Classic Audiobook Collection - The Card by Arnold Bennett ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
Episode Date: October 26, 2022The Card by Arnold Bennett audiobook. Genre: comedy The ‘Card’ in question is Edward Henry Machin - His mother called him ‘Denry’. This light-hearted story is of his rise from humble beginnin...gs as the son of a washerwoman and sempstress in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, in the pottery towns (which Arnold Bennett christened ‘The Five Towns’) of the English Midlands; how, by his own wits, enterprise and ‘nerve’ he rose to wealth, married bliss and public recognition as the youngest-ever mayor of his home town. “’And yet,’ demanded Councillor Barlow, ‘what’s he done? What great cause is he identified with? ’‘He’s identified,’ said the speaker, ‘with the great cause of cheering us all up’.” For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:39:11) Chapter 2 (01:20:20) Chapter 3 (02:04:56) Chapter 4 (02:41:21) Chapter 5 (03:24:33) Chapter 6 (04:04:19) Chapter 7 (04:45:15) Chapter 8 (05:28:46) Chapter 9 (06:05:31) Chapter 10 (06:47:12) Chapter 11 (07:28:27) Chapter 12 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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the card a story of adventure in the five towns by arnold bennett chapter one the dance one
edward henry machen first saw the smoke on the twenty seventh of may eighteenth of may eighteen sixty seven in broom street bursley the most ancient of the five towns brum street runs down from st luke square straight into the shropshire union canal and consists of
partly of buildings known as pot-banks, until they come to be sold by auction, when auctioneers
describe them as extensive earthenware manufactories, and partly of cottages, whose highest rent
is four and six a week.
In such surroundings was an extraordinary man born.
He was the only anxiety of a widowed mother, who gained her livelihood and his by making
up ladies' own materials in ladies' own houses.
Mrs. Machen, however, had a speciality apart from her vocation.
She could wash flannel with less shrinking than any other woman in the district,
and she could wash fine lace without ruining it. Thus, often she came to sew, and remained to
wash. A somewhat gloomy woman, thin with a tongue. But I liked her. She saved a certain amount
of time every day, by addressing her son as Denry, instead of Edward Henry.
Not intellectual, not industrious, Denry would have maintained the average dignity of labour on a
pot-bank, had he not at the age of twelve, won a scholarship from the board school to the
endowed school. He owed his triumph to audacity rather than learning, and to chance rather than
design. On the second day of the examination, he happened to arrive in the examination room
ten minutes too soon for the afternoon sitting. He wandered about the place, exercising his
curiosity, and reached the master's desk. On the desk was a tabulated form, with names of candidates
and the number of marks achieved by each in each subject of the previous day. He had done badly in
geography and saw seven marks against his name in the geographical column out of a possible thirty.
The figures had been written in pencil. The pencil lay on the desk. He picked it up,
glanced at the door, and at the rows of empty desks, and wrote a neat two in front of the seven.
Then he strolled innocently forth and came back late. His trick ought to have been
found out. The odds were against him, but it was not found out. Of course it was dishonest,
yes, but I will not agree that Denry was uncommonly vicious. Every schoolboy is dishonest by the
adult standard. If I knew an honest schoolboy, I would begin to count my silver spoons.
All is fair between schoolboys and schoolmasters. This dazzling feat seemed to influence not only
Denry's career, but also his character.
He gradually came to believe that he had won the scholarship by genuine merit,
and that he was a remarkable boy, and destined to great ends.
His new companions, whose mothers employed Denry's mother,
also believed that he was a remarkable boy,
but they did not forget, in their gentlemanly way, to call him washerwoman.
Happily, Denry didn't mind.
He had a thick skin, and fair hair and bright eyes,
and broad shoulders, and the jolly gaiety of his disposition developed daily.
He did not shine at the school, he failed to fulfil the rosy promise of the scholarship,
but he was not stupider than the majority, and his opinion of himself, having once risen,
remained at set fair. It was inconceivable that he should work in clay with his hands.
Two
When he was sixteen, his mother, by operations,
on a yard and a half of Brussels Point lace,
put Mrs. Emery under an obligation.
Mrs. Emery was the sister of Mr. Duncalf.
Mr. Duncalf was town clerk of Bursley, and a solicitor.
It is well known that all bureaucracies are honeycombed with intrigue.
Denry Macchin left school to be a clerk to Mr. Duncalf,
on the condition that within a year he should be able to write shorthand
at a rate of 150 words a minute.
In those days, mediocre and incorrect shorthand was not a drug on the market.
He complied, more or less, and decided less than more, with the condition,
and for several years he really thought that he had nothing further to hope for.
Then he met the Countess.
The Countess of Chell was born of poor but picturesque parents,
and she could put her finger on her great-grandfather's grandfather.
Her mother gained her livelihood and her daughters by allowing herself to be seen a great deal with humbler but richer people's daughters.
The Countess was brought up to matrimony. She was aimed and timed to hit a given mark at a given moment.
She succeeded. She married the Earl of Chelle. She also married about twenty thousand acres in England, about a fifth of Scotland, a house in Piccadilly, seven country seats, including Snail.
a steam yacht and £500,000 worth of shares in the Midland Railway.
She was young and pretty.
She had travelled in China and written a book about China.
She sang at charity concerts and acted in private theatricals.
She sketched from nature.
She was one of the great hostesses of London,
and she had not the slightest tendency to stoutness.
All this did not satisfy her.
She was ambitious.
She wanted to be taken seriously.
She wanted to enter into the life of the people.
She saw in the quarter of a million souls that constitute the five towns
a unique means to her end, an unrivaled toy,
and she determined to be identified with all that was most serious in the social progress of the five towns.
Hence some fifteen thousand pounds were spent in refurbishing Snade Hall,
which lies on the edge of the five towns,
and the Earl and Countess passed four months of the year there.
Hence the Earl, a mild retiring man,
when invited by the town council to be the ornamental mayor of Burzley,
accepted the infidation.
Hence the mayor and maireess gave an immense afternoon reception
to practically the entire role of Burgesses.
And hence, a little later,
the maireess let it be known that she meant to give a municipal ball.
The news of the ball thrilled Burzley more than anything had thrilled Burzley since the signing of the Magna Carta.
Nevertheless, balls had been offered by previous mayresses.
One can only suppose that in Burzley there remains a peculiar respect for land, railway stock, steam yachts, and great-grandfather's grandfather.
Now, everybody of account had been asked to the reception, but everybody could not be asked of the ball.
because not more than two hundred people could dance in the town hall.
There were nearly thirty-five thousand inhabitants of Burzley,
of whom quite two thousand counted,
even though they did not dance.
Three. Three weeks and three days before the ball,
Denry Machen was seated one morning alone in Mr. Duncoff's private offices in Duck Square,
where he carried on his practice as a solicitor.
when in stepped a tall and pretty young woman, dressed very smartly but soberly in dark green.
On the desk in front of Denry was several wide sheets of abstract paper, concealed by a copy of that morning's athletic news.
Before Denry could even think of reversing the positions of the abstract paper and the athletic news,
the young woman said, Good morning, in a very friendly style. She had a shrill voice and an efficient smile.
"'Good morning, madam,' said Denry.
"'Mr. Duncar, Finn,' asked the young woman brightly.
"'Why should Denry have slipped off his stool?
"'It's utterly against etiquette,
"'for solicitous clerks to slip off their stools while answering inquiries.'
"'No, madam, he's across at the town hall,' said Denry.
"'The young lady shook her head playfully with a faint smile.
"'I've just been there,' she said.
"'They said he was here.'
"'I dare say I could find him, madam, if you would.'
She now smiled broadly.
"'Conservative club, I suppose,' she said, with an air deliciously confidential.
He too smiled.
"'Oh, no,' she said after a little pause, just tell him I've called.
"'Certainly, madam, nothing I can do?'
She was already turning away, but she turned back and scrutinised his face,
as Denry thought, roguishly.
"'You might just give him this list,' she said,
"'taking a paper from her satchel and spreading it.
"'She had come to the desk, their elbows touched.
"'He isn't to take any notice of the crossings out in red ink, you understand?
"'Of course I'm relying on him for the other lists,
"'and I expect all the invitations to be out on Wednesday.
"'Good morning.'
"'She was gone.
"'He sprang to the grimy window.
"'Outside in the snow were a broom,
twin horses, twin men in yellow, and a little crowd of youngsters and oldsters.
She flashed across the footpath and vanished.
The door of the carriage banged, one of the twins in yellow leapt up to his brother,
and the whole affair dashed dangerously away.
The face of the leaping twin was familiar to Denry.
The man had indeed once inhabited Broome Street, being known to the street as jock,
and his mother had for long years been a friend of Mrs. Macchins.
It was the first time Denry had seen the Countess, save at a distance.
Assuredly she was finer even in her photographs, entirely different from what one would have expected, so easy to talk to.
Yet what had he said to her? Nothing, and everything.
He nodded his head, and murmured, no mistake about that lot, meaning presumably,
that all that one had read about the brilliance of the aristocracy was true, and more than true,
"'She's the finest woman that ever came into this town,' he murmured.
The truth was that she surpassed his dreams of womanhood.
At two o'clock she had been a name to him.
At five minutes past two he was in love with her.
He felt profoundly thankful that for a church tea-meeting that evening
he happened to be wearing his best clothes.
It was while looking at her list of invitations to the ball
that he first conceived the fantastic scheme of attending the ball himself.
Mr. Duncalfe was fussily and deferentially managing the machinery of the ball for the Countess.
He had prepared a little list of his own of people who ought to be invited.
Several aldermen had been requested to do the same.
There were thus about half a dozen lists to be combined into one.
Denry did the combining.
Nothing was easier than to insert the name of E.H. M.H.
in, inconspicuously, towards the centre of the list, nothing was easier than to lose the
original lists, inadvertently, so that if a question arose as to any particular name, the
responsibility for it could not be ascertained without inquiries too delicate to be made.
On Wednesday, Denry received a lovely Bristol board, stating in copperplate, that the Countess
desired the pleasure of his company at the ball, and on Thursday his name was ticked off as one
who had accepted.
Four.
He had never been to a dance.
He had no dress-suit, and no notion of dancing.
He was a strange, inconsequent mixture of courage and timidity.
You and I are consistent in character.
We're either one thing or the other.
But Denry-Machin had no consistency.
For three days he hesitated, and then, secretly trembling,
he slipped into shillit-toes, the young tailor who had recently.
set up, and who was gathering together the Gernest d'Oray of the town.
"'I want a dress-suit,' he said.
"'Shilito, who knew that Denry only earned eighteen shillings a week,
replied with only superficial politeness that a dress-suit was out of the question.
He had already taken more orders than he could execute without killing himself.
The whole town had uprisen as one man and demanded a dress-suit.
"'So you're going to the ball, I'm sorry.'
"'Are you?' said Shilito, trying to condescend, but in fact slightly impressed.
"'Yes,' said Denry.
"'Are you?'
"'Shilito started, and then shook his head.
"'No time for balls,' said he.
"'I can get you an invitation, if you like,' said Denry,
glancing at the door, precisely as he had glanced at the door before adding two to seven.
"'Oh!'
"'Shillito cocked his ears.
"'He was not a native of the town,
"'and had no alderman to protect his legitimate interests.
"'To cut a shameful story short,
"'in a week, Denry was being tried on.
"'Shilito allowed him two years' credit.
"'The prospect of the ball gave an immense impetus
"'to the study of the art of dancing in Burseley,
"'and so put quite a nice sum of money
"'into the pocket of Miss Earp,
"'a young mistress in that art.
She was the daughter of a furniture-dealer with a passion for the bankruptcy court.
Miss Earp's evening classes were attended by Denry, but none of his money went into her pocket.
She was compensated by an expression of the Countess's desire for the pleasure of her company at the ball.
The Countess had aroused Denry's interest in women as a sex.
Ruth Earp quickened the interest.
She was plain, but she was only twenty-four, and very graceful on her feet.
"'Denry had one or two strictly private lessons from her in reversing.
"'She said to him one evening, when he was practising reversing,
"'and they were entwined in the attitude prescribed by the latest fashion.
"'Never mind me. Think about yourself.
"'It's the same in dancing as it is in life.
"'The woman's duty is to adapt herself to the man.'
"'He did think about himself.
"'He was thinking about himself in the middle of the night,
and about her too.
There had been something in her tone, her eye.
At the final lesson he inquired if she would give him the first waltz at the ball.
She paused, and then said, yes.
Five.
On the evening of the ball, Denry spent at least two hours in the operation which was necessary
before he could give the countess the pleasure of his company.
This operation took place in his minute bedroom at the back.
of the cottage in Broom Street, and it was of a complex nature. Three weeks ago he had innocently
thought that you had only to order a dress-suit, and there you were. He now knew that a dress-suit
is merely the beginning of anxiety. Shirt, collar, tie, studs, cufflings, gloves, handkerchief.
He was very glad to learn authoritatively from Shillito, that handkerchiefs were no longer
worn in the waistcoat opening, and that men who so wore them,
were barbarians, and the truth was not in them.
Thus, an everyday handkerchief would do.
Boots!
Boots were the rock on which he had struck.
Shilito, in addition to being a tailor, was a hosier,
but by some flaw in the scheme of the universe,
hosiers do not sell boots.
Except boots, Denry could get all he needed on credit.
Boots he could not get on credit,
and he could not pay cash for them.
Eventually he decided that his church boots must be dazzled up to the level of this great secular occasion.
The pity was that he forgot, not that he was of a forgetful disposition in great matters.
He was simply over-excited. He forgot to dazzle them up, until after he had fairly put his collar on and his necktie in a bow.
It was imprudent to touch blacking in a dress-shirt, so Denry had to undo the past and begin again.
This hurried him. He was not afraid of it. He was not afraid of it.
of being late for the first waltz with Miss Ruth Earp, but he was afraid of not being out
of the house before his mother returned. Mrs. Machen had been making up a lady's own materials
all day, naturally, the day being what it was. If she had had twelve hands instead of two,
she might have made up the own materials of half a dozen ladies instead of one, and earned
twenty-four shillings instead of four. Denry did not want his mother to see him ere he departed.
He had lavished an enormous amount of brains and energy to the end of displaying himself
in this refined and novel attire to the gaze of two hundred persons, and yet his secret wish
was to deprive his mother of the beautiful spectacle.
However, she slipped in, with her bag and her seamy fingers, and her rather sardonic expression
at the very moment when Denry was putting on his overcoat in the kitchen, there being
insufficient room in the passage. He did what he could to hide his shirt-front, though she knew
all about it, and failed. "'Bless us!' she exclaimed briefly, going to the fire to warm her hands.
A harmless remark, but her tone seemed to strip bare the vanity of human greatness.
"'I'm in a hurry,' said Denry, importantly, as if he was going forth to sign a treaty
involving the welfare of nations.
"'Well,' said she,
"'Happan you are, Denry,
"'but the kitchen table's no place for boot-brushes.'
He had one piece of luck.
It froze.
Therefore, no anxiety about the condition of boots.
Six.
The Countess was late, some trouble with a horse.
Happily the Earl had been in Bursley all day,
and had dressed at the Conservative Club,
and his lordship had ordered that the programme of dances should be begun.
Denry learnt this as soon as he emerged, effulgent, from the gentleman's cloak-room,
into the broad, red-carpeted corridor which runs from end to end of the ground-floor of the town hall.
Many important townspeople were chatting in the corridor,
the innumerable Swetnam family, the Stanways, the great etches, the fernses,
Mrs. Clayton Vernon, the Sutton's, including Beatrice Sutton.
Of course everyone knew him for Duncast's shorthand-cler, and the son of the flannel washer,
but universal white-kid gloves constitute a democracy,
and Chilito could put more style into a suit than any other tailor in the five towns.
"'How do?' the eldest of the Sweatnam boys nodded carelessly.
"'How do, Sweatnam?' said Denry, with equal carelessness.
The thing was accomplished. That greeting was like a Masonic initiation, and henceforth he was the peer of no matter whom.
At first he had thought that four hundred eyes would be fastened on him, their glance saying,
This youth is wearing a dress suit for the first time, and it is not paid for either.
But it was not so.
And the reason was that the entire population of the town hall was heartily engaged in pretend,
that never in its life had it been seen after seven o'clock of a night, apart from a dress suit.
Denry observed with joy that while numerous middle-aged and awkward men wore red or white silk
handkerchiefs in their waistcoats, such peoples as Charles Ferns, the Swetnam's and Harold Etches,
did not. He was then in the shyness of his handkerchief on the side of the angels.
He passed up the double staircase, decorated with the shudence.
with white or pale frocks of unparalleled richness, and so into the grand hall.
A scarlet orchestra was on the platform, and many people strolled about the floor in attitudes of
expectation. The walls were festooned with flowers, the thrill of being magnificent seized
him, and he was drenched in a vast desire to be truly magnificent himself. He dreamt of
magnificence, and boot-brushes kept sticking out of this dream like black mum.
mud out of snow. In his reverie he looked about for Ruth Earp, but she was invisible.
Then he went downstairs again idly, gorgeously feigning that he spent six evenings a week
in ascending and descending monumental staircases appropriately clad. He was determined to be
as sublime as anyone. There was a stir in the corridor, and the sublimist consented to be
excited. The Countess was announced to be imminent. Everybody,
body was grouped round the main portal, careless of temperatures.
Six times was the Countess announced to be imminent, before she actually appeared,
expanding from the narrow gloom of her black carriage like a magic vision.
Alderman received her, and they did not do it with any excess of gracefulness.
They seemed afraid of her, as though she were recovering from influenza, and they feared to catch it.
She had precisely the same high voice, and precisely the same efficient smile,
as she had employed to Denry.
And these instruments worked marvels on Alderman.
They were as melting as salt on snow.
The Countess disappeared upstairs in a cloud of shrill apologies and trailing Alderman.
She seemed to have greeted everybody except Denry.
Somehow he was relieved that she had not drawn attention to him.
He lingered, hesitating,
and then he saw a being in a long yellow overcoat,
with a bit of peacock's feather at the summit of a shiny high hat.
This being held a lady's fur mantle.
Their eyes met.
Denry had to decide instantly.
He decided.
Hello, Jock, he said.
Hello, Denry, said the other, pleased.
What's been happening?
Denry inquired, friendly.
Then Jock told him about the antics of one of the Countess's horses.
He went upstairs again.
and met Ruth Earp coming down.
She was glorious in white.
Except that nothing glittered in her hair,
she looked the very equal of the Countess,
at a little distance,
plain though her features were.
"'What about that waltz?' Denry began informally.
"'That waltz is nearly over,' said Ruth Earp, with chilliness.
"'I suppose you have been staring at her ladyship with all the other men.'
"'I'm awfully sorry,' he said.
"'I didn't know the waltz was...
"'Well, why didn't you look at your programme?'
"'Haven't got one,' he said naively.
"'He had omitted to take a programme.
"'Ninny! Barbarian!'
"'Better get one,' she said cuttingly,
"'somewhat in her role of dancing mistress.
"'Can't we finish the waltz?' he suggested, crestfallen.
"'No,' she said,
"'and continued her solitary way downwards.
"'She was hurt.
"'He tried to think of something to say
that was equal to the situation, and equal to the style of his suit, but he could not.
In a moment he heard her below him greeting some male acquaintance in the most effusive way.
Yet, if Denry had not committed a wicked crime for her, she could never have come to the dance at all.
He got a programme, and with terror gripping his heart he asked sundry young and middle-aged women,
whom he knew by sight and by name for a dance.
Ruth had taught him how to ask.
Not one of them had a dance left.
Several looked at him as much as to say,
You must be a goose to suppose that my programme is not filled up in the twinkling of my eye.
Then he joined a group of despisers of dancing near the main door.
Harold Etches was there, the wealthiest manufacturer of his years, barely twenty-four, in the five towns.
Also, Shillito.
cause of another of Denry's wicked crimes.
The group was taciturned, critical, and very doggy.
The group observed that the Countess was not dancing.
The Earl was dancing, need it be said, with Mrs. Joss Curtney,
second wife of the Deputy Mayor.
But the Countess stood resolutely smiling, surrounded by Alderman.
Possibly she was getting her breath.
Possibly nobody had the pluck to ask her.
Anyway, she seemed to be stranded there, on a beach of aldermen.
Very wisely she had brought with her no members of a house-party from Snade Hall.
Members of a house-party, at a municipal ball, invariably operate as a bar between greatness and democracy,
and the Countess desired to participate in the life of the people.
"'Why don't some of those johnnies ask her?' Denry burst out.
He had hitherto said nothing in the group,
and he felt that he must be a man with the rest of them.
"'Well, you go and do it. It's a free country,' said Chilito.
"'So I would for two pins,' said Denry.
Harold Etches glanced at him, apparently resentful of his presence there.
Harold Etches was determined to put the extinguis on him.
"'I'll bet you a fiver you don't,' said Etches scornfully.
"'I'll take you,' said Denry very quickly, and very quickly walked off.
"'Seven. She can't eat me. She can't eat me.'
That was what he said to himself as he crossed the floor.
People seemed to make a lane for him, divining his incredible intention.
If he had not started at once, if his legs had not started of themselves, he would never
have started, and, not being in command of a fiver, he would afterwards have cut a preposterous
figure in the group. But started he was, like a piece of clockwork that could not be stopped.
in the grand crises of his life something not himself something more powerful than himself jumped up in him and forced him to do things now for the first time he seemed to understand what had occurred with him in previous crises
In a second, so it appeared, he had reached the Countess.
Just behind her was his employer, Mr. Duncalfe, whom Denry had not previously noticed there.
Denry regretted this, for he had never mentioned to Mr. Duncalf that he was coming to the ball,
and he feared Mr. Duncalf.
"'Could I have this dance with you?' he demanded bluntly, but smiling and showing his teeth.
No ceremonial title, no mention of pleasure or of honour.
not a trace of the formula in which Ruth Earp had instructed him.
He forgot all such trivialities.
"'I've won that fiver, Mr. Harold Etches,' he said to himself.
The mouths of Alderman inadvertently opened.
Mr. Duncalf blenched.
"'It's nearly over, isn't it?' said the Countess, still efficiently smiling.
She did not recognise Denry.
In that suit he might have been a foreign officer attach.
"'Oh, that doesn't matter, I'm sure,' said Denry.
She yielded, and he took the paradisical creature in his arms.
It was her business that evening to be universally and inclusively polite.
She could not have begun with a refusal.
A refusal might have dried up all other invitations whatsoever.
Besides, she saw that the alderman wanted a lead.
Besides, she was young, though a countess, and adored dancing.
Thus they waltzed together, while the flower of Burzley's chivalry gazed in enchantment.
The Countess's fan, depending from her arm, dangled against Henry's suit in rather a confusing fashion,
which withdrew his attention from his feet.
He laid hold of it gingerly between two unemployed fingers.
After that he managed fairly well.
Once they came perilously near the Earl and his partner, nothing else,
and then the dance ended.
exactly when Denry had begun to savour the astounding spectacle of himself in clasping
the Countess.
The Countess had soon perceived that he was the merest boy.
"'You waltz quite nicely,' she said,
"'like an aunt, but with more than an aunt's smile.'
"'Do I?' he beamed.
Then something compelled him to say,
"'Do you know it's the first time I've ever waltzed in my life,
except in a lesson, you know?'
"'Really,' she murmured.
"'You pick things up easily, I suppose.'
"'Yes,' he said,
"'do you?'
"'Either the question or the tone
"'sent the countess off into carolins of amusement.
"'Everybody could see that Denry had made the countess laugh tremendously.
"'It was on this note that the waltz finished.
"'She was still laughing when he bowed to her,
"'as taught by Ruth Earp.
"'He could not comprehend why she had laughed,
"'save on the suspicion that he was more humorous
"'than he had suspected.
Anyhow, he laughed too, and they parted laughing.
He remembered that he had made a marked effect, though not one of laughter, on the tailor,
by quickly returning the question,
"'Are you?'
And his unpremeditated stroke with the Countess was similar.
When he had got ten yards on his way towards Harold Etches and a fiver, he felt something
in his hand.
The Countess's fan was sticking between his fingers.
It had unhooked itself from her chain.
He furtively pocketed it.
Eight.
Just the same as dancing with any other woman.
He told this untruth in reply to a question from Shilito.
It was the least he could do.
And any other young man in his place would have said as much, or as little.
What was she laughing at?
Somebody asked.
Ah, said Denry judiciously, wouldn't you like to know?
Here are, said Etches, with an inattentive, plutocratic gesture
handing over a five-pound note?
He was one of those men who never venture out of sight of a bank
without a bank-note in their pockets,
because you never know what might turn up.
Denry accepted the note with a silent nod.
In some directions he was gifted with astounding insight,
and he could read in the faces of the haughty males surrounding him
that in the space of a few minutes
he had risen from an entity into renown.
He had become a great man.
He did not at one,
realised how great, how renowned, but he saw enough in those eyes to cause his heart to glow,
and to rouse in his brain those ambitious dreams which stirred him upon occasion.
He left the group, he had need of motion, and also of that mental privacy, which one may enjoy
while strolling about on a crowded floor, in the midst of a considerable noise.
He noticed that the Countess was now dancing with an alderman, and that the alderman, by an oversight
inexcusable in an alderman was not wearing gloves. It was he, Denry, who had broken the
ice, so that the alderman might plunge into the water. He first had danced with the Countess,
and had rendered her up to the alderman with delicious gaiety upon her countenance.
By instinct he knew Burseley, and he knew that he would be talked of. He knew that, for a time
at any rate, he would displace even Joss Curtney, that almost professional card and amuse
of Burgesses in the popular imagination.
It would not be, have you heard Joss's latest?
It would be, have you heard about young Macon, Duncast, Clark?
Then he met Ruth Earp, strolling in the opposite direction, with a young girl,
one of her pupils, of whom all he knew, was that her name was Nelly,
and that this was her first ball, a childish little thing with a wistful face.
He could not decide whether to look at Ruth or to avoid her glance.
She settled the point by smiling at him in a manner that could not be ignored.
"'Are you going to make it up for me for that waltz you missed?' said Ruth Earp.
She pretended to be vexed and stern, but he knew that she was not.
"'Or is your programme full?' she added.
"'I should like to,' he said simply.
"'But perhaps you don't care to dance with us, poor ordinary people.
Now you've danced with the Countess,' she said,
with a certain lofty and bitter pride.
He perceived that his tone had lacked eagerness.
"'Don't talk like that,' he said, as if hurt.
"'Well, she said, you can have the supper dance.'
He took her programme to write on it.
"'Why, he said, there's a name down here for the supper dance.
Herbert, it looks like.'
"'Oh,' she replied carelessly,
"'that's nothing. Cross it out.'
So he crossed Herbert out.
"'Why don't you ask Nellie here?'
for a dance, said Ruth Earp.
And Nellie blushed.
He gathered that the possible honour of dancing with the supremely great man
had surpassed Nellie's modest expectations.
Can I have the next one, he said.
Oh, yes, Nellie timidly whispered.
It's a polka, and you aren't very good at polking, you know,
Ruth warned him.
Still, Nellie will pull you through.
Nellie laughed in silver.
The naive child thought,
thought that Ruth was trying to joke at Denry's expense. Her very manifest joy and pride, in being
seen with a unique Mr. Machen, in being the next after the Countess to dance with him, made another
mirror in which Denry could discern the reflection of his vast importance. At the supper, which
was worthy of the hospitable traditions of the Chelle family, though served standing up in the
police court, he learnt all the gossip of the dance from Ruth Earp, among other things that more than one young
man had asked the Countess for a dance, and had been refused, though Ruth Earp, for her part,
declined to believe that Alderman and counsellors had utterly absorbed the Countess's programme.
Ruth hinted that the Countess was keeping a second dance open for him, Denry.
When she asked him squarely if he meant to request another from the Countess, he said no,
positively. He knew when to let well alone, a knowledge which is more precious than a knowledge of
geography. The supper was the summit of Denry's triumph. The best people spoke to him without
being introduced, and lovely creatures mysteriously and intoxicatingly discovered that programmes
which had been crammed two hours before were not, after all, quite full. Do tell us what
the Countess was laughing at? This question was shot at him at least thirty times. He always
said he would not tell. And one girl, who had danced with Mr. Stanway, who had danced with the
Countess said that Mr. Stanway had said that the Countess would not tell either.
Proof here that he was being extensively talked about.
Towards the end of the festivity, the rumour floated abroad that the Countess had lost her fan.
The rumour reached Denry, who maintained a culpable silence.
But when all was over, and the Countess was departing, he rushed down after her,
and in a dramatic fashion which demonstrated his genius for the effective, he caught
exactly as she was getting into her carriage.
"'I've just picked it up,' he said,
pushing through the crowd of worshippers.
"'Oh, thank you so much,' she said.
And the Earl also thanked Denry,
and then the Countess, leaning from the carriage,
said, with archness in her efficient smile,
"'You do pick things up easily, don't you?'
And both Denry and the Countess laughed without restraint,
and the pillars of Burrs'i Society were mystified.
Denry winked at Jock as the horses poured away, and Jock winked back.
The envied of all, Denry walked home, thinking violently. At a stroke he had become possessed
of more than he could earn from Dunker off in a month. The faces of the Countess, of Ruther and
of the timid Nellie mingled in exquisite hallucinations before his tired eyes. He was inexpressibly
happy. Trouble, however, awaited him.
End of Chapter 1. This is a Librivox recording. All Librevox recordings are in the public domain.
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The Card, A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns, by Arnold Bennett.
chapter two the widow hullins house one the simple fact that he first of all the citizens in bursley had asked the countess for a dance and not been refused made a new man of denry
He was not only regarded by the whole town as a fellow, wonderful and dazzling, but he so regarded
himself. He could not get over it. He had always been cheerful, even to optimism. He was now
in a permanent state of calm, assured jollity. He would get up in the morning with song and dance.
Burseley and the general world were no longer Burrsley and the general world. They had been
mysteriously transformed into an oyster, and Denry felt strangely that the
Oyster-knife was lying about somewhere handy, but just out of sight, and that presently he
should spy it and seize it. He waited for something to happen, and not in vain.
A few days after the historic revelry, Mrs. Codlin called to see Denry's employer.
Mr. Duncalf was her solicitor, a stout, breathless, and yet muscular woman of near sixty,
the widow of a chemist and druggist, who had made money before living.
companies had taken the liberty of being pharmacutical.
The money had been largely invested in mortgage on cottage property.
The interest on it had not been paid, and latterly Mrs. Codlin had been obliged to foreclose,
thus becoming the owner of some seventy cottages.
Mrs. Codlin, though they brought her in about twelve pounds a week gross,
esteemed these cottages an infliction, a bugbear, an affront, and a positive source of loss.
She talked as though she would be willing to present them to anyone who care to accept, and be glad to be rid of them.
Most owners of property talk thus.
She particularly hated paying the rates on them.
Now, there had recently occurred, under the direction of the borough savare, a revaluation of the whole town.
This may not sound exciting, yet a revaluation is the most exciting event, save a municipal ball given by a titled mayor,
that can happen in any town.
If your house is rated at £40 a year,
and rates are £7 shillings in the pound,
and the revaluation lifts you up to £45,
it means £35 shillings a year right out of your pocket,
which is the interest on £35.
And if the revaluation drops you to £35,
it means £35 shillings in your pocket,
which is a box of Havanaise or a fancy waistcoat.
is not this exciting, and there are seven thousand houses in Burzley.
Mrs. Codlin hoped that her rateable value would be reduced.
She based the hope chiefly on the fact that she was a client of Mr. Duncalfe, the town clerk.
The town clerk was not the borough surveyor, and had nothing to do with the revaluation.
Moreover, Mrs. Codlin presumably entrusted him with her affairs because she considered him an honest man.
and an honest man could not honestly have sought to tickle the borough of air out of the narrow path of rectitude in order to oblige a client.
Nevertheless, Mrs Codlin thought that because she patronised the town clerk, her rates ought to be reduced.
Such is human nature in the provinces, so different from human nature in London, where nobody ever dreams of offering even a match to a municipal official, lest the act might be construed into an insult.
It was on a Saturday morning that Mrs. Codlin called to impart to Mr. Duncalfe the dissatisfaction with which she had learnt the news, printed on a bit of bluish paper, that her rateable value, far from being reduced, had been slightly augmented.
The interview, as judged by the clerks through a Latin plaster wall and by means of a speaking tube, atoned by its vivacity for its lack of ceremony.
When the stairs had finished creaking under the descent of Mrs. Codlin's righteous fury,
Mr. Duncalfe whistled sharply twice.
Two whistles meant Denry.
Denry picked up his short-hand notebook and obeyed the summons.
"'Take this down,' said his master, rudely and angrily.
"'Just as though Denry had abetted Mrs. Codlin.
Just as though Denry was not a personage of high importance in the town,
the friend of countesses and a short-hand clerk only on the surface.
Do you hear?
Yes, sir.
Madam.
Hitherto it had always been a dear madam, or dear Mrs. Codlin.
Madam, of course I need hardly say that if, after our interview this morning,
and your extraordinary remarks you wish to place your interests in other hands,
I shall be most happy to hand over all the papers on payment of my costs,
yours, truly, to Mrs. Codlin.
Denry reflected,
"'Ass, why doesn't he let her cool down?
"'Also, he's got hands and hand in the same sentence.
"'Very ugly.
"'Shows what a temper he's in.
"'Short-hand clerks are always like that, hypercritical.
"'Also, well, I jolly well hope she does chuck him.
"'Then I shan't have those rents to collect.
"'Every Monday, and often on Tuesday, too,
"'denry collected the rents of Mrs. Codlin's cottages,
an odious task for Denry.
Mr. Duncalf, though not affected by its odiousness,
deducted seven and a half per cent for the job from the rents.
"'That'll do,' said Mr. Duncalfe.
But as Denry was leaving the room,
Mr. Duncalfe called out with formidable bruseness,
"'Mach in?'
"'Yes, sir.'
In the flash, Denry knew what was coming.
He felt sickly that a crisis had supervened
with the suddenness of a tidal wave.
and for one little second it seemed to him that to have danced with the countess while the flower of burlesley's chivalry watched in envious wonder was not after all the key to the door of success throughout life
undoubtedly he had practised fraud in sending to himself an invitation to the ball undoubtedly he had practised fraud in sending invitations to his tailor and his dancing mistress on the day after the ball beneath his great glory he had practised fraud in sending invitations to his tailor and his dancing mistress
On the day after the ball, beneath his great glory, he had trembled to meet Mr. Duncalf's
eye, lest Mr. Duncalfe should ask him,
"'May Chin, what were you doing at the town hall last night, behaving as if you were the
Shire of Persia, the Prince of Wales and Henry Irving?'
But Mr. Duncalf had said nothing, and Mr. Duncalf's eye had said nothing, and Denry
thought that the danger was past.
Now it surged up.
"'Who invited you to the mayor's ball?' demanded Mr. Duncalfe like thunder.
"'Yes, there it was, and a very difficult question.'
"'I did, sir,' he blundered out.
"'transparent veracity. He simply could not think of a lie.
"'Why?'
"'I thought that you had perhaps forgotten to put my name down on the list of invitations, sir.'
"'Oh, this grimly, and I suppose you thought I had also forgotten
to put down that tailor chap, Shilito.
So it was all out.
Shilito must have been chattering.
Denry remembered that the classic established tailor of the town, Hatterton,
whose trade Shilito was getting,
was a particular friend of Mr. Duncalf's.
He saw the whole thing.
Well, persisted Mr. Duncalfe after a judicious silence from Denry.
Denry, sheltered in the castle of his silence,
was not to be tempted out.
"'I suppose you rather fancy yourself, dancing with your betters,' growled Mr. Duncalfe menacingly.
"'Yes,' said Denry, "'do you?'
"'He'd not meant to say it. The question slipped out of his mouth. He had recently
formed the habit of retorting swiftly upon people who put queries to him,
"'Yes, are you, or no, do you?'
The trick of speech had been enormously effective with Chilito, for instance, and with the Countess.
He was in the process of acquiring renown for it.
Certainly it was effective now.
Mr. Duncalf's dance with the Countess had come to an ignominious conclusion in the middle,
Mr. Duncalfe, referring to dance on skirts rather than on the floor, and the fact was notorious.
"'You can take a week's notice,' said Mr. Duncalfe pompously.
"'It was no argument, but employers are so unscrupulous in an altercation.'
"'Oh, very well.
"'said Denry.
"'Unt to himself he said,
"'something must turn up now.'
"'He felt dizzy at being thus thrown on the world,
"'he who had been meditating the propriety
"'of getting himself elected
"'to the stylish and newly established sports club at Hillport.
"'He felt enraged,
"'for Mr. Dunkerff had only been venting on Denry
"'the annoyance induced in him by Mrs. Codlin.
"'But it is remarkable that he was not depressed at all.
No, he went about with songs and whistling, though he had no prospects except starvation or living on his mother.
He traversed the street in his grand new manner, and his thoughts ran,
What on earth can I do to live up to my reputation?
However, he possessed intact a five-pound note won from Harold Etches in the matter of the darbys.
Two
Every life is a series of coincidences.
"'Nothing happens that is not rooted in coincidence.
"'All great changes find their cause in coincidence.
"'Therefore I shall not mince the fact
"'that the next change in Denry's career
"'was due to an enormous and complicated coincidence.
"'On the following morning,
"'both Mrs. Codlin and Denry were late for service
"'at St. Luke's Church,
"'Mrs. Codlin by accident and obesity,
"'Denry by design.
"'Denry was later than Mrs. Codlin,
"'whom he discovered.
waiting in the porch. That Mrs. Codlin was waiting is an essential part of the coincidence.
Now Mrs. Codlin would not have been waiting if her pew had not been right at the front of the
church near the choir, nor would she have been waiting if she had been a thin woman, and not
given to breathing loudly after a hurried walk. She waited partly to get her breath, and partly
so that she might take advantage of a hymn or psal to gain her seat without attracting attention.
she had not been late, if she had not been stout, if she had not had a seat under the
pulpit, if she had not had an objection to making herself conspicuous, she would
already have been in the church, and Denry would not have had a private colloquy with her.
"'Well, your nice people, I must say,' she observed as he raised his hat.
She meant Dunkaff, and all Duncalf's Mermedon's.
She was still full of her grievance.
The letter which she had received that morning had started.
her, and even the shadow of the sacred edifice did not prevent her from referring to an affair
that was more suited to Monday than to Sunday morning.
A little more, and she would have snorted.
"'Nothing to do with me, you know,' Denry defended himself.
"'Oh,' she said, "'you're all alike, and I tell you this, Mr. Machen.
I'd take him at his word if it wasn't that I don't know who else I could trust to collect my rents.
I've heard such tales about rent collectors.
I reckon I shall have to make my peace with him."
"'Why?' said Denry.
"'I'll keep on collecting your rents for you, if you like.'
"'You?'
"'I've given him notice to leave,' said Denry.
The fact is Mr. Duncalf and I don't hit it off together.'
Another procrastinator arrived in the porch, and by a singular simultaneous impulse,
Mrs. Codlin and Denry fell into the silence of the overheard, and wandered forth together
among the graves.
There, among the graves, she eyed him.
He was a clerk at eighteen shillings a week, and he looked it.
His mother was the seamstress, and he looked it.
The idea of neat but shabby Denry and the mighty Dunkard,
not hitting it off together, seemed excessively comic.
If only Denry could have worn his dress-suit at church,
it vexed him exceedingly that he had only worn that expensive dress-suit once,
and saw no faintest hope of ever being able to wear his.
it again.
And what's more, Denry pursued, I'll collect them for five percent, instead of seven and a half
percent. Give me a free hand, and see if I don't get better results than he did, and I'll
settle accounts every month, or weak if you like, instead of once a quarter, like he does.
The bright and beautiful idea had smitten Denry like some heavenly arrow. It went through
him and pierced Mrs. Codlin with equal success. It was an idea that appealed to the reason,
to the pocket and to the instinct of revenge.
Having revengefully settled the hash of Mr. Duncalf, they went into church.
No need to continue this part of the narrative,
even the text of the rector's sermon has no bearing on the issue.
In a week there was a painted board affixed at the door of Denry's mother.
E. H. Meachin, rent collector and estate agent.
There was also an advertisement in The Signal,
announcing that Denry managed estates, large or small.
Three.
The next crucial event in Denry's career
happened one Monday morning,
in a cottage that was very much smaller even than his mother's.
This cottage, part of Mrs. Codlin's multitudinous property,
stood by itself in Chapel Alley, behind the Wesleyan Chapel.
The majority of the tenements were in Carpenter's Square near two.
The neighbourhood was not distinguished for its centre.
social splendour, but existence in it was picturesque, varied, exciting, full of accidents,
as existence is apt to be in residences that cost their occupiers an average of three shillings a week.
Some persons referred to the quarter as a slum, and ironically insisted on its adjacency to the Wesleyan Chapel,
as though that were the Wesleyan Chapel's fault. Such people did not understand life, and the joy thereof.
The solitary cottage had a front yard, about as large as a blanket, surrounded by an insecure brick wall, and paved with mud.
You went up two steps, pushed at a door, and instantly found yourself in the principal reception room,
which no earthly blanket could possibly have covered.
Behind this chamber could be seen obscurely an apartment so tiny that an auctioneer would have been justified in terming it,
Bijou
furnished simply but practically with a slopstone
also the beginnings of a stairway
The furniture of the reception room comprised two chairs and a table
One or two saucepence and some antique crockery
What lay at the upper end of the stairway
No living person knew
Save the old woman who slept there
The old woman sat at the fireplace
All bunched up as they say in the five towns
The only fire in the room, however, was in the short clay pipe which she smoked.
Mrs. Hullins was one of the last old women in Bursley to smoke a cutty,
and even then the pipe was considered coarse and cigarettes were coming into fashion,
though not in Chapel Alley.
Mrs. Hullins smoked her pipe and thought about nothing in particular.
Occasionally some vision of the past floated through her drowsy brain.
She had lived in that residence,
for over forty years.
She had brought up eleven children and two husbands there.
She had coddled thirty-five grandchildren there,
and given instruction to some half-dozen daughters-in-law.
She had known midnights when she could scarcely move in that residence
without disturbing somebody asleep.
Now she was alone in it.
She never left it, except to fetch water from the pump in the square.
She had seen a lot of life, and she was tired.
Denry came unceremoniously in, smiling gaily and benevolently, with his bright, optimistic face under his fair brown hair.
He had large and good teeth. He was getting, not stout, but plump.
"'Well, mother?' He greeted Mrs. Hullins and sat down on the other chair.
A young fellow obviously at peace with the world. A young fellow content with himself for the moment.
No longer a clerk, one of the employed, saying, sir, to persons with no more.
fingers and toes than he had himself, bound by servile agreement to be in a fixed place at fixed
hours, an independent unit, master of his own time and his own movements. In brief, a man.
The truth was that he earned now in two days a week, slightly more than Mr. Duncalfe paid him
for the labour of five and a half days. His income, as collector of rents and manager of estates,
large or small, totaled about a pound a week. But he walked forth in the
town, smiled, joke, spoke vaguely, and said,
"'Do you? There's such a tune that his income might have been guessed to be anything
from ten pounds a week to ten thousand a year, and he had four days a week in which to
excogitate new methods of creating a fortune.'
"'I've now up for you,' said the old woman, not moving.
"'Come, come now, that won't do,' said Denry.
"'Have a pinch of my tobacco.'
She accepted a pinch of his tobacco, and refilled her pipe,
and he gave her a match.
"'I'm not going out of this house without half a crown at any rate,' said Denry blithely.
And he rolled himself a cigarette, possibly to keep warm.
It was very chilly in this stuffy residence, but the old woman never shivered.
She was one of those old women who seemed to wear all the skirts of all their lives, one over the other.
"'You're here for the better part of some time, then?' exclaimed Mrs. Hullins, looking facts in the face.
"'I've told you about my son Jack. He's been playing.
"'Out of work. Six weeks. He starts to-day, and he'll give me some at Saturday.'
"'That won't do,' said Denry, curtly and kindly.
He then, with his bluff benevolence, explained to Mother Hollins that Mrs. Codland would stand
no further increase of arrears from anybody, that she could not afford to stand any further
increase of arrears, that her tenants were ruining her, and that he himself, with all his
cheery goodwill for the rent-paying classes would be involved in her fall.
"'Six and forty years of I've been here in this house,' said Mrs. Hullens.
"'Yes, I know,' said Denry,
"'and look at what you owe, mother!'
"'It was with immense good-humoured kindliness
"'that he invited her attention to what she owed.
"'She tacitly declined to look at it.
"'Your children ought to keep you,' said Denry, upon her silence.
"'Themers is dead?'
"'It can't,' said Mrs. Hullins,
"'and Nemesis alive has their own to keep, except Jack.'
"'Well, then, it's bailiffs,' said Denry, but still cheerfully.
"'Nay, nay, ye'll none turn me out.'
Denry threw up his hands, as if to exclaim,
"'I've done all I can, and I've given you a pinch of tobacco.
Besides, you oughtn't to be here alone.
You ought to be with one of your children.'
There was more conversation, which ended in Denry's repeat.
with sympathetic resignation.
"'No, you'll have to get out. It's bailiffs.'
Immediately afterwards he left the residence with a bright filial smile,
and then in two minutes he popped his cheerful head in at the door again.
"'Look here, mother,' he said,
"'I'll lend you half a crown, if you like.'
Charity beamed on his face, and genuinely warmed his heart.
"'But you must pay me something for the accommodation,' he added.
"'I can't do it for nothing.
"'You must pay me back next week and give me threpanse.
"'That's fair. I couldn't bear to see you turned out of your house.
"'Now get your rent-book.'
"'And he marked half a crown as paid in her greasy, dirty rent-book, and the same in his large book.
"'Eh, you're a queeran, Mr. Meagin,' murmured the old woman as he left.
"'He never knew precisely what she meant, fifteen, twenty years later.
in his career, her intonation of that phrase would recur to him and puzzle him.
On the following Monday, everybody in Chapel Alley and Carpenter Square seemed to know that
the inconvenience of bailiffs and eviction could be avoided by arrangement with Denry the philanthropist.
He did quite a business, and having regard to the fantastic nature of the security, he could not
well charge less than threepence a week for half a crown. That was about forty percent of
month, and five hundred percent per annum. The security was merely fantastic, but nevertheless he
had his remedy against evil-doers, he would take what they paid him for rent, and refused
to marketers' rent, appropriating it to his loans, so that the fear of bailiffs was upon them
again. Thus, as the good genius of Chapel Alley and Carpenter Square, saving the distressed from
the rigours of the open street, rescuing the needy from their tightest corn-house,
as, keeping many a home together, when but for him it would have fallen to pieces, always
smiling, jolly, sympathetic, and picturesque, Denry at length employed the five-pound note
won from Harold Etches.
A five-pound note, especially a new and crisp one, as this was, is a miraculous fragment
of matter, wonderful in the pleasure which the sight of it gives, even to millionaires.
But perhaps no five-pound note was ever so miraculous as
Denry's. Ten percent per week. Compound interest mounts up. It ascends, and it lifts.
Denry never talked precisely, but the town soon began to comprehend that he was a rising man,
a man to watch. The town admitted that so far he had lived up to his reputation as a dancer
with countess's. The town felt that there was something indefinable about Denry.
Denry himself felt this.
He did not consider himself clever or brilliant,
but he considered himself peculiarly gifted.
He considered himself different from other men.
His thoughts would run,
Anybody but me would have knuckled down to Dunker off
and remained a short-hand clerk for ever.
Who but me would have had the idea of going to the ball
and asking the Countess to dance,
and then that business with the fan?
Who but me would have had the idea
idea of taking his rent-collecting off Dunkerff. Who but me would have had the idea of combining
these loans with the rent-collecting? It's simple enough, it's just what they want, and yet nobody
ever thought of it till I thought of it. And he knew of a surety that he was that most admired
type in the bustling industrial provinces, a card.
Four, the desire to become a member of the sports club revived in his breast, and yet,
Celebrity though he was, rising though he was, he secretly regarded the sports club at Hillport as being really a bit above him.
The sports club was the latest and greatest phenomenon of social life in Bursley, and it was emphatically the club to which it behoved the golden youth of the town to belong.
To Denry's generation, the Conservative Club and the Liberal Club did not seem like real clubs.
They were machinery for politics, and membership carried nearly no distinction with.
it. But the sports club had been founded by the most dashing young men of Hillport, which is the
most aristocratic suburb of Bursley and set on a lofty eminence. The sons of the wealthiest
earthenware manufacturers made a point of belonging to it, and after a period of disdain their
fathers also made a point of belonging to it. It was housed in an old mansion, with extensive
grounds and a pond and tennis courts. It had a working agreement with the golf club,
and with the Hillport Cricket Club,
but chiefly it was a social affair.
The correctest thing was to be seen there at nights,
rather late than early,
and an exact knowledge of card games and billiards
was worth more in it than prowess on the field.
It was a club in the Palmao sense of the word.
And Denry still lived in insignificant Broome Street,
and his mother was still a seamstress.
These were apparently insurmountable truths.
All the men whom he knew to be members were somehow more dashing than Denry, and it was a question of dash.
Few things are more mysterious than Dash.
Denry was unique, knew himself to be unique.
He had danced with a countess, and yet these other fellows—
Yes, there are puzzles, baffling puzzles in the social career.
In going over on Tuesdays to Hanbridge, where he had a few trifling rents to collect,
Denry often encountered Harold Etches in the tram car.
At that time Etches lived at Hillport,
and the principal Etches' manufactory was at Hanbridge.
Etches partook of the riches of his family,
and though a bachelor was reputed to have the spending of at least a thousand a year,
he was famous on summer Sundays on the pier at Landadno in white flannels.
He had been one of the originators of the sports club.
He spent far more on clothes alone than dead.
Henry spent in the entire enterprise of keeping his soul in his body.
At their first meeting little was said.
They were not equals, and nothing but dress-suits could make them equals.
However, even a king could not refuse speech with a scullion whom he had allowed to win money
from him.
And Etches and Denry chatted feebly.
Bit by bit they chatted less feebly.
And once, when they were almost alone on the car, they chatted with Vermon's during the
complete journey of twenty minutes.
He isn't so bad, said Denry to himself of the dashing Harold Etches, and he took a private
oath that at his very next encounter with Etches he would mention the sports club, just
to see.
This oath disturbed his sleep for several nights, but with Denry an oath was sacred.
Having sworn that he would mention the club to Etches, he was bound to mention it.
When Tuesday came he hoped that Etches.
would not be on the tram, and the coward in him would have walked to Hanbridge instead of taking
the tram.
But he was brave, and he boarded the tram, and Etches was already in it.
Now that he looked at it close, the enterprise of suggesting to Harold Etches that he,
Denry, would be a suitable member of the sports club at Hillport, seemed in the highest degree
preposterous.
Why, he could not play any games at all.
He was a figure only in the streets.
nevertheless, the oath.
He sat awkwardly silent for a few moments, wondering how to begin.
And then Harold Etches leaned across the tram to him and said,
"'I say, Machen, I've several times meant to ask you,
"'Why don't you put up for the sports club?
"'It's really very good, you know.'
Denry blushed, quite probably for the last time in his life,
and he saw with fresh clearness how great he was and how little
large he must loom in the life of the town. He perceived that he had been too modest.
Five. You could not be elected to the sports club all in a minute. There were formalities,
and that these formalities were complicated and took time is simply a proof that the club was
correctly exclusive and worth belonging to. When at last Denry received notice from the
Secretary and Steward that he was elected to the most sparkling fellowship in the five towns,
He was positively afraid to go and visit the club.
He wanted some old and experienced member to lead him gently into the club,
and explain its usages, and introduce him to the chief habitues,
or else he wanted to slip in unobserved while the heads of clubmen were turned.
And then he had a distressing shock.
Mrs. Codlin took it into her head that she must sell her cottage property.
Now Mrs. Codlin's cottage property was the backbone of Denry's livelihood.
and he could by no means be sure that a new owner would employ him as rent collector.
A new owner might have the absurd notion of collecting rents in person.
Vainly did Denry exhibit to Mrs. Godlin rows of figures
showing that her income from the property had increased under his control.
Vainly did he assert that from no other form of investment
would she derive such a handsome interest.
She went so far as to consult an auctioneer.
The auctioneer's idea of what could constitute a fair reserve price shook, but did not quite overthrow her.
At this crisis it was that Denry happened to say to her, in his new large manner,
Why, if I could afford, I'd buy the property off you myself, just to show you.
He did not explain, and he did not perhaps know himself what had to be shown.
She answered that she wished the goodness he would.
Then he said wildly that he would, in instance.
and he actually did buy the widow Hullins half a crown a week cottage for forty-five pounds,
of which he paid thirty pounds in cash,
and arranged that the balance should be deducted gradually from his weekly commission.
He chose the widow Hullins, because it stood by itself, an odd piece, as it were,
chipped off from the block of Mrs. Codlin's realty.
The transaction quietened Mrs. Codlin,
and Denry felt secure because she could not now dispense,
with his services without losing her security for fifteen pounds.
He still thought in these small sums, instead of thinking in thousands.
He was now a property owner.
Encouraged by this great and solemn fact, he went up one afternoon to the club at Hillport.
His entry was magnificent, superficially.
No one suspected that he was nervous under the ordeal.
The truth is that no one suspected because the place was empty.
The emptiness of the hall gave him pause.
He saw a large framed copy of the rules, hanging under a deer's head,
and he read them as carefully as though he had not got a copy in his pocket.
Then he read the notices, as though they had been the latest telegrams from some dire seat of war.
Then, perceiving a massive open door of oak, the clubhouse had once been a pretty stately mansion,
he passed through it, and saw a bar, with bottles, and a number of small,
tables and wicker chairs, and on one of the tables an example of the Staffordshire signal,
displaying in vast letters the fearful question,
Is your skin troublesome?
Denry's skin was troublesome. It crept.
He crossed the hall and went into another room, which was placarded silence.
And silence was.
And on a table with copies of the Potter's World, the British Australation, the Iron Trades Review,
the golf was annual, was a second copy of the signal, again demanding of Denry in vast letters
whether his skin was troublesome, evidently the reading-room.
He ascended the stairs, and discovered a deserted billiard-room with two tables.
Though he had never played at billions he seized a cue, but when he touched them,
the balls gave such a resounding click in the hush of the chamber, that he put the cue away instantly.
He noticed another door, curiously opened it, and started back at the sight of a small room,
and eight middle-aged men, mostly hatted, playing cards in two groups.
They had the air of conspirators, but they were merely some of the finest solo whist-players in Burzley.
This was before Bridge had quitted Palmael.
Among them was Mr. Duncalf.
Denry shut the door quickly.
He felt like a wander in an enchanted castle, who had suddenly.
come across something that ought not to become across. He returned to Earth, and in the hall
met a man in shirt-sleeves, the secretary and steward, a nice, homely man, who said in the accents
of ancient friendship, though he had never spoken to Denry before, is it Mr. Machin? Glad to see you,
Mr. Macon. Come and have a drink with me, will you? Give it a name, saying which the secretary and
steward went behind the bar, and Denry imbibed a little whiskey, and much information.
"'Anyhow, I've been,' he said to himself, going home.
"'Six.
The next night he made another visit to the club, about ten o'clock.
The reading-room, that haunt of learning, was as empty as ever,
but the bar was full of men, smoke, and glasses.
It was so full that Denry's arrival was scarcely observed.
However, the secretary and Stuart observed him,
and soon he was chatting with a group at the bar,
presided over by the secretary and steward's shirt-sleeves.
He glanced around and was satisfied.
It was a scene of dashing gaiety and worldliness
that did not belie the club's reputation.
Some of the most important men in Burrsley were there.
Charles Ferns, the solicitor, who practiced at Handbridge,
was arguing vivaciously in a corner.
Ferns lived at Bleakridge and belonged to the Bleakridge Club,
and his presence at Hillport, two miles from him.
Bleakridge was a dramatic tribute to the prestige of Hillport's club.
Ferns was apparently in one of his anarchistic moods.
Though a successful businessman, who voted right,
he was pleased occasionally to uproot the fabric of society
and rebuild it on a new plan of his own.
Tonight he was inveying against landlords.
He, who, by conveyancing, kept a wife and family
and a French governess for the family in rather more than comfort.
The Ferns' French governess was one of the seven wonders of the five towns.
Men enjoyed him in these moods, and as he raised his voice, so he enlarged the circle of his audience.
If the bylaws of this town were worth a bilberry, he was saying,
about a thousand so-called houses would have to come down tomorrow.
Now there's that old woman I was talking about just now, Hullins.
She's a Catholic, and my governess is always slumming about among Catholics.
That's how I know.
She's paid half a crown a week for pretty near half a century,
for a hovel that isn't worth eighteen pence.
Now she's going to be pitched into the street because she can't pay any more.
And she's seventy if she's a day.
And that's the basis of society.
Nice refined society, eh?
Who's the grasping owner?
Someone asked.
Old Mrs. Codlin, said Ferns.
"'Here, Mr. Machen, they're talking about you,' said the secretary.
and Stuart, genially.
He knew that Denry collected Mrs. Codlin's rents.
"'Mrs. Codlin isn't the owner,' Denry called out across the room, almost before he was
aware what he was doing.
There was a smile on his face, and a glass in his hand.
"'Oh,' said Ferns, "'I thought she was. Who is?'
Everybody looked inquisitively at the renowned Macon, the new member.
"'I am,' said Denry.
He had concealed a change of ownership from the widow Hullins.
In his quality of owner he could not have lent her money
in order that she might pay it instantly back to himself.
"'I beg your pardon,' said Harnes, with polite sincerity.
"'I'd no idea.'
He saw that unwittingly he had come near to committing a gross outrage on club etiquette.
"'Not at all,' said Denry.
"'But suppose the cottage was yours.
What would you do, Mr. Ferns?'
"'Before I bought the property, I used to lend her money myself to pay her rent.'
"'I know,' Ferns answered, with a certain dryness of tone.
"'It occurred to Denry that the lawyer knew too much.
"'Well, what should you do?' he repeated obstinately.
"'She's an old woman,' said Ferns, and honest enough, you must admit.
"'She came up to see my governess, and I happened to see her.
"'But what should you do in my place?'
Denry insisted.
"'Since you ask, I should lower the rent and let her off the arrears,' said Ferns.
"'And suppose she didn't pay then.
Let her have it rent free because she's seventy, or pitch her into the street?'
"'Oh, well, Ferns would make her a present at the blooming house and give her a conveyance free,'
a voice said humorously, and everybody laughed.
"'Well, that's what I'll do,' said Denry.
"'If Mr Ferns will do the conveyance free,
"'I'll make her a present of the blooming house.
"'That's the sort of grasping owner I am.'
"'There was a startled pause.
"'I mean it,' said Denry firmly, even fiercely,
"'and raised his glass.
"'Here's to the widow Hullins.'
"'There was a sensation,
"'because, incredible though the thing was,
"'it had to be believed.
"'Denry himself was not the least astounded person
in the crowded, smoky room. To him it had been like somebody else talking, not himself,
but as always, when he did something crucial, spectacular and effective, the deed had seemed to be
done by a mysterious power within him, over which he had no control. This particular deed
was quixotic, enormously unusual, a deed assuredly without precedent in the annals of the five towns,
and he, Denry, had done it. The cost was prodigious, resumed,
ridiculously and dangerously beyond his means. He could find no rational excuse for the deed,
but he had done it, and men again wondered. Men had wondered when he led the Countess out to Walsh.
That was nothing to this. What, a smooth-chinned youth giving houses away, out of mere
mad, impulsive generosity? And men said, on reflection,
"'Of course that's just the sort of thing May-chin would do.'
They appeared to find out of the sort of thing Maychin would do. They appeared to find
a logical connection between dancing with the Countess and tossing a house or so to a poor widow.
And the next morning, every man who had been in the sports club that night, was remarking eagerly
to his friends, "'I say, have you heard young Macchin's latest?'
And Denry, inwardly aghast at his own rashness, was saying to himself,
"'Well, no one but me would ever have done that.'
He was now not simply a card.
He was the card.
End of Chapter 2.
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The Card, a story of adventure in the five towns.
Arnold Bennett
Chapter 3
The Pantechnicon
1
How do you do, Miss Earp?
said Denry, in a worldly manner
which he had acquired for himself
by taking the most effective features
of the manners of several prominent citizens
and piecing them together,
so that as a whole they formed Denry's manner.
Oh, how do you do, Mr. Macchin,
said Ruth Earp,
who had opened her door to him
at the corner of tudor passage and st luke's square it was an afternoon in july denry wore a new summer suit whose pattern indicated not only present prosperity but the firm belief that prosperity would continue
as for ruth that plain but pecan girl was in one of her simpler costumes blue linen no jewellery her hair was in its usual calculated disorder its outer fleeces held the light
she was now at least twenty-five and her gaze disconcertingly combined extreme maturity with extreme candour at one moment a man would be saying to himself this woman knows more of the secrets of human nature than i can ever know
and the next he would be saying to himself what a simple little thing she is the career of nearly every man is marked at the sharp corners with such women
speaking generally ruthurpe's demeanour was hard and challenging it was evident that she could not be subject to the common weaknesses of her sex denry was glad a youth of quick intelligence he had perceived all the dangers of the mission upon which he was engaged
and had planned his precautions.
"'May I come in a minute?' he asked in a purely business tone.
There was no hint in that tone of the fact that once she had accorded him a supper-dance.
"'Please do,' said Ruth,
"'an agreeable flouncing swish of linen skirts as she turned to precede him down the passage.
But he ignored it, that is to say, he easily steeled himself against it.
She led him to the large room which served as her dancing academy, the bare-bordid place
in which, a year and a half before, she had taught his clumsy limbs the principles of grace
and rhythm.
She occupied the back part of a building, of which the front part was an empty shop.
The shop had been tenanted by her father, one of whose frequent bankruptcies had happened
there, after which his stock of the latest novelties in inexpensive furniture had been
seized by rapacious creditors, and Mr. Earp had migrated to Birmingham, where he was
courting the official receiver anew. Ruth had remained solitary and unprotected,
with a considerable amount of household goods which had been her mother's. Like all professional
bankrupts, Mr. Earp had invariably had belongings which, as he could prove to his creditors,
did not belong to him. Public opinion had justified Ruth in her enterprise of staying in Burr's
on her own responsibility and renting part of the building in order not to lose her connection as a dancing mistress public opinion said that there would have been no sense in her going dangling after her waistrope of a father
quite a long time since we saw anything of each other observed ruth in rather a pleasant style as she sat down and as he sat down it was the intimate ecstasy of the supper-dance had never been repeated
"'Denry's exceeding industry and carving out his career,
"'and his desire to graduate as an accomplished clubman,
"'had prevented him from giving to his heart
"'that attention which it deserved,
"'having regard to his tender years.
"'Yes, it is, isn't it?' said Denry.
"'Then there was a pause,
"'and they both glanced vaguely about the inhospitable and very wooden room.
"'Now was the moment for Denry to carry out his prearranged plan,
in all its savage simplicity. He did so.
"'I've called about the rent, Miss Earp,' he said,
and by an effort looked her in the eyes.
"'The rent?' exclaimed Ruth,
as though she had never in all her life heard of such a thing as rent,
as though June 24th, recently passed,
was an ordinary day like any other day.
"'Yes,' said Denry.
"'What rent?' asked Ruth,
as though for aught she guessed it might have been the rent of Buckingham Palace that he'd called about.
Yours, said Denry.
Mine, she murmured.
But what has my rent got to do with you? she demanded.
And it was just as if she had said,
But what has my rent got to do with you, little boy?
Well, he said, I suppose you know I'm a rent-collector.
No, I didn't, she said.
He thought she was fibbing out of first.
sheer naughtiness, but she was not. She did not know that he collected rents. She knew that he was a card, a figure, a celebrity, and that was all. It is strange how the knowledge of even the cleverest woman will confine itself to certain fields. Yes, he said, always in a cold commercial tone, I collect rents. I should have thought you'd have preferred postage stamps, she said, gazing out of the window at a kiln that was blackening all the sky. If he could have
could have invented something clever and cutting in response to this, Sally.
He might have made the mistake of quitting his role of hard, unsentimental man of business.
But he could think of nothing.
So he proceeded sternly.
Mr. Herbert Calvert has put all his property into my hands,
and he has given me strict instructions that no rent is to be allowed to remain in arre.
No answer from Ruth.
Mr. Calvert was a little fellow of fifty, who had made money in the mysterious call
of a commission agent. By reputation he was really very much harder than Denry could even pretend
to be, and indeed Denry had been considerably startled by the advent of such a client.
Surely if any man in Bursley were capable of unmercifully collecting rents on his own account,
Herbert Calvert must be that man.
Let me see, said Denry further, pulling a book from his pocket and peering into it.
You owe five-quarters rent thirty-pound.
He knew without the book precisely what Ruth owed, but the book kept him in countenance, supplied him with needed moral support.
Ruth Earp, without the least warning, exploded into a long peal of gay laughter. Her laugh was far prettier than her face. She laughed well. She might, with advantage to Burstley, have given lessons in laughing as well as in dancing, for Burzley laughs without grace. Her laughter was a proof that she had not a care in the world.
and that the world for her was naught but a source of light amusement.
Denry smiled guardedly.
Of course, with me, it's purely a matter of business, said he.
"'So that's what Mr Herbert Calvert has done,' she exclaimed, amid the embers for her mirth.
"'I wondered what he would do.
"'I presume you know all about Mr. Herbert Calvert,' she added.
"'No,' said Denry, I don't know anything about him,
except that he owns some property, and I'm in charge of it.
Stay!
He corrected himself,
I think I do remember crossing his name off your programme once.
And he said to himself,
That's one for her.
If she likes to be so desperately funny about postage stamps,
I don't see why I shouldn't have my turn.
The recollection that it was precisely Herbert Calvert,
whom he had supplanted in the supper-dance
at the Countess of Chells' historic...
ball somehow increased his confidence in his ability to manage the interview with brilliance.
Ruth's voice grew severe and chilly. It seemed incredible that she had just been laughing.
I will tell you about Mr. Herbert Calvert, she enunciated her words with slow, stern clearness.
Mr. Herbert Calvert took advantage of his visits here for his rent to pay his attentions to me.
At one time he was so far, well, gone, that he would scarcely take his rent.
Really?
Murmoured Denry, genuinely staggered by this symptom of the distance to which Mr. Herbert
Calvert was once gone.
Yes, said Ruth, still sternly and inimically.
Naturally a woman can't make up her mind about these things all of a sudden, she continued.
Naturally, she repeated.
Of course, Denry.
agreed, perceiving that his experience of life and deep knowledge of human nature were being
appealed to.
And when I did decide, definitely, Mr. Herbert Calvert did not behave like a gentleman.
He forgot what was due to himself and to me.
I won't describe to you the scene he made.
I'm simply telling you this, so that you may know.
To cut a long story short he behaved in a very vulgar way.
And a woman doesn't forget these things, Mr. Machen.
Her eyes threatened him.
I decided to punish Mr. Herbert Calvert.
I thought if he wouldn't take his rent before, well, let him wait for him now.
I might have given him notice to leave, but I didn't.
I didn't see why I should let myself be upset because Mr. Herbert Calvert had forgotten
that he was a gentleman.
I said let him wait for his rent, and I promised myself that I would just see what he
would dare to do.
"'I don't quite follow your argument,' Denry put in.
"'Perhaps you don't,' she silenced him.
"'I didn't expect you would, you and Mr. Herbert Calvert.
So he didn't dare do anything himself, and he's paying you to do his dirty work for him.'
"'Very well, very well,' she lifted her head defiantly.
"'What will happen if I don't pay the rent?'
"'I shall have to let things take their course,' said Denry with a genial.
smile. "'All right, then?' Ruther responded.
"'If you choose to mix yourself up with people like Mr. Herbert Calvert, you must take the
consequences. It's all the same to me, after all.'
"'Then it isn't convenient for you to pay anything on account,' said Denry, more and more
affable. "'Convenient,' she cried, "'it's perfectly convenient, only I don't care to.
I won't pay a penny until I'm forced.'
"'Let Mr. Herbert Calvert do his worst, and then I'll pay.'
"'And not before.
"'And the whole town shall hear about Mr. Herbert Calvert.'
"'I see,' he laughed easily.
"'Convenient,' she reiterated contemptuously,
"'I think everybody in Burstley knows how my clientele gets larger and larger every year.
"'Convenient.'
"'So that's final, Miss Earp.'
"'Perfectly,' said Miss Earp.
"'He rose.
"'Then the simplest thing will be for me to send round a bailiff to-morrow morning early.'
he might have been saying the simplest thing will be for me to send round a bunch of orchids another man would have felt emotion and probably expressed it but not denry the rent-collector and manager of estates large and small
there were several different men in denry but he had the great gift of not mixing up two different denries when he found himself in a complicated situation
Ruth Earp rose also.
She dropped her eyelids and looked at him from under them.
And then she gradually smiled.
I just thought I'd see what you'd do, she said in a low, confidential voice,
from which all trace of hostility had suddenly departed.
You're a strange creature, she went on curiously,
as though fascinated by the problems presented by his individuality.
Of course I shan't let it go as far as that.
I only thought I'd see what you'd say.
I'll write you tonight.
With a cheque, Denry demanded, with suave, jolly courtesy,
I don't collect postage stamps.
And to himself, she's got her stamps back.
She hesitated.
Stay, she said.
I told you what will be better.
Can you call tomorrow afternoon?
The bank will be closed now.
Yes, he said, I can call.
What time?
Oh, she answered.
Any time.
If you come in about four, I'll give you a cup of tea.
into the bargain. No, you don't deserve it. After an instant she added, reassuringly,
"'Of course I know business is business with you, but I'm glad I have told you the real truth
about your precious Mr. Herbert Calvert, all the same.' And as he walked slowly home,
then repondered upon the singular, erratic, incalculable strangeness of woman, and of the
possibly magic effect of his own personality on women.
Two. It was the next afternoon, in July. Denry wore his new summer suit, but with a necktie of
higher rank than the previous days. As for Ruth, that plain but piquant girl was in one of her
more elaborate and foamyer costumes. The wonder was that such a costume could survive even for
an hour the smuts that lend continual interest and excitement to the atmosphere of Burzley. It was a
white muslin, spotted with spots of opaque white, and founded on something pink.
Denry imagined that he had seen parts of it before, at the ball, and he had, but it was now
a teagown, with long, languishing sleeves. The waves of it broke at her shoulders,
sending lacy surf high up the precipices of Ruth's neck. Denry did not know that it was a teagown,
but he knew that it had a most peculiar and agreeable effect on himself.
and that she had promised him tea.
He was glad that he had paid her the homage of his best necktie.
Although the month was July, Ruth wore a kind of shawl over the tea-gown.
It was not a shawl, Denry noted, it was merely about two yards of very thin muslin.
He puzzled himself as to its purpose.
It could not be for warmth, for it would have not helped to melt an icicle.
Could it be meant to fulfil the same function as muslin in a confectioner's shawl?
shop? She was pale, her voice was weak and had an imploring quality. She led him, not into the
inhospitable wooden academy, but into a very small room, which like herself was dressed in muslin
and bows of ribbon. Photographs of amiable men and women decorated the pinkish-green walls.
The mantelpiece was concealed in drapery, as though it had been a sin. A writing-desk, as green as a leaf,
stood carelessly in one corner. On the desk a vase containing some Cape Guzbury's. In the middle
of the room a small table, on the table a spirit-lamp in full blast, and on the lamp a kettle,
practising scales. A tray occupied the remainder of the table. There were two easy chairs.
Ruth sank delicately into one, and Denry took the other with precautions. He was nervous.
Nothing equals Muslin for imparting nervousness to the naive, but he felt pleased.
Not much of the widow Hullin's touch about this, he reflected privately,
and he wished that all rent-collecting might be done with such ease,
and amid such surroundings as this particular piece of rent-collecting.
He saw what a fine thing it was to be a free man, under orders from nobody.
Not many men in Burlesley were in a position to accept invitations to four o'clock,
locked tea at a day's notice.
Further, five per cent on thirty pounds was thirty shillings,
so that if he stayed an hour, and he meant to stay an hour,
he would, while enjoying himself, be earning money steadily at the rate of sixpence a minute.
It was the ideal of a business career.
When the kettle, having finished its scales, burst into song with an accompaniment of castanets and vapour,
and Ruth's sleeves rose and fell as she made the tea,
Denry acknowledged, frankly, to himself, that it was this sort of thing, and not the Broome Street
sort of thing that he was really born for. He acknowledged to himself humbly that this sort of thing
was life, and that hitherto he had had no adequate idea of what life was. For with all his
ability as a card and a rising man, with all his assiduous frequenting of the sports club,
he had not penetrated into the upper domestic strata of Burzley society.
He had never been invited to any house where, as he put it, he would have to mind his P's and
Q's. He still remained the kind of man whom you familiarly chat with in the street and club,
and no more. His mother's fame as a flannel washer was against him, Broome Street was against
him, and, chiefly, his poverty was against him. True he had gorgeously given a house away to
an aged widow. True, he succeeded in transmitting to him.
his acquaintances a vague idea that he was doing well and waxing financially from strength to
strength. But the idea was too vague, too much in the air. And saved by a suit of clothes he never
gave ocular proof that he had money to waste. He could not. It was impossible for him to compete
with even the more modest of the bloods and the blades. To keep a satisfactory straight crease
down the middle of each leg of his trousers, was all he could accomplish with the money regularly
at his disposal. The town was waiting for him to do something decisive in the matter of
what it called the stuff. Thus Ruther was the first to introduce him to the higher intimate
civilizations, the refinements lurking behind the foul walls of Bursley.
"'Sugar?' she questioned, her head on one side, her arm uplifted, her sleeve drooping,
and a bit of sugar caught like a white mouse between the claws of the tongs.
Nobody before had ever said sugar to him like that.
His mother never said, sugar, to him.
His mother was aware that he liked three pieces,
but she would not give him more than two.
Sugar, in that slightly weak, imploring voice,
seemed to be charged with the significance at once tremendous and elusive.
Yes, please.
Another?
"'And the another was even more delicious.'
He said to himself,
"'I suppose this is what they call flirting.
When a chronicler speaks the exact truth,
there is always a danger that he will not be believed.
Yet in spite of the risk, it must be said plainly,
that at this point Denry actually thought of marriage.
An absurd and childish thought, preposterously rash,
but he came into his mind.
and what is more it stuck there he pictured marriage as a perpetual afternoon tea alone with an elegant woman amid an environment of ribbon muslin and the picture appealed to him very strongly
and ruth appeared to him in a new light it was perhaps the change in her voice that did it she appeared to him at once as a creature very feminine and enchanting and as a creature who could earn her own living in a manner that was both original and lady-lust she appeared to him at once as a creature who could earn her own living in a manner that was both original and lady-lust
a woman such as Ruth would be a delight without being a drag.
And truly was she not a remarkable woman, as remarkable as he was a man?
Here she was living amid the refinements of luxury.
Not an expensive luxury.
He had an excellent notion of the monetary value of things, but still luxury.
And the whole affair was so stylish.
His heart went out to the stylish.
The slices of bread and butter were rolled.
up. There now was a pleasing device. It cost nothing to roll up a slice of bread and butter.
Her fingers had doubtless done the rolling, and yet it gave quite a different taste to the food.
"'What made you give that house to Mrs. Hullins?' she asked him suddenly, with a candour that seemed to demand candour.
"'Oh,' he said, just a lark, I thought I would. It came to me all in a second, and I did.'
She shook her head. "'Strange boy!' she observed.
There was a pause.
It was something Charlie Ferns said, wasn't it? she inquired.
She uttered the name Charlie Ferns, with a certain faint hint of disdain,
as if indicating to Denry that, of course, she and Denry were quite able to put Ferns into his proper place in the scheme of things.
Oh, he said so, you know all about it.
Well, said she, naturally it was all over the town.
"'Mrs. Ferns's girl, anunciata, what a name, eh, is one of my pupils, the youngest, in fact.'
"'Well,' said he, after another pause, "'I wasn't going to have Ferns coming to Duke over me.'
She smiled sympathetically. He felt that they understood each other deeply.
"'You'll find some cigarettes in that box,' she said, when he had been there thirty minutes,
and pointed to the mantelpiece.'
"'Sure you don't mind,' he murmured.
she raised her eyebrows there was also a silver match-box in the larger box no detail lacked it seemed to him that he stood on a mountain and had only to walk down a winding path in order to enter the promised land
he was decidedly pleased with the worldly way in which he had said sure you don't mind he puffed out smoke delicately and the cigarette between his lips as with his left hand he waved the match into extinction he had said sure you don't mind he puffed out smoke delicately and the cigarette between his lips as with his left hand he waved the match into extinction he
"'He demanded.
"'You smoke?'
"'Yes,' she said,
"'but not in public.
"'I know what you men are.'
"'This was in the early timid days of feminine smoking.'
"'I assure you,' he protested,
"'and pushed the box towards her,
"'but she would not smoke.'
"'It isn't that I mind you,' she said.
"'Not at all, but I'm not well.
"'I've got a frightful headache.'
"'He put on a concerned expression.
"'I thought you looked rather pale,' he said,
awkwardly. "'Pale!' she repeated the word.
"'You should have seen me this morning. I have fits of dizziness, you know, too. The doctor says it's
nothing but dyspepsia. However, don't let's talk about poor little me and my silly complaints.
Perhaps the tea will do me good.' He protested again, but his experience of intimate
civilisation was too brief to allow him to protest with effectiveness. The truth was he could
not say these things naturally. He had to compose them, and then pronounced them, and the result
failed in the necessary air of spontaneity. He could not help thinking what marvellous
self-control women had. Now when he had a headache, which happily was seldom, he could think
of nothing else, and talk of nothing else. The entire universe consisted solely of his headache,
and here she was overcome with a headache, and during more than half an hour had not even
mentioned it. She began talking gossip about the fernses and the sweat-nums, and she mentioned
rumours concerning Henry Miners, who had scruples against dancing, and Anna Tell-Rite, the daughter
of that rich old skin-print E-frame tell-right. No mistake, she was on the inside of things in
Burzley Society. It was just as if she had removed the front walls of every house, and examined
every room at her leisure, with minute particularity.
but of course a teacher of dancing had opportunities denry had to pretend to be nearly as omniscient as she was then she broke off without warning and lay back in her chair
i wonder if you'd mind going into the barn for me she murmured she generally referred to her academy as the barn it had once been a warehouse he jumped up certainly he said very eager i think you'll find a small bottle of odour cologne on the
the top of the piano, she said, and shut her eyes. He hastened away, full of his mission, and
feeling himself to be a terrific cavalier and guardian of weak women. He felt keenly that he must
be equal to the situation. Yes, the small bottle of Odur Cologne was on the top of the piano. He
seized it, and bore it to her on the wings of chivalry. He had not been aware that Odacallone
was a remedy for, or a palliative of headaches.
she opened her eyes and with a great effort tried to be bright and better but it was a failure she took the stopper out of the bottle and sniffed first at the stopper and then at the bottle then she spilled a few drops of the liquid on her handkerchief and applied the handkerchief to her temples
"'It's easier,' she said.
"'Sure?' he asked.
He did not know what to do with himself,
whether to sit down and feign that she was well,
or to remain standing in an attitude of respectful and grave anxiety.
He thought he ought to depart.
Yet would it not be ungallant to desert her under the circumstances?
She was alone.
She had no servant, only an occasional charwoman.
She nodded with brave, false gaiety.
and then she had a relapse.
"'Don't you think you'd better lie down,' he suggested in more masterful accents,
and added,
"'and I'll go.
You ought to lie down.
It's the only thing.'
He was now speaking to her like a wise uncle.
"'Oh, no,' she said, without conviction.
"'Besides, you can't go till I've paid you.'
It was on the tip of his tongue to say,
"'Oh, don't bother about that now.'
But he restrained himself.
there was a notable core of common sense in Denry.
He had been puzzling how he might neatly mention the rent
while departing in a hurry, so that she might lie down,
and now she had solved the difficulty for him.
She stretched out her arm,
and picked up a bunch of keys from a basket on a little table.
"'You might just unlock that desk for me, will you?' she said,
and further as she went through the keys one by one to select the right key.
"'Each quarter I've put your precious Mr. Herbert Calvert's rent in a draw in that desk.'
"'Here's the key.'
She held up the whole ring by the chosen key, and he accepted it,
and she lay back once more in her chair, exhausted by her exertions.
"'You must turn the key sharply in the lock,' she said weakly as he fumbled at the locked part of the desk.
So he turned the key sharply.
"'You'll see her bag in a little draw on the right,' she murmured.
The key turned round and round.
It had begun by resisting, but now it yielded too easily.
"'It doesn't seem to open,' he said, feeling clumsy.
The key clicked and slid, and the other keys rattled together.
"'Oh, yes,' she replied,
"'I opened it quite easily this morning.
It is a bit catchy.'
The key kept going round and round.
"'Here, I'll do it,' she said wearily.
"'Oh, no,' he urged.
But she rose courageously, and tottered to the desk, and took the bunch from him.
"'I'm afraid you've broken something in the lock,' she announced with gentle resignation,
after she had tried to open the desk and failed.
"'Have I?' he mumbled.
He knew that he was not shining.
"'Would you mind calling in at Allmans?' she said, resuming her chair,
"'and tell them to send a man down at once to pick the lock. There's nothing else for it.
"'Or perhaps you'd better say first thing to-morrow morning, and then as soon as he's done it,
"'I'll call and pay you the money myself.
"'And you might tell your precious Mr. Herbert Calvert the next quarter I shall give notice to leave.'
"'Don't you trouble to call, please,' said he,
I can easily pop in here.
She sped him away in an agnostic tone.
He could not be sure whether he had succeeded or failed in her estimation,
as a man of the world and a partaker of delicate teas.
"'Don't forget almonds!' she enjoined him as he left the room.
He was to let himself out.
"'Three.'
He was coming home late that night from the sports club,
from a delectable evening, which had lasted till one
o'clock in the morning, when, just as he put the large doorky into his mother's cottage,
he grew aware of peculiar phenomena at the top end of Broom Street, where it runs into St. Luke's
square. And then, in the gaslit gloom of the warm summer night, he perceived a vast and vague
rectangular form in slow movement towards the slope of Broom Street. It was a Pantechnikan
van. But the extraordinary thing was, not that it should be a Pan-Teknican van, but it that should
be moving of its own accord and power, for there were no horses in front of it, and Denry saw
that the double shafts had been pushed up perpendicularly, after the manner of Carman
when they outspan. The Pantecnican was running away. It had perceived the wrath to come and was
fleeing. Its guardians had evidently left it imperfectly scotched or braked.
and it had got loose.
It proceeded down the first bit of Broome Street
with a dignity worthy of its dimensions,
and at the same time with apparently a certain sense of the humour of the situation.
Then it seemed to be saying to itself,
Pantechnikins will be Pantechnikins!
Then it took on the absurd gravity of a man who is perfectly sure that he is not drunk.
Nevertheless, it kept fairly well to the middle of the road,
but as though the road were a tightrope.
The rumble of it increased as it approached Denry.
He withdrew the key from his mother's cottage and put it in his pocket.
He was always at his finest in a crisis,
and the onrush of the Pantechnican constituted a clear crisis.
Lower down, the gradient of Broom Street was more dangerous,
and it was within the possibilities
that people inhabiting the depths of the street
might find themselves pitched out of bed by the shrewd,
sharp corner of a Pantecnican that was determined to be a Pantecnican.
A Pantecican whose ardour is fairly aroused may be capable of surpassing deeds.
Whole thoroughfares may crumble before it.
As the Pantecnican passed Denry, at the rate of about three and a half miles an hour,
he leapt, or rather he scrambled, onto it, losing nothing in the process except his straw hat,
which remained a witness at his mother's door that her boy had been that way,
and departed under unusual circumstances.
Denry had the bright idea of dropping the shafts down to act as a break.
But unaccustomed to the manipulation of shafts,
he was rather slow in accomplishing the deed,
and ere the first pair of shafts had fallen,
the Pantechnican was doing quite eight miles an hour,
and the steepest declivity was yet to come.
Further, the dropping of the left-hand shafts jerked the van to the left,
and Denry dropped the other pair only just in time
to avoid the sudden uprooting of a lamp-post.
The four points of the shaft, digging and prodding into the surface of the road,
gave the Pantechnican something to think about for a few seconds.
But unfortunately, the precipitousness of the street encouraged its headlong caprices,
and a few seconds later all force shafts were broken,
and the Pantecnican seemed to scent the open prairie.
What it really did sent was the canal.
Then Denry discovered a break,
and furiously struggled with the iron handle.
He turned it and turned it some forty revolutions.
It seemed to have no effect.
The miracle was that the Pantecnican maintained its course in the middle of the street.
Presently, D'Nry could vaguely distinguish the wall and double wooden gates of the canal wharf.
He could not jump off, the Pantecican was now an express,
and I doubt whether he would have jumped off, even if jumping off had not been madness.
his was the kind of perseverance that, for the fun of it, will perish in an attempt.
The final fifty or sixty yards of Broom Street were level, and the Pantechnican slightly abated its haste.
Denry could now plainly see, in the radiance of the gas-lamp, the gates of the wharf, and on them the painted letters,
Shropshire Union Canal Company Limited, General Carriers, no admittance except on business.
He was heading straight for those gates, and the Pantechnikin evidently had business within.
It jolted over the iron guard of the weighing machine, and this jolt deflected it,
so that instead of aiming at the gates it aimed for a part of a gate and part of a brick pillar.
Then re-ground his teeth together and clung to his seat.
The gate might have been paper, and the brick-pillar a cardboard pillar,
the Pentechan went through them as a sword will go through a ghost.
and Denry was still alive.
The remainder of the journey was brief and violent,
owing partly to a number of bags of cement,
and partly to the propinquity of the canal basin.
The Pantecnican jumped into the canal, like a mastodon, and drank.
Denry, clinging to the woodwork, was submerged for a moment,
but by standing on the narrow platform,
from which sprouted the splintered ends of the shafts,
he could get his waist clear of the water,
He was not a swimmer.
All was still and dark,
save for the faint stream of starlight
on the broad bosom of the canal basin.
The Pentechnican had encountered nobody whatever en route,
of its strange escapade, Denry had been the sole witness.
"'Well, I'm dashed,' he murmured aloud,
and a voice replied from the belly of the Pantecnican,
"'Who is there?'
All Denry's body shook.
"'It's me,' said he.
"'Not Mr. Machin,' said the voice.
"'Yes,' said he,
"'I jumped on as it came down the street,
"'and here we are.'
"'Oh!' cried the voice.
"'I do wish you could get round to me.'
"'Ruth Earp's voice.'
He saw the truth in a moment of piercing insight.
Ruth had been playing with him.
She had performed a comedy for him in two acts.
she had meant to do what is called in the five towns, a moonlight flit.
The Pantechnican, doubtless from Birmingham, where her father was,
had been brought to her door late in the evening,
and was to have been filled and taken away during the night.
The horses had been stabled, probably in Ruth's own yard,
and while the carmen were reposing, the Pantecnican had got off, Ruth in it.
She had no money locked in her unlockable desk,
her reason for not having paid the precious Mr Herbert Calvert
was not the reason which he had advanced.
His first staggered thought was,
She's got a nerve, no mistake.
Her duplicity, her wickedness, did not shock him.
He admired her tremendous and audacious enterprise.
It appealed strongly to every cell in his brain.
He felt that she and he were kindred spirits.
He tried to clamber round the side of the van,
so as to get to the doors at the back,
but a Pantechnikin has a wheel base
which forbids leaping from wheel to wheel,
especially when the wheels are under water.
Hence he was obliged to climb onto the roof,
and so slide down onto the top of one of the doors,
which was swinging loose.
The feat was not simple.
At last he felt the floor of the van
under half a yard of water.
"'Where are you?'
"'I'm here,' said Rubek,
Ruth, very plaintively,
"'I'm on a table. It was the only thing they'd put into the van
before they went off to have their supper or something.
Furniture removers are always like that.
Haven't you got a match?'
"'I've got scores of matches,' said Denry.
"'But what good do you suppose they'll be now, all soaked through?'
A short silence.
He noticed that she had offered no explanation of her conduct towards himself.
She seemed to take it for granted that he would
understand.
I'm frightfully bumped, and I believe my nose is bleeding, said Ruth, still more plaintively.
It's a good thing there was a lot of straw and sacks here.
Then after much groping, his hand touched her wet dress.
You know, you're a very naughty girl, he said.
He heard a sob, a wild sob.
The proud, independent creature had broken down under the stress of it.
of events. He climbed out of the water onto the part of the table which she was not occupying,
and the van was as black as Erebus. Gradually, out of the welter of sobs came faint articulations,
and, little by little, he learnt the entire story of her difficulties, her misfortunes,
her struggles, and her defeats. He listened to a frank confession of guilt.
But what could she do? She had meant well. But what could she do? She had been just,
driven into a corner, and she had her father to think of. Honestly, on the previous days she
had intended to pay the rent, or part of it, but there had been a disappointment, and she
had been so unwell. In short—'
The van gave a lurch. She clutched at him, and he at her. The van was settling down for a
comfortable night in the mud. Queer that it had not occurred to him before, but at the first
visit she had postponed paying him on the plea that the bank was closed, while at the second
visit she had stated that the actual cash had been slowly accumulating in her desk, and the
discrepancy had not struck him. Such is the influence of a teagown. However, he forgave her, in consideration
of her immense audacity. "'What can we do?' she almost whispered. Her confidence in him affected
him. "'Wait till it gets light,' said he.
So they waited, amid the waste of waters.
In a hot July it is not unpleasant to dangle one's feet in the water
during the sultry dark hours. She told him more and more.
When the inspiring grey preliminaries of the dawn began, Denry saw that at the back of the
Pentechnikum the waste of waters extended for at most a yard, and that it was easy by
climbing onto the roof to jump therefrom to the wharf. He did so, and then fixed a plank
so that Ruth could get ashore. Relieved of their weight, the table floated out after them.
Denry seized it, and set about smashing it to pieces with his feet.
"'What are you doing?' she asked faintly. She was too enfeebled to protest more vigorously.
"'Leave it to me,' said Denry. "'This table is the only thing that can give your show away. We can't carry it
we might meet someone. He tied the fragments of the table together with rope that was
afloat in the van, and attached the heavy iron bar, whose function was to keep the doors
closed. Then he sank the faggot of wood and iron in the distant corner of the basin.
"'There,' he said, "'now you understand. Nothing's happened except that a furniture-vans run off,
and fallen into the canal owing to the men's carelessness. We can settle the rest later—I mean
about the rent and so on. They looked at each other. Her skirts were nearly dry. Her nose showed no
trace of bleeding, but there was a bluish lump over her left eye. Save that he was hatless,
and that his trousers clung, he was not utterly untresentable. They were alone in the silent dawn.
You'd better go home by Aker Lane, not up Broome Street, he said. I'll come in during the morning.
It was a parting in which more was felt than said.
They went one after the other through the devastated gateway, baptising the path as they walked.
The town hall clock struck three as Denry crept up his mother's stairs.
He had seen not a soul.
Four.
The exact truth in its details was never known to more than two inhabitants of Burzley.
The one thing clear certainly appeared to be that Denry, in indian,
endeavouring to prevent a runaway Pantechnican from destroying the town had travelled with it into the canal.
The romantic trip was accepted as perfectly characteristic of Denry.
Around this island of fact washed a fabulous sea of uninformed gossip,
in which assertion conflicted with assertion,
and the names of Denry and Ruth were continually bumping against each other.
Mr Herbert Calvert glanced queerly and perhaps sardonically at Denry,
when Denry called and handed over ten pounds, less commission, which he said Miss Earp had paid on account.
"'Look here,' said the little Calvert, his mean little eyes gleaming.
"'You must get in the balance at once.'
"'That's all right,' said Denry.
"'I shall.'
"'What is she trying to hook it on the QT?' Calvert demanded.
"'Oh, no,' said Denry.
"'That was a very funny misunderstanding.
the only explanation I can think of is that the van must have come to the wrong house.
Are you engaged to her? Calvert asked, with amazing effrontery.
Denry paused.
Yes, he said. Are you?
Mr. Calvert wondered what he meant.
He admitted to himself that the courtship had begun in a manner surpassingly strange.
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The Card, A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns, by Arnold Bennett.
Chapter 4. Recking of a Life
1
In the five towns, and perhaps elsewhere, there exists a custom in virtue of which a couple who have become engaged in the early summer, find themselves by a most curious coincidence, at the same seaside resort, and often in the same street thereof during August. Thus it happened to Denry and to Ruth Earp. There had been difficulties. There always are. A businessman who lives by collecting weekly rents, obviously cannot go away from an indefinite period.
and a young woman who lives alone in the world is bound to respect public opinion.
However, Ruth arranged that her girlish friend, Nellie Cotterill, who had generous parents,
should accompany her, and the North Staffordshire Railway's philanthropic scheme
of issuing four-shilling tourist-returned tickets to the seaside,
enabled Denry to persuade himself that he was not absolutely mad
in contemplating a fortnight on the shores of England.
Ruth chose Clandidno,
Clandidno being more stylish than either Rill or Blackpool, and not dearer.
Ruth and Nellie had a double room in a boarding-house,
number 26 St. Aft's Road, off the Marine Parade,
and Denry had a small single room in another boarding-house,
number 28 St. Asaph's Road.
The ideal could scarcely have been approached more nearly.
Denry had never seen the sea before,
as in his gayest clothes he strolled along the Esplanade or on the pier between those two girls in their gayest clothes,
and mingled with the immense crowd of pleasure-seekers and money-spenders,
he was undoubtedly much impressed by the beauty and grandeur of the sea.
But what impressed him far more than the beauty and the grandeur of the sea
was the field for profitable commercial enterprise, which a place, like Thunditnau, presented.
He had not only his first vision of the sea,
but his first genuine vision of the possibilities of amassing wealth by honest ingenuity.
On the morning after his arrival he went out for a walk and lost himself near the great orm,
and had to return hurriedly along the whole length of the parade about nine o'clock,
and through every ground-floor window in every house he saw a long table full of people eating and drinking the same kinds of food.
Inland did no, fifty thousand souls desired always,
to perform the same act at the same time.
They wanted to be distracted,
and they would do anything for the sake of distraction,
and would pay for the privilege,
and they would all pay at once.
This great thought was more majestic to him than the sea,
or the great orm, or the little or.
It stuck in his head,
because he had suddenly grown into a very serious person.
He had now something to live for,
something on which to lavish his energy.
He was happy in his own.
being affianced, and more proud than happy, and more startled than proud. The manner and
method of his courtship had sharply differed from his previous conception of what such an affair
would be. He had not passed through the sensations which he would have expected to pass through,
and then this question was continually presenting itself. What could she see in him? She must have
got a notion that he was far more wonderful than he really was. Could it be true that she,
his superior in experience and in splendour of person had kissed him him he felt that it would be his duty to live up to this exaggerated notion which she had of him but how two
they had not yet discussed finance at all though denry would have liked to discuss it evidently she regarded him as a man of means this became clear during the progress of the journey to slandidno denry was flattered but the next day he had
slight misgivings, and on the following day he was alarmed, and on the day after that
his state resembled terror. It is truer to say that she regarded him less as a man of means,
than as a magic and inexhaustible siphon of money. He simply could not stir out of the
house without spending money, and often in ways quite unforeseen. Pier, minstrels, punch and Judy,
bathing, bums, ices, canes, fruit, chairs, row-boats, concerts, toffee, photographs, sharrabangs,
Any of these expenditures was likely to happen whenever they went forth for a simple stroll.
One might think that strolls were gratis, that the air was free. Error.
If he had had the courage, he would have left his purse in the house, as Ruth invariably did.
But men are moral cowards.
He had calculated thus.
Return fare, four shillings a week.
Agreed terms at boarding-house, twenty-five shillings a week.
Total expenses per week, twenty-nine shillings.
"'Say thirty.
"'On the first day he spent fourteen shillings on nothing whatever,
"'which was at the rate of five pounds a week of supplementary estimates.
"'On the second day he spent nineteen shillings on nothing whatever,
"'and Ruth insisted on his having tea with herself and Nellie at their boarding-house,
"'for which, of course, he had to pay, while his own tea was wasting next door.
"'So the figures ran on, jumping up each day.
"'Mercifully, when Sunday dawns the open wound in his pocket,
it was temporarily staunched. Ruth wished him to come in for tea again. He refused,
at any rate he did not come, and the exquisite placidity of the stream of their love was
slightly disturbed. Nobody could have guessed that she was in monetary difficulties on her own
account. Denry, as a chivalrous lover, had assisted her out of the fearful quagmire of her
rent, but she owed much beyond rent. Yet, when some of her quarterly fees had
come in, her thoughts had instantly run to Llanded No, joy, and frocks. She did not know what
money was, and she never would. This was perhaps part of her superior splendour. The gentle,
timid, silent Nellie occasionally let Denry see that she, too, was scandalised by her bosom
friend's recklessness. Often Nellie would modestly beg for permission to pay her share of the cost
of an amusement, and it seemed just to Denry that she should pay her share.
and he violently wished to accept her money, but he could not. He would even get quite curt with her
when she insisted. From this it will be seen how absurdly and irrationally different he was from the rest
of us. Nellie was continually with them, except just before they separated for the night,
so that Denry paid consistently for three. But he liked Nellie Cotterill. She blushed so easily,
and she so obviously worshipped Ruth, and admired himself.
and there was a marked vein of common sense in her ingenuous composition.
On the Monday morning he was up early and off to Burzley to collect rents and manage estates.
He had spent nearly five pounds beyond his expectation.
Indeed, if by chance he had not gone to Clandidno with a portion of the previous week's rent in his pockets,
he would have been in what their five towns call a fix.
While in Burstley he thought a good deal,
Burrsley in August encourages nothing but thought.
His mother was working as usual.
His recitals to her of the existence led by betrothed lovers at Llandedno were vague.
On the Tuesday evening he returned to Llandedno,
and despite the general trend of his thoughts,
it once more occurred that his pockets were loaded with a portion of the week's rents.
He did not know precisely what was going to happen,
but he knew that something was going to happen,
for the sufficient reason that his career could not continue unless something did happen.
Without either a quarrel, an understanding, or a miracle,
three months of affiance bliss with Ruth Earp would exhaust his resources
and ruin his reputation as one who was ever equal to a crisis.
Three.
What immediately happened was a storm at sea.
He heard it mentioned at Rill, and he saw in the deep night the foam of breakers at Prestatin.
And when the train reached Landidnau, those two girls in Ulsters and caps greeted him with wondrous tales of the storm at sea and of wrecks and of life-boats, and they were so jolly and so welcoming, so plainly glad to see their cavalier again, that Denry instantly discovered himself to be in the highest spirits.
He put away the dark and brooding thoughts which had disfigured his journey, and became the gay Denry of his own dreams. The very wind intoxicated him. There was not a very wind intoxicated him. There was no one.
no rain. It was half-past nine, and half Landed Nau was afoot on the parade, and discussing
the storm, a storm unparalleled it seemed in the month of August. At any rate, people who had
visited Llanded Nau yearly for twenty-five years, declared that never had they witnessed such a storm.
The new life-boat had gone forth amid cheers, about six o'clock to a schooner in distress near Rouse,
and at eight o'clock a second life-boat, an old one, which the new one, which the new one,
one had replaced, and which had been bought for a floating warehouse by an aged fisherman,
had departed to the rescue of a Norwegian bark, the Shalmar, round the bend of the little
orm.
"'Let's go on the pier,' said Denry.
"'It'll be splendid.'
He was not an hour in the town, and yet he was already hanging expense.
"'They've closed the pier,' the girls told him.
"'But when, in the course of their meandrings among the excited crowd under the gas-lamps,
they arrived at the pier gates. Denry perceived figures on the pier.
"'They're sailors and things, and the mare,' the girls explained.
"'Who?' said Denry, fired.
He approached the turnstile, and handed a card to the official.
It was the card of an advertisement agent of the Staffordshire Signal,
who had called at Broome Street in Denry's absence, about the renewal of Denry's advertisement.
"'Press,' said Denry to the Guardian at the Turnstile,
and went through with the ease of a bird on the wing.
"'Come along,' he cried to the girls.
The guardian seemed to hesitate.
"'These ladies are with me,' he said.
The guardian yielded.
"'It was a triumph for Denry.
He could read his triumph in the eyes of his companions.
When she looked at him like that,
Ruth was assuredly marvellous among women,
and any ideas derogatory to her marvellousness,
which he might have had at Burrsley and in the train.
were false ideas.
At the head of the pier
beyond the pavilion
there were gathered together
some fifty people,
and the tale ran
that the second lifeboat
had successfully
accomplished its mission
and was approaching the pier.
"'I shall write an account of this
for the signal,' said Denry,
whose thoughts were excusably on the press.
"'Oh, do!' exclaimed Nellie.
"'They have the signal
at all the newspaper shops here,'
said Ruth.
Then they seemed to be
emerged in the storm. The pier shook and trembled under the shock of the waves, and occasionally,
though the tide was very low, a sprinkle of water flew up and caught their faces. The eyes could
see nothing save the passing glitter of the foam on the crest of a breaker. It was the most
thrilling situation that any of them had ever been in. And at last came word from the mouths of men,
who could apparently see as well in the dark as in daylight, that the second lifeboat was
close to the pier, and then everybody momentarily saw it, a ghostly thing that heaved up pale
out of the murk for an instant, and was lost again, and the little crowd cheered.
The next moment a Bengal light illuminated the pier, and the lifeboat was silhouetted
with strange effectiveness against the storm, and someone flung a rope, and then another rope
arrived out of the sea, and fell on Denry's shoulder.
"'Hull on there!' yelled a hoarse voice.
The Bengal light expired.
Denry hauled with a will.
The occasion was unique,
and those few seconds were worth to him the whole of Denry's previous life.
Yes, not excluding the seconds in which he had kissed Ruth,
and the minutes in which he had danced with the Countess of Shell.
Then two men with beards took the rope from his hands.
The air was now alive with shoutings.
Finally there was a rush of men down the iron stairway to the lower part of the pier.
ten feet nearer the water.
"'You stay here, you too,' Denry ordered.
"'But Denry, stay here, I tell you.'
All the mail in him was aroused.
He was off, after the rush of men.
"'Half a jiffy,' he said, coming back.
"'Just take charge of this, will you?'
And he poured into their hands about twelve shillings worth of copper,
small change of rents from his hip pocket.
"'If anything happened, that might sink me,' he said, and vanished.
It was very characteristic of him, that effusion of calm, sagacity, and a supreme emergency.
Four.
Beyond getting his feet wet, Denry accomplished but little in the dark basement of the pier.
In spite of his success in hauling in the throne rope, he seemed to be classed at once down there by the experts assembled as an eager and useless person who had no right to the space which he occupied.
However, he witnessed the heaving arrival of the lifeboat and the disembarking of the rescued crew of the Norwegian bark,
and he was more than ever decided to compose a descriptive article for the Staffordshire signal.
The rescued and rescuing crews disappeared in single file to the upper floor of the pier,
with the exception of the coxswain, a man with the spreading red beard,
who stayed behind to inspect the lifeboat, of which indeed he was the absolute owner.
As a journalist, Denry did the correct thing and engaged him in conversation.
Meanwhile, cheering could be heard above.
The coxon, who stated that his name was Creguine, and that he was a manxman,
seemed to regret the entire expedition.
He seemed to be unaware that it was his duty now to play the part of the modest hero to Denry's interviewing.
At every loose end of the chat he would say, gloomily,
"'And look at her now, I'm telling you.'
meaning the battered craft, which rose and fell on the black waves.
Denry ran upstairs again, in search of more amenable material.
Some twenty men, in various sow-wester's and other headgear,
were eating thick slices of bread and butter, and drinking hot coffee,
which with foresight had been prepared for them in the pier buffet.
A few had preferred whiskey.
The whole crowd was now under the lee of the pavilion,
and it constituted a spectacle which Denry said to himself he should
refer to in his article as Rembrandtesque. For a few moments he could not describe Ruth and
Nelly in the gloom. Then he saw the indubitable form of his betrothed at a penny in the slot
machine, and the indubitable form of Nellie at another penny in the slot machine, and then he
could hear the click, click, click of the machines working rapidly, and his thoughts took a new
direction. Presently Ruth ran with blithe gracefulness from her machine, and commenced a generous
distribution of packets to the members of the crew. There was neither calculation nor exact
justice in her generosity. She dropped packets onto heroic knees with a splendid gesture of
largesse. Some packets even fell on the floor, but she did not mind. Denry could hear
her saying, "'You must eat it! Chocolate is so sustaining there's nothing like it!' She ran back to
the machines, and snatched more packets from Nellie, who under her orders had been industrious,
and then began a second distribution.
A calm and disinterested observer
would probably have been touched
by this spectacle of impulsive womanly charity.
He might even have decided
that it was one of the most beautifully human things
that he had ever seen.
And the fact that the hardy heroes and Norsemen
appeared scarcely to know what to do
with the silver-wrapped bonbons
would not have impaired his admiration
for these two girlish figures of benevolence.
Denry, too, was touched by the specter.
but in another way. It was the rents of his clients that were being thus dissipated in the very luxury of needless benevolence. He muttered,
"'Well, that's a bit thick, that is, but of course he could do nothing.'
As the process continued, the clicking of the machine exacerbated his ears.
"'Idiotic,' he muttered. The final annoyance to him was that everybody except himself seemed to consider that Ruth was displaying singular ingenuity, originality,
surprise and goodness of heart. In that moment he saw clearly for the first time that the marriage
between himself and Ruth had not been arranged in heaven. He admitted privately that the
saving of a young woman from violent death in a Pentechnican need not inevitably involve
espousing her. She was without doubt a marvellous creature, but it was as wise to dream of
keeping a carriage and pair as to dream of keeping Ruth. He grew suddenly cynical. His age leaptly
to fifty or so, and the curve of his lips changed.
Ruth, spying around, saw him, and ran to him with a glad cry.
Here, she said, take these, then are good, she held out her hands.
What are they? he asked.
They'd hate this.
So sorry, he said, with an accent whose significance escaped her, and took the useless
coins.
We've exhausted all the chocolate, said she, but there's but there's butterscotch left.
it's nearly as good, and gold-tipped cigarettes.
I dare say some of them would enjoy a smoke.
Have you got any more pennies?'
"'No,' he replied,
"'but I've got ten or a dozen half-crowns.
They'll work the machine just as well, won't they?'
This time she did notice a certain unusualness in the flavour of his accent,
and she hesitated.
"'Don't be silly,' she said.
"'I'll try not to be,' said Denry.
So far as he could remember
He had never used such a tone before
Ruth swerved away to rejoin Nelly
Denry surreptitiously counted the hapennies
There were eighteen
She had fed those machines then with over
130 pence
He murmured thick
Thick
Considering that he had returned to Slandidna
In the full intention of putting his foot down
Of clearly conveying to Ruth
That his conception of finding
"'differed from hers.
"'The second sojourn had commenced badly.
"'Still, he had promised to marry her,
"'and he must marry her.
"'Better a lifetime of misery and insolvency
"'than a failure to behave as a gentleman should.
"'Of course, if she chose to break it off,
"'but he must be minutely careful
"'to do nothing which might lead to a breach.
"'Such was Denry's code.
"'The walk home at midnight,
amid the reverberations of the falling tempest, was marked by a slight pettishness on the part of Root,
and by Denry's polite taciturnity.
5. Yet the next morning, as the three companions sat together under the striped awning of the buffet on the pier,
nobody could have divined by looking at them that one of them at any rate was the most uncomfortable
young man in all the land did know. The sun was hotly shining on their bright attire,
and on the still turbulent waves.
Ruth, thirsty after a breakfast of herrings and bacon,
was sucking iced lemonade up a straw.
Nellie was eating chocolate,
undistributed remains of the night's benevolence.
Dennery was yawning,
not in the least because the proceedings failed to excite his keen interest,
but because he had been a journalist till 3am,
and had risen at six in order to dispatch a communication
to the editor of the Staffordshire signal by train.
The girls were very playful.
Nelly dropped a piece of chocolate into Ruth's glass,
and Ruth fished it out and bit at it.
"'What a jolly taste!' she exclaimed.
And then Nellie bit at it.
"'Oh, it's just lovely!' said Nellie softly.
"'Here, dear,' said Ruth, try it.
And Denry had to try it,
and to pronounce it a delicious novelty,
which indeed it was,
and generally to brighten himself up,
and all the time he was murmuring in his husband,
this can't go on. Nevertheless, he was obliged to admit that it was he who had invited Ruth to pass the rest of her earthly life with him, and not vice versa.
"'Well, shall we go on somewhere else?' Ruth suggested.
And he paid yet again. He paid and smiled. He who had meant to be the masterful male. He who deemed himself always equal to a crisis. But in this crisis he was a
helpless. They set off down the pier, brilliant in the brilliant crowd. Everybody was talking of
wrecks and lifeboats. The new lifeboat had done nothing, having been forestalled by the
Prestatine boat. Butland did know was apparently very proud of its brave old, worn-out
lifeboat, which had brought ashore the entire crew of the Chalmar, without casualty in a
terrific hurricane.
"'Run along, child,' said Ruth to Nellie,
"'while Uncle and Auntie talked to each other for a minute.'
Nellie stared, blushed, and walked forward in confusion.
She was startled, and Denry was equally startled.
Never before had Ruth so brazenly hinted that lovers must be left alone at intervals.
Injustice to her, it must be said that she was a mirror for all the proprieties.
Denry had even reproached her in his heart.
for not sufficiently showing her desire for his exclusive society he wondered now what was to be the next revelation of her surprising character i had our bill this morning said ruth
she leaned gracefully on the handle of her sunshade and they both stared at the sea she was very elegant with an aristocratic air the bill as she mentioned it seemed a very negligible trifle nevertheless
Denry's heart quaked.
Oh, he said,
Did you pay it?
Yes, said she.
The landlady wanted the money, she told me,
so Nellie gave me her share, and I paid it at once.
Oh, said Denry.
There was a silence.
Denry felt as though he were defending a castle,
or as though he were in a dark room,
and somebody was calling him, calling him,
and he was pretending not to be there.
and holding his breath.
"'But I've hardly any money left,' said Ruth.
"'The fact is, Nellie and I spent a lot yesterday and the day before.
You've no idea how money goes.'
"'Haven't I,' said Denry,
"'but not to her, only to his own heart.
To her he said nothing.
"'I suppose we shall have to go back home,' she ventured lightly,
"'but one can't run into debt here.
they'd claim your luggage.
What a pity, said Denry sadly.
Just those few words, and the interesting part of the interview was over.
All that followed counted not in the least.
She had meant to induce him to offer to defray the whole of her expenses in Llandidna,
no doubt in the form of a loan, and she had failed.
She had intended him to repair the disaster called by her chronic extravagance,
and he had only said,
What a pity.
Yes, it is, she agreed bravely,
and with a finer disdain than ever of petty financial troubles,
still it can't be helped.
No, I suppose not, said Denry.
There was undoubtedly something fine about Ruth.
In that moment she had it in her to kill Denry with a bodkin,
but she merely smiled.
The situation was terribly.
restrained, past all Denry's previous conceptions of a strange situation, but she deviated
with superlative sang-froid into frothy small talk, a proud and unconquerable woman.
After all, what were men for, if not to pay?
I think I shall go home to-night, she said after the excursion into Prattle.
I'm sorry, said Denry. He was not coming out of his castle.
At that moment a hand touched.
his shoulder. It was the hand of Crigine, the owner of the old lifeboat.
"'Mr,' said Crigine, too absorbed in his own welfare to notice Ruth,
"'it's now or never. Five and twenty'll buy the fleet-wing if tens paid down this morning.'
And Denry, replied Boldly, "'you shall have it in an hour. Where shall you be?'
"'I'll be at John's cabin under the pier,' said Crigine. Where ye found me this morning?'
"'Right,' said Denry.
"'If Ruth had not been caracoling on her absurdly high horse,
"'she would have had the truth out of Denry in a moment
"'concerning these early-morning interviews
"'and mysterious transactions in shipping.
"'But from that height she could not deign to be curious,
"'and so she said naught.
"'Denry had passed the whole morning since breakfast
"'and had uttered no word of pre-prandial encounters with mariners,
"'though he had talked a lot about his article for the signal.
and of how he had risen betimes in order to dispatch it by the first train.
And as Ruth showed no curiosity, Denry behaved on the assumption that she felt none,
and the situation grew even more strained.
As they walked down the pier towards the beach at the dinner hour,
Ruth bowed to a dandahical man who obsequiously saluted her.
"'Who's that?' asked Denry instinctively.
"'Is a gentleman I was once engaged.
do, answered Ruth, with cold, brief politeness.
Denry did not like this.
The situation almost creaked under the complicated stresses to which it was subject.
The wonder was that it did not fly to pieces long before evening.
Six.
The pride of the principal actors being now engaged.
Each person was compelled to carry out the intentions which he had expressed,
either in words or tacitly.
Denry's silence had announced more efficiently than any words
that he would under no inducement emerge from his castle.
Ruth had stated plainly that there was nothing for it
but to go home at once, that very night.
Hence she arranged to go home,
and hence Denry refrained from interfering with her arrangements.
Ruth was lugubrious under a mask of gaiety.
Nellie was lugubrious under no mask whatever.
Nellie was merely the puppet of these betrothed players,
her elders. She admired Ruth, and she admired Denry, and between them they were spoiling
the Little Things holiday for their own adult purposes. Nellie knew that dreadful occurrences
were in the air, occurrences compared to which the storm at sea was a storm in a teacup.
She knew partly because Ruth had been so queenly polite, and partly because they had come
separately to St. Asaph's Road, and had not spent the entire afternoon together.
so quickly do great events loom up and happen that at six o'clock they had had tea and were on their way afoot to the station the odd man of number twenty-sixth and assaf's road had preceded them with the luggage
all the rest of flandedno was joyously strolling home to its half-past six high tea grand people to whom weekly bills were as dust and who were in a position to stop in london for ever and ever if they chose
and Ruth and Nellie were conscious of the shame,
which always affects those,
whom necessity forces to the railway station
of a pleasure resort in the middle of the season.
They saw omnibuses loaded with luggage,
and jolly souls were actually coming,
whose holiday had not yet properly commenced,
and this spectacle added to their humiliation and their disgust.
They genuinely felt that they belonged to the lower orders.
Ruth, for the sake of effect,
joked on the most solemn subjects,
She even referred with giggling laughter to the fact that she had borrowed from Nellie
in order to discharge her liabilities for the final 24 hours at the boarding-house.
A giggling laughter being contagious, as they were walking side by side together,
they all laughed, and each one secretly thought how ridiculous was such behaviour,
and how it failed to reach the standard of true worldliness.
Then, nearer the station, some sprightly caprice prompted Denry to raise his hat
two young women, who were crossing the road in front of them.
Neither of the two young women responded to the homage.
"'Who are they?' asked Ruth,
and the words were out of her mouth
before she could remind herself that curiosity was beneath her.
"'It's a young lady I was once engaged to,' said Denry.
"'Which one?' asked the Nanny, Nelly, astounded.
"'I forget,' said Denry.
He considered this to be one of the one of the men,
of his greatest retorts, not to Nellie, but to Ruth. Nellie naturally did not appreciate its
loveliness, but Ruth did. There was no facet of that retort that escaped Ruth's critical notice.
At length they arrived at the station, quite a quarter of an hour before the train was due,
and half an hour before it came in. Denry tipped the odd man to the transport of the luggage.
Sure it's all there, he asked the girls, embracing both of them in his gaze.
"'Yes,' said Ruth.
"'But where's yours?'
"'Oh,' he said,
"'I'm not going to-night.
"'I've got some business to attend to here.
"'I thought you understood.
"'I expect you'll be all right,
"'you two together.'
"'After a moment,' Ruth said brightly,
"'Oh, yes, I was quite forgetting
"'about your business.'
"'Which was completely untrue,
"'since she knew nothing of his business,
"'and he had assuredly not informed her
"'that he would not return with them.'
"'But Ruth's not.
was being very brave, haughty and queen-like, and for this the precise truth must sometimes
be abandoned. The most precious thing in the world to Ruth was her dignity, and who can blame
her? She meant to keep it, no matter what costs. In a few minutes, the book-stall on the platform
attracted them as inevitably as a prone horse attracts a crowd. Other people were near the
bookstool, and as these people were obviously leaving Kland did know, Ruth and Nellie felt a certain
solace. The social outlook seemed brighter for them. Denry bought one or two penny-papers,
and then the newsboy began to paste up the contents poster of the Staffordshire Signal, which had
just arrived, and on this poster, very prominent were the words, The Great Storm in North Wales,
special descriptive report. Denry snatched up one of the
the green papers and opened it, and on the first column of the news page saw his wondrous
description, including the word Rembrandtesque. Graphic account by a Burzley gentleman of the
scene at Flandino, said the subtitle, and the article was introduced by the phrase,
We are indebted to Mr. E. H. Meachin, a prominent figure in Burzley, etc. It was like a miracle.
Do what he would. Denry could not stop his.
face from glowing. With false calm he gave the paper to Ruth. Her calmness in receiving it
upset him.
"'We'll read it at the train,' she said primly, and started to talk about something else,
and she became most agreeable and companionable.
Mixed up with papers and six-penny novels on the bookstall were a number of souvenirs
of Flan de Nau. Paper knives, pens, paper-weights, watch-cases, pen-cases, all in light wood or
glass, and ornamented with coloured views of Llandinno, and also the word Llandinno in large
German capitals, so that mistakes might not arise. Ruth remembered that she had even intended
to buy a crystal paperweight, with a view of the great orm at the bottom. The bookstall-cler
clerk had several crystal paper-weights with views of the pier, the Hotel Majestic, the Esplanard,
the Happy Valley, but none with a view of the great orm. He had also paper-pourgues. He had also
paper-knives and watch-cases, with a view of the great orm. But Ruth wanted a combination of
paper-weight and great-aum, and nothing else would satisfy her. She was like that. The
clerk admitted that such a combination existed, but he was sold out of it. Couldn't you get
one and send it to me, said Ruth? And Denry saw and knew that she was incurable.
"'Oh, yes, miss,' said the clerk. "'Sertainly miss to-morrow.
latest? And he pulled out a book. What name? Ruth looked at Denry, as women do look on such occasions.
Rothschild, said Denry. It may seem perhaps strange that a single word ended their engagement,
but it did. She could not tolerate a rebuke. She walked away, flashing. The book-stalled
Clark received no order. Several persons in the vicinity dimly perceived that a domestic scene had occurred
in a flash under their noses on a platform of a railway station. Nellie was speedily aware that
something very serious had happened, for the train took them off without Ruth speaking a syllable
to Denry, though Denry raised his hat and was almost effusive. The next afternoon, Denry received
by post, a ring in a box.
I will not submit to insult, ran the brief letter.
I only said Rothschild, then remit to himself.
Can't a fellow say Rothschild?
But secretly he was proud of himself.
End of Chapter 4.
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The Card, A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns, by Arnold Bennett.
Chapter 5 The Mercantile Marine
1. The decisive scene, henceforward historic, occurred in the shanty known as John's Cabin,
John being the unacknowledged leader of the longshore population under the
the tail of Llandinope pier.
The cabin, festooned with cordage, was lighted by an oil-lamp of a primitive model,
and round the orange case on which the lamp was balanced, sat Denry,
Kriegine, the owner of the lifeboat, and John himself,
to give, as it were, a semi-official character to whatever was afoot.
"'Well, here you are,' said Denry, and handed to Krigene a piece of paper.
"'What's this, I'm asking ye?' said Kregine, taking the penit.
paper in his large fingers and peering at it as though it had been a papyrus.
But he knew quite well what it was. It was a cheque for twenty-five pounds.
What he did not know was that with the ten pounds paid in cash earlier in the day,
it represented a very large part indeed of such of Denry's savings
as had survived his engagement to Ruth Earp.
Kriegine took a pen as though it had been a match-end and wrote a receipt.
Then, after finding a stamp in a pocket of his waistcoat under his jersey, he put it in his mouth, and lost it there for a long time.
Finally, Denry got the receipt, certifying that he was the owner of the lifeboat, formerly known as Landed-No, but momentarily without a name, together with all her gear and sails.
"'Are you going to live in her?' the rather curt John inquired.
"'Not in her.
said Denry.
And he went out onto the sand and shingle,
leaving John and Craigine to complete the sale to Craigine of the Fleet Wing,
a small cutter specially designed to take twelve persons forth for a pleasant sail in the bay.
If Craigine had not had a fancy for the Fleet Wing,
and a perfect lack of the money to buy her,
Denry might never have been able to induce him to sell the lifeboat.
Under another portion of the pier,
Denry met a sailor with a long white beard, the aged Simeon, who had been one of the crew that rescued the Shalma,
but whom his colleagues appeared to regard rather as an ornament than as a motive force.
"'It's all right,' said Denry, and Simeon, in silence, nodded his head slowly several times.
"'I shall give you thirty shilling for the week,' said Denry.
and that venerable head oscillated again in the moonlit gloom, and rocked gradually to a standstill.
Presently the head said in shrill low tones,
"'I've seen three of them Norwegian chaps.
Two of them can no more speak English than a baby unborn, nor understand what she said to them.
Though have her bald in their ear rose.'
"'So much the better,' said Denry.
"'I showed them that sovereign,' said the bearded head, wagging again.
"'Well,' said Denry, "'you won't forget six o'clock tomorrow morning.
"'You'd better say five,' the head suggested.
"'Quia et alike.'
"'Five, then,' Denry agreed,
"'and he departed to St. Dasaf's road,
"'burdened with a tremendous thought.
"'The thought was,
"'I've gone and done it this time.'
"'Now that the transatlise,
action was accomplished and could not be undone, he admitted to himself that he had never been
more mad. He could scarcely comprehend what had led him to do that which he had done,
but he obscurely imagined that his caprice for the possession of sea-going craft must somehow
be the result of his singular adventure with the Pantechnican in the canal at Burzley. He was so
preoccupied with material interests as to be capable of forgetting for a quarter of an hour
at a stretch, that in all essential respects his life was wrecked, and he had nothing to hope
for save hollow, worldly success. He knew that Ruth would return the ring. He could almost
see the postman holding the little cardboard cube, which would contain the rendered ring.
He had loved, and loved tragically. That was how he put it in his unspoken thoughts,
but the truth was merely that he had loved something too expensive. Now the dream was
done, and a man of disillusion walked along the parade towards St. Dasaf's Road, among revelers,
a man with a past, a man who had probed women, a man who had nothing to learn about the sex.
And amid all the tragedy of his heart, and all his apprehensions concerning hollow, worldly
success, little thoughts of observed unimportance kept running about like clockwork mice in his
head, such as that it would be a bit of a bore to have to tell people at Burstley that his
engagement, which truly had thrilled the town, was broken off. Humiliating that.
And after all, Ruth was a glittering gem among women. Was there another girl in
Burstley so smart, so effective, so truly ornate?
Then he comforted himself with the reflection,
I'm certainly the only man that ever ended an engagement by just saying,
Ross Child?
This was probably true, but it did not help him to sleep.
Two.
The next morning, at 5.20, the youthful sun was shining on the choppy waters of the Irish sea,
just off the little orm, to the west of Lantidna Bay.
Oscillating on the uneasy waves was Denry's lifeboat,
and, by the nodding-bearded head, three ordinary British longshoremen,
a Norwegian who could speak English of two syllables,
and two other Norwegians, who, by a strange neglect of education, could speak nothing but Norwegian.
Close under the headland, near a morsel of beach lay the remains of the Shalma in an attitude of repose.
It was as if the Shalma, after a long struggle, had lain down like a cab-horse, and said to the
tempest, do what you like now.
Yes, the venerable head was piping.
Us can come out comfortable in twenty minutes, unless the tide be.
setting east strong, and as for getting back it'll be the same other way round, if you understand
me?' There could be no question that Simeon had come out comfortable, but he was the coxon.
The rowers seemed to be perspiringly aware that the boat was vast and beamy.
"'Shall we row up to it?' Simmion inquired, pointing to the wreck.
Then the pale face appeared above the gunwale, and an expiring, imploring voice said,
"'No, we'll go back,' whereupon the pale face vanished again.
Denry had never before been outside the bay.
In the navigation of Pantechnikins on the squaw-swept basins of canals,
he might have been a great master, but he was unfitted for the open sea.
At that moment he would have been almost ready to give the lifeboat and all that he owned
for the privilege of returning to land by train.
The inward journey was so long that Denry lost hope of ever touching his native island again,
and then there was a bump, and he disembarked, with hope burning up cheerfully in his bosom,
and it was quarter to six.
By the first post, which arrived at half-past seven, there came a brown package.
The ring, he thought, starting horribly,
but the package was a cube of three inches, and would have held a hundred rings.
He undid the cover, and saw on half a sheet of note-paper the words,
"'Thank you so much for the lovely time you gave me. I hope you will like this.
Nelly!' He was touched. If Ruth was hard, mercenary, costly, her young and ingenuous companion
could at any rate be grateful and sympathetic. Yes, he was touched. He had imagined himself to be
dead to all human affections, but it was not so.
A package contained chocolate, and his nose at once perceived that it was chocolate impregnated
with lemon, the surprising but agreeable compound accidentally invented by Nellie on the previous
day at the pier buffet. The little thing must have spent a part of the previous afternoon
in preparing it, and she must have put the package in the post at Crewe. Secretive and delightful
little thing. After his recent experience beyond the bay he had imagined himself to be in
capable of ever eating again, but it was not so. The lemon gave a peculiar, astringent, appetising,
settling quality to the chocolate, and he ate even with gusto. The result was that instead of
waiting for the nine o'clock boarding-house breakfast, he hurried energetically into the streets,
and called on a jobbing printer whom he had seen on the previous evening. As Ruth had said,
there is nothing like chocolate for sustaining you.
3. At 10 o'clock, two Norwegian sailors, who could only smile in answer to the questions which assailed them, were distributing the following handbill on the parade.
Wreck of the Shalmar, heroism at Llandedno. Every hour at 11, 12, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 o'clock, the identical, guaranteed lifeboat which rescued the crew of the Shalmar will leave the beach for the scene of the wreck, manned by Simeon Edith.
Edward's, the oldest boatman in Flandindon, and by members of the rescued crew, genuine
Norwegians, guaranteed.
Simeon Edward's Coxon
Return Fair, with use of cork-belt and lifelines if desired, two shillings and sixpence.
A unique opportunity, a unique experience.
P.S.
The bravery of the lifeboatmen has been the theme of the press throughout the principality and
neighbouring counties, E. H. Meachin.
At eleven o'clock there was an eager crowd down on the beach, where, with some planks and a piece of rock, Simeon had arranged an embarkation pier for the life-boat. One man in overall stood up to his knees in the water, and escorted passengers up the planks, while Simmion's confidence-generating beard received them into the broad waste of the boat. The rowers wore soullesters and were secured to the craft by lifelines, and these conveniences were also offered with life-lines.
belts to the intrepid excursionists. A paper was pinned in the stern, licensed to carry
fourteen. Denry had just paid the fee, but quite forty people were anxious to make the first voyage.
"'No more!' shrilled Simeon solemnly, and the wader scrambled in, and the boat slid away.
"'Where's bees?' shrilled Simeon. He collected one pound fifteen, and slowly buttoned it up in the right-hand
pocket of his blue trousers.
"'Now, my lads, with a will!' he gave the order, and then, with deliberate method, he
lighted his pipe, and the life-boat shot away.
Close by the planks stood a young man in a negligent attitude, and with a look on his face
as if to say, "'Please do not imagine that I have the slightest interest in this affair.'
He stared consistently out to sea until the boat had disappeared round the little orm, and
then he took a few turns on the sands, in and out amid the castles. His heart was beating in the
most disconcerting manner. After a time he resumed his perusal of the sea, and the lifeboat
reappeared and grew larger and larger, and finally arrived at the spot from which it had departed,
only higher up the beach, because the tide was rising. And Simeon debarked first, and there was
a small blue and red model of a lifeboat in his hand, which he shook to a sound of coin.
"'For the lifeboat fund! For the lifeboat fund!' he gravely intoned.
Every debarking passenger dropped a coin into the slit.
In five minutes the boat was refilled, and Simeon had put the value of fourteen more half-crowns into his pocket.
The lips of the young man on the beach moved, and he murmured,
"'That makes over three pounds! Well, I'm dashed.'
At the hour appointed for dinner he went to St. Asaph's Road, but could eat nothing.
He could only keep repeating very softly to himself.
Well, I'm dashed.
Throughout the afternoon the competition for places in the lifeboat grew keener and more dangerous.
Denry's craft was by no means the sole craft engaged in carrying people to see the wreck.
There were dozens of boats in the business, which had suddenly sprung up that morning,
the sea being then fairly inoffensive for the first time since the height of the storm.
But the other boats simply took what the lifeboat left,
the guaranteed identity of the lifeboat, and of the Norseman,
who replied to questions in gibberish, and of Simeon himself,
the Sower Wester's, the life-belts and the lines.
Even the collection for the life-boat fund at the close of the voyage.
All these matters resolved themselves into a fascination which Land did now could not resist.
And in regard to the collection a remarkable crisis arose.
The model of a lifeboat became full, gorge to the slot.
And the local secretary of the fund had the key.
The model was dispatched to him by special messenger to open and to empty,
and in the meantime Simmion used his Saint-Westre as a collecting-box.
This controutreth was impressive.
At night, Denry received twelve pounds odd at the hands of Simeon Edwards.
He showered the odd in largesse on his heroic crew, who had also received many tips.
By the evening post the fatal ring arrived from Ruth, as he anticipated.
He was just about to throw it into the sea,
when he thought better of the idea, and stuck it in his pocket.
He tried still to feel that his life had been blighted by Ruth, but he could not.
The twelve pounds, largely in silver, weighed so heavy in his pocket.
said to himself, of course, this can't last.
Four.
Then came the day when he first heard someone saying, discreetly, behind him,
that's the lifeboat chap.
Or more briefly, that's him, implying that in all Llandedno, him could only mean one person.
And for a time he went about the streets self-consciously.
However, that self-consciousness soon passed off, and he wore his fame as easily as he wore his collar.
The lifeboat trips to the Shalmar became a feature of daily life in Flandinno.
The pronunciation of the ship's name went through a troublous period.
Some said the J ought to be pronounced the exclusion of the H, and others maintained the contrary.
In the end, the first two letters were both abandoned utterly, also the last, but nobody had ever paid any attention to the last.
The facetious had a trick of calling the wreck Incomen.
This definite settlement of the pronunciation of the name was a sign that the pleasure-seekers of Flandidno had definitely fallen in love with the life-boat-trip habit.
Denry's timid fear, that the phenomenon which put money into his pocket could not continue, was quite falsified.
It continued violently, and Denry wished that the Chalma had been wrecked a month earlier.
He calculated that the tardiness of the Chalma, in wrecking itself, had involved him in a loss of some four hundred hundred,
If only the catastrophe had happened early in July, instead of early in August, and he had
been there.
Why, if forty shalmers had been wrecked and their forty crews saved by forty different
lifeboats, and Denry had bought all the lifeboats, he could have filled them all.
Still the regularity of his receipts was extremely satisfactory and comforting.
The thing had somehow the air of being a miracle.
at any rate of being connected with magic.
It seemed to him that nothing could have stopped the visitors to Flandinno
from fighting for places in his lifeboat and paying handsomely for the privilege.
They had begun the practice, and they looked as if they meant to go on with the practice eternally.
He thought that the monotony of it would strike them unfavourably.
But no!
He thought that they would revolt against doing what everyone had done.
But no!
Hundreds of persons arrived fresh from the relinquency.
station every day, and they all appeared to be drawn to that life-boat as to a magnet.
They all seemed to know instantly and instinctively, that to be correct, Tintland did know,
they must make at least one trip in Denry's lifeboat. He was pocketing an income, which
far exceeded his most golden visions, and therefore, naturally, his first idea was to make that
income larger and larger still. He commenced by putting up the price of the afternoon trips. There was
a vast deal too much competition for seats in the afternoon. This competition led to quarrels,
unseemly language, and deplorable loss of temper. It also led to loss of time. Denry
was therefore benefiting humanity by charging three shillings after two o'clock. This
simple and benign device equalized the competition throughout the day, and made Denry richer
by seven or eight pounds a week. But his fertility of invention did not stop there.
One morning the earliest excursionists saw a sort of Robinson Crusoe barooned on the strip of beach near the wreck.
All that Hartle's fate had left him appeared to be a machine on a tripod and a few black bags,
and there was no shelter for him, save a shallow cave.
The poor fellow was quite respectfully dressed.
Simeon steered the boat round by the beach, which shelved down sharply,
and as he did so the Robinson Crusoe hid his head in clon.
as though ashamed, or as though he had gone mad and believed himself to be an ostrich.
Then apparently he thought the better of it, and gazed boldly forth again,
and the boat passed on its starboard side, within a dozen feet of him and his machine.
Then it put about, and passed on the port side, and the same thing happened on every trip,
and the last trippers of the day left Robinson Crusoe on the strip of beach in his solitude.
The next morning, a photographer's shop on the parade pulled down its shutters and displayed posters over all the upper part of its windows, and the lower part of the windows held sixteen different large photographs of the lifeboat broadside on, the likenesses of over a hundred visitors, many of them with sowesters, court belts and lifelines, could be clearly distinguished in those picturesque groups. A notice said, copies of any of the list of any of the last year.
of these magnificent permanent holographs can be supplied handsomely mounted at a charge of two shillings each.
Orders executed in rotation, and delivered by post if necessary. It is respectfully requested
that cash be paid with order, otherwise orders cannot be accepted. Very few of those who
had made the trip could resist the fascination of a photograph of themselves in a real lifeboat
meant by real heroes and real Norwegians on real waves, especially if they had worn the gear
appropriate to life-boats. The windows of the shop were beset throughout the day, with crowds
anxious to see who was in the life-boat, and who had come out well, and who was the perfect
fright. The orders on the first day amounted to over fifteen pounds, for not everybody
was content with one photograph. The novelty was acute and enchanting, and it renewed itself
each day.
Let's go down and look at the lifeboat photographs, people would say, when they were wondering
what to do next.
Some persons who had not taken nicely would perform a special trip in the lifeboat, and would
wear special clothes and compose special faces for the ordeal.
The mayor of Ashby de la Zouche for that year ordered 200 copies of a photograph which
showed himself in the centre for presentation as New Year's cards.
On the mornings after very dull days or wet days when photography had been impossible or unsatisfactory,
Llanded no felt that something lacked.
Here it may be mentioned that in clement weather, of which for the rest there was little,
scarcely interfered with Denry's receipts, imagine a lifeboat being deterred by rain or by a breath of wind.
There were tarpaulins.
When the tide was strong and adverse, male passengers were allowed to pull without extra
charge, though naturally they would give a trifle to this or that member of the professional
crew.
Denry's arrangement with the photographer was so simple that a child could have grasped it.
The photographer paid him sixpence on every photograph sold.
This was Denry's only connection with the photographer.
The sixpences totaled over a dozen pounds a week.
Regardless of cost, Denry reprinted his article from the Staffordshire Signal,
descriptive of the night of the wreck, with a photograph of the lifeboat and its crew,
and presented a copy to every client of his photographic department.
Five.
Thandinot was next titillated by the mysterious chocolate remedy,
that made its first appearance in a small boat that plied off Robinson Crusoe's strip of beach.
Not infrequently passengers in the lifeboat were inconvenienced by displeasing
and even distressing sensations, as Denry had once been in.
inconvenienced. He felt deeply for them. The chocolate remedy was designed to alleviate the symptoms,
while captivating the palate. It was one of the most agreeable remedies that the wit of man ever
invented. It tasted like chocolate, and yet there was an astringent flavour of lemon in it,
a flavour that flattered the stomach into a good opinion of itself, and seemed to say all's right
with the world. The stuff was retailed in sixpenny packets, and you were advised to eat only a very
little of it at a time, and not to masticate, but merely to permit melting.
Then the chocolate remedy came to be sold on the lifeboat itself, and you were informed
that if you took it before starting on the wave, no wave could disarrange you.
And indeed many persons who followed this advice suffered no distress, and were proud accordingly,
and duly informed the world.
Then the chocolate remedy began to be sold everywhere.
Young people bought it because they enjoyed it, and perfectly,
ignored the advice against overindulgence and against mastication.
The chocolate remedy penetrated like the refrain of a popular song to other seaside places.
It was on sale from Morecambe to Barmouth, and at all the landing stages of the steamers for
the Isle of Man and Anglesey.
Nothing surprised Denry so much as the vogue of the chocolate remedy.
It was a serious anxiety to him, and he muddled both the manufacture and distribution of
the remedy from simple ignorance.
and inexperience.
His chief difficulty at first
had been to obtain small cakes of chocolate
that were not stamped with the maker's name or mark.
Chocolate manufacturers seemed to have a passion
for imprinting their quakerly names
on every bit of stuff they sold.
Having at length obtained a supply,
he was silly enough to spend time
in preparing the remedy himself in his bedroom.
He might as well have tried to feed the British army
from his mother's kitchen.
At length he went to a confession,
A perfectioner in Rill, and a green grocer in Llandidno, and by giving away half the secret to each, he contrived to keep the whole secret to himself. But even then he was manifestly unequal to the situation created by the demand for the chocolate remedy. It was a situation that needed the close attention of half a dozen men of business. It was quite different from the affair of the lifeboat.
One night a man who had been staying a day or two in the boarding-house in St.
Assaf's Road said to Denry,
"'Look here, mister, I'll go straight to the point. What'll you take?'
And he explained what he meant.
What would Denry take for the entire secret and rights of the chocolate remedy,
and the use of the name Meachin, without which none was genuine?
"'What do you offer?' Denry asked.
"'Well, I'll give you a hundred pound down, and that's my money.'
last word. Denry was staggered. A hundred pounds for simply nothing at all, for dipping bits of
chocolate in lemon-juice. He shook his head. "'I'll take two hundred,' he replied, and he got two hundred.
It was probably the worst bargain that he ever made in his life, for the chocolate remedy
continued obstinately in demand for ten years afterwards. But he was glad to be rid of the thing.
It was spoiling his sleep and wearing him out.
He had other worries. The boatman of Flan did know regarded him as an enemy of the human race.
If they had not been nature's gentlemen, they would have burned him alive at a stake.
Kregine, in particular, consistently referred to him in terms which could not have been more severe,
had Denry been the assassin of Kragine's wife and seven children.
In daring to make over a hundred pounds a week out of a ramshackle old lifeboat,
that Kregine had sold him for thirty-five pounds,
Denry was outraging Craigine's moral code.
Craigine had paid thirty-five pounds for the fleet-wing,
a craft immeasurably superior to Denry's nameless tub,
and was Craigine making a hundred pounds a week out of it?
Not a hundred shillings.
Craigine genuinely thought that he had a right to half-denry's profits.
Old Simeon, too, seemed to think that he had a right
to a large percentage of the same profits.
And the corporation, though it was notorious.
that excursionists visited the town purposely to voyage in the lifeboat, the corporation
made difficulties about the embarking and disembarking, about the photographic strip of
beach, about the crowds on the pavement outside the photograph-shop. Denry learnt that he
had committed the sin of not being a native of Flan did know. He was a stranger, and he was taking
money out of the town. At times he wished he could have been born again. His friend and saviour was
the local secretary of the lifeboat institution, who happened to be a town councillor.
This worthy man, to whom Denry paid over a pound a day, was invaluable to him.
Further, Denry was invited, they commanded, to contribute to nearly every church, chapel,
mission and charity in Carnarvonshire, Flintshire, and other counties. His usefulness was not
accepted as an excuse, and as his gross profits could be calculated by any dunce who
chose to stand on the beach for half a day, it was not easy for him to pretend that he was
on the brink of starvation. He could only ward off attacks by stating, with vague, convinced
sadness, that his expenses were much greater than anyone could imagine. In September, when
the moon was red and full and the sea-glassy, he announced a series of nocturnal rocket fates.
The life-boat hung with Chinese lanterns, put out in the evening, charged
five shillings, and, followed by half the harbour's fleet of rowing-boats and cutters,
proceeded to the neighbourhood of the strip of beach, where a rocket apparatus had been installed
by the help of the life-boat secretary. The mortar was trained, there was a flash, a whizzed
line of fire, and a rope fell out of the sky across the life-boat. The effect was thrilling,
and roused cheers. Never did the life-boat institution receive such an advertisement as Denry gave it,
gratis. After the rocketing, Denry stood alone on the slopes of the little
orm, and watched the lanterns floating home over the water, and heard the lusty mirth of
his clients in the still air. It was an emotional experience for him.
By Jove! he said. I've wakened this town up.
Six.
One morning, in the very last sad days of the dying season, when his receipts had dropped to
the miserable figure of about fifty pounds a week. Denry had a great and pleasing surprise. He met
Nellie on the parade. It was a fact that the recognition of that innocent, childlike, blushing
face gave him joy. Nellie was with her father, Councillor Cotterill, and her mother. The
counsellor was a speculative builder, who was erecting several streets of British homes in the
new quarter above the new municipal park at Bursley. Denry had already encountered him, once or
twice in the way of business, he was a big and portly man of forty-five, with a thin face and a
consciousness of prosperity. At one moment you would think him a jolly, bluff fellow, and at the
next you would be disconcerted by a note of cunning or of harshness. Mrs. Councillor Cotrell
was one of those women who failed to live up to the ever-increasing height of their husbands.
Afflicted with an eternal stage fright, she never opened her close-pressed lips in society,
though a few people knew that she could talk as fast and effectively as anyone.
Difficult to set in motion, her vocal machinery was equally difficult to stop.
She generally wore a low bonnet and a mantle.
The gottrells had been spending a fortnight at the Isle of Man,
and they had come direct from Douglas to Llandinno by steamer,
where they meant to pass two or three days.
They were staying at Craigadon at the eastern end of the parade.
"'Well, young man,' said Councillor Cotterill,
"'and he kept on young man in Denry
"'with an easy patronage, which Denry could scarcely approve of.
"'I bet I've made more money this summer than you have with all your jerrying,'
"'said Denry, silently, to the councillor's back,
"'while the Cotterill family were inspecting the historic lifeboat on the beach.
"'Counsellor Cotterill said frankly that one reason for their calling a cland-ed-no
"'who was his desire to see this.
singular lifeboat, about which there really had been a great deal of talk in the five towns.
The admission comforted Denry.
Then the counsellor recommenced his young Manning.
"'Look here,' said Denry, carelessly.
"'You must come and dine with me one night, all of you, will you?'
"'Nobody who has not passed at least twenty years in a district where people dine at one o'clock,
and dining after dark is regarded as a wild idiosyncrasy of earls, can
appreciate the effect of this speech the counsellor when he had recovered himself said that they would be pleased to dine with him mrs cotteril's tight lips were seen to move but not heard and nelly glowed
yes said denry come and dine with me at the majestic the name of the majestic put an end to the young manning it was a new hotel by the pier and advertised itself as the most luxurious hotel in the principality which was bold of it having regard to the magnificent
of caravansarise at Cardiff. It had two hundred bedrooms, and waiters who talked English
imperfectly, and its prices were supposed to be fantastic. After all, the most startled and
frightened person of the fore was perhaps Denry. He had never given a dinner to anybody. He had
never even dined at night. He had never been inside the majestic. He had never had the courage
to go inside the majestic. He had no notion of the mysterious preliminaries to the offering
of a dinner in a public place.
But the next morning he contracted to give away the life-boat to a syndicate of boatmen,
headed by John their leader, for £35, and he swore to himself that he would do that dinner
properly, even if it cost him the whole price of the boat.
Then he met Mrs. Cotterill coming out of a shop.
Mrs. Cotterill, owing to a strange hazard of fate, began talking at once, and Denry,
as an old shorthand-writer, instinctively calculated.
that not Thomas Allen Reed himself could have taken Mrs. Cotterill down verbatim.
Her face tried to express pain, but pleasure shone out of it, for she found herself in an exciting contretante which she could understand.
Oh, Mr. Machen, she said, what do you think's happened? I don't know how to tell you, I'm sure.
Here you've arranged for that dinner to-morrow, and it's all settled, and now, Miss Earp, telegraphs to our Nellie to say she's coming to-morrow for a day or two with us.
You know, Ruth and Nellie are such friends. It's like as if what must be.
be, isn't it, I don't know what to do, I do declare, whatever will Ruth's
haet is leaving her alone on the first night she comes. I really do think she might have—
"'You must bring her along with you,' said Denry.
"'But won't you—shan't you—she won't—'
"'Not at all,' said Denry.
"'Speaking for myself, I shall be delighted.'
"'Well, I'm sure you are very sensible,' said Mrs. Cotterill.
"'I was but saying to Mr. Cotterill over breakfast,' I said to him.
"'I shall ask Council of Rees Jones to meet you,' said Denry.
He's one of the principal members of the town council here, local secretary of the lifeboat institution,
great friend of mine.
Oh, exclaimed Mrs. Cotterill.
It'll be quite an affair.
It was.
Then refound to his relief that the only difficult part of arranging a dinner at the majestic
was the stealing of yourself to enter the gorgeous portals of the hotel.
After that and after murmuring that you wished to fix up a little snack,
You had nothing to do but listen to suggestions, each surpassing the rest in splendour, and say yes.
Similarly, with the greeting of a young woman who was once to you the jewel of the world,
you simply said, Good afternoon, how are you? And she said the same, and you shook hands,
and there you were, still alive. The one defect of the dinner was that the men were not in evening dress.
Denry registered a new rule of life.
Never travel without your evening dress,
because you never know what may turn up.
The girls were radiantly white,
and after all there is nothing like white.
Mrs. Cottrell was in black silk and silence,
and after all there is nothing like black silk.
There was champagne.
There were ices.
Nelly, not being permitted champagne,
took her revenge in ice.
Denry had found an opportunity,
to relate to her the history of the chocolate remedy.
She said,
How wonderful you are!
And he said it was she who was wonderful.
Denry gave no information about the chocolate remedy to her father.
Neither did she.
As for Ruth, indupitably she was responsible
for the social success of the dinner.
She seemed to have the habit of these affairs.
She it was who loosed tongues.
Nevertheless, Denry saw her now with different eyes.
and it appeared incredible to him that he had once mistaken her for the jewel of the world.
At the end of the dinner, Councillor Rees Jones produced a sensation by rising to propose the health of their host.
He referred to the superb heroism of England's lifeboatman, and in the name of the institution thanked Denry for fifty-three pounds,
which Denry's public had contributed to the funds.
He said it was a noble contribution, and that Denry was a philanthropist, and he called on
Councillor Cotterill to second the toast, which Councillor Cotrill did, in good set terms,
the result of long habit, and Denry stammered that he was much obliged, and really it was
nothing. But when the toasting was finished, Councillor Cotterill lapsed somewhat into a
patronising irony, as if he were jealous of a youthful success, and he did not stop
but young man. He addressed Denry grandiously as,
"'My boy.'
"'This life-bold. It was just an idea, my boy, just an idea,' he said.
"'Yes,' said Denry,
"'but I thought of it.'
"'The question is,' said the counsellor,
"'can you think of any more ideas as good?'
"'Well,' said Denry,
"'can you?'
With reluctance, they left the luxury of the private dining-room,
and Denry surreptitiously paid the bill.
with a pile of sovereigns, and Councillor Rhys Jones parted from them with lively grief.
The other five walked in a row along the parade in the moonlight, and when they arrived in front
of Craigodon, and the cotterils were entering, Ruth, who loitered behind, said to Denry in a
liquid voice, "'I don't feel a bit like going to sleep. I suppose you wouldn't care for a stroll.'
"'Well—'
"'I dare say you're very tired,' she said.
no he replied it's this moonlight i'm afraid of had their eyes met under the door-lamp and ruth wished him pleasant dreams and vanished it was exceedingly subtle seven
the next afternoon the cotterills and ruth urp went home and denry with them flandednoe was just settling into its winter sleep and denry's rather complex affairs had all been put in order
though the others showed a certain lassitude he himself was hilarious among his insignificant luggage was a new hat-box which proved to be the origin of much gaiety
just take this will you he said to a porter on the platform at landed no station and held out the new hat-box with an air of calm the porter innocently took it and then as the hat-box nearly jerked his arm out of the socket gave vent to his astonishment after the manner of porters
"'My gun, mister,' said he,
"'that's heavy.'
"'It, in fact, weighed nearly two stone.'
"'Yes,' said Denry,
"'it's full of sovereigns, of course,' and everybody laughed.
At Crewe, where they had to change,
and again at Knife and Burseley,
he produced astonishment in porters
by concealing the effort with which he handed them the hat-box,
as though its weight was ten ounces,
and each time he made the same witticism about sovereigns.
"'What have you got in that hat-box?' Ruth asked.
"'Don't I tell you?' said Denry, laughing, sovereigns.'
"'Lastly he performed the same trick on his mother.
Mrs. Machen was working, as usual, in the cottage, in Broome Street.
Perhaps the notion of going to Lland Edna for a change had not occurred to her.
In any case, her presence had been necessary in Bursley,
for she had frequently collected Denry's rents for him,
and collected them very well.
Denry was glad to see her again, and she was glad to see him,
but they concealed their feelings as much as possible.
When he basely handed her the hat-box, she dropped it,
and roundly informed him that she was not going to have any of his pranks.
After tea, whose savouriness he enjoyed quite as much as his own state dinner,
he gave her a key, and asked her to open the hat-box,
which she had placed on a chair.
"'What is there in it?
"'A lot of jolly fine pebbles that I've been collecting on the beach,' he said.
She got the hat-box onto her knee and unlocked it, and came to a thick cloth, which she partly withdrew.
And then there was a scream from Mrs. Machen, and the hat-box rolled with a terrific crash to the tiled floor,
and she was ankle-deep in Sovereigns.
She could see sovereigns running about all over the parlour.
Gradually, even the most active sovereigns decided to lie down and be quiet, and a great silence ensued.
Denry's heart was beating.
Mrs. Macchin merely shook her head.
Not often did her son deprive her of words, but this theatrical culmination of his homecoming really did leave her speechless.
Late that night, rows of piles of sovereigns decorated the oval table in the parlour.
"'A thousand and eleven,' said Denry, at length, beneath the lamp.
"'There's fifteen missing yet. We'll look for them to-morrow.'
For several days afterwards Mrs. Machen was still picking up sovereigns.
Two had even gone outside the parlour, and down the two steps into the backyard,
and finding themselves unable to get back, had remained there.
And all the town knew that the unique Denry had thought of the idea of returning
home to his mother with a hat-box crammed with sovereigns.
This was Denry's latest, and it employed the conversation of the borough, for I don't know how long.
End of Chapter 5.
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recording by andiminta the card a story of adventure in the five towns by arnold bennett chapter six his burglary
one the fact that denry machen decided not to drive behind his mule to snade hall showed in itself that the enterprise of interviewing the countess of chell was not quite the simple daily trifling matter that he strove to pretend it was
The mule was part of his more recent splendour.
It was aged seven, and it had cost Denry ten pounds.
He had bought it off a farmer whose wife stood in St. Luke's market.
His excuse was that he needed help in getting about the five towns in pursuit of cottage rents,
for his business of a rent-collector had grown.
But for this purpose a bicycle would have served equally well,
and would not have cost a shilling a day to feed, as the mule did,
nor have shied at policemen, as the mule nearly always did.
Denry had bought the mule, simply because he had been struck all of a sudden with the idea of buying the mule.
Some time previously, Josh Curtney, the deputy mayor, who became mayor of Burzley,
on the Earl of Chell being called away to govern an Australian colony,
had made an enormous sensation by buying a flock of geese and driving them home himself.
Denry did not like this.
He was indeed jealous, if a large mind can be jealous.
Joss Curtinie was old enough to be his grandfather,
and had been a recognised card and character since before Denry's birth.
But Denry, though so young, had made immense progress as a card,
and had, perhaps justifiably, come to consider himself as the Premier card,
the very ace of the town.
He felt that some reply was needed to Curtney's geese,
and the mule was his reply.
It served excellently.
People were soon asking each other whether they had heard that Denry Machen's latest was to buy a mule.
He obtained a little old Victoria for another ten pounds, and a good set of harness for three guineas.
The carriage was low, which enabled him, as he said, to nip in and out much more easily than in and out of a trap.
In his business you did almost nothing but nip in and out.
On the front seat he caused to be fitted a narrow box of Japan,
tin, with a formidable lock and slits on the top. This box was understood to receive the rents
as he collected them. It was always guarded on journeys by a cross between a mastiff and something
unknown, whose growl would have terrorised a lion-tamer. Denry himself was afraid of Roger,
the dog, but he would not admit it. Roger slept in the stable behind Mrs. Machen's cottage,
for which Denry paid a shilling a week. In the stable there was precise.
precisely room for Raja, the mule and the carriage, and when Denry entered to groom or to harness,
something had to go out. The equipage quickly grew into a familiar sight in the streets of the
district. Denry said that it was funny without being vulgar. Certainly it amounted to a
continual advertisement for him. An infinitely more effective advertisement than, for instance, a sandwichman
at 18 pence a day, and costing no more, even with the licence and the shoeing.
moreover a sandwichman has this inferiority to a turnout when you have done with him you cannot put him up at auction and sell him further there are no sandwichmen in the five towns in that democratic and independent neighbourhood nobody would deign to be a sandwichman
The mulish vehicular display does not end the tale of Denry's splendour.
He had an office in St. Luke's Square, and in the office was an office boy, small but genuine,
and a real copying press, and outside it was the little square signboard,
which in the days of his simplicity used to be screwed onto his mother's door.
His mother's steely firmness of character had driven him into the extravagance of an office,
even after he had made over a thousand pounds out of the land did no lifeboat in less than three months.
She would not listen to a proposal for going into a slightly larger house,
of which one room might serve as an office,
nor would she abandon her own labours as a seamstress.
She said that since her marriage she had always lived in that cottage and had always worked,
and that she meant to die there, working,
and that Denry could do what he chose.
He was a bold youth, but not but not,
bold enough to dream of quitting his mother. Besides, his share of household expenses in the cottage
was only ten shillings a week. So he rented the office, and he hired an office boy, partly to convey to
his mother that he should do what he chose, and partly for his own private amusement. He was thus
at an age when fellows without imagination are fraying their cuffs for the enrichment of their elders,
and glad if they can afford a cigar once a month, in possession of a business, business
premises, a clerical staff, and a private carriage, drawn by an animal unique in the five
towns. He was living on less than his income, and in the course of about two years, to a small
extent by economies, and to a large extent by injudicious but happy investments, he had
doubled the Lunditna thousand, and won the deference of the manager of the bank at the top
of St. Luke's Square, one of the most unsentimental men, whoever wrote, refer to draw on a cheque.
And yet Denry was not satisfied. He had a secret woe, due to the facts that he was gradually
ceasing to be a card, and that he was not multiplying his capital by two every six months.
He did not understand the money market, nor the stock market, nor even the financial article
in the signal, but he regarded himself as a financial genius, and deemed that as a financial
genius he was vegetating. And as for setting the town on fire,
of painting it scarlet, he seemed to have lost the trick of that.
Two. And then, one day, the populace saw on his office door, beneath his nameboard,
another sign. Five-town Universal Thrift Club, Secretary and Manager E. H. Meachin. An idea had visited him.
Many tradesmen formed slate clubs, goose clubs, turkey clubs, whiskey clubs, in the autumn for Christmas.
Their humble customers paid so much a week to the tradesmen, who charged them nothing for keeping it,
and at the end of the agreed period they took out the total sum in goods, dead or alive, eatable, drinkable or wearable.
Denry conceived a universal slate club. He meant it to embrace each of the five towns.
He saw 40,000 industrial families paying weakly installments into his slate club.
He saw the slate club, entering into contracts with all the principal tradesmen.
of the entire district, so that the members of the Slate Club could shop with Slate Club tickets
practically where they chose. He saw his Slate Club so powerful that no tradesmen could afford
not to be in relations with it. He had induced all Flamindno to perform the same act daily
for nearly a whole season, and he now wished to induce all the vast five towns to perform
the same act to his profit for all eternity. And he would be a philanthropist into the
bargain. He would encourage thrift in the working man and the working man's wife. He would guard
the working man's money for him, and to save trouble to the working man he would call at the
working man's door for the working man's money. Further, as a special inducement and to prove
superior advantages to ordinary slate clubs, he would allow the working man to spend his full
nominal subscription to the club as soon as he had actually paid only half of it. Thus, after paying
ten shillings to Denry, the working-man could spend a pound in Denry's chosen shops,
and Denry would settle with the shops at once, while collecting the balance weekly at the
working-man's door. But this privilege of anticipation was to be forfeited or postponed if the
working-man's earlier payments were irregular. And Denry would bestow all these wondrous benefits
on the working-man without any charge whatsoever. Every penny that members paid in, members
would draw out. The affair was enormously philanthropic. Denry's modest remuneration was to come from
the shopkeepers, upon whom his scheme would shower new custom. They were to allow him at least
tuppence in the shilling discount on all transactions, which would be more than sixteen per cent on his
capital, and he would turn over his capital three times a year. He calculated that out of
fifty percent per annum he would be able to cover working expenses and a little over.
Of course he had to persuade the shopkeepers. He drove his mule to Handbridge, and began with Bostock's, the largest, but not the most distinguished drapery house in the five towns. He succeeded in convincing them on every point, except that of his own financial stability.
Bostock's indicated their opinion that he looked far too much like a boy to be financially stable. His reply was to offer to deposit fifty pounds with them before starting business, and to take him to be financially stable, and to offer to deposit fifty pounds with them before starting business, and to be far too much as to a boy to be financially stable. He was to a
stable. His reply was to offer to deposit fifty pounds with them before starting business,
and to renew the sum in advance as quickly as the members of his club should exhaust it.
Checks talk. He departed with Bostock's name at the head of his list, and he used them as a
clinching argument with other shops. But the prejudice against his youth was strong and general.
Yes, tradesman would answer, what you say is all right, but you're so young.
as if to insinuate that a man must be either a rascal or a fool until he is thirty,
just as he must be either a fool or a physician after his forty.
Nevertheless, he had soon compiled a list of several score shops.
His mother said,
"'Why don't you grow a beard?
Here you spend money on razors, stropes, soaps, and brushes,
besides a quarter of an hour of your time every day, and cutting yourself,
all to keep yourself from having something that would be the greatest help
to you in business. With a beard you'd look at least thirty-one. Your father had a splendid beard,
and so could you, if you chose. This was high wisdom, but he would not listen to it. The truth is
he was getting somewhat dandelial. At length his scheme lacked naught but what then recalled
a right-down good starting shove. In a word a fine advertisement to fire it off. Now he could
have had the whole of the first page of the signal.
at that period, for five-and-twenty pounds, but he had been so accustomed to free advertisements
of one sort or another, that the notion of paying for one was loathsome to him.
Then it was that he thought of the Countess of Chell, who happened to be staying at night.
If he could obtain that great aristocrat, that ex-maireess, that lovely witch, that
benefactor of the district, to honour his thrift club as a patroness, success was certain.
Everybody in the five towns sneered at the Countess and called her a busybody.
She was even dubbed interfering Iris, Iris being one of her eleven Christian names.
The Five Towns was fiercely democratic, in theory.
In practice the Countess was worshipped.
Her smile was worth at least five pounds, and her invitation to tea was priceless.
She could not have been more sincerely adulated in the United States,
the home of social equality.
Denry said to himself,
And why shouldn't I get her name as patroness?
I will have her name as patroness.
Hence the expedition to Snade Hall,
one of the ancestral homes of the earls of Chell.
Three.
He had been to Snade Hall before many times,
like the majority of the inhabitants of the five towns,
for by the generosity of its owner,
Snade Park was always open to the public.
to picnic in Snade Park was one of the chief distractions of the five towns on thirsty and Saturday afternoons.
But he had never entered the private gardens.
In the midst of the private gardens stood the hall,
shut off by immense iron palisades, like a lion in a cage at the zoo.
On the autumn afternoon of his historic visit,
Denry passed with qualms through the double gates of the palisade,
and began to crunch the gravel of the broad drive.
that led in a straight line to the overwhelming palladian façadean faade of the hall.
Yes, he was decidedly glad that he had not brought his mule.
As he approached nearer and nearer to the Countess's front door,
his arguments in favour of the visit grew more and more ridiculous,
useless to remind himself that he had once danced with the Countess at the Municipal Ball
and amused her to the giggling point,
and restored her lost fan to her,
useless to remind himself that he was a quite exceptional young man with a quite exceptional renown and the equal of any man or woman on earth useless to remind himself that the countess was notorious for her affability and also for her efforts to encourage the true welfare of the five towns
The visit was grotesque.
He ought to have written.
He ought, at any rate, to have announced his visit by a note.
Yet only an hour earlier he had been arguing that he could most easily capture the Countess by storm,
with no warning or preparations of any kind.
Then, from a lateral path, a closed carriage and pair drove rapidly up to the hall,
and a footman bounced off the hammercloth.
Denry could not see through the carriage, but under it he could distinguish the skirts of someone
who had got out of it. Evidently the Countess was just returning from a drive. He quickened his
pace, for at heart he was an audacious boy. She can't eat me, he said. This assertion was
absolutely irrefutable, and yet there remained in his bold heart an irrational fear that, after all,
she could eat him. Such is the extraordinary influence of a Palladian façade. After what seemed several
hours of torture, entirely novel in his experience, he skirted the back of the carriage and mounted
the steps to the portal. And although the coachman was innocuous, being apparently carved in stone,
Denry would have given a ten-pound note to find himself suddenly in his club, or even in church.
The masonry of the hall rose up above him like a precipice. He was searching for a bell-knob
in the face of the precipice when a lady suddenly appeared at the doors. At first he thought it was
the Countess, and that heart of his began to slip down the inside of his legs, but it was not
the Countess.
"'Well?' demanded the lady.
She was dressed in black.
"'Can I see the Countess?' he inquired.
The Lady stared at him.
He handed her his professional card, which lay waiting already in his waistcoat pocket.
"'I will ask my lady,' said the lady in black.
Denry perceived from her accent that she was not English.
she disappeared through a swinging door and then denry most clearly heard the countess's own authentic voice saying in a pettish disgusted tone oh bother and he was chilled he seriously wished that he had never thought of starting his confounded universal thrift club
after some time the carriage suddenly drove off presumably to the stables as he was now within the hollow of the porch a sort of cave at the foot of the precipice
he could not see along the length of the façade. Nobody came to him. The lady who had promised
to ask my lady whether the latter could see him did not return. He reflected that she had not
promised to return, she had merely promised to ask a question. As the minutes passed, he grew
careless, or grew bolder, gradually dropping his correct attitude of a man about town paying
an afternoon call, and peered through the glass of the doors that divided him from the countess.
He could distinguish nothing that had life.
One of his preliminary tremors had been caused by a fanciful vision of multitudinous footmen,
through a double line of whom he would be compelled to walk in order to reach the Countess.
But there was not even one footman.
This complete absence of indoor footmen seemed to him remiss,
not in accordance with centuries of tradition concerning life at Snade.
Then he caught sight through the doors of the back of Jock,
the Countess's carriage footman and the son of his mother's old friend.
Jock was standing motionless at a half-open door to the right of the space between Denry's double doors and the next pair of double doors.
Denry tried to attract Jock's attention by singular movements and strange noises of the mouth.
But Jock, like his partner the coachman, appeared to be carven in stone.
Denry decided that he would go in and have speech with Jock.
They were on Christian name terms, or had been a few.
years ago, he unobtrusively pushed at the doors, and at the very same moment, Jock, with
a start, as they released from some spell, vanished away from the door to the right. Denry was
now within.
"'Joc!' he gave a whispering cry, rather conspiratorial in tone, and as Jock offered
no response, he hurried after Jock through the door to the right. This door led to a large
apartment, which struck Denry as being an idealisation of a first-class waiting-room at a
highly important terminal station. In a wall to the left was a small door, half open. Jock must
have gone through that door. Denry hesitated. He had not properly been invited into the hall.
But in hesitating he was wrong. He ought to have followed his prey without qualms. When he had
conquered qualms and reached the further door, his eyes were met to their remembrance.
by an immense perspective of great chambers. Denry had once seen a Pullman car, which had halted at Knipe's station, with the French actress on board. What he saw now presented itself to him as a train of Pullman cars, one opening into the other, constructed for giants. Each car was about as large as the large hall in Burstley Town Hall, and like that auditorium had a ceiling painted to represent blue sky, milk-white clouds, and birds. But in the course,
were groups of naked cupids, swimming joyously on the ceiling. In Bursley Town Hall there were no
naked cupids. He understood now that he had been quite wrong in his estimate of the room by which he had
come into this fair sigh. Instead of being large, it was tiny, and instead of being luxurious,
it was merely furnished with miscellaneous odds and ends left over from more important furnishings.
It was indeed nought but a nondescript box of a hole, insignificantly wedged between the
State Apartments and the Outer Lobby.
For an instant he forgot that he was in pursuit of Jock.
Jock was perfectly invisible and inaudible.
He must, however, have gone down the vista of the great chambers,
and therefore Densri went down the vista of the great chambers after him,
curiously expecting to have a glimpse of his long salmon-tinted coat
or his cacaded hat popping up out of some corner.
He reached the other end of the vista, having traversed three enormous chambers,
of which the middle one was the most enormous and the most gorgeous there were high windows everywhere to his right and to his left in every chamber double doors with gilt handles of a peculiar shape windows and doors with equal splendour were draped in hangings of brocade
through the windows he had a glimpse of the gardens in their autumnal colours but no glimpse of a gardener then a carriage flew past the windows at the end of the suite and he had a very clear though a trance of his own,
transient view of two menials on the box-seat. One of those menials he knew must be Jock. Hence Jock must have escaped from the State Suite by one of the numerous doors. Denry tried one door after another, and they were all fastened firmly on the outside. The gilded handles would turn, but the lofty and ornate portals would not yield to pressure. Mistified and startled he went back to the place from which he had begun his explorations, and was even more seriously.
startled, and more deeply mystified, to find nothing but a blank wall where he had entered.
Obviously he could not have penetrated through a solid wall. A careful perusal of the wall
showed him that there was indeed a door in it, but that the door was artfully disguised by
painting and other devices, so as to look like part of the wall. He had never seen such a
phenomenon before. A very small glass knob was the door's sole fitting. Then returned this
crystal, but with no useful result. In the brief space of time since his entrance, that door,
and the door by which Jock had gone, had been secured by unseen hands. Denry imagined sinister
persons bolting all the multitudinous doors, and inimical eyes staring at him through many
keyholes. He imagined himself to be the victim of some fearful and incomprehensible conspiracy.
Why, in the sacred name of common sense, should he have been imprisoned in the state suite?
The only answer to the conundrum was that nobody was aware of his quite unauthorised presence in the State Suite.
But then why should the State's suite be so suddenly locked up, since the Countess had just come in from a drive?
It then occurred to him, but instead of just coming in, the Countess had been just leaving.
The carriage must have driven round from some humbler part of the hall, with the Lady in Black in it,
and the Lady in Black, perhaps a lady's maid, alone had stepped out from it.
The Countess had been waiting for the carriage in the porch, and had fled to avoid being forced to meet the unfortunate denry.
Humiliating thought.
The carriage had then taken her up at a side door, and now she was gone.
Possibly she had left Snaid Hall not to return for months, and that was why the doors had been locked.
Perhaps everybody had departed from the hall, save one aged and deaf retainer.
He knew from historical novels which he had glanced at in his youth,
that in every hall that respected itself, an aged and deaf retainer was invariably left solitary during the absences of the noble owner.
He knocked on the small disguised door.
His unique purpose in knocking was naturally to make a noise, but something prevented him from making a noise.
He felt that he must not decently, discreetly, he felt that he must not outrage the conventions.
No result to this polite summoning.
He attacked other doors.
He attacked every door he could.
could put his hands on, and gradually he lost his respect for decency in the convention's proper
to halls, knocking loudly and more loudly. He banged. Nothing but sheer solidity stopped his sturdy
hands from going through the panels. He so far forgot himself as to shake the doors with all his
strength furiously. And finally he shouted, "'Hi there! Hi! Why! Can't you hear?' Apparently the aged and
deaf retainer could not hear. Apparently he was the dead.
deafest retainer that a peeress of the realm ever left in charge of a princely pile.
"'Well, that's a nice thing,' Denry exclaimed, and he noticed that he was hot and angry.
He took a certain pleasure in being angry. He considered that he had a right to be angry.
At this point he began to work himself up into the state of not caring, into the state of
despising Snade Hall and everything for which it stood. As for permitting himself to be
impressed or intimidated by the lonely magnificence of his environment, he laughed at the idea,
or more accurately, he snorted at it. Scornfully he tramped up and down those immense interiors,
doing the cage lion, and cogitating in quest of the right dramatic, effective act to perform in
the singular crisis. Unhappily, the carpets were very thick, so that though he could tramp,
he could not stamp, and he desired to stamp. But in the connecting doorways,
There were expanses of bare, highly polished oak floor, and here he did stamp.
The rooms were not furnished after the manner of ordinary rooms.
There was no round or square table in the midst of each, with a checked cloth on it, and a plant in the centre,
nor in front of each window was there a small table with a large Bible thereon.
The middle parts of the rooms were empty, save for a group of statuary in the largest room.
Great armchairs and double-ended sofas were ranged of,
about in straight lines, and among these here and there were smaller chairs, gilded from head to
foot. Round the walls were placed long, narrow tables, with tops, like glass cases, and in the
cases were all sorts of strange matters, such as coins, fans, daggers, snuff-boxes.
In various corners white statues stood awaiting the day of doom, without a rag to protect them
from the winds of destiny. The walls were panelled in tremendous panels, and in each paneled.
was a formidable dark oil painting. The mantelpieces were so preposterously high that not even a giant could have sat at the fireplace and put his feet on them, and if they had held clocks, as mantelpieces do, a telescope would have been necessary to discern the hour. Above each mantelpiece, instead of a looking-glass, was a vast picture. The chandeliers were overpowering in glitter and in dimensions. Near to a sofa, Denry saw a pile of yellow,
yellow linen things. He picked up the topmost article, and it assumed the form of a chair.
Yes, those articles were furniture covers. The hall, then, was to be shut up. He argued from the
furniture covers that somebody must enter sooner or later to put the covers on the furniture.
Then he did a few more furlongs up and down the vista, and sat down at the far end, under a window.
Anyhow, there were always the windows. High though they were from the window. High though they were from
floor, he could easily open one, spring out, and slip unostentatiously away. But he thought
he would wait until dusk fell. Prudence is seldom misplaced. The windows, however, held a disappointment
for him. A mere bar, padlocked, prevented each one of them from being opened. It was a simple
device. He would be under the necessity of breaking a plate-glass pane. For this enterprise he thought
he would wait until black night. He sat down again.
he made a fresh and noisy assault on all the doors, no result. He sat down a third time,
and gazed into the gardens where the shadows were creeping darkly, not a soul in the gardens.
Then he felt a draught on the crown of his head, and looking aloft he saw that the summit
of the window had a transverse glazed flat for ventilation, and that this flap had been left open.
If he could have climbed up, he might have fallen out on the other side into the gullible,
gardens and liberty. But the summit of the window was at least sixteen feet from the floor.
Night descended. Four. At a vague hour in the evening, a start woman, dressed in black, with a black
apron, a neat violet cap on her head, and a small lamp in her podgy hand, unlocked one of the
doors giving entry to the state rooms. She was on her nightly round of inspection. The autumn moon,
nearly at full had risen and was shining into the great windows, and in front of the furthest window,
she perceived in the radiance of the moonshine a pyramidal group somewhat in the style of a family of acrobats,
dangerously arranged on the stage of a music hall. The base of the pyramid comprised two settees.
Upon these were several armchairs laid flat, and on the armchairs two tables covered with cushions and rugs.
Lastly, in the way of inanimate nature, two gilt chairs.
On the gilt chairs was something that unmistakably moved,
and was fumbling with the top of the window.
Being a stout woman, with a tranquil and sagacious mind,
her first act was not to drop the lamp.
She courageously clung to the lamp.
"'Who's there?' said a voice from the apex of the pyramid.
Then a subsidence began, followed by a crash and a multitude and a splintering of glass.
The living form dropped onto one of the settees,
rebounding like a football from its powerful springs.
There was a hole as big as a coffin in the window.
The living form collected itself,
and then jumped wildly through that hole into the gardens.
Denry ran.
The moment had not struck him as a moment propitious for explanation.
In a flash he had seen the ridiculousness
of endeavouring to convince a stout lady in black
that he was a gentleman paying a call on the countess.
He simply scrambled to his legs and ran.
He ran aimlessly in the darkness,
and sprawled over a hedge after crossing various flower-beds.
Then he saw the sheen of the moon on Snade Lake,
and he could take his bearings.
In winter all the five towns skate on Snade Lake, if the ice will bear,
and the geography of it was quite familiar to Denry.
He skirted its east bank,
plunged into Great Shendon Wood,
and emerged near Great Shendon Station,
on the line from Stafford to Knipe.
He inquired for the next train in the tones of innocency,
and in half an hour was passing through Snade Station itself.
In another fifty minutes he was at home.
The clock showed ten-fifteen.
His mother's cottage seemed amazingly small.
He said that he had been detained in Hanbridge on business,
that he had had neither tea or supper, and that he was hungry.
Next morning he could scarcely be sure that his visit to Snade Hall was not a dream.
In any event, it had been a complete failure.
Five. It was on this untriumphant morning that one of the tenants under his control,
calling at the cottage to pay some rent overdue, asked him when the Universal Thrift Club was going to commence its operations.
He had talked to the enterprise to all his tenants, for it was precisely with his tenants that he hoped to make a beginning.
He had there a clientele ready to hand, and as he was intimately acquainted with the circumstances,
of each, he could judge between those who would be reliable, and those to whom he would be obliged
to refuse membership. The tenants, conclaving together of an evening on doorsteps, had come to the
conclusion that the Universal Thrift Club was the very contrivance which they had lacked for years.
They saw in it a cure for all their economic ills, and the gate to paradise. The dame, who put
the question to him on the morning after his defeat, wanted to be the possessor of carpets, a new teapot,
a silver brooch and a cookery book, and she was evidently depending upon denry.
On consideration he saw no reason why the Universal Thrift Club should not be allowed to start
itself by the impetus of its own intrinsic excellence. The dame was inscribed for three shares,
paid eighteen-pence-fee, undertook to pay three shillings a week, and received a document,
entitling her to spend £3.18 shillings in sixty-five shops as soon as she had paid £1.19.
to Denry. It was a marvellous scheme. The rumour of it spread. Before dinner, Denry had visits from
other aspirants to membership, and he had posted a check to Bostock's, but more from ostentation
than necessity, for no member could possibly go into Bostock's with his coupons until at least two months
had elapsed. But immediately after dinner, when the posters of the early edition of the signal
waved in the streets, he had material for other thought. He saw a poster as a poster as a
as he was walking across to his office.
The awful legend ran
An astounding attempted burglary at Snade Hall.
In buying the paper he was afflicted with a kind of ague,
and the description of events at Snade Hall
was enough to give Ague to a negro.
The account had been taken from the lips of Mrs. Gator,
housekeeper at Snade Hall.
She had related to a reporter how,
upon going into the state suite,
before retiring for the night,
she had surprised a burglar of Herculian physique and titanic proportions.
Fortunately she knew her duty and did not blench.
The burglar had threatened her with a revolver,
and then, finding such bluff futile,
had deliberately jumped through a large plate-glass window and vanished.
Mrs. Gator could not conceive how the fellow had effected an entrance.
According to the reporter Mrs. Gator said,
"'Effected an entrance, not got in.
and here it may be mentioned that in the columns of the signal,
burglars never get into a residence, without exception, they invariably affect an entrance.
Mrs. Gator explained further how the plans of the burglar must have been laid with the most diabolic skill,
how he must have studied the daily life of the hall patiently for weeks, if not months,
how he must have known the habits and plans of every soul in the place,
and the exact instant at which the Countess had arranged a drive to Stafford to King's,
catch the London Express. It appeared that, say for four maid-servants a page, two dogs, three
gardeners, and the kitchen-clerc, Mrs. Gator was alone in the hall. During the late afternoon and
early evening they had all been to assist at a rat catching in the stables, and the burglar must
have been aware of this. It passed Mrs. Gator's comprehension how the criminal had got
clear a way out of the gardens and park, for to set up a hue and cry had been with her
the work of a moment. She could not be sure whether he had taken any valuable property, but the inventory
was being checked, though surely for her an inventory was scarcely necessary, as she had been
housekeeper at Snaid Hall for six and twenty years, and might be said to know the entire contents
of the mansion by heart. The police were at work. They had studied footprints and debris. There
was talk of obtaining detectives from London. Up to the time of going to press, no clue had been
discovered, but Mrs. Gator was confident that a clue would be discovered, and of her ability to
recognise the burglar when he should be caught. His features, as seen in the moonlight, were imprinted
on her mind for ever. He was a young man, well-dressed. The Earl had telegraphed, offering a reward
of twenty pounds for the fellow's capture. A warrant was out. So it ran on. Denry saw clearly
all the errors of tact which he had committed on the previous day.
He ought not to have entered uninvited.
But having entered, he ought to have held firm in quiet dignity until the housekeeper came,
and then he ought to have gone into full details with the housekeeper,
producing his credentials, and showing her unmistakably that he was offended by the experience
which somebody's gross carelessness had forced upon him.
Instead of all that, he had behaved with simple stupidity,
and the result was that a price was upon his head.
Far from acquiring moral impressiveness and influential aid by his journey to Snade Hall,
he had utterly ruined himself as a founder of a universal thrift club.
You cannot conduct a thrift club from prison,
and a sentence of ten years does not inspire confidence in the ignorant mob.
He trembled at the thought of what would happen when the police learnt from the Countess
that a man with a card on which was the name of Machen had called at Snade just before her departure.
However, the police never did learn this from the Countess, who had gone to Rome for the autumn.
It appeared that her maid had merely said to the Countess that a man had called,
and also that the maid had lost the card.
Careful research showed that the burglar had been disturbed before he had opportunity to burgle,
and the affair, after raising a terrific bother in the district, died down.
Then it was that an article appeared in the signal, signed by Denry,
and giving a full, picturesque description of the state apartments at Snade Hall.
He had formed a habit of occasional contributions to the signal.
This article began,
The recent sensational burglary at Snade Hall
has drawn attention to the magnificent state apartments of that unique mansion.
As very few but the personal friends of the family
are allowed a glimpse of these historic rooms,
they being of course quite close to the public,
we have thought that some account of them might interest the reeds of the signal.
On the occasion of our last visit, etc., he left out nothing of their splendour.
The article was quoted as far as Birmingham in the Midlands press.
People recalled Denry's famous waltz with the Countess at the memorable dance in Burlesley-town Hall,
and they were bound to assume that the relations thus begun had been more or less maintained.
They were struck by Denry's amazing,
discreet self-denial in never boasting on them. Denry rose in the market of popular esteem.
Talking of Denry, people talked to the Universal Thrift Club, which went quietly ahead,
and they admitted that Denry was of the stuff which succeeds, and deserves to succeed.
But only Denry himself could appreciate fully how great Denry was, to have snatched such a
wondrous victory out of such a humiliating defeat.
His chin slowly disappeared from view under a quite presentable beard.
But whether the beard was encouraged out of respect for his mother's sage advice,
or with the object of putting the housekeeper of Snade Hall off the scent,
if she should chance to meet Denry, who shall say?
End of Chapter 6.
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The Card, A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns, by Arnold Bennett.
Chapter 7 The Rescuer of Dames
1. It next happened that Denry began to suffer from the ravages of a malady
which is almost worse than failure, namely a surfeit of success.
The success was that of his universal thrift club.
This device, by which members, after subscribing one pound in weekly installments,
could at once get two pounds worth of goods at nearly any large shop in the district,
appealed with enormous force to the democracy of the five towns.
There was no need whatever for Denry to spend money on advertising.
The first members of the club did all the advertising,
and made no charge for doing it.
A stream of people, anxious to deposit money with Denry, in exchange for a card,
never ceased to flow into his little office in St. Luke's Square.
The stream, indeed, constantly thickened.
It was a wonderful invention, the Universal Thrift Club,
and Denry ought to have been happy,
especially as his beard was growing strongly and evenly,
and giving him the desired air of a man of wisdom and stability.
But he was not happy.
and the reason was that the popularity of the thrift club
necessitated much bookkeeping, which he hated.
He was an adventurer, in the old honest sense and no clerk,
and he found himself obliged, not merely to buy large books of account,
but to fill them with figures, and to do addition sums from page to page,
and to fill up hundreds of cards, and to write out lists of shops,
and to have long interviews with printers, whose proofs made him dream of lunatic asylums,
and to reckon innumerable piles of small coins,
and to assist his small office-boy in the great task of licking envelopes and stamps.
Moreover, he was worried by shopkeepers.
Every shopkeeper in the district now wanted to allow him tuppence in the shilling
on the purchases of club members,
and he had to collect all the subscriptions, in addition to his rents,
and also to make personal preliminary inquiries as to the reputation of intending members.
If he could have risen every day at 4 a.m.,
and stayed up working every night till 4 a.m.,
he might have got through most of the labour.
He did, as a fact, come very near to this ideal,
so near, that one morning his mother said to him at her driest,
"'I suppose I might as well sell your bedstead, Denry.'
And there was no hope of improvement.
Instead of decreasing, the work multiplied.
What saved him was the fortunate death of lawyer Lawton.
The aged solicitor's death put the town into mourning,
and hung the church with black.
But Denry, as a citizen, bravely bore the blow,
because he was able to secure the surfaces of Pencithman,
lawyer Lawton's eldest clerk,
who, after keeping the Lawton books and writing the Lawton letters for 35 years,
was dismissed by young Lawton for being over fifty and behind the times.
The desicated bachelor was grateful to Denry.
He called Denry Sir.
Or rather he called Denry's suit of clothes, sir,
for he had a vast respect for a well-cut suit.
On the other hand, he maltreated the little office-boy,
for he had always been accustomed to maltreating little office-boys,
not seriously, but just enough to give them an interest in life.
Pencithman enjoyed desks, ledgers, pens, ink, rulers, and blotting-paper.
He could run from bottom to top of a column of figures
more quickly than the fire-engine could run up Oldcastle Street,
and his totals were never wrong.
His gesture with a piece of blotting-pings,
as he blotted off a total was magnificent.
He liked long hours, he was thoroughly used to overtime,
and his boredom in his lodgings was such that he would often arrive at the office before the appointed hour.
He asked thirty shillings a week, and Denry, in a mood of generosity, gave him thirty-one.
He gave Denry his whole life, and put a meticulous order into the establishment.
Denry secretly thought him a miracle, but up at the club at Port Hill,
He was content to call him the human machine.
I wind him up every Saturday night with a sovereign, half a sovereign and a shilling,
said Denry, and he goes for a week.
Compensated balance, adjusted for all temperatures, no escapement,
jewelled in every hole, ticks in any position, made in England.
This jocularity of Denry's was a symptom that Denry's spirits were rising.
The bearded youth was seen oftener in the streets behind his mule and his dog.
the adventurer had indeed taken to the road again.
After an emaciating period, he began once more to Stoughton.
He was the image of success.
He was the picturesque card, whom everybody knew, and everybody had pleasure in greeting.
In some sort he was rather like the flag on the town hall.
And then a graver misfortune threatened.
It arose out of the fact that though Denry was a financial genius,
he was in no sense qualified to be a fellow of the Institute.
of chartered accountants.
The notion that an excess of prosperity may bring ruin had never presented itself to him,
until one day he discovered that out of over £2,000, there remained less than $600 to his credit at the bank.
This was at the stage of the Thrift Club, when the founder of the Thrift Club was bound under the rules to give credit.
When the original Lady Member had paid in her £2 or so, she was entitled to spend £4 or so at show.
She did spend four pounds or so at shops, and Denry had to pay the shops.
He was thus temporarily nearly two pounds out of pocket, and he had to collect that sum by trifling
installments. Multiply this case by five hundred, and you will understand the drain on
Denry's capital. Multiply it by a thousand, and you will understand the very serious peril which
overhung Denry. Multiply by fifteen hundred, and you will understand that Denry,
had been culpably silly to inaugurate a mighty scheme like the Universal Thrift Club on a
paltry capital of two thousand pounds. He had. In his simplicity he had regarded two thousand
pounds as boundless wealth. Although new subscriptions poured in, the drain grew more distressing,
yet he could not persuade himself to refuse new members. He stiffened his rules,
and compelled members to pay at his office instead of on their own doorsteps.
He instituted fines for irregularity,
but nothing could stop the progress of the Universal Thrift Club,
and disaster approached.
Denry felt as though he was being pushed nearer and nearer
to the edge of a precipice by a tremendous multitude of people.
At length, very much against his inclination,
he put up a card in his window,
but no new members could be accepted until further notice,
pending the acquisition of larger offices and other arrangements.
For the shrewd it was a confession of failure, and he knew it.
Then the rumour began to form, and to thicken and to spread,
that Denry's famous Universal Thrift Club was unsound at the core,
and that the teeth of those who had bitten the apple would be set on edge.
And Denry saw that something great, something decisive, must be done,
and done with rapidity.
Two.
His thoughts turned to the Countess of Chell,
The original attempt to engage her moral support in aid of the Thrift Club
had ended in a dangerous fiasco.
Denry had been beaten by circumstances,
and though he had emerged from the defeat with credit,
he had no taste for defeat.
He disliked defeat, even when it was served with jam,
and his indomitable thoughts turned to the Countess again.
He put it to himself in this way, scratching his head.
"'I've got to get hold of that woman, and that's all about it.'
The Countess at this period was busying herself with the policemen of the five towns.
In her exhaustless passion for philanthropy, bazaars and platforms,
she had already dealt with orphans, the aged, the blind, potters asthma, craches, churches, chapels, schools,
economic cookery, the smoke nuisance, country holidays, Christmas, puddings, and blankets,
healthy musical entertainments, and barmaids.
The excellent and beautiful creature was suffering from a dearth of subjects.
When the policeman occurred to her, she made the benevolent discovery that policemen were overworked,
underpaid, courteous and trustworthy public servants, and that our lives depended on them,
and from this discovery it naturally followed that policemen deserved her energetic assistance,
which assistance resulted in the erection of a policeman's institute at Hanbridge, the chief of the five towns.
At the institute, policemen would be able to play at drafts, read the papers, and drink everything non-alphemy.
alcoholic at prices that defied competition, and the Institute also conferred other benefits on those whom all the five mayors of the five towns fell into the way of describing as the stalwart guardians of the law. The Institute, having been built, had to be opened with due splendour and ceremony, and naturally the Countess of Chell was the person to open it, since without her it would never have existed.
The solemn day was a day in March, and the hour was fixed for three o'clock,
and the place was the large hall of the Institute itself, behind Crown Square, which is the Trafalgar Square of Hanbridge.
The Countess was to drive over from Snade. Had the epoch been ten years later, she would have motored over,
but probably that would not have made any difference to what happened.
In relating what did happen, I confined myself to facts, estuing imputational.
It is a truism that life is full of coincidences.
But whether these events comprised a coincidence or not,
each reader must decide for himself,
according to his cynicism, or his faith in human nature.
The facts are, first,
that Denry called one day at the house of Mrs. Kemp,
a little lower-down Broom Street.
Mrs. Kemp, being friendly with Mrs. Machen,
and the mother of Jock,
the Countess's carriage footman,
whom Denry had known from boyhood.
Second, that a few days later, when Jock came over to see his mother, Denry was present,
and that subsequently Denry and Jock went for a stroll together in the cemetery,
the principal resort of strollers in Bursley.
Third, that on the afternoon of the opening ceremony,
the Countess's carriage broke down in Snade Vale,
two miles from Snade and three miles from Hambridge.
Fourth, that five minutes later, Denry, in all his best clothes, drove up
behind his mule.
Fifth, that Denry drove right past the breakdown, apparently not noticing it.
Sixth, that Jock, touching his hat to Denry as if to a stranger, for, of course, while on
duty a footman must be dead to all humanities, said, excuse me, sir, and so caused Denry to
stop.
These are the simple facts.
Denry looked round, with that careless half-turn of the upper part of the body, which
drivers of elegant equipages effect when their attention is called to something trifling behind them.
The mule also looked round. It was a habit of the mules, and if the dog had been there,
the dog would have shown an even livelier inquisitiveness. But Denry had left the faithful
animal at home. Good afternoon, Countess, he said, raising his hat, and trying to express surprise,
pleasure, and imperturbability all at once. The Countess of Chelle, who was standing in the road,
raised her lognon, which was attached to the end of a tortoiseshell pole about a foot long,
and regarded Denry. This lognonion was a new device of hers,
and it was already having the happy effect of increasing the sale of long-handled lognons throughout the five towns.
"'Oh, it's you, is it?' said the Countess.
"'I see you've grown a beard.'
It was just this easy familiarity that endeared her to the district.
As observant people put it,
"'You never knew what she would say next,
"'and yet she never compromised her dignity.'
"'Yes,' said Denry,
"'have you had an accident?'
"'No,' said the Countess, bitterly,
"'I'm doing this for idle amusement.'
"'The horses had been taken out,
"'and were grazing by the roadside like common horses.
"'The coachman was dipping his skirts in the mud
"'as he bent down in front of the carriage
"'and twisted the pole to and fro
"'and round about and round about.
"'The footman, jock,
was industriously watching him.
"'It's the pole-pin, sir,' said Jock.
Denry descended from his own hammercloth.
The Countess was not smiling.
It was the first time that Denry had seen her without an efficient smile on her face.
"'Have you got to be anywhere particular?' he asked.
Many ladies would not have understood what he meant,
but the Countess was used to the Five Towns.
"'Yes,' said she,
"'I've got to be somewhere particular.
I've got to be at the Police Institute at three o'clock particular, Mr. Meachin, and I shan't
me. I'm late now. We've been here ten minutes.' The Countess was rather too often late for
public ceremonies. Nobody informed her of the fact. Everybody, on the contrary, assiduously
pretended that she had arrived at the very second, but she was well aware that she had a
reputation of un-punctuality. Ordinarily, being too hurried to invent a really clever excuse,
she would assert likely that something had happened to her carriage.
And now something in truth had happened to her carriage,
but who would believe it in the Police Institute?
If you'll come with me, I'll guarantee to get you there by three o'clock, said Denry.
The road thereabouts was lonely.
A canal ran parallel with it at a distance of fifty yards,
and on the canal the boat was moving in the direction of Hanbridge
at the rate of a mile an hour.
such was the only other vehicle in sight.
The outskirts of Knipe, the nearest town, did not begin until at least a mile further on,
and the Countess, dressed for the undoing of mares and other unimpressionable functionaries,
could not possibly have walked even half a mile in that rich dark mud.
She thanked him, and without a word to her servants, took the seat beside him.
Three.
Immediately the mule began to trot.
the Countess began to smile again. Relief and content were painted upon her handsome features.
Denry soon learned that she knew all about mules, or almost all. She told him how she had
ridden hundreds of miles on mules in the Apennines, where there were no roads, and only mules,
goats and flies could keep their feet on the steep, stony paths. She said that a good mule was
worth forty pounds in the Apennines, more than a horse of similar quality. In fact she was very
sympathetic about mules. Denry saw that he must drive with as much style as possible, and he
tried to remember all that he had picked up from a book concerning the proper manner of holding
the reins. For in everything that appertained to riding and driving, the Countess was an expert.
In the season she hunted once or twice a week with the North Staffordshire Hounds, and the signal
had stated that she was a fearless horsewoman. It made this statement one day when she had been
thrown, and carried to Snade senseless.
The mule, too, seemingly conscious of its responsibilities and its high destiny,
put its best foot foremost, and behaved in general like a mule that knew the name of its
great-grandfather.
It went through Nipe in admirable style, not swerving at the steam-cars, nor exciting
itself about the railway bridge.
A photographer, who stood at his door, manoeuvring a large camera, startled it momentarily,
until it remembered that it had seen a camera before.
The Countess, who wondered why an earth a photographer
should be capering round a tripod in a doorway,
turned to inspect the man with her lorgnon.
They were now coursing up the Caldon Bank towards Hanbridge.
They were already within the boundaries of Hanbridge,
and a pedestrian here and there recognised the Countess.
You can hide nothing from the Quidnunk of Hanbridge.
Moreover, when a quidnunk in the streets of Hanbridge sees somebody face,
or striking or notorious. He does not pretend that he has seen nobody. He points unmistakably
to what he has observed, if he has a companion, and if he has no companion, he stands still and
stares with such honest intensity that the entire street stands and stares too. Occasionally you
may see an entire street standing and staring without any idea of what it is staring at.
As the equipage dashingly approached the busy centre of Hambridge, the region of fine shops,
houses, hotels, halls, and theatres, more and more of the inhabitants knew that Iris,
as they affectionately called her, was driving with a young man in a tumble-down little Victoria
behind a mule whose ears flapped like an elephant's. Denry being far less renowned in
Hanbridge than in his native Bursley, few persons recognised him. After the Victoria had gone by,
people who had heard the news too late rushed from shops and gazed at the countess's back,
as at a fading dream, until the insistent clang of a car bell
made them jump again to the footpath.
At length, Denry and the Countess could see the clock
of the old town hall in Crown Square, and it was a minute to three.
They were less than a minute off the institute.
"'There you are,' said Denry proudly.
"'Three miles if it's a yard, in seventeen minutes.
"'For a mule, it's non-sadusty.'
"'And such was the Countess's knowledge of the language of the five-town,
that she instantly divined the meaning of even that phrase, non-so dusty.
They swept into Crown Square grandly.
Then, with no warning, the mules suddenly applied all the automatic brakes which a mule has, and stopped.
"'Oh, lor!' sighed Denry.
He knew the cause of that arresting.
A large squad of policemen, a perfect regiment of policeman,
was moving across the north side of the square in the direction of the institute.
nothing could have seemed more reassuring, less harmful than that band of policemen, off duty for the afternoon,
and collected together for the purpose of giving a hearty and policemanly welcome to their benefactress the Countess.
But the mule had his own views about policemen.
In the early days of Denry's ownership of him, he had nearly always shied at the spectacle of a policeman.
He would tolerate steamrollers, and even fall in kites, but a policeman had ever been antipathetic
to him. Denry, by patience and punishment, had gradually brought him round almost to the
Countess's view of policemen, namely that they were a courteous and trustworthy body of public
servants, not to be treated as scarecrow's or the dregs of society. At any rate, the mule
had of late months practically ceased to set his face against the policing of the five towns,
and when he was on his best behaviour, he would ignore a policeman completely.
But there were several hundreds of policemen in that squad, the majority of all the policemen in the five towns,
and clearly the Mule considered that Denry, in confronting him with several hundred policemen simultaneously,
had been presuming upon his good nature.
The Mule's ears were saying, agitatedly,
A line must be drawn somewhere, and I have drawn it where my forefeet now are.
The mule's ears soon drew together a little crowd.
It occurred to Denry that if mules were so wonderful in the Apennines,
the reason must be that there are no policemen in the Apennines.
It also occurred to him that something must be done to this mule.
Well, said the Countess, inquiringly,
it was a challenge to him to prove that he and not the mule was in charge of the expedition.
He briefly explained the mule's idiosyncrasy,
as it were apologising for its bad taste and objecting to public servants
whom the Countess cherished.
"'They'll be out of sight in a moment,' said the Countess,
and both she and Denry tried to look as if the Victoria had stopped in that special spot
for a special reason, and that the mule was a pattern of obedience.
Nevertheless, the little crowd was growing a little larger.
"'Now,' said the Countess encouragingly,
the tale of the regiment of policemen had vanished towards the institute,
"'Denry persuaded the mule.
"'No response from those four feet.'
"'Perhaps I'd better get out and walk,' the Countess suggested.
"'The crowd was becoming inconvenient,
"'and had even begun to offer unsolicited hints
"'as to the proper management of mules.
"'The crowd was also saying to itself,
"'It's her, it's her, it's her!'
"'Meaning that it was the countess.
"'Oh, no,' said Denry, it's all right,
"'and he caught the mule one, over the head with his whip.
The mules stung into action, dashed away,
and the crowd scattered as if blown to pieces by the explosion of a bomb.
Instead of pursuing a right line,
the mule turned within a radius of its own length,
swinging the Victoria round after it,
as though the Victoria had been a kettle attached to it with string.
And Countess Denry and Victoria were wrapped with miraculous swiftness away,
not at all towards the policeman's institute,
but down Longshore Road, which is tolerably steep.
They were pursued, but ineffectually, for the mule had bolted and was winged.
They fortunately came into contact with nothing except a large barrow of carrots, turnips, and cabbages,
which an old woman was wheeling up Longshore Road.
The concussion upset the barrow, half-filled the Victoria with vegetables,
and for a second stayed the mule, but no real harm seemed to have been done,
and the mule proceeded with vigour.
Then the countess noticed that Denry was not using his right answer,
arm, which swung about rather uselessly.
"'I must have knocked my elbow against the barrow,' he muttered.
His face was pale.
"'Give me the reins,' said the Countess.
"'I think I can turn the brute up here,' he said.
And he did, in fact, neatly divert the mule at Birch's Street, which is steeper even
than Longshore Road.
The mule, for a few instance, pretended that all gradients up or down were equal before
its angry might.
But Birch's Street has the slope of a house.
roof. Presently the mule walked, and then it stood still, and half Birch's Street emerged a gaze,
for the Countess's attire was really very splendid. "'I'll leave this here and we'll walk back,'
said Denry. "'You won't be late. That is nothing to speak of. The Institute is just round the top here.'
"'You don't mean to say that you're going to let that mule beat you,' exclaimed the Countess.
"'I was only thinking of your being late.
"'No bother,' said she.
"'Your mule may be ruined.'
The horse-trainer in her was aroused.
"'And then my arm,' said Denry.
"'Shall I drive back?'
The Countess suggested.
"'Oh, do,' said Denry.
"'Keep on up the street, and then to the left.'
They changed places, and two minutes later she had brought the mule
to an obedient rest in front of the Police Institute,
which was all newly read with terracotta.
The main body of policemen had passed into the building, but two remained at the door, and the mule haughtily tolerated them.
The Countess dispatched one to Longshore Road, to settle with the old woman whose vegetables they had brought away with them.
The other policeman, who, owing to the Countess's philanthropic energy, had received a course of instruction in first aid, arranged a sling for Denry's arm.
And then the Countess said that Denry ought certainly to go with her to the inaugurial.
ceremony. The policeman whistled a boy to hold the mule. Denry picked a carrot out of the
complex folds of the Countess's rich costume, and the Countess and her saviour entered the portico,
and were therein met by an imposing group of important male personages, several of whom wore
merrill chains. Strange tales of what had happened to the Countess had already flown up to the
Institute, and the chief expression on the faces of the group seemed to be one of astonishment
that she still lived.
Four.
Denry observed that the Countess was now a different woman.
She had suddenly put on a manner to match her costume, which in certain parts was stiff
with embroidery.
From the informal companion and the tamer of mules, she had miraculously developed into the
public celebrity, the peeress of the realm, and the inaugurator-general.
general of philanthropic schemes and buildings. Not one of the important male personages but would
have looked down on Denry, and yet, while treating Denry as a jolly equal, the Countess,
with all her embroidered and stiff politeness, somehow looked down on the important male personages,
and they knew it, and the most curious thing was that they seemed rather to enjoy it.
The one who seemed to enjoy it the least was Sir Jehoshaphate Dane, a white-bearded pillar of
terrific imposingness. Sir G., as he was then beginning to be called, had recently been knighted
by way of reward for his enormous benefactions to the community. In the role of philanthropist,
he was really much more effective than the Countess, but he was not young, he was not pretty,
he was not a woman, and his family had not helped to rule England for generations,
at any rate as far as anybody knew. He had made more money than had ever before been made by a single
brain in the manufacture of earthenware, and he had given more money to public causes than
a single pocket had ever before given in the five towns. He had never sought municipal honours,
considering himself to be somewhat above such trifles. He was the first purely local man
to be knighted in the five towns. Even before the bestowl of the knighthood his sense of
humour had been deficient, and immediately afterwards it had vanished entirely. Indeed, he
did not miss it. He divided the population of the kingdom into two classes, the titled and the
untitled. With Sir G, either you were titled, or you weren't. He lumped all the untitled together,
and to be just to his logical faculty, he lumped all the titled together. There were various
titles, Sir G admitted that, but a title was a title, and therefore all titles were practically
equal. The Duke of Norfolk was one titled individual, and Sir G was another. The fine difference
between them might be perceptible to the titled, and might properly be recognised by the
title when the titled were among themselves, but for the untitled, such a difference ought not
to exist, and could not exist. Thus, for Sir G, there were two titled beings in the group,
the Countess and himself. The Countess and himself formed one.
cast in the group, and the rest another cast. And although the Countess, in her punctilious
demeanour towards him, gave due emphasis to his title, he returning more than due emphasis
to hers, he was not precisely pleased by the undertones of suave condescension that
characterised her greeting of him, as well as her greeting of the others. Moreover, he had known
Denry as a clerk of Mr. Duncalf's, for Mr. Duncalfe had done a lot of legal work for him in the
past. He looked upon Denry as an upstart, a capering mountebank, and he strongly resented
Denry's familiarity with the Countess. He further resented Denry's sling, which gave to Denry
an interesting romantic aspect, despite his beard, and he more than all resented that
Denry should have rescued the Countess from a carriage accident by means of his preposterous
mule. Whenever the Countess in the preliminary chatter referred to Denry, or looked at Denry in
recounting the history of her adventures, Sir G.'s soul squirmed, and his body sympathised with his
soul. Something in him that was more powerful than himself compelled him to do his utmost,
to reduce Denry to a moral pulp, to flatten him, to ignore him, or to exterminate him by the
application of ice. This tactic was no more lost on the Countess than it was on Denry,
and the Countess foiled it at every instant. In truth, their existence, there existed,
between the Countess and Sir G
a rather hot rivalry in
philanthropy and the cultivation of the
higher welfare of the district.
He regarded himself,
and she regarded herself,
as the most brightly glittering star
of the Five Towns.
When the Countess had finished the recital
of her journey, and the faces of the
group had gone through all the contortions
proper to express terror, amazement,
admiration, and manly
sympathy, Sir G took the lead,
coughed, and said,
in his elaborate style.
"'Before we adjourn to the hall,
will not your ladyship take a little refreshment?'
"'Oh, no, thanks,' said the Countess.
"'I'm not a bit upset.'
Then she turned to the ensling Denry,
and with concern added,
"'But will you have something?'
If she could have foreseen the consequences of her question,
she might never have put it.
Still, she might have put it just the same.'
Denry paused an instant.
and an old habit rose up in him.
"'Oh, no, thanks,' he said,
and turning deliberately to Sir G., he added,
"'Will you?'
This, of course, was mere crude insolence
to the titled philanthropic white-beard,
but it was by no means the worst of Denry's behaviour.
The group, every member of the group,
distinctly perceived a movement of Denry's left hand towards Sir G.
It was the very slightest movement,
a wavering, a nothing.
It would have had no significance whatever but for one fact.
Denry's left hand still held the carrot.
Everybody exhibited the most marvellous self-control,
and everybody except Sir G. was secretly charmed,
for Sir G had never inspired love.
It is remarkable how local philanthropists are unloved locally.
The Countess, without blenching, gave the signal for what Sir G called the adjournment to the hall.
nothing might have happened yet everything had happened five next denry found himself seated on the temporary platform which had been erected in the large games hall of the policeman's institute
the mayor of hanbridge was in the chair and he had the countess on his right and the mairess of bursley on his left other mayoral chains blazed in the centre of the platform together with fine hats of mayresses and uniforms of police superintendents and captains of firemenes and captains of firemenes of police superintendents and captains of firemen
fire brigades. Denry's sling also contributed to the effectiveness. He was placed behind the
Countess. Policemen, looking strange without helmets, and their wives, sweethearts and friends,
filled the hall to its fullest. Enthusiasm was rife and strident, and there was only one
little sign that the untoward had occurred. That little sign was an empty chair in the first row
near the Countess, Sir G, a prey to sudden indisposition, had departed. He had somehow
faded away while the personages were climbing the stairs. He had faded away amid the expressed
regrets of those few who, by chance, saw him in the act of fading, but even these bore up
manfully. The high humour of the gathering was not eclipsed. Towards the end of the ceremony
came the votes of thanks, and the principle of these was the vote of thanks to the Countess,
prime cause of the Institute. It was proposed by the Superintendent of Hanbridge Police. Other
personages had wished to propose it, but the stronger right of the Hanbridge Superintendent,
as chief officer of the largest force of constables in the five towns, could not be disputed.
He made a few facetious references to the episode of the Countess's arrival, and brought
the House down by saying that if he did his duty he would arrest both the Countess and Denry
for driving to the common danger. When he sat down, amid tempestuous applause, there was a hitch.
According to the official programme,
Sergei Hossafat Dane was to have seconded the vote,
and Sir G was not there.
All that remained of Sir G was his chair.
The Mayor of Hanbridge looked round about,
trying swiftly to make up his mind what was to be done,
and Denry heard him whisper to another mayor for advice.
"'Shall I do it?' Denry whispered,
and by at once rising, relieved the Mayor from the necessity of coming to a decision.
"'Impossible to say why Denry should have risen as he did, without any warning.
"'Ten seconds before, five seconds before.
"'He himself had not the dimmest idea that he was about to address the meeting.
"'All that can be said is that he was subject to these attacks of the unexpected.
"'Once on his legs he began to suffer,
"'for he had never before been on his legs on a platform,
"'or even on a platform at all.
"'He could see nothing whatever except a cloud that had mysteriously,
and with frightful suddenness filled the room.
And through this cloud
he could feel that hundreds and hundreds of eyes
were piercingly fixed upon him.
A voice was saying inside him,
"'What a fool you are! What a fool you are!
I always told you you were a fool!'
And his heart was beating as it had never beat,
and his forehead was damp,
his throat distressingly dry,
and one foot nervously tapping on the floor.
This condition lasted for something like ten hours,
during which time the eyes continued to pierce the cloud and him with patient, obstinate cruelty.
Denry heard someone talking. It was himself. The superintendent had said,
I have very great pleasure in proposing the vote of thanks to the Countess of Chell.
And so Denry heard himself saying,
I have very great pleasure in seconding the vote of thanks to the Countess of Chell.
He could not think of anything else to say, and there was a pause, a realise of
real pause, not a pause merely in Denry's sick imagination.
Then the cloud was dissipated, and Denry himself said to the audience of policemen,
with his own natural tone, smile and gesture, colloquially, informally, comically.
"'Now then, move along there, please. I'm not going to say any more.'
And for a signal he put his hands in the position for applauding, and sat down.
He had tickled the stout ribs of every bobby in the place.
surpassed all previous applause. The most staid ornaments on the platform had to laugh.
People nudged each other, and explained that it was that chap machin from Bursley. As if to imply that
that chap machin from Bursley never let a day pass without doing something striking and humorous,
the mayor was still smiling when he put the vote to the meeting, and the Countess was still
smiling when she responded. Afterwards, in the portico, when everything was over,
Denry exercised his right to remain in charge of the Countess.
They escaped from the personages by going out to look for her carriage and neglecting to return.
There was no sign of the Countess's carriage, but Denry's Mule and Victoria were waiting in a quiet corner.
May I drive you home, he suggested?
But she would not.
She said that she had a call to pay before dinner,
and that her broom would surely arrive the very next minute.
"'Will you come and have tea at the sub-roser?' Denry next asked.
"'The sub-roser?' questioned the Countess.
"'Well,' said Denry,
"'that's what we call the new tea-room that's just been opened round here.'
He indicated a direction.
"'It's quite a novelty in the five towns.'
The Countess had a passion for tea.
"'They have splendid china tea,' said Denry.
"'Well,' said the Countess,
"'I suppose I may as well go through with it.'
At the moment her broom drove up, she instructed her coachman to wait next to the mule and Victoria.
Her demeanour had cast off all its similarity to her dress.
It appeared to imply that, as she had begun with a mad escapade, she ought to finish with another one.
Thus the Countess and Denry went to the tea-shop, and Denry ordered tea and paid for it.
There was scarcely a customer in the place, and a few who were fortunate enough to be present, had not the wit to rest.
recognised the Countess. The proprietess did not recognise the Countess. Later, when it became
known that the Countess had actually patronised the Sub-Rosa, half the ladies of Hanbridge were
almost ill from sheer disgust that they had not heard of it in time. It would have been so easy
for them to be there, taking tea at the next table to the Countess, and observing her choice of
cakes and her manner of holding a spoon, and whether she removed her gloves or retained them,
in the case of a meringue, it was an opportunity lost that would in all human probability never occur again.
And in the discreet corner which he had selected, the Countess fired a sudden shot at Denry.
How did you get all those details about the state rooms at Snade? she asked.
Upon which opening the conversation became lively.
The same evening, Denry called at the Signal Office and gave an order for a half-paying.
advertisement of the Five Towns Universal Thrift Club, Patroness, the Countess of Chelle.
The advertisement informed the public that the club had now made arrangements to accept new
members. Besides the order for a half-page advertisement, Denry also gave many interesting and
authentic details about the historic drive from Snaid Vale to Hanbridge. The next day, the signal
was simply full of Denry and the Countess. It had a large photograph, taken by a
photographer on Calden Bank, which showed Denry actually driving the Countess, and the
countess's face was full in the picture. It presented, too, an excellently appreciative account
of Denry's speech, and it congratulated Denry on his first appearance in the public life of the
five towns. In parenthesis, it sympathised with Sir G, in his indisposition. In short, Denry's
triumph obliterated the memory of his previous triumphs. It abhorred. It ablified.
obliterated too, all rumours adverse to the thrift club. In a few days he had a thousand new members.
Of course this addition only increased his liabilities, but now he could obtain capital on fair terms,
and he did obtain it. A company was formed. The Countess had a few shares in this company.
So, strangely, had Jock and his companion the coachman. Not the least of the mysteries,
was that when Denry reached his mother's cottage on the night of the tea,
the Countess, his arm was not in a sling, and showed no symptom of having been damaged.
End of Chapter 7.
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Recording by Andy Minta
The Card, a story of adventure in the five towns.
by Arnold Bennett
Chapter 8 Raising a Wigwam
1
A still young man, his age was 30,
with a short, strong beard,
peeping out over the fur collar of a vast overcoat,
emerged from a cab at the snowy corner of St. Luke's Square and Broome Street,
and paid the cabman with a gesture that indicated both wealth and habit of command.
And the cabman, who had driven him over from Hanbridge through the winter night,
responded accordingly.
Few people take cabs in the five towns.
There are a few cabs to take.
If you're going to a party,
you may order one in advance by telephone,
reconciling yourself also in advance to the expense.
But to hail a cab in the street,
without forethought,
and jump into it as carelessly as you would jump into a tram,
this is by very few done.
The young man with the beard did it frequently,
which proved that he was fundamentally ducal.
He was encumbered with a large and rather heavy parcel as he walked down Broome Street,
and moreover the footpath of Broome Street was exceedingly dirty,
and yet no one acquainted with the circumstances of his life
would have asked why he had dismissed the cab before arriving at his destination,
because everyone knew.
The reason was that this ducal person, with gestures of command,
dared not drive up to his mother's door in a cab oftener than about once a month.
He opened that door with a latch-key, a modern lock, was almost the only innovation that he had succeeded in fixing on his mother, and stumbled with his unwieldy parcel into the exceedingly narrow lobby.
"'Is that you, Denry?' called a feeble voice from the parlour.
"'Yes,' said he, and went into the parlour, hat, fur coat, parcel, and all.
Mrs. Macchin, in a shawl and an antimacassar over the shawl, sat close to the fire, and leaning towards it.
She looked cold and ill.
Although the parlour was very tiny, and the fire comparatively large, the structure of the grate made it impossible that the room should be warm,
as all the heat went up the chimney.
If Mrs. Machen had sat on the roof and put her hands over the top of the chimney, she would have been much warmer than at the grate.
"'You aren't in bed?'
"'Denry queried.
"'Can't you see?' said his mother.
"'And indeed, to ask a woman who was obviously sitting up in a chair
"'whether she was in bed did seem somewhat absurd.
"'She added, less sarcastically,
"'I was expecting ye every minute.
"'Where have you had your tea?'
"'Oh,' he said lightly, in Hanbridge.
"'An untruth.
"'He had not had his tea anywhere,
"'but he had dined richly at the
new Hotel Metropolitan, in Hanbridge.
"'What have you got there?' asked his mother.
"'A present for you,' said Denry.
"'It's your birthday to-morrow.'
"'I don't know as I want reminding of that,' murmured Mrs. Maychin.
But when he had undone the parcel and held up the contents before her, she exclaimed,
"'Bless us!'
The staggered tone was an admission that for once, in a way, he had impressed her.
It was a magnificent seal-skin mantle.
Longer than seal-skin mantles usually are.
It was one of those articles, the owner of which can say,
"'Nobody can have a better than this.
I don't care who she is.
It was worth, in monetary value,
all the plain shabby clothes on Mrs. Macchin's back,
and all her very ordinary best clothes upstairs,
and all the furniture in the entire house,
and perhaps all dennery's dundiarchal wardrobe, too,
except his fur coat.
If the entire contents of the cottage,
with the aforesaid exception,
had been put up to auction,
they would not have realised enough to pay
for that seal-skin mantle.
Had it been anything but a seal-skin mantle,
and equally costly,
Mrs. Machen would have abraded.
But a seal-skin mantle is not showy.
It goes with any and every dress and bonnet,
and the most respectable, the most conservative,
the most austere woman,
may find legitimate pleasure in wearing it.
A sealskin mantle is the sole luxurious ostentation
that a woman of Mrs. Machen's temperament,
and there are many such in the five towns and elsewhere,
will conscientiously permit herself.
Try it on, said Denry.
She rose weakly and tried it on.
It fitted as well as a sealskin mantle can fit.
My word, it's warm, she said.
This was her soul.
whole comment.
"'Keep it on,' said Denry.
His mother's glance withered the suggestion.
"'Where are you going?' he asked as she left the room.
"'To put it away,' said she,
"'I must get some moth-powder to-morrow.'
He protested with inarticulate noises,
removed his own furs, which he threw down
onto the old worn-out sofa, and drew a windsor chair up to the fire.
After a while his mother returned, and sat down in her rocking-chair,
and began to shiver again under the shawl and the antimacassar.
The lamp on the table lighted up the left side of her face and the right side of his.
"'Look here, mother,' said he,
"'you must have a doctor.'
"'I shall have no doctor.'
"'You've got influenza, and it's a very tricky business, influenza is.
"'You never know where you are with it.'
"'You can call it influenza if you like,' said Mrs. Machen.
"'There was no influenza.
in my young days we called a cold a cold.
Well, said Denry, you aren't well, are you?
I never said I was, she answered grimly.
No, said Denry, with the triumphant ring of one who is about to devastate an enemy,
and you never will be in this rotten old cottage.
This was reckoned a very good class of house when your father and I came into it,
and it's always been kept in repair.
It was good enough for your father, and it's good enough for me.
I don't see myself flitting.
But some folks have gotten so grand.
As for health, old Rubin next door is ninety-one.
How many people over ninety are there in those gimcrack houses up by the park, I should like to know?'
Denry could argue with anyone, save his mother.
Always, when he was about to reduce her to impotence, she fell on him thus, and rolled him in the dust.
Still he began again.
Do we pay four and sixpence a week for this cost?
"'Or, don't we?' he demanded.
"'And always have done,' said Mrs. Machen.
"'I should like to see the landlord put it up,' she added, formidably,
as if to say, I'd landlord him if he tried to put my rent up.
"'Well,' said Denry,
"'here we are, living in a four-and-six-a-week cottage,
"'and do you know how much I'm making?
"'I'm making two thousand pounds a year, that's what I'm making.'
"'A second willful deception of his mother.
as managing director of the Five Towns Universal Thrift Club,
as proprietor of the majority of its shares,
as its absolute autocrat,
he was making very nearly four thousand a year.
Why could he not as easily have said four as two to his mother?
The simple answer is that he was afraid to say four.
It was as if he ought to blush before his mother for being so plutocratic,
his mother who had passed most of her life in hard toil to gain a few shillings
a week. Four thousand seemed so fantastic, and in fact the thrift club, which he had invented in a moment,
had arrived at a prodigious success, with its central offices in Handbridge and its branch offices
in the other four towns, and its scores of clerks and collectors, presided over by Mr. Penkethman.
It had met with opposition. The mighty said that Denry was making an unholy fortune under the guise of
philanthropy, and to be on the safe side the Countess of Chell had resigned her official patronage
of the club, and given her shares to the Pire Hill Infirmary, which had accepted the high dividends
on them without the least protest. As for Denry, he said that he had never set out to be a
philanthropist, nor posed as one, and that his unique intention was to grow rich by supplying
a want, like the rest of them, and that anyhow there was no compulsion to belong to his thrift club.
Then letters in his defence from representatives of the thousand and thousands of members of the club reigned into the columns of the signal,
and Denry was the most discussed personage in the county.
It was stated that such thrift clubs, under various names, existed in several large towns in Yorkshire and Lancashire.
This disclosure rehabilitated Denry, completely in general esteem,
for whatever obtains in Yorkshire and Lancashire must be right for Staffordshire.
But he'd rather dashed Denry.
who was obliged to admit to himself that, after all, he had not invented the thrift club.
Finally, the hundreds of tradesmen who had bound themselves to allow a discount of tuppence in the shilling to the club,
sole source of the club's dividends, had endeavoured to revolt.
Denry effectually cowed them by threatening to establish cooperative stores.
There was not a single co-operative store in the five towns.
They knew he would have the wild audacity to do it.
Lence forward, the progress of the Thrift Club had been unruffled.
Denry waxed amazingly in importance.
His mule died.
He dared not buy a proper horse and dog-cart,
because he dared not bring such an equipage to the front door of his mother's four-and-sixpign cottage.
So he had taken to cabs.
In all exterior magnificence and lavishness,
he equalled even the great Harold Etches, of whom he had once been afraid,
and like etches he became a famous habitual.
of landed no pier. But whereas Etches lived with his wife in a superb house at Bleakridge,
Denry lived with his mother in a ridiculous cottage, in ridiculous Broom Street. He had a regiment
of acquaintances, and he accepted a lot of hospitality, but he could not return it at Broom
Street. His greatness fizzled into nothing in Broom Street. It stopped short and sharp at the
corner of St. Luke's Square, where he left his cabs. He could do nothing with his mother. If
She was not still going out as a seamstress.
The reason was not that she was not ready to go out,
but that her old clients had ceased to send for her,
and could they be blamed for not employing three shillings a day,
the mother of a young man who wallowed in thousands sterling.
Denry had essayed over and over again to instill reason into his mother,
and he had invariably failed.
She was too independent, too profoundly rooted in her habits,
and her character had more force than his.
Of course he might have left her and set up a suitably gorgeous house of his own, but he would not.
In fact, they were a remarkable pair.
On this eve of her birthday he had meant to cajole her into some step, to win her by an appeal,
basing his argument on her indisposition, but he was being beaten off once more.
The truth was that a cajoling, caressing tone could not be long employed towards Mrs. Machen.
persuasive herself, nor favourable to persuasiveness in others.'
"'Well,' said she,
"'if you're making two thousand a year,
you can spend it or save it as you like,
though you'd better save it.
You never know what may happen in these days.
There was a man dropped half a crown down a grid opposite
only the day before yesterday.'
Denry laughed.
"'Aye,' she said,
"'you can laugh.'
"'There's no doubt about one thing,' he said.
"'You ought to be in bed.
you ought to stay in bed for two or three days at least.'
"'Yes,' she said,
"'and who's going to look after the house while I'm moping between blankets?'
"'You can have Rose chud in,' he said.
"'No,' said she,
"'I'm not going to have any woman rummaging about my house and me in bed.'
"'You know perfectly well she's been practically starving since her husband died,
and as she's going out charring,
why can't you have her and put a bit of bread into her mouth?'
"'Because I won't have her, neither her nor anyone,
"'as naught to prevent you giving some of your two thousand a year, if you're a mind,
"'but I see no reason for my house being turned upside down by her,
"'even if I have got a bit of a cold.'
"'You're an unreasonable old woman,' said Denry.
"'Hapn I am,' said she,
"'that can't be two wise ones in a family,
"'but I'm not going to give up this cottage,
"'and as long as I am standing on my feet,
"'I'm not going to pay anyone for doing what I can do better myself.'
"'A pause.
"'And so you needn't think it.
"'You can't come round me with a fur mantle.'
"'She retired to rest.
"'On the following morning he was very glum.'
"'You needn't be so glum,' she said.
"'But she was rather pleased at his glumness,
"'for in him, glumness was a sign that he recognised defeat.
"'Two.
"'The next episode between them was curiously brief.
Denry had influenza. He said that naturally he had caught hers. He went to bed and stayed there. She nursed him all day, and grew angry in a vain attempt to force him to eat. Towards night he tossed furiously on the little bed in the little bedroom, complaining of fearful headaches. She remained by his side most of the night. In the morning he was easier. Neither of them mentioned the word doctor. She spent the day largely on the stairs. Once more to her.
towards night he grew worse, and she remained most of the second night by his side.
In the sinister winter-dawn, Denry murmured in a feeble tone.
"'Mother, you'd better send for him.'
"'Doctor?' she said, and secretly she thought that she had better send for the doctor,
and that there must be, after all, some difference between influenza and a cold.
"'No,' said Denry, send for young lawton.
"'Young Lawton!' she exclaimed.
"'What do you want young Lawton to come here for?'
"'I haven't made my will,' Denry answered.
"'Poh!' she retorted.
Nevertheless, she was the least bit in the world frightened,
and she sent for Dr. Stirling, the aged Harrop's Scotch partner.
Dr. Stirling, who was full-bodied
and left little space for anybody else in the tiny, shabby bedroom of the man with four thousand a year,
gazed at Mrs. Macon, and he gazed also at Denry.
"'You must go to bed this minute,' said he.
"'But he is in bed,' cried Mrs. Machen.
"'I mean yourself,' said Dr. Stirling.
She was very nearly at the end of her resources,
and the proof was that she had no strength left to fight Dr. Stirling.
She did go to bed, and shortly afterwards,
Denry got up, and a little later Rose Chud,
that prim and efficient young widow from lower down the street came into the house and controlled it as if it had been her own.
Mrs. Machen, whose constitution was hardy, arose in about a week, cured, and duly dismissed Rose, with wages and without thanks.
But Rose had been. Like the signals burglars, she had effected an entrance, and the house had not been turned upside down.
Mrs. Machen, though she tried, could not find fault with the result.
of Rose's uncontrolled activities.
Three.
One morning, and not very long afterwards,
in such wise did fate seem to favour the young at the expense of the old,
Mrs. Macon received two letters, which alarmed and disgusted her.
One was from her landlord,
announcing that he had sold the house in which she lived to her Mr. Wilbraham of London,
and that in future she must pay the rent to the said Mr. Wilbraham, or his legal representatives.
The other was from a firm of London solicitors,
announcing that their client, Mr Wilbraham,
had bought the house,
and that the rent must be paid to their agent,
whom they would name later.
Mrs. Macchin gave vent to her emotion in her customary manner.
Bless us!
And she showed the impudent letters to Denry.
Oh, said Denry, so he has bought them, has he?
I heard he was going to.
Them?
"'Exclained Mrs. Machen.
"'What else has he bought?'
"'I expect he's bought all the five,
"'this and the four below, as far as downs.
"'I expect you'll find that the other four
"'have had notices just like these.
"'You know all this row used to belong to the Wilbrahams?
"'You surely must remember that, mother.'
"'Is he one of the Wilbrams of Hillport, then?'
"'Yes, of course he is.'
"'I thought the last of him was Cecil,
"'and when he'd beggared himself here,
"'he went to Australia and died of drink.
That's what I always heard.
We always used to say, is there wasn't a Wilbraham left.
He did go to Australia, but he didn't die of drink.
He disappeared.
And when he'd made a fortune, he turned up again in Sydney, so it seems.
I heard he's thinking of coming back here to settle.
Anyhow, he's buying up a lot of the Wilbraham property.
I should have thought you'd have heard of it.
Well, lots of people have been talking about it.
Well, said Mrs. Maiton, I don't like it.
She objected to a law which permitted a landlord to sell a house over the head of a tenant who had occupied it for more than thirty years.
In the course of the morning she discovered that Denry was right.
The other tenants had received notices, exactly similar to hers.
Two days later, Denry arrived home for tea with a most surprising article of news.
Mr. Cecil Wilbrougham had been down to Burrseley from London, and had visited him, Denry.
Mr. Cecil Wilbraham's local information was evidently quite out of date, for he had imagined Denry to be a rent collector and estate agent, whereas the fact was that Denry had abandoned this mine of occasion years ago.
His desire had been that Denry should collect his rents and watch over his growing interests in the district.
"'So what did you tell him?' asked Mrs. Macon.
"'I told him I'd do it,' said Denry.
"'Why?'
"'I thought it might be safer for you,' said Denry, with a certain emphasis.
"'And besides, it looked as if it might be a bit of a lark.
He's a very peculiar chap.'
"'Pecular? For one thing, he's got the largest moustaches of any man I ever saw,
and there's something up with his left eye.
Now I think he's a bit mad.
"'Mad?'
"'Mad?'
"'Well, touched.
"'He's got a notion about building a funny sort of house for himself,
"'on a plot of land at Bleakridge.
appears he's fond of living alone, and he's collected all kinds of dodges for doing without servants,
still being comfortable.
"'Ah, but he's right there,' breathed Mrs. Machen in deep sympathy.
"'As she said about once a week, she never could abide the idea of servants.'
"'He's not married, then,' she added.
"'He told me he'd been a widow of three times, but he'd never had any children,' said Denry.
"'Bless us,' murmured Mrs.
his mace in. Denry was the one person in the town who enjoyed the acquaintance and the confidence
of the thrice widowed stranger with long mustaches. He had descended without notice on
Burrseley, seen Denry at the branch office of the thrift club, and then departed. It was understood
that later he would permanently settle in the district. Then the wonderful house began to rise
on the plot of land at Bleakridge. Denry had general charge of it, but always subject to erratic
and autocratic instructions from London.
Thanks to Denry, who, since the historic episode at Llandidno, had remained very friendly with
the Cotterill family, Mr. Cotterill had the job of building the house.
The plans came from London, and though Mr. Cessle Wilbraham proved to be exceedingly
watchful against any form of imposition, the job was a remunerative one for Mr. Cotterill,
who talked a great deal about the originality of the residence. The town judged of the wealth and
importance of Mr. Cecil Wilbraham by the fact that a person so wealthy and important as
Denry should be content to act as his agent. But then the Wilbrams had been magnates in the
Burseley region for generations, up till the final Wilbraham smash in the late 70s. The town hungered
to see those huge mustaches and that peculiar eye. In addition to Denry, only one person
had seen the madman, and that person was Nelly Cotterill, who had been viewing the half
built house with Denry one Sunday morning, when the madman had most astonishingly arrived upon
the scene, and after a few minutes vanished. The building of the house strengthened greatly
the friendship between Denry and the Cotterill's. Yet Denry neither liked Mr. Cotterill nor trusted
him. The next incident in this happening was that Mrs. Machen received notice from the London
firm to quit her four-and-sixpence-a-week cottage. It seemed to her that not merely Broom Street,
but the world was coming to an end.
She was very angry with Denry for not protecting her more successfully.
He was Mr. Wilbraham's agent, he collected the rent,
and it was his duty to guard his mother from unpleasantness.
She observed, however, that he was remarkably disturbed by the notice,
and he assured her that Mr. Wilbraham had not consulted him in the matter at all.
He wrote a letter to London, which she signed,
demanding the reason of this absurd notice flung at an ancient and
and perfect tenant.
The reply was that Mr. Wilbraham intended to pull the houses down,
beginning with Mrs. Machins, and rebuild.
"'Poo!' said Denry.
"'Don't you worry ahead, Mother, I shall arrange it.
He'll be down here soon to see his new house.
It's practically finished, and the furniture's coming in.
And I'll just talk to him.'
But Mr. Wilbram did not come,
the explanation, doubtless being that he was mad.
On the other hand, fresh notices came with a ma'amie.
increasing frequency. Mrs. Machen just handed them over to Denry, and then Denry received a telegram
to say that Mr. Wilbraham would be at his new house that night, and wished to see Denry there.
Unfortunately, on the same day by the afternoon post, while Denry was at his offices,
there arrived a sort of supreme and ultimate notice from London to Mrs. Machen, and it was on
blue paper. It stated, boldly, that as Mrs. Machen had failed to comply with all the previous,
notices, had indeed ignored them, she and her goods would now be ejected into the street
according to the law. It gave her twenty-four hours notice to flit. Never had a respectable
Dame been so insulted as Mrs. Machen was insulted by that notice, the prospect of camping
out in Broom Street confronted her. When Denry reached home that evening, Mrs. Machen, as the
phrase is, gave it him. Denry admitted frankly that he was non-plus, staggered.
and outraged, but the thing was simply another proof of Mr. Wilbram's madness.
After tea he decided that his mother must put on her best clothes
and go up with him to see Mr. Wilbraham and firmly expostulate.
In fact, they would arrange the situation between them,
and if Mr. Wilbraham was obstinate, they would defy Mr. Wilbram.
Denry explained to his mother that an English woman's cottage was her castle,
that our landlord's minions had no right to force an entrance,
and that the one thing that Mr Wilbrham could do was to begin unbuilding the cottage from the top outside,
and he would like to see Mr. Wilbraham dried on.
So the seal-skin mantle, for it was spring again, went up with Denry to Bleakridge.
Four. The moon shone in the chill night.
The house stood back from Trafalgar Road in the moonlight, a squareish block of a building.
"'Oh,' said Mrs. Machen,
"'it isn't so large.'
"'No, he didn't want it large. He only wanted it large enough,' said Denry,
and pushed a button to the right of the front door.
There was no reply, though they heard the ringing of the bell inside.
They waited.
Mrs. Machen was very nervous, but thanks to her sealskin mantle, she was not cold.
"'This is a funny doorstep,' she remarked, to kill time.
"'It's of marble,' said Denry.
"'What's that for?' asked his mother.
"'So much easier to keep clean,' said Denry.
"'Well,' said Mrs. Macon,
"'it's pretty dirty now, anyway.'
"'It was.'
"'Quite simple to clean,' said Denry, bending down.
"'You just turn this tap at the side.
"'You see, it's so arranged that it sends a flat jet along the step.
"'Stand off for a second.'
He turned the tap, and the step was washed pure in a moment.
"'How is it that that water steams?' Mrs. Macon demanded.
"'Because it's hot,' said Denry.
"'Did you ever know water steam for any other reason?'
"'Hot water outside?'
"'Just as easy to have hot water outside as inside, isn't it?' said Denry.
"'Well, I never,' exclaimed Mrs. Macon.
She was impressed.
"'That's how everything's dodged up in this house.'
said Denry. He shut off the water, and he rang once again. No answer. No illumination within the abode.
I'll tell you what I shall do, said Denry, at length. I shall let myself in. I've got a key of the back door.
Are you sure it's all right? I don't care if it isn't all right, said Denry defiantly. He asked me to be up here,
and he ought to be here to meet me. I'm not going to stand any nonsense from anybody. In they went,
having skirted round the walls of the house.
Denry closed the door, pushed the switch,
and the electric light shone.
Electric light was then quite a novelty in Burlesley.
Mrs. Matin had never seen it in action.
She had to admit that it was less complicated than oil lamps.
In the kitchen the electric light blazed upon walls,
tiled in grey, and a floor tiled in black and white.
There was a gas range,
and a marble slopstone with two taps.
The woodwork was dark.
Earthenware saucepens stood on a shelf.
The cupboards were full of gear, chiefly in earthenware.
Dendry began to exhibit to his mother, a tank provided with ledges and shelves and grooves,
in which he said everything except knives could be washed and dried automatically.
"'Hadn't you better go and find your Mr. Wilburham?' she interrupted.
"'So I had,' said D'enry.
I was forgetting him.
She heard him wandering over the house, and calling in diversions.
as tones upon Mr. Wilbraham, but she heard no other voice. Meanwhile, she examined the
kitchen in detail, appreciating some of its devices, and failing to comprehend others.
"'I expect he's missed the train,' said Denry, coming back. Anyhow, he isn't here. I may as well
show you the rest of the house now.' He led her into the hall, which was radiantly lighted.
"'It's quite warm here,' said Mrs. Machen. "'The whole house is heated by sea.'
"'Steem,' said Denry.
"'No fireplaces.'
"'No fireplaces?'
"'No fireplaces.
"'No, no fireplaces. No grates to polish, assage to carry down,
"'coals to carry up, mantelpieces to dust, fire-arms to clean,
"'fenders to polish, chimneys to sweep.'
"'And suppose he wants a bit of a fire all of a sudden in summer.'
"'Gastove in every room for emergencies,' said Denry.
"'She glanced into a room.
"'But,' she cried, "'it's all complete, ready.
and as warm as toast.
Yes, said Denry, he gave orders.
I can't think why on earth he isn't here.
At that moment an electric bell rang loud and sharp,
and Mrs. Machen jumped.
There he is, said Denry, moving to the door.
Bless us! What will he think of us being here like?
Mrs. Machen mumbled.
Poo, said Denry, carelessly, and he opened the door.
Five.
Three persons stood on the door.
newly washed marble step, Mr. and Mrs. Cotterill and their daughter.
"'Oh, come in, come in. Make yourselves quite at home. That's what we're doing,'
said Denry and Blythe greeting, and added, "'I suppose he's invited you too.'
And it appeared that Mr. Cessel Wilbraham had indeed invited them to. He had written
from London, saying that he would be glad if Mr. and Mrs. Cotterill would drop in on this
particular evening. Further he had mentioned that, as he had already had the pleasure of meeting Miss
Cotterill. Perhaps she would accompany her parents.
"'Well, he isn't here,' said Denry, shaking hands.
"'He must have missed his train or something.
He can't possibly be here now until tomorrow.
But the house seems to be all ready for him.'
"'Yes, my word.'
"'And how's yourself, Mrs. Cotterill?'
"'Put in Mrs. Machen.'
"'So we may as well look over it in its finished state.
"'I suppose that's what he's asked us up for,'
Denry concluded.
"'Mrs. Machen explained quickly.
and nervously, that she had not been compromised in any invitation, that her errand was pure business.
"'Come on upstairs,' Denry called out, turning switches, and adding radiance to radiance.
"'Denry,' his mother protested, "'I'm sure I don't know what Mr. and Mrs. Cotterill will think of you.
"'You carry on as if you owned everything in the place. I wonder at you.'
"'Well,' said Denry, "'if anybody in this town is the owner's agent, I am, and Mr. Cotrell has built the Blessed House,
"'If Wilbraham wanted to keep his old shanty to himself,
"'he shouldn't send out invitations.
"'It's simple enough not to send out invitations.
"'Now, Nelly!'
"'He was hanging over the balustrade at the curve of the stairs.
"'The familiar ease with which he said,
"'now Nelly, and especially in the spontaneity of Nellie's instant response,
"'put new thoughts into the mind of Mrs. Machen,
"'but she neither pricked up her ears,
"'nor started back, nor accompanied back,
nor accomplished any of the acrobatic feats,
which an ordinary mother of a wealthy son
would have performed under similar circumstances.
Her ears did not even tremble.
And she just said,
I like this balustrade knob being of black china.
Every knob in the house is a black china, said Denry.
Never shows dirt.
But if you should take it into your head to clean it,
you can do it with a damp cloth in a second.
Nellie now stood beside him.
Nellie had grown up since the Sandin did no episode.
She did not blush at a glance.
When spoken to suddenly she could answer without torture to herself.
She could, in fact, maintain a conversation without breaking down,
for a much longer time than a few years back she had been able to skip without breaking down.
She no longer imagined that all the people in the street were staring at her,
anxious to find faults in her appearance.
She had temporarily ruined the lives of several ames.
and fairly innocent young men, by refusing to marry them, for she was pretty, and her father
cut a figure in the town, though her mother did not. And yet, despite the immense accumulation
of her experiences, and the weight of her varied knowledge of human nature, there was something
very girlish and timidly roguish about her, as she stood on the stairs near Denry, waiting
for the elder generation to follow. The old Nellie still lived in her. The party passed to the
first floor. And the first floor exceeded the ground floor in marbles. In each bedroom two aluminium
taps poured hot and cold water, respectively, into a marble basin, and below the marble basin
was a sink. No portrait of water anywhere in the house. The water came to you, and every room
consumed its own slops. The bedsteads were of black enameled iron, and very light. The floors
were covered with linoleum, with a few rugs that could be shaken with one hand.
The walls were painted with grey enamel.
Mrs. Cotterill, with her all-seeing eye, observed a detail that Mrs. Machen had missed.
There were no sharp corners anywhere.
Every corner, every angle between wall and floor, or wall and wall, was rounded to facilitate
cleaning.
And every wall, floor, ceiling and fixture could be washed, and all the furniture was enameled,
and could be wiped with a cloth in a moment, instead of having to be polished with three cloths
and as many odours in a day and a half.
The bathroom was absolutely waterproof. You could spray it with a hose, and by means of a gas apparatus you could produce an endless supply of hot water, independent of the general supply. Denry was apparently familiar with each detail of Mr. Wilbram's manifold contrivances, and he explained them with an enormous gusto.
"'Bless us,' said Mrs. Macchin. "'Bless us,' said Mrs. Cotterill, doubtless the force of example.
They descended to the dining-room, where a supper-table had been laid by order of the invisible Mr. Cessel Wilbraham,
and there the ladies lauded Mr. Wilbram's wisdom in their stewing silver.
Everything of the table-service that could be of earthenware was of earthenware.
The forks and spoons were electro-plate.
"'Why, Mrs. Cotterill said, I could run this house without a servant, and have myself tidy by ten o'clock in the morning.'
And Mrs. Machen nodded.
And then, when you want a regular turnout, as you call it, said Denry, there's the vacuum
cleaner.
The vacuum cleaner was at that period the last word of civilisation, and the first agency
for it was being set up in Burzley.
Denry explained the vacuum-cleaner to the housewives, who had got no further than a
Eubank, and they again called down blessings on themselves.
What price this supper?
Denry exclaimed.
We ought to eat it.
I'm sure he'd like us to eat it.
"'Do sit down all of you.
"'I'll take the consequences.'
"'Mrs. Macein hesitated, even more than the other ladies.
"'It's really very strange him not being here.'
"'She shook her head.
"'Don't I tell you he's quite mad?' said Denry.
"'I shouldn't think he was so mad as all that,' said Mrs. Machen, dryly.
"'This is the most sensible kind of house I've ever seen.'
"'Oh, is it?'
"'Denry answered.
"'Great Scott.
bottles of wine on the sideboard? At length he succeeded in seating them at table.
Thenceforth there was no difficulty. The ample and diversified cold supper began to disappear
steadily, and the wine with it. And as the wine disappeared, so did Mr. Cotterill, who had been
pompous and taciturn, grow talkative, offering to the company the exact figures of the
cost of the house and so forth. But ultimately, the sheer joy of life killed arithmetic.
Mrs. Macchin, however, could not quite rid herself of the notion that she was in her dream that outraged the proprieties.
The entire affair for an unromantic spot like Pursley was too fantastically and wickedly romantic.
"'We must be thinking about home, Denry,' said she.
"'Plenty of time,' Denry replied.
"'What, all that wine gone? I'll see if there's any more in the sideboard.'
He emerged with a red face from bending into the deeps of the enameled.
sideboard, and a wine-bottle was in his triumphant hand. It had already been opened.
"'Hurray!' he proclaimed, pouring a white wine into his glass, and raising the glass.
"'Here's to the health of Mr. Cecil Wilbraham. He made a brave tableau in the brightness of the
electric light. Then he drank. Then he dropped the glass, which broke.
"'Egh! What's that?' he demanded, with the distorted features of a gargoyle.
His mother, who was seated next to him, seized the bottle.
Denry's hand, in clasping the bottle, had hidden a small label, which said,
"'Poison! Nettleship's patent enamel cleaning fluid. One wipe does it.'
"'Confusion! Only Nellie Cottrell seemed to be incapable of realizing that a grave accident had occurred.
She had laughed throughout the supper, and she still laughed hysterically, though she had drunk
scarcely any wine. Her mother silenced her. Denry was the first to recover.
"'It'll be all right,' said he, leaning back in his chair. They always put a bit of poison in
those things. Can't hurt me, really. I never noticed the label. Mrs. Machen smelt at the bottle.
She could detect no odour. But the fact that she could detect no odour appeared only to increase
her alarm. You must have a nematic instantly, she said.
"'Oh, no,' said Denry, I shall be all right.
and he did seem to be suddenly restored.
"'You must have an emetic instantly,' she repeated.
"'What can I have?' he grumbled.
"'You can't expect to find emetics here.'
"'Oh, yes, I can,' said she.
"'I saw a mustard tin in a cupboard in the kitchen.
"'Come along now, and don't be silly.'
Nellie's hysteric mirth surged up again.
Denry objected to accompanying his mother into the kitchen,
but he was forced to submit.
She shut the door on both of them.
It is probable that during the seven minutes which they spent mysteriously together in the kitchen,
the practicability of the kitchen apparatus for carrying off waste products was duly tested.
Denry came forth, very pale and very cross, on his mother's arm.
"'There's no danger now,' said his mother easily.
Naturally the party was at an end.
The cotterill sympathised and prepared to depart,
and inquired whether Denry could walk home.
Denry replied from a sofa, in a weak expiring voice, that he was perfectly incapable of walking home,
that his sensations were in the highest degree disconcerting, that he should sleep in that house,
as the bedrooms were ready for occupation, and that he should expect his mother to remain also.
And Mrs. Macchin had to concur.
Mrs. Macon sped the cotterills from the door as though it had been her own door.
She was exceedingly angry and agitated, but she could not impart her feelings to the
suffering Denry. He moaned on a bed for about half an hour, and then fell asleep, and in the
middle of the night, in the dark, strange house, she also fell asleep. Six. The next morning
she arose and went forth, and in about half an hour returned. Denry was still in bed,
but his health seemed to have resumed its normal excellence. Mrs. Machen burst in upon him,
in such a state of complicated excitement as he had never before seen her in.
"'Denry,' she cried, "'what do you think?'
"'What?' said he.
"'I've just been down home, and they're pulling the house down,
"'all the furniture's out, and they've got all the tiles off the roof,
"'and the windows out, and there's a regular crowd watching.'
"'Denry sat up.
"'And I can tell you another piece of news,' said he.
"'Mr. Cecil Wilbram is dead.'
"'Dead,' she breathed.
"'Yes,' said Denry,
"'I think he's served his purpose.
"'As we're here, we'll stop here.
"'Don't forget it's the most sensible kind of a house you've ever seen.
"'Don't forget that Mrs. Cotterill could run it without a servant
"'and have herself tidy by ten o'clock in the morning.'
"'Mrs. Machen perceived then, in a flash of terrible illumination,
"'that there never had been any Cecil, Wilbram,
"'that Denry had merely invented him,
"'and his long mustaches, and his wall-eye,
for the purpose of getting the better of his mother.
The whole affair was an immense swindle upon her.
Not a Mr. Cecil Wilbraham,
but her own son had bought her cottage over her head,
and jock it out of it, beyond any chance of getting into it again.
And to defeat his mother,
the rascal had not simply perverted the innocent Nellie Cotrel
to some cooperation in his scheme,
but he had actually bought four other cottages,
because the landlord would not sell one alone,
and he was actually demolishing property to the sole end of stopping her from re-entering it.
Of course the entire town soon knew the upshot of the battle,
of the year-long battle between Denry and his mother,
and the means adopted by Denry to win.
The town also had been hoodwinked, but he did not mind that.
It loved its Denry the more,
and seeing that he was now properly established in the most remarkable house in the district,
it soon afterwards made him a town counsellor,
as some reward for his talent in amusing it.
And Denry would say to himself,
"'Everything went like clockwork, except the mustard and water.
I didn't bargain for the mustard and water,
and yet if I was clever enough to think of putting a label on the bottle
and to have the beds prepared,
I ought to have been clever enough to keep mustard out of the house.'
It would be wrong to mince the unpleasant fact that the sham poisoning
which he arranged,
the end that he and his mother
should pass the night in the house,
had finished in a manner
much too realistic for Dennery's pleasure.
Mustard and water,
particularly when mixed by Mrs. Macchin,
is mustard and water.
She had that consolation.
End of Chapter 8.
This is a Libreivox recording.
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please visit librivox dot org recording by andymenta the card a story of adventure in the five towns by arnold bennet chapter nine the great newspaper war
when denry and his mother had been established a year and a month in the new house at bleakridge denry received a visit one evening which perhaps flattered him more than anything had ever flattered him more than anything had ever flattered
him. The visitor was Mr. Meissen. Now Mr. Meissen was the founder, proprietor and editor of the
Five Towns Weekly, a new organ of public opinion which had been in existence about a year, and Denry
thought that Mr. Meissen had popped in to see him in pursuit of an advertisement of the thrift club,
and at first he was not at all flattered. But Mr. Meissen was not hunting for advertisements,
and Denry soon saw him to be the kind of man who would be likely to depute that work to other.
of middle height, well and quietly dressed, with a sober, assured deportment.
He spoke in a voice and accent that were not of the Five Towns.
They were superior to the Five Towns, and in fact Mr. Meissen originated in Manchester,
and had seen London. He was not provincial, and he beheld the Five Towns as part of the
provinces, which no native of the Five Towns ever succeeds in doing.
Nevertheless, his manner to Denry was the summit of easy and yet
deferential politeness.
He asked permission to put something before, Denry.
And when, rather taken aback by such smooth phrases,
Denry had graciously accorded the permission,
he gave a brief history of the Five Towns Weekly,
showing how its circulation had grown,
and definitely stating that at that moment it was yielding a profit.
Then he said,
Now, my scheme is to turn it into a daily.
Very good notion, said Denry,
instinctively.
"'I'm glad you think so,' said Mr. Meissen,
"'because I've come here in the hope of getting your assistance.
I'm a stranger to the district, and I want the cooperation of someone who isn't.
So I've come to you.
I need money, of course, though I have myself what most people would consider sufficient capital,
but what I need more than money is, well, moral support.'
"'And who put you on to me?' asked Denry.
Mr. Meissen smiled.
I put myself on to you, said he.
I think I may say I've got my bearings in the five towns
after a year's journalism in it,
and it appeared to me that you were the best man I could approach.
I always believe in flying high.
Therein, was Denry flattered.
The visit seemed to him to seal his position in the district,
in a way in which his election to the Bursley Town Council had failed to do.
He had been somehow disappointed with the,
that election. He had desired to display his interest in the serious welfare of the town,
and to answer his opponent's argument with better ones. But the burgesses of his ward appeared to have
no passionate love of logic. They just cried, good old Denry, and elected him, with a majority
of only forty-one votes. He had expected to feel a different Denry when he could put
counsellor before his name. It was not so. He had been solemnly in the mayoral procession to
Church, he had attended meetings of the Council, he had been nominated to the Watch Committee,
but he was still precisely the same Denry, though the youngest member of the Council.
But now he was being recognised from the outside. Mr. Meissen's keen Manchester Eye,
ranging over the quarter of a million inhabitants of the five towns in search of a
representative individual force, had settled on Denry Meachin.
Yes, he was flattered. Mr. Meissen's choice through a rose
light on all Denry's career, his wealth and its origin, his house and stable, which were the
astonishment and admiration of the town, his universal thrift club, yea, and his counsellorship.
After all, these were marvels, and possibly the greatest marvel was the resigned presence
of his mother in that wondrous house, and the fact that she consented to employ Rose
Chud, the incomparable Sappho of charwomen for three hours every day.
In fine, he perceived from Mr. Meissen's eyes that his position was unique, and after they had chatted a little, and the conversation had deviated momentarily from journalism to house property, he offered to display Machen House, as he had christened it, to Mr. Mison, and Mr. Mison was really impressed beyond the ordinary.
Mr. Mison's homage to Mrs. Machen, whom they chanced on in the paradise of the bathroom, was the polished mirror of courtesy.
How Denry wished that he could behave like that when he happened to meet countesses.
Then once more in the drawing-room they resumed the subject of newspapers.
"'You know,' said Mr. Meissen,
"'it really is a very bad thing indeed for a district to have only one daily newspaper.
I have nothing myself to say against the Staffordshire signal,
but you'd perhaps be astonished, this in a confidential tone,
at the feeling there is against the signal in many quarters.'
"'Really?' said Denry.
"'Of course, its fault is that it isn't sufficiently interested in the great public questions of the district.
And it can't be, because it can't take a definite side.
It must try to please all parties. At any rate it must offend none.
That is the great evil of a journalistic monopoly.
Two hundred and fifty thousand people. Why, there's an ample public for two first-class papers.
Look at Nottingham. Look at Bristol. Look at Leeds. Look at Sheffield.
and their newspapers.
And Denry endeavoured to look at these great cities.
Truly, the Five Towns was just about as big.
The dizzy journalistic intoxication seized him.
He did not give Mr. Meissen an answer at once,
but he gave himself an answer at once.
He would go into the immense adventure.
He was very friendly with the Signal people, certainly.
But business was business,
and the highest welfare of the Five Towns
was the Highest Welfare of the Five Towns,
Soon afterwards all the hoardings of the district spoke with one blue voice and said that the Five Towns Weekly was to be transformed into the Five Towns Daily with four editions, beginning each day at noon, and that the new organ would be conducted on the lines of a first-class evening paper.
The Inner Ring of Knowing Ones knew that a company entitled The Five Towns Newspapers Limited had been formed at the capital of £10,000.
and that Mr. Meissen held three thousand pounds worth of shares, and the great Denry-Machin
one thousand five hundred, and that the remainder were to be sold and allotted as occasion demanded.
The Inner Ring said that nothing would ever be able to stand up against the signal,
and on the other hand it admitted that Denry, the most prodigious card ever borne into the five towns,
had never been flawed by anything.
The Inner Ring anticipated the future with glee.
Denry and Mr. Meissen anticipated the future with righteous confidence.
As for the signal, it went on its august way, blind to sensational hoardings.
Two, on the day of the appearance of the first issue of the Five Towns Daily, the offices of the new paper at Handbridge gave proof of their excellent organisation, working in all details with an admirable smoothness.
In the basement, a Marinoni machine
thundered like a sucking dove to produce 15,000 copies an hour.
On the ground floor, ingenious arrangements had been made for publishing the paper.
In particular, the iron railings to keep the boys in order
in front of the publishing counter had been imitated from the signal.
On the first floor was the editor and founder with his staff,
and above that the composing department.
The number of stairs that separated the composing department
from the machine room was not a positive advantage,
but bricks and mortar are inelastic, and one does what one can.
The offices looked very well from the outside,
and they compared possibly with the offices of the signal close by.
The posters were duly in the ground-floor windows,
and gold signs, one above another, to the roof,
produced an air of lucrative success.
Denry happened to be in the daily offices that afternoon.
He had had nothing specially to do with the detail,
of the organisation, for details of organisation were not his speciality. His speciality was
large, leading ideas. He knew almost nothing of the agreements with correspondence and press
association and central news, and the racing services and the fiction departments, nor of the
difficulties with the compositor's union, nor of the struggle to lower the price of paper by the
twentieth of a penny per pound, nor of the awful discounts allowed to certain advertisers, nor of
the friction with the railway company, nor of the sickening adulation that had been lavished
on quite unimportant newsagents, nor, worst of all, of the dearth of newsboys.
These matters did not attract him. He could not stoop to them. But when Mr. Meissen, calm and
proud, escorted him down to the machine-room, and the marinoni threw a folded pink daily
almost into his hands, and it looked exactly like a real newspaper, and he saw one of his
own descriptive articles in it, and he reflected that he was an owner of it, then Denry was
attracted and delighted, and his heart beat, for this pink thing was the symbol and result
of the whole affair, and had the effect of a miracle on him. And he said to himself, never
guessing how many thousands of men had said it before him, that a newspaper was the finest toy in the
world. About four o'clock, the publisher, in shirt-sleeves and an apron, came up to Mr. Meissen, and
respectfully asked him to step into the publishing office. Mr. Meissen stepped into the publishing
office, and Denry with him. And they there beheld a small, ragged boy with a bleeding nose and a bundle
of dailies in his wounded hand. "'Yes,' the boy sobbed, and they said they'd cut my eyes out,
and they'd marvels with him if they coach me in Crown Square again.
and he threw down the papers with a final yell.
The two directors learnt that the delicate threat had been uttered by four signal boys,
who had objected to any fellow boys offering any paper other than the signal for sale in Crown Square or anywhere else.
Of course it was absurd.
Del, absurd as it was, it continued.
The central publishing offices of the Daily at Hanbridge,
and its branch offices in the neighbouring towns were like military hospitals.
and the truth appeared to the directors
that while the public was panting to buy copies of the Daily,
the sale of the Daily was being prevented
by means of a scandalous conspiracy on the part of Signal Boys.
For it must be understood that in the Five Towns
people prefer to catch their newspaper in the street as it flies and cries.
The Signal had a vast army of boys,
to whom every year it gave a great fate.
Indeed the Signal possessed nearly all the available boys
and assuredly all the most pugilistic and strongest boys.
Mr. Meissen had obtained boys only after persistent inquiry and demand,
and such as he had found were not the fittest, and therefore were unlikely to survive.
You would have supposed that in a district that never ceases to grumble about bad trade and unemployment,
thousands of boys would have been delighted to buy the daily at fourpence a dozen and sell it at sixpence,
but it was not so.
On the second day
The death of boys at the offices of the daily was painful.
There was that magnificent enterprising newspaper waiting to be sold,
and there was the great enlightened public waiting to buy,
and scarcely any business could be done,
because the Signal Boys had established a reign of terror
over their puny and upstart rival.
The situation was unthinkable.
Still, unthinkable as it was, it continued.
Mr. Meissen had thought of everything except this,
Naturally it had not occurred to him that an immense and serious effort for the General Wheel
was going to be blocked by a gang of Tata-Demalians.
He complained with dignity to the signal, and was informed with dignity by the signal that the
signal could not be responsible for the playful antics of its boys in the streets, that
in short the five towns was a free country.
In the latter proposition Mr. Meissen did not concur.
After trouble in the persuasion of parents, astonishing how indifferent the Five Town's parent was to the loss of blood by his offspring, a case reached the police court. At the hearing the signal gave a solicitor a watching brief, and that solicitor expressed the signal's horror of carnage. The evidence was excessively contradictory, and the stipendary dismissed the summons with a good joke. The sole definite result was that the boy whose father had ostensation. The
He, sensibly brought the summons, got his ear torn within a quarter of an hour of leaving the court.
Boys will be boys.
Still, the Daily had so little faith in human nature
that he could not believe that the signal was not secretly encouraging its boys to be boys.
He could not believe that the signal, out of a sincere desire for fair play,
and for the highest welfare of the district, would willingly sacrifice nearly half its circulation
and a portion of its advertisement revenue.
hurt tone of Mr. Meissen's leading articles, seemed to indicate that in Mr. Meissen's opinion
his old arrival ought to do everything in its power to ruin itself. The signal never
spoke of the fight. The Daily gave shocking details of it every day. The struggle trailed on
through the weeks. Then Denry had one of his ideas. An advertisement was printed in the daily
for two-bodied men to earn two shillings for working six hours a day. An address, and
address different from the address of the
daily it was given. By a ruse,
Denry procured the insertion
of the adversement in the signal also.
"'We must expend
our capital on getting the paper onto
the street,' said Denry.
"'That's evident. We'll have it sold by men.
We'll soon see if the signal on ragamuffins
will attack them. And we
won't pay them by results. We'll pay them
a fixed wage. That'll fetch them.
And a commission on sales into
the bargain. Well, I wouldn't
mind engaging five hundred men.
swamp the streets. That's it, hang expense, and when we've done the trick, we can go back to the
boys. They'll have learnt their lesson. And Mr. Meissen agreed, and was pleased that Denry was
living up to his reputation. The state of the earthenware trade was supposed that summer to be
worse than it had been since 1869, and the grumblings of the unemployed were prodigious, even
seditious. Mr. Meissen, therefore, as a measure of precaution, engaged a couple of policemen to ensure order
at the address, and during the hours named in the advertisement as a rendezvous for respectable
men in search of a well-paid job. Having regard to the thousands of perishing families in the
five towns, he foresaw a rush and a crush of eager breadwinners. Indeed, the arrangements
were elaborate. Forty minutes after the advertised time for the opening of the reception
of respectable men in search of money, four men had arrived. Mr. Meissen, mystified, thought that
there had been a mistake in the advertisement.
But there was no mistake in the advertisement.
A little later, two more men came.
Of the six, three was tipsy,
and the other three absolutely declined
to be seen selling papers in the streets.
Two were abusive, one facetious.
Mr. Meissen did not know his five towns,
nor did Denry.
A five-towns man, when he can get neither bread nor beer,
will keep himself and his family on pride and water.
The policeman went off to more serious duties.
3. Then came the announcement of the 35th anniversary of the Signal,
and of the processional fate by which the signal was at once to give itself a splendid spectacular advertisement,
and to reward and then hearten its boys.
The Signal meant to liven up the streets of the five towns on that great day,
by means of a display of all the gilt chariots of Snape's circus in the main thoroughfare.
Many of the boys would be in the gilt chariots.
Copies of the anniversary number of the signal would be sold from the gilt chariots.
The idea was excellent, and it showed that after all the signal was getting just a little more afraid of its young rival than it had pretended to be.
For strange to say, after a trying period of hesitation, the five towns daily was slightly on the upward curve, thanks to Denry.
Denry did not mean to be beaten by the puzzle which the daily offered to his intelligence,
There the Daily was, full of news, and with quite an encouraging show of advertisements,
printed on real paper, with real ink, and yet it would not go.
Notariously, the Signal earned a net profit of at the very least five thousand a year,
whereas the Daily earned a net loss of at the very least £60 a week,
and of that sixty, quite a third was Denry's money.
He could not explain it.
Mr. Meissen tried to rouse the public by passionately
stirring up extremely urgent matters, such as the smoke nuisance, the increase of the rates,
the park question, German competition, technical education for apprentices.
But the public obstinately would not be roused concerning its highest welfare to the point
of insisting on a regular supply of the daily. If a mere 5,000 souls had positively demanded
a copy of the daily, and not slept little boys or agents had responded to their wish,
the troubles of the daily would soon have vanished.
But this ridiculous public did not seem to care which paper was put into its hand in exchange for its apney,
so long as the sporting news was put there.
It simply was indifferent.
It failed to see the importance to such an immense district of having two flourishing and mutually opposing daily organs.
The fundamental boy difficulty remained ever present.
And it was the boy difficulty that Denry persevered,
and ingeniously attacked, until at length the Daly did indeed possess some sort of brigade of its own,
and the bullying and slaughter in the streets, so amusing to the inhabitants, grew a little less one-sided.
A week or more before the Signal's anniversary day, Denry heard that the Signal was secretly afraid,
lest the Daly's brigade might accomplish the marring of its gorgeous procession,
and that the Signal was ready to do anything to smash the Daily's army.
brigade. He laughed. He said he did not mind. About that time, hostilities were rather acute.
Blood was warming, and both papers, in the excitation of rivalry had partially lost the sense of
what was due to the dignity of great organs. By chance, a tremendous local football match,
Knight v. Spursley, fell on the very Saturday of the procession. The rival arrangements for the
reporting of the match were as tremendous as the match itself. And somehow, the match seemed to add keenness
to the journalistic struggle, especially as the daily favoured Burzley, and the signal was therefore
forced to favour Nipe. By all the laws of hazard, there ought to have been a hitch on that
historic Saturday. Telephone or telegraph ought to have broken down, or rain ought to have made
play impossible. But no hitch occurred, and at 5.30 o'clock of a glorious afternoon in earliest
November, the Daily went to press with a truly brilliant account of the manner in which
Bursley, for the first and last time in its history, had defeated night by one Golton
on. Mr. Meissen was proud. Mr. Meissen defied the signal to beat his descriptive report.
As for the signals procession, well, Mr. Meissen and the chief sub-editor of the
Daly, glanced at each other, and smiled.
And a few minutes later, the Daily Boys were rushing out of the publishing room with bundles of papers,
assuredly in advance of the signal.
It was at this juncture that the unexpected began to occur to the Daily boys.
The publishing door of the Daily opened into Stanway Rents,
a narrow alley in a maze of mean streets behind Crown Square.
In Stanway Rents was a small warehouse, in which,
According to rumours of the afternoon, a free soup kitchen was to be opened.
And just before the football edition of the Daily came off the marinoni, it emphatically was opened,
and there issued from its inviting gate an odour, not to be sure of soup, but of toasted cheese and hot jam.
Such an odour as had never before tempted the nostrils of a daily boy, a unique and omnipotent odour.
Several boys, who, I may state frankly, were traitors to the Daily.
because spies and mischief-makers from elsewhere raced unhesitatingly in, crying that toasted cheese sandwiches and jam-tarts would be distributed like lightning to all authentic newspaper lads.
The entire gang followed, scores over a hundred, inwardly expecting to emerge instantly with teeth fully employed, followed like a sheep into a fold, and the gate was shut.
Toasted cheese and hot jammy pastry were faithfully served at the ragged host.
but with no breathless haste.
And when, loaded, the boys struggled to depart,
they were instructed by the kind philanthropist who had fed them
to depart by another exit,
and they discovered themselves in an enclosed yard,
of which the double doors were apparently unyielding.
And the warehouse door was shut also.
And as the cheese and jam disappeared,
shouts of fury arose on the air.
The yard was so close to the offices of the daily
that the chimney-pots of those offices could actually be seen,
and yet the shouting brought no answer from the Lords of the Daily,
congratulating themselves up there on their fine account of the football match,
and on their celerity in going to press, and on the loyalty of their brigade.
The signal, it need not be said, disavoured complicity in this extraordinary
entrapping of the Daily Brigade by means of an odour.
Could it be held responsible for the excesses of its disinterested sympathisers?
still the appalling trick showed the high temperature to which blood had risen in the genial battle between great rival organs persons in the inmost ring whispered that denry machen had at length been bested on this critically important day
Four. Snape's circus used to be one of the great shining institutions of North Dafercher,
trailing its magnificence on sculptured wheels from town to town,
and occupying the dreams of boys from one generation to another. Its headquarters were at
Axe in the Moorlands, ten miles away from Hambridge, but the riches of old Snape had chiefly come
from the five towns. At the time of the struggle between the signal and the daily, its decline had
already begun. The aged proprietor had recently died, and the name and the horses and the
chariots and the carefully repaired tents had been sold to strangers. On the Saturday of the
anniversary and the football match, which was also Martin Mass Saturday, the circus was set up at
Oldcastle, on the edge of the Five Towns, and was giving its final performances of the season.
Even boys will not go to circuses in the middle of a Five Towns winter. The signal-peer
had hired the processional portion of Snape's for the late afternoon and early evening,
and the instructions were that the entire courtes should be round about the signal offices
in marching order, not later than five o'clock. But at four o'clock, several gentlemen with rosettes
in their buttonholes and signal posters in their hands, arrived important and panting at the
fairground of Oldcastle, and announced that the programme had been altered at the last moment,
in order to defeat certain feared machinations of the unscrupulous daily.
The cavalcade was to be split into three groups,
one of which the chief was to enter Handbridge by a back road,
and the other two were to go to Bursley and Longshore, respectively.
In this manner the forces of advertisement would be distributed,
and the chief parts of the district equally honoured.
The special linen banners, pennons and ribbons bearing the words,
signal, 35th anniversary, etc., had already been hung and planted and draped around the gilded summits of the chariots,
and after some delay the processions were started, separating at the bottom of the cattle market.
The head of the handbidge part of the procession consisted of an enormous car of Jupiter,
with six wheels and 36 paragonical figures, as the clown used to say,
and drawn by six piebald steeds guided by white-rayed.
This coach had a windowed interior, at the great affairs it sometimes served as a box-office,
and in the interior one of the delegates of the signal had fixed himself, from it he directed the paths of the procession.
It would be futile longer to conceal that the delegate of the signal in the bowels of the car of Jupiter
was not honestly a delegate of the signal at all. He was indeed Denry Meachin, and none other.
From this single fact
It will be seen to what extent
The representative of great organs
Had forgotten what was due to their dignity
And to public decency
Esconced in his lair
Then redirected the main portion
Of the Signals' advertising procession
By all manner of discrete lanes
Round the skirts of Hambridge
And so into the town from the hilly side
And ultimately the ten vehicles halted in Crapper Street
To the joy of the simple inhabitants
Denry emerged, and wandered innocently towards the offices of his paper, which were close by.
It was getting late. The first yelling of the imprisoned daily boys was just beginning to rise on the autumn air.
Suddenly Denry was accosted by a young man.
"'Hello, Machen!' cried the young man.
"'What have you shaved your beard off for? I scarcely knew you.'
"'I just thought I would, Sweatnam,' said Denry, who was obviously discomposed.
It was the youngest of the Swettonham boys.
He and Denry had taken a sort of curt fancied to one another.
"'I say,' said Swetnam confidentially, as if obeying a swift impulse,
"'I did hear that the Signal people meant to collar all your chaps this afternoon,
and I believe they have done. Hear that now?'
"'Swetnam's father was intimate with the Signal people.'
"'I know,' Denry replied.
"'But I mean papers and all.'
"'I know,' said Denry.
"'Oh,' murmured Swetnam.
"'But I'll tell you a secret,' Denry added.
"'They aren't to-day's papers.
They're yesterdays, and last weeks and last months.
We've been collecting them specially, and keeping them nice and new-looking.'
"'Well, you're a caution,' murmured Swetnam.
"'I am,' Denry agreed.
"'A number of men rushed at that instant,
with bundles of the genuine football edition from the offices of the daily.
Come on, Denry cried to them, come on, this way, bye-bye, Swetnam!
And the whole file vanished round a corner.
The yelling of imprisoned cheese-fed boys grew louder.
Five.
In the meantime, at the Signal Office, which was not three hundred yards away,
but on the other side of Crown Square,
apprehension had deepened into anxiety as the minutes passed,
and the Snape's circus procession persisted in not appearing on the horizon of the Oldcastle Road.
The signal would have telephoned to Snapes,
but for the fact that a circus is never on the telephone.
It then telephoned to its Oldcastle agent,
who, after a long delay, was able to reply that the cavalcade had left Oldcastle at the appointed hour,
with every sign of health and energy.
Then the signal sent forth scouts, all down the old castle road, to put spurs into the procession, and the scouts return, having seen nothing.
Pessimists glanced at the possibility of the whole procession, having fallen into the canal at Calden Bridge.
The paper was printed, the train parcels for Knight, Longshore, Beresley and Turnhill were dispatched, the boys were waiting, the fingers of the clock in the publishing department were simply flying.
It had been arranged that the bulk of the Hanbridge edition, and in particular the first copies of it, should be sold by boys from the gilt chariots themselves.
The publisher hesitated for an awful moment, and then decided that he could wait no more, and that the boys must sell the papers in the usual way from the pavements and gutters.
There was no knowing what the daily might not be doing.
And then Signal Boys, in dozens, rushed forth paper-laden, but they were disappointed.
They had thought to ride in gilt chariots, not to paddle in mud.
And almost the first thing they saw in Crown Square was the car of Jupiter in its glory,
flying all the signal colours and other cars behind.
They did not rush now, they sprang as from a catapult,
and alighted like flies on the vehicles.
Men insisted on taking their papers from them and paying for them on the spot.
The boys were startled, they were entirely puzzled,
but they had not the habit of refusing money.
And off went the procession to the music of its own band, down the road to Nipe,
and perhaps a hundred boys on board cheering.
The men in charge then performed a curious act.
They tore down all the signal flagging, and replaced it with the emblem of the daily.
So that all the great and enlightened public, wandering home in crowds from the football match at Nipe,
had the spectacle of a daily procession instead of a signal procession,
and could scarce believe their eyes.
And dailies were sold in quantities from the cars.
At Nipe station the procession curved and returned to Hambridge.
And finally, after a multitudinous triumph, came to a stand,
with all its daily bunting, in front of the Signal offices,
and Denry appeared from his lair.
Denry's men fled with bundles.
"'There an hour and a half late,' said Denry calmly,
"'to one of the proprietors of the Signal,
who was on the pavement, but I've managed to get them here.
I thought I'd just look in to thank you for giving such a good feed to our lads.'
The telephones hummed with news of similar daily processions in Longshore and Burzley,
and there was not a high-class private bar in the district
that did not tinkle with delighted astonishment at the brazen,
the inconceivable effrontery of that card Denry Macchin.
Many people for saw lawsuits, but it was agreed that the signal had begun the game
of impudence in trapping the daily lads so as to secure a holy calm for its much trumpeted procession.
And Denry had not finished with the signal.
In the special football edition of the Daily was an announcement, the first of special
Martinmus Fates organised by the Five Towns Daily, and on that same morning every member of the
Universal Thrift Club had received an invitation to said fates. They were three, held on public
ground at Hanbridge, Burrsley and Longshore. They were in the style of the usual five-town's
wakes, that's to say roundabouts, shows, gingerbread stalls, swings, coconut shies. But at each
fate a new and very simple form of shy had been erected. It consisted of a row of small railway
signals.
"'March up, march up!' cried the shy men. "'Knock down the signal! Knock down the signal!
And the packet of Turkish delight is yours! Knock down the signal!
And when you had knocked down the signal, the men cried,
We wrap it up for you in the special anniversary number of the signal.
And they disdainfully tore into suitable fragments, copies of the signal,
which had cost Denry and co. Hate me each,
and enfolded the Turkish delight therein, and handed it to you with a smack.
And all the fairgrounds were carpeted with draggled and muddy signals.
People were up to the ankles in signals.
The affair was the talk of Sunday.
Few matters in the five towns have raised more gossip than did that enormous escapade,
which Denry had invented and conducted.
The moral damage to the signal was held to approach the disastrous,
and now not the possibility, but the probability of lawsuits was incessantly discussed.
On the Monday both papers were bought with anxiety.
Everybody was frothing to know what the respective editors would say.
But in neither sheet was there a single word as to the effect.
fair. Both had determined to be discreet. Both were afraid. The signal feared, lest it might not, if the
pinch came, be able to prove its innocence of the crime of luring boys into confinement
by means of toasted cheese and hot jam. The signal had also to consider its seriously
damaged dignity. For such wounds, silence is the best dressing. The Daily was comprehensively
afraid. It had practically driven its gilded chariots through the
entire decalogue. Moreover, it had won easily in the grand altercation. It was exquisitely
conscious of glory. D'enry went away to Blackpool, doubtless to grow his beard. The proof
of the Daily's moral and material victory was that soon afterwards there were four applicants,
men of substance, for shares in the Daily Company, and this, by the way, was the end of the tale.
For these applicants, who secured options on a majority of the shares, were emissaries of the
Signal. Armed with the options, the Signal made terms with its rival, and then, by mutual
agreement, killed it. The price of its death was no trifle, but it was less than a year's
profits of the Signal. Denry considered that he had been done, but in the depths of his heart
he was glad that he had been done. He had had two disconcerting a glimpse of the signal.
of the rigours and perils of journalism to wish to continue it. He had scored supremely,
and for him to score was life itself. His reputation as a card was far, far higher than ever.
Had he so desired, he could have been elected to the House of Commons on the strength of
his procession and fate. Mr. Meissen, somewhat scandalised by the exuberance of his partner,
returned to Manchester, and the signal, subsequently often referred to as the old lady,
resumed its monopolistic sway over the opinions of a quarter of a million of people,
and has never since been attacked.
End of Chapter 9.
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recording by andy minta the card a story of adventure in the five towns by arnold bennet chapter ten his infamy
when denry at a single stroke wearied his mother and proved his adventurous spirit by becoming the possessor of one of the first motor-cars ever owned in bursley his instinct naturally was to run up to counsellor cotterills in it
not that he loved counsellorotrull and therefore wished to make him a partaker in his joy for he did not love counsellorot he had never been able to forgive nelly's father for those patronising heirs years and years before at landinot know
airs, indeed, which had not even yet disappeared from Cotrill's attitude towards Denry,
though they were councillors on the same town council.
Though Denry was getting richer, and Cotterill was assuredly not getting richer,
the latter's face and tone always seemed to be saying to Denry,
Well, you're not doing so badly for a beginner.
So Denry did not care to lose an opportunity of impressing Councillor Cotrell.
Moreover, Denry had other reasons for going up to the Cotterills.
There existed a sympathetic bond between him and Mrs. Cotterill, despite her prim taciturnity,
and her exasperating habit of sitting with her hands pressed tight against her body and one over the other.
Occasionally he teased her, and she liked being teased. He had glimpses now and then of her secret soul.
He was perhaps the only person in Bursley, thus privileged. Then there was Nellie.
Denry and Nellie were great friends. For the rest of the world she had grown up,
but not for Denry, who treated her as the chocolate child, while she, if she called him anything,
called him respectfully, Mr. The Cotterill's had a fairly large old house with a good garden,
up Bycar's Lane, above the new park, and above all those red streets which Mr. Cotterill
had helped to bring into being. Mr. Cotterill had built new houses with terracotta facings for others,
but preferred an old one in stucco for himself. His abode.
had been saved from the parceling out of several Georgian estates.
It was dignified. It had a double entrance gate,
and from this portal the drive started off for the house door,
but deliberately avoided reaching the house door
until it had wandered in curves over the entire garden.
That was the Georgian touch.
The modern touch was shown in Councillor Cotterill's Bay windows,
bathroom and garden squirter.
There was stabling, in which were kept a Victorian dog carton,
Georgian horse, used by the counsellor in his business. As sure as ever his wife or daughter
wanted the dog-cart, it was either out or just going out, or the Georgian horse was fatigued and
needed repose. The man who groomed the Georgian also ploughed the flower-beds, broke the windows
in cleaning them, and put blacking on brown boots. Two indoor servants had differing views as to
the frontier between the kingdom of his duties and the kingdom of theirs. In fact, it's
was the usual spacious household of successful trade in a provincial town. Denry got to buy
cars lane without a breakdown. This was in the days quite thirteen years ago, when automobileists
made their wills and took food supplies when setting forth. Hence Denry was pleased. The small but
useful fund of prudence in him, however, forbade him to run the car along the unending, sinuous drive.
The May night was fine, and he left the loved vehicle with his new furs in the
shadow of a monkey tree near the gate. As he was crunching towards the door, he had a beautiful
idea. I'll take them all out for a spin. There'll just be room, he said. Now, even today,
when the very cabman drives his automobile, a man who buys a motor, cannot say to a friend,
I've bought a motor, come for a spin, in the same self-unconscious accents as he would say,
I've bought a boat, come for a sale, or, I've bought a house, come and look at it.
Even today, and in the centre of London there is still something about a motor.
Well, something.
Everybody who has bought a motor, and everybody who's dreamed of buying a motor, will comprehend me.
Useless to fain that a motor is the most banal thing imaginable.
It is not.
It remains a supreme symbol of swagger.
If such is the effect of a motor in these days, and in Berkeley Square,
what must it have been in that dim past, and in that...
dim town three hours by the fastest express from euston the imagination must be forced to the task of answering this question then it will be understood that denry was simply tingling with pride
master in he demanded of the servant who was correctly starched but unkempt in detail no sir ye ain't been in for tea i shall take the women out then said denry to himself come in come in cried a voice from the other side of the open door
of the drawing-room, Nellie's voice, the manners and state of a family that has industrially
risen, combined the spectacular grandeur of the cast to which it has climbed, with the ease and
freedom of the cast which it has quitted.
Such a surprise, said the voice.
Nellie appeared, Rosie.
Denry threw his new motoring-cap hastily onto the hall-stand.
No, he did not hope that Nellie would see it.
He hoped that she would not see it.
Now that the moment was really come to declare himself the owner of a motor-car, he grew
timid and nervous. He would have liked to hide his hat. But then Dendri was quite different
from our common humanity. He was capable, even of feeling awkward in a new suit of clothes.
A singular person. "'Hello,' she greeted him. "'Hello,' he greeted her. Their hands touched.
"'Father hasn't come yet,' she added.
She fancied she was not quite at ease.
Well, he said,
What's this surprise?
She motioned him into the drawing-room.
The surprise was a wonderful woman, brilliant in black.
Not black silk, but a softer, delicate stuff.
She reclined in an easy chair, with surpassing grace and self-possession.
A black Egyptian shawl, spangled with silver, was slipping off her shoulders.
Her hair was dressed.
That is to say, it was,
dressed. It was obviously and thrillingly a work of elaborate art. He could see her two feet
and one of her ankles. The boots, the open-work stocking? Such boots, such open-work stocking,
had never been seen in Berthley, not even at a ball. She was in mourning, and wore scarcely any
jewellery. But there was a gleaming tint of gold here and there among the black, which
resulted in a marvellous effect of richness. The least experienced would have said, and
said rightly, this must be a woman of wealth and fashion. It was the detail that finished the
demonstration. The detail was incredible. There might have been ten million stitches in the dress.
Ten seamstresses might have worked on the dress for ten years. An examination of it under a microscope
could but have deepened one's amazement at it. She was something new in the five towns,
something quite new. Denry was not equal to the situation. He seldom was
equal to a small situation, and although he had latterly acquired a considerable amount of social
savour, he was constantly mislaying it, so that he could not put his hand on it at the moment
when he most required it, as now.
"'Well, Denry,' said the wondrous creature in black, softly, and he collected
himself as though for a plunge, and said, "'Well, Ruth!'
"'This was the woman whom he had once loved, kissed, and engaged.
engaged himself to marry. He was relieved that she had begun with Christian names, because he could not
recall her surname. He could not even remember whether he had ever heard it. All he knew was that
after leaving Burzley to join her father in Birmingham, she had married somebody with a double
name, somebody well off, somebody older than herself, somebody apparently of high social standing,
and that this somebody had died. She made no fuss. There was no implication in her
her demeanour, that she expected to be wept over, as a lone widow, or that because she and
he had on a time been betrothed, therefore they could never speak naturally to each other again.
She just talked as if nothing had ever happened to her, and as if about twenty-four hours
had elapsed since she had last seen him. He felt that she must have picked up this most useful
diplomatic calmness in her contacts with her late husband's class. It was a valuable lesson to him,
always behave as if nothing had happened, no matter what has happened.
To himself he was saying,
I'm glad I came up in my motor.
He seemed to need something in self-defense
against the sudden attack of all this wealth
and all this superior social tact,
and the motor-cast served excellently.
"'I've been hearing a great deal about you lately,'
said she, with a soft smile,
unobtrusively rearranging a fold of her skirt.
"'Well,' he replied,
"'I'm sorry, I can't say the same of you.
"'Slightly perilous, perhaps,
"'but still he thought it rather neat.'
"'Oh,' she said,
"'you see, I've been so much out of England.
"'We were just talking about holidays.
"'I was saying to Mrs. Cottrell
"'that they certainly ought to go to Switzerland this year for change.'
"'Yes, Mrs. Capron Smith was just saying,'
"'Mrs. Cotterill put in.
"'So that was her name.
"'It would be something too lovely,' said Nellie,
in ecstasy.
Switzerland.
Astonishing how, with a single word,
she had mocked the gulf between
Burzley people and herself.
The Cotterills had never been out of England.
Not merely that,
but the Cotterills had never dreamt of going out of England.
Jennery had once been to Dieppe,
and had come back as though from Timbuktu
with a traveller's renown,
and she talked to Switzerland easily.
I suppose it's very jolly, he said.
Yes, she said.
"'It's splendid in summer.
"'But, of course, the time is winter for the sports.
"'Naturally, when you aren't free to take a bit of holiday in winter,
"'you must be content with summer, and very splendid it is.
"'I'm sure you'd enjoy it frightfully, Nell.'
"'I'm sure I should frightfully,' Nellie agreed.
"'I shall speak to father. I shall make him.'
"'Now, Nellie,' her mother warned her.
"'Yes, I shall, Mother,' Nellie insisted.
"'There is your father,' I'm sorry.
served Mrs. Cotterill after listening.
Footsteps crossed the hall, and died away into the dining-room.
"'I wonder why on earth father doesn't come in here.
He must have heard us talking,' said Nellie, like a tyrant crossed in some trifle.
A bell rang, and then the servant came into the drawing-room and remarked,
"'If you please, Mum,' at Mrs. Cotterill, and Mrs. Cotterill disappeared, closing the door after her.
"'What are they up to between them?'
Nellie demanded, and she too departed, with wrinkled brow, leaving Denry and Ruth together.
It could be perceived on Nellie's brow that her father was going to catch it.
I haven't seen Mr. Cotron yet, said Mrs. Capron Smith.
When did you come? Denry asked.
Only this afternoon.
She continued to talk, as he looked at her, listening and responding intelligently now and then.
He saw that Mrs. Capron Smith was, in truth, the woman that Ruth had so cleverly imitated ten years before.
The imitation had deceived him then. He had accepted it for genuine. It would not have
deceived him now. He knew that. Oh yes. This was the real article that could hold its own anywhere.
Switzerland. And not simply Switzerland, but a refinement on Switzerland.
Switzerland.
He defined that, in her opinion,
Switzerland in summer was not worth doing,
in the way of correctness, but in winter.
2.
Nelly had announced a surprise for Denry as he entered the house,
but Nellie's surprise for Denry,
startling and successful, though it proved,
was as naught to the surprise which Mr. Cotterill had in hand,
for Nellie, her mother, Denry,
the town of Bursley,
and various persons up and down the country.
Mrs. Gottrell came hysterically in upon the duelogue between Denry and Ruth in the drawing-room,
from the activity of her hands, which, instead of being decently folded one over the other,
were waving round her head in the strangest way.
It was clear that Mrs. Cottrell was indeed under the stress of a very unusual emotion.
"'It's those creditors! At last! I knew it would be! It's all those creditors! They won't let him alone,
and now they've done it!'
So, Mrs. Cotterill.
She dropped into a chair.
She no longer had any sense of shame of what was due to her dignity.
She seemed to have forgotten that certain matters are not proper to be discussed in drawing-rooms.
She had left the room Mrs. Councillor Cotterill.
She had returned to it nobody in particular, the personification of defeat.
The change had operated in about five minutes.
Mrs. Capron Smith and Denry glanced at each other,
and even Mrs. Capron Smith was at a loss for a moment.
Then Ruth approached Mrs. Cotterill and took her hand.
Perhaps Mrs. Capron-Smith was not so astonished after all.
She and Nellie's mother had always been very friendly,
and in the five towns, very friendly, means a lot.
Perhaps if you were to leave us,
Ruth suggested, twisting her head to glance at Denry.
It was exactly what he desired to do.
There could be no doubt that Ruth was supremely a woman of the world.
Her tact was faultless.
he left them saying to himself well years ago in the hall through an open door he saw counsellor cotterill standing against the dining-room mantelpiece when cotterill caught sight of denry he straightened himself into a certain uneasy perkins
a young man he said in account of fate of his old patronising tone come in here you might as well hear about it you're a friend of ours come in and shut the door
Nellie was not in view.
Denry went in and shut the door.
"'Sit down,' said Cotterill.
And it was just as if he had said,
"'Now you're a fairly bright sort of youth,
and you haven't done so badly in life,
and as a reward I mean to admit you
to the privilege of hearing about our ill luck,
which, for some mysterious reason,
reflects more credit on me than your good luck
reflects on you, young man.'
And he stroked his straggling grey beard,
i'm going to file my petition to-morrow said he and gave a short laugh really said denry who could think of nothing else to say his name was not capron smith yes they won't leave me any alternative said mr cotterill
then he gave a brief history of his late commercial career to the young man and he seemed to figure it as a sort of tug-of-war between his creditors and his debtors he himself being the rope
he seemed to imply that he had always done his sincere best to attain the greatest good of the greatest number but that those wrong-headed creditors had consistently thwarted him however he bore them no grudge it was the fortune of the tug-of-war
he pretended with shabby magnificence of spirit that a bankruptcy at the age of near sixty in a community where one has cut a figure is a mere passing episode are you surprised he asked foolishly with a sheepishly with a sheepishish
smile? Denry took vengeance for all the patronage that he had received during a decade.
No, he said, are you? Instead of kicking Denry out of the house for an impudent young jackan-apes,
Mr. Cotterill simply resumed his sheepish smile. Denry had been surprised for a moment,
but he had quickly recovered. Cotterill's downfall was one of those events which any person of
acute intelligence can foretell, after they have happened.
Cotterill had run the risks of a speculative builder.
Built and mortgaged, built and mortgaged, sold at a profit, sold without profit, sold at a loss,
and failed to sell, given bills, second mortgages, and third mortgages.
And because he was a builder, and could do nothing but build, he had continued to build,
in defiance of Burzley's lack of enthusiasm for his erections.
If rich gold deposits had been discovered in Bursley Municipal Park,
Cotterill would have owned a mining camp and amassed immense wealth.
But unfortunately, gold deposits were not discovered in the park.
Nobody knew his position.
Nobody ever does know the position of a speculative builder.
He did not know it himself.
There had been rumours, but they had been contradicted in an adequate way.
His recent refusal of the marl chain, due to lack of spare coin,
had been attributed to prudence.
His domestic existence had always been conducted
on the same moderately lavish scale.
He had always paid the baker, the butcher, the tailor, the dressmaker,
and now he was to file his petition in bankruptcy,
and tomorrow the entire town would have been seeing it coming for years.
"'What shall you do?' Denry inquired in amicable curiosity.
"'Well,' said Cottrell,
"'that's the point.
I've got a brother, a builder in Toronto, you know. He's doing very well. Building is building over there. I wrote to him a bit since, and he replied by the next mail, by the next mail, that what he wanted was just a man like me to overlook things. He's getting an old man now, is John. So you see there's an opening waiting for me, as if to say, the righteous are never forsaken. I tell you all this as you're a friend of the family like, he added.
after an expanse of vagueness, he began, hopefully, cheerfully, undauntedly.
Even now, if I could get hold of a couple of thousand, I could pull through handsome,
and there's plenty of security for it.
A bit late now, isn't it?
Not it, if only someone who really knows the town, and has faith in the property market,
would come down with a couple of thousand, well he might double it in five years.
Really?
Yes, said Cotterle.
"'Look at Clare Street.'
"'Clair Street was one of his terracotta masterpieces.
"'You now,' said Cotterill, insinuating,
"'I don't expect anyone can teach you much about the value of property in this town.
"'You know as well as I do.
"'If you happen to have a couple of thousand loose,
"'by gosh, it's a chance in a million.'
"'Yes,' said Denry.
"'I should say that's just about what it was.'
"'I put it before you,' Cotterill proceeded, gathering way,
and missing the flavour of Denry's remark,
because you're a friend of the family.
You're so often here. Why?
It's pretty near ten years.
Denry sighed.
I expect I come and see you all about once a fortnight,
fairly regular.
That makes two hundred and fifty times in ten years, yes.
A couple of thou,' said Cotterle, reflectively.
Two hundred and a two thousand, eight.
Eight pounds a visit.
"'A shade thick, Cottrell.
"'A shade thick.
"'You might be half a dozen fashionable physicians rolled into one.
"'Never before had he called the counsellor,
"'Cotterill, unadorned.
"'Mr. Cotterill flushed and rose.
"'Denry does not appear to advantage in this interview.
"'He failed in magnanimity.
"'The only excuse that can be offered for him
"'is that Mr. Cotterill had called him
"'Young man, once or twice too often
in the course of ten years.
It's subtle.
Three.
No, whispered Ruth in all her wraps.
Don't bring it up to the door.
I'll walk down with you to the gate and get in there.
He nodded.
They were off together.
Ruth, it had appeared, was actually staying at the Five Towns Hotel in Nipe,
which at that epoch was the only hotel in the Five Towns,
seriously pretending to be first-class, in the full-page advertisement sense.
The fact that Ruth was staying at the Five Towns Hotel impressed Denry anew.
Assuredly she did things in the grand manner.
She had meant to walk down by the park to Burzley Station
and catch the last loop-lane train to Knipe.
And when Denry suddenly disclosed the existence of his motor-car
and proposed to see her to her hotel in it,
she in her turn had been impressed.
The astonishment in her tone as she exclaimed,
"'Have you got a motor?'
was the least in the world naive. Thus they departed together from the stricken house.
Ruth, saying brightly to Nelly, who had reappeared in a painful state of demoralisation,
that she should return on the morrow. And Denry went down the obscure drive for the final vision
of the poor child Nelly as she stood at the door to speed them. It was extraordinary how
that child had remained a child. He knew that she must be more than half-yearly. He knew that she must be
more than half-way through her twenties, yet she persisted in being the merest girl.
A delightful little thing!
But no savour fair, no equality to a situation, no spectacular pride, just a nice, bright,
strangely girlish.
The Cotterills had managed that bad evening badly.
They had shown no dignity, no reserve, no discretion, an old Cotterill had been simply fatuous in his suggestion.
As for Mrs. Cotterill, she had been.
She was completely overcome, and it was due solely to Ruth's calm managing influence that
Nellie, nervous and whimpering, had wound herself up to come and shut the front door after the
guests.
It was all very sad.
When he had successfully started the car, and they were sliding down the Moor House Hill together,
side by side, their shoulders touching, Denry threw off the nightmarish effect of the
bankrupt household.
all there was no reason why he should be depressed. He was not a bankrupt. He was steadily
adding riches to riches. He acquired wealth mechanically now. Owing to the habits of his mother,
he never came within miles of living up to his income. And Ruth, she too, was wealthy.
He felt that she must be wealthy in the strict significance of the term. And she completed
wealth by experience of the world. She was his equal. She understood things in general. She
had lived, travelled, suffered, reflected. In short, she was a complete article of manufacture.
She was no little clinging, raw girl. Further, she was less hard than of yaw. Her voice and gestures
had a different quality. The world had softened her, and it occurred to him suddenly that her
sole fault, extravagance, had no importance now that she was wealthy. He told her all that Mr. Cotterill
had said about Canada.
and she told him all that Mrs. Cotterill had said about Canada,
and they agreed that Mr. Cotterill had got his desserts,
and that in its own interest, Canada was the only thing for the Cotterill family,
and the sooner the better.
People must accept the consequences of bankruptcy.
Nothing could be done.
I think it's a pity Nelly should have to go, said Denry.
Oh, do you? replied Ruth.
Yes, going out to a strange country like that.
"'She's not what you might call the Canadian kind of a girl.
"'If she could only get something to do here,
"'if something could be found for her.
"'Oh, I don't agree with you at all,' said Ruth.
"'Do you really think she ought to leave her parents just now?
"'Her place is with her parents,
"'and besides, between you and me,
"'she'll have a much better chance of marrying there
"'than in this town, after all this.
"'Of course I should be very sorry to lose her,
"'and Mrs. Cotterill, too.
But, I expect your right, Denry concurred, and they sped on luxuriously through the lamplit
night of the five towns.
And Denry pointed out his house as they passed it, and they both thought much of the
security of their positions in the world, and of their incomes, and of the honeyd deference
of their bankers, and also of the mistake of being a failure.
You could do nothing with a failure.
Four.
On a frosty morning in early winter, you might have seen them together in a different
vehicle, a first-class compartment of the express from Nipe to Liverpool.
They had the compartment to themselves, and they were installed therein with every circumstance
of luxury.
Both were enrapped in furs, and a fur rug united their knees in its shelter.
Magazines and newspapers were scattered about to the value of a labourer's hire for a whole day,
and when Denry's eye met the guards, it said shilling.
In short, nobody could possibly be more superb than they were on that morning in that compartment.
The journey was the result of peculiar events.
Mr. Gottorill had made himself a bankrupt, and cast away the robe of a town councillor.
He had submitted to the inquisitiveness of the official receiver,
and to the harsh prying of those rampant, baying beasts his creditors.
He had laid bare his books, his correspondence, his lack of method, his domestic extravagance,
and the distressing fact that he had continued to trade long after he knew himself to be insolvent.
He had, for several months, in the interests of the said beasts, carried on his own business
as a manager at a nominal salary, and gradually everything that was his had been sold.
During the final weeks
The Cotterill family had been obliged
to quit their dismantled house
and exist in lodgings
It had been arranged
that they should go to Canada by way of Liverpool
And on the day before the journey
of Denry and Ruth to Liverpool
They had departed from the borough of Burrsley
Which Mr Cotrill had so extensively faced
With terracotta
Unhonoured and unsung
Even Denry
Though he had visited them in their lodgings
To say goodbye
had not seen them off at the station.
But Ruth Capron Smith had seen them off at the station.
She had interrupted a sojourn in Southport in order to come to Bursley,
and dispatched them therefrom with due friendliness.
Certain matters had to be attended to after their departure,
and Ruth had promised to attend to them.
Now, immediately after seeing them off,
Ruth had met Denry in the street.
"'Do you know?' she said brusquely.
"'Those people are actually going steerage.'
i had no idea of it mr and mrs cotrell kept it from me and i shouldn't have heard of it only from something nelly said that's why they've gone to-day the boat doesn't sail to to-morrow afternoon
steerage and denry whistled yes sidroo nothing that pride of course old cotrell wants to have every penny he can scrape so as to be able to make the least tiny bit of a show when he gets to toronto and so steerage just think of mrs cotrell and nelly
in the steerage. If I'd known of it, I should have altered that, I can tell you, and pretty
quickly, too. Now it's too late. No, it isn't. Denry contradicted her flatly. But they've gone.
I could telegraph to Liverpool for saloon berths. There's bound to be plenty at this time of year,
and I could run over to Liverpool to-morrow, and catch them on the boat, and make them change.
She asked whether he really thought he could, and he assured her.
"'Second-class cabins would be better,' said she.
"'Why?
"'Well, because of dressing for dinner and so on.
"'They haven't got the clothes, you know.'
"'Of course,' said Denry.
"'Listen,' she said, with an enchanting smile.
"'Let's halve the cost, you and I,
"'and let's go to Liverpool together and make the little gift
"'and arrange things.
"'I'm leaving for Southport to-morrow.
"'Liverpool's on my way.'
"'Denry was delighted by the...
the suggestion, and telegraphed to Liverpool with success.
Thus they found themselves on that morning in the Liverpool expressed together.
The work of benevolence in which they were engaged
had a powerful influence on their mood, which grew both intimate and tender.
Ruth made no concealment of her regard for Denry,
and as he gazed across the compartment at her, exquisitely mature,
she was slightly older than himself, dressed to a marvel,
perfect in every detail of manner,
knowing all that was to be known
about life, and secure in a handsome fortune.
As he gazed, Denry reflected joyously,
victoriously.
I've got the dibs, of course,
but she's got them too, perhaps more.
Therefore she must like me for myself alone.
This brilliant creature has been everywhere
and seen everything,
and she comes back to the five towns,
and comes back to me.
It was his proudest moment, and in it he saw his fortune far more glorious than he had dreamt.
"'When shall you be out of morning?' he inquired.
"'In two months,' said she.
"'This was not a proposal and acceptance, but it was very nearly one.
They were silent and happy.
Then she said,
"'Do you ever have business in Southport?'
and he said in a unique manner i shall have another silence this time he felt he would marry her five the white star liner tytubic stuck out of the water like a row of houses against the landing-stage
there was a large crowd on her promenade deck and a still larger crowd on the landing stage above the promenade deck officers paced on the navigating deck and a large crowd on the landing-stage and a still larger crowd on the landing-stage above the promenade deck officers paced on the navigating deck and
and above that was the airy bridge, and above that the funnels, smoking,
and somewhere still higher a flag or two, fluttering in the icy breeze.
And behind the crowd on the landing-stage stretched a row of four-wheeled cabs and rickety horses.
The landing-stage swayed ever so slightly on the tide,
only the ship was apparently solid, apparently cemented in foundations of concrete.
On the starboard side of the promenade deck, among a hundred other small groups,
was a group consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Cotterill, and Ruth, and Denry.
Nellie stood a few feet apart.
Mrs. Cotterill was crying.
People naturally thought she was crying because of the adieu.
But she was not.
She wept because Denry and Ruth, by sheer force of will,
had compelled them to come out of the steerage,
and occupy beautiful and commodious berths in the second-conquered.
cabin, where the manor of the stewards was quite different. She wept because they had been caught in
the steerage. She wept because she was ashamed, and because people were too kind. She was at once
delighted and desolated. She wanted to outpour psalms of gratitude, and also she wanted to curse.
Mr. Cotrell said stiffly that he should repay, and that soon. An immense bell sounded impatiently.
"'We'd better be shunting,' said Denry.
"'That's the second.
"'In exciting crises he sometimes employed such peculiar language as this,
"'and he was very excited.
"'He had done a great deal of rushing about.
"'The upraising of the Cotterill family
"'from the social Hades of the steerage
"'to the respectability of the second cabin
"'had demanded all his energy, and a lot of Ruth's.
"'Ruth kissed Mrs. Cotterill, and then Nelly.
and Mrs. Cotterill and Nellie acquired rank and importance for the whole voyage
by reason of being kissed in public by a woman so elegant and aristocratic as Ruth Capron-Smith.
And D'Enry shook hands. He looked brightly at the parents,
but he could not look at Nellie, nor could she look at him.
Their handshaking was perfunctory. For months their playful intimacy had been in abeyance.
Good-bye. Good luck.
"'Thanks. Goodbye. Goodbye.'
The horrible bell continued to insist.
"'All non-passengers ashore! All ashore!'
The numerous gangways were thronged with people obeying the call,
and handkerchiefs began to wave, and there was a regular vibrating tremor through the ship.
Mr. and Mrs. Cotterill turned away.
Ruth and Denry approached the nearest gangway,
and Denry stood aside and made a place for
her to pass, and as always a number of women pushed into the gangways immediately after her,
and Henry had to wait, being a perfect gentleman.
His eye caught Nellys, she had not moved.
He felt then, as he had never felt in his life.
No, absolutely never.
Her sad, her tragic glance rendered him so uncomfortable,
and yet so deliciously uncomfortable,
that the symptoms startled him.
He wondered what would happen to his legs.
He was not sure that he had legs.
However, he demonstrated the existence of his legs by running up to Nelly.
Ruth was by this time swallowed in the crowd on the landing stage.
He looked at Nellie.
Nellie looked at him.
Her lips twitched.
"'What am I doing here?' he asked of his soul.
She was not at all well-dressed.
She was indeed shabby.
in a steerage style.
Her hat was awry, her gloves miserable,
no girlish pride in her distraught face,
no determination to overcome fate,
no consciousness of ability to meet a bad situation,
just those sad eyes and those twitching lips.
"'Look here,' Denry whispered,
"'you must come ashore for a second.
I've got something I want to give you,
and I've left it in the cab.'
"'But there's no time.
The bells!'
"'Bosh!' he exclaimed gruffly,
extinguishing her timid childish voice.
You won't go for at least a quarter an hour.
All that's only a dodge to get people off in plenty of time.
Come on, I tell you.
And in a sort of hysteria he seized her thin, long hand,
and dragged her along the deck to another gangway,
down whose steep slope they stumbled together.
The crowd of sightseers and handkerchief wavers jostled them.
They could see nothing but heads and shoulders,
and the great side of the ship rising above.
"'Denry turned her back on the ship.
"'This way,' he still held her hand.
"'He struggled to the cab-rank.
"'Which one is it?' she asked.
"'Anyone, never mind which, jump in.'
"'And to the first driver whose I met his,' he said,
"'Lyme Street Station.'
"'The gangways were being drawn away.
"'A horse boom filled the air, and then a cheer.
"'But I shall miss the boat,' the dazed girl protested.
"'Jump in!' he peeped.
He pushed her in.
But I shall miss her.
I know you will, he replied, as if angrily.
Do you suppose I was going to let you go by that steamer?
Not much.
But mother and father.
I'll telegraph.
They'll get it on landing.
And where's Ruth?
Be hang to Ruth, he shouted furiously.
As the cab rattled over the cobbles,
the Taitubic slipped away from the landing stage.
The irretrievable had happened.
"'Nnell he burst into tears.
"'Look here,' Henry said savagely.
"'If you don't dry up, I shall have to cry myself.'
"'What are you going to do with me?' she whimpered.
"'Well, what do you think? I'm going to marry you, of course.'
His aggrieved tone might have been supposed to imply that people had tried to thwart him,
but that he had no intention of being thwarted,
nor of asking commissions, nor of conducting himself as anything but a fierce tyrant.
As for Nellie, she seemed to surrender.
Then he kissed her, also angrily.
He kissed her several times.
Yes, even in Lord Street itself, less and less angrily.
"'Where are you taking me to?' she inquired, humbly, as a captive.
"'I shall take you to my mother's,' he said.
"'Will she like it?'
"'She'll either like it or lump it,' said Denry.
"'It'll take a fortnight.'
"'What?'
the notice and things in the train in the midst of a great submissive silence she murmured it'll be simply awful for father and mother that can't be helped said he and they'll be far too seasick to bother their heads about you
"'You can't think how you've staggered me,' said she.
"'You can't think how I've staggered myself,' said he.
"'When did you decide to?
"'When I was standing at the gangway, and you looked at me?' he answered.
"'But it's no use butting,' he said.
"'I'm like that.
"'That's me, that is.'
"'It was the bare truth that he had staggered himself.
"'But he had staggered himself into a miraculous, ecstatic happiness.
she had no money no clothes no style no experience no particular gifts but she was she and when he looked at her calmed he knew that he had done well for himself
he knew that if he had not yielded to that terrific impulse he would have done badly for himself mrs mitching had what she called a ticklish night of it six the next day he received a note from ruth dated southport
inquiring how he came to lose her on the landing-stage and expressing concern.
It took him three days to reply, and even then that the reply was a bad one.
He had behaved infamously to Ruth, so much could not be denied.
Within three hours of practically proposing to her,
he had run off with a simple girl who was not fit to hold a candle to her,
and he did not care. That was the worst of it. He did not care.
Of course the facts reached her.
Facts reach everybody, for the singular reappearance of Nellie,
in the streets of Burrseley, immediately after her departure for Canada,
had to be explained.
Moreover, the infamous Denry was rather proud of the facts,
and the town inevitably said,
"'Machin all over that, snatching the girl off the blooming lugger,
Machen all over.'
And Denry agreed privately that it was Machen all over.
"'What other chap,' he demanded of the air,
"'would have thought of it, all had the pluck.
"'It was mere malice on the part of destiny,
"'that caused Denry to run across Mrs. Capron-Smith at Houston some weeks later.
"'Happily they both had immense nerve.
"'Dear me,' said she,
"'what are you doing here?'
"'Only honeymooning,' he said.
"'End of chapter ten.
This is a Librivox recording.
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Recording by Andy Minter
The Card
A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns
By Arnold Bennett.
Chapter 11
1
Although Denry was extremely happy as a bridegroom, and came
of the most foolish symptoms of affection in private.
He said to himself, and he said to Nellie, and she sturdily agreed with him,
We aren't going to be the ordinary silly honeymooners,
by which, of course, he meant that they would behave so as to be taken for stayed married persons.
They failed thoroughly in this enterprise, as far as London, where they spent a couple of nights,
but on leaving Charing Cross they made a new and better start in the light of experience.
Their destination, it need hardly be said, was Switzerland.
After Mrs. Capron-Smith's remarks on the necessity of going to Switzerland in winter,
if one wished to respect oneself, there was really no alternative to Switzerland.
Thus it was announced in the signal, which had reported the wedding in ten lines,
only to the excessive quietude of the wedding,
that Mr and Mrs. Councillor Macchin were spending a month at Montreou-sur-Montre,
on the lake of Geneva, and the announcement looked very.
well. At Dieppe they got a through-carriage. There were several through-carriages for Switzerland
on the train. In walking through the corridors from one to another, Denry and Nellie had their
first glimpse of the world which travels, and which runs off for a holiday whenever it feels
in the mood. The idea of going for a holiday in any month but August seemed odd to both
of them. Denry was very bold, and would insist on talking in a naturally loud voice. Nellie was
timid and clinging.
"'What do you say?'
Denry would roar at her when she half-whispered something,
and she had to repeat it so that all could hear.
It was part of their plan to address each other curtly,
brusquely, and to frown, and to pretend to be slightly bored by each other.
They were outclassed by the world which travels.
Try as they might, even Denry was morally intimidated.
He had managed his clothes fairly correctly.
He was not ashamed of them, and Nellys were by no means.
the worst in the compartments. Indeed, according to the standard of some of the more intimidating
women, Nelly's costume erred in not being quite sufficiently negligent, sufficiently
anyhow. And they had plenty, and ten times plenty of money, and the consciousness of it.
Expense was not being spared on that honeymoon, and yet, well, all that can be said is that the
company was imposing. The company, which was entirely English, seemed to be unaware that anyone ever did anything
else but travel luxuriously to places mentioned in second-year geographies.
It astounded, Nellie, that there should be so many people in the world with nothing to do
but spend, and they were constantly saying the strangest things with an air of perfect calm.
How much did you pay for the excess luggage?
An untidy young woman asked of an old man.
Oh, thirteen pounds, answered the old man carelessly.
And not long before, Nellie had scarcely escaped ten.
days in the steerage of an Atlantic liner. After dinner in the restaurant car, no champagne
because it was vulgar, but a good, sound, expensive wine, they felt more equal to the situation,
more like part-owners of the train. Nellie prudently went to bed ere the triumphant feeling wore off,
but Denry stayed up smoking in the corridor. He stayed up very late, being proud and happy,
and too avid of new sensations to be able to think of sleep.
It was a match which led to a conversation between himself and a thin, drawling, overbearing fellow with an eyeglass.
Denry had hated this lordly creature all the way from Dieppe.
In presenting him with the match, he felt he was somehow getting the better of him,
for the match was precious in the nocturnal solitude of the vibrating corridor.
The mere fact that two people are alone together and awake,
divided from a sleeping or sleepy population only by a row of closed mysterious doors,
will do much to break down social barriers.
The excellence of Denry's cigar also helped.
It atoned for the breadth of his accent.
He said to himself,
I'll have a bit of a chat with this, Johnny.
And then he said aloud,
Not a bad train this.
No.
The eyeglass agreed languidly.
Pity they gave you such a beast in Anna.
And Denry agreed hastily that it was.
Soon they were chatting of places,
and somehow it came.
out of Denry that he was going to Montreux. The eyeglass professed its indifference to Montre
in winter, but said the resorts above Montre were all right, such as Coe or Pridou,
and Denry said, well, of course, shouldn't think of stopping in Montre, going to try Pridou.
The eyeglass said it wasn't going as far as Switzerland yet. It meant to stop in the Jura.
Geneva's a pretty deadly place, ain't it? said the eyeglass after a pause.
"'Yes,' said Denry.
"'Been there since that new Esplanade was finished?'
"'No,' said Denry.
"'I saw nothing of it.'
"'When we were there?'
"'Oh, a couple of years ago.'
"'Ah, it wasn't started then.
"'Comic thing.
"'Of course they're awfully proud in Geneva
"'of the view of Mont Blanc.'
"'Yes,' said Denry.
"'Ever noticed how queer women are
about that view. They're no end keen on it at first, but after a day or two gets on their nerves.'
"'Yes,' said Denry, "'I've noticed that myself. My wife—'
He stopped, because he didn't know what he was going to say.'
The eyeglass nodded, understandingly.
"'All alike,' it said.
"' Odd thing.'
When Denry introduced himself into the two-birth compartment, which he had managed to secure at the
end of the carriage for himself and Nellie, the poor tired child was as wakeful as an owl.
"'Who have you been talking to?' she yawned.
"'The eyeglass, Johnny.'
"'Oh, really?' Nellie murmured, interested and impressed.
"'With him, have you? I could hear voices. What sort of man is he?'
"'He seems to be an ass,' said Denry.
"'fearfully ho-ho, ha! Couldn't stand him for long. I've made him believe we have been
married for two years.
Two.
They stood on the balcony of the Hotel Bo-Sit at Montreidou.
A little below to the right was the other hotel, the metropole, with the red and white
Swiss flag waving over its central tower.
A little below that was the terminal station of the funicular railway from Montreux.
The railway ran down the shear of the mountain into the roofs of Montreux, like a wire.
On it, two toy trains crawled towards each other, like.
flies, climbing and descending a wall. Beyond the fringe of hotels that constituted Montreux
was a strip of water, and beyond the water a range of hills, white at the top. So these are the
Alps, Nellie exclaimed. She was disappointed, he also. But when Denry learnt from the guidebook,
and by inquiry, that the strip of lake was seven miles across, and the highest notched peaks
ten thousand feet above the sea, and twenty-five miles off, nearly gasped and was content.
They liked the hotel, Bo-seat. It had been recommended to Denry by a man who knew what was what,
as the best hotel in Switzerland. Don't you be misled by prices, the man had said, and Denry was not.
He paid sixteen francs a day for the two of them at the Bo-seat, and was rather relieved than otherwise
by the absence of finger-bowls. Everything was very good.
except sometimes the hot water.
The hot water cans bore the legend hot water,
but these two words were occasionally the only evidence of heat in the water.
On the other hand, the bedrooms could be made sultry
by merely turning a handle, and the windows were double.
Nellie was wondrously inventive.
They breakfasted in bed,
and she would save butter and honey from the breakfast
to furnish forth afternoon tea,
which was not included in the terms.
She served the butter freshly with ice
by the simple expedient of leaving it outside the window of a night,
and Denry was struck by this house wiffory.
The other guests appeared to be of a comfortable, companionable class,
with, as Denry said, no frills.
They were amazed to learn that a chattering little woman of 35,
who gossiped with everybody,
and soon invited Denry and Nellie to have tea in her room,
was an authentic Russian countess,
inscribed in the visitors lists as Comtes Roul with maid, Bosco.
Her room was the untidiest that Nelly had ever seen, and the tea a picnic.
Still, it was thrilling to have had tea with the Russian countess,
plots, nihilism, secret police, marble palaces.
Those visitors' lists were breathtaking,
pages and pages of them, scores for hotels, thousands of names,
nearly all English,
and all people who came to Switzerland in winter, having naught else to do.
Denry and Nellie bathed in correctness, as in a bath.
The only persons in the hotel with whom they did not get on, nor hit it off,
were a military party, chiefly named Clutterbuck,
and presided over by a major Clutterbuck and his wife.
They sat at a large table in the corner,
a father, mother, several children, a sister-in-law, a sister, a governess,
eight heads in all, and while utterly polite they seemed to draw a ring round themselves.
They grumbled at the hotel. They played bridge, then a newish game,
and once went Denry and the Countess played with them, Denry being an adept card-player,
for shilling points, Denry overheard the sister-in-law saying that she was sure Captain Devereux wouldn't play for shilling points.
This was the first rumour of the existence of Captain Devereur, but afterwards a Captain Devereux,
began to be mentioned several times a day. Captain Devereux was coming to join them, and it seemed
that he was a very particular man. Soon all the rest of the hotel had got its back-up against
this arriving Captain Devereur. Then a clutter-butt cousin came, a smiling, hard, fluffy woman,
and pronounced definitely that the Hotel Boat-seat would never do for Captain Devereux. This cousin
aroused Denry's hostility in a strange way. She imparted to the Countess, who united all sects,
her opinion that Denry and Nellie were on their honeymoon.
At night, in a corner of the drawing-room,
the Countess, delicately, but bluntly, asked Nellie if she had been married long.
"'No,' said Nellie.
"'A month?' asked the Countess, smiling.
"'No,' said Nellie.
The next day all the hotel knew.
The vast edifice of make-believe that Denry and Nellie had laboriously erected,
crumbled at a word, and they stood forth those two, blushing for the criminals they were.
The hotel was delighted. There is more rejoicing in the hotel over one honeymoon couple
than over fifty families with children. But the hotel had a shock the same day. The Clutterbuck
cousin had proclaimed that, owing to the inadequacy of the bedroom furniture, she had been obliged to
employ a sofa as a wardrobe. Then there were more references to Captain Devereux, and then at
dinner it became known, heaven knows how, that the entire Clutterbuck party had given notice,
and was seceding to the Hotel Metropole. Also, they had tried to carry the Countess with them,
but had failed. Now, among the guests of the Hotel Boseet, there had always been a professed scorn
of the rival Hotel Metropole, which was a Frankaday dearer, and famous for its new and rich
furniture. The Metropole had an orchestra twice a week, and the English church services were held
in its drawing-room, and it was larger than the beau-seat.
In spite of these facts, the clients of the Bo-seat affected to despise it,
saying that the food was inferior and that the guests were snobbish.
It was an article of faith in the Bo-seat,
that the Bo-seat was the best hotel on the mountain-side, if not in Switzerland.
The insolence of this defection on the part of the clutter-bucks!
How on earth could people have the face to go to a landlord
and say to him that they meant to desert him in favour of his rival.
Another detail.
The secession of nine or ten people from one hotel to the other
meant that the metropole would decidedly be more populous than the Bo-Sete,
and on the point of numbers the emulation was very keen.
Well, said the Bo-seat, let them go, with their Captain Devereur.
We shall be better without them.
And that deadliest of all feuds sprang up,
a rivalry between the guests of rival hotels.
The metropole had issued a general invitation to a dance, and after the monstrous conduct of the clutter-bucks the question arose whether the Bo-Siet should not boycott the dance.
However, it was settled that the truly effective course would be to go with critical noses in the air, and emit unfavourable comparisons with the Bo-Sete.
The Bo-Sit suddenly became perfect in the esteem of its patrons.
Not another word was heard on the subject of hot water being coated with ice?
and the clutter-bucks, with incredible assurance, slid their luggage off in a sleigh to the metropole in the full light of day amidst the contempt of the faithful.
3. Under the stars, the dancing section of the bow-seat went off in jingling sleighs over the snow to the ball at the metropole.
The distance was not great, but it was great enough to show the inadequacy of firs against twenty degrees of mountain frost,
and it was also great enough to allow the party to come to a general final understanding
that its demeanour must be cold and critical in the gilded halls of the metropole.
The rumour ran that Captain Devereux had arrived,
and everyone agreed that he must be an insufferable booby,
except the Countess rule,
who never used her fluent exotic English to say ill of anybody.
The gilded halls of the metropole certainly were imposing.
The hotel was incontestably larger than the beau-seat,
newer, more richly furnished.
Its occupants, too, had a lordly way with them,
trying to others, but inimitable.
Hence the visitors from the beaux-seat,
as they moved to and fro beneath those crystal chandeliers
from Tottenham Court Road,
had their work cut out to maintain the men of haughty indifference.
Nellie, for instance, frankly, could not do it,
and Denry did not do it very well.
Denry nevertheless did score one point
over Mrs. Clutterbuck's fussy cousin.
"'Captain Devereux has come,' said this latter.
"'He was very late. He'll be downstairs in a few minutes. We shall get him to lead the cartillion.'
"'Captain Devere? Denry questioned.
"'Yes, you've heard us mention him,' said the cousin, affronted.
"'Possibly,' said Denry, "'I don't remember.'
On hearing this brief colloquy, the cohorts of the Bo-seat felt that in Denry they possessed the making of a champion.
There was a disturbing surprise, however, waiting for Denry.
The lift descended, and with a peculiar double action of his arms on the doors,
like a pantomime fairy in merging from an enchanted castle,
a tall, thin man stepped elegantly out of the lift,
and approached the company with a certain mincingness.
But before he could reach the company, several young women had rushed towards him,
as though with the intention of committing suicide by hanging themselves from his neck.
He was in an evening suit so perfect in detail that it might have sustained comparison with the costume of the head-waiter, and he wore an eyeglass in his left eye. It was the eyeglass that made Denry jump. For two seconds he dismissed the notion, but another two seconds of examination showed beyond doubt that this eyeglass was the eyeglass of the train, and Denry had apprehensions.
"'Captain Devereux!' exclaimed several voices.
The manner in which the youthful and the mature affair
clustered around this captain aged forty, and not handsome,
was really extraordinary to the males of the hotel-bo-seat.
Even the little Russian countess attached herself to him at once,
and by reason of her title, her social energy, and her personal distinction,
she took natural precedence of the others.
"'Recognise him,' Denry whispered to his wife.
"'Nelly nodded.
"'He seems rather nice,' she said diffidently.
"'Nice?' Denry repeated the adjective.
"'A man's an ass.'
And the majority of the Beau Seat party
agreed with Denry's verdict either by word or gesture.
Captain Devereux stared fixedly at Denry,
then smiled vaguely and rolled,
"'Hello, how'd you do?'
And they shook hands.
"'So you know him,' someone murmured to Denry.
"'Know him?
Since infancy.'
The inquirer scented facetiousness, but he was somehow impressed.
The remarkable thing was that though he regarded Captain Devereux as a Popinjay,
he could not help feeling a certain slight satisfaction in the fact that they were in some sort acquaintances.
Mystery of the human heart.
He wished sincerely that he had not, in his conversation with the captain in the train,
talked about previous visits to Switzerland. It was dangerous.
The dance achieved that brightness and joviality, which entitle a dance to call itself a success.
The Catillion reached brilliance, owing to the captaincy of Captain Devereur.
Several score opprobious epithets were applied to the captain in the course of the night,
but it was agreed, nemini contradicente, that whatever he would have done in front of a light brigade at Balaclava,
as a leader of Catillians, he was terrific.
"'Many men, however, seemed to argue that if a man who was a man,' led a cotillion,
"'he ought not to lead it too well, on pain of being considered a coxcomb.
At the close, during the hot soup, the worst happened. Denry had known that it would.
Captain Devereux was talking to Nellie, who was respectfully listening about the scenery
when the Countess came up, plate in hand.
"'No, no,' the Countess protested.
"'As for me, I hit your mountains.
"'I was born in the step, where it is all level.
"'Level!
"'Your mountains close me in.
"'I am only here, by order of my doctor.
"'Your mountains get on my nerves.'
"'She shrugged her shoulders.
"'Captain Devereux smiled.
"'It's the same with you, isn't it?'
"'He said, Turling to Nellie.
"'Oh, no,' said Nellie, simply.
"'But your husband told me the other day
"'that when you and he were in july,
Geneva a couple of years ago,
the view of Mont Blanc used to upset you.
View of Mont Blanc?' nearly stammered.
Everyone was aware that she and Denry had never been in Switzerland before,
and that their marriage was indeed less than a month old.
You misunderstood me, said Denry gruffly.
My wife hasn't been to Geneva.
"'Oh,' drawled Captain Devereux.
His oh, contained.
in so much of insinuation, disdain, and lofty amusement that Denry blushed, and when
Nelly saw her husband's cheek, she blushed in competition, and defeated him easily.
It was felt that either Denry had been romancing to the captain, or that he had been married
before, unknown to his Nellie, and had been carrying on, at Geneva.
The situation, although it dissolved of itself in a brief space, was awkward.
It discredited the hotel-bow seat.
It was in the nature of a repulse for the hotel-beau-seat,
frank a day cheaper than the metropole,
and of a triumph for the Popping J.
The fault was utterly Denry's.
Yet he said to himself,
I'll be even with that chap.
On the drive home he was silent.
The theme of conversation in the sleighs,
which did not contain the Countess,
was that the captain had flirted tremendously with the Countess,
and that it amounted to an affair.
4. Captain Devere was equally salient in the Department of Sports. There was a fair sheet of
ice, obtained by cutting into the side of the mountain, and a very good toboggoning track,
about half a mile in length, and full of fine curves, common to the two hotels.
Denry's predilection was for the track. He would lie on his stomach on the little contrivance,
which the Swiss call a luge, and which consists of nought but three bits of wood and two steel-clad
runners, and would course down the perilous curves at twenty miles an hour.
Until the captain came, this was regarded as dashing, because most people were content to sit
on the luge and travel legs foremost, instead of head foremost. But the captain, after a few
eights on the ice, intimated that for the rest no sport was true sport, save the sport of ski-running.
He allowed it to be understood that luges were for infants. He had brought his skis, and these
instruments of locomotion, some six feet in length, made a sensation among the inexperienced.
For when he had strapped them to his feet, the captain, while stating candidly that his skill
was as nothing to that of the Swedish professionals at Samaritz, could assuredly slide over snow
in a manner prodigious and beautiful, and he was exquisitely clothed to the part. His knicker-bockers,
in the elegance of their lines, were the delight of beholders. Skiing became the rage. Even Nellie
insisted on hiring a pair, and the pronunciation of the word ski aroused long discussions
and was never settled by anybody. The captain said ski, but he did not object to she,
which was said to be the more strictly correct by a lady who knew someone who had been
to Norway. People with no shame and no feeling for correctness said brazenly, Sky. Denry, whom
nothing could induce to desert his luge, said that
obviously S-K-I could only spell planks, and thanks to his inspiration, this version was adopted
by the majority. On the second day of Nellie's struggle with her skis, she had more success than
she either anticipated or desired. She had been making experiments at the summit of the track,
slathering about, falling, and being restored to uprightness by as many persons as happened
to be near. Skies seemed to her the most ungovernable and least practical means of
that the madness of man had ever concocted. Skates were well-behaved, old horses compared to these long,
untamed fiends, and a luge was like a tricycle. Then suddenly a friendly starting push
drove her a yard or two, and she glided past the level onto the first imperceptible slope of the track.
By some hazard her two planks were exactly parallel, as they ought to be, and she glided forward
miraculously. And people heard her say,
How lovely! And then people heard her say,
Oh! Oh! For her pace was increasing, and she dared not strike her pole into the ground.
She had, in fact, no control whatever over those two planks, to which her feet were strapped.
She might have been Maseppa and they Mustangs. She could not even fall.
So she fled down the preliminary strait of the track, and ecstatic spectators cried,
"'Look how well Mrs. Machen is doing!'
"'Mrs. Machen would have given all her furs
"'to be anywhere off those planks.'
"'On the adjacent fields of glittering snow.
"'The captain had been giving his adored countess
"'a lesson in the use of skis,
"'and they stood together,
"'the countess somewhat insecure,
"'by the side of the track, at its first curve.
"'Nellie, dumb with excitement and amazement,
"'swept towards them.
"'Look out!' cried the captain.
"'In vain.
"'He might himself,
perhaps have escaped, but he could not abandon his countess in the moment of peril, and the
countess could only move after much thought and many efforts, being scarce more advanced than
Nelly. Nellie's willful planks quite ignored the curve, and, as it were afloat on them, she charged
off the track and into the captain and the countess. The impact was tremendous. Six skis
waved like semaphores in the air. Then all was still. Then, as the beholders, haste,
to the scene of the disaster. The Countess laughed, and Nellie laughed. The laugh of the captain
was not heard. The sole casualty was a wound, about a foot long, in the hinterland of the
captain's unique knickerbockers. And as threads of that beautiful check pattern were afterwards
found attached to the wheel of Nellie's pole, the cause of the wound was indisputable, and the
captain departed home, chiefly backwards, but with great rapidity. In the after
afternoon denry went down to montreux and returned with an opal bracelet which nelly wore at dinner oh what a ripping bracelet said a girl yes said nelly my husband gave it me only to-day
i suppose it's your birthday or something the inquisitive girl ventured no said nelly how nice of him said the girl
the next day captain devereur appeared in riding-breeches they were not correct
for ski-running, but they were the best he could do. He visited a tailor's in Montreux.
Five. The Countess Rule had a large sleigh of her own, also a horse. Both were hired from Montreux.
In this vehicle, sometimes alone, sometimes with a male servant, she would drive at Russian speed
over the undulating mountain roads, and for such expeditions she always wore a large red cloak
with a hood. Often she was thus seen, in the afternoon, a scarlet made a bright moving patch on the vast
expanse of snow. Once, at some distance from the village, two tale-tellers observed a man on skis
carrearing in the neighbourhood of the sleigh. It was Captain Devereur. The flirtation, therefore,
was growing warmer and warmer. The hotels hummed with the tidings of it. But the
countess never said anything, nor could anything be extracted from her by even the
most experienced gossips. She was an agreeable, but a mysterious woman, as befitted the Russian countess.
A gained and the gain was she and the captains seen together afar off in the landscape.
Certainly it was a novelty in flirtations. People wondered what might happen between the two
at the fancy-dress ball, which the Hotel Bo Cete was to give in return for the hospitality
of the Hotel Metropon. The ball was offered, not in love, but in emulation, almost in hate,
for the jealousy displayed by the Beaux-Seat against the increasing insolence of the Metropole had become acute.
The heirs of the Captain, and his Leages, the Clutterbuck Party, had reached the limit of the Bo-Seat's endurance.
The Metropole seemed to take it for granted that the Captain would lead the Catillian at the Bo-Siet's ball, as it had led it at the Metropoles.
And then, on the very afternoon of the ball, the Countess received a telegram.
It was said from St. Petersburg, which,
necessitated her instant departure, and she went, in an hour, down to Montreux by the funicular railway, and was lost to the beau-seat. This was a blow to the prestige of the beau-seat, for the Countess was its chief star, and moreover much loved by her fellow-guests, despite her curious weakness for the Popinjay and the mystery of her outings with him.
In the stables, Denry saw the Countess's hired sleigh and horse, and in the sleigh her glowing red cloak.
and he had one of his ideas, which he executed, although snow was beginning to fall.
In ten minutes he and Nellie were driving forth, and Nellie in the red cloak held the reins.
Denry, in the coachman's furs, sat behind.
They whirled past the Hotel Metropole, and shortly afterwards, on the wild road towards Atelens,
Denry saw a pair of skis, scudding as quickly as skis can scud in their rear.
It was astonishing how the sleigh, with a little bit of skis, with a pair of skis.
all the merry jingles of its bells kept that pair of skis at a distance of about a hundred yards.
It seemed to invite the skis to overtake it, and then to regret the invitation and flee further.
Up the hills it would crawl, for the skis climbed slowly. Downhill it galloped, for the skis
slid on the slopes at a dizzy pace. Occasionally a shout came from the skis, and the snow fell
thicker and thicker. So, for four or five miles. Starlight commenced.
Then the road made a huge descending curve round a hollowed meadow, and the horse galloped its best.
But the skis, making a straight line down the snow, acquired the speed of an express, and gained on the sleigh one yard in every three.
At the bottom where the curve met the straight line was a farmhouse and outbuildings, and a hedge and a stone wall and other matters.
The sleigh arrived at the point first, but only by a trifle.
"'Mind your toes!' then remuttered to himself,
"'meaning an injunction to the skis, whose toes were three feet long.
"'The skis, through the eddying snow, yelled frantically to the sleigh to give room.
"'The skis shot up into the road, and in swerving aside, swerved into a snow-laden hedge,
"'and clean over it into the farmyard, where they stuck themselves up in the air,
"'as skis will when the person to whose feet they are attached is lying prone.
The door of the farm opened, and a woman appeared.
She saw the skis at her doorstep.
She heard the sleigh bells, but the sleigh had already vanished into the dusk.
"'Well, that was a bit of a lark. That was, Countess,' said Denry to Nelly.
"'That will be something to talk about. We'd better drive home through Corsier, and quick, too.
It'll be quite dark soon.'
"'Supposing he's dead!' Nellie breathed, aghast, raining in the horse.
"'Not he,' said Denry.
I saw him beginning to sit up.
But how will he get home?
It looks a very nice farmhouse, said Denry.
I should think he'd be sorry to leave it.
Six.
When Denry entered the dining-room of the Bo-seat,
which had been cleared for the ball,
his costume drew attention not so much by its splendour or ingenuity
as by its peculiarity.
He wore a short Chinese-shaped jacket,
which his wife had made out of blue linen,
and a flat Chinese hat to match, which they had constructed together on a basis of cardboard.
But his thighs were enclosed in a pair of absurdly ample riding-bridges of an impressive check,
and cut to a comic exaggeration of the English pattern.
He had bought the cloth for these at the tailors in Montreux.
Below them were very tight leggings, also English.
In reply to a question as to what or whom he supposed himself to represent, he replied,
a captain of Chinese cavalry, of course,
and he put an eyeglass into his left eye and stared.
Now it had been understood that Nellie was to appear as Lady Jane Grey,
but she appeared as little red riding-hood,
wearing over her frock the forgotten cloak of the Countess Roul.
Instantly he saw her, Denry hurried towards her,
with a movement of the legs and a flourish of the eyeglass in his left hand,
which powerfully suggested a figure familiar to every member of the company.
there was laughter people saw that the idea was immensely funny and clever and the laughter ran about like fire at the same time some persons were not quite sure whether denry had not lapsed a little from the finest taste in this caricature
and all of them were secretly afraid that the uncomfortable might happen when captain devere arrived however captain devere did not arrive the party from the metropole came with the news that he had not been seen at the hotel for dinner
It was assumed that he had been to Montreux and had missed the funicular back.
"'Our two stars simultaneously eclipsed,' said Denry,
as the Clutterbuck's, representing all the history of England, stared at him curiously.
"'Why?' exclaimed the Clutterbuck cousin.
"'Who's the other?'
"'The Countess,' said Denry.
"'She went this afternoon, three o'clock.'
"'And all the Metropole Party fell into grief.
"'It's a world of coincidences,' said Denry, with emphasis.
"'You don't mean to insinuate,' said Mrs. Clutterbuck, with a nervous laugh,
"'that Captain Devereux has er gone after the Countess.'
"'Oh, no,' said Denry, with unction.
"'Such a thought never entered my head.'
"'I think you're a very strange man, Mr. Machen,' retorted Mrs. Clutterbuck,
hostile, and not a bit reassured.
"'May one ask what that costume is supposed to be?'
"'A captain of Chinese cavalry,' said Denry, lifting his eyeglass.
nevertheless the dance was a remarkable success and little by little even the sternest adherents of the absent captain devereux deign to be amused by denry's chinese gestures also denry led the cartilion and was thereafter greatly applauded by the beausite
the visitors agreed among themselves that considering that his name was not deverer denry acquitted himself honourably later he went to the bureau and returning whispered to his wife
"'It's all right. He's come back safe.'
"'How do you know?' I've just telephoned to ask.
Denry's subsequent humour was wildly gay, and for some reason which nobody could comprehend,
he put a sling round his left arm. His efforts to insert the eyeglass into his left eye with his right hand
were insistently ludicrous, and became a sure source of laughter for all beholders.
When the Metropole Party were getting into their slaves to go home, it had ceased snowing.
Denry was still trying to insert his eyeglass into his left eye with his right hand to the universal joy.
Seven
But the joy of the night was feeble in comparison with the violent joy of the next morning.
Denry was wandering, apparently aimless, between the finish of the tobogging track and the portals of the metropole.
The snowfall had repaired the defects of the worn track, but it needed to be flattened down by use,
and a number of conscientious liugures were flattening it by frequent descents, which grew faster at each repetition.
Other holiday-makers were idling about in the sunshine. A page-boy of the metropole departed in the direction of the beaux-seat with a note.
At length, the hour was nearing eleven. Captain Devereux, Languid, put his head out of the metropole and sniffed the air.
Finding the air sufferable, he came forth onto the steps. His left arm was in a third.
sling. He was wearing the new knicker-bock as which he had ordered at Montreux, and which were of
precisely the same vast cheque as had ornamented Denry's legs on the previous night.
"'Hello,' said Denry, sympathetically.
"'What's this?'
The captain needed sympathy.
"'The skiing yesterday afternoon,' said he with a little laugh,
"'hasn't the Countess told any of you?'
"'No,' said Denry not a word.
The captain seemed to pause a moment.
"'Yes,' said he,
"'a trifling accident,
"'oh, skiing with the Countess.
"'That is, I was skiing,
"'and she was in her sleigh.
"'Then this is why you didn't turn up at the dance.'
"'Yes,' said the captain.
"'Well,' said Denry,
"'I hope it's not serious.
"'I can tell you one thing.
"'The cotillion was a most fearful frost without you.'
"'The captain seemed grateful.
"'They strolled together toward the track.
"'The first.
group of people that caught sight of the captain with his checked legs and his arm in a sling began
to smile. Observing this smile and fancying himself deceived, the captain attempted to put his
eyeglass into his left eye with his right hand, and regularly failed. His efforts towards
this feat changed the smiles to enormous laughter. "'I dare say it's awfully funny,' said he.
"'But what can a fellow do with one arm in the sling?' The laughter was merely intensified.
and the group, growing as luge after luge arrived at the end of the track,
seemed to give itself up to mirth,
to the exclusion of even a proper curiosity about the nature of the captain's damage.
Each fresh attempt put the eyeglass to his eye, was coal on the crackling fire.
The clutter-bucks alone seemed glum.
"'What on earth is the joke?' Denry asked primly.
Captain Devere came to grief late yesterday afternoon, skiing with the Countess Rule.
"'That's why he didn't turn up last night.
"'By the way, where was it, Captain?'
"'On the mountain in near Atalens,' Devereux answered gloomily.
"'Herply there was a farmhouse near, it was almost dark.'
"'With the Countess?' demanded a young, impulsive schoolgirl.
"'You did say the Countess, didn't you?' Denry asked.
"'Well, certainly,' said the Captain, testily.
"'Well,' said the schoolgirl,
with the nonchalant, thoughtless cruelty of youth.
Considering we all saw the Countess off in the funicular at three o'clock,
I don't see how you could have been skiing with her when it was nearly dark.
And the child turned up the hill with her luge,
leaving her elders to unnot the situation.
"'Oh, yes,' said Denry,
"'I forgot to tell you that the Countess left yesterday after lunch.'
At the same moment, page boy, reappearing, touched his cap
and placed a note in the captain's only free hand.
"'Couldn't deliver it, sir.'
The contest left early yesterday afternoon."
Convicted of imaginary adventure with noble ladies, the captain made his retreat, muttering,
back to the hotel.
At lunch, Denry related the exact circumstances to a delighted table, and the exact circumstances
soon reached the Clutterbuck faction at the Metropole.
On the following day, the Clutterbuck faction and Captain Devereux, now fully enlightened,
left Montre d'U for some paradise unknown.
If murderous thoughts could kill, Denry would have lain dead.
But he survived to go with about half the Bo-seat guests to the funicular station
to wish the Clutter-Bucks a pleasant journey.
The captain might have challenged him to a duel,
but a haughty and icy ceremoniousness was deemed the best treatment for Denry.
Never show a wound, must have been the captain's motto.
The Bo-seat had scored effectively,
and now that its rival had lost eleven clients by one seat.
single train. It beat the metropole, even in vulgar numbers. Denry had an embryo of a conscience
somewhere, and Nellys was fully developed. Well, said Denry, in reply to Nellie's conscience,
it serves him right for making me look a fool over that Geneva business. And besides, I can't
stand-upishness, and I won't. I'm from the five towns, I am. On which singular utterance,
the incident closed.
11. This is a Librivox recording. All Librevox recordings are in the public domain. For further information,
or to volunteer, please visit Librevox.org. Recording by Andy Minter
The Card, A Story of Adventure in the Five Towns.
Chapter 12 The Supreme Honor
1
Denry was not as regular in his goings and comings as the generality of businessmen in the five towns,
no doubt because he was not by nature a businessman at all,
but an adventurous spirit who happened to be in a business which was much too good to leave.
He was continually, as they say there, up to something that caused changes in daily habits.
Moreover, the Universal Thrift Club, limited, was so automatic and self-winding,
that Denry ran no risks in leaving it,
often to the care of his highly drilled staff. Still, he did usually come home to his tea
about six o'clock of an evening, like the rest, and like the rest he brought with him a copy of
the signal to glance at during tea. One afternoon in July he arrived thus upon his waiting
wife at Macon House Bleakridge, and she could see that an idea was fermenting in his head.
Nelly understood him. One of the most delightful and reassuring things about his married life was
Nellie's instinctive comprehension of him. His mother understood him profoundly, but she understood
him in a manner sardonic, slightly malicious, and even hostile, whereas Nellie understood him
with her absurd love. According to his mother's attitude, then it was guilty until he had
proved himself innocent. According to Nellys, he was always right, and always clever in what he
did, until he himself had said that he had been wrong and stupid, and not always then.
Nevertheless, his mother was just as ridiculously proud of him as Nelly was, but she would
have perished on the scaffold rather than admit that Denry differed in any detail from
the common run of sons. Mrs. Machen had departed from Machen House without waiting to be
asked. It was characteristic of her that she had returned to Broom Street and rented there
an out-of-date cottage without a single one of the labour-saming contrivances that distinguished
the residence which her son had originally built for her.
It was still delicious for Denry to sit down to tea in the dining-room, that miracle of
conveniences, opposite the smile of his wife, which told him, A, that he was wonderful,
B, that she was enchanted to be alive, and C, that he had deserved her particularly
caressing attentions, and would receive them. On the afternoon in July, the smile told him,
D, that he was possessed by one of his ideas.
"'extraudinary how she tumbles to things,' he reflected.
"'Nelly's new fox-terrier had come in from the garden through the French window,
"'and eaten part of a muffin, and Denry had eaten a muffin and a half,
"'before Nellie, straightening herself proudly,
"'and putting her shoulders back, a gesture of hers, thought fit to murmur,
"'Well, anything thrilling happened to-day?'
"'Denry opened the green sheet and read,
"'Suddened death of Alderman Bloor in London.
"'What price that?'
"'Oh!' exclaimed Nellie.
"'How shocked Father will be! They were always rather friendly.
"'By the way, I had a letter from Mother this morning.
"'It appears as if Toronto was a sort of paradise,
"'but you can see the old thing prefers Burzley.
"'Farthur's had a boil on his neck, just at the edge of his collar.
"'He says it's because he's too well.
"'What did Mr. Bloer die of?'
"'He was in the fashion,' said Denry.
"'How?'
"'Appendicitis, of course.
operation, domino, all over in three days.
Poor man, Nellie murmured,
trying to feel sad for a change and not succeeding.
And he was to have been mayor in November, wasn't he?
How disappointing for him!
I expect he's got something else to think about, said Denry.
After a pause, Nellie asked suddenly,
Who'll be mayor now?
Well, said Denry,
his worship counsellor Barlow, J.P.
extremely cross if he isn't.
How horrid, said Nelly, frankly, and he's got nobody at all to be mairese.
Mrs. Preeterman would be mares, said Denry.
When there's no wife or daughter, it's always a sister, if there is one.
But can you imagine Mrs. Prettyman as mairese?
Why, they say she scrubs her own doorstep after dark.
They ought to make you mare.
Do you fancy yourself as mairese? he inquired.
I should be better than Miss.
"'Mrs. Prettyman, anyhow.'
"'I believe you'd make an A-1, Mayoress,' said Denry.
"'I should be frightfully nervous,' she confidentially admitted.
"'I doubt it,' said he.
"'The fact was that since her return to Bursley from the honeymoon,
"'nelly was an altered woman.
"'She had acquired, as it were, in a day, to an astonishing extent,
"'what in the five towns is called a nerve.'
"'I should like to try it,' said she.
"'One day you'll have to try.
it, whether he want to or not.
When will that be?
Don't know.
Might be next year, but one.
Old Barlow's pretty certain to be chosen for next November.
It's looked on us his turn next.
I know there's been a good bit of talk about me for the year after Barlow.
Of course, Bloor's death will advance everything by a year.
But even if I come next after Barlow, it'll be too late.
Too late?
Too late for what?
I'll tell you, said Denry.
I wanted to be the youngest mayor that Bursley's ever had.
It was only a kind of notion I had a long time ago.
I'd given it up, because I knew there was no chance
unless I came before Blur, which of course I couldn't do.
Now he's dead.
If I could upset old Barlow's apple-cart,
I should just be the youngest mare by the skin of my teeth.
Huskison, the mayor in 1884, was aged 34 and six months.
I've looked it all up this afternoon.
How lovely if you could be the youngest mare.
Yes, I'd tell you how I feel.
I feel that if I didn't want to be mayor at all,
if I can't be the youngest mayor, you know, she knew.
Oh, she cried, do upset Mr Barlow's apple-cart.
He's a horrid old thing.
Should I be the youngest maeress?
Not by chalks, said he.
Huskison's sister was only sixteen.
But that's only playing at being mairese, Nellie protested.
"'Anyhow, I do think you might be youngest, Mayor.
"'Who settles it?'
"'The Council, of course.
"'Nobody likes Councillor Barlow.
"'He'll be still less liked when he's wound up the Bursley Football Club.'
"'Well, urge him to wind it up, then.
"'But I don't see what football's got to do with being Mayor.'
"'She endeavoured to look like a serious politician.
"'You're nothing but a cuckoo,' Denry pleasantly informed her.
"'Football's got to do with everything,
and it's been a disastrous mistake in my career that I'd never taken any interest in football.
Old Barlow wants no urging to wind up the football club.
He's absolutely set on it.
He's lost too much over it.
If I could stop him from winding it up, I might—
What?
I don't know.
She perceived that his idea was yet vague.
Two.
Not very many days afterwards.
The walls of Burzley called attention by small,
blue and red posters, blue and red being the historic colours of the Beresley Football Club,
to a public meeting, which was to be held in the town hall under the presidency of the Mayor,
to consider what steps could be taken to secure the future of the Beresley Football Club.
There were two great football clubs in the five towns,
Nipe, one of the oldest clubs in England, and Burseley.
Both were in the league, though Nipe was in the first division, while Burstley was only in the second.
Both were, in fact, limited companies, engaged as much in the pursuit of dividends as in the practice of the one ancient and glorious sport, which appeals to the reason and the heart of England.
Neither ever paid a dividend.
Both employed professionals, who by a strange chance, were nearly all born in Scotland, and both also employed trainers, who, before an important match, took the teams off to a hydropathic establishment, far, far distant from any public house.
This was called training.
Now, whereas the night club was struggling along fairly well, the Burzley Club had come to the end of its resources. The great football public had practically deserted it. The explanation, of course, was that Burzley had been losing too many matches. The great football public had no use for anything but victories. It would treat its players like gods, so long as they won. But when they happened to lose, the great football public simply sulked. It did not kick a man that was down. It merely. It meant to be able to lose. It
ignored him, well knowing that the man could not get up without help. It cared nothing whatever
for fidelity, municipal patriotism, fair play, the chances of war, or dividends on capital.
If it could see victories, it would pay sixpence, but it would not pay sixpence to assist
at defeats. Still, when at a special general meeting of the Bursley Football Club Limited,
held at the registered office, the coffee-house, Bursley, Councillor Barlow, J.P.,
Chairman of the Company since the creation of the League, announced that the directors had reluctantly come to the conclusion that they could not conscientiously embark on the dangerous risks of the approaching season, and that it was the intention of the directors to wind up the club, in default of adequate public interest.
When Bursley read this in the signal, the town was certainly shocked. Was the famous club, then, to disappear forever, and the football ground to be sold in plots, and the grandstand for firewood?
The shock was so severe that the death of Alderman Bloor,
nonetheless a mighty figure in Bursley,
had passed as a minor event.
Hence the advertisement of the meeting in the town hall
caused joy and hope,
and people said to themselves,
something's bound to be done,
the old club can't go out like that,
and everybody grew quite sentimental.
And although nothing is supposed to be capable
of filling Burrsley Town Hall,
except a political meeting and an old folks treat,
Burrsley Town Hall was as near full as made no matter for the football question.
Many men had cheerfully sacrificed a game of billiards and a glass of beer in order to attend it.
The mayor in the chair was a mild old gentleman who knew nothing whatever about football,
and had probably never seen a football match,
but it was essential that the meeting should have august patronage,
and so the mayor had been trapped and tamed,
on the mere fact that he paid an annual subscription to the golf club,
certain parties built up the legend that he was a true sportsman with the true interests of sport in his soul.
He uttered a few phrases, such as the manly game, old associations,
bound up with the history of England, splendid fellows, indomitable pluck, dogged my misfortune,
indeed he produced quite an impression on the rude and grim audience,
and then he called upon Councillor Barlow to make a statement.
"'Councilor Barlow, on the mayor's right, was a different kind of man from the mayor.
He was fifty, and iron-gray, with whiskers but no moustache, short, stoutish, raspish.
He said nothing about manliness, pluck, history, or old Langsine.
He said that he had given his services as chairman to the football club for thirteen years,
that he had taken up two thousand pounds worth of shares in the company,
and that as at that moment the company's liabilities would exactly absorb its assets.
His £2,000 was worth exactly nothing.
"'You may say,' he said,
"'I've lost that £2,000 in thirteen years.
"'That is, it's the same as if I'd been steadily paying £3 a week out of my own pocket
"'to provide football matches that you chaps wouldn't take the trouble to go and see.
"'That's the straight of it.
"'What have I got for my pains?
"'Nothing but worries and these.'
he pointed to his grey hairs.
"'And I'm not alone. There's others.
And now I have to come and defend myself at a public meeting.
I'm supposed not to have the best interests of football at heart.
Me and my co-directors,' he proceeded, with an even rougher rasbishness,
have warned the town again and again what would happen if the matches weren't better patronised.
And now it's happened, and now it's too late.
You want to do something.
You can't. It's too late.
"'There's only one thing the matter with first-class football in Burzley,' he concluded,
"'and it isn't the players. It's the public. It's yourselves. You're the most craven lot of
Tom Fools that ever a big football club had to do with. When we lose a match, what do you do?
Do you come and encourage us next time?'
"'No. You stop away, and leave us fifty or sixty pounds out of pocket on a match,
just to teach us better. Do you expect us to win every match?'
"'Why? Preston North End itself.'
here he spoke solemnly of heroes.
Preston North End itself, in its great days, didn't win every match.
It lost to Ackrington.
But did the Preston public deserted?
No.
You?
You haven't got the pluck of a louse nor the faithfulness of a cat.
You starved your football club to death,
and now you call a meeting to weep and grumble,
and you have the insolence to write letters to the signal about bad management forsooth.
If anybody in the hall thinks that he can manage
this club better than me and my co-directors have done, I may say that we hold a majority of
the shares, and we'll part with the whole show to any clever person or persons who care
to take it off our hands at a bargain price. That's dorking.' He sat down. Silence fell.
Even in five towns a public meeting is seldom bullied as Councillor Barlow had bullied that
meeting. It was aghast. Councillor Barlow had never been popular. He had not. He had not
merely been respected, but thenceforth he became even less popular than before.
I am sure we shall all find Councillor Barlow's heat quite excusable, the bear diplomatically began.
No heat at all, the counsellor interrupted, simply cold truth.
A number of speakers followed, and nearly all of them were against the directors.
Some, with prodigious memories for every combination of players in every match that had ever been played,
sought to prove by detailed instances that Councillor Barlow and his co-directors had persistently and regularly muddled their work during thirteen industrious years.
And they defended the insulted public, by asserting that no public that respected itself would pay six minutes to watch the wretched football provided by Councillor Barlow.
They shouted that the team wanted reconstituting, wanted new blood.
Yes, shouted Councillor Barlow in reply, and how are you again?
going to get new blood, with transfer fees as high as they are now. You can't get even an average
good player for less than £200. Where's the money to come from? Anybody want to lend a thousand
or so on second debentures? He laughed sneeringly. No one showed a desire to invest in second
debentures of the Bursley FC Limited. Still, speakers kept harping on the necessity of new blood
in the team. And then others, Boulder, harped on the necessity of new blood on the board.
Shares on sale, cried the counsellor, any buyers? Or, he added, do you want something for nothing?
As usual. At length a gentleman rose at the back of the hall.
I don't pretend to be an expert on football, said he, though I think it is a great game,
but I should like to say a few words as to this question of new blood.
The audience crained its neck.
Will Mr. Councillor Macon kindly step up to the platform, the mayor suggested, and up Denry stepped.
The thought in every mind was, what's he going to do?
What's he got up his sleeve this time?
Three cheers for Macon, people chanted gaily.
Order, cried the Mayor.
Denry faced the audience.
He was now accustomed to audiences.
He said,
If I'm not mistaken, one of the greatest modern footballers is a native of this town,
and scores of voices yelled,
Aye, Kalear! Kalear! Greatest centre forward in England!
Yes, said Denry.
Kalear is the man, I mean.
Kalear left the district, unfortunately for the district, at the age of nineteen for Liverpool.
And it was not until after he left that his astounding abilities were perceived.
It isn't too much to say that he made the form.
of Liverpool City, and I believe it's a fact that he scored more goals in three seasons
than any other player has ever done in the league. Then York County, which was in a tight place
last year, bought him from Liverpool for a high price, and as all the world knows, Kaler had his
leg broken in the first match he played for his new club. That just happened to be the ruin
of the York Club, which is now quite suddenly in bankruptcy, which happily we're not, and which
is disposing of its players.
Gentlemen, I say that Collier
ought to come back to his native town.
He's fitter than ever he was,
and his proper place is in his native
town. Loud
cheers. As captain and centre
forward of the club of the mother of the
five towns, he would be an
immense acquisition and attraction,
and he'd lead us to victory.
Renewed cheers. And
how? demanded Councillor Barlow
jumping up angrily,
are we to get him back to his precious
native town? Councilor Machen admits that he's not an expert on football. It will probably be
news to him that Aston Villa have offered £700 to York for the transfer of Kalear,
and Blackburn Rovers have offered £750, and they're fighting it out between them. Any gentleman
willing to put down £800 to buy Kalear for Pursley?' he sneered.
"'I don't mind telling you that steam-engines and the King himself couldn't get Kalear into our club.'
"'Quite finished?' Denry inquired, still standing.
Laughter, overtopped by Councillor Barlow's snort as he sat down.
Denry lifted his voice.
"'Mr. Kalear, will you be good enough to step forward and let us all have a look at you?'
The effect of these apparently simple words surpassed any effect previously obtained by the most complex flights of oratory in that hall.
A young, blushing, clumsy, long-limbed, small-bodied giant, stumbled along the central aisle,
and climbed the steps to the platform, where Denry pointed him to a seat.
He was recognised by all the true votaries of the game,
and everybody said to everybody,
"'By gosh, it's him right enough, it's Calais!
And a vast astonishment, an expectation of good fortune filled the hall.
A applause burst forth, and though no one knew what the appearance of Calais,
signified, the applause continued and waxed.
"'Good old Collier!'
The horse shouts succeeded each other.
"'Good old Machen!'
"'Anyhow,' said Denry,
when the storm was stilled,
"'we've got him here, without either steam-engines or his majesty.
"'Will the directors of the club accept him?'
"'And what about the transfer?'
"'Counsela Barlow demanded.
"'Would you accept him and try another season
"'if you could get him free?'
Denry retorted.
Councillor Barlow always knew his mind,
and was never afraid to let other people share that knowledge.
Yes, he said.
Then I will see that you have the transfer free.
But what about York?
I have settled with York provisionally, said Denry.
That's my affair.
I have returned from York to-day.
Leave all that to me.
This town has had many benefactors,
far more important than myself.
But I shall be able to claim,
this originality. I am the first to make a present of a live man to the town.
Gentlemen, Mr. Mayor, I venture to call for three cheers for the greatest centre-forward in England,
our fellow-townsman. The scene, as the signal said, was unique.
And at the sports club, and the other clubs afterwards, men said to each other,
"'No one but him would have thought of bringing Killeur over specially and showing him on the platform.
that's cost him above tuppence that has two days later a letter appeared in the signal signed fiat justitia
suggesting that denry as some reward for his public spirit ought to be the next mayor of bursley in place of alderman bloer deceased the letter urged that he would make an admirable mayor the sort of mayor the old town wanted in order to wake it up and also it pointed out that denry would be the youngest mayor that bursley had ever had
and probably the youngest mayor in England that year.
The sentiment in the last idea appealed to the town.
The town decided that it would positively like
to have the youngest mayor it had ever had,
and probably the youngest mayor in England that year.
The signal printed dozens of letters on the subject.
When the council met, more informally than formally,
to choose a chief magistrate in place of the dead alderman,
several councillors urged that
what Bursley wanted was a young and pop
"'and in fine, Councillor Barlow was shelled for a year.
"'On the choice being published, the entire town said,
"'Now we shall have a morality, and don't you forget it.'
"'And Henry said to Nellie,
"'you'll be mayorist of the youngest mayor, etc., my child,
"'and it's cost me, including hotel and travelling expenses,
"'eight hundred and eleven pounds, six and sevenpence.'
"'Three.
"'The rightness of the
Council in selecting Denry as Mayor was confirmed in a singular manner by the behaviour of the football
and of Collier at the opening match of the season. It was a philanthropic match between Beresley and
Axe, for the benefit of a county orphanage, and according to the custom of such matches,
the ball was formally kicked off by a celebrity, a pillar of society. The ceremony of kicking
off has no sporting significance. The celebrity merely with gentleness propels the ball out of the
white circle, and then flies for his life from the melee, but it is supposed to add to the moral
splendour of the game. In the present instance, the posters said, kick off at 345 by Councillor
E. H. Machin, Mayor Designate, and indeed no other celebrity could have been decently selected.
On the fine afternoon of the match, Denry therefore discovered himself with a new football at his
toes, a silk hat on his head, and twenty-two Herculane players menacing him in
attitudes expressive of an intention to murder him.
Burzley had lost the toss, and hence Denry had to kick towards the Burzley goal.
As the signal said, he dispatched the sphere, straight into the keeping of Kare,
who as centre-forward was facing him, and Kalear was dodging down the field with it,
before the axe-players had finished admiring Denry's effrontery.
Every reader will remember with a thrill the historic match in which the immortal Jimmy Brown,
on the last occasion when he captained Blackburn Rovers, dribbled the ball himself down the length of the field, scored a goal, and went home with the English Cup under his arm.
Calier evidently intended to imitate the feat.
He was entirely wrong.
Dribbling tactics had been killed forever years before by Preston North End,
who invented the passing game.
Yet Calier went on, and good luck seemed to float over him like a cherub.
Finally he shot, a wild high shot,
but there was an adverse wind which dragged the ball down,
swept it round, and blew it into the net.
The first goal had been scored in twenty-seventh.
seconds. It was also the last in the match. Collier's reputation was established, useless for solemn
experts to point out that he had simply been larking for the gallery, and that the result was a shocking
fluke. Calier's reputation was established. He became at once the idol of the populace.
As Denry walked gingerly off the field to the grandstand, he too was loudly cheered,
and he could not help feeling that somehow it was he who had scored that goal.
and although nobody uttered the precise thought, most people did secretly think, as they
gazed at the triumphant Denry, that a man who had triumphed like that, because he triumphed
like that, was the right sort of man to be mayor, the kind of man they needed.
Denry became identified with the highest class of local football. This fact led to a curious
crisis in the history of municipal manners. On Corporation Sunday,
The mayor walks to church, preceded by the mace, and followed by the alderman and councillors,
the borough officials, the volunteers, and the fire brigade.
After all these in the procession come individuals known as prominent citizens.
Now the first and second elevens of the Burseley Football Club, headed by Kalear,
expressed their desire to occupy a place in Denry's mayoral procession.
They felt that some public acknowledgement was due to the mayor for his services to the national
sport. Denry instantly agreed with thanks. The notion seemed to him entirely admirable.
Then some unfortunately inspired Parson wrote to the signal to protest against professional
football as following the chief magistrate of the borough to church. His arguments were that
such a thing was unheard of, and that football was the cause of a great deal of evil gambling.
Some people were inclined to agree with the protest, until Denry wrote to the signal and put a few
questions. Was Burlesley proud of its football team, or was Burrsley ashamed of its football team?
Was the practice of football incompatible with good citizenship? Was there anything dishonourable
in playing football, or professional footballers to be considered as social pariahs? Was there
any class of beings to whom the churches ought to be closed? The parson founded in a storm of
opprobrium, scorn, and ironic laughter, though the town laughed.
it only laughed to hide its disgust of the parson.
People began to wonder whether the teams would attend in costume,
carrying the football between them on a charger as a symbol.
No such multitudes ever greeted a mayoral procession in Burseley before.
The footballers, however, appeared in ordinary costume,
many of them in frock-coats,
but they wore neckties of the club colours,
a device which was agreed to be in the nicest taste.
St. Luke's church was crowded,
and what is stranger the churchyard was also crowded.
The church barely held the procession itself
and the ladies who, by influence,
had been accommodated with seats in advance.
Thousands of persons filled the churchyard,
and to prevent them from crushing into the packed fane
and bursting it at its weakest point in the apse,
the doors had to be locked and guarded.
Four women swooned during the service.
Neither Mrs. Machen senior nor Nellie was among the four.
it was the first time that any one had been known to swoon at a religious service held in november this fact alone gave a tremendous prestige to denry's morality
when with nelly on his arm he emerged from the church to the thunders of the organ the greeting which he received in the churchyard though the solemnity of the occasion for bad clapping lacked naught in brilliance and efficacy
The real point and delight of that corporation Sunday was not fully appreciated till later.
It had been expected that the collection after the sermon would be much larger than usual,
because the congregation was much larger than usual.
But the churchwardens were startled to find it four times as large as usual.
They were further startled to find only three threply bits amongst all the coins.
This singularity led to comment and to note comparing.
everybody had noticed for weeks past a growing dearth of threpne bits. Indeed,
Threpne bits had practically vanished from circulation in the five towns.
On the Monday it became known that the clerks of the various branches of the Universal Thrift
Club Limited had paid into the banks enormous and unparalleled quantities of Threpne bits,
and for at least a week afterwards everybody paid for everything in Threpne Bits,
and the piquant news passed from mouth to mouth that then
to the simple end of ensuring a thumping collection for charities on corporation Sunday
had used the vast organisation of the thrift club to bring about a famine of threepney bits.
In the annals of the town that Sunday is referred to as Threepney Bit Sunday,
because it was so happily devoid of Threepney Bits.
A little group of counsellors were discussing Denry.
What a car, said one, laughing joyously,
He's a rare and no mistake.
"'Of course this will make him more popular than ever,' said another.
"'We've never had a man to touch him for that.'
"'And yet?' demanded Councillor Barlow.
"'What's he done? Has he ever done a day's work in his life?
"'What great cause is he identified with?'
"'He's identified,' said the Speaker,
"'with the great cause of cheering us all up.'
"'End of Chapter 12 and of
"'the Card by Arnold Bennett.'
Thank you.
