appeared to be in
the accents of the Colonies, the tale of a career
of unvarying calamity. There was nothing merry
or philosophic about this adventurer. Nay, there
was something menacing. He eyed his companion’s
waterproof covetously, and declared that he had had
one like it which had been stolen from him the day
before. Had the place been lonely he might have
contemplated highway robbery, but they were at the
entrance to a village, and the sight of a public-house
awoke his thirst. Dickson parted with him at
the cost of sixpence for a drink.
He had no more company that morning
except an aged stone-breaker whom he convoyed for
half a mile. The stone-breaker also was soured
with the world. He walked with a limp, which,
he said, was due to an accident years before, when
he had been run into by “ane of thae damned
velocipeeds.” The word revived in Dickson
memories of his youth, and he was prepared to be friendly.
But the ancient would have none of it. He inquired
morosely what he was after, and, on being told remarked
that he might have learned more sense. “It’s
a daft-like thing for an auld man like you to be traivellin’
the roads. Ye maun be ill-off for a job.”
Questioned as to himself, he became, as the newspapers
say, “reticent,” and having reached his
bing of stones, turned rudely to his duties.
“Awa’ hame wi’ ye,” were his
parting words. “It’s idle scoondrels
like you that maks wark for honest folk like me.”
The morning was not a success, but
the strong air had given Dickson such an appetite
that he resolved to break his rule, and, on reaching
the little town of Kilchrist, he sought luncheon at
the chief hotel. There he found that which revived
his spirits. A solitary bagman shared the meal,
who revealed the fact that he was in the grocery line.
There followed a well-informed and most technical
conversation. He was drawn to speak of the United
Supply Stores, Limited, of their prospects and of
their predecessor, Mr. McCunn, whom he knew well by
repute but had never met. “Yon’s
the clever one.” he observed. “I’ve
always said there’s no longer head in the city
of Glasgow than McCunn. An old-fashioned firm,
but it has aye managed to keep up with the times.
He’s just retired, they tell me, and in my opinion
it’s a big loss to the provision trade....”
Dickson’s heart glowed within him. Here
was Romance; to be praised incognito; to enter a casual
inn and find that fame had preceded him. He
warmed to the bagman, insisted on giving him a liqueur
and a cigar, and finally revealed himself. “I’m
Dickson McCunn,” he said, “taking a bit
holiday. If there’s anything I can do
for you when I get back, just let me know.”
With mutual esteem they parted.
He had need of all his good spirits,
for he emerged into an unrelenting drizzle.
The environs of Kilchrist are at the best unlovely,
and in the wet they were as melancholy as a graveyard.
But the encounter with the bagman had worked wonders
with Dickson, and he strode lustily into the weather,
his waterproof collar buttoned round his chin.
The road climbed to a bare moor, where lagoons had
formed in the ruts, and the mist showed on each side
only a yard or two of soaking heather. Soon
he was wet; presently every part of him boots,
body, and pack was one vast sponge.
The waterproof was not water-proof, and the rain penetrated
to his most intimate garments. Little he cared.
He felt lighter, younger, than on the idyllic previous
day. He enjoyed the buffets of the storm, and
one wet mile succeeded another to the accompaniment
of Dickson’s shouts and laughter. There
was no one abroad that afternoon, so he could talk
aloud to himself and repeat his favourite poems.
About five in the evening there presented himself
at the Black Bull Inn at Kirkmichael a soaked, disreputable,
but most cheerful traveller.
Now the Black Bull at Kirkmichael
is one of the few very good inns left in the world.
It is an old place and an hospitable, for it has been
for generations a haunt of anglers, who above all other
men understand comfort. There are always bright
fires there, and hot water, and old soft leather armchairs,
and an aroma of good food and good tobacco, and giant
trout in glass cases, and pictures of Captain Barclay
of Urie walking to London and Mr. Ramsay of Barnton
winning a horse-race, and the three-volume edition
of the Waverley Novels with many volumes missing,
and indeed all those things which an inn should have.
Also there used to be there may still
be sound vintage claret in the cellars.
The Black Bull expects its guests to arrive in every
stage of dishevelment, and Dickson was received by
a cordial landlord, who offered dry garments as a
matter of course. The pack proved to have resisted
the elements, and a suit of clothes and slippers were
provided by the house. Dickson, after a glass
of toddy, wallowed in a hot bath, which washed all
the stiffness out of him. He had a fire in his
bedroom, beside which he wrote the opening passages
of that diary he had vowed to keep, descanting lyrically
upon the joys of ill weather. At seven o’clock,
warm and satisfied in soul, and with his body clad
in raiment several sizes too large for it, he descended
to dinner.
At one end of the long table in the
dining-room sat a group of anglers. They looked
jovial fellows, and Dickson would fain have joined
them; but, having been fishing all day in the Lock
o’ the Threshes, they were talking their own
talk, and he feared that his admiration for Izaak
Walton did not qualify him to butt into the erudite
discussions of fishermen. The landlord seemed
to think likewise, for he drew back a chair for him
at the other end, where sat a young man absorbed in
a book. Dickson gave him good evening, and got
an abstracted reply. The young man supped the
Black Bull’s excellent broth with one hand, and
with the other turned the pages of his volume.
A glance convinced Dickson that the work was French,
a literature which did not interest him. He
knew little of the tongue and suspected it of impropriety.
Another guest entered and took the
chair opposite the bookish young man. He was
also young not more than thirty-three and
to Dickson’s eye was the kind of person he would
have liked to resemble. He was tall and free
from any superfluous flesh; his face was lean, fine-drawn,
and deeply sunburnt, so that the hair above showed
oddly pale; the hands were brown and beautifully shaped,
but the forearm revealed by the loose cuffs of his
shirt was as brawny as a blacksmith’s.
He had rather pale blue eyes, which seemed to have
looked much at the sun, and a small moustache the
colour of ripe hay. His voice was low and pleasant,
and he pronounced his words precisely, like a foreigner.
He was very ready to talk, but in
defiance of Dr. Johnson’s warning, his talk
was all questions. He wanted to know everything
about the neighbourhood who lived in what
houses, what were the distances between the towns,
what harbours would admit what class of vessel.
Smiling agreeably, he put Dickson through a catechism
to which he knew none of the answers. The landlord
was called in, and proved more helpful. But
on one matter he was fairly at a loss. The catechist
asked about a house called Darkwater, and was met with
a shake of the head. “I know no sic-like
name in this countryside, sir,” and the catechist
looked disappointed.
The literary young man said nothing,
but ate trout abstractedly, one eye on his book.
The fish had been caught by the anglers in the Loch
o’ the Threshes, and phrases describing their
capture floated from the other end of the table.
The young man had a second helping, and then refused
the excellent hill mutton that followed, contenting
himself with cheese. Not so Dickson and the
catechist. They ate everything that was set before
them, topping up with a glass of port. Then the
latter, who had been talking illuminatingly about Spain,
rose, bowed, and left the table, leaving Dickson,
who liked to linger over his meals, to the society
of the ichthyophagous student.
He nodded towards the book. “Interesting?”
he asked.
The young man shook his head and displayed
the name on the cover. “Anatole France.
I used to be crazy about him, but now he seems rather
a back number.” Then he glanced towards
the just-vacated chair. “Australian,”
he said.
“How d’you know?”
“Can’t mistake them.
There’s nothing else so lean and fine produced
on the globe to-day. I was next door to them
at Pozieres and saw them fight. Lord!
Such men! Now and then you had a freak, but most
looked like Phoebus Apollo.”
Dickson gazed with a new respect at
his neighbour, for he had not associated him with
battle-fields. During the war he had been a
fervent patriot, but, though he had never heard a shot
himself, so many of his friends’ sons and nephews,
not to mention cousins of his own, had seen service,
that he had come to regard the experience as commonplace.
Lions in Africa and bandits in Mexico seemed to him
novel and romantic things, but not trenches and airplanes
which were the whole world’s property.
But he could scarcely fit his neighbour into even
his haziest picture of war. The young man was
tall and a little round-shouldered; he had short-sighted,
rather prominent brown eyes, untidy black hair and
dark eyebrows which came near to meeting. He
wore a knickerbocker suit of bluish-grey tweed, a pale
blue shirt, a pale blue collar, and a dark blue tie a
symphony of colour which seemed too elaborately considered
to be quite natural. Dickson had set him down
as an artist or a newspaper correspondent, objects
to him of lively interest. But now the classification
must be reconsidered.
“So you were in the war,” he said encouragingly.
“Four blasted years,”
was the savage reply. “And I never want
to hear the name of the beastly thing again.”
“You said he was an Australian,”
said Dickson, casting back. “But I thought
Australians had a queer accent, like the English.”
“They’ve all kind of accents,
but you can never mistake their voice. It’s
got the sun in it. Canadians have got grinding
ice in theirs, and Virginians have got butter.
So have the Irish. In Britain there are no
voices, only speaking-tubes. It isn’t safe
to judge men by their accent only. You yourself
I take to be Scotch, but for all I know you may be
a senator from Chicago or a Boer General.”
“I’m from Glasgow.
My name’s Dickson McCunn.” He had
a faint hope that the announcement might affect the
other as it had affected the bagman at Kilchrist.
“Golly, what a name!” exclaimed the young
man rudely.
Dickson was nettled. “It’s
very old Highland,” he said. “It
means the son of a dog.”
“Which Christian
name or surname?” Then the young man appeared
to think he had gone too far, for he smiled pleasantly.
“And a very good name too. Mine is prosaic
by comparison. They call me John Heritage.”
“That,” said Dickson,
mollified, “is like a name out of a book.
With that name by rights you should be a poet.”
Gloom settled on the young man’s
countenance. “It’s a dashed sight
too poetic. It’s like Edwin Arnold and
Alfred Austin and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Great
poets have vulgar monosyllables for names, like Keats.
The new Shakespeare when he comes along will probably
be called Grubb or Jubber, if he isn’t Jones.
With a name like yours I might have a chance.
You should be the poet.”
“I’m very fond of reading,” said
Dickson modestly.
A slow smile crumpled Mr. Heritage’s
face. “There’s a fire in the smoking-room,”
he observed as he rose. “We’d better
bag the armchairs before these fishing louts take
them.” Dickson followed obediently.
This was the kind of chance acquaintance for whom he
had hoped, and he was prepared to make the most of
him.
The fire burned bright in the little
dusky smoking-room, lighted by one oil-lamp.
Mr. Heritage flung himself into a chair, stretched
his long legs, and lit a pipe.
“You like reading?” he
asked. “What sort? Any use for poetry?”
“Plenty,” said Dickson.
“I’ve aye been fond of learning it up
and repeating it to myself when I had nothing to do.
In church and waiting on trains, like. It used
to be Tennyson, but now it’s more Browning.
I can say a lot of Browning.”
The other screwed his face into an
expression of disgust. “I know the stuff.
‘Damask cheeks and dewy sister eyelids.’
Or else the Ercles vein ’God’s
in His Heaven, all’s right with the world.’
No good, Mr. McCunn. All back numbers.
Poetry’s not a thing of pretty round phrases
or noisy invocations. It’s life itself,
with the tang of the raw world in it not
a sweetmeat for middle-class women in parlours.”
“Are you a poet, Mr. Heritage?”
“No, Dogson, I’m a paper-maker.”
This was a new view to Mr. McCunn.
“I just once knew a paper-maker,” he
observed reflectively, “They called him Tosh.
He drank a bit.”
“Well, I don’t drink,”
said the other. “I’m a paper-maker,
but that’s for my bread and butter. Some
day for my own sake I may be a poet.”
“Have you published anything?”
The eager admiration in Dickson’s
tone gratified Mr. Heritage. He drew from his
pocket a slim book. “My firstfruits,”
he said, rather shyly.
Dickson received it with reverence.
It was a small volume in grey paper boards with a
white label on the back, and it was lettered:
Whorls-John Heritage’s book.
He turned the pages and read a little. “It’s
a nice wee book,” he observed at length.
“Good God, if you call it nice,
I must have failed pretty badly,” was the irritated
answer.
Dickson read more deeply and was puzzled.
It seemed worse than the worst of Browning to understand.
He found one poem about a garden entitled “Revue.”
“Crimson and resonant clangs the dawn,”
said the poet. Then he went on to describe noonday:
“Sunflowers, tall Grenadiers, ogle
the roses’ short-skirted ballet.
The fumes of dark sweet wine hidden in
frail petals
Madden the drunkard bees.”
This seemed to him an odd way to look
at things, and he boggled over a phrase about an “epicene
lily.” Then came evening: “The
painted gauze of the stars flutters in a fold of twilight
crape,” sang Mr. Heritage; and again, “The
moon’s pale leprosy sloughs the fields.”
Dickson turned to other verses which
apparently enshrined the writer’s memory of
the trenches. They were largely compounded of
oaths, and rather horrible, lingering lovingly over
sights and smells which every one is aware of, but
most people contrive to forget. He did not like
them. Finally he skimmed a poem about a lady
who turned into a bird. The evolution was described
with intimate anatomical details which scared the
honest reader.
He kept his eyes on the book, for
he did not know what to say. The trick seemed
to be to describe nature in metaphors mostly drawn
from music-halls and haberdashers’ shops, and,
when at a loss, to fall to cursing. He thought
it frankly very bad, and he laboured to find words
which would combine politeness and honesty.
“Well?” said the poet.
“There’s a lot of fine
things here, but but the lines don’t
just seem to scan very well.”
Mr. Heritage laughed. “Now
I can place you exactly. You like the meek rhyme
and the conventional epithet. Well, I don’t.
The world has passed beyond that prettiness.
You want the moon described as a Huntress or a gold
disc or a flower I say it’s oftener
like a beer barrel or a cheese. You want a wealth
of jolly words and real things ruled out as unfit
for poetry. I say there’s nothing unfit
for poetry. Nothing, Dogson! Poetry’s
everywhere, and the real thing is commoner among drabs
and pot-houses and rubbish-heaps than in your Sunday
parlours. The poet’s business is to distil
it out of rottenness, and show that it is all one
spirit, the thing that keeps the stars in their place....
I wanted to call my book ‘Drains,’ for
drains are sheer poetry carrying off the excess and
discards of human life to make the fields green and
the corn ripen. But the publishers kicked.
So I called it ‘Whorls,’ to express my
view of the exquisite involution of all things.
Poetry is the fourth dimension of the soul....
Well, let’s hear about your taste in prose.”
Mr. McCunn was much bewildered, and
a little inclined to be cross. He disliked being
called Dogson, which seemed to him an abuse of his
etymological confidences. But his habit of politeness
held.
He explained rather haltingly his preferences in prose.
Mr. Heritage listened with wrinkled brows.
“You’re even deeper in
the mud than I thought,” he remarked. “You
live in a world of painted laths and shadows.
All this passion for the picturesque! Trash,
my dear man, like a schoolgirl’s novelette heroes.
You make up romances about gipsies and sailors, and
the blackguards they call pioneers, but you know nothing
about them. If you did, you would find they
had none of the gilt and gloss you imagine. But
the great things they have got in common with all
humanity you ignore. It’s like it’s
like sentimentalising about a pancake because it looked
like a buttercup, and all the while not knowing that
it was good to eat.”
At that moment the Australian entered
the room to get a light for his pipe. He wore
a motor-cyclist’s overalls and appeared to be
about to take the road. He bade them good night,
and it seemed to Dickson that his face, seen in the
glow of the fire, was drawn and anxious, unlike that
of the agreeable companion at dinner.
“There,” said Mr. Heritage,
nodding after the departing figure. “I dare
say you have been telling yourself stories about that
chap life in the bush, stockriding and
the rest of it. But probably he’s a bank-clerk
from Melbourne.... Your romanticism is one vast
self-delusion, and it blinds your eye to the real
thing. We have got to clear it out, and with
it all the damnable humbug of the Kelt.”
Mr. McCunn, who spelt the word with
a soft “C,” was puzzled. “I
thought a kelt was a kind of a no-weel fish,”
he interposed.
But the other, in the flood-tide of
his argument, ignored the interruption. “That’s
the value of the war,” he went on. “It
has burst up all the old conventions, and we’ve
got to finish the destruction before we can build.
It is the same with literature and religion, and
society and politics. At them with the axe, say
I. I have no use for priests and pedants. I’ve
no use for upper classes and middle classes.
There’s only one class that matters, the plain
man, the workers, who live close to life.”
“The place for you,” said
Dickson dryly, “is in Russia among the Bolsheviks.”
Mr. Heritage approved. “They
are doing a great work in their own fashion.
We needn’t imitate all their methods they’re
a trifle crude and have too many Jews among them but
they’ve got hold of the right end of the stick.
They seek truth and reality.”
Mr. McCunn was slowly being roused.
“What brings you wandering hereaways?”
he asked.
“Exercise,” was the answer.
“I’ve been kept pretty closely tied up
all winter. And I want leisure and quiet to
think over things.”
“Well, there’s one subject
you might turn your attention to. You’ll
have been educated like a gentleman?”
“Nine wasted years five at Harrow,
four at Cambridge.”
“See here, then. You’re
daft about the working-class and have no use for any
other. But what in the name of goodness do you
know about working-men?... I come out of them
myself, and have lived next door to them all my days.
Take them one way and another, they’re a decent
sort, good and bad like the rest of us. But there’s
a wheen daft folk that would set them up as models close
to truth and reality, says you. It’s sheer
ignorance, for you’re about as well acquaint
with the working-man as with King Solomon. You
say I make up fine stories about tinklers and sailor-men
because I know nothing about them. That’s
maybe true. But you’re at the same job
yourself. You ideelise the working man, you and
your kind, because you’re ignorant. You
say that he’s seeking for truth, when he’s
only looking for a drink and a rise in wages.
You tell me he’s near reality, but I tell you
that his notion of reality is often just a short working
day and looking on at a footba’-match on Saturday....
And when you run down what you call the middle-classes
that do three-quarters of the world’s work and
keep the machine going and the working-man in a job,
then I tell you you’re talking havers.
Havers!”
Mr. McCunn, having delivered his defence
of the bourgeoisie, rose abruptly and went to bed.
He felt jarred and irritated. His innocent little
private domain had been badly trampled by this stray
bull of a poet. But as he lay in bed, before
blowing out his candle, he had recourse to Walton,
and found a passage on which, as on a pillow, he went
peacefully to sleep:
“As I left this place, and entered
into the next field, a second pleasure entertained
me; ’twas a handsome milkmaid, that had not yet
attained so much age and wisdom as to load her mind
with any fears of many things that will never be,
as too many men too often do; but she cast away all
care, and sang like a nightingale; her voice was good,
and the ditty fitted for it; it was the smooth song
that was made by Kit Marlow now at least fifty years
ago. And the milkmaid’s mother sung an
answer to it, which was made by Sir Walter Raleigh
in his younger days. They were old-fashioned
poetry, but choicely good; I think much better than
the strong lines that are now in fashion in this critical
age.”