About a fortnight after this Philip,
going home one evening after his day’s work
at the hospital, knocked at the door of Cronshaw’s
room. He got no answer and walked in. Cronshaw
was lying huddled up on one side, and Philip went
up to the bed. He did not know whether Cronshaw
was asleep or merely lay there in one of his uncontrollable
fits of irritability. He was surprised to see
that his mouth was open. He touched his shoulder.
Philip gave a cry of dismay. He slipped his hand
under Cronshaw’s shirt and felt his heart; he
did not know what to do; helplessly, because he had
heard of this being done, he held a looking-glass
in front of his mouth. It startled him to be
alone with Cronshaw. He had his hat and coat still
on, and he ran down the stairs into the street; he
hailed a cab and drove to Harley Street. Dr.
Tyrell was in.
“I say, would you mind coming
at once? I think Cronshaw’s dead.”
“If he is it’s not much good my coming,
is it?”
“I should be awfully grateful
if you would. I’ve got a cab at the door.
It’ll only take half an hour.”
Tyrell put on his hat. In the
cab he asked him one or two questions.
“He seemed no worse than usual
when I left this morning,” said Philip.
“It gave me an awful shock when I went in just
now. And the thought of his dying all alone....
D’you think he knew he was going to die?”
Philip remembered what Cronshaw had
said. He wondered whether at that last moment
he had been seized with the terror of death. Philip
imagined himself in such a plight, knowing it was
inevitable and with no one, not a soul, to give an
encouraging word when the fear seized him.
“You’re rather upset,” said Dr.
Tyrell.
He looked at him with his bright blue
eyes. They were not unsympathetic. When
he saw Cronshaw, he said:
“He must have been dead for
some hours. I should think he died in his sleep.
They do sometimes.”
The body looked shrunk and ignoble.
It was not like anything human. Dr. Tyrell looked
at it dispassionately. With a mechanical gesture
he took out his watch.
“Well, I must be getting along.
I’ll send the certificate round. I suppose
you’ll communicate with the relatives.”
“I don’t think there are any,” said
Philip.
“How about the funeral?”
“Oh, I’ll see to that.”
Dr. Tyrell gave Philip a glance.
He wondered whether he ought to offer a couple of
sovereigns towards it. He knew nothing of Philip’s
circumstances; perhaps he could well afford the expense;
Philip might think it impertinent if he made any suggestion.
“Well, let me know if there’s anything
I can do,” he said.
Philip and he went out together, parting
on the doorstep, and Philip went to a telegraph office
in order to send a message to Leonard Upjohn.
Then he went to an undertaker whose shop he passed
every day on his way to the hospital. His attention
had been drawn to it often by the three words in silver
lettering on a black cloth, which, with two model coffins,
adorned the window: Economy, Celerity, Propriety.
They had always diverted him. The undertaker
was a little fat Jew with curly black hair, long and
greasy, in black, with a large diamond ring on a podgy
finger. He received Philip with a peculiar manner
formed by the mingling of his natural blatancy with
the subdued air proper to his calling. He quickly
saw that Philip was very helpless and promised to
send round a woman at once to perform the needful
offices. His suggestions for the funeral were
very magnificent; and Philip felt ashamed of himself
when the undertaker seemed to think his objections
mean. It was horrible to haggle on such a matter,
and finally Philip consented to an expensiveness which
he could ill afford.
“I quite understand, sir,”
said the undertaker, “you don’t want any
show and that I’m not a believer
in ostentation myself, mind you but you
want it done gentlemanly-like. You leave it to
me, I’ll do it as cheap as it can be done, ’aving
regard to what’s right and proper. I can’t
say more than that, can I?”
Philip went home to eat his supper,
and while he ate the woman came along to lay out the
corpse. Presently a telegram arrived from Leonard
Upjohn.
Shocked and grieved beyond measure.
Regret cannot come tonight. Dining out.
With you early tomorrow. Deepest sympathy.
Upjohn.
In a little while the woman knocked
at the door of the sitting-room.
“I’ve done now, sir.
Will you come and look at ’im and see it’s
all right?”
Philip followed her. Cronshaw
was lying on his back, with his eyes closed and his
hands folded piously across his chest.
“You ought by rights to ’ave a few
flowers, sir.”
“I’ll get some tomorrow.”
She gave the body a glance of satisfaction.
She had performed her job, and now she rolled down
her sleeves, took off her apron, and put on her bonnet.
Philip asked her how much he owed her.
“Well, sir, some give me two
and sixpence and some give me five shillings.”
Philip was ashamed to give her less
than the larger sum. She thanked him with just
so much effusiveness as was seemly in presence of the
grief he might be supposed to feel, and left him.
Philip went back into his sitting-room, cleared away
the remains of his supper, and sat down to read Walsham’s
Surgery. He found it difficult. He felt singularly
nervous. When there was a sound on the stairs
he jumped, and his heart beat violently. That
thing in the adjoining room, which had been a man and
now was nothing, frightened him. The silence
seemed alive, as if some mysterious movement were
taking place within it; the presence of death weighed
upon these rooms, unearthly and terrifying: Philip
felt a sudden horror for what had once been his friend.
He tried to force himself to read, but presently pushed
away his book in despair. What troubled him was
the absolute futility of the life which had just ended.
It did not matter if Cronshaw was alive or dead.
It would have been just as well if he had never lived.
Philip thought of Cronshaw young; and it needed an
effort of imagination to picture him slender, with
a springing step, and with hair on his head, buoyant
and hopeful. Philip’s rule of life, to follow
one’s instincts with due regard to the policeman
round the corner, had not acted very well there:
it was because Cronshaw had done this that he had made
such a lamentable failure of existence. It seemed
that the instincts could not be trusted. Philip
was puzzled, and he asked himself what rule of life
was there, if that one was useless, and why people
acted in one way rather than in another. They
acted according to their emotions, but their emotions
might be good or bad; it seemed just a chance whether
they led to triumph or disaster. Life seemed
an inextricable confusion. Men hurried hither
and thither, urged by forces they knew not; and the
purpose of it all escaped them; they seemed to hurry
just for hurrying’s sake.
Next morning Leonard Upjohn appeared
with a small wreath of laurel. He was pleased
with his idea of crowning the dead poet with this;
and attempted, notwithstanding Philip’s disapproving
silence, to fix it on the bald head; but the wreath
fitted grotesquely. It looked like the brim of
a hat worn by a low comedian in a music-hall.
“I’ll put it over his heart instead,”
said Upjohn.
“You’ve put it on his stomach,”
remarked Philip.
Upjohn gave a thin smile.
“Only a poet knows where lies a poet’s
heart,” he answered.
They went back into the sitting-room,
and Philip told him what arrangements he had made
for the funeral.
“I hoped you’ve spared
no expense. I should like the hearse to be followed
by a long string of empty coaches, and I should like
the horses to wear tall nodding plumes, and there
should be a vast number of mutes with long streamers
on their hats. I like the thought of all those
empty coaches.”
“As the cost of the funeral
will apparently fall on me and I’m not over
flush just now, I’ve tried to make it as moderate
as possible.”
“But, my dear fellow, in that
case, why didn’t you get him a pauper’s
funeral? There would have been something poetic
in that. You have an unerring instinct for mediocrity.”
Philip flushed a little, but did not
answer; and next day he and Upjohn followed the hearse
in the one carriage which Philip had ordered.
Lawson, unable to come, had sent a wreath; and Philip,
so that the coffin should not seem too neglected,
had bought a couple. On the way back the coachman
whipped up his horses. Philip was dog-tired and
presently went to sleep. He was awakened by Upjohn’s
voice.
“It’s rather lucky the
poems haven’t come out yet. I think we’d
better hold them back a bit and I’ll write a
preface. I began thinking of it during the drive
to the cemetery. I believe I can do something
rather good. Anyhow I’ll start with an
article in The Saturday.”
Philip did not reply, and there was
silence between them. At last Upjohn said:
“I daresay I’d be wiser
not to whittle away my copy. I think I’ll
do an article for one of the reviews, and then I can
just print it afterwards as a preface.”
Philip kept his eye on the monthlies,
and a few weeks later it appeared. The article
made something of a stir, and extracts from it were
printed in many of the papers. It was a very
good article, vaguely biographical, for no one knew
much of Cronshaw’s early life, but delicate,
tender, and picturesque. Leonard Upjohn in his
intricate style drew graceful little pictures of Cronshaw
in the Latin Quarter, talking, writing poetry:
Cronshaw became a picturesque figure, an English Verlaine;
and Leonard Upjohn’s coloured phrases took on
a tremulous dignity, a more pathetic grandiloquence,
as he described the sordid end, the shabby little room
in Soho; and, with a reticence which was wholly charming
and suggested a much greater generosity than modesty
allowed him to state, the efforts he made to transport
the Poet to some cottage embowered with honeysuckle
amid a flowering orchard. And the lack of sympathy,
well-meaning but so tactless, which had taken the
poet instead to the vulgar respectability of Kennington!
Leonard Upjohn described Kennington with that restrained
humour which a strict adherence to the vocabulary of
Sir Thomas Browne necessitated. With delicate
sarcasm he narrated the last weeks, the patience with
which Cronshaw bore the well-meaning clumsiness of
the young student who had appointed himself his nurse,
and the pitifulness of that divine vagabond in those
hopelessly middle-class surroundings. Beauty from
ashes, he quoted from Isaiah. It was a triumph
of irony for that outcast poet to die amid the trappings
of vulgar respectability; it reminded Leonard Upjohn
of Christ among the Pharisees, and the analogy gave
him opportunity for an exquisite passage. And
then he told how a friend his good taste
did not suffer him more than to hint subtly who the
friend was with such gracious fancies had
laid a laurel wreath on the dead poet’s heart;
and the beautiful dead hands had seemed to rest with
a voluptuous passion upon Apollo’s leaves, fragrant
with the fragrance of art, and more green than jade
brought by swart mariners from the manifold, inexplicable
China. And, an admirable contrast, the article
ended with a description of the middle-class, ordinary,
prosaic funeral of him who should have been buried
like a prince or like a pauper. It was the crowning
buffet, the final victory of Philistia over art, beauty,
and immaterial things.
Leonard Upjohn had never written anything
better. It was a miracle of charm, grace, and
pity. He printed all Cronshaw’s best poems
in the course of the article, so that when the volume
appeared much of its point was gone; but he advanced
his own position a good deal. He was thenceforth
a critic to be reckoned with. He had seemed before
a little aloof; but there was a warm humanity about
this article which was infinitely attractive.