6601 lines
391 KiB
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6601 lines
391 KiB
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Essays of Travel by Stevenson**
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#30 in our series by Robert Louis Stevenson
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Essays of Travel
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by Robert Louis Stevenson
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August, 1996 [Etext #627]
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Essays of Travel by Stevenson**
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*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
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Essays of Travel by Robert Louis Stevenson
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Scanned and proofed by David Price
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ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
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ESSAYS OF TRAVEL
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Contents
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I. THE AMATEUR EMIGRANT: FROM THE CLYDE TO SANDY HOOK
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THE SECOND CABIN
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EARLY IMPRESSION
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STEERAGE IMPRESSIONS
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STEERAGE TYPES
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THE SICK MAN
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THE STOWAWAYS
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PERSONAL EXPIERENCE AND REVIEW
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NEW YORK
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II. COCKERMOUTH AND KESWICK
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COCKERMOUTH
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AN EVANGELIST
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ANOTHER
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LAST OF SMETHURST
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III. AN AUTUMN EFFECT
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IV. A WINTER'S WALK IN CARRICK AND GALLOWAY
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V. FOREST NOTES -
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ON THE PLAINS
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IN THE SEASON
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IDLE HOURS
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A PLEASURE-PARTY
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THE WOODS IN SPRING
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MORALITY
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VI. A MOUNTAIN TOWN IN FRANCE
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VII. RANDOM MEMORIES: ROSA QUO LOCORUM
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VIII. THE IDEAL HOUSE
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IX. DAVOS IN WINTER
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X. HEALTH AND MOUNTAINS
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XI. ALPINE DIVERSION
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XII. THE STUMULATION OF THE ALPS
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XIII. ROADS
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XIV. ON THE ENJOYMENT OF UNPLEASANT PLACES
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CHAPTER I - THE AMATEUR EMIGRANT
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THE SECOND CABIN
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I FIRST encountered my fellow-passengers on the Broomielaw in
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Glasgow. Thence we descended the Clyde in no familiar spirit, but
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looking askance on each other as on possible enemies. A few
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Scandinavians, who had already grown acquainted on the North Sea,
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were friendly and voluble over their long pipes; but among English
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speakers distance and suspicion reigned supreme. The sun was soon
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overclouded, the wind freshened and grew sharp as we continued to
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descend the widening estuary; and with the falling temperature the
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gloom among the passengers increased. Two of the women wept. Any
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one who had come aboard might have supposed we were all absconding
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from the law. There was scarce a word interchanged, and no common
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sentiment but that of cold united us, until at length, having touched
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at Greenock, a pointing arm and a rush to the starboard now announced
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that our ocean steamer was in sight. There she lay in mid-river, at
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the Tail of the Bank, her sea-signal flying: a wall of bulwark, a
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street of white deck-houses, an aspiring forest of spars, larger than
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a church, and soon to be as populous as many an incorporated town in
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the land to which she was to bear us.
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I was not, in truth, a steerage passenger. Although anxious to see
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the worst of emigrant life, I had some work to finish on the voyage,
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and was advised to go by the second cabin, where at least I should
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have a table at command. The advice was excellent; but to understand
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the choice, and what I gained, some outline of the internal
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disposition of the ship will first be necessary. In her very nose is
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Steerage No. 1, down two pair of stairs. A little abaft, another
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companion, labelled Steerage No. 2 and 3, gives admission to three
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galleries, two running forward towards Steerage No. 1, and the third
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aft towards the engines. The starboard forward gallery is the second
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cabin. Away abaft the engines and below the officers' cabins, to
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complete our survey of the vessel, there is yet a third nest of
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steerages, labelled 4 and 5. The second cabin, to return, is thus a
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modified oasis in the very heart of the steerages. Through the thin
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partition you can hear the steerage passengers being sick, the rattle
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of tin dishes as they sit at meals, the varied accents in which they
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converse, the crying of their children terrified by this new
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experience, or the clean flat smack of the parental hand in
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chastisement.
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There are, however, many advantages for the inhabitant of this strip.
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He does not require to bring his own bedding or dishes, but finds
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berths and a table completely if somewhat roughly furnished. He
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enjoys a distinct superiority in diet; but this, strange to say,
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differs not only on different ships, but on the same ship according
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as her head is to the east or west. In my own experience, the
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principal difference between our table and that of the true steerage
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passenger was the table itself, and the crockery plates from which we
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ate. But lest I should show myself ungrateful, let me recapitulate
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every advantage. At breakfast we had a choice between tea and coffee
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for beverage; a choice not easy to make, the two were so surprisingly
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alike. I found that I could sleep after the coffee and lay awake
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after the tea, which is proof conclusive of some chemical disparity;
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and even by the palate I could distinguish a smack of snuff in the
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former from a flavour of boiling and dish-cloths in the second. As a
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matter of fact, I have seen passengers, after many sips, still
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doubting which had been supplied them. In the way of eatables at the
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same meal we were gloriously favoured; for in addition to porridge,
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which was common to all, we had Irish stew, sometimes a bit of fish,
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and sometimes rissoles. The dinner of soup, roast fresh beef, boiled
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salt junk, and potatoes, was, I believe, exactly common to the
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steerage and the second cabin; only I have heard it rumoured that our
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potatoes were of a superior brand; and twice a week, on pudding-days,
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instead of duff, we had a saddle-bag filled with currants under the
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name of a plum-pudding. At tea we were served with some broken meat
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from the saloon; sometimes in the comparatively elegant form of spare
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patties or rissoles; but as a general thing mere chicken-bones and
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flakes of fish, neither hot nor cold. If these were not the
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scrapings of plates their looks belied them sorely; yet we were all
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too hungry to be proud, and fell to these leavings greedily. These,
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the bread, which was excellent, and the soup and porridge which were
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both good, formed my whole diet throughout the voyage; so that except
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for the broken meat and the convenience of a table I might as well
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have been in the steerage outright. Had they given me porridge again
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in the evening, I should have been perfectly contented with the fare.
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As it was, with a few biscuits and some whisky and water before
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turning in, I kept my body going and my spirits up to the mark.
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The last particular in which the second cabin passenger remarkably
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stands ahead of his brother of the steerage is one altogether of
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sentiment. In the steerage there are males and females; in the
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second cabin ladies and gentlemen. For some time after I came aboard
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I thought I was only a male; but in the course of a voyage of
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discovery between decks, I came on a brass plate, and learned that I
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was still a gentleman. Nobody knew it, of course. I was lost in the
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crowd of males and females, and rigorously confined to the same
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quarter of the deck. Who could tell whether I housed on the port or
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starboard side of steerage No. 2 and 3? And it was only there that
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my superiority became practical; everywhere else I was incognito,
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moving among my inferiors with simplicity, not so much as a swagger
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to indicate that I was a gentleman after all, and had broken meat to
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tea. Still, I was like one with a patent of nobility in a drawer at
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home; and when I felt out of spirits I could go down and refresh
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myself with a look of that brass plate.
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For all these advantages I paid but two guineas. Six guineas is the
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steerage fare; eight that by the second cabin; and when you remember
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that the steerage passenger must supply bedding and dishes, and, in
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five cases out of ten, either brings some dainties with him, or
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privately pays the steward for extra rations, the difference in price
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becomes almost nominal. Air comparatively fit to breathe, food
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comparatively varied, and the satisfaction of being still privately a
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gentleman, may thus be had almost for the asking. Two of my fellow-
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passengers in the second cabin had already made the passage by the
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cheaper fare, and declared it was an experiment not to be repeated.
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As I go on to tell about my steerage friends, the reader will
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perceive that they were not alone in their opinion. Out of ten with
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whom I was more or less intimate, I am sure not fewer than five
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vowed, if they returned, to travel second cabin; and all who had left
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their wives behind them assured me they would go without the comfort
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of their presence until they could afford to bring them by saloon.
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Our party in the second cabin was not perhaps the most interesting on
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|
board. Perhaps even in the saloon there was as much good-will and
|
|
character. Yet it had some elements of curiosity. There was a mixed
|
|
group of Swedes, Danes, and Norsemen, one of whom, generally known by
|
|
the name of 'Johnny,' in spite of his own protests, greatly diverted
|
|
us by his clever, cross-country efforts to speak English, and became
|
|
on the strength of that an universal favourite - it takes so little
|
|
in this world of shipboard to create a popularity. There was,
|
|
besides, a Scots mason, known from his favourite dish as 'Irish
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|
Stew,' three or four nondescript Scots, a fine young Irishman,
|
|
O'Reilly, and a pair of young men who deserve a special word of
|
|
condemnation. One of them was Scots; the other claimed to be
|
|
American; admitted, after some fencing, that he was born in England;
|
|
and ultimately proved to be an Irishman born and nurtured, but
|
|
ashamed to own his country. He had a sister on board, whom he
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|
faithfully neglected throughout the voyage, though she was not only
|
|
sick, but much his senior, and had nursed and cared for him in
|
|
childhood. In appearance he was like an imbecile Henry the Third of
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France. The Scotsman, though perhaps as big an ass, was not so dead
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of heart; and I have only bracketed them together because they were
|
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fast friends, and disgraced themselves equally by their conduct at
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|
the table.
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Next, to turn to topics more agreeable, we had a newly-married
|
|
couple, devoted to each other, with a pleasant story of how they had
|
|
first seen each other years ago at a preparatory school, and that
|
|
very afternoon he had carried her books home for her. I do not know
|
|
if this story will be plain to southern readers; but to me it recalls
|
|
many a school idyll, with wrathful swains of eight and nine
|
|
confronting each other stride-legs, flushed with jealousy; for to
|
|
carry home a young lady's books was both a delicate attention and a
|
|
privilege.
|
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|
Then there was an old lady, or indeed I am not sure that she was as
|
|
much old as antiquated and strangely out of place, who had left her
|
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husband, and was travelling all the way to Kansas by herself. We had
|
|
to take her own word that she was married; for it was sorely
|
|
contradicted by the testimony of her appearance. Nature seemed to
|
|
have sanctified her for the single state; even the colour of her hair
|
|
was incompatible with matrimony, and her husband, I thought, should
|
|
be a man of saintly spirit and phantasmal bodily presence. She was
|
|
ill, poor thing; her soul turned from the viands; the dirty
|
|
tablecloth shocked her like an impropriety; and the whole strength of
|
|
her endeavour was bent upon keeping her watch true to Glasgow time
|
|
till she should reach New York. They had heard reports, her husband
|
|
and she, of some unwarrantable disparity of hours between these two
|
|
cities; and with a spirit commendably scientific, had seized on this
|
|
occasion to put them to the proof. It was a good thing for the old
|
|
lady; for she passed much leisure time in studying the watch. Once,
|
|
when prostrated by sickness, she let it run down. It was inscribed
|
|
on her harmless mind in letters of adamant that the hands of a watch
|
|
must never be turned backwards; and so it behoved her to lie in wait
|
|
for the exact moment ere she started it again. When she imagined
|
|
this was about due, she sought out one of the young second-cabin
|
|
Scotsmen, who was embarked on the same experiment as herself and had
|
|
hitherto been less neglectful. She was in quest of two o'clock; and
|
|
when she learned it was already seven on the shores of Clyde, she
|
|
lifted up her voice and cried 'Gravy!' I had not heard this innocent
|
|
expletive since I was a young child; and I suppose it must have been
|
|
the same with the other Scotsmen present, for we all laughed our
|
|
fill.
|
|
|
|
Last but not least, I come to my excellent friend Mr. Jones. It
|
|
would be difficult to say whether I was his right-hand man, or he
|
|
mine, during the voyage. Thus at table I carved, while he only
|
|
scooped gravy; but at our concerts, of which more anon, he was the
|
|
president who called up performers to sing, and I but his messenger
|
|
who ran his errands and pleaded privately with the over-modest. I
|
|
knew I liked Mr. Jones from the moment I saw him. I thought him by
|
|
his face to be Scottish; nor could his accent undeceive me. For as
|
|
there is a LINGUA FRANCA of many tongues on the moles and in the
|
|
feluccas of the Mediterranean, so there is a free or common accent
|
|
among English-speaking men who follow the sea. They catch a twang in
|
|
a New England Port; from a cockney skipper, even a Scotsman sometimes
|
|
learns to drop an H; a word of a dialect is picked up from another
|
|
band in the forecastle; until often the result is undecipherable, and
|
|
you have to ask for the man's place of birth. So it was with Mr.
|
|
Jones. I thought him a Scotsman who had been long to sea; and yet he
|
|
was from Wales, and had been most of his life a blacksmith at an
|
|
inland forge; a few years in America and half a score of ocean
|
|
voyages having sufficed to modify his speech into the common pattern.
|
|
By his own account he was both strong and skilful in his trade. A
|
|
few years back, he had been married and after a fashion a rich man;
|
|
now the wife was dead and the money gone. But his was the nature
|
|
that looks forward, and goes on from one year to another and through
|
|
all the extremities of fortune undismayed; and if the sky were to
|
|
fall to-morrow, I should look to see Jones, the day following,
|
|
perched on a step-ladder and getting things to rights. He was always
|
|
hovering round inventions like a bee over a flower, and lived in a
|
|
dream of patents. He had with him a patent medicine, for instance,
|
|
the composition of which he had bought years ago for five dollars
|
|
from an American pedlar, and sold the other day for a hundred pounds
|
|
(I think it was) to an English apothecary. It was called Golden Oil,
|
|
cured all maladies without exception; and I am bound to say that I
|
|
partook of it myself with good results. It is a character of the man
|
|
that he was not only perpetually dosing himself with Golden Oil, but
|
|
wherever there was a head aching or a finger cut, there would be
|
|
Jones with his bottle.
|
|
|
|
If he had one taste more strongly than another, it was to study
|
|
character. Many an hour have we two walked upon the deck dissecting
|
|
our neighbours in a spirit that was too purely scientific to be
|
|
called unkind; whenever a quaint or human trait slipped out in
|
|
conversation, you might have seen Jones and me exchanging glances;
|
|
and we could hardly go to bed in comfort till we had exchanged notes
|
|
and discussed the day's experience. We were then like a couple of
|
|
anglers comparing a day's kill. But the fish we angled for were of a
|
|
metaphysical species, and we angled as often as not in one another's
|
|
baskets. Once, in the midst of a serious talk, each found there was
|
|
a scrutinising eye upon himself; I own I paused in embarrassment at
|
|
this double detection; but Jones, with a better civility, broke into
|
|
a peal of unaffected laughter, and declared, what was the truth, that
|
|
there was a pair of us indeed.
|
|
|
|
EARLY IMPRESSIONS
|
|
|
|
We steamed out of the Clyde on Thursday night, and early on the
|
|
Friday forenoon we took in our last batch of emigrants at Lough
|
|
Foyle, in Ireland, and said farewell to Europe. The company was now
|
|
complete, and began to draw together, by inscrutable magnetisms, upon
|
|
the decks. There were Scots and Irish in plenty, a few English, a
|
|
few Americans, a good handful of Scandinavians, a German or two, and
|
|
one Russian; all now belonging for ten days to one small iron country
|
|
on the deep.
|
|
|
|
As I walked the deck and looked round upon my fellow-passengers, thus
|
|
curiously assorted from all northern Europe, I began for the first
|
|
time to understand the nature of emigration. Day by day throughout
|
|
the passage, and thenceforward across all the States, and on to the
|
|
shores of the Pacific, this knowledge grew more clear and melancholy.
|
|
Emigration, from a word of the most cheerful import, came to sound
|
|
most dismally in my ear. There is nothing more agreeable to picture
|
|
and nothing more pathetic to behold. The abstract idea, as conceived
|
|
at home, is hopeful and adventurous. A young man, you fancy,
|
|
scorning restraints and helpers, issues forth into life, that great
|
|
battle, to fight for his own hand. The most pleasant stories of
|
|
ambition, of difficulties overcome, and of ultimate success, are but
|
|
as episodes to this great epic of self-help. The epic is composed of
|
|
individual heroisms; it stands to them as the victorious war which
|
|
subdued an empire stands to the personal act of bravery which spiked
|
|
a single cannon and was adequately rewarded with a medal. For in
|
|
emigration the young men enter direct and by the shipload on their
|
|
heritage of work; empty continents swarm, as at the bo's'un's
|
|
whistle, with industrious hands, and whole new empires are
|
|
domesticated to the service of man.
|
|
|
|
This is the closet picture, and is found, on trial, to consist mostly
|
|
of embellishments. The more I saw of my fellow-passengers, the less
|
|
I was tempted to the lyric note. Comparatively few of the men were
|
|
below thirty; many were married, and encumbered with families; not a
|
|
few were already up in years; and this itself was out of tune with my
|
|
imaginations, for the ideal emigrant should certainly be young.
|
|
Again, I thought he should offer to the eye some bold type of
|
|
humanity, with bluff or hawk-like features, and the stamp of an eager
|
|
and pushing disposition. Now those around me were for the most part
|
|
quiet, orderly, obedient citizens, family men broken by adversity,
|
|
elderly youths who had failed to place themselves in life, and people
|
|
who had seen better days. Mildness was the prevailing character;
|
|
mild mirth and mild endurance. In a word, I was not taking part in
|
|
an impetuous and conquering sally, such as swept over Mexico or
|
|
Siberia, but found myself, like Marmion, 'in the lost battle, borne
|
|
down by the flying.'
|
|
|
|
Labouring mankind had in the last years, and throughout Great
|
|
Britain, sustained a prolonged and crushing series of defeats. I had
|
|
heard vaguely of these reverses; of whole streets of houses standing
|
|
deserted by the Tyne, the cellar-doors broken and removed for
|
|
firewood; of homeless men loitering at the street-corners of Glasgow
|
|
with their chests beside them; of closed factories, useless strikes,
|
|
and starving girls. But I had never taken them home to me or
|
|
represented these distresses livingly to my imagination.
|
|
|
|
A turn of the market may be a calamity as disastrous as the French
|
|
retreat from Moscow; but it hardly lends itself to lively treatment,
|
|
and makes a trifling figure in the morning papers. We may struggle
|
|
as we please, we are not born economists. The individual is more
|
|
affecting than the mass. It is by the scenic accidents, and the
|
|
appeal to the carnal eye, that for the most part we grasp the
|
|
significance of tragedies. Thus it was only now, when I found myself
|
|
involved in the rout, that I began to appreciate how sharp had been
|
|
the battle. We were a company of the rejected; the drunken, the
|
|
incompetent, the weak, the prodigal, all who had been unable to
|
|
prevail against circumstances in the one land, were now fleeing
|
|
pitifully to another; and though one or two might still succeed, all
|
|
had already failed. We were a shipful of failures, the broken men of
|
|
England. Yet it must not be supposed that these people exhibited
|
|
depression. The scene, on the contrary, was cheerful. Not a tear
|
|
was shed on board the vessel. All were full of hope for the future,
|
|
and showed an inclination to innocent gaiety. Some were heard to
|
|
sing, and all began to scrape acquaintance with small jests and ready
|
|
laughter.
|
|
|
|
The children found each other out like dogs, and ran about the decks
|
|
scraping acquaintance after their fashion also. 'What do you call
|
|
your mither?' I heard one ask. 'Mawmaw,' was the reply, indicating,
|
|
I fancy, a shade of difference in the social scale. When people pass
|
|
each other on the high seas of life at so early an age, the contact
|
|
is but slight, and the relation more like what we may imagine to be
|
|
the friendship of flies than that of men; it is so quickly joined, so
|
|
easily dissolved, so open in its communications and so devoid of
|
|
deeper human qualities. The children, I observed, were all in a
|
|
band, and as thick as thieves at a fair, while their elders were
|
|
still ceremoniously manoeuvring on the outskirts of acquaintance.
|
|
The sea, the ship, and the seamen were soon as familiar as home to
|
|
these half-conscious little ones. It was odd to hear them,
|
|
throughout the voyage, employ shore words to designate portions of
|
|
the vessel. 'Go 'way doon to yon dyke,' I heard one say, probably
|
|
meaning the bulwark. I often had my heart in my mouth, watching them
|
|
climb into the shrouds or on the rails, while the ship went swinging
|
|
through the waves; and I admired and envied the courage of their
|
|
mothers, who sat by in the sun and looked on with composure at these
|
|
perilous feats. 'He'll maybe be a sailor,' I heard one remark;
|
|
'now's the time to learn.' I had been on the point of running
|
|
forward to interfere, but stood back at that, reproved. Very few in
|
|
the more delicate classes have the nerve to look upon the peril of
|
|
one dear to them; but the life of poorer folk, where necessity is so
|
|
much more immediate and imperious, braces even a mother to this
|
|
extreme of endurance. And perhaps, after all, it is better that the
|
|
lad should break his neck than that you should break his spirit.
|
|
|
|
And since I am here on the chapter of the children, I must mention
|
|
one little fellow, whose family belonged to Steerage No. 4 and 5, and
|
|
who, wherever he went, was like a strain of music round the ship. He
|
|
was an ugly, merry, unbreeched child of three, his lint-white hair in
|
|
a tangle, his face smeared with suet and treacle; but he ran to and
|
|
fro with so natural a step, and fell and picked himself up again with
|
|
such grace and good-humour, that he might fairly be called beautiful
|
|
when he was in motion. To meet him, crowing with laughter and
|
|
beating an accompaniment to his own mirth with a tin spoon upon a tin
|
|
cup, was to meet a little triumph of the human species. Even when
|
|
his mother and the rest of his family lay sick and prostrate around
|
|
him, he sat upright in their midst and sang aloud in the pleasant
|
|
heartlessness of infancy.
|
|
|
|
Throughout the Friday, intimacy among us men made but a few advances.
|
|
We discussed the probable duration of the voyage, we exchanged pieces
|
|
of information, naming our trades, what we hoped to find in the new
|
|
world, or what we were fleeing from in the old; and, above all, we
|
|
condoled together over the food and the vileness of the steerage.
|
|
One or two had been so near famine that you may say they had run into
|
|
the ship with the devil at their heels; and to these all seemed for
|
|
the best in the best of possible steamers. But the majority were
|
|
hugely contented. Coming as they did from a country in so low a
|
|
state as Great Britain, many of them from Glasgow, which commercially
|
|
speaking was as good as dead, and many having long been out of work,
|
|
I was surprised to find them so dainty in their notions. I myself
|
|
lived almost exclusively on bread, porridge, and soup, precisely as
|
|
it was supplied to them, and found it, if not luxurious, at least
|
|
sufficient. But these working men were loud in their outcries. It
|
|
was not 'food for human beings,' it was 'only fit for pigs,' it was
|
|
'a disgrace.' Many of them lived almost entirely upon biscuit,
|
|
others on their own private supplies, and some paid extra for better
|
|
rations from the ship. This marvellously changed my notion of the
|
|
degree of luxury habitual to the artisan. I was prepared to hear him
|
|
grumble, for grumbling is the traveller's pastime; but I was not
|
|
prepared to find him turn away from a diet which was palatable to
|
|
myself. Words I should have disregarded, or taken with a liberal
|
|
allowance; but when a man prefers dry biscuit there can be no
|
|
question of the sincerity of his disgust.
|
|
|
|
With one of their complaints I could most heartily sympathise. A
|
|
single night of the steerage had filled them with horror. I had
|
|
myself suffered, even in my decent-second-cabin berth, from the lack
|
|
of air; and as the night promised to be fine and quiet, I determined
|
|
to sleep on deck, and advised all who complained of their quarters to
|
|
follow my example. I dare say a dozen of others agreed to do so, and
|
|
I thought we should have been quite a party. Yet, when I brought up
|
|
my rug about seven bells, there was no one to be seen but the watch.
|
|
That chimerical terror of good night-air, which makes men close their
|
|
windows, list their doors, and seal themselves up with their own
|
|
poisonous exhalations, had sent all these healthy workmen down below.
|
|
One would think we had been brought up in a fever country; yet in
|
|
England the most malarious districts are in the bedchambers.
|
|
|
|
I felt saddened at this defection, and yet half-pleased to have the
|
|
night so quietly to myself. The wind had hauled a little ahead on
|
|
the starboard bow, and was dry but chilly. I found a shelter near
|
|
the fire-hole, and made myself snug for the night.
|
|
|
|
The ship moved over the uneven sea with a gentle and cradling
|
|
movement. The ponderous, organic labours of the engine in her bowels
|
|
occupied the mind, and prepared it for slumber. From time to time a
|
|
heavier lurch would disturb me as I lay, and recall me to the obscure
|
|
borders of consciousness; or I heard, as it were through a veil, the
|
|
clear note of the clapper on the brass and the beautiful sea-cry,
|
|
'All's well!' I know nothing, whether for poetry or music, that can
|
|
surpass the effect of these two syllables in the darkness of a night
|
|
at sea.
|
|
|
|
The day dawned fairly enough, and during the early part we had some
|
|
pleasant hours to improve acquaintance in the open air; but towards
|
|
nightfall the wind freshened, the rain began to fall, and the sea
|
|
rose so high that it was difficult to keep ones footing on the deck.
|
|
I have spoken of our concerts. We were indeed a musical ship's
|
|
company, and cheered our way into exile with the fiddle, the
|
|
accordion, and the songs of all nations. Good, bad, or indifferent -
|
|
Scottish, English, Irish, Russian, German or Norse, - the songs were
|
|
received with generous applause. Once or twice, a recitation, very
|
|
spiritedly rendered in a powerful Scottish accent, varied the
|
|
proceedings; and once we sought in vain to dance a quadrille, eight
|
|
men of us together, to the music of the violin. The performers were
|
|
all humorous, frisky fellows, who loved to cut capers in private
|
|
life; but as soon as they were arranged for the dance, they conducted
|
|
themselves like so many mutes at a funeral. I have never seen
|
|
decorum pushed so far; and as this was not expected, the quadrille
|
|
was soon whistled down, and the dancers departed under a cloud.
|
|
Eight Frenchmen, even eight Englishmen from another rank of society,
|
|
would have dared to make some fun for themselves and the spectators;
|
|
but the working man, when sober, takes an extreme and even melancholy
|
|
view of personal deportment. A fifth-form schoolboy is not more
|
|
careful of dignity. He dares not be comical; his fun must escape
|
|
from him unprepared, and above all, it must be unaccompanied by any
|
|
physical demonstration. I like his society under most circumstances,
|
|
but let me never again join with him in public gambols.
|
|
|
|
But the impulse to sing was strong, and triumphed over modesty and
|
|
even the inclemencies of sea and sky. On this rough Saturday night,
|
|
we got together by the main deck-house, in a place sheltered from the
|
|
wind and rain. Some clinging to a ladder which led to the hurricane
|
|
deck, and the rest knitting arms or taking hands, we made a ring to
|
|
support the women in the violent lurching of the ship; and when we
|
|
were thus disposed, sang to our hearts' content. Some of the songs
|
|
were appropriate to the scene; others strikingly the reverse.
|
|
Bastard doggrel of the music-hall, such as, 'Around her splendid
|
|
form, I weaved the magic circle,' sounded bald, bleak, and pitifully
|
|
silly. 'We don't want to fight, but, by Jingo, if we do,' was in
|
|
some measure saved by the vigour and unanimity with which the chorus
|
|
was thrown forth into the night. I observed a Platt-Deutsch mason,
|
|
entirely innocent of English, adding heartily to the general effect.
|
|
And perhaps the German mason is but a fair example of the sincerity
|
|
with which the song was rendered; for nearly all with whom I
|
|
conversed upon the subject were bitterly opposed to war, and
|
|
attributed their own misfortunes, and frequently their own taste for
|
|
whisky, to the campaigns in Zululand and Afghanistan.
|
|
|
|
Every now and again, however, some song that touched the pathos of
|
|
our situation was given forth; and you could hear by the voices that
|
|
took up the burden how the sentiment came home to each, 'The Anchor's
|
|
Weighed' was true for us. We were indeed 'Rocked on the bosom of the
|
|
stormy deep.' How many of us could say with the singer, 'I'm lonely
|
|
to-night, love, without you,' or, 'Go, some one, and tell them from
|
|
me, to write me a letter from home'! And when was there a more
|
|
appropriate moment for 'Auld Lang Syne' than now, when the land, the
|
|
friends, and the affections of that mingled but beloved time were
|
|
fading and fleeing behind us in the vessel's wake? It pointed
|
|
forward to the hour when these labours should be overpast, to the
|
|
return voyage, and to many a meeting in the sanded inn, when those
|
|
who had parted in the spring of youth should again drink a cup of
|
|
kindness in their age. Had not Burns contemplated emigration, I
|
|
scarce believe he would have found that note.
|
|
|
|
All Sunday the weather remained wild and cloudy; many were prostrated
|
|
by sickness; only five sat down to tea in the second cabin, and two
|
|
of these departed abruptly ere the meal was at an end. The Sabbath
|
|
was observed strictly by the majority of the emigrants. I heard an
|
|
old woman express her surprise that 'the ship didna gae doon,' as she
|
|
saw some one pass her with a chess-board on the holy day. Some sang
|
|
Scottish psalms. Many went to service, and in true Scottish fashion
|
|
came back ill pleased with their divine. 'I didna think he was an
|
|
experienced preacher,' said one girl to me.
|
|
|
|
Is was a bleak, uncomfortable day; but at night, by six bells,
|
|
although the wind had not yet moderated, the clouds were all wrecked
|
|
and blown away behind the rim of the horizon, and the stars came out
|
|
thickly overhead. I saw Venus burning as steadily and sweetly across
|
|
this hurly-burly of the winds and waters as ever at home upon the
|
|
summer woods. The engine pounded, the screw tossed out of the water
|
|
with a roar, and shook the ship from end to end; the bows battled
|
|
with loud reports against the billows: and as I stood in the lee-
|
|
scuppers and looked up to where the funnel leaned out, over my head,
|
|
vomiting smoke, and the black and monstrous top-sails blotted, at
|
|
each lurch, a different crop of stars, it seemed as if all this
|
|
trouble were a thing of small account, and that just above the mast
|
|
reigned peace unbroken and eternal.
|
|
|
|
STEERAGE SCENES
|
|
|
|
Our companion (Steerage No. 2 and 3) was a favourite resort. Down
|
|
one flight of stairs there was a comparatively large open space, the
|
|
centre occupied by a hatchway, which made a convenient seat for about
|
|
twenty persons, while barrels, coils of rope, and the carpenter's
|
|
bench afforded perches for perhaps as many more. The canteen, or
|
|
steerage bar, was on one side of the stair; on the other, a no less
|
|
attractive spot, the cabin of the indefatigable interpreter.
|
|
|
|
I have seen people packed into this space like herrings in a barrel,
|
|
and many merry evenings prolonged there until five bells, when the
|
|
lights were ruthlessly extinguished and all must go to roost.
|
|
|
|
It had been rumoured since Friday that there was a fiddler aboard,
|
|
who lay sick and unmelodious in Steerage No. 1; and on the Monday
|
|
forenoon, as I came down the companion, I was saluted by something in
|
|
Strathspey time. A white-faced Orpheus was cheerily playing to an
|
|
audience of white-faced women. It was as much as he could do to
|
|
play, and some of his hearers were scarce able to sit; yet they had
|
|
crawled from their bunks at the first experimental flourish, and
|
|
found better than medicine in the music. Some of the heaviest heads
|
|
began to nod in time, and a degree of animation looked from some of
|
|
the palest eyes. Humanly speaking, it is a more important matter to
|
|
play the fiddle, even badly, than to write huge works upon recondite
|
|
subjects. What could Mr. Darwin have done for these sick women? But
|
|
this fellow scraped away; and the world was positively a better place
|
|
for all who heard him. We have yet to understand the economical
|
|
value of these mere accomplishments. I told the fiddler he was a
|
|
happy man, carrying happiness about with him in his fiddle-case, and
|
|
he seemed alive to the fact.
|
|
|
|
'It is a privilege,' I said. He thought a while upon the word,
|
|
turning it over in his Scots head, and then answered with conviction,
|
|
'Yes, a privilege.'
|
|
|
|
That night I was summoned by 'Merrily danced the Quake's wife' into
|
|
the companion of Steerage No. 4 and 5. This was, properly speaking,
|
|
but a strip across a deck-house, lit by a sickly lantern which swung
|
|
to and fro with the motion of the ship. Through the open slide-door
|
|
we had a glimpse of a grey night sea, with patches of phosphorescent
|
|
foam flying, swift as birds, into the wake, and the horizon rising
|
|
and falling as the vessel rolled to the wind. In the centre the
|
|
companion ladder plunged down sheerly like an open pit. Below, on
|
|
the first landing, and lighted by another lamp, lads and lasses
|
|
danced, not more than three at a time for lack of space, in jigs and
|
|
reels and hornpipes. Above, on either side, there was a recess
|
|
railed with iron, perhaps two feet wide and four long, which stood
|
|
for orchestra and seats of honour. In the one balcony, five
|
|
slatternly Irish lasses sat woven in a comely group. In the other
|
|
was posted Orpheus, his body, which was convulsively in motion,
|
|
forming an odd contrast to his somnolent, imperturbable Scots face.
|
|
His brother, a dark man with a vehement, interested countenance, who
|
|
made a god of the fiddler, sat by with open mouth, drinking in the
|
|
general admiration and throwing out remarks to kindle it.
|
|
|
|
'That's a bonny hornpipe now,' he would say, 'it's a great favourite
|
|
with performers; they dance the sand dance to it.' And he expounded
|
|
the sand dance. Then suddenly, it would be a long, 'Hush!' with
|
|
uplifted finger and glowing, supplicating eyes, 'he's going to play
|
|
"Auld Robin Gray " on one string!' And throughout this excruciating
|
|
movement, - 'On one string, that's on one string!' he kept crying. I
|
|
would have given something myself that it had been on none; but the
|
|
hearers were much awed. I called for a tune or two, and thus
|
|
introduced myself to the notice of the brother, who directed his talk
|
|
to me for some little while, keeping, I need hardly mention, true to
|
|
his topic, like the seamen to the star. 'He's grand of it,' he said
|
|
confidentially. 'His master was a music-hall man.' Indeed the
|
|
music-hall man had left his mark, for our fiddler was ignorant of
|
|
many of our best old airs; 'Logie o' Buchan,' for instance, he only
|
|
knew as a quick, jigging figure in a set of quadrilles, and had never
|
|
heard it called by name. Perhaps, after all, the brother was the
|
|
more interesting performer of the two. I have spoken with him
|
|
afterwards repeatedly, and found him always the same quick, fiery bit
|
|
of a man, not without brains; but he never showed to such advantage
|
|
as when he was thus squiring the fiddler into public note. There is
|
|
nothing more becoming than a genuine admiration; and it shares this
|
|
with love, that it does not become contemptible although misplaced.
|
|
|
|
The dancing was but feebly carried on. The space was almost
|
|
impracticably small; and the Irish wenches combined the extreme of
|
|
bashfulness about this innocent display with a surprising impudence
|
|
and roughness of address. Most often, either the fiddle lifted up
|
|
its voice unheeded, or only a couple of lads would be footing it and
|
|
snapping fingers on the landing. And such was the eagerness of the
|
|
brother to display all the acquirements of his idol, and such the
|
|
sleepy indifference of the performer, that the tune would as often as
|
|
not be changed, and the hornpipe expire into a ballad before the
|
|
dancers had cut half a dozen shuffles.
|
|
|
|
In the meantime, however, the audience had been growing more and more
|
|
numerous every moment; there was hardly standing-room round the top
|
|
of the companion; and the strange instinct of the race moved some of
|
|
the newcomers to close both the doors, so that the atmosphere grew
|
|
insupportable. It was a good place, as the saying is, to leave.
|
|
|
|
The wind hauled ahead with a head sea. By ten at night heavy sprays
|
|
were flying and drumming over the forecastle; the companion of
|
|
Steerage No. 1 had to be closed, and the door of communication
|
|
through the second cabin thrown open. Either from the convenience of
|
|
the opportunity, or because we had already a number of acquaintances
|
|
in that part of the ship, Mr. Jones and I paid it a late visit.
|
|
Steerage No. 1 is shaped like an isosceles triangle, the sides
|
|
opposite the equal angles bulging outward with the contour of the
|
|
ship. It is lined with eight pens of sixteen bunks apiece, four
|
|
bunks below and four above on either side. At night the place is lit
|
|
with two lanterns, one to each table. As the steamer beat on her way
|
|
among the rough billows, the light passed through violent phases of
|
|
change, and was thrown to and fro and up and down with startling
|
|
swiftness. You were tempted to wonder, as you looked, how so thin a
|
|
glimmer could control and disperse such solid blackness. When Jones
|
|
and I entered we found a little company of our acquaintances seated
|
|
together at the triangular foremost table. A more forlorn party, in
|
|
more dismal circumstances, it would be hard to imagine. The motion
|
|
here in the ship's nose was very violent; the uproar of the sea often
|
|
overpoweringly loud. The yellow flicker of the lantern spun round
|
|
and round and tossed the shadows in masses. The air was hot, but it
|
|
struck a chill from its foetor.
|
|
|
|
From all round in the dark bunks, the scarcely human noises of the
|
|
sick joined into a kind of farmyard chorus. In the midst, these five
|
|
friends of mine were keeping up what heart they could in company.
|
|
Singing was their refuge from discomfortable thoughts and sensations.
|
|
One piped, in feeble tones, 'Oh why left I my hame?' which seemed a
|
|
pertinent question in the circumstances. Another, from the invisible
|
|
horrors of a pen where he lay dog-sick upon the upper-shelf, found
|
|
courage, in a blink of his sufferings, to give us several verses of
|
|
the 'Death of Nelson'; and it was odd and eerie to hear the chorus
|
|
breathe feebly from all sorts of dark corners, and 'this day has done
|
|
his dooty' rise and fall and be taken up again in this dim inferno,
|
|
to an accompaniment of plunging, hollow-sounding bows and the
|
|
rattling spray-showers overhead.
|
|
|
|
All seemed unfit for conversation; a certain dizziness had
|
|
interrupted the activity of their minds; and except to sing they were
|
|
tongue-tied. There was present, however, one tall, powerful fellow
|
|
of doubtful nationality, being neither quite Scotsman nor altogether
|
|
Irish, but of surprising clearness of conviction on the highest
|
|
problems. He had gone nearly beside himself on the Sunday, because
|
|
of a general backwardness to indorse his definition of mind as 'a
|
|
living, thinking substance which cannot be felt, heard, or seen' -
|
|
nor, I presume, although he failed to mention it, smelt. Now he came
|
|
forward in a pause with another contribution to our culture.
|
|
|
|
'Just by way of change,' said he, 'I'll ask you a Scripture riddle.
|
|
There's profit in them too,' he added ungrammatically.
|
|
|
|
This was the riddle-
|
|
|
|
C and P
|
|
Did agree
|
|
To cut down C;
|
|
But C and P
|
|
Could not agree
|
|
Without the leave of G;
|
|
All the people cried to see
|
|
The crueltie
|
|
Of C and P.
|
|
|
|
Harsh are the words of Mercury after the songs of Apollo! We were a
|
|
long while over the problem, shaking our heads and gloomily wondering
|
|
how a man could be such a fool; but at length he put us out of
|
|
suspense and divulged the fact that C and P stood for Caiaphas and
|
|
Pontius Pilate.
|
|
|
|
I think it must have been the riddle that settled us; but the motion
|
|
and the close air likewise hurried our departure. We had not been
|
|
gone long, we heard next morning, ere two or even three out of the
|
|
five fell sick. We thought it little wonder on the whole, for the
|
|
sea kept contrary all night. I now made my bed upon the second cabin
|
|
floor, where, although I ran the risk of being stepped upon, I had a
|
|
free current of air, more or less vitiated indeed, and running only
|
|
from steerage to steerage, but at least not stagnant; and from this
|
|
couch, as well as the usual sounds of a rough night at sea, the
|
|
hateful coughing and retching of the sick and the sobs of children, I
|
|
heard a man run wild with terror beseeching his friend for
|
|
encouragement. 'The ship 's going down!' he cried with a thrill of
|
|
agony. 'The ship's going down!' he repeated, now in a blank whisper,
|
|
now with his voice rising towards a sob; and his friend might
|
|
reassure him, reason with him, joke at him - all was in vain, and the
|
|
old cry came back, 'The ship's going down!' There was something
|
|
panicky and catching in the emotion of his tones; and I saw in a
|
|
clear flash what an involved and hideous tragedy was a disaster to an
|
|
emigrant ship. If this whole parishful of people came no more to
|
|
land, into how many houses would the newspaper carry woe, and what a
|
|
great part of the web of our corporate human life would be rent
|
|
across for ever!
|
|
|
|
The next morning when I came on deck I found a new world indeed. The
|
|
wind was fair; the sun mounted into a cloudless heaven; through great
|
|
dark blue seas the ship cut a swath of curded foam. The horizon was
|
|
dotted all day with companionable sails, and the sun shone pleasantly
|
|
on the long, heaving deck.
|
|
|
|
We had many fine-weather diversions to beguile the time. There was a
|
|
single chess-board and a single pack of cards. Sometimes as many as
|
|
twenty of us would be playing dominoes for love. Feats of dexterity,
|
|
puzzles for the intelligence, some arithmetical, some of the same
|
|
order as the old problem of the fox and goose and cabbage, were
|
|
always welcome; and the latter, I observed, more popular as well as
|
|
more conspicuously well done than the former. We had a regular daily
|
|
competition to guess the vessel's progress; and twelve o'clock, when
|
|
the result was published in the wheel-house, came to be a moment of
|
|
considerable interest. But the interest was unmixed. Not a bet was
|
|
laid upon our guesses. From the Clyde to Sandy Hook I never heard a
|
|
wager offered or taken. We had, besides, romps in plenty. Puss in
|
|
the Corner, which we had rebaptized, in more manly style, Devil and
|
|
four Corners, was my own favourite game; but there were many who
|
|
preferred another, the humour of which was to box a person's ears
|
|
until he found out who had cuffed him.
|
|
|
|
This Tuesday morning we were all delighted with the change of
|
|
weather, and in the highest possible spirits. We got in a cluster
|
|
like bees, sitting between each other's feet under lee of the deck-
|
|
houses. Stories and laughter went around. The children climbed
|
|
about the shrouds. White faces appeared for the first time, and
|
|
began to take on colour from the wind. I was kept hard at work
|
|
making cigarettes for one amateur after another, and my less than
|
|
moderate skill was heartily admired. Lastly, down sat the fiddler in
|
|
our midst and began to discourse his reels, and jigs, and ballads,
|
|
with now and then a voice or two to take up the air and throw in the
|
|
interest of human speech.
|
|
|
|
Through this merry and good-hearted scene there came three cabin
|
|
passengers, a gentleman and two young ladies, picking their way with
|
|
little gracious titters of indulgence, and a Lady-Bountiful air about
|
|
nothing, which galled me to the quick. I have little of the radical
|
|
in social questions, and have always nourished an idea that one
|
|
person was as good as another. But I began to be troubled by this
|
|
episode. It was astonishing what insults these people managed to
|
|
convey by their presence. They seemed to throw their clothes in our
|
|
faces. Their eyes searched us all over for tatters and
|
|
incongruities. A laugh was ready at their lips; but they were too
|
|
well-mannered to indulge it in our hearing. Wait a bit, till they
|
|
were all back in the saloon, and then hear how wittily they would
|
|
depict the manners of the steerage. We were in truth very
|
|
innocently, cheerfully, and sensibly engaged, and there was no shadow
|
|
of excuse for the swaying elegant superiority with which these
|
|
damsels passed among us, or for the stiff and waggish glances of
|
|
their squire. Not a word was said; only when they were gone Mackay
|
|
sullenly damned their impudence under his breath; but we were all
|
|
conscious of an icy influence and a dead break in the course of our
|
|
enjoyment.
|
|
|
|
STEERAGE TYPES
|
|
|
|
We had a fellow on board, an Irish-American, for all the world like a
|
|
beggar in a print by Callot; one-eyed, with great, splay crow's-feet
|
|
round the sockets; a knotty squab nose coming down over his
|
|
moustache; a miraculous hat; a shirt that had been white, ay, ages
|
|
long ago; an alpaca coat in its last sleeves; and, without hyperbole,
|
|
no buttons to his trousers. Even in these rags and tatters, the man
|
|
twinkled all over with impudence like a piece of sham jewellery; and
|
|
I have heard him offer a situation to one of his fellow-passengers
|
|
with the air of a lord. Nothing could overlie such a fellow; a kind
|
|
of base success was written on his brow. He was then in his ill
|
|
days; but I can imagine him in Congress with his mouth full of
|
|
bombast and sawder. As we moved in the same circle, I was brought
|
|
necessarily into his society. I do not think I ever heard him say
|
|
anything that was true, kind, or interesting; but there was
|
|
entertainment in the man's demeanour. You might call him a half-
|
|
educated Irish Tigg.
|
|
|
|
Our Russian made a remarkable contrast to this impossible fellow.
|
|
Rumours and legends were current in the steerages about his
|
|
antecedents. Some said he was a Nihilist escaping; others set him
|
|
down for a harmless spendthrift, who had squandered fifty thousand
|
|
roubles, and whose father had now despatched him to America by way of
|
|
penance. Either tale might flourish in security; there was no
|
|
contradiction to be feared, for the hero spoke not one word of
|
|
English. I got on with him lumberingly enough in broken German, and
|
|
learned from his own lips that he had been an apothecary. He carried
|
|
the photograph of his betrothed in a pocket-book, and remarked that
|
|
it did not do her justice. The cut of his head stood out from among
|
|
the passengers with an air of startling strangeness. The first
|
|
natural instinct was to take him for a desperado; but although the
|
|
features, to our Western eyes, had a barbaric and unhomely cast, the
|
|
eye both reassured and touched. It was large and very dark and soft,
|
|
with an expression of dumb endurance, as if it had often looked on
|
|
desperate circumstances and never looked on them without resolution.
|
|
|
|
He cried out when I used the word. 'No, no,' he said, 'not
|
|
resolution.'
|
|
|
|
'The resolution to endure,' I explained.
|
|
|
|
And then he shrugged his shoulders, and said, 'ACH, JA,' with gusto,
|
|
like a man who has been flattered in his favourite pretensions.
|
|
Indeed, he was always hinting at some secret sorrow; and his life, he
|
|
said, had been one of unusual trouble and anxiety; so the legends of
|
|
the steerage may have represented at least some shadow of the truth.
|
|
Once, and once only, he sang a song at our concerts; standing forth
|
|
without embarrassment, his great stature somewhat humped, his long
|
|
arms frequently extended, his Kalmuck head thrown backward. It was a
|
|
suitable piece of music, as deep as a cow's bellow and wild like the
|
|
White Sea. He was struck and charmed by the freedom and sociality of
|
|
our manners. At home, he said, no one on a journey would speak to
|
|
him, but those with whom he would not care to speak; thus
|
|
unconsciously involving himself in the condemnation of his
|
|
countrymen. But Russia was soon to be changed; the ice of the Neva
|
|
was softening under the sun of civilisation; the new ideas, 'WIE EINE
|
|
FEINE VIOLINE,' were audible among the big empty drum notes of
|
|
Imperial diplomacy; and he looked to see a great revival, though with
|
|
a somewhat indistinct and childish hope.
|
|
|
|
We had a father and son who made a pair of Jacks-of-all-trades. It
|
|
was the son who sang the 'Death of Nelson' under such contrarious
|
|
circumstances. He was by trade a shearer of ship plates; but he
|
|
could touch the organ, and led two choirs, and played the flute and
|
|
piccolo in a professional string band. His repertory of songs was,
|
|
besides, inexhaustible, and ranged impartially from the very best to
|
|
the very worst within his reach. Nor did he seem to make the least
|
|
distinction between these extremes, but would cheerily follow up 'Tom
|
|
Bowling' with 'Around her splendid form.'
|
|
|
|
The father, an old, cheery, small piece of man-hood, could do
|
|
everything connected with tinwork from one end of the process to the
|
|
other, use almost every carpenter's tool, and make picture frames to
|
|
boot. 'I sat down with silver plate every Sunday,' said he, 'and
|
|
pictures on the wall. I have made enough money to be rolling in my
|
|
carriage. But, sir,' looking at me unsteadily with his bright rheumy
|
|
eyes, 'I was troubled with a drunken wife.' He took a hostile view
|
|
of matrimony in consequence. 'It's an old saying,' he remarked:
|
|
'God made 'em, and the devil he mixed 'em.'
|
|
|
|
I think he was justified by his experience. It was a dreary story.
|
|
He would bring home three pounds on Saturday, and on Monday all the
|
|
clothes would be in pawn. Sick of the useless struggle, he gave up a
|
|
paying contract, and contented himself with small and ill-paid jobs.
|
|
'A bad job was as good as a good job for me,' he said; 'it all went
|
|
the same way.' Once the wife showed signs of amendment; she kept
|
|
steady for weeks on end; it was again worth while to labour and to do
|
|
one's best. The husband found a good situation some distance from
|
|
home, and, to make a little upon every hand, started the wife in a
|
|
cook-shop; the children were here and there, busy as mice; savings
|
|
began to grow together in the bank, and the golden age of hope had
|
|
returned again to that unhappy family. But one week my old
|
|
acquaintance, getting earlier through with his work, came home on the
|
|
Friday instead of the Saturday, and there was his wife to receive him
|
|
reeling drunk. He 'took and gave her a pair o' black eyes,' for
|
|
which I pardon him, nailed up the cook-shop door, gave up his
|
|
situation, and resigned himself to a life of poverty, with the
|
|
workhouse at the end. As the children came to their full age they
|
|
fled the house, and established themselves in other countries; some
|
|
did well, some not so well; but the father remained at home alone
|
|
with his drunken wife, all his sound-hearted pluck and varied
|
|
accomplishments depressed and negatived.
|
|
|
|
Was she dead now? or, after all these years, had he broken the chain,
|
|
and run from home like a schoolboy? I could not discover which; but
|
|
here at least he was out on the adventure, and still one of the
|
|
bravest and most youthful men on board.
|
|
|
|
'Now, I suppose, I must put my old bones to work again,' said he;
|
|
'but I can do a turn yet.'
|
|
|
|
And the son to whom he was going, I asked, was he not able to support
|
|
him?
|
|
|
|
'Oh yes,' he replied. 'But I'm never happy without a job on hand.
|
|
And I'm stout; I can eat a'most anything. You see no craze about
|
|
me.'
|
|
|
|
This tale of a drunken wife was paralleled on board by another of a
|
|
drunken father. He was a capable man, with a good chance in life;
|
|
but he had drunk up two thriving businesses like a bottle of sherry,
|
|
and involved his sons along with him in ruin. Now they were on board
|
|
with us, fleeing his disastrous neighbourhood.
|
|
|
|
Total abstinence, like all ascetical conclusions, is unfriendly to
|
|
the most generous, cheerful, and human parts of man; but it could
|
|
have adduced many instances and arguments from among our ship's
|
|
company. I was, one day conversing with a kind and happy Scotsman,
|
|
running to fat and perspiration in the physical, but with a taste for
|
|
poetry and a genial sense of fun. I had asked him his hopes in
|
|
emigrating. They were like those of so many others, vague and
|
|
unfounded; times were bad at home; they were said to have a turn for
|
|
the better in the States; a man could get on anywhere, he thought.
|
|
That was precisely the weak point of his position; for if he could
|
|
get on in America, why could he not do the same in Scotland? But I
|
|
never had the courage to use that argument, though it was often on
|
|
the tip of my tongue, and instead I agreed with him heartily adding,
|
|
with reckless originality, 'If the man stuck to his work, and kept
|
|
away from drink.'
|
|
|
|
'Ah!' said he slowly, 'the drink! You see, that's just my trouble.'
|
|
|
|
He spoke with a simplicity that was touching, looking at me at the
|
|
same time with something strange and timid in his eye, half-ashamed,
|
|
half-sorry, like a good child who knows he should be beaten. You
|
|
would have said he recognised a destiny to which he was born, and
|
|
accepted the consequences mildly. Like the merchant Abudah, he was
|
|
at the same time fleeing from his destiny and carrying it along with
|
|
him, the whole at an expense of six guineas.
|
|
|
|
As far as I saw, drink, idleness, and incompetency were the three
|
|
great causes of emigration, and for all of them, and drink first and
|
|
foremost, this trick of getting transported overseas appears to me
|
|
the silliest means of cure. You cannot run away from a weakness; you
|
|
must some time fight it out or perish; and if that be so, why not
|
|
now, and where you stand? COELUM NON ANIMAM. Change Glenlivet for
|
|
Bourbon, and it is still whisky, only not so good. A sea-voyage will
|
|
not give a man the nerve to put aside cheap pleasure; emigration has
|
|
to be done before we climb the vessel; an aim in life is the only
|
|
fortune worth the finding; and it is not to be found in foreign
|
|
lands, but in the heart itself.
|
|
|
|
Speaking generally, there is no vice of this kind more contemptible
|
|
than another; for each is but a result and outward sign of a soul
|
|
tragically ship-wrecked. In the majority of cases, cheap pleasure is
|
|
resorted to by way of anodyne. The pleasure-seeker sets forth upon
|
|
life with high and difficult ambitions; he meant to be nobly good and
|
|
nobly happy, though at as little pains as possible to himself; and it
|
|
is because all has failed in his celestial enterprise that you now
|
|
behold him rolling in the garbage. Hence the comparative success of
|
|
the teetotal pledge; because to a man who had nothing it sets at
|
|
least a negative aim in life. Somewhat as prisoners beguile their
|
|
days by taming a spider, the reformed drunkard makes an interest out
|
|
of abstaining from intoxicating drinks, and may live for that
|
|
negation. There is something, at least, NOT TO BE DONE each day; and
|
|
a cold triumph awaits him every evening.
|
|
|
|
We had one on board with us, whom I have already referred to under
|
|
the name Mackay, who seemed to me not only a good instance of this
|
|
failure in life of which we have been speaking, but a good type of
|
|
the intelligence which here surrounded me. Physically he was a small
|
|
Scotsman, standing a little back as though he were already carrying
|
|
the elements of a corporation, and his looks somewhat marred by the
|
|
smallness of his eyes. Mentally, he was endowed above the average.
|
|
There were but few subjects on which he could not converse with
|
|
understanding and a dash of wit; delivering himself slowly and with
|
|
gusto like a man who enjoyed his own sententiousness. He was a dry,
|
|
quick, pertinent debater, speaking with a small voice, and swinging
|
|
on his heels to launch and emphasise an argument. When he began a
|
|
discussion, he could not bear to leave it off, but would pick the
|
|
subject to the bone, without once relinquishing a point. An engineer
|
|
by trade, Mackay believed in the unlimited perfectibility of all
|
|
machines except the human machine. The latter he gave up with
|
|
ridicule for a compound of carrion and perverse gases. He had an
|
|
appetite for disconnected facts which I can only compare to the
|
|
savage taste for beads. What is called information was indeed a
|
|
passion with the man, and he not only delighted to receive it, but
|
|
could pay you back in kind.
|
|
|
|
With all these capabilities, here was Mackay, already no longer
|
|
young, on his way to a new country, with no prospects, no money, and
|
|
but little hope. He was almost tedious in the cynical disclosures of
|
|
his despair. 'The ship may go down for me,' he would say, 'now or
|
|
to-morrow. I have nothing to lose and nothing to hope.' And again:
|
|
'I am sick of the whole damned performance.' He was, like the kind
|
|
little man, already quoted, another so-called victim of the bottle.
|
|
But Mackay was miles from publishing his weakness to the world; laid
|
|
the blame of his failure on corrupt masters and a corrupt State
|
|
policy; and after he had been one night overtaken and had played the
|
|
buffoon in his cups, sternly, though not without tact, suppressed all
|
|
reference to his escapade. It was a treat to see him manage this:
|
|
the various jesters withered under his gaze, and you were forced to
|
|
recognise in him a certain steely force, and a gift of command which
|
|
might have ruled a senate.
|
|
|
|
In truth it was not whisky that had ruined him; he was ruined long
|
|
before for all good human purposes but conversation. His eyes were
|
|
sealed by a cheap, school-book materialism. He could see nothing in
|
|
the world but money and steam-engines. He did not know what you
|
|
meant by the word happiness. He had forgotten the simple emotions of
|
|
childhood, and perhaps never encountered the delights of youth. He
|
|
believed in production, that useful figment of economy, as if it had
|
|
been real like laughter; and production, without prejudice to liquor,
|
|
was his god and guide. One day he took me to task - novel cry to me
|
|
- upon the over-payment of literature. Literary men, he said, were
|
|
more highly paid than artisans; yet the artisan made threshing-
|
|
machines and butter-churns, and the man of letters, except in the way
|
|
of a few useful handbooks, made nothing worth the while. He produced
|
|
a mere fancy article. Mackay's notion of a book was HOPPUS'S
|
|
MEASURER. Now in my time I have possessed and even studied that
|
|
work; but if I were to be left to-morrow on Juan Fernandez, Hoppus's
|
|
is not the book that I should choose for my companion volume.
|
|
|
|
I tried to fight the point with Mackay. I made him own that he had
|
|
taken pleasure in reading books otherwise, to his view,
|
|
insignificant; but he was too wary to advance a step beyond the
|
|
admission. It was in vain for me to argue that here was pleasure
|
|
ready-made and running from the spring, whereas his ploughs and
|
|
butter-churns were but means and mechanisms to give men the necessary
|
|
food and leisure before they start upon the search for pleasure; he
|
|
jibbed and ran away from such conclusions. The thing was different,
|
|
he declared, and nothing was serviceable but what had to do with
|
|
food. 'Eat, eat, eat!' he cried; 'that's the bottom and the top.'
|
|
By an odd irony of circumstance, he grew so much interested in this
|
|
discussion that he let the hour slip by unnoticed and had to go
|
|
without his tea. He had enough sense and humour, indeed he had no
|
|
lack of either, to have chuckled over this himself in private; and
|
|
even to me he referred to it with the shadow of a smile.
|
|
|
|
Mackay was a hot bigot. He would not hear of religion. I have seen
|
|
him waste hours of time in argument with all sorts of poor human
|
|
creatures who understood neither him nor themselves, and he had had
|
|
the boyishness to dissect and criticise even so small a matter as the
|
|
riddler's definition of mind. He snorted aloud with zealotry and the
|
|
lust for intellectual battle. Anything, whatever it was, that seemed
|
|
to him likely to discourage the continued passionate production of
|
|
corn and steam-engines he resented like a conspiracy against the
|
|
people. Thus, when I put in the plea for literature, that it was
|
|
only in good books, or in the society of the good, that a man could
|
|
get help in his conduct, he declared I was in a different world from
|
|
him. 'Damn my conduct!' said he. 'I have given it up for a bad job.
|
|
My question is, "Can I drive a nail?"' And he plainly looked upon me
|
|
as one who was insidiously seeking to reduce the people's annual
|
|
bellyful of corn and steam-engines.
|
|
|
|
It may be argued that these opinions spring from the defect of
|
|
culture; that a narrow and pinching way of life not only exaggerates
|
|
to a man the importance of material conditions, but indirectly, by
|
|
denying him the necessary books and leisure, keeps his mind ignorant
|
|
of larger thoughts; and that hence springs this overwhelming concern
|
|
about diet, and hence the bald view of existence professed by Mackay.
|
|
Had this been an English peasant the conclusion would be tenable.
|
|
But Mackay had most of the elements of a liberal education. He had
|
|
skirted metaphysical and mathematical studies. He had a thoughtful
|
|
hold of what he knew, which would be exceptional among bankers. He
|
|
had been brought up in the midst of hot-house piety, and told, with
|
|
incongruous pride, the story of his own brother's deathbed ecstasies.
|
|
Yet he had somehow failed to fulfil himself, and was adrift like a
|
|
dead thing among external circumstances, without hope or lively
|
|
preference or shaping aim. And further, there seemed a tendency
|
|
among many of his fellows to fall into the same blank and unlovely
|
|
opinions. One thing, indeed, is not to be learned in Scotland, and
|
|
that is the way to be happy. Yet that is the whole of culture, and
|
|
perhaps two-thirds of morality. Can it be that the Puritan school,
|
|
by divorcing a man from nature, by thinning out his instincts, and
|
|
setting a stamp of its disapproval on whole fields of human activity
|
|
and interest, leads at last directly to material greed?
|
|
|
|
Nature is a good guide through life, and the love of simple pleasures
|
|
next, if not superior, to virtue; and we had on board an Irishman who
|
|
based his claim to the widest and most affectionate popularity
|
|
precisely upon these two qualities, that he was natural and happy.
|
|
He boasted a fresh colour, a tight little figure, unquenchable
|
|
gaiety, and indefatigable goodwill. His clothes puzzled the
|
|
diagnostic mind, until you heard he had been once a private coachman,
|
|
when they became eloquent and seemed a part of his biography. His
|
|
face contained the rest, and, I fear, a prophecy of the future; the
|
|
hawk's nose above accorded so ill with the pink baby's mouth below.
|
|
His spirit and his pride belonged, you might say, to the nose; while
|
|
it was the general shiftlessness expressed by the other that had
|
|
thrown him from situation to situation, and at length on board the
|
|
emigrant ship. Barney ate, so to speak, nothing from the galley; his
|
|
own tea, butter, and eggs supported him throughout the voyage; and
|
|
about mealtime you might often find him up to the elbows in amateur
|
|
cookery. His was the first voice heard singing among all the
|
|
passengers; he was the first who fell to dancing. From Loch Foyle to
|
|
Sandy Hook, there was not a piece of fun undertaken but there was
|
|
Barney in the midst.
|
|
|
|
You ought to have seen him when he stood up to sing at our concerts -
|
|
his tight little figure stepping to and fro, and his feet shuffling
|
|
to the air, his eyes seeking and bestowing encouragement - and to
|
|
have enjoyed the bow, so nicely calculated between jest and earnest,
|
|
between grace and clumsiness, with which he brought each song to a
|
|
conclusion. He was not only a great favourite among ourselves, but
|
|
his songs attracted the lords of the saloon, who often leaned to hear
|
|
him over the rails of the hurricane-deck. He was somewhat pleased,
|
|
but not at all abashed, by this attention; and one night, in the
|
|
midst of his famous performance of 'Billy Keogh,' I saw him spin half
|
|
round in a pirouette and throw an audacious wink to an old gentleman
|
|
above.
|
|
|
|
This was the more characteristic, as, for all his daffing, he was a
|
|
modest and very polite little fellow among ourselves.
|
|
|
|
He would not have hurt the feelings of a fly, nor throughout the
|
|
passage did he give a shadow of offence; yet he was always, by his
|
|
innocent freedoms and love of fun, brought upon that narrow margin
|
|
where politeness must be natural to walk without a fall. He was once
|
|
seriously angry, and that in a grave, quiet manner, because they
|
|
supplied no fish on Friday; for Barney was a conscientious Catholic.
|
|
He had likewise strict notions of refinement; and when, late one
|
|
evening, after the women had retired, a young Scotsman struck up an
|
|
indecent song, Barney's drab clothes were immediately missing from
|
|
the group. His taste was for the society of gentlemen, of whom, with
|
|
the reader's permission, there was no lack in our five steerages and
|
|
second cabin; and he avoided the rough and positive with a girlish
|
|
shrinking. Mackay, partly from his superior powers of mind, which
|
|
rendered him incomprehensible, partly from his extreme opinions, was
|
|
especially distasteful to the Irishman. I have seen him slink off
|
|
with backward looks of terror and offended delicacy, while the other,
|
|
in his witty, ugly way, had been professing hostility to God, and an
|
|
extreme theatrical readiness to be shipwrecked on the spot. These
|
|
utterances hurt the little coachman's modesty like a bad word.
|
|
|
|
THE SICK MAN
|
|
|
|
One night Jones, the young O'Reilly, and myself were walking arm-in-
|
|
arm and briskly up and down the deck. Six bells had rung; a head-
|
|
wind blew chill and fitful, the fog was closing in with a sprinkle of
|
|
rain, and the fog-whistle had been turned on, and now divided time
|
|
with its unwelcome outcries, loud like a bull, thrilling and intense
|
|
like a mosquito. Even the watch lay somewhere snugly out of sight.
|
|
|
|
For some time we observed something lying black and huddled in the
|
|
scuppers, which at last heaved a little and moaned aloud. We ran to
|
|
the rails. An elderly man, but whether passenger or seaman it was
|
|
impossible in the darkness to determine, lay grovelling on his belly
|
|
in the wet scuppers, and kicking feebly with his outspread toes. We
|
|
asked him what was amiss, and he replied incoherently, with a strange
|
|
accent and in a voice unmanned by terror, that he had cramp in the
|
|
stomach, that he had been ailing all day, had seen the doctor twice,
|
|
and had walked the deck against fatigue till he was overmastered and
|
|
had fallen where we found him.
|
|
|
|
Jones remained by his side, while O'Reilly and I hurried off to seek
|
|
the doctor. We knocked in vain at the doctor's cabin; there came no
|
|
reply; nor could we find any one to guide us. It was no time for
|
|
delicacy; so we ran once more forward; and I, whipping up a ladder
|
|
and touching my hat to the officer of the watch, addressed him as
|
|
politely as I could -
|
|
|
|
'I beg your pardon, sir; but there is a man lying bad with cramp in
|
|
the lee scuppers; and I can't find the doctor.'
|
|
|
|
He looked at me peeringly in the darkness; and then, somewhat
|
|
harshly, 'Well, I can't leave the bridge, my man,' said he.
|
|
|
|
'No, sir; but you can tell me what to do,' I returned.
|
|
|
|
'Is it one of the crew?' he asked.
|
|
|
|
'I believe him to be a fireman,' I replied.
|
|
|
|
I dare say officers are much annoyed by complaints and alarmist
|
|
information from their freight of human creatures; but certainly,
|
|
whether it was the idea that the sick man was one of the crew, or
|
|
from something conciliatory in my address, the officer in question
|
|
was immediately relieved and mollified; and speaking in a voice much
|
|
freer from constraint, advised me to find a steward and despatch him
|
|
in quest of the doctor, who would now be in the smoking-room over his
|
|
pipe.
|
|
|
|
One of the stewards was often enough to be found about this hour down
|
|
our companion, Steerage No. 2 and 3; that was his smoking-room of a
|
|
night. Let me call him Blackwood. O'Reilly and I rattled down the
|
|
companion, breathing hurry; and in his shirt-sleeves and perched
|
|
across the carpenters bench upon one thigh, found Blackwood; a neat,
|
|
bright, dapper, Glasgow-looking man, with a bead of an eye and a rank
|
|
twang in his speech. I forget who was with him, but the pair were
|
|
enjoying a deliberate talk over their pipes. I dare say he was tired
|
|
with his day's work, and eminently comfortable at that moment; and
|
|
the truth is, I did not stop to consider his feelings, but told my
|
|
story in a breath.
|
|
|
|
'Steward,' said I, 'there's a man lying bad with cramp, and I can't
|
|
find the doctor.'
|
|
|
|
He turned upon me as pert as a sparrow, but with a black look that is
|
|
the prerogative of man; and taking his pipe out of his mouth -
|
|
|
|
'That's none of my business,' said he. 'I don't care.'
|
|
|
|
I could have strangled the little ruffian where he sat. The thought
|
|
of his cabin civility and cabin tips filled me with indignation. I
|
|
glanced at O'Reilly; he was pale and quivering, and looked like
|
|
assault and battery, every inch of him. But we had a better card
|
|
than violence.
|
|
|
|
'You will have to make it your business,' said I, 'for I am sent to
|
|
you by the officer on the bridge.'
|
|
|
|
Blackwood was fairly tripped. He made no answer, but put out his
|
|
pipe, gave me one murderous look, and set off upon his errand
|
|
strolling. From that day forward, I should say, he improved to me in
|
|
courtesy, as though he had repented his evil speech and were anxious
|
|
to leave a better impression.
|
|
|
|
When we got on deck again, Jones was still beside the sick man; and
|
|
two or three late stragglers had gathered round, and were offering
|
|
suggestions. One proposed to give the patient water, which was
|
|
promptly negatived. Another bade us hold him up; he himself prayed
|
|
to be let lie; but as it was at least as well to keep him off the
|
|
streaming decks, O'Reilly and I supported him between us. It was
|
|
only by main force that we did so, and neither an easy nor an
|
|
agreeable duty; for he fought in his paroxysms like a frightened
|
|
child, and moaned miserably when he resigned himself to our control.
|
|
|
|
'O let me lie!' he pleaded. 'I'll no' get better anyway.' And then,
|
|
with a moan that went to my heart, 'O why did I come upon this
|
|
miserable journey?'
|
|
|
|
I was reminded of the song which I had heard a little while before in
|
|
the close, tossing steerage: 'O why left I my hame?'
|
|
|
|
Meantime Jones, relieved of his immediate charge, had gone off to the
|
|
galley, where we could see a light. There he found a belated cook
|
|
scouring pans by the radiance of two lanterns, and one of these he
|
|
sought to borrow. The scullion was backward. 'Was it one of the
|
|
crew?' he asked. And when Jones, smitten with my theory, had assured
|
|
him that it was a fireman, he reluctantly left his scouring and came
|
|
towards us at an easy pace, with one of the lanterns swinging from
|
|
his finger. The light, as it reached the spot, showed us an elderly
|
|
man, thick-set, and grizzled with years; but the shifting and coarse
|
|
shadows concealed from us the expression and even the design of his
|
|
face.
|
|
|
|
So soon as the cook set eyes on him he gave a sort of whistle.
|
|
|
|
'IT'S ONLY A PASSENGER!' said he; and turning about, made, lantern
|
|
and all, for the galley.
|
|
|
|
'He's a man anyway,' cried Jones in indignation.
|
|
|
|
'Nobody said he was a woman,' said a gruff voice, which I recognised
|
|
for that of the bo's'un.
|
|
|
|
All this while there was no word of Blackwood or the doctor; and now
|
|
the officer came to our side of the ship and asked, over the
|
|
hurricane-deck rails, if the doctor were not yet come. We told him
|
|
not.
|
|
|
|
'No?' he repeated with a breathing of anger; and we saw him hurry aft
|
|
in person.
|
|
|
|
Ten minutes after the doctor made his appearance deliberately enough
|
|
and examined our patient with the lantern. He made little of the
|
|
case, had the man brought aft to the dispensary, dosed him, and sent
|
|
him forward to his bunk. Two of his neighbours in the steerage had
|
|
now come to our assistance, expressing loud sorrow that such 'a fine
|
|
cheery body' should be sick; and these, claiming a sort of
|
|
possession, took him entirely under their own care. The drug had
|
|
probably relieved him, for he struggled no more, and was led along
|
|
plaintive and patient, but protesting. His heart recoiled at the
|
|
thought of the steerage. 'O let me lie down upon the bieldy side,'
|
|
he cried; 'O dinna take me down!' And again: 'O why did ever I come
|
|
upon this miserable voyage?' And yet once more, with a gasp and a
|
|
wailing prolongation of the fourth word: 'I had no CALL to come.'
|
|
But there he was; and by the doctor's orders and the kind force of
|
|
his two shipmates disappeared down the companion of Steerage No.1
|
|
into the den allotted him.
|
|
|
|
At the foot of our own companion, just where I found Blackwood, Jones
|
|
and the bo's'un were now engaged in talk. This last was a gruff,
|
|
cruel-looking seaman, who must have passed near half a century upon
|
|
the seas; square-headed, goat-bearded, with heavy blond eyebrows, and
|
|
an eye without radiance, but inflexibly steady and hard. I had not
|
|
forgotten his rough speech; but I remembered also that he had helped
|
|
us about the lantern; and now seeing him in conversation with Jones,
|
|
and being choked with indignation, I proceeded to blow off my steam.
|
|
|
|
'Well,' said I, 'I make you my compliments upon your steward,' and
|
|
furiously narrated what had happened.
|
|
|
|
'I've nothing to do with him,' replied the bo's'un. 'They're all
|
|
alike. They wouldn't mind if they saw you all lying dead one upon
|
|
the top of another.'
|
|
|
|
This was enough. A very little humanity went a long way with me
|
|
after the experience of the evening. A sympathy grew up at once
|
|
between the bo's'un and myself; and that night, and during the next
|
|
few days, I learned to appreciate him better. He was a remarkable
|
|
type, and not at all the kind of man you find in books. He had been
|
|
at Sebastopol under English colours; and again in a States ship,
|
|
'after the ALABAMA, and praying God we shouldn't find her.' He was a
|
|
high Tory and a high Englishman. No manufacturer could have held
|
|
opinions more hostile to the working man and his strikes. 'The
|
|
workmen,' he said, 'think nothing of their country. They think of
|
|
nothing but themselves. They're damned greedy, selfish fellows.' He
|
|
would not hear of the decadence of England. 'They say they send us
|
|
beef from America,' he argued; 'but who pays for it? All the money
|
|
in the world's in England.' The Royal Navy was the best of possible
|
|
services, according to him. 'Anyway the officers are gentlemen,'
|
|
said he; 'and you can't get hazed to death by a damned non-
|
|
commissioned - as you can in the army.' Among nations, England was
|
|
the first; then came France. He respected the French navy and liked
|
|
the French people; and if he were forced to make a new choice in
|
|
life, 'by God, he would try Frenchmen!' For all his looks and rough,
|
|
cold manners, I observed that children were never frightened by him;
|
|
they divined him at once to be a friend; and one night when he had
|
|
chalked his hand and clothes, it was incongruous to hear this
|
|
formidable old salt chuckling over his boyish monkey trick.
|
|
|
|
In the morning, my first thought was of the sick man. I was afraid I
|
|
should not recognise him, baffling had been the light of the lantern;
|
|
and found myself unable to decide if he were Scots, English, or
|
|
Irish. He had certainly employed north-country words and elisions;
|
|
but the accent and the pronunciation seemed unfamiliar and
|
|
incongruous in my ear.
|
|
|
|
To descend on an empty stomach into Steerage No. 1, was an adventure
|
|
that required some nerve. The stench was atrocious; each respiration
|
|
tasted in the throat like some horrible kind of cheese; and the
|
|
squalid aspect of the place was aggravated by so many people worming
|
|
themselves into their clothes in twilight of the bunks. You may
|
|
guess if I was pleased, not only for him, but for myself also, when I
|
|
heard that the sick man was better and had gone on deck.
|
|
|
|
The morning was raw and foggy, though the sun suffused the fog with
|
|
pink and amber; the fog-horn still blew, stertorous and intermittent;
|
|
and to add to the discomfort, the seamen were just beginning to wash
|
|
down the decks. But for a sick man this was heaven compared to the
|
|
steerage. I found him standing on the hot-water pipe, just forward
|
|
of the saloon deck house. He was smaller than I had fancied, and
|
|
plain-looking; but his face was distinguished by strange and
|
|
fascinating eyes, limpid grey from a distance, but, when looked into,
|
|
full of changing colours and grains of gold. His manners were mild
|
|
and uncompromisingly plain; and I soon saw that, when once started,
|
|
he delighted to talk. His accent and language had been formed in the
|
|
most natural way, since he was born in Ireland, had lived a quarter
|
|
of a century on the banks of Tyne, and was married to a Scots wife.
|
|
A fisherman in the season, he had fished the east coast from
|
|
Fisherrow to Whitby. When the season was over, and the great boats,
|
|
which required extra hands, were once drawn up on shore till the next
|
|
spring, he worked as a labourer about chemical furnaces, or along the
|
|
wharves unloading vessels. In this comparatively humble way of life
|
|
he had gathered a competence, and could speak of his comfortable
|
|
house, his hayfield, and his garden. On this ship, where so many
|
|
accomplished artisans were fleeing from starvation, he was present on
|
|
a pleasure trip to visit a brother in New York.
|
|
|
|
Ere he started, he informed me, he had been warned against the
|
|
steerage and the steerage fare, and recommended to bring with him a
|
|
ham and tea and a spice loaf. But he laughed to scorn such counsels.
|
|
'I'm not afraid,' he had told his adviser; 'I'll get on for ten days.
|
|
I've not been a fisherman for nothing.' For it is no light matter,
|
|
as he reminded me, to be in an open boat, perhaps waist-deep with
|
|
herrings, day breaking with a scowl, and for miles on every hand lee-
|
|
shores, unbroken, iron-bound, surf-beat, with only here and there an
|
|
anchorage where you dare not lie, or a harbour impossible to enter
|
|
with the wind that blows. The life of a North Sea fisher is one long
|
|
chapter of exposure and hard work and insufficient fare; and even if
|
|
he makes land at some bleak fisher port, perhaps the season is bad or
|
|
his boat has been unlucky and after fifty hours' unsleeping vigilance
|
|
and toil, not a shop will give him credit for a loaf of bread. Yet
|
|
the steerage of the emigrant ship had been too vile for the endurance
|
|
of a man thus rudely trained. He had scarce eaten since he came on
|
|
board, until the day before, when his appetite was tempted by some
|
|
excellent pea-soup. We were all much of the same mind on board, and
|
|
beginning with myself, had dined upon pea-soup not wisely but too
|
|
well; only with him the excess had been punished, perhaps because he
|
|
was weakened by former abstinence, and his first meal had resulted in
|
|
a cramp. He had determined to live henceforth on biscuit; and when,
|
|
two months later, he should return to England, to make the passage by
|
|
saloon. The second cabin, after due inquiry, he scouted as another
|
|
edition of the steerage.
|
|
|
|
He spoke apologetically of his emotion when ill. 'Ye see, I had no
|
|
call to be here,' said he; 'and I thought it was by with me last
|
|
night. I've a good house at home, and plenty to nurse me, and I had
|
|
no real call to leave them.' Speaking of the attentions he had
|
|
received from his shipmates generally, 'they were all so kind,' he
|
|
said, 'that there's none to mention.' And except in so far as I
|
|
might share in this, he troubled me with no reference to my services.
|
|
|
|
But what affected me in the most lively manner was the wealth of this
|
|
day-labourer, paying a two months' pleasure visit to the States, and
|
|
preparing to return in the saloon, and the new testimony rendered by
|
|
his story, not so much to the horrors of the steerage as to the
|
|
habitual comfort of the working classes. One foggy, frosty December
|
|
evening, I encountered on Liberton Hill, near Edinburgh, an Irish
|
|
labourer trudging homeward from the fields. Our roads lay together,
|
|
and it was natural that we should fall into talk. He was covered
|
|
with mud; an inoffensive, ignorant creature, who thought the Atlantic
|
|
Cable was a secret contrivance of the masters the better to oppress
|
|
labouring mankind; and I confess I was astonished to learn that he
|
|
had nearly three hundred pounds in the bank. But this man had
|
|
travelled over most of the world, and enjoyed wonderful opportunities
|
|
on some American railroad, with two dollars a shift and double pay on
|
|
Sunday and at night; whereas my fellow-passenger had never quitted
|
|
Tyneside, and had made all that he possessed in that same accursed,
|
|
down-falling England, whence skilled mechanics, engineers,
|
|
millwrights, and carpenters were fleeing as from the native country
|
|
of starvation.
|
|
|
|
Fitly enough, we slid off on the subject of strikes and wages and
|
|
hard times. Being from the Tyne, and a man who had gained and lost
|
|
in his own pocket by these fluctuations, he had much to say, and held
|
|
strong opinions on the subject. He spoke sharply of the masters,
|
|
and, when I led him on, of the men also. The masters had been
|
|
selfish and obstructive, the men selfish, silly, and light-headed.
|
|
He rehearsed to me the course of a meeting at which he had been
|
|
present, and the somewhat long discourse which he had there
|
|
pronounced, calling into question the wisdom and even the good faith
|
|
of the Union delegates; and although he had escaped himself through
|
|
flush times and starvation times with a handsomely provided purse, he
|
|
had so little faith in either man or master, and so profound a terror
|
|
for the unerring Nemesis of mercantile affairs, that he could think
|
|
of no hope for our country outside of a sudden and complete political
|
|
subversion. Down must go Lords and Church and Army; and capital, by
|
|
some happy direction, must change hands from worse to better, or
|
|
England stood condemned. Such principles, he said, were growing
|
|
'like a seed.'
|
|
|
|
From this mild, soft, domestic man, these words sounded unusually
|
|
ominous and grave. I had heard enough revolutionary talk among my
|
|
workmen fellow-passengers; but most of it was hot and turgid, and
|
|
fell discredited from the lips of unsuccessful men. This man was
|
|
calm; he had attained prosperity and ease; he disapproved the policy
|
|
which had been pursued by labour in the past; and yet this was his
|
|
panacea, - to rend the old country from end to end, and from top to
|
|
bottom, and in clamour and civil discord remodel it with the hand of
|
|
violence.
|
|
|
|
THE STOWAWAYS
|
|
|
|
On the Sunday, among a party of men who were talking in our
|
|
companion, Steerage No. 2 and 3, we remarked a new figure. He wore
|
|
tweed clothes, well enough made if not very fresh, and a plain
|
|
smoking-cap. His face was pale, with pale eyes, and spiritedly
|
|
enough designed; but though not yet thirty, a sort of blackguardly
|
|
degeneration had already overtaken his features. The fine nose had
|
|
grown fleshy towards the point, the pale eyes were sunk in fat. His
|
|
hands were strong and elegant; his experience of life evidently
|
|
varied; his speech full of pith and verve; his manners forward, but
|
|
perfectly presentable. The lad who helped in the second cabin told
|
|
me, in answer to a question, that he did not know who he was, but
|
|
thought, 'by his way of speaking, and because he was so polite, that
|
|
he was some one from the saloon.'
|
|
|
|
I was not so sure, for to me there was something equivocal in his air
|
|
and bearing. He might have been, I thought, the son of some good
|
|
family who had fallen early into dissipation and run from home. But,
|
|
making every allowance, how admirable was his talk! I wish you could
|
|
have heard hin, tell his own stories. They were so swingingly set
|
|
forth, in such dramatic language, and illustrated here and there by
|
|
such luminous bits of acting, that they could only lose in any
|
|
reproduction. There were tales of the P. and O. Company, where he
|
|
had been an officer; of the East Indies, where in former years he had
|
|
lived lavishly; of the Royal Engineers, where he had served for a
|
|
period; and of a dozen other sides of life, each introducing some
|
|
vigorous thumb-nail portrait. He had the talk to himself that night,
|
|
we were all so glad to listen. The best talkers usually address
|
|
themselves to some particular society; there they are kings,
|
|
elsewhere camp-followers, as a man may know Russian and yet be
|
|
ignorant of Spanish; but this fellow had a frank, headlong power of
|
|
style, and a broad, human choice of subject, that would have turned
|
|
any circle in the world into a circle of hearers. He was a Homeric
|
|
talker, plain, strong, and cheerful; and the things and the people of
|
|
which he spoke became readily and clearly present to the minds of
|
|
those who heard him. This, with a certain added colouring of
|
|
rhetoric and rodomontade, must have been the style of Burns, who
|
|
equally charmed the ears of duchesses and hostlers.
|
|
|
|
Yet freely and personally as he spoke, many points remained obscure
|
|
in his narration. The Engineers, for instance, was a service which
|
|
he praised highly; it is true there would be trouble with the
|
|
sergeants; but then the officers were gentlemen, and his own, in
|
|
particular, one among ten thousand. It sounded so far exactly like
|
|
an episode in the rakish, topsy-turvy life of such an one as I had
|
|
imagined. But then there came incidents more doubtful, which showed
|
|
an almost impudent greed after gratuities, and a truly impudent
|
|
disregard for truth. And then there was the tale of his departure.
|
|
He had wearied, it seems, of Woolwich, and one fine day, with a
|
|
companion, slipped up to London for a spree. I have a suspicion that
|
|
spree was meant to be a long one; but God disposes all things; and
|
|
one morning, near Westminster Bridge, whom should he come across but
|
|
the very sergeant who had recruited him at first! What followed? He
|
|
himself indicated cavalierly that he had then resigned. Let us put
|
|
it so. But these resignations are sometimes very trying.
|
|
|
|
At length, after having delighted us for hours, he took himself away
|
|
from the companion; and I could ask Mackay who and what he was.
|
|
'That?' said Mackay. 'Why, that's one of the stowaways.'
|
|
|
|
'No man,' said the same authority, 'who has had anything to do with
|
|
the sea, would ever think of paying for a passage.' I give the
|
|
statement as Mackay's, without endorsement; yet I am tempted to
|
|
believe that it contains a grain of truth; and if you add that the
|
|
man shall be impudent and thievish, or else dead-broke, it may even
|
|
pass for a fair representation of the facts. We gentlemen of England
|
|
who live at home at ease have, I suspect, very insufficient ideas on
|
|
the subject. All the world over, people are stowing away in coal-
|
|
holes and dark corners, and when ships are once out to sea, appearing
|
|
again, begrimed and bashful, upon deck. The career of these sea-
|
|
tramps partakes largely of the adventurous. They may be poisoned by
|
|
coal-gas, or die by starvation in their place of concealment; or when
|
|
found they may be clapped at once and ignominiously into irons, thus
|
|
to be carried to their promised land, the port of destination, and
|
|
alas! brought back in the same way to that from which they started,
|
|
and there delivered over to the magistrates and the seclusion of a
|
|
county jail. Since I crossed the Atlantic, one miserable stowaway
|
|
was found in a dying state among the fuel, uttered but a word or two,
|
|
and departed for a farther country than America.
|
|
|
|
When the stowaway appears on deck, he has but one thing to pray for:
|
|
that he be set to work, which is the price and sign of his
|
|
forgiveness. After half an hour with a swab or a bucket, he feels
|
|
himself as secure as if he had paid for his passage. It is not
|
|
altogether a bad thing for the company, who get more or less
|
|
efficient hands for nothing but a few plates of junk and duff; and
|
|
every now and again find themselves better paid than by a whole
|
|
family of cabin passengers. Not long ago, for instance, a packet was
|
|
saved from nearly certain loss by the skill and courage of a stowaway
|
|
engineer. As was no more than just, a handsome subscription rewarded
|
|
him for his success: but even without such exceptional good fortune,
|
|
as things stand in England and America, the stowaway will often make
|
|
a good profit out of his adventure. Four engineers stowed away last
|
|
summer on the same ship, the CIRCASSIA; and before two days after
|
|
their arrival each of the four had found a comfortable berth. This
|
|
was the most hopeful tale of emigration that I heard from first to
|
|
last; and as you see, the luck was for stowaways.
|
|
|
|
My curiosity was much inflamed by what I heard; and the next morning,
|
|
as I was making the round of the ship, I was delighted to find the
|
|
ex-Royal Engineer engaged in washing down the white paint of a deck
|
|
house. There was another fellow at work beside him, a lad not more
|
|
than twenty, in the most miraculous tatters, his handsome face sown
|
|
with grains of beauty and lighted up by expressive eyes. Four
|
|
stowaways had been found aboard our ship before she left the Clyde,
|
|
but these two had alone escaped the ignominy of being put ashore.
|
|
Alick, my acquaintance of last night, was Scots by birth, and by
|
|
trade a practical engineer; the other was from Devonshire, and had
|
|
been to sea before the mast. Two people more unlike by training,
|
|
character, and habits it would be hard to imagine; yet here they were
|
|
together, scrubbing paint.
|
|
|
|
Alick had held all sorts of good situations, and wasted many
|
|
opportunities in life. I have heard him end a story with these
|
|
words: 'That was in my golden days, when I used finger-glasses.'
|
|
Situation after situation failed him; then followed the depression of
|
|
trade, and for months he had hung round with other idlers, playing
|
|
marbles all day in the West Park, and going home at night to tell his
|
|
landlady how he had been seeking for a job. I believe this kind of
|
|
existence was not unpleasant to Alick himself, and he might have long
|
|
continued to enjoy idleness and a life on tick; but he had a comrade,
|
|
let us call him Brown, who grew restive. This fellow was continually
|
|
threatening to slip his cable for the States, and at last, one
|
|
Wednesday, Glasgow was left widowed of her Brown. Some months
|
|
afterwards, Alick met another old chum in Sauchiehall Street.
|
|
|
|
'By the bye, Alick,' said he, 'I met a gentleman in New York who was
|
|
asking for you.'
|
|
|
|
'Who was that?' asked Alick.
|
|
|
|
'The new second engineer on board the SO-AND-SO,' was the reply.
|
|
|
|
'Well, and who is he?'
|
|
|
|
'Brown, to be sure.'
|
|
|
|
For Brown had been one of the fortunate quartette aboard the
|
|
CIRCASSIA. If that was the way of it in the States, Alick thought it
|
|
was high time to follow Brown's example. He spent his last day, as
|
|
he put it, 'reviewing the yeomanry,' and the next morning says he to
|
|
his landlady, 'Mrs. X., I'll not take porridge to-day, please; I'll
|
|
take some eggs.'
|
|
|
|
'Why, have you found a job?' she asked, delighted.
|
|
|
|
'Well, yes,' returned the perfidious Alick; 'I think I'll start to-
|
|
day.'
|
|
|
|
And so, well lined with eggs, start he did, but for America. I am
|
|
afraid that landlady has seen the last of him.
|
|
|
|
It was easy enough to get on board in the confusion that attends a
|
|
vessel's departure; and in one of the dark corners of Steerage No. 1,
|
|
flat in a bunk and with an empty stomach, Alick made the voyage from
|
|
the Broomielaw to Greenock. That night, the ship's yeoman pulled him
|
|
out by the heels and had him before the mate. Two other stowaways
|
|
had already been found and sent ashore; but by this time darkness had
|
|
fallen, they were out in the middle of the estuary, and the last
|
|
steamer had left them till the morning.
|
|
|
|
'Take him to the forecastle and give him a meal,' said the mate, 'and
|
|
see and pack him off the first thing to-morrow.'
|
|
|
|
In the forecastle he had supper, a good night's rest, and breakfast;
|
|
and was sitting placidly with a pipe, fancying all was over and the
|
|
game up for good with that ship, when one of the sailors grumbled out
|
|
an oath at him, with a 'What are you doing there?' and 'Do you call
|
|
that hiding, anyway?' There was need of no more; Alick was in
|
|
another bunk before the day was older. Shortly before the passengers
|
|
arrived, the ship was cursorily inspected. He heard the round come
|
|
down the companion and look into one pen after another, until they
|
|
came within two of the one in which he lay concealed. Into these
|
|
last two they did not enter, but merely glanced from without; and
|
|
Alick had no doubt that he was personally favoured in this escape.
|
|
It was the character of the man to attribute nothing to luck and but
|
|
little to kindness; whatever happened to him he had earned in his own
|
|
right amply; favours came to him from his singular attraction and
|
|
adroitness, and misfortunes he had always accepted with his eyes
|
|
open. Half an hour after the searchers had departed, the steerage
|
|
began to fill with legitimate passengers, and the worst of Alick's
|
|
troubles was at an end. He was soon making himself popular, smoking
|
|
other people's tobacco, and politely sharing their private stock
|
|
delicacies, and when night came he retired to his bunk beside the
|
|
others with composure.
|
|
|
|
Next day by afternoon, Lough Foyle being already far behind, and only
|
|
the rough north-western hills of Ireland within view, Alick appeared
|
|
on deck to court inquiry and decide his fate. As a matter of fact,
|
|
he was known to several on board, and even intimate with one of the
|
|
engineers; but it was plainly not the etiquette of such occasions for
|
|
the authorities to avow their information. Every one professed
|
|
surprise and anger on his appearance, and he was led prison before
|
|
the captain.
|
|
|
|
'What have you got to say for yourself?' inquired the captain.
|
|
|
|
'Not much,' said Alick; 'but when a man has been a long time out of a
|
|
job, he will do things he would not under other circumstances.'
|
|
|
|
'Are you willing to work?'
|
|
|
|
Alick swore he was burning to be useful.
|
|
|
|
'And what can you do?' asked the captain.
|
|
|
|
He replied composedly that he was a brass-fitter by trade.
|
|
|
|
'I think you will be better at engineering?' suggested the officer,
|
|
with a shrewd look.
|
|
|
|
'No, sir,' says Alick simply. - 'There's few can beat me at a lie,'
|
|
was his engaging commentary to me as he recounted the affair.
|
|
|
|
'Have you been to sea?' again asked the captain.
|
|
|
|
'I've had a trip on a Clyde steamboat, sir, but no more,' replied the
|
|
unabashed Alick.
|
|
|
|
'Well, we must try and find some work for you,' concluded the
|
|
officer.
|
|
|
|
And hence we behold Alick, clear of the hot engine-room, lazily
|
|
scraping paint and now and then taking a pull upon a sheet. 'You
|
|
leave me alone,' was his deduction. 'When I get talking to a man, I
|
|
can get round him.'
|
|
|
|
The other stowaway, whom I will call the Devonian - it was noticeable
|
|
that neither of them told his name - had both been brought up and
|
|
seen the world in a much smaller way. His father, a confectioner,
|
|
died and was closely followed by his mother. His sisters had taken,
|
|
I think, to dressmaking. He himself had returned from sea about a
|
|
year ago and gone to live with his brother, who kept the 'George
|
|
Hotel' - 'it was not quite a real hotel,' added the candid fellow -
|
|
'and had a hired man to mind the horses.' At first the Devonian was
|
|
very welcome; but as time went on his brother not unnaturally grew
|
|
cool towards him, and he began to find himself one too many at the
|
|
'George Hotel.' 'I don't think brothers care much for you,' he said,
|
|
as a general reflection upon life. Hurt at this change, nearly
|
|
penniless, and too proud to ask for more, he set off on foot and
|
|
walked eighty miles to Weymouth, living on the journey as he could.
|
|
He would have enlisted, but he was too small for the army and too old
|
|
for the navy; and thought himself fortunate at last to find a berth
|
|
on board a trading dandy. Somewhere in the Bristol Channel the dandy
|
|
sprung a leak and went down; and though the crew were picked up and
|
|
brought ashore by fishermen, they found themselves with nothing but
|
|
the clothes upon their back. His next engagement was scarcely better
|
|
starred; for the ship proved so leaky, and frightened them all so
|
|
heartily during a short passage through the Irish Sea, that the
|
|
entire crew deserted and remained behind upon the quays of Belfast.
|
|
|
|
Evil days were now coming thick on the Devonian. He could find no
|
|
berth in Belfast, and had to work a passage to Glasgow on a steamer.
|
|
She reached the Broomielaw on a Wednesday: the Devonian had a
|
|
bellyful that morning, laying in breakfast manfully to provide
|
|
against the future, and set off along the quays to seek employment.
|
|
But he was now not only penniless, his clothes had begun to fall in
|
|
tatters; he had begun to have the look of a street Arab; and captains
|
|
will have nothing to say to a ragamuffin; for in that trade, as in
|
|
all others, it is the coat that depicts the man. You may hand, reef,
|
|
and steer like an angel, but if you have a hole in your trousers, it
|
|
is like a millstone round your neck. The Devonian lost heart at so
|
|
many refusals. He had not the impudence to beg; although, as he
|
|
said, 'when I had money of my own, I always gave it.' It was only on
|
|
Saturday morning, after three whole days of starvation, that he asked
|
|
a scone from a milkwoman, who added of her own accord a glass of
|
|
milk. He had now made up his mind to stow away, not from any desire
|
|
to see America, but merely to obtain the comfort of a place in the
|
|
forecastle and a supply of familiar sea-fare. He lived by begging,
|
|
always from milkwomen, and always scones and milk, and was not once
|
|
refused. It was vile wet weather, and he could never have been dry.
|
|
By night he walked the streets, and by day slept upon Glasgow Green,
|
|
and heard, in the intervals of his dozing, the famous theologians of
|
|
the spot clear up intricate points of doctrine and appraise the
|
|
merits of the clergy. He had not much instruction; he could 'read
|
|
bills on the street,' but was 'main bad at writing'; yet these
|
|
theologians seem to have impressed him with a genuine sense of
|
|
amusement. Why he did not go to the Sailors' House I know not; I
|
|
presume there is in Glasgow one of these institutions, which are by
|
|
far the happiest and the wisest effort of contemporaneous charity;
|
|
but I must stand to my author, as they say in old books, and relate
|
|
the story as I heard it. In the meantime, he had tried four times to
|
|
stow away in different vessels, and four times had been discovered
|
|
and handed back to starvation. The fifth time was lucky; and you may
|
|
judge if he were pleased to be aboard ship again, at his old work,
|
|
and with duff twice a week. He was, said Alick, 'a devil for the
|
|
duff.' Or if devil was not the word, it was one if anything
|
|
stronger.
|
|
|
|
The difference in the conduct of the two was remarkable. The
|
|
Devonian was as willing as any paid hand, swarmed aloft among the
|
|
first, pulled his natural weight and firmly upon a rope, and found
|
|
work for himself when there was none to show him. Alick, on the
|
|
other hand, was not only a skulker in the brain, but took a humorous
|
|
and fine gentlemanly view of the transaction. He would speak to me
|
|
by the hour in ostentatious idleness; and only if the bo's'un or a
|
|
mate came by, fell-to languidly for just the necessary time till they
|
|
were out of sight. 'I'm not breaking my heart with it,' he remarked.
|
|
|
|
Once there was a hatch to be opened near where he was stationed; he
|
|
watched the preparations for a second or so suspiciously, and then,
|
|
'Hullo,' said he, 'here's some real work coming - I'm off,' and he
|
|
was gone that moment. Again, calculating the six guinea passage-
|
|
money, and the probable duration of the passage, he remarked
|
|
pleasantly that he was getting six shillings a day for this job, 'and
|
|
it's pretty dear to the company at that.' 'They are making nothing
|
|
by me,' was another of his observations; 'they're making something by
|
|
that fellow.' And he pointed to the Devonian, who was just then busy
|
|
to the eyes.
|
|
|
|
The more you saw of Alick, the more, it must be owned, you learned to
|
|
despise him. His natural talents were of no use either to himself or
|
|
others; for his character had degenerated like his face, and become
|
|
pulpy and pretentious. Even his power of persuasion, which was
|
|
certainly very surprising, stood in some danger of being lost or
|
|
neutralised by over-confidence. He lied in an aggressive, brazen
|
|
manner, like a pert criminal in the dock; and he was so vain of his
|
|
own cleverness that he could not refrain from boasting, ten minutes
|
|
after, of the very trick by which he had deceived you. 'Why, now I
|
|
have more money than when I came on board,' he said one night,
|
|
exhibiting a sixpence, 'and yet I stood myself a bottle of beer
|
|
before I went to bed yesterday. And as for tobacco, I have fifteen
|
|
sticks of it.' That was fairly successful indeed; yet a man of his
|
|
superiority, and with a less obtrusive policy, might, who knows? have
|
|
got the length of half a crown. A man who prides himself upon
|
|
persuasion should learn the persuasive faculty of silence, above all
|
|
as to his own misdeeds. It is only in the farce and for dramatic
|
|
purposes that Scapin enlarges on his peculiar talents to the world at
|
|
large.
|
|
|
|
Scapin is perhaps a good name for this clever, unfortunate Alick; for
|
|
at the bottom of all his misconduct there was a guiding sense of
|
|
humour that moved you to forgive him. It was more than half a jest
|
|
that he conducted his existence. 'Oh, man,' he said to me once with
|
|
unusual emotion, like a man thinking of his mistress, 'I would give
|
|
up anything for a lark.'
|
|
|
|
It was in relation to his fellow-stowaway that Alick showed the best,
|
|
or perhaps I should say the only good, points of his nature. 'Mind
|
|
you,' he said suddenly, changing his tone, 'mind you that's a good
|
|
boy. He wouldn't tell you a lie. A lot of them think he is a scamp
|
|
because his clothes are ragged, but he isn't; he's as good as gold.'
|
|
To hear him, you become aware that Alick himself had a taste for
|
|
virtue. He thought his own idleness and the other's industry equally
|
|
becoming. He was no more anxious to insure his own reputation as a
|
|
liar than to uphold the truthfulness of his companion; and he seemed
|
|
unaware of what was incongruous in his attitude, and was plainly
|
|
sincere in both characters.
|
|
|
|
It was not surprising that he should take an interest in the
|
|
Devonian, for the lad worshipped and served him in love and wonder.
|
|
Busy as he was, he would find time to warn Alick of an approaching
|
|
officer, or even to tell him that the coast was clear, and he might
|
|
slip off and smoke a pipe in safety. 'Tom,' he once said to him, for
|
|
that was the name which Alick ordered him to use, 'if you don't like
|
|
going to the galley, I'll go for you. You ain't used to this kind of
|
|
thing, you ain't. But I'm a sailor; and I can understand the
|
|
feelings of any fellow, I can.' Again, he was hard up, and casting
|
|
about for some tobacco, for he was not so liberally used in this
|
|
respect as others perhaps less worthy, when Alick offered him the
|
|
half of one of his fifteen sticks. I think, for my part, he might
|
|
have increased the offer to a whole one, or perhaps a pair of them,
|
|
and not lived to regret his liberality. But the Devonian refused.
|
|
'No,' he said, 'you're a stowaway like me; I won't take it from you,
|
|
I'll take it from some one who's not down on his luck.'
|
|
|
|
It was notable in this generous lad that he was strongly under the
|
|
influence of sex. If a woman passed near where he was working, his
|
|
eyes lit up, his hand paused, and his mind wandered instantly to
|
|
other thoughts. It was natural that he should exercise a fascination
|
|
proportionally strong upon women. He begged, you will remember, from
|
|
women only, and was never refused. Without wishing to explain away
|
|
the charity of those who helped him, I cannot but fancy he may have
|
|
owed a little to his handsome face, and to that quick, responsive
|
|
nature, formed for love, which speaks eloquently through all
|
|
disguises, and can stamp an impression in ten minutes' talk or an
|
|
exchange of glances. He was the more dangerous in that he was far
|
|
from bold, but seemed to woo in spite of himself, and with a soft and
|
|
pleading eye. Ragged as he was, and many a scarecrow is in that
|
|
respect more comfortably furnished, even on board he was not without
|
|
some curious admirers.
|
|
|
|
There was a girl among the passengers, a tall, blonde, handsome,
|
|
strapping Irishwoman, with a wild, accommodating eye, whom Alick had
|
|
dubbed Tommy, with that transcendental appropriateness that defies
|
|
analysis. One day the Devonian was lying for warmth in the upper
|
|
stoke-hole, which stands open on the deck, when Irish Tommy came
|
|
past, very neatly attired, as was her custom.
|
|
|
|
'Poor fellow,' she said, stopping, 'you haven't a vest.'
|
|
|
|
'No,' he said; 'I wish I 'ad.'
|
|
|
|
Then she stood and gazed on him in silence, until, in his
|
|
embarrassment, for he knew not how to look under this scrutiny, he
|
|
pulled out his pipe and began to fill it with tobacco.
|
|
|
|
'Do you want a match?' she asked. And before he had time to reply,
|
|
she ran off and presently returned with more than one.
|
|
|
|
That was the beginning and the end, as far as our passage is
|
|
concerned, of what I will make bold to call this love-affair. There
|
|
are many relations which go on to marriage and last during a
|
|
lifetime, in which less human feeling is engaged than in this scene
|
|
of five minutes at the stoke-hole.
|
|
|
|
Rigidly speaking, this would end the chapter of the stowaways; but in
|
|
a larger sense of the word I have yet more to add. Jones had
|
|
discovered and pointed out to me a young woman who was remarkable
|
|
among her fellows for a pleasing and interesting air. She was poorly
|
|
clad, to the verge, if not over the line, of disrespectability, with
|
|
a ragged old jacket and a bit of a sealskin cap no bigger than your
|
|
fist; but her eyes, her whole expression, and her manner, even in
|
|
ordinary moments, told of a true womanly nature, capable of love,
|
|
anger, and devotion. She had a look, too, of refinement, like one
|
|
who might have been a better lady than most, had she been allowed the
|
|
opportunity. When alone she seemed preoccupied and sad; but she was
|
|
not often alone; there was usually by her side a heavy, dull, gross
|
|
man in rough clothes, chary of speech and gesture - not from caution,
|
|
but poverty of disposition; a man like a ditcher, unlovely and
|
|
uninteresting; whom she petted and tended and waited on with her eyes
|
|
as if he had been Amadis of Gaul. It was strange to see this hulking
|
|
fellow dog-sick, and this delicate, sad woman caring for him. He
|
|
seemed, from first to last, insensible of her caresses and
|
|
attentions, and she seemed unconscious of his insensibility. The
|
|
Irish husband, who sang his wife to sleep, and this Scottish girl
|
|
serving her Orson, were the two bits of human nature that most
|
|
appealed to me throughout the voyage.
|
|
|
|
On the Thursday before we arrived, the tickets were collected; and
|
|
soon a rumour began to go round the vessel; and this girl, with her
|
|
bit of sealskin cap, became the centre of whispering and pointed
|
|
fingers. She also, it was said, was a stowaway of a sort; for she
|
|
was on board with neither ticket nor money; and the man with whom she
|
|
travelled was the father of a family, who had left wife and children
|
|
to be hers. The ship's officers discouraged the story, which may
|
|
therefore have been a story and no more; but it was believed in the
|
|
steerage, and the poor girl had to encounter many curious eyes from
|
|
that day forth.
|
|
|
|
PERSONAL EXPERIENCE AND REVIEW
|
|
|
|
Travel is of two kinds; and this voyage of mine across the ocean
|
|
combined both. 'Out of my country and myself I go,' sings the old
|
|
poet: and I was not only travelling out of my country in latitude
|
|
and longitude, but out of myself in diet, associates, and
|
|
consideration. Part of the interest and a great deal of the
|
|
amusement flowed, at least to me, from this novel situation in the
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
I found that I had what they call fallen in life with absolute
|
|
success and verisimilitude. I was taken for a steerage passenger; no
|
|
one seemed surprised that I should be so; and there was nothing but
|
|
the brass plate between decks to remind me that I had once been a
|
|
gentleman. In a former book, describing a former journey, I
|
|
expressed some wonder that I could be readily and naturally taken for
|
|
a pedlar, and explained the accident by the difference of language
|
|
and manners between England and France. I must now take a humbler
|
|
view; for here I was among my own countrymen, somewhat roughly clad
|
|
to be sure, but with every advantage of speech and manner; and I am
|
|
bound to confess that I passed for nearly anything you please except
|
|
an educated gentleman. The sailors called me 'mate,' the officers
|
|
addressed me as 'my man,' my comrades accepted me without hesitation
|
|
for a person of their own character and experience, but with some
|
|
curious information. One, a mason himself, believed I was a mason;
|
|
several, and among these at least one of the seaman, judged me to be
|
|
a petty officer in the American navy; and I was so often set down for
|
|
a practical engineer that at last I had not the heart to deny it.
|
|
From all these guesses I drew one conclusion, which told against the
|
|
insight of my companions. They might be close observers in their own
|
|
way, and read the manners in the face; but it was plain that they did
|
|
not extend their observation to the hands.
|
|
|
|
To the saloon passengers also I sustained my part without a hitch.
|
|
It is true I came little in their way; but when we did encounter,
|
|
there was no recognition in their eye, although I confess I sometimes
|
|
courted it in silence. All these, my inferiors and equals, took me,
|
|
like the transformed monarch in the story, for a mere common, human
|
|
man. They gave me a hard, dead look, with the flesh about the eye
|
|
kept unrelaxed.
|
|
|
|
With the women this surprised me less, as I had already experimented
|
|
on the sex by going abroad through a suburban part of London simply
|
|
attired in a sleeve-waistcoat. The result was curious. I then
|
|
learned for the first time, and by the exhaustive process, how much
|
|
attention ladies are accustomed to bestow on all male creatures of
|
|
their own station; for, in my humble rig, each one who went by me
|
|
caused me a certain shock of surprise and a sense of something
|
|
wanting. In my normal circumstances, it appeared every young lady
|
|
must have paid me some tribute of a glance; and though I had often
|
|
not detected it when it was given, I was well aware of its absence
|
|
when it was withheld. My height seemed to decrease with every woman
|
|
who passed me, for she passed me like a dog. This is one of my
|
|
grounds for supposing that what are called the upper classes may
|
|
sometimes produce a disagreeable impression in what are called the
|
|
lower; and I wish some one would continue my experiment, and find out
|
|
exactly at what stage of toilette a man becomes invisible to the
|
|
well-regulated female eye.
|
|
|
|
Here on shipboard the matter was put to a more complete test; for,
|
|
even with the addition of speech and manner, I passed among the
|
|
ladies for precisely the average man of the steerage. It was one
|
|
afternoon that I saw this demonstrated. A very plainly dressed woman
|
|
was taken ill on deck. I think I had the luck to be present at every
|
|
sudden seizure during all the passage; and on this occasion found
|
|
myself in the place of importance, supporting the sufferer. There
|
|
was not only a large crowd immediately around us, but a considerable
|
|
knot of saloon passengers leaning over our heads from the hurricane-
|
|
deck. One of these, an elderly managing woman, hailed me with
|
|
counsels. Of course I had to reply; and as the talk went on, I began
|
|
to discover that the whole group took me for the husband. I looked
|
|
upon my new wife, poor creature, with mingled feelings; and I must
|
|
own she had not even the appearance of the poorest class of city
|
|
servant-maids, but looked more like a country wench who should have
|
|
been employed at a roadside inn. Now was the time for me to go and
|
|
study the brass plate.
|
|
|
|
To such of the officers as knew about me - the doctor, the purser,
|
|
and the stewards - I appeared in the light of a broad joke. The fact
|
|
that I spent the better part of my day in writing had gone abroad
|
|
over the ship and tickled them all prodigiously. Whenever they met
|
|
me they referred to my absurd occupation with familiarity and breadth
|
|
of humorous intention. Their manner was well calculated to remind me
|
|
of my fallen fortunes. You may be sincerely amused by the amateur
|
|
literary efforts of a gentleman, but you scarce publish the feeling
|
|
to his face. 'Well!' they would say: 'still writing?' And the smile
|
|
would widen into a laugh. The purser came one day into the cabin,
|
|
and, touched to the heart by my misguided industry, offered me some
|
|
other kind of writing, 'for which,' he added pointedly, 'you will be
|
|
paid.' This was nothing else than to copy out the list of
|
|
passengers.
|
|
|
|
Another trick of mine which told against my reputation was my choice
|
|
of roosting-place in an active draught upon the cabin floor. I was
|
|
openly jeered and flouted for this eccentricity; and a considerable
|
|
knot would sometimes gather at the door to see my last dispositions
|
|
for the night. This was embarrassing, but I learned to support the
|
|
trial with equanimity.
|
|
|
|
Indeed I may say that, upon the whole, my new position sat lightly
|
|
and naturally upon my spirits. I accepted the consequences with
|
|
readiness, and found them far from difficult to bear. The steerage
|
|
conquered me; I conformed more and more to the type of the place, not
|
|
only in manner but at heart, growing hostile to the officers and
|
|
cabin passengers who looked down upon me, and day by day greedier for
|
|
small delicacies. Such was the result, as I fancy, of a diet of
|
|
bread and butter, soup and porridge. We think we have no sweet tooth
|
|
as long as we are full to the brim of molasses; but a man must have
|
|
sojourned in the workhouse before he boasts himself indifferent to
|
|
dainties. Every evening, for instance, I was more and more
|
|
preoccupied about our doubtful fare at tea. If it was delicate my
|
|
heart was much lightened; if it was but broken fish I was
|
|
proportionally downcast. The offer of a little jelly from a fellow-
|
|
passenger more provident than myself caused a marked elevation in my
|
|
spirits. And I would have gone to the ship's end and back again for
|
|
an oyster or a chipped fruit.
|
|
|
|
In other ways I was content with my position. It seemed no disgrace
|
|
to he confounded with my company; for I may as well declare at once I
|
|
found their manners as gentle and becoming as those of any other
|
|
class. I do not mean that my friends could have sat down without
|
|
embarrassment and laughable disaster at the table of a duke. That
|
|
does not imply an inferiority of breeding, but a difference of usage.
|
|
Thus I flatter myself that I conducted myself well among my fellow-
|
|
passengers; yet my most ambitious hope is not to have avoided faults,
|
|
but to have committed as few as possible. I know too well that my
|
|
tact is not the same as their tact, and that my habit of a different
|
|
society constituted, not only no qualification, but a positive
|
|
disability to move easily and becomingly in this. When Jones
|
|
complimented me - because I 'managed to behave very pleasantly' to my
|
|
fellow-passengers, was how he put it - I could follow the thought in
|
|
his mind, and knew his compliment to be such as we pay foreigners on
|
|
their proficiency in English. I dare say this praise was given me
|
|
immediately on the back of some unpardonable solecism, which had led
|
|
him to review my conduct as a whole. We are all ready to laugh at
|
|
the ploughman among lords; we should consider also the case of a lord
|
|
among the ploughmen. I have seen a lawyer in the house of a
|
|
Hebridean fisherman; and I know, but nothing will induce me to
|
|
disclose, which of these two was the better gentleman. Some of our
|
|
finest behaviour, though it looks well enough from the boxes, may
|
|
seem even brutal to the gallery. We boast too often manners that are
|
|
parochial rather than universal; that, like a country wine, will not
|
|
bear transportation for a hundred miles, nor from the parlour to the
|
|
kitchen. To be a gentleman is to be one all the world over, and in
|
|
every relation and grade of society. It is a high calling, to which
|
|
a man must first be born, and then devote himself for life. And,
|
|
unhappily, the manners of a certain so-called upper grade have a kind
|
|
of currency, and meet with a certain external acceptation throughout
|
|
all the others, and this tends to keep us well satisfied with slight
|
|
acquirements and the amateurish accomplishments of a clique. But
|
|
manners, like art, should be human and central.
|
|
|
|
Some of my fellow-passengers, as I now moved among them in a relation
|
|
of equality, seemed to me excellent gentlemen. They were not rough,
|
|
nor hasty, nor disputatious; debated pleasantly, differed kindly;
|
|
were helpful, gentle, patient, and placid. The type of manners was
|
|
plain, and even heavy; there was little to please the eye, but
|
|
nothing to shock; and I thought gentleness lay more nearly at the
|
|
spring of behaviour than in many more ornate and delicate societies.
|
|
I say delicate, where I cannot say refined; a thing may be fine, like
|
|
ironwork, without being delicate, like lace. There was here less
|
|
delicacy; the skin supported more callously the natural surface of
|
|
events, the mind received more bravely the crude facts of human
|
|
existence; but I do not think that there was less effective
|
|
refinement, less consideration for others, less polite suppression of
|
|
self. I speak of the best among my fellow-passengers; for in the
|
|
steerage, as well as in the saloon, there is a mixture. Those, then,
|
|
with whom I found myself in sympathy, and of whom I may therefore
|
|
hope to write with a greater measure of truth, were not only as good
|
|
in their manners, but endowed with very much the same natural
|
|
capacities, and about as wise in deduction, as the bankers and
|
|
barristers of what is called society. One and all were too much
|
|
interested in disconnected facts, and loved information for its own
|
|
sake with too rash a devotion; but people in all classes display the
|
|
same appetite as they gorge themselves daily with the miscellaneous
|
|
gossip of the newspaper. Newspaper-reading, as far as I can make
|
|
out, is often rather a sort of brown study than an act of culture. I
|
|
have myself palmed off yesterday's issue on a friend, and seen him
|
|
re-peruse it for a continuance of minutes with an air at once
|
|
refreshed and solemn. Workmen, perhaps, pay more attention; but
|
|
though they may be eager listeners, they have rarely seemed to me
|
|
either willing or careful thinkers. Culture is not measured by the
|
|
greatness of the field which is covered by our knowledge, but by the
|
|
nicety with which we can perceive relations in that field, whether
|
|
great or small. Workmen, certainly those who were on board with me,
|
|
I found wanting in this quality or habit of the mind. They did not
|
|
perceive relations, but leaped to a so-called cause, and thought the
|
|
problem settled. Thus the cause of everything in England was the
|
|
form of government, and the cure for all evils was, by consequence, a
|
|
revolution. It is surprising how many of them said this, and that
|
|
none should have had a definite thought in his head as he said it.
|
|
Some hated the Church because they disagreed with it; some hated Lord
|
|
Beaconsfield because of war and taxes; all hated the masters,
|
|
possibly with reason. But these failings were not at the root of the
|
|
matter; the true reasoning of their souls ran thus - I have not got
|
|
on; I ought to have got on; if there was a revolution I should get
|
|
on. How? They had no idea. Why? Because - because - well, look at
|
|
America!
|
|
|
|
To be politically blind is no distinction; we are all so, if you come
|
|
to that. At bottom, as it seems to me, there is but one question in
|
|
modern home politics, though it appears in many shapes, and that is
|
|
the question of money; and but one political remedy, that the people
|
|
should grow wiser and better. My workmen fellow-passengers were as
|
|
impatient and dull of hearing on the second of these points as any
|
|
member of Parliament; but they had some glimmerings of the first.
|
|
They would not hear of improvement on their part, but wished the
|
|
world made over again in a crack, so that they might remain
|
|
improvident and idle and debauched, and yet enjoy the comfort and
|
|
respect that should accompany the opposite virtues; and it was in
|
|
this expectation, as far as I could see, that many of them were now
|
|
on their way to America. But on the point of money they saw clearly
|
|
enough that inland politics, so far as they were concerned, were
|
|
reducible to the question of annual income; a question which should
|
|
long ago have been settled by a revolution, they did not know how,
|
|
and which they were now about to settle for themselves, once more
|
|
they knew not how, by crossing the Atlantic in a steamship of
|
|
considerable tonnage.
|
|
|
|
And yet it has been amply shown them that the second or income
|
|
question is in itself nothing, and may as well be left undecided, if
|
|
there be no wisdom and virtue to profit by the change. It is not by
|
|
a man's purse, but by his character that he is rich or poor. Barney
|
|
will be poor, Alick will be poor, Mackay will be poor; let them go
|
|
where they will, and wreck all the governments under heaven, they
|
|
will be poor until they die.
|
|
|
|
Nothing is perhaps more notable in the average workman than his
|
|
surprising idleness, and the candour with which he confesses to the
|
|
failing. It has to me been always something of a relief to find the
|
|
poor, as a general rule, so little oppressed with work. I can in
|
|
consequence enjoy my own more fortunate beginning with a better
|
|
grace. The other day I was living with a farmer in America, an old
|
|
frontiersman, who had worked and fought, hunted and farmed, from his
|
|
childhood up. He excused himself for his defective education on the
|
|
ground that he had been overworked from first to last. Even now, he
|
|
said, anxious as he was, he had never the time to take up a book. In
|
|
consequence of this, I observed him closely; he was occupied for four
|
|
or, at the extreme outside, for five hours out of the twenty-four,
|
|
and then principally in walking; and the remainder of the day he
|
|
passed in born idleness, either eating fruit or standing with his
|
|
back against a door. I have known men do hard literary work all
|
|
morning, and then undergo quite as much physical fatigue by way of
|
|
relief as satisfied this powerful frontiersman for the day. He, at
|
|
least, like all the educated class, did so much homage to industry as
|
|
to persuade himself he was industrious. But the average mechanic
|
|
recognises his idleness with effrontery; he has even, as I am told,
|
|
organised it.
|
|
|
|
I give the story as it was told me, and it was told me for a fact. A
|
|
man fell from a housetop in the city of Aberdeen, and was brought
|
|
into hospital with broken bones. He was asked what was his trade,
|
|
and replied that he was a TAPPER. No one had ever heard of such a
|
|
thing before; the officials were filled with curiosity; they besought
|
|
an explanation. It appeared that when a party of slaters were
|
|
engaged upon a roof, they would now and then be taken with a fancy
|
|
for the public-house. Now a seamstress, for example, might slip away
|
|
from her work and no one be the wiser; but if these fellows
|
|
adjourned, the tapping of the mallets would cease, and thus the
|
|
neighbourhood be advertised of their defection. Hence the career of
|
|
the tapper. He has to do the tapping and keep up an industrious
|
|
bustle on the housetop during the absence of the slaters. When he
|
|
taps for only one or two the thing is child's-play, but when he has
|
|
to represent a whole troop, it is then that he earns his money in the
|
|
sweat of his brow. Then must he bound from spot to spot,
|
|
reduplicate, triplicate, sexduplicate his single personality, and
|
|
swell and hasten his blows., until he produce a perfect illusion for
|
|
the ear, and you would swear that a crowd of emulous masons were
|
|
continuing merrily to roof the house. It must be a strange sight
|
|
from an upper window.
|
|
|
|
I heard nothing on board of the tapper; but I was astonished at the
|
|
stories told by my companions. Skulking, shirking, malingering, were
|
|
all established tactics, it appeared. They could see no dishonesty
|
|
where a man who is paid for an bones work gives half an hour's
|
|
consistent idling in its place. Thus the tapper would refuse to
|
|
watch for the police during a burglary, and call himself a honest
|
|
man. It is not sufficiently recognised that our race detests to
|
|
work. If I thought that I should have to work every day of my life
|
|
as hard as I am working now, I should be tempted to give up the
|
|
struggle. And the workman early begins on his career of toil. He
|
|
has never had his fill of holidays in the past, and his prospect of
|
|
holidays in the future is both distant and uncertain. In the
|
|
circumstances, it would require a high degree of virtue not to snatch
|
|
alleviations for the moment.
|
|
|
|
There were many good talkers on the ship; and I believe good talking
|
|
of a certain sort is a common accomplishment among working men.
|
|
Where books are comparatively scarce, a greater amount of information
|
|
will be given and received by word of mouth; and this tends to
|
|
produce good talkers, and, what is no less needful for conversation,
|
|
good listeners. They could all tell a story with effect. I am
|
|
sometimes tempted to think that the less literary class show always
|
|
better in narration; they have so much more patience with detail, are
|
|
so much less hurried to reach the points, and preserve so much juster
|
|
a proportion among the facts. At the same time their talk is dry;
|
|
they pursue a topic ploddingly, have not an agile fancy, do not throw
|
|
sudden lights from unexpected quarters, and when the talk is over
|
|
they often leave the matter where it was. They mark time instead of
|
|
marching. They think only to argue, not to reach new conclusions,
|
|
and use their reason rather as a weapon of offense than as a tool for
|
|
self-improvement. Hence the talk of some of the cleverest was
|
|
unprofitable in result, because there was no give and take; they
|
|
would grant you as little as possible for premise, and begin to
|
|
dispute under an oath to conquer or to die.
|
|
|
|
But the talk of a workman is apt to be more interesting than that of
|
|
a wealthy merchant, because the thoughts, hopes, and fears of which
|
|
the workman's life is built lie nearer to necessity and nature. They
|
|
are more immediate to human life. An income calculated by the week
|
|
is a far more human thing than one calculated by the year, and a
|
|
small income, simply from its smallness, than a large one. I never
|
|
wearied listening to the details of a workman's economy, because
|
|
every item stood for some real pleasure. If he could afford pudding
|
|
twice a week, you know that twice a week the man ate with genuine
|
|
gusto and was physically happy; while if you learn that a rich man
|
|
has seven courses a day, ten to one the half of them remain untasted,
|
|
and the whole is but misspent money and a weariness to the flesh.
|
|
|
|
The difference between England and America to a working man was thus
|
|
most humanly put to me by a fellow-passenger: 'In America,' said he,
|
|
'you get pies and puddings.' I do not hear enough, in economy books,
|
|
of pies and pudding. A man lives in and for the delicacies,
|
|
adornments, and accidental attributes of life, such as pudding to eat
|
|
and pleasant books and theatres to occupy his leisure. The bare
|
|
terms of existence would be rejected with contempt by all. If a man
|
|
feeds on bread and butter, soup and porridge, his appetite grows
|
|
wolfish after dainties. And the workman dwells in a borderland, and
|
|
is always within sight of those cheerless regions where life is more
|
|
difficult to sustain than worth sustaining. Every detail of our
|
|
existence, where it is worth while to cross the ocean after pie and
|
|
pudding, is made alive and enthralling by the presence of genuine
|
|
desire; but it is all one to me whether Croesus has a hundred or a
|
|
thousand thousands in the bank. There is more adventure in the life
|
|
of the working man who descends as a common solder into the battle of
|
|
life, than in that of the millionaire who sits apart in an office,
|
|
like Von Moltke, and only directs the manoeuvres by telegraph. Give
|
|
me to hear about the career of him who is in the thick of business;
|
|
to whom one change of market means empty belly, and another a copious
|
|
and savoury meal. This is not the philosophical, but the human side
|
|
of economics; it interests like a story; and the life all who are
|
|
thus situated partakes in a small way the charm of ROBINSON CRUSOE;
|
|
for every step is critical and human life is presented to you naked
|
|
and verging to its lowest terms.
|
|
|
|
NEW YORK
|
|
|
|
As we drew near to New York I was at first amused, and then somewhat
|
|
staggered, by the cautious and the grisly tales that went the round.
|
|
You would have thought we were to land upon a cannibal island. You
|
|
must speak to no one in the streets, as they would not leave you till
|
|
you were rooked and beaten. You must enter a hotel with military
|
|
precautions; for the least you had to apprehend was to awake next
|
|
morning without money or baggage, or necessary raiment, a lone forked
|
|
radish in a bed; and if the worst befell, you would instantly and
|
|
mysteriously disappear from the ranks of mankind.
|
|
|
|
I have usually found such stories correspond to the least modicum of
|
|
fact. Thus I was warned, I remember, against the roadside inns of
|
|
the Cevennes, and that by a learned professor; and when I reached
|
|
Pradelles the warning was explained - it was but the far-away rumour
|
|
and reduplication of a single terrifying story already half a century
|
|
old, and half forgotten in the theatre of the events. So I was
|
|
tempted to make light of these reports against America. But we had
|
|
on board with us a man whose evidence it would not do to put aside.
|
|
He had come near these perils in the body; he had visited a robber
|
|
inn. The public has an old and well-grounded favour for this class
|
|
of incident, and shall be gratified to the best of my power.
|
|
|
|
My fellow-passenger, whom we shall call M'Naughten, had come from New
|
|
York to Boston with a comrade, seeking work. They were a pair of
|
|
rattling blades; and, leaving their baggage at the station, passed
|
|
the day in beer saloons, and with congenial spirits, until midnight
|
|
struck. Then they applied themselves to find a lodging, and walked
|
|
the streets till two, knocking at houses of entertainment and being
|
|
refused admittance, or themselves declining the terms. By two the
|
|
inspiration of their liquor had begun to wear off; they were weary
|
|
and humble, and after a great circuit found themselves in the same
|
|
street where they had begun their search, and in front of a French
|
|
hotel where they had already sought accommodation. Seeing the house
|
|
still open, they returned to the charge. A man in a white cap sat in
|
|
an office by the door. He seemed to welcome them more warmly than
|
|
when they had first presented themselves, and the charge for the
|
|
night had somewhat unaccountably fallen from a dollar to a quarter.
|
|
They thought him ill-looking, but paid their quarter apiece, and were
|
|
shown upstairs to the top of the house. There, in a small room, the
|
|
man in the white cap wished them pleasant slumbers.
|
|
|
|
It was furnished with a bed, a chair, and some conveniences. The
|
|
door did not lock on the inside; and the only sign of adornment was a
|
|
couple of framed pictures, one close above the head of the bed, and
|
|
the other opposite the foot, and both curtained, as we may sometimes
|
|
see valuable water-colours, or the portraits of the dead, or works of
|
|
art more than usually skittish in the subject. It was perhaps in the
|
|
hope of finding something of this last description that M'Naughten's
|
|
comrade pulled aside the curtain of the first. He was startlingly
|
|
disappointed. There was no picture. The frame surrounded, and the
|
|
curtain was designed to hide, an oblong aperture in the partition,
|
|
through which they looked forth into the dark corridor. A person
|
|
standing without could easily take a purse from under the pillow, or
|
|
even strangle a sleeper as he lay abed. M'Naughten and his comrade
|
|
stared at each other like Vasco's seamen, 'with a wild surmise'; and
|
|
then the latter, catching up the lamp, ran to the other frame and
|
|
roughly raised the curtain. There he stood, petrified; and
|
|
M'Naughten, who had followed, grasped him by the wrist in terror.
|
|
They could see into another room, larger in size than that which they
|
|
occupied, where three men sat crouching and silent in the dark. For
|
|
a second or so these five persons looked each other in the eyes, then
|
|
the curtain was dropped, and M'Naughten and his friend made but one
|
|
bolt of it out of the room and downstairs. The man in the white cap
|
|
said nothing as they passed him; and they were so pleased to be once
|
|
more in the open night that they gave up all notion of a bed, and
|
|
walked the streets of Boston till the morning.
|
|
|
|
No one seemed much cast down by these stories, but all inquired after
|
|
the address of a respectable hotel; and I, for my part, put myself
|
|
under the conduct of Mr. Jones. Before noon of the second Sunday we
|
|
sighted the low shores outside of New York harbour; the steerage
|
|
passengers must remain on board to pass through Castle Garden on the
|
|
following morning; but we of the second cabin made our escape along
|
|
with the lords of the saloon; and by six o'clock Jones and I issued
|
|
into West Street, sitting on some straw in the bottom of an open
|
|
baggage-wagon. It rained miraculously; and from that moment till on
|
|
the following night I left New York, there was scarce a lull, and no
|
|
cessation of the downpour. The roadways were flooded; a loud
|
|
strident noise of falling water filled the air; the restaurants smelt
|
|
heavily of wet people and wet clothing.
|
|
|
|
It took us but a few minutes, though it cost us a good deal of money,
|
|
to be rattled along West Street to our destination: 'Reunion House,
|
|
No. 10 West Street, one minutes walk from Castle Garden; convenient
|
|
to Castle Garden, the Steamboat Landings, California Steamers and
|
|
Liverpool Ships; Board and Lodging per day 1 dollar, single meals 25
|
|
cents, lodging per night 25 cents; private rooms for families; no
|
|
charge for storage or baggage; satisfaction guaranteed to all
|
|
persons; Michael Mitchell, Proprietor.' Reunion House was, I may go
|
|
the length of saying, a humble hostelry. You entered through a long
|
|
bar-room, thence passed into a little dining-room, and thence into a
|
|
still smaller kitchen. The furniture was of the plainest; but the
|
|
bar was hung in the American taste, with encouraging and hospitable
|
|
mottoes.
|
|
|
|
Jones was well known; we were received warmly; and two minutes
|
|
afterwards I had refused a drink from the proprietor, and was going
|
|
on, in my plain European fashion, to refuse a cigar, when Mr.
|
|
Mitchell sternly interposed, and explained the situation. He was
|
|
offering to treat me, it appeared, whenever an American bar-keeper
|
|
proposes anything, it must be borne in mind that he is offering to
|
|
treat; and if I did not want a drink, I must at least take the cigar.
|
|
I took it bashfully, feeling I had begun my American career on the
|
|
wrong foot. I did not enjoy that cigar; but this may have been from
|
|
a variety of reasons, even the best cigar often failing to please if
|
|
you smoke three-quarters of it in a drenching rain.
|
|
|
|
For many years America was to me a sort of promised land; 'westward
|
|
the march of empire holds its way'; the race is for the moment to the
|
|
young; what has been and what is we imperfectly and obscurely know;
|
|
what is to be yet lies beyond the flight of our imaginations.
|
|
Greece, Rome, and Judaea are gone by forever, leaving to generations
|
|
the legacy of their accomplished work; China still endures, an old-
|
|
inhabited house in the brand-new city of nations; England has already
|
|
declined, since she has lost the States; and to these States,
|
|
therefore, yet undeveloped, full of dark possibilities, and grown,
|
|
like another Eve, from one rib out of the side of their own old land,
|
|
the minds of young men in England turn naturally at a certain hopeful
|
|
period of their age. It will be hard for an American to understand
|
|
the spirit. But let him imagine a young man, who shall have grown up
|
|
in an old and rigid circle, following bygone fashions and taught to
|
|
distrust his own fresh instincts, and who now suddenly hears of a
|
|
family of cousins, all about his own age, who keep house together by
|
|
themselves and live far from restraint and tradition; let him imagine
|
|
this, and he will have some imperfect notion of the sentiment with
|
|
which spirited English youths turn to the thought of the American
|
|
Republic. It seems to them as if, out west, the war of life was
|
|
still conducted in the open air, and on free barbaric terms; as if it
|
|
had not yet been narrowed into parlours, nor begun to be conducted,
|
|
like some unjust and dreary arbitration, by compromise, costume forms
|
|
of procedure, and sad, senseless self-denial. Which of these two he
|
|
prefers, a man with any youth still left in him will decide rightly
|
|
for himself. He would rather be houseless than denied a pass-key;
|
|
rather go without food than partake of stalled ox in stiff,
|
|
respectable society; rather be shot out of hand than direct his life
|
|
according to the dictates of the world.
|
|
|
|
He knows or thinks nothing of the Maine Laws, the Puritan sourness,
|
|
the fierce, sordid appetite for dollars, or the dreary existence of
|
|
country towns. A few wild story-books which delighted his childhood
|
|
form the imaginative basis of his picture of America. In course of
|
|
time, there is added to this a great crowd of stimulating details -
|
|
vast cities that grow up as by enchantment; the birds, that have gone
|
|
south in autumn, returning with the spring to find thousands camped
|
|
upon their marshes, and the lamps burning far and near along populous
|
|
streets; forests that disappear like snow; countries larger than
|
|
Britain that are cleared and settled, one man running forth with his
|
|
household gods before another, while the bear and the Indian are yet
|
|
scarce aware of their approach; oil that gushes from the earth; gold
|
|
that is washed or quarried in the brooks or glens of the Sierras; and
|
|
all that bustle, courage, action, and constant kaleidoscopic change
|
|
that Walt Whitman has seized and set forth in his vigorous, cheerful,
|
|
and loquacious verses.
|
|
|
|
Here I was at last in America, and was soon out upon New York
|
|
streets, spying for things foreign. The place had to me an air of
|
|
Liverpool; but such was the rain that not Paradise itself would have
|
|
looked inviting. We were a party of four, under two umbrellas; Jones
|
|
and I and two Scots lads, recent immigrants, and not indisposed to
|
|
welcome a compatriot. They had been six weeks in New York, and
|
|
neither of them had yet found a single job or earned a single
|
|
halfpenny. Up to the present they were exactly out of pocket by the
|
|
amount of the fare.
|
|
|
|
The lads soon left us. Now I had sworn by all my gods to have such a
|
|
dinner as would rouse the dead; there was scarce any expense at which
|
|
I should have hesitated; the devil was in it, but Jones and I should
|
|
dine like heathen emperors. I set to work, asking after a
|
|
restaurant; and I chose the wealthiest and most gastronomical-looking
|
|
passers-by to ask from. Yet, although I had told them I was willing
|
|
to pay anything in reason, one and all sent me off to cheap, fixed-
|
|
price houses, where I would not have eaten that night for the cost of
|
|
twenty dinners. I do not know if this were characteristic of New
|
|
York, or whether it was only Jones and I who looked un-dinerly and
|
|
discouraged enterprising suggestions. But at length, by our own
|
|
sagacity, we found a French restaurant, where there was a French
|
|
waiter, some fair French cooking, some so-called French wine, and
|
|
French coffee to conclude the whole. I never entered into the
|
|
feelings of Jack on land so completely as when I tasted that coffee.
|
|
|
|
I suppose we had one of the 'private rooms for families' at Reunion
|
|
House. It was very small, furnished with a bed, a chair, and some
|
|
clothes-pegs; and it derived all that was necessary for the life of
|
|
the human animal through two borrowed lights; one looking into the
|
|
passage, and the second opening, without sash, into another
|
|
apartment, where three men fitfully snored, or in intervals of
|
|
wakefulness, drearily mumbled to each other all night long. It will
|
|
be observed that this was almost exactly the disposition of the room
|
|
in M'Naughten's story. Jones had the bed; I pitched my camp upon the
|
|
floor; he did not sleep until near morning, and I, for my part, never
|
|
closed an eye.
|
|
|
|
At sunrise I heard a cannon fired; and shortly afterwards the men in
|
|
the next room gave over snoring for good, and began to rustle over
|
|
their toilettes. The sound of their voices as they talked was low
|
|
and like that of people watching by the sick. Jones, who had at last
|
|
begun to doze, tumbled and murmured, and every now and then opened
|
|
unconscious eyes upon me where I lay. I found myself growing eerier
|
|
and eerier, for I dare say I was a little fevered by my restless
|
|
night, and hurried to dress and get downstairs.
|
|
|
|
You had to pass through the rain, which still fell thick and
|
|
resonant, to reach a lavatory on the other side of the court. There
|
|
were three basin-stands, and a few crumpled towels and pieces of wet
|
|
soap, white and slippery like fish; nor should I forget a looking-
|
|
glass and a pair of questionable combs. Another Scots lad was here,
|
|
scrubbing his face with a good will. He had been three months in New
|
|
York and had not yet found a single job nor earned a single
|
|
halfpenny. Up to the present, he also was exactly out of pocket by
|
|
the amount of the fare. I began to grow sick at heart for my fellow-
|
|
emigrants.
|
|
|
|
Of my nightmare wanderings in New York I spare to tell. I had a
|
|
thousand and one things to do; only the day to do them in, and a
|
|
journey across the continent before me in the evening. It rained
|
|
with patient fury; every now and then I had to get under cover for a
|
|
while in order, so to speak, to give my mackintosh a rest; for under
|
|
this continued drenching it began to grow damp on the inside. I went
|
|
to banks, post-offices, railway-offices, restaurants, publishers,
|
|
booksellers, money-changers, and wherever I went a pool would gather
|
|
about my feet, and those who were careful of their floors would look
|
|
on with an unfriendly eye. Wherever I went, too, the same traits
|
|
struck me: the people were all surprisingly rude and surprisingly
|
|
kind. The money-changer cross-questioned me like a French
|
|
commissary, asking my age, my business, my average income, and my
|
|
destination, beating down my attempts at evasion, and receiving my
|
|
answers in silence; and yet when all was over, he shook hands with me
|
|
up to the elbows, and sent his lad nearly a quarter of a mile in the
|
|
rain to get me books at a reduction. Again, in a very large
|
|
publishing and bookselling establishment, a man, who seemed to he the
|
|
manager, received me as I had certainly never before been received in
|
|
any human shop, indicated squarely that he put no faith in my
|
|
honesty, and refused to look up the names of books or give me the
|
|
slightest help or information, on the ground, like the steward, that
|
|
it was none of his business. I lost my temper at last, said I was a
|
|
stranger in America and not learned in their etiquette; but I would
|
|
assure him, if he went to any bookseller in England, of more handsome
|
|
usage. The boast was perhaps exaggerated; but like many a long shot,
|
|
it struck the gold. The manager passed at once from one extreme to
|
|
the other; I may say that from that moment he loaded me with
|
|
kindness; he gave me all sorts of good advice, wrote me down
|
|
addresses, and came bareheaded into the rain to point me out a
|
|
restaurant, where I might lunch, nor even then did he seem to think
|
|
that he had done enough. These are (it is as well to be bold in
|
|
statement) the manners of America. It is this same opposition that
|
|
has most struck me in people of almost all classes and from east to
|
|
west. By the time a man had about strung me up to be the death of
|
|
him by his insulting behaviour, he himself would be just upon the
|
|
point of melting into confidence and serviceable attentions. Yet I
|
|
suspect, although I have met with the like in so many parts, that
|
|
this must be the character of some particular state or group of
|
|
states, for in America, and this again in all classes, you will find
|
|
some of the softest-mannered gentlemen in the world.
|
|
|
|
I was so wet when I got back to Mitchell's toward the evening, that I
|
|
had simply to divest myself of my shoes, socks, and trousers, and
|
|
leave them behind for the benefit of New York city. No fire could
|
|
have dried them ere I had to start; and to pack them in their present
|
|
condition was to spread ruin among my other possessions. With a
|
|
heavy heart I said farewell to them as they lay a pulp in the middle
|
|
of a pool upon the floor of Mitchell's kitchen. I wonder if they are
|
|
dry by now. Mitchell hired a man to carry my baggage to the station,
|
|
which was hard by, accompanied me thither himself, and recommended me
|
|
to the particular attention of the officials. No one could have been
|
|
kinder. Those who are out of pocket may go safely to Reunion House,
|
|
where they will get decent meals and find an honest and obliging
|
|
landlord. I owed him this word of thanks, before I enter fairly on
|
|
the second and far less agreeable chapter of my emigrant experience.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II - COCKERMOUTH AND KESWICK - A FRAGMENT - 1871
|
|
|
|
VERY much as a painter half closes his eyes so that some salient
|
|
unity may disengage itself from among the crowd of details, and what
|
|
he sees may thus form itself into a whole; very much on the same
|
|
principle, I may say, I allow a considerable lapse of time to
|
|
intervene between any of my little journeyings and the attempt to
|
|
chronicle them. I cannot describe a thing that is before me at the
|
|
moment, or that has been before me only a very little while before; I
|
|
must allow my recollections to get thoroughly strained free from all
|
|
chaff till nothing be except the pure gold; allow my memory to choose
|
|
out what is truly memorable by a process of natural selection; and I
|
|
piously believe that in this way I ensure the Survival of the
|
|
Fittest. If I make notes for future use, or if I am obliged to write
|
|
letters during the course of my little excursion, I so interfere with
|
|
the process that I can never again find out what is worthy of being
|
|
preserved, or what should be given in full length, what in torso, or
|
|
what merely in profile. This process of incubation may be
|
|
unreasonably prolonged; and I am somewhat afraid that I have made
|
|
this mistake with the present journey. Like a bad daguerreotype,
|
|
great part of it has been entirely lost; I can tell you nothing about
|
|
the beginning and nothing about the end; but the doings of some fifty
|
|
or sixty hours about the middle remain quite distinct and definite,
|
|
like a little patch of sunshine on a long, shadowy plain, or the one
|
|
spot on an old picture that has been restored by the dexterous hand
|
|
of the cleaner. I remember a tale of an old Scots minister called
|
|
upon suddenly to preach, who had hastily snatched an old sermon out
|
|
of his study and found himself in the pulpit before he noticed that
|
|
the rats had been making free with his manuscript and eaten the first
|
|
two or three pages away; he gravely explained to the congregation how
|
|
he found himself situated: 'And now,' said he, 'let us just begin
|
|
where the rats have left off.' I must follow the divine's example,
|
|
and take up the thread of my discourse where it first distinctly
|
|
issues from the limbo of forgetfulness.
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|
|
|
COCKERMOUTH
|
|
|
|
I was lighting my pipe as I stepped out of the inn at Cockermouth,
|
|
and did not raise my head until I was fairly in the street. When I
|
|
did so, it flashed upon me that I was in England; the evening
|
|
sunlight lit up English houses, English faces, an English
|
|
conformation of street, - as it were, an English atmosphere blew
|
|
against my face. There is nothing perhaps more puzzling (if one
|
|
thing in sociology can ever really be more unaccountable than
|
|
another) than the great gulf that is set between England and Scotland
|
|
- a gulf so easy in appearance, in reality so difficult to traverse.
|
|
Here are two people almost identical in blood; pent up together on
|
|
one small island, so that their intercourse (one would have thought)
|
|
must be as close as that of prisoners who shared one cell of the
|
|
Bastille; the same in language and religion; and yet a few years of
|
|
quarrelsome isolation - a mere forenoon's tiff, as one may call it,
|
|
in comparison with the great historical cycles - has so separated
|
|
their thoughts and ways that not unions, not mutual dangers, nor
|
|
steamers, nor railways, nor all the king's horses and all the king's
|
|
men, seem able to obliterate the broad distinction. In the
|
|
trituration of another century or so the corners may disappear; but
|
|
in the meantime, in the year of grace 1871, I was as much in a new
|
|
country as if I had been walking out of the Hotel St. Antoine at
|
|
Antwerp.
|
|
|
|
I felt a little thrill of pleasure at my heart as I realised the
|
|
change, and strolled away up the street with my hands behind my back,
|
|
noting in a dull, sensual way how foreign, and yet how friendly, were
|
|
the slopes of the gables and the colour of the tiles, and even the
|
|
demeanour and voices of the gossips round about me.
|
|
|
|
Wandering in this aimless humour, I turned up a lane and found myself
|
|
following the course of the bright little river. I passed first one
|
|
and then another, then a third, several couples out love-making in
|
|
the spring evening; and a consequent feeling of loneliness was
|
|
beginning to grow upon me, when I came to a dam across the river, and
|
|
a mill - a great, gaunt promontory of building, - half on dry ground
|
|
and half arched over the stream. The road here drew in its shoulders
|
|
and crept through between the landward extremity of the mill and a
|
|
little garden enclosure, with a small house and a large signboard
|
|
within its privet hedge. I was pleased to fancy this an inn, and
|
|
drew little etchings in fancy of a sanded parlour, and three-cornered
|
|
spittoons, and a society of parochial gossips seated within over
|
|
their churchwardens; but as I drew near, the board displayed its
|
|
superscription, and I could read the name of Smethurst, and the
|
|
designation of 'Canadian Felt Hat Manufacturers.' There was no more
|
|
hope of evening fellowship, and I could only stroll on by the river-
|
|
side, under the trees. The water was dappled with slanting sunshine,
|
|
and dusted all over with a little mist of flying insects. There were
|
|
some amorous ducks, also, whose lovemaking reminded me of what I had
|
|
seen a little farther down. But the road grew sad, and I grew weary;
|
|
and as I was perpetually haunted with the terror of a return of the
|
|
tie that had been playing such ruin in my head a week ago, I turned
|
|
and went back to the inn, and supper, and my bed.
|
|
|
|
The next morning, at breakfast, I communicated to the smart waitress
|
|
my intention of continuing down the coast and through Whitehaven to
|
|
Furness, and, as I might have expected, I was instantly confronted by
|
|
that last and most worrying form of interference, that chooses to
|
|
introduce tradition and authority into the choice of a man's own
|
|
pleasures. I can excuse a person combating my religious or
|
|
philosophical heresies, because them I have deliberately accepted,
|
|
and am ready to justify by present argument. But I do not seek to
|
|
justify my pleasures. If I prefer tame scenery to grand, a little
|
|
hot sunshine over lowland parks and woodlands to the war of the
|
|
elements round the summit of Mont Blanc; or if I prefer a pipe of
|
|
mild tobacco, and the company of one or two chosen companions, to a
|
|
ball where I feel myself very hot, awkward, and weary, I merely state
|
|
these preferences as facts, and do not seek to establish them as
|
|
principles. This is not the general rule, however, and accordingly
|
|
the waitress was shocked, as one might be at a heresy, to hear the
|
|
route that I had sketched out for myself. Everybody who came to
|
|
Cockermouth for pleasure, it appeared, went on to Keswick. It was in
|
|
vain that I put up a little plea for the liberty of the subject; it
|
|
was in vain that I said I should prefer to go to Whitehaven. I was
|
|
told that there was 'nothing to see there' - that weary, hackneyed,
|
|
old falsehood; and at last, as the handmaiden began to look really
|
|
concerned, I gave way, as men always do in such circumstances, and
|
|
agreed that I was to leave for Keswick by a train in the early
|
|
evening.
|
|
|
|
AN EVANGELIST
|
|
|
|
Cockermouth itself, on the same authority, was a Place with 'nothing
|
|
to see'; nevertheless I saw a good deal, and retain a pleasant, vague
|
|
picture of the town and all its surroundings. I might have dodged
|
|
happily enough all day about the main street and up to the castle and
|
|
in and out of byways, but the curious attraction that leads a person
|
|
in a strange place to follow, day after day, the same round, and to
|
|
make set habits for himself in a week or ten days, led me half
|
|
unconsciously up the same, road that I had gone the evening before.
|
|
When I came up to the hat manufactory, Smethurst himself was standing
|
|
in the garden gate. He was brushing one Canadian felt hat, and
|
|
several others had been put to await their turn one above the other
|
|
on his own head, so that he looked something like the typical Jew
|
|
old-clothes man. As I drew near, he came sidling out of the doorway
|
|
to accost me, with so curious an expression on his face that I
|
|
instinctively prepared myself to apologise for some unwitting
|
|
trespass. His first question rather confirmed me in this belief, for
|
|
it was whether or not he had seen me going up this way last night;
|
|
and after having answered in the affirmative, I waited in some alarm
|
|
for the rest of my indictment. But the good man's heart was full of
|
|
peace; and he stood there brushing his hats and prattling on about
|
|
fishing, and walking, and the pleasures of convalescence, in a bright
|
|
shallow stream that kept me pleased and interested, I could scarcely
|
|
say how. As he went on, he warmed to his subject, and laid his hats
|
|
aside to go along the water-side and show me where the large trout
|
|
commonly lay, underneath an overhanging bank; and he was much
|
|
disappointed, for my sake, that there were none visible just then.
|
|
Then he wandered off on to another tack, and stood a great while out
|
|
in the middle of a meadow in the hot sunshine, trying to make out
|
|
that he had known me before, or, if not me, some friend of mine,
|
|
merely, I believe, out of a desire that we should feel more friendly
|
|
and at our ease with one another. At last he made a little speech to
|
|
me, of which I wish I could recollect the very words, for they were
|
|
so simple and unaffected that they put all the best writing and
|
|
speaking to the blush; as it is, I can recall only the sense, and
|
|
that perhaps imperfectly. He began by saying that he had little
|
|
things in his past life that it gave him especial pleasure to recall;
|
|
and that the faculty of receiving such sharp impressions had now died
|
|
out in himself, but must at my age be still quite lively and active.
|
|
Then he told me that he had a little raft afloat on the river above
|
|
the dam which he was going to lend me, in order that I might be able
|
|
to look back, in after years, upon having done so, and get great
|
|
pleasure from the recollection. Now, I have a friend of my own who
|
|
will forgo present enjoyments and suffer much present inconvenience
|
|
for the sake of manufacturing 'a reminiscence' for himself; but there
|
|
was something singularly refined in this pleasure that the hatmaker
|
|
found in making reminiscences for others; surely no more simple or
|
|
unselfish luxury can be imagined. After he had unmoored his little
|
|
embarkation, and seen me safely shoved off into midstream, he ran
|
|
away back to his hats with the air of a man who had only just
|
|
recollected that he had anything to do.
|
|
|
|
I did not stay very long on the raft. It ought to have been very
|
|
nice punting about there in the cool shade of the trees, or sitting
|
|
moored to an over-hanging root; but perhaps the very notion that I
|
|
was bound in gratitude specially to enjoy my little cruise, and
|
|
cherish its recollection, turned the whole thing from a pleasure into
|
|
a duty. Be that as it may, there is no doubt that I soon wearied and
|
|
came ashore again, and that it gives me more pleasure to recall the
|
|
man himself and his simple, happy conversation, so full of gusto and
|
|
sympathy, than anything possibly connected with his crank, insecure
|
|
embarkation. In order to avoid seeing him, for I was not a little
|
|
ashamed of myself for having failed to enjoy his treat sufficiently,
|
|
I determined to continue up the river, and, at all prices, to find
|
|
some other way back into the town in time for dinner. As I went, I
|
|
was thinking of Smethurst with admiration; a look into that man's
|
|
mind was like a retrospect over the smiling champaign of his past
|
|
life, and very different from the Sinai-gorges up which one looks for
|
|
a terrified moment into the dark souls of many good, many wise, and
|
|
many prudent men. I cannot be very grateful to such men for their
|
|
excellence, and wisdom, and prudence. I find myself facing as
|
|
stoutly as I can a hard, combative existence, full of doubt,
|
|
difficulties, defeats, disappointments, and dangers, quite a hard
|
|
enough life without their dark countenances at my elbow, so that what
|
|
I want is a happy-minded Smethurst placed here and there at ugly
|
|
corners of my life's wayside, preaching his gospel of quiet and
|
|
contentment.
|
|
|
|
ANOTHER
|
|
|
|
I was shortly to meet with an evangelist of another stamp. After I
|
|
had forced my way through a gentleman's grounds, I came out on the
|
|
high road, and sat down to rest myself on a heap of stones at the top
|
|
of a long hill, with Cockermouth lying snugly at the bottom. An
|
|
Irish beggar-woman, with a beautiful little girl by her side, came up
|
|
to ask for alms, and gradually fell to telling me the little tragedy
|
|
of her life. Her own sister, she told me, had seduced her husband
|
|
from her after many years of married life, and the pair had fled,
|
|
leaving her destitute, with the little girl upon her hands. She
|
|
seemed quite hopeful and cheery, and, though she was unaffectedly
|
|
sorry for the loss of her husband's earnings, she made no pretence of
|
|
despair at the loss of his affection; some day she would meet the
|
|
fugitives, and the law would see her duly righted, and in the
|
|
meantime the smallest contribution was gratefully received. While
|
|
she was telling all this in the most matter-of-fact way, I had been
|
|
noticing the approach of a tall man, with a high white hat and
|
|
darkish clothes. He came up the hill at a rapid pace, and joined our
|
|
little group with a sort of half-salutation. Turning at once to the
|
|
woman, he asked her in a business-like way whether she had anything
|
|
to do, whether she were a Catholic or a Protestant, whether she could
|
|
read, and so forth; and then, after a few kind words and some
|
|
sweeties to the child, he despatched the mother with some tracts
|
|
about Biddy and the Priest, and the Orangeman's Bible. I was a
|
|
little amused at his abrupt manner, for he was still a young man, and
|
|
had somewhat the air of a navy officer; but he tackled me with great
|
|
solemnity. I could make fun of what he said, for I do not think it
|
|
was very wise; but the subject does not appear to me just now in a
|
|
jesting light, so I shall only say that he related to me his own
|
|
conversion, which had been effected (as is very often the case)
|
|
through the agency of a gig accident, and that, after having examined
|
|
me and diagnosed my case, he selected some suitable tracts from his
|
|
repertory, gave them to me, and, bidding me God-speed, went on his
|
|
way.
|
|
|
|
LAST OF SMETHURST
|
|
|
|
That evening I got into a third-class carriage on my way for Keswick,
|
|
and was followed almost immediately by a burly man in brown clothes.
|
|
This fellow-passenger was seemingly ill at ease, and kept continually
|
|
putting his head out of the window, and asking the bystanders if they
|
|
saw HIM coming. At last, when the train was already in motion, there
|
|
was a commotion on the platform, and a way was left clear to our
|
|
carriage door. HE had arrived. In the hurry I could just see
|
|
Smethurst, red and panting, thrust a couple of clay pipes into my
|
|
companion's outstretched band, and hear him crying his farewells
|
|
after us as we slipped out of the station at an ever accelerating
|
|
pace. I said something about it being a close run, and the broad
|
|
man, already engaged in filling one of the pipes, assented, and went
|
|
on to tell me of his own stupidity in forgetting a necessary, and of
|
|
how his friend had good-naturedly gone down town at the last moment
|
|
to supply the omission. I mentioned that I had seen Mr. Smethurst
|
|
already, and that he had been very polite to me; and we fell into a
|
|
discussion of the hatter's merits that lasted some time and left us
|
|
quite good friends at its conclusion. The topic was productive of
|
|
goodwill. We exchanged tobacco and talked about the season, and
|
|
agreed at last that we should go to the same hotel at Keswick and sup
|
|
in company. As he had some business in the town which would occupy
|
|
him some hour or so, on our arrival I was to improve the time and go
|
|
down to the lake, that I might see a glimpse of the promised wonders.
|
|
|
|
The night had fallen already when I reached the water-side, at a
|
|
place where many pleasure-boats are moored and ready for hire; and as
|
|
I went along a stony path, between wood and water, a strong wind blew
|
|
in gusts from the far end of the lake. The sky was covered with
|
|
flying scud; and, as this was ragged, there was quite a wild chase of
|
|
shadow and moon-glimpse over the surface of the shuddering water. I
|
|
had to hold my hat on, and was growing rather tired, and inclined to
|
|
go back in disgust, when a little incident occurred to break the
|
|
tedium. A sudden and violent squall of wind sundered the low
|
|
underwood, and at the same time there came one of those brief
|
|
discharges of moonlight, which leaped into the opening thus made, and
|
|
showed me three girls in the prettiest flutter and disorder. It was
|
|
as though they had sprung out of the ground. I accosted them very
|
|
politely in my capacity of stranger, and requested to be told the
|
|
names of all manner of hills and woods and places that I did not wish
|
|
to know, and we stood together for a while and had an amusing little
|
|
talk. The wind, too, made himself of the party, brought the colour
|
|
into their faces, and gave them enough to do to repress their
|
|
drapery; and one of them, amid much giggling, had to pirouette round
|
|
and round upon her toes (as girls do) when some specially strong gust
|
|
had got the advantage over her. They were just high enough up in the
|
|
social order not to be afraid to speak to a gentleman; and just low
|
|
enough to feel a little tremor, a nervous consciousness of wrong-
|
|
doing - of stolen waters, that gave a considerable zest to our most
|
|
innocent interview. They were as much discomposed and fluttered,
|
|
indeed, as if I had been a wicked baron proposing to elope with the
|
|
whole trio; but they showed no inclination to go away, and I had
|
|
managed to get them off hills and waterfalls and on to more promising
|
|
subjects, when a young man was descried coming along the path from
|
|
the direction of Keswick. Now whether he was the young man of one of
|
|
my friends, or the brother of one of them, or indeed the brother of
|
|
all, I do not know; but they incontinently said that they must be
|
|
going, and went away up the path with friendly salutations. I need
|
|
not say that I found the lake and the moonlight rather dull after
|
|
their departure, and speedily found my way back to potted herrings
|
|
and whisky-and-water in the commercial room with my late fellow-
|
|
traveller. In the smoking-room there was a tall dark man with a
|
|
moustache, in an ulster coat, who had got the best place and was
|
|
monopolising most of the talk; and, as I came in, a whisper came
|
|
round to me from both sides, that this was the manager of a London
|
|
theatre. The presence of such a man was a great event for Keswick,
|
|
and I must own that the manager showed himself equal to his position.
|
|
He had a large fat pocket-book, from which he produced poem after
|
|
poem, written on the backs of letters or hotel-bills; and nothing
|
|
could be more humorous than his recitation of these elegant extracts,
|
|
except perhaps the anecdotes with which he varied the entertainment.
|
|
Seeing, I suppose, something less countrified in my appearance than
|
|
in most of the company, he singled me out to corroborate some
|
|
statements as to the depravity and vice of the aristocracy, and when
|
|
he went on to describe some gilded saloon experiences, I am proud to
|
|
say that he honoured my sagacity with one little covert wink before a
|
|
second time appealing to me for confirmation. The wink was not
|
|
thrown away; I went in up to the elbows with the manager, until I
|
|
think that some of the glory of that great man settled by reflection
|
|
upon me, and that I was as noticeably the second person in the
|
|
smoking-room as he was the first. For a young man, this was a
|
|
position of some distinction, I think you will admit. . . .
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III - AN AUTUMN EFFECT - 1875
|
|
|
|
'Nous ne decrivons jamais mieux la nature que lorsque nous nous
|
|
efforcons d'exprimer sobrement et simplement l'impression que nous en
|
|
avons recue.' - M. ANDRE THEURIET, 'L'Automne dans les Bois,' Revue
|
|
des Deux Mondes, 1st Oct. 1874, p.562.
|
|
|
|
A COUNTRY rapidly passed through under favourable auspices may leave
|
|
upon us a unity of impression that would only be disturbed and
|
|
dissipated if we stayed longer. Clear vision goes with the quick
|
|
foot. Things fall for us into a sort of natural perspective when we
|
|
see them for a moment in going by; we generalise boldly and simply,
|
|
and are gone before the sun is overcast, before the rain falls,
|
|
before the season can steal like a dial-hand from his figure, before
|
|
the lights and shadows, shifting round towards nightfall, can show us
|
|
the other side of things, and belie what they showed us in the
|
|
morning. We expose our mind to the landscape (as we would expose the
|
|
prepared plate in the camera) for the moment only during which the
|
|
effect endures; and we are away before the effect can change. Hence
|
|
we shall have in our memories a long scroll of continuous wayside
|
|
pictures, all imbued already with the prevailing sentiment of the
|
|
season, the weather and the landscape, and certain to be unified more
|
|
and more, as time goes on, by the unconscious processes of thought.
|
|
So that we who have only looked at a country over our shoulder, so to
|
|
speak, as we went by, will have a conception of it far more memorable
|
|
and articulate than a man who has lived there all his life from a
|
|
child upwards, and had his impression of to-day modified by that of
|
|
to-morrow, and belied by that of the day after, till at length the
|
|
stable characteristics of the country are all blotted out from him
|
|
behind the confusion of variable effect.
|
|
|
|
I begin my little pilgrimage in the most enviable of all humours:
|
|
that in which a person, with a sufficiency of money and a knapsack,
|
|
turns his back on a town and walks forward into a country of which he
|
|
knows only by the vague report of others. Such an one has not
|
|
surrendered his will and contracted for the next hundred miles, like
|
|
a man on a railway. He may change his mind at every finger-post,
|
|
and, where ways meet, follow vague preferences freely and go the low
|
|
road or the high, choose the shadow or the sun-shine, suffer himself
|
|
to be tempted by the lane that turns immediately into the woods, or
|
|
the broad road that lies open before him into the distance, and shows
|
|
him the far-off spires of some city, or a range of mountain-tops, or
|
|
a rim of sea, perhaps, along a low horizon. In short, he may gratify
|
|
his every whim and fancy, without a pang of reproving conscience, or
|
|
the least jostle to his self-respect. It is true, however, that most
|
|
men do not possess the faculty of free action, the priceless gift of
|
|
being able to live for the moment only; and as they begin to go
|
|
forward on their journey, they will find that they have made for
|
|
themselves new fetters. Slight projects they may have entertained
|
|
for a moment, half in jest, become iron laws to them, they know not
|
|
why. They will be led by the nose by these vague reports of which I
|
|
spoke above; and the mere fact that their informant mentioned one
|
|
village and not another will compel their footsteps with inexplicable
|
|
power. And yet a little while, yet a few days of this fictitious
|
|
liberty, and they will begin to hear imperious voices calling on them
|
|
to return; and some passion, some duty, some worthy or unworthy
|
|
expectation, will set its hand upon their shoulder and lead them back
|
|
into the old paths. Once and again we have all made the experiment.
|
|
We know the end of it right well. And yet if we make it for the
|
|
hundredth time to-morrow: it will have the same charm as ever; our
|
|
heart will beat and our eyes will be bright, as we leave the town
|
|
behind us, and we shall feel once again (as we have felt so often
|
|
before) that we are cutting ourselves loose for ever from our whole
|
|
past life, with all its sins and follies and circumscriptions, and go
|
|
forward as a new creature into a new world.
|
|
|
|
It was well, perhaps, that I had this first enthusiasm to encourage
|
|
me up the long hill above High Wycombe; for the day was a bad day for
|
|
walking at best, and now began to draw towards afternoon, dull,
|
|
heavy, and lifeless. A pall of grey cloud covered the sky, and its
|
|
colour reacted on the colour of the landscape. Near at hand, indeed,
|
|
the hedgerow trees were still fairly green, shot through with bright
|
|
autumnal yellows, bright as sunshine. But a little way off, the
|
|
solid bricks of woodland that lay squarely on slope and hill-top were
|
|
not green, but russet and grey, and ever less russet and more grey as
|
|
they drew off into the distance. As they drew off into the distance,
|
|
also, the woods seemed to mass themselves together, and lie thin and
|
|
straight, like clouds, upon the limit of one's view. Not that this
|
|
massing was complete, or gave the idea of any extent of forest, for
|
|
every here and there the trees would break up and go down into a
|
|
valley in open order, or stand in long Indian file along the horizon,
|
|
tree after tree relieved, foolishly enough, against the sky. I say
|
|
foolishly enough, although I have seen the effect employed cleverly
|
|
in art, and such long line of single trees thrown out against the
|
|
customary sunset of a Japanese picture with a certain fantastic
|
|
effect that was not to be despised; but this was over water and level
|
|
land, where it did not jar, as here, with the soft contour of hills
|
|
and valleys. The whole scene had an indefinable look of being
|
|
painted, the colour was so abstract and correct, and there was
|
|
something so sketchy and merely impressional about these distant
|
|
single trees on the horizon that one was forced to think of it all as
|
|
of a clever French landscape. For it is rather in nature that we see
|
|
resemblance to art, than in art to nature; and we say a hundred
|
|
times, 'How like a picture!' for once that we say, 'How like the
|
|
truth!' The forms in which we learn to think of landscape are forms
|
|
that we have got from painted canvas. Any man can see and understand
|
|
a picture; it is reserved for the few to separate anything out of the
|
|
confusion of nature, and see that distinctly and with intelligence.
|
|
|
|
The sun came out before I had been long on my way; and as I had got
|
|
by that time to the top of the ascent, and was now treading a
|
|
labyrinth of confined by-roads, my whole view brightened considerably
|
|
in colour, for it was the distance only that was grey and cold, and
|
|
the distance I could see no longer. Overhead there was a wonderful
|
|
carolling of larks which seemed to follow me as I went. Indeed,
|
|
during all the time I was in that country the larks did not desert
|
|
me. The air was alive with them from High Wycombe to Tring; and as,
|
|
day after day, their 'shrill delight' fell upon me out of the vacant
|
|
sky, they began to take such a prominence over other conditions, and
|
|
form so integral a part of my conception of the country, that I could
|
|
have baptized it 'The Country of Larks.' This, of course, might just
|
|
as well have been in early spring; but everything else was deeply
|
|
imbued with the sentiment of the later year. There was no stir of
|
|
insects in the grass. The sunshine was more golden, and gave less
|
|
heat than summer sunshine; and the shadows under the hedge were
|
|
somewhat blue and misty. It was only in autumn that you could have
|
|
seen the mingled green and yellow of the elm foliage, and the fallen
|
|
leaves that lay about the road, and covered the surface of wayside
|
|
pools so thickly that the sun was reflected only here and there from
|
|
little joints and pinholes in that brown coat of proof; or that your
|
|
ear would have been troubled, as you went forward, by the occasional
|
|
report of fowling-pieces from all directions and all degrees of
|
|
distance.
|
|
|
|
For a long time this dropping fire was the one sign of human activity
|
|
that came to disturb me as I walked. The lanes were profoundly
|
|
still. They would have been sad but for the sunshine and the singing
|
|
of the larks. And as it was, there came over me at times a feeling
|
|
of isolation that was not disagreeable, and yet was enough to make me
|
|
quicken my steps eagerly when I saw some one before me on the road.
|
|
This fellow-voyager proved to be no less a person than the parish
|
|
constable. It had occurred to me that in a district which was so
|
|
little populous and so well wooded, a criminal of any intelligence
|
|
might play hide-and-seek with the authorities for months; and this
|
|
idea was strengthened by the aspect of the portly constable as he
|
|
walked by my side with deliberate dignity and turned-out toes. But a
|
|
few minutes' converse set my heart at rest. These rural criminals
|
|
are very tame birds, it appeared. If my informant did not
|
|
immediately lay his hand on an offender, he was content to wait; some
|
|
evening after nightfall there would come a tap at his door, and the
|
|
outlaw, weary of outlawry, would give himself quietly up to undergo
|
|
sentence, and resume his position in the life of the country-side.
|
|
Married men caused him no disquietude whatever; he had them fast by
|
|
the foot. Sooner or later they would come back to see their wives, a
|
|
peeping neighbour would pass the word, and my portly constable would
|
|
walk quietly over and take the bird sitting. And if there were a few
|
|
who had no particular ties in the neighbourhood, and preferred to
|
|
shift into another county when they fell into trouble, their
|
|
departure moved the placid constable in no degree. He was of
|
|
Dogberry's opinion; and if a man would not stand in the Prince's
|
|
name, he took no note of him, but let him go, and thanked God he was
|
|
rid of a knave. And surely the crime and the law were in admirable
|
|
keeping; rustic constable was well met with rustic offender. The
|
|
officer sitting at home over a bit of fire until the criminal came to
|
|
visit him, and the criminal coming - it was a fair match. One felt
|
|
as if this must have been the order in that delightful seaboard
|
|
Bohemia where Florizel and Perdita courted in such sweet accents, and
|
|
the Puritan sang Psalms to hornpipes, and the four-and-twenty
|
|
shearers danced with nosegays in their bosoms, and chanted their
|
|
three songs apiece at the old shepherd's festival; and one could not
|
|
help picturing to oneself what havoc among good peoples purses, and
|
|
tribulation for benignant constables, might be worked here by the
|
|
arrival, over stile and footpath, of a new Autolycus.
|
|
|
|
Bidding good-morning to my fellow-traveller, I left the road and
|
|
struck across country. It was rather a revelation to pass from
|
|
between the hedgerows and find quite a bustle on the other side, a
|
|
great coming and going of school-children upon by-paths, and, in
|
|
every second field, lusty horses and stout country-folk a-ploughing.
|
|
The way I followed took me through many fields thus occupied, and
|
|
through many strips of plantation, and then over a little space of
|
|
smooth turf, very pleasant to the feet, set with tall fir-trees and
|
|
clamorous with rooks making ready for the winter, and so back again
|
|
into the quiet road. I was now not far from the end of my day's
|
|
journey. A few hundred yards farther, and, passing through a gap in
|
|
the hedge, I began to go down hill through a pretty extensive tract
|
|
of young beeches. I was soon in shadow myself, but the afternoon sun
|
|
still coloured the upmost boughs of the wood, and made a fire over my
|
|
head in the autumnal foliage. A little faint vapour lay among the
|
|
slim tree-stems in the bottom of the hollow; and from farther up I
|
|
heard from time to time an outburst of gross laughter, as though
|
|
clowns were making merry in the bush. There was something about the
|
|
atmosphere that brought all sights and sounds home to one with a
|
|
singular purity, so that I felt as if my senses had been washed with
|
|
water. After I had crossed the little zone of mist, the path began
|
|
to remount the hill; and just as I, mounting along with it, had got
|
|
back again, from the head downwards, into the thin golden sunshine, I
|
|
saw in front of me a donkey tied to a tree. Now, I have a certain
|
|
liking for donkeys, principally, I believe, because of the delightful
|
|
things that Sterne has written of them. But this was not after the
|
|
pattern of the ass at Lyons. He was of a white colour, that seemed
|
|
to fit him rather for rare festal occasions than for constant
|
|
drudgery. Besides, he was very small, and of the daintiest portions
|
|
you can imagine in a donkey. And so, sure enough, you had only to
|
|
look at him to see he had never worked. There was something too
|
|
roguish and wanton in his face, a look too like that of a schoolboy
|
|
or a street Arab, to have survived much cudgelling. It was plain
|
|
that these feet had kicked off sportive children oftener than they
|
|
had plodded with a freight through miry lanes. He was altogether a
|
|
fine-weather, holiday sort of donkey; and though he was just then
|
|
somewhat solemnised and rueful, he still gave proof of the levity of
|
|
his disposition by impudently wagging his ears at me as I drew near.
|
|
I say he was somewhat solemnised just then; for, with the admirable
|
|
instinct of all men and animals under restraint, he had so wound and
|
|
wound the halter about the tree that he could go neither back nor
|
|
forwards, nor so much as put down his head to browse. There he
|
|
stood, poor rogue, part puzzled, part angry, part, I believe, amused.
|
|
He had not given up hope, and dully revolved the problem in his head,
|
|
giving ever and again another jerk at the few inches of free rope
|
|
that still remained unwound. A humorous sort of sympathy for the
|
|
creature took hold upon me. I went up, and, not without some trouble
|
|
on my part, and much distrust and resistance on the part of Neddy,
|
|
got him forced backwards until the whole length of the halter was set
|
|
loose, and he was once more as free a donkey as I dared to make him.
|
|
I was pleased (as people are) with this friendly action to a fellow-
|
|
creature in tribulation, and glanced back over my shoulder to see how
|
|
he was profiting by his freedom. The brute was looking after me; and
|
|
no sooner did he catch my eye than he put up his long white face into
|
|
the air, pulled an impudent mouth at me, and began to bray
|
|
derisively. If ever any one person made a grimace at another, that
|
|
donkey made a grimace at me. The hardened ingratitude of his
|
|
behaviour, and the impertinence that inspired his whole face as he
|
|
curled up his lip, and showed his teeth, and began to bray, so
|
|
tickled me, and was so much in keeping with what I had imagined to
|
|
myself about his character, that I could not find it in my heart to
|
|
be angry, and burst into a peal of hearty laughter. This seemed to
|
|
strike the ass as a repartee, so he brayed at me again by way of
|
|
rejoinder; and we went on for a while, braying and laughing, until I
|
|
began to grow aweary of it, and, shouting a derisive farewell, turned
|
|
to pursue my way. In so doing - it was like going suddenly into cold
|
|
water - I found myself face to face with a prim little old maid. She
|
|
was all in a flutter, the poor old dear! She had concluded beyond
|
|
question that this must be a lunatic who stood laughing aloud at a
|
|
white donkey in the placid beech-woods. I was sure, by her face,
|
|
that she had already recommended her spirit most religiously to
|
|
Heaven, and prepared herself for the worst. And so, to reassure her,
|
|
I uncovered and besought her, after a very staid fashion, to put me
|
|
on my way to Great Missenden. Her voice trembled a little, to be
|
|
sure, but I think her mind was set at rest; and she told me, very
|
|
explicitly, to follow the path until I came to the end of the wood,
|
|
and then I should see the village below me in the bottom of the
|
|
valley. And, with mutual courtesies, the little old maid and I went
|
|
on our respective ways.
|
|
|
|
Nor had she misled me. Great Missenden was close at hand, as she had
|
|
said, in the trough of a gentle valley, with many great elms about
|
|
it. The smoke from its chimneys went up pleasantly in the afternoon
|
|
sunshine. The sleepy hum of a threshing-machine filled the
|
|
neighbouring fields and hung about the quaint street corners. A
|
|
little above, the church sits well back on its haunches against the
|
|
hillside - an attitude for a church, you know, that makes it look as
|
|
if it could be ever so much higher if it liked; and the trees grew
|
|
about it thickly, so as to make a density of shade in the churchyard.
|
|
A very quiet place it looks; and yet I saw many boards and posters
|
|
about threatening dire punishment against those who broke the church
|
|
windows or defaced the precinct, and offering rewards for the
|
|
apprehension of those who had done the like already. It was fair day
|
|
in Great Missenden. There were three stalls set up, SUB JOVE, for
|
|
the sale of pastry and cheap toys; and a great number of holiday
|
|
children thronged about the stalls and noisily invaded every corner
|
|
of the straggling village. They came round me by coveys, blowing
|
|
simultaneously upon penny trumpets as though they imagined I should
|
|
fall to pieces like the battlements of Jericho. I noticed one among
|
|
them who could make a wheel of himself like a London boy, and
|
|
seemingly enjoyed a grave pre-eminence upon the strength of the
|
|
accomplishment. By and by, however, the trumpets began to weary me,
|
|
and I went indoors, leaving the fair, I fancy, at its height.
|
|
|
|
Night had fallen before I ventured forth again. It was pitch-dark in
|
|
the village street, and the darkness seemed only the greater for a
|
|
light here and there in an uncurtained window or from an open door.
|
|
Into one such window I was rude enough to peep, and saw within a
|
|
charming GENRE picture. In a room, all white wainscot and crimson
|
|
wall-paper, a perfect gem of colour after the black, empty darkness
|
|
in which I had been groping, a pretty girl was telling a story, as
|
|
well as I could make out, to an attentive child upon her knee, while
|
|
an old woman sat placidly dozing over the fire. You may be sure I
|
|
was not behindhand with a story for myself - a good old story after
|
|
the manner of G. P. R. James and the village melodramas, with a
|
|
wicked squire, and poachers, and an attorney, and a virtuous young
|
|
man with a genius for mechanics, who should love, and protect, and
|
|
ultimately marry the girl in the crimson room. Baudelaire has a few
|
|
dainty sentences on the fancies that we are inspired with when we
|
|
look through a window into other people's lives; and I think Dickens
|
|
has somewhere enlarged on the same text. The subject, at least, is
|
|
one that I am seldom weary of entertaining. I remember, night after
|
|
night, at Brussels, watching a good family sup together, make merry,
|
|
and retire to rest; and night after night I waited to see the candles
|
|
lit, and the salad made, and the last salutations dutifully
|
|
exchanged, without any abatement of interest. Night after night I
|
|
found the scene rivet my attention and keep me awake in bed with all
|
|
manner of quaint imaginations. Much of the pleasure of the ARABIAN
|
|
NIGHTS hinges upon this Asmodean interest; and we are not weary of
|
|
lifting other people's roofs, and going about behind the scenes of
|
|
life with the Caliph and the serviceable Giaffar. It is a salutary
|
|
exercise, besides; it is salutary to get out of ourselves and see
|
|
people living together in perfect unconsciousness of our existence,
|
|
as they will live when we are gone. If to-morrow the blow falls, and
|
|
the worst of our ill fears is realised, the girl will none the less
|
|
tell stories to the child on her lap in the cottage at Great
|
|
Missenden, nor the good Belgians light their candle, and mix their
|
|
salad, and go orderly to bed.
|
|
|
|
The next morning was sunny overhead and damp underfoot, with a thrill
|
|
in the air like a reminiscence of frost. I went up into the sloping
|
|
garden behind the inn and smoked a pipe pleasantly enough, to the
|
|
tune of my landlady's lamentations over sundry cabbages and
|
|
cauliflowers that had been spoiled by caterpillars. She had been so
|
|
much pleased in the summer-time, she said, to see the garden all
|
|
hovered over by white butterflies. And now, look at the end of it!
|
|
She could nowise reconcile this with her moral sense. And, indeed,
|
|
unless these butterflies are created with a side-look to the
|
|
composition of improving apologues, it is not altogether easy, even
|
|
for people who have read Hegel and Dr. M'Cosh, to decide intelligibly
|
|
upon the issue raised. Then I fell into a long and abstruse
|
|
calculation with my landlord; having for object to compare the
|
|
distance driven by him during eight years' service on the box of the
|
|
Wendover coach with the girth of the round world itself. We tackled
|
|
the question most conscientiously, made all necessary allowance for
|
|
Sundays and leap-years, and were just coming to a triumphant
|
|
conclusion of our labours when we were stayed by a small lacuna in my
|
|
information. I did not know the circumference of the earth. The
|
|
landlord knew it, to be sure - plainly he had made the same
|
|
calculation twice and once before, - but he wanted confidence in his
|
|
own figures, and from the moment I showed myself so poor a second
|
|
seemed to lose all interest in the result.
|
|
|
|
Wendover (which was my next stage) lies in the same valley with Great
|
|
Missenden, but at the foot of it, where the hills trend off on either
|
|
hand like a coast-line, and a great hemisphere of plain lies, like a
|
|
sea, before one, I went up a chalky road, until I had a good outlook
|
|
over the place. The vale, as it opened out into the plain, was
|
|
shallow, and a little bare, perhaps, but full of graceful
|
|
convolutions. From the level to which I have now attained the fields
|
|
were exposed before me like a map, and I could see all that bustle of
|
|
autumn field-work which had been hid from me yesterday behind the
|
|
hedgerows, or shown to me only for a moment as I followed the
|
|
footpath. Wendover lay well down in the midst, with mountains of
|
|
foliage about it. The great plain stretched away to the northward,
|
|
variegated near at hand with the quaint pattern of the fields, but
|
|
growing ever more and more indistinct, until it became a mere hurly-
|
|
burly of trees and bright crescents of river, and snatches of
|
|
slanting road, and finally melted into the ambiguous cloud-land over
|
|
the horizon. The sky was an opal-grey, touched here and there with
|
|
blue, and with certain faint russets that looked as if they were
|
|
reflections of the colour of the autumnal woods below. I could hear
|
|
the ploughmen shouting to their horses, the uninterrupted carol of
|
|
larks innumerable overhead, and, from a field where the shepherd was
|
|
marshalling his flock, a sweet tumultuous tinkle of sheep-bells. All
|
|
these noises came to me very thin and distinct in the clear air.
|
|
There was a wonderful sentiment of distance and atmosphere about the
|
|
day and the place.
|
|
|
|
I mounted the hill yet farther by a rough staircase of chalky
|
|
footholds cut in the turf. The hills about Wendover and, as far as I
|
|
could see, all the hills in Buckinghamshire, wear a sort of hood of
|
|
beech plantation; but in this particular case the hood had been
|
|
suffered to extend itself into something more like a cloak, and hung
|
|
down about the shoulders of the hill in wide folds, instead of lying
|
|
flatly along the summit. The trees grew so close, and their boughs
|
|
were so matted together, that the whole wood looked as dense as a
|
|
bush of heather. The prevailing colour was a dull, smouldering red,
|
|
touched here and there with vivid yellow. But the autumn had scarce
|
|
advanced beyond the outworks; it was still almost summer in the heart
|
|
of the wood; and as soon as I had scrambled through the hedge, I
|
|
found myself in a dim green forest atmosphere under eaves of virgin
|
|
foliage. In places where the wood had itself for a background and
|
|
the trees were massed together thickly, the colour became intensified
|
|
and almost gem-like: a perfect fire green, that seemed none the less
|
|
green for a few specks of autumn gold. None of the trees were of any
|
|
considerable age or stature; but they grew well together, I have
|
|
said; and as the road turned and wound among them, they fell into
|
|
pleasant groupings and broke the light up pleasantly. Sometimes
|
|
there would be a colonnade of slim, straight tree-stems with the
|
|
light running down them as down the shafts of pillars, that looked as
|
|
if it ought to lead to something, and led only to a corner of sombre
|
|
and intricate jungle. Sometimes a spray of delicate foliage would be
|
|
thrown out flat, the light lying flatly along the top of it, so that
|
|
against a dark background it seemed almost luminous. There was a
|
|
great bush over the thicket (for, indeed, it was more of a thicket
|
|
than a wood); and the vague rumours that went among the tree-tops,
|
|
and the occasional rustling of big birds or hares among the
|
|
undergrowth, had in them a note of almost treacherous stealthiness,
|
|
that put the imagination on its guard and made me walk warily on the
|
|
russet carpeting of last year's leaves. The spirit of the place
|
|
seemed to be all attention; the wood listened as I went, and held its
|
|
breath to number my footfalls. One could not help feeling that there
|
|
ought to be some reason for this stillness; whether, as the bright
|
|
old legend goes, Pan lay somewhere near in siesta, or whether,
|
|
perhaps, the heaven was meditating rain, and the first drops would
|
|
soon come pattering through the leaves. It was not unpleasant, in
|
|
such an humour, to catch sight, ever and anon, of large spaces of the
|
|
open plain. This happened only where the path lay much upon the
|
|
slope, and there was a flaw in the solid leafy thatch of the wood at
|
|
some distance below the level at which I chanced myself to be
|
|
walking; then, indeed, little scraps of foreshortened distance,
|
|
miniature fields, and Lilliputian houses and hedgerow trees would
|
|
appear for a moment in the aperture, and grow larger and smaller, and
|
|
change and melt one into another, as I continued to go forward, and
|
|
so shift my point of view.
|
|
|
|
For ten minutes, perhaps, I had heard from somewhere before me in the
|
|
wood a strange, continuous noise, as of clucking, cooing, and
|
|
gobbling, now and again interrupted by a harsh scream. As I advanced
|
|
towards this noise, it began to grow lighter about me, and I caught
|
|
sight, through the trees, of sundry gables and enclosure walls, and
|
|
something like the tops of a rickyard. And sure enough, a rickyard
|
|
it proved to be, and a neat little farm-steading, with the beech-
|
|
woods growing almost to the door of it. Just before me, however, as
|
|
I came upon the path, the trees drew back and let in a wide flood of
|
|
daylight on to a circular lawn. It was here that the noises had
|
|
their origin. More than a score of peacocks (there are altogether
|
|
thirty at the farm), a proper contingent of peahens, and a great
|
|
multitude that I could not number of more ordinary barn-door fowls,
|
|
were all feeding together on this little open lawn among the beeches.
|
|
They fed in a dense crowd, which swayed to and fro, and came hither
|
|
and thither as by a sort of tide, and of which the surface was
|
|
agitated like the surface of a sea as each bird guzzled his head
|
|
along the ground after the scattered corn. The clucking, cooing
|
|
noise that had led me thither was formed by the blending together of
|
|
countless expressions of individual contentment into one collective
|
|
expression of contentment, or general grace during meat. Every now
|
|
and again a big peacock would separate himself from the mob and take
|
|
a stately turn or two about the lawn, or perhaps mount for a moment
|
|
upon the rail, and there shrilly publish to the world his
|
|
satisfaction with himself and what he had to eat. It happened, for
|
|
my sins, that none of these admirable birds had anything beyond the
|
|
merest rudiment of a tail. Tails, it seemed, were out of season just
|
|
then. But they had their necks for all that; and by their necks
|
|
alone they do as much surpass all the other birds of our grey climate
|
|
as they fall in quality of song below the blackbird or the lark.
|
|
Surely the peacock, with its incomparable parade of glorious colour
|
|
and the scannel voice of it issuing forth, as in mockery, from its
|
|
painted throat, must, like my landlady's butterflies at Great
|
|
Missenden, have been invented by some skilful fabulist for the
|
|
consolation and support of homely virtue: or rather, perhaps, by a
|
|
fabulist not quite so skilful, who made points for the moment without
|
|
having a studious enough eye to the complete effect; for I thought
|
|
these melting greens and blues so beautiful that afternoon, that I
|
|
would have given them my vote just then before the sweetest pipe in
|
|
all the spring woods. For indeed there is no piece of colour of the
|
|
same extent in nature, that will so flatter and satisfy the lust of a
|
|
man's eyes; and to come upon so many of them, after these acres of
|
|
stone-coloured heavens and russet woods, and grey-brown ploughlands
|
|
and white roads, was like going three whole days' journey to the
|
|
southward, or a month back into the summer.
|
|
|
|
I was sorry to leave PEACOCK FARM - for so the place is called, after
|
|
the name of its splendid pensioners - and go forwards again in the
|
|
quiet woods. It began to grow both damp and dusk under the beeches;
|
|
and as the day declined the colour faded out of the foliage; and
|
|
shadow, without form and void, took the place of all the fine tracery
|
|
of leaves and delicate gradations of living green that had before
|
|
accompanied my walk. I had been sorry to leave PEACOCK FARM, but I
|
|
was not sorry to find myself once more in the open road, under a pale
|
|
and somewhat troubled-looking evening sky, and put my best foot
|
|
foremost for the inn at Wendover.
|
|
|
|
Wendover, in itself, is a straggling, purposeless sort of place.
|
|
Everybody seems to have had his own opinion as to how the street
|
|
should go; or rather, every now and then a man seems to have arisen
|
|
with a new idea on the subject, and led away a little sect of
|
|
neighbours to join in his heresy. It would have somewhat the look of
|
|
an abortive watering-place, such as we may now see them here and
|
|
there along the coast, but for the age of the houses, the comely
|
|
quiet design of some of them, and the look of long habitation, of a
|
|
life that is settled and rooted, and makes it worth while to train
|
|
flowers about the windows, and otherwise shape the dwelling to the
|
|
humour of the inhabitant. The church, which might perhaps have
|
|
served as rallying-point for these loose houses, and pulled the
|
|
township into something like intelligible unity, stands some distance
|
|
off among great trees; but the inn (to take the public buildings in
|
|
order of importance) is in what I understand to be the principal
|
|
street: a pleasant old house, with bay-windows, and three peaked
|
|
gables, and many swallows' nests plastered about the eaves.
|
|
|
|
The interior of the inn was answerable to the outside: indeed, I
|
|
never saw any room much more to be admired than the low wainscoted
|
|
parlour in which I spent the remainder of the evening. It was a
|
|
short oblong in shape, save that the fireplace was built across one
|
|
of the angles so as to cut it partially off, and the opposite angle
|
|
was similarly truncated by a corner cupboard. The wainscot was
|
|
white, and there was a Turkey carpet on the floor, so old that it
|
|
might have been imported by Walter Shandy before he retired, worn
|
|
almost through in some places, but in others making a good show of
|
|
blues and oranges, none the less harmonious for being somewhat faded.
|
|
The corner cupboard was agreeable in design; and there were just the
|
|
right things upon the shelves - decanters and tumblers, and blue
|
|
plates, and one red rose in a glass of water. The furniture was old-
|
|
fashioned and stiff. Everything was in keeping, down to the
|
|
ponderous leaden inkstand on the round table. And you may fancy how
|
|
pleasant it looked, all flushed and flickered over by the light of a
|
|
brisk companionable fire, and seen, in a strange, tilted sort of
|
|
perspective, in the three compartments of the old mirror above the
|
|
chimney. As I sat reading in the great armchair, I kept looking
|
|
round with the tail of my eye at the quaint, bright picture that was
|
|
about me, and could not help some pleasure and a certain childish
|
|
pride in forming part of it. The book I read was about Italy in the
|
|
early Renaissance, the pageantries and the light loves of princes,
|
|
the passion of men for learning, and poetry, and art; but it was
|
|
written, by good luck, after a solid, prosaic fashion, that suited
|
|
the room infinitely more nearly than the matter; and the result was
|
|
that I thought less, perhaps, of Lippo Lippi, or Lorenzo, or
|
|
Politian, than of the good Englishman who had written in that volume
|
|
what he knew of them, and taken so much pleasure in his solemn
|
|
polysyllables.
|
|
|
|
I was not left without society. My landlord had a very pretty little
|
|
daughter, whom we shall call Lizzie. If I had made any notes at the
|
|
time, I might be able to tell you something definite of her
|
|
appearance. But faces have a trick of growing more and more
|
|
spiritualised and abstract in the memory, until nothing remains of
|
|
them but a look, a haunting expression; just that secret quality in a
|
|
face that is apt to slip out somehow under the cunningest painter's
|
|
touch, and leave the portrait dead for the lack of it. And if it is
|
|
hard to catch with the finest of camel's-hair pencils, you may think
|
|
how hopeless it must be to pursue after it with clumsy words. If I
|
|
say, for instance, that this look, which I remember as Lizzie, was
|
|
something wistful that seemed partly to come of slyness and in part
|
|
of simplicity, and that I am inclined to imagine it had something to
|
|
do with the daintiest suspicion of a cast in one of her large eyes, I
|
|
shall have said all that I can, and the reader will not be much
|
|
advanced towards comprehension. I had struck up an acquaintance with
|
|
this little damsel in the morning, and professed much interest in her
|
|
dolls, and an impatient desire to see the large one which was kept
|
|
locked away for great occasions. And so I had not been very long in
|
|
the parlour before the door opened, and in came Miss Lizzie with two
|
|
dolls tucked clumsily under her arm. She was followed by her brother
|
|
John, a year or so younger than herself, not simply to play propriety
|
|
at our interview, but to show his own two whips in emulation of his
|
|
sister's dolls. I did my best to make myself agreeable to my
|
|
visitors, showing much admiration for the dolls and dolls' dresses,
|
|
and, with a very serious demeanour, asking many questions about their
|
|
age and character. I do not think that Lizzie distrusted my
|
|
sincerity, but it was evident that she was both bewildered and a
|
|
little contemptuous. Although she was ready herself to treat her
|
|
dolls as if they were alive, she seemed to think rather poorly of any
|
|
grown person who could fall heartily into the spirit of the fiction.
|
|
Sometimes she would look at me with gravity and a sort of
|
|
disquietude, as though she really feared I must be out of my wits.
|
|
Sometimes, as when I inquired too particularly into the question of
|
|
their names, she laughed at me so long and heartily that I began to
|
|
feel almost embarrassed. But when, in an evil moment, I asked to be
|
|
allowed to kiss one of them, she could keep herself no longer to
|
|
herself. Clambering down from the chair on which she sat perched to
|
|
show me, Cornelia-like, her jewels, she ran straight out of the room
|
|
and into the bar - it was just across the passage, - and I could hear
|
|
her telling her mother in loud tones, but apparently more in sorrow
|
|
than in merriment, that THE GENTLEMAN IN THE PARLOUR WANTED TO KISS
|
|
DOLLY. I fancy she was determined to save me from this humiliating
|
|
action, even in spite of myself, for she never gave me the desired
|
|
permission. She reminded me of an old dog I once knew, who would
|
|
never suffer the master of the house to dance, out of an exaggerated
|
|
sense of the dignity of that master's place and carriage.
|
|
|
|
After the young people were gone there was but one more incident ere
|
|
I went to bed. I heard a party of children go up and down the dark
|
|
street for a while, singing together sweetly. And the mystery of
|
|
this little incident was so pleasant to me that I purposely refrained
|
|
from asking who they were, and wherefore they went singing at so late
|
|
an hour. One can rarely be in a pleasant place without meeting with
|
|
some pleasant accident. I have a conviction that these children
|
|
would not have gone singing before the inn unless the inn-parlour had
|
|
been the delightful place it was. At least, if I had been in the
|
|
customary public room of the modern hotel, with all its
|
|
disproportions and discomforts, my ears would have been dull, and
|
|
there would have been some ugly temper or other uppermost in my
|
|
spirit, and so they would have wasted their songs upon an unworthy
|
|
hearer.
|
|
|
|
Next morning I went along to visit the church. It is a long-backed
|
|
red-and-white building, very much restored, and stands in a pleasant
|
|
graveyard among those great trees of which I have spoken already.
|
|
The sky was drowned in a mist. Now and again pulses of cold wind
|
|
went about the enclosure, and set the branches busy overhead, and the
|
|
dead leaves scurrying into the angles of the church buttresses. Now
|
|
and again, also, I could hear the dull sudden fall of a chestnut
|
|
among the grass - the dog would bark before the rectory door - or
|
|
there would come a clinking of pails from the stable-yard behind.
|
|
But in spite of these occasional interruptions - in spite, also, of
|
|
the continuous autumn twittering that filled the trees - the chief
|
|
impression somehow was one as of utter silence, insomuch that the
|
|
little greenish bell that peeped out of a window in the tower
|
|
disquieted me with a sense of some possible and more inharmonious
|
|
disturbance. The grass was wet, as if with a hoar frost that had
|
|
just been melted. I do not know that ever I saw a morning more
|
|
autumnal. As I went to and fro among the graves, I saw some flowers
|
|
set reverently before a recently erected tomb, and drawing near, was
|
|
almost startled to find they lay on the grave a man seventy-two years
|
|
old when he died. We are accustomed to strew flowers only over the
|
|
young, where love has been cut short untimely, and great
|
|
possibilities have been restrained by death. We strew them there in
|
|
token, that these possibilities, in some deeper sense, shall yet be
|
|
realised, and the touch of our dead loves remain with us and guide us
|
|
to the end. And yet there was more significance, perhaps, and
|
|
perhaps a greater consolation, in this little nosegay on the grave of
|
|
one who had died old. We are apt to make so much of the tragedy of
|
|
death, and think so little of the enduring tragedy of some men's
|
|
lives, that we see more to lament for in a life cut off in the midst
|
|
of usefulness and love, than in one that miserably survives all love
|
|
and usefulness, and goes about the world the phantom of itself,
|
|
without hope, or joy, or any consolation. These flowers seemed not
|
|
so much the token of love that survived death, as of something yet
|
|
more beautiful - of love that had lived a man's life out to an end
|
|
with him, and been faithful and companionable, and not weary of
|
|
loving, throughout all these years.
|
|
|
|
The morning cleared a little, and the sky was once more the old
|
|
stone-coloured vault over the sallow meadows and the russet woods, as
|
|
I set forth on a dog-cart from Wendover to Tring. The road lay for a
|
|
good distance along the side of the hills, with the great plain below
|
|
on one hand, and the beech-woods above on the other. The fields were
|
|
busy with people ploughing and sowing; every here and there a jug of
|
|
ale stood in the angle of the hedge, and I could see many a team wait
|
|
smoking in the furrow as ploughman or sower stepped aside for a
|
|
moment to take a draught. Over all the brown ploughlands, and under
|
|
all the leafless hedgerows, there was a stout piece of labour abroad,
|
|
and, as it were, a spirit of picnic. The horses smoked and the men
|
|
laboured and shouted and drank in the sharp autumn morning; so that
|
|
one had a strong effect of large, open-air existence. The fellow who
|
|
drove me was something of a humourist; and his conversation was all
|
|
in praise of an agricultural labourer's way of life. It was he who
|
|
called my attention to these jugs of ale by the hedgerow; he could
|
|
not sufficiently express the liberality of these men's wages; he told
|
|
me how sharp an appetite was given by breaking up the earth in the
|
|
morning air, whether with plough or spade, and cordially admired this
|
|
provision of nature. He sang O FORTUNATOS AGRICOLAS! indeed, in
|
|
every possible key, and with many cunning inflections, till I began
|
|
to wonder what was the use of such people as Mr. Arch, and to sing
|
|
the same air myself in a more diffident manner.
|
|
|
|
Tring was reached, and then Tring railway-station; for the two are
|
|
not very near, the good people of Tring having held the railway, of
|
|
old days, in extreme apprehension, lest some day it should break
|
|
loose in the town and work mischief. I had a last walk, among russet
|
|
beeches as usual, and the air filled, as usual, with the carolling of
|
|
larks; I heard shots fired in the distance, and saw, as a new sign of
|
|
the fulfilled autumn, two horsemen exercising a pack of fox-hounds.
|
|
And then the train came and carried me back to London.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV - A WINTER'S WALK IN CARRICK AND GALLOWAY - A FRAGMENT -
|
|
1876
|
|
|
|
AT the famous bridge of Doon, Kyle, the central district of the shire
|
|
of Ayr, marches with Carrick, the most southerly. On the Carrick
|
|
side of the river rises a hill of somewhat gentle conformation, cleft
|
|
with shallow dells, and sown here and there with farms and tufts of
|
|
wood. Inland, it loses itself, joining, I suppose, the great herd of
|
|
similar hills that occupies the centre of the Lowlands. Towards the
|
|
sea it swells out the coast-line into a protuberance, like a bay-
|
|
window in a plan, and is fortified against the surf behind bold
|
|
crags. This hill is known as the Brown Hill of Carrick, or, more
|
|
shortly, Brown Carrick.
|
|
|
|
It had snowed overnight. The fields were all sheeted up; they were
|
|
tucked in among the snow, and their shape was modelled through the
|
|
pliant counterpane, like children tucked in by a fond mother. The
|
|
wind had made ripples and folds upon the surface, like what the sea,
|
|
in quiet weather, leaves upon the sand. There was a frosty stifle in
|
|
the air. An effusion of coppery light on the summit of Brown Carrick
|
|
showed where the sun was trying to look through; but along the
|
|
horizon clouds of cold fog had settled down, so that there was no
|
|
distinction of sky and sea. Over the white shoulders of the
|
|
headlands, or in the opening of bays, there was nothing but a great
|
|
vacancy and blackness; and the road as it drew near the edge of the
|
|
cliff seemed to skirt the shores of creation and void space.
|
|
|
|
The snow crunched under foot, and at farms all the dogs broke out
|
|
barking as they smelt a passer-by upon the road. I met a fine old
|
|
fellow, who might have sat as the father in 'The Cottar's Saturday
|
|
Night,' and who swore most heathenishly at a cow he was driving. And
|
|
a little after I scraped acquaintance with a poor body tramping out
|
|
to gather cockles. His face was wrinkled by exposure; it was broken
|
|
up into flakes and channels, like mud beginning to dry, and weathered
|
|
in two colours, an incongruous pink and grey. He had a faint air of
|
|
being surprised - which, God knows, he might well be - that life had
|
|
gone so ill with him. The shape of his trousers was in itself a
|
|
jest, so strangely were they bagged and ravelled about his knees; and
|
|
his coat was all bedaubed with clay as tough he had lain in a rain-
|
|
dub during the New Year's festivity. I will own I was not sorry to
|
|
think he had had a merry New Year, and been young again for an
|
|
evening; but I was sorry to see the mark still there. One could not
|
|
expect such an old gentleman to be much of a dandy or a great student
|
|
of respectability in dress; but there might have been a wife at home,
|
|
who had brushed out similar stains after fifty New Years, now become
|
|
old, or a round-armed daughter, who would wish to have him neat, were
|
|
it only out of self-respect and for the ploughman sweetheart when he
|
|
looks round at night. Plainly, there was nothing of this in his
|
|
life, and years and loneliness hung heavily on his old arms. He was
|
|
seventy-six, he told me; and nobody would give a day's work to a man
|
|
that age: they would think he couldn't do it. 'And, 'deed,' he went
|
|
on, with a sad little chuckle, ''deed, I doubt if I could.' He said
|
|
goodbye to me at a footpath, and crippled wearily off to his work.
|
|
It will make your heart ache if you think of his old fingers groping
|
|
in the snow.
|
|
|
|
He told me I was to turn down beside the school-house for Dunure.
|
|
And so, when I found a lone house among the snow, and heard a babble
|
|
of childish voices from within, I struck off into a steep road
|
|
leading downwards to the sea. Dunure lies close under the steep
|
|
hill: a haven among the rocks, a breakwater in consummate disrepair,
|
|
much apparatus for drying nets, and a score or so of fishers' houses.
|
|
Hard by, a few shards of ruined castle overhang the sea, a few
|
|
vaults, and one tall gable honeycombed with windows. The snow lay on
|
|
the beach to the tidemark. It was daubed on to the sills of the
|
|
ruin: it roosted in the crannies of the rock like white sea-birds;
|
|
even on outlying reefs there would be a little cock of snow, like a
|
|
toy lighthouse. Everything was grey and white in a cold and dolorous
|
|
sort of shepherd's plaid. In the profound silence, broken only by
|
|
the noise of oars at sea, a horn was sounded twice; and I saw the
|
|
postman, girt with two bags, pause a moment at the end of the clachan
|
|
for letters.
|
|
|
|
It is, perhaps, characteristic of Dunure that none were brought him.
|
|
|
|
The people at the public-house did not seem well pleased to see me,
|
|
and though I would fain have stayed by the kitchen fire, sent me 'ben
|
|
the hoose' into the guest-room. This guest-room at Dunure was
|
|
painted in quite aesthetic fashion. There are rooms in the same
|
|
taste not a hundred miles from London, where persons of an extreme
|
|
sensibility meet together without embarrassment. It was all in a
|
|
fine dull bottle-green and black; a grave harmonious piece of
|
|
colouring, with nothing, so far as coarser folk can judge, to hurt
|
|
the better feelings of the most exquisite purist. A cherry-red half
|
|
window-blind kept up an imaginary warmth in the cold room, and threw
|
|
quite a glow on the floor. Twelve cockle-shells and a half-penny
|
|
china figure were ranged solemnly along the mantel-shelf. Even the
|
|
spittoon was an original note, and instead of sawdust contained sea-
|
|
shells. And as for the hearthrug, it would merit an article to
|
|
itself, and a coloured diagram to help the text. It was patchwork,
|
|
but the patchwork of the poor; no glowing shreds of old brocade and
|
|
Chinese silk, shaken together in the kaleidoscope of some tasteful
|
|
housewife's fancy; but a work of art in its own way, and plainly a
|
|
labour of love. The patches came exclusively from people's raiment.
|
|
There was no colour more brilliant than a heather mixture; 'My
|
|
Johnny's grey breeks,' well polished over the oar on the boat's
|
|
thwart, entered largely into its composition. And the spoils of an
|
|
old black cloth coat, that had been many a Sunday to church, added
|
|
something (save the mark!) of preciousness to the material.
|
|
|
|
While I was at luncheon four carters came in - long-limbed, muscular
|
|
Ayrshire Scots, with lean, intelligent faces. Four quarts of stout
|
|
were ordered; they kept filling the tumbler with the other hand as
|
|
they drank; and in less time than it takes me to write these words
|
|
the four quarts were finished - another round was proposed,
|
|
discussed, and negatived - and they were creaking out of the village
|
|
with their carts.
|
|
|
|
The ruins drew you towards them. You never saw any place more
|
|
desolate from a distance, nor one that less belied its promise near
|
|
at hand. Some crows and gulls flew away croaking as I scrambled in.
|
|
The snow had drifted into the vaults. The clachan dabbled with snow,
|
|
the white hills, the black sky, the sea marked in the coves with
|
|
faint circular wrinkles, the whole world, as it looked from a loop-
|
|
hole in Dunure, was cold, wretched, and out-at-elbows. If you had
|
|
been a wicked baron and compelled to stay there all the afternoon,
|
|
you would have had a rare fit of remorse. How you would have heaped
|
|
up the fire and gnawed your fingers! I think it would have come to
|
|
homicide before the evening - if it were only for the pleasure of
|
|
seeing something red! And the masters of Dunure, it is to be
|
|
noticed, were remarkable of old for inhumanity. One of these vaults
|
|
where the snow had drifted was that 'black route' where 'Mr. Alane
|
|
Stewart, Commendatour of Crossraguel,' endured his fiery trials. On
|
|
the 1st and 7th of September 1570 (ill dates for Mr. Alan!), Gilbert,
|
|
Earl of Cassilis, his chaplain, his baker, his cook, his pantryman,
|
|
and another servant, bound the Poor Commendator 'betwix an iron
|
|
chimlay and a fire,' and there cruelly roasted him until he signed
|
|
away his abbacy. it is one of the ugliest stories of an ugly period,
|
|
but not, somehow, without such a flavour of the ridiculous as makes
|
|
it hard to sympathise quite seriously with the victim. And it is
|
|
consoling to remember that he got away at last, and kept his abbacy,
|
|
and, over and above, had a pension from the Earl until he died.
|
|
|
|
Some way beyond Dunure a wide bay, of somewhat less unkindly aspect,
|
|
opened out. Colzean plantations lay all along the steep shore, and
|
|
there was a wooded hill towards the centre, where the trees made a
|
|
sort of shadowy etching over the snow. The road went down and up,
|
|
and past a blacksmith's cottage that made fine music in the valley.
|
|
Three compatriots of Burns drove up to me in a cart. They were all
|
|
drunk, and asked me jeeringly if this was the way to Dunure. I told
|
|
them it was; and my answer was received with unfeigned merriment.
|
|
One gentleman was so much tickled he nearly fell out of the cart;
|
|
indeed, he was only saved by a companion, who either had not so fine
|
|
a sense of humour or had drunken less.
|
|
|
|
'The toune of Mayboll,' says the inimitable Abercrummie, 'stands upon
|
|
an ascending ground from east to west, and lyes open to the south.
|
|
It hath one principals street, with houses upon both sides, built of
|
|
freestone; and it is beautifyed with the situation of two castles,
|
|
one at each end of this street. That on the east belongs to the Erle
|
|
of Cassilis. On the west end is a castle, which belonged sometime to
|
|
the laird of Blairquan, which is now the tolbuith, and is adorned
|
|
with a pyremide [conical roof], and a row of ballesters round it
|
|
raised from the top of the staircase, into which they have mounted a
|
|
fyne clock. There be four lanes which pass from the principall
|
|
street; one is called the Black Vennel, which is steep, declining to
|
|
the south-west, and leads to a lower street, which is far larger than
|
|
the high chiefe street, and it runs from the Kirkland to the Well
|
|
Trees, in which there have been many pretty buildings, belonging to
|
|
the severall gentry of the countrey, who were wont to resort thither
|
|
in winter, and divert themselves in converse together at their owne
|
|
houses. It was once the principall street of the town; but many of
|
|
these houses of the gentry having been decayed and ruined, it has
|
|
lost much of its ancient beautie. Just opposite to this vennel,
|
|
there is another that leads north-west, from the chiefe street to the
|
|
green, which is a pleasant plott of ground, enclosed round with an
|
|
earthen wall, wherein they were wont to play football, but now at the
|
|
Gowff and byasse-bowls. The houses of this towne, on both sides of
|
|
the street, have their several gardens belonging to them; and in the
|
|
lower street there be some pretty orchards, that yield store of good
|
|
fruit.' As Patterson says, this description is near enough even to-
|
|
day, and is mighty nicely written to boot. I am bound to add, of my
|
|
own experience, that Maybole is tumbledown and dreary. Prosperous
|
|
enough in reality, it has an air of decay; and though the population
|
|
has increased, a roofless house every here and there seems to protest
|
|
the contrary. The women are more than well-favoured, and the men
|
|
fine tall fellows; but they look slipshod and dissipated. As they
|
|
slouched at street corners, or stood about gossiping in the snow, it
|
|
seemed they would have been more at home in the slums of a large city
|
|
than here in a country place betwixt a village and a town. I heard a
|
|
great deal about drinking, and a great deal about religious revivals:
|
|
two things in which the Scottish character is emphatic and most
|
|
unlovely. In particular, I heard of clergymen who were employing
|
|
their time in explaining to a delighted audience the physics of the
|
|
Second Coming. It is not very likely any of us will be asked to
|
|
help. if we were, it is likely we should receive instructions for the
|
|
occasion, and that on more reliable authority. And so I can only
|
|
figure to myself a congregation truly curious in such flights of
|
|
theological fancy, as one of veteran and accomplished saints, who
|
|
have fought the good fight to an end and outlived all worldly
|
|
passion, and are to be regarded rather as a part of the Church
|
|
Triumphant than the poor, imperfect company on earth. And yet I saw
|
|
some young fellows about the smoking-room who seemed, in the eyes of
|
|
one who cannot count himself strait-laced, in need of some more
|
|
practical sort of teaching. They seemed only eager to get drunk, and
|
|
to do so speedily. It was not much more than a week after the New
|
|
Year; and to hear them return on their past bouts with a gusto
|
|
unspeakable was not altogether pleasing. Here is one snatch of talk,
|
|
for the accuracy of which I can vouch-
|
|
|
|
'Ye had a spree here last Tuesday?'
|
|
|
|
'We had that!'
|
|
|
|
'I wasna able to be oot o' my bed. Man, I was awful bad on
|
|
Wednesday.'
|
|
|
|
'Ay, ye were gey bad.'
|
|
|
|
And you should have seen the bright eyes, and heard the sensual
|
|
accents! They recalled their doings with devout gusto and a sort of
|
|
rational pride. Schoolboys, after their first drunkenness, are not
|
|
more boastful; a cock does not plume himself with a more unmingled
|
|
satisfaction as he paces forth among his harem; and yet these were
|
|
grown men, and by no means short of wit. It was hard to suppose they
|
|
were very eager about the Second Coming: it seemed as if some
|
|
elementary notions of temperance for the men and seemliness for the
|
|
women would have gone nearer the mark. And yet, as it seemed to me
|
|
typical of much that is evil in Scotland, Maybole is also typical of
|
|
much that is best. Some of the factories, which have taken the place
|
|
of weaving in the town's economy, were originally founded and are
|
|
still possessed by self-made men of the sterling, stout old breed -
|
|
fellows who made some little bit of an invention, borrowed some
|
|
little pocketful of capital, and then, step by step, in courage,
|
|
thrift and industry, fought their way upwards to an assured position.
|
|
|
|
Abercrummie has told you enough of the Tolbooth; but, as a bit of
|
|
spelling, this inscription on the Tolbooth bell seems too delicious
|
|
to withhold: 'This bell is founded at Maiboll Bi Danel Geli, a
|
|
Frenchman, the 6th November, 1696, Bi appointment of the heritors of
|
|
the parish of Maiyboll.' The Castle deserves more notice. It is a
|
|
large and shapely tower, plain from the ground upwards, but with a
|
|
zone of ornamentation running about the top. In a general way this
|
|
adornment is perched on the very summit of the chimney-stacks; but
|
|
there is one corner more elaborate than the rest. A very heavy
|
|
string-course runs round the upper story, and just above this, facing
|
|
up the street, the tower carries a small oriel window, fluted and
|
|
corbelled and carved about with stone heads. It is so ornate it has
|
|
somewhat the air of a shrine. And it was, indeed, the casket of a
|
|
very precious jewel, for in the room to which it gives light lay, for
|
|
long years, the heroine of the sweet old ballad of 'Johnnie Faa' -
|
|
she who, at the call of the gipsies' songs, 'came tripping down the
|
|
stair, and all her maids before her.' Some people say the ballad has
|
|
no basis in fact, and have written, I believe, unanswerable papers to
|
|
the proof. But in the face of all that, the very look of that high
|
|
oriel window convinces the imagination, and we enter into all the
|
|
sorrows of the imprisoned dame. We conceive the burthen of the long,
|
|
lack-lustre days, when she leaned her sick head against the mullions,
|
|
and saw the burghers loafing in Maybole High Street, and the children
|
|
at play, and ruffling gallants riding by from hunt or foray. We
|
|
conceive the passion of odd moments, when the wind threw up to her
|
|
some snatch of song, and her heart grew hot within her, and her eyes
|
|
overflowed at the memory of the past. And even if the tale be not
|
|
true of this or that lady, or this or that old tower, it is true in
|
|
the essence of all men and women: for all of us, some time or other,
|
|
hear the gipsies singing; over all of us is the glamour cast. Some
|
|
resist and sit resolutely by the fire. Most go and are brought back
|
|
again, like Lady Cassilis. A few, of the tribe of Waring, go and are
|
|
seen no more; only now and again, at springtime, when the gipsies'
|
|
song is afloat in the amethyst evening, we can catch their voices in
|
|
the glee.
|
|
|
|
By night it was clearer, and Maybole more visible than during the
|
|
day. Clouds coursed over the sky in great masses; the full moon
|
|
battled the other way, and lit up the snow with gleams of flying
|
|
silver; the town came down the hill in a cascade of brown gables,
|
|
bestridden by smooth white roofs, and sprangled here and there with
|
|
lighted windows. At either end the snow stood high up in the
|
|
darkness, on the peak of the Tolbooth and among the chimneys of the
|
|
Castle. As the moon flashed a bull's-eye glitter across the town
|
|
between the racing clouds, the white roofs leaped into relief over
|
|
the gables and the chimney-stacks, and their shadows over the white
|
|
roofs. In the town itself the lit face of the clock peered down the
|
|
street; an hour was hammered out on Mr. Geli's bell, and from behind
|
|
the red curtains of a public-house some one trolled out - a
|
|
compatriot of Burns, again! - 'The saut tear blin's my e'e.'
|
|
|
|
Next morning there was sun and a flapping wind. From the street
|
|
corners of Maybole I could catch breezy glimpses of green fields.
|
|
The road underfoot was wet and heavy - part ice, part snow, part
|
|
water, and any one I met greeted me, by way of salutation, with 'A
|
|
fine thowe' (thaw). My way lay among rather bleak bills, and past
|
|
bleak ponds and dilapidated castles and monasteries, to the Highland-
|
|
looking village of Kirkoswald. It has little claim to notice, save
|
|
that Burns came there to study surveying in the summer of 1777, and
|
|
there also, in the kirkyard, the original of Tam o' Shanter sleeps
|
|
his last sleep. It is worth noticing, however, that this was the
|
|
first place I thought 'Highland-looking.' Over the bill from
|
|
Kirkoswald a farm-road leads to the coast. As I came down above
|
|
Turnberry, the sea view was indeed strangely different from the day
|
|
before. The cold fogs were all blown away; and there was Ailsa
|
|
Craig, like a refraction, magnified and deformed, of the Bass Rock;
|
|
and there were the chiselled mountain-tops of Arran, veined and
|
|
tipped with snow; and behind, and fainter, the low, blue land of
|
|
Cantyre. Cottony clouds stood in a great castle over the top of
|
|
Arran, and blew out in long streamers to the south. The sea was
|
|
bitten all over with white; little ships, tacking up and down the
|
|
Firth, lay over at different angles in the wind. On Shanter they
|
|
were ploughing lea; a cart foal, all in a field by himself, capered
|
|
and whinnied as if the spring were in him.
|
|
|
|
The road from Turnberry to Girvan lies along the shore, among sand-
|
|
hills and by wildernesses of tumbled bent. Every here and there a
|
|
few cottages stood together beside a bridge. They had one odd
|
|
feature, not easy to describe in words: a triangular porch projected
|
|
from above the door, supported at the apex by a single upright post;
|
|
a secondary door was hinged to the post, and could be hasped on
|
|
either cheek of the real entrance; so, whether the wind was north or
|
|
south, the cotter could make himself a triangular bight of shelter
|
|
where to set his chair and finish a pipe with comfort. There is one
|
|
objection to this device; for, as the post stands in the middle of
|
|
the fairway, any one precipitately issuing from the cottage must run
|
|
his chance of a broken head. So far as I am aware, it is peculiar to
|
|
the little corner of country about Girvan. And that corner is
|
|
noticeable for more reasons: it is certainly one of the most
|
|
characteristic districts in Scotland, It has this movable porch by
|
|
way of architecture; it has, as we shall see, a sort of remnant of
|
|
provincial costume, and it has the handsomest population in the
|
|
Lowlands. . . .
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V - FOREST NOTES 1875-6
|
|
|
|
ON THE PLAIN
|
|
|
|
PERHAPS the reader knows already the aspect of the great levels of
|
|
the Gatinais, where they border with the wooded hills of
|
|
Fontainebleau. Here and there a few grey rocks creep out of the
|
|
forest as if to sun themselves. Here and there a few apple-trees
|
|
stand together on a knoll. The quaint, undignified tartan of a
|
|
myriad small fields dies out into the distance; the strips blend and
|
|
disappear; and the dead flat lies forth open and empty, with no
|
|
accident save perhaps a thin line of trees or faint church spire
|
|
against the sky. Solemn and vast at all times, in spite of pettiness
|
|
in the near details, the impression becomes more solemn and vast
|
|
towards evening. The sun goes down, a swollen orange, as it were
|
|
into the sea. A blue-clad peasant rides home, with a harrow smoking
|
|
behind him among the dry clods. Another still works with his wife in
|
|
their little strip. An immense shadow fills the plain; these people
|
|
stand in it up to their shoulders; and their heads, as they stoop
|
|
over their work and rise again, are relieved from time to time
|
|
against the golden sky.
|
|
|
|
These peasant farmers are well off nowadays, and not by any means
|
|
overworked; but somehow you always see in them the historical
|
|
representative of the serf of yore, and think not so much of present
|
|
times, which may be prosperous enough, as of the old days when the
|
|
peasant was taxed beyond possibility of payment, and lived, in
|
|
Michelet's image, like a hare between two furrows. These very people
|
|
now weeding their patch under the broad sunset, that very man and his
|
|
wife, it seems to us, have suffered all the wrongs of France. It is
|
|
they who have been their country's scapegoat for long ages; they who,
|
|
generation after generation, have sowed and not reaped, reaped and
|
|
another has garnered; and who have now entered into their reward, and
|
|
enjoy their good things in their turn. For the days are gone by when
|
|
the Seigneur ruled and profited. 'Le Seigneur,' says the old
|
|
formula, 'enferme ses manants comme sous porte et gonds, du ciel a la
|
|
terre. Tout est a lui, foret chenue, oiseau dans l'air, poisson dans
|
|
l'eau, bete an buisson, l'onde qui coule, la cloche dont le son au
|
|
loin roule.' Such was his old state of sovereignty, a local god
|
|
rather than a mere king. And now you may ask yourself where he is,
|
|
and look round for vestiges of my late lord, and in all the country-
|
|
side there is no trace of him but his forlorn and fallen mansion. At
|
|
the end of a long avenue, now sown with grain, in the midst of a
|
|
close full of cypresses and lilacs, ducks and crowing chanticleers
|
|
and droning bees, the old chateau lifts its red chimneys and peaked
|
|
roofs and turning vanes into the wind and sun. There is a glad
|
|
spring bustle in the air, perhaps, and the lilacs are all in flower,
|
|
and the creepers green about the broken balustrade: but no spring
|
|
shall revive the honour of the place. Old women of the people,
|
|
little, children of the people, saunter and gambol in the walled
|
|
court or feed the ducks in the neglected moat. Plough-horses, mighty
|
|
of limb, browse in the long stables. The dial-hand on the clock
|
|
waits for some better hour. Out on the plain, where hot sweat
|
|
trickles into men's eyes, and the spade goes in deep and comes up
|
|
slowly, perhaps the peasant may feel a movement of joy at his heart
|
|
when he thinks that these spacious chimneys are now cold, which have
|
|
so often blazed and flickered upon gay folk at supper, while he and
|
|
his hollow-eyed children watched through the night with empty bellies
|
|
and cold feet. And perhaps, as he raises his head and sees the
|
|
forest lying like a coast-line of low hills along the sea-level of
|
|
the plain, perhaps forest and chateau hold no unsimilar place in his
|
|
affections.
|
|
|
|
If the chateau was my lord's, the forest was my lord the king's;
|
|
neither of them for this poor Jacques. If he thought to eke out his
|
|
meagre way of life by some petty theft of wood for the fire, or for a
|
|
new roof-tree, he found himself face to face with a whole department,
|
|
from the Grand Master of the Woods and Waters, who was a high-born
|
|
lord, down to the common sergeant, who was a peasant like himself,
|
|
and wore stripes or a bandoleer by way of uniform. For the first
|
|
offence, by the Salic law, there was a fine of fifteen sols; and
|
|
should a man be taken more than once in fault, or circumstances
|
|
aggravate the colour of his guilt, he might be whipped, branded, or
|
|
hanged. There was a hangman over at Melun, and, I doubt not, a fine
|
|
tall gibbet hard by the town gate, where Jacques might see his
|
|
fellows dangle against the sky as he went to market.
|
|
|
|
And then, if he lived near to a cover, there would be the more hares
|
|
and rabbits to eat out his harvest, and the more hunters to trample
|
|
it down. My lord has a new horn from England. He has laid out seven
|
|
francs in decorating it with silver and gold, and fitting it with a
|
|
silken leash to hang about his shoulder. The hounds have been on a
|
|
pilgrimage to the shrine of Saint Mesmer, or Saint Hubert in the
|
|
Ardennes, or some other holy intercessor who has made a speciality of
|
|
the health of hunting-dogs. In the grey dawn the game was turned and
|
|
the branch broken by our best piqueur. A rare day's hunting lies
|
|
before us. Wind a jolly flourish, sound the BIEN-ALLER with all your
|
|
lungs. Jacques must stand by, hat in hand, while the quarry and
|
|
hound and huntsman sweep across his field, and a year's sparing and
|
|
labouring is as though it had not been. If he can see the ruin with
|
|
a good enough grace, who knows but he may fall in favour with my
|
|
lord; who knows but his son may become the last and least among the
|
|
servants at his lordship's kennel - one of the two poor varlets who
|
|
get no wages and sleep at night among the hounds?
|
|
|
|
For all that, the forest has been of use to Jacques, not only warming
|
|
him with fallen wood, but giving him shelter in days of sore trouble,
|
|
when my lord of the chateau, with all his troopers and trumpets, had
|
|
been beaten from field after field into some ultimate fastness, or
|
|
lay over-seas in an English prison. In these dark days, when the
|
|
watch on the church steeple saw the smoke of burning villages on the
|
|
sky-line, or a clump of spears and fluttering pensions drawing nigh
|
|
across the plain, these good folk gat them up, with all their
|
|
household gods, into the wood, whence, from some high spur, their
|
|
timid scouts might overlook the coming and going of the marauders,
|
|
and see the harvest ridden down, and church and cottage go up to
|
|
heaven all night in flame. It was but an unhomely refuge that the
|
|
woods afforded, where they must abide all change of weather and keep
|
|
house with wolves and vipers. Often there was none left alive, when
|
|
they returned, to show the old divisions of field from field. And
|
|
yet, as times went, when the wolves entered at night into depopulated
|
|
Paris, and perhaps De Retz was passing by with a company of demons
|
|
like himself, even in these caves and thickets there were glad hearts
|
|
and grateful prayers.
|
|
|
|
Once or twice, as I say, in the course of the ages, the forest may
|
|
have served the peasant well, but at heart it is a royal forest, and
|
|
noble by old associations. These woods have rung to the horns of all
|
|
the kings of France, from Philip Augustus downwards. They have seen
|
|
Saint Louis exercise the dogs he brought with him from Egypt; Francis
|
|
I. go a-hunting with ten thousand horses in his train; and Peter of
|
|
Russia following his first stag. And so they are still haunted for
|
|
the imagination by royal hunts and progresses, and peopled with the
|
|
faces of memorable men of yore. And this distinction is not only in
|
|
virtue of the pastime of dead monarchs.
|
|
|
|
Great events, great revolutions, great cycles in the affairs of men,
|
|
have here left their note, here taken shape in some significant and
|
|
dramatic situation. It was hence that Gruise and his leaguers led
|
|
Charles the Ninth a prisoner to Paris. Here, booted and spurred, and
|
|
with all his dogs about him, Napoleon met the Pope beside a woodland
|
|
cross. Here, on his way to Elba not so long after, he kissed the
|
|
eagle of the Old Guard, and spoke words of passionate farewell to his
|
|
soldiers. And here, after Waterloo, rather than yield its ensign to
|
|
the new power, one of his faithful regiments burned that memorial of
|
|
so much toil and glory on the Grand Master's table, and drank its
|
|
dust in brandy, as a devout priest consumes the remnants of the Host.
|
|
|
|
IN THE SEASON
|
|
|
|
Close into the edge of the forest, so close that the trees of the
|
|
BORNAGE stand pleasantly about the last houses, sits a certain small
|
|
and very quiet village. There is but one street, and that, not long
|
|
ago, was a green lane, where the cattle browsed between the
|
|
doorsteps. As you go up this street, drawing ever nearer the
|
|
beginning of the wood, you will arrive at last before an inn where
|
|
artists lodge. To the door (for I imagine it to be six o'clock on
|
|
some fine summer's even), half a dozen, or maybe half a score, of
|
|
people have brought out chairs, and now sit sunning themselves, and
|
|
waiting the omnibus from Melun. If you go on into the court you will
|
|
find as many more, some in billiard-room over absinthe and a match of
|
|
corks some without over a last cigar and a vermouth. The doves coo
|
|
and flutter from the dovecot; Hortense is drawing water from the
|
|
well; and as all the rooms open into the court, you can see the
|
|
white-capped cook over the furnace in the kitchen, and some idle
|
|
painter, who has stored his canvases and washed his brushes, jangling
|
|
a waltz on the crazy, tongue-tied piano in the salle-a-manger.
|
|
'EDMOND, ENCORE UN VERMOUTH,' cries a man in velveteen, adding in a
|
|
tone of apologetic afterthought, 'UN DOUBLE, S'IL VOUS PLAIT.'
|
|
'Where are you working?' asks one in pure white linen from top to
|
|
toe. 'At the Carrefour de l'Epine,' returns the other in corduroy
|
|
(they are all gaitered, by the way). 'I couldn't do a thing to it.
|
|
I ran out of white. Where were you?' 'I wasn't working. I was
|
|
looking for motives.' Here is an outbreak of jubilation, and a lot
|
|
of men clustering together about some new-comer with outstretched
|
|
hands; perhaps the 'correspondence' has come in and brought So-and-so
|
|
from Paris, or perhaps it is only So-and-so who has walked over from
|
|
Chailly to dinner.
|
|
|
|
'A TABLE, MESSIEURS!' cries M. Siron, bearing through the court the
|
|
first tureen of soup. And immediately the company begins to settle
|
|
down about the long tables in the dining-room, framed all round with
|
|
sketches of all degrees of merit and demerit. There's the big
|
|
picture of the huntsman winding a horn with a dead boar between his
|
|
legs, and his legs - well, his legs in stockings. And here is the
|
|
little picture of a raw mutton-chop, in which Such-a-one knocked a
|
|
hole last summer with no worse a missile than a plum from the
|
|
dessert. And under all these works of art so much eating goes
|
|
forward, so much drinking, so much jabbering in French and English,
|
|
that it would do your heart good merely to peep and listen at the
|
|
door. One man is telling how they all went last year to the fete at
|
|
Fleury, and another how well so-and-so would sing of an evening: and
|
|
here are a third and fourth making plans for the whole future of
|
|
their lives; and there is a fifth imitating a conjurer and making
|
|
faces on his clenched fist, surely of all arts the most difficult and
|
|
admirable! A sixth has eaten his fill, lights a cigarette, and
|
|
resigns himself to digestion. A seventh has just dropped in, and
|
|
calls for soup. Number eight, meanwhile, has left the table, and is
|
|
once more trampling the poor piano under powerful and uncertain
|
|
fingers.
|
|
|
|
Dinner over, people drop outside to smoke and chat. Perhaps we go
|
|
along to visit our friends at the other end of the village, where
|
|
there is always a good welcome and a good talk, and perhaps some
|
|
pickled oysters and white wine to close the evening. Or a dance is
|
|
organised in the dining-room, and the piano exhibits all its paces
|
|
under manful jockeying, to the light of three or four candles and a
|
|
lamp or two, while the waltzers move to and fro upon the wooden
|
|
floor, and sober men, who are not given to such light pleasures, get
|
|
up on the table or the sideboard, and sit there looking on
|
|
approvingly over a pipe and a tumbler of wine. Or sometimes -
|
|
suppose my lady moon looks forth, and the court from out the half-lit
|
|
dining-room seems nearly as bright as by day, and the light picks out
|
|
the window-panes, and makes a clear shadow under every vine-leaf on
|
|
the wall - sometimes a picnic is proposed, and a basket made ready,
|
|
and a good procession formed in front of the hotel. The two
|
|
trumpeters in honour go before; and as we file down the long alley,
|
|
and up through devious footpaths among rocks and pine-trees, with
|
|
every here and there a dark passage of shadow, and every here and
|
|
there a spacious outlook over moonlit woods, these two precede us and
|
|
sound many a jolly flourish as they walk. We gather ferns and dry
|
|
boughs into the cavern, and soon a good blaze flutters the shadows of
|
|
the old bandits' haunt, and shows shapely beards and comely faces and
|
|
toilettes ranged about the wall. The bowl is lit, and the punch is
|
|
burnt and sent round in scalding thimblefuls. So a good hour or two
|
|
may pass with song and jest. And then we go home in the moonlit
|
|
morning, straggling a good deal among the birch tufts and the
|
|
boulders, but ever called together again, as one of our leaders winds
|
|
his horn. Perhaps some one of the party will not heed the summons,
|
|
but chooses out some by-way of his own. As he follows the winding
|
|
sandy road, he hears the flourishes grow fainter and fainter in the
|
|
distance, and die finally out, and still walks on in the strange
|
|
coolness and silence and between the crisp lights and shadows of the
|
|
moonlit woods, until suddenly the bell rings out the hour from far-
|
|
away Chailly, and he starts to find himself alone. No surf-bell on
|
|
forlorn and perilous shores, no passing knell over the busy market-
|
|
place, can speak with a more heavy and disconsolate tongue to human
|
|
ears. Each stroke calls up a host of ghostly reverberations in his
|
|
mind. And as he stands rooted, it has grown once more so utterly
|
|
silent that it seems to him he might hear the church bells ring the
|
|
hour out all the world over, not at Chailly only, but in Paris, and
|
|
away in outlandish cities, and in the village on the river, where his
|
|
childhood passed between the sun and flowers.
|
|
|
|
IDLE HOURS
|
|
|
|
The woods by night, in all their uncanny effect, are not rightly to
|
|
be understood until you can compare them with the woods by day. The
|
|
stillness of the medium, the floor of glittering sand, these trees
|
|
that go streaming up like monstrous sea-weeds and waver in the moving
|
|
winds like the weeds in submarine currents, all these set the mind
|
|
working on the thought of what you may have seen off a foreland or
|
|
over the side of a boat, and make you feel like a diver, down in the
|
|
quiet water, fathoms below the tumbling, transitory surface of the
|
|
sea. And yet in itself, as I say, the strangeness of these nocturnal
|
|
solitudes is not to be felt fully without the sense of contrast. You
|
|
must have risen in the morning and seen the woods as they are by day,
|
|
kindled and coloured in the sun's light; you must have felt the odour
|
|
of innumerable trees at even, the unsparing heat along the forest
|
|
roads, and the coolness of the groves.
|
|
|
|
And on the first morning you will doubtless rise betimes. If you
|
|
have not been wakened before by the visit of some adventurous pigeon,
|
|
you will be wakened as soon as the sun can reach your window - for
|
|
there are no blind or shutters to keep him out - and the room, with
|
|
its bare wood floor and bare whitewashed walls, shines all round you
|
|
in a sort of glory of reflected lights. You may doze a while longer
|
|
by snatches, or lie awake to study the charcoal men and dogs and
|
|
horses with which former occupants have defiled the partitions:
|
|
Thiers, with wily profile; local celebrities, pipe in hand; or,
|
|
maybe, a romantic landscape splashed in oil. Meanwhile artist after
|
|
artist drops into the salle-a-manger for coffee, and then shoulders
|
|
easel, sunshade, stool, and paint-box, bound into a fagot, and sets
|
|
of for what he calls his 'motive.' And artist after artist, as he
|
|
goes out of the village, carries with him a little following of dogs.
|
|
For the dogs, who belong only nominally to any special master, hang
|
|
about the gate of the forest all day long, and whenever any one goes
|
|
by who hits their fancy, profit by his escort, and go forth with him
|
|
to play an hour or two at hunting. They would like to be under the
|
|
trees all day. But they cannot go alone. They require a pretext.
|
|
And so they take the passing artist as an excuse to go into the
|
|
woods, as they might take a walking-stick as an excuse to bathe.
|
|
With quick ears, long spines, and bandy legs, or perhaps as tall as a
|
|
greyhound and with a bulldog's head, this company of mongrels will
|
|
trot by your side all day and come home with you at night, still
|
|
showing white teeth and wagging stunted tail. Their good humour is
|
|
not to be exhausted. You may pelt them with stones if you please,
|
|
and all they will do is to give you a wider berth. If once they come
|
|
out with you, to you they will remain faithful, and with you return;
|
|
although if you meet them next morning in the street, it is as like
|
|
as not they will cut you with a countenance of brass.
|
|
|
|
The forest - a strange thing for an Englishman - is very destitute of
|
|
birds. This is no country where every patch of wood among the
|
|
meadows gibes up an increase of song, and every valley wandered
|
|
through by a streamlet rings and reverberates from side to with a
|
|
profusion of clear notes. And this rarity of birds is not to be
|
|
regretted on its own account only. For the insects prosper in their
|
|
absence, and become as one of the plagues of Egypt. Ants swarm in
|
|
the hot sand; mosquitos drone their nasal drone; wherever the sun
|
|
finds a hole in the roof of the forest, you see a myriad transparent
|
|
creatures coming and going in the shaft of light; and even between-
|
|
whiles, even where there is no incursion of sun-rays into the dark
|
|
arcade of the wood, you are conscious of a continual drift of
|
|
insects, an ebb and flow of infinitesimal living things between the
|
|
trees. Nor are insects the only evil creatures that haunt the
|
|
forest. For you may plump into a cave among the rocks, and find
|
|
yourself face to face with a wild boar, or see a crooked viper
|
|
slither across the road.
|
|
|
|
Perhaps you may set yourself down in the bay between two spreading
|
|
beech-roots with a book on your lap, and be awakened all of a sudden
|
|
by a friend: 'I say, just keep where you are, will you? You make
|
|
the jolliest motive.' And you reply: 'Well, I don't mind, if I may
|
|
smoke.' And thereafter the hours go idly by. Your friend at the
|
|
easel labours doggedly a little way off, in the wide shadow of the
|
|
tree; and yet farther, across a strait of glaring sunshine, you see
|
|
another painter, encamped in the shadow of another tree, and up to
|
|
his waist in the fern. You cannot watch your own effigy growing out
|
|
of the white trunk, and the trunk beginning to stand forth from the
|
|
rest of the wood, and the whole picture getting dappled over with the
|
|
flecks of sun that slip through the leaves overhead, and, as a wind
|
|
goes by and sets the trees a-talking, flicker hither and thither like
|
|
butterflies of light. But you know it is going forward; and, out of
|
|
emulation with the painter, get ready your own palette, and lay out
|
|
the colour for a woodland scene in words.
|
|
|
|
Your tree stands in a hollow paved with fern and heather, set in a
|
|
basin of low hills, and scattered over with rocks and junipers. All
|
|
the open is steeped in pitiless sunlight. Everything stands out as
|
|
though it were cut in cardboard, every colour is strained into its
|
|
highest key. The boulders are some of them upright and dead like
|
|
monolithic castles, some of them prone like sleeping cattle. The
|
|
junipers - looking, in their soiled and ragged mourning, like some
|
|
funeral procession that has gone seeking the place of sepulchre three
|
|
hundred years and more in wind and rain - are daubed in forcibly
|
|
against the glowing ferns and heather. Every tassel of their rusty
|
|
foliage is defined with pre-Raphaelite minuteness. And a sorry
|
|
figure they make out there in the sun, like misbegotten yew-trees!
|
|
The scene is all pitched in a key of colour so peculiar, and lit up
|
|
with such a discharge of violent sunlight, as a man might live fifty
|
|
years in England and not see.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile at your elbow some one tunes up a song, words of Ronsard to
|
|
a pathetic tremulous air, of how the poet loved his mistress long
|
|
ago, and pressed on her the flight of time, and told her how white
|
|
and quiet the dead lay under the stones, and how the boat dipped and
|
|
pitched as the shades embarked for the passionless land. Yet a
|
|
little while, sang the poet, and there shall be no more love; only to
|
|
sit and remember loves that might have been. There is a falling
|
|
flourish in the air that remains in the memory and comes back in
|
|
incongruous places, on the seat of hansoms or in the warm bed at
|
|
night, with something of a forest savour.
|
|
|
|
'You can get up now,' says the painter; 'I'm at the background.'
|
|
|
|
And so up you get, stretching yourself, and go your way into the
|
|
wood, the daylight becoming richer and more golden, and the shadows
|
|
stretching farther into the open. A cool air comes along the
|
|
highways, and the scents awaken. The fir-trees breathe abroad their
|
|
ozone. Out of unknown thickets comes forth the soft, secret,
|
|
aromatic odour of the woods, not like a smell of the free heaven, but
|
|
as though court ladies, who had known these paths in ages long gone
|
|
by, still walked in the summer evenings, and shed from their brocades
|
|
a breath of musk or bergamot upon the woodland winds. One side of
|
|
the long avenues is still kindled with the sun, the other is plunged
|
|
in transparent shadow. Over the trees the west begins to burn like a
|
|
furnace; and the painters gather up their chattels, and go down, by
|
|
avenue or footpath, to the plain.
|
|
|
|
A PLEASURE-PARTY
|
|
|
|
As this excursion is a matter of some length, and, moreover, we go in
|
|
force, we have set aside our usual vehicle, the pony-cart, and
|
|
ordered a large wagonette from Lejosne's. It has been waiting for
|
|
near an hour, while one went to pack a knapsack, and t'other hurried
|
|
over his toilette and coffee; but now it is filled from end to end
|
|
with merry folk in summer attire, the coachman cracks his whip, and
|
|
amid much applause from round the inn door off we rattle at a
|
|
spanking trot. The way lies through the forest, up hill and down
|
|
dale, and by beech and pine wood, in the cheerful morning sunshine.
|
|
The English get down at all the ascents and walk on ahead for
|
|
exercise; the French are mightily entertained at this, and keep coyly
|
|
underneath the tilt. As we go we carry with us a pleasant noise of
|
|
laughter and light speech, and some one will be always breaking out
|
|
into a bar or two of opera bouffe. Before we get to the Route Ronde
|
|
here comes Desprez, the colourman from Fontainebleau, trudging across
|
|
on his weekly peddle with a case of merchandise; and it is 'Desprez,
|
|
leave me some malachite green'; 'Desprez, leave me so much canvas';
|
|
'Desprez, leave me this, or leave me that'; M. Desprez standing the
|
|
while in the sunlight with grave face and many salutations. The next
|
|
interruption is more important. For some time back we have had the
|
|
sound of cannon in our ears; and now, a little past Franchard, we
|
|
find a mounted trooper holding a led horse, who brings the wagonette
|
|
to a stand. The artillery is practising in the Quadrilateral, it
|
|
appears; passage along the Route Ronde formally interdicted for the
|
|
moment. There is nothing for it but to draw up at the glaring cross-
|
|
roads and get down to make fun with the notorious Cocardon, the most
|
|
ungainly and ill-bred dog of all the ungainly and ill-bred dogs of
|
|
Barbizon, or clamber about the sandy banks. And meanwhile the
|
|
doctor, with sun umbrella, wide Panama, and patriarchal beard, is
|
|
busy wheedling and (for aught the rest of us know) bribing the too
|
|
facile sentry. His speech is smooth and dulcet, his manner dignified
|
|
and insinuating. It is not for nothing that the Doctor has voyaged
|
|
all the world over, and speaks all languages from French to
|
|
Patagonian. He has not come borne from perilous journeys to be
|
|
thwarted by a corporal of horse. And so we soon see the soldier's
|
|
mouth relax, and his shoulders imitate a relenting heart. 'EN
|
|
VOITURE, MESSIEURS, MESDAMES,' sings the Doctor; and on we go again
|
|
at a good round pace, for black care follows hard after us, and
|
|
discretion prevails not a little over valour in some timorous spirits
|
|
of the party. At any moment we may meet the sergeant, who will send
|
|
us back. At any moment we may encounter a flying shell, which will
|
|
send us somewhere farther off than Grez.
|
|
|
|
Grez - for that is our destination - has been highly recommended for
|
|
its beauty. 'IL Y A DE L'EAU,' people have said, with an emphasis,
|
|
as if that settled the question, which, for a French mind, I am
|
|
rather led to think it does. And Grez, when we get there, is indeed
|
|
a place worthy of some praise. It lies out of the forest, a cluster
|
|
of houses, with an old bridge, an old castle in ruin, and a quaint
|
|
old church. The inn garden descends in terraces to the river;
|
|
stable-yard, kailyard, orchard, and a space of lawn, fringed with
|
|
rushes and embellished with a green arbour. On the opposite bank
|
|
there is a reach of English-looking plain, set thickly with willows
|
|
and poplars. And between the two lies the river, clear and deep, and
|
|
full of reeds and floating lilies. Water-plants cluster about the
|
|
starlings of the long low bridge, and stand half-way up upon the
|
|
piers in green luxuriance. They catch the dipped oar with long
|
|
antennae, and chequer the slimy bottom with the shadow of their
|
|
leaves. And the river wanders and thither hither among the islets,
|
|
and is smothered and broken up by the reeds, like an old building in
|
|
the lithe, hardy arms of the climbing ivy. You may watch the box
|
|
where the good man of the inn keeps fish alive for his kitchen, one
|
|
oily ripple following another over the top of the yellow deal. And
|
|
you can hear a splashing and a prattle of voices from the shed under
|
|
the old kirk, where the village women wash and wash all day among the
|
|
fish and water-lilies. It seems as if linen washed there should be
|
|
specially cool and sweet.
|
|
|
|
We have come here for the river. And no sooner have we all bathed
|
|
than we board the two shallops and push off gaily, and go gliding
|
|
under the trees and gathering a great treasure of water-lilies. Some
|
|
one sings; some trail their hands in the cool water; some lean over
|
|
the gunwale to see the image of the tall poplars far below, and the
|
|
shadow of the boat, with the balanced oars and their own head
|
|
protruded, glide smoothly over the yellow floor of the stream. At
|
|
last, the day declining - all silent and happy, and up to the knees
|
|
in the wet lilies - we punt slowly back again to the landing-place
|
|
beside the bridge. There is a wish for solitude on all. One hides
|
|
himself in the arbour with a cigarette; another goes a walk in the
|
|
country with Cocardon; a third inspects the church. And it is not
|
|
till dinner is on the table, and the inn's best wine goes round from
|
|
glass to glass, that we begin to throw off the restraint and fuse
|
|
once more into a jolly fellowship.
|
|
|
|
Half the party are to return to-night with the wagonette; and some of
|
|
the others, loath to break up company, will go with them a bit of the
|
|
way and drink a stirrup-cup at Marlotte. It is dark in the
|
|
wagonette, and not so merry as it might have been. The coachman
|
|
loses the road. So-and-so tries to light fireworks with the most
|
|
indifferent success. Some sing, but the rest are too weary to
|
|
applaud; and it seems as if the festival were fairly at an end -
|
|
|
|
'Nous avons fait la noce,
|
|
Rentrons a nos foyers!'
|
|
|
|
And such is the burthen, even after we have come to Marlotte and
|
|
taken our places in the court at Mother Antonine's. There is punch
|
|
on the long table out in the open air, where the guests dine in
|
|
summer weather. The candles flare in the night wind, and the faces
|
|
round the punch are lit up, with shifting emphasis, against a
|
|
background of complete and solid darkness. It is all picturesque
|
|
enough; but the fact is, we are aweary. We yawn; we are out of the
|
|
vein; we have made the wedding, as the song says, and now, for
|
|
pleasure's sake, let's make an end on't. When here comes striding
|
|
into the court, booted to mid-thigh, spurred and splashed, in a
|
|
jacket of green cord, the great, famous, and redoubtable Blank; and
|
|
in a moment the fire kindles again, and the night is witness of our
|
|
laughter as he imitates Spaniards, Germans, Englishmen, picture-
|
|
dealers, all eccentric ways of speaking and thinking, with a
|
|
possession, a fury, a strain of mind and voice, that would rather
|
|
suggest a nervous crisis than a desire to please. We are as merry as
|
|
ever when the trap sets forth again, and say farewell noisily to all
|
|
the good folk going farther. Then, as we are far enough from
|
|
thoughts of sleep, we visit Blank in his quaint house, and sit an
|
|
hour or so in a great tapestried chamber, laid with furs, littered
|
|
with sleeping hounds, and lit up, in fantastic shadow and shine, by a
|
|
wood fire in a mediaeval chimney. And then we plod back through the
|
|
darkness to the inn beside the river.
|
|
|
|
How quick bright things come to confusion! When we arise next
|
|
morning, the grey showers fall steadily, the trees hang limp, and the
|
|
face of the stream is spoiled with dimpling raindrops. Yesterday's
|
|
lilies encumber the garden walk, or begin, dismally enough, their
|
|
voyage towards the Seine and the salt sea. A sickly shimmer lies
|
|
upon the dripping house-roofs, and all the colour is washed out of
|
|
the green and golden landscape of last night, as though an envious
|
|
man had taken a water-colour sketch and blotted it together with a
|
|
sponge. We go out a-walking in the wet roads. But the roads about
|
|
Grez have a trick of their own. They go on for a while among clumps
|
|
of willows and patches of vine, and then, suddenly and without any
|
|
warning, cease and determine in some miry hollow or upon some bald
|
|
knowe; and you have a short period of hope, then right-about face,
|
|
and back the way you came! So we draw about the kitchen fire and
|
|
play a round game of cards for ha'pence, or go to the billiard-room,
|
|
for a match at corks and by one consent a messenger is sent over for
|
|
the wagonette - Grez shall be left to-morrow.
|
|
|
|
To-morrow dawns so fair that two of the party agree to walk back for
|
|
exercise, and let their kidnap-sacks follow by the trap. I need
|
|
hardly say they are neither of them French; for, of all English
|
|
phrases, the phrase 'for exercise' is the least comprehensible across
|
|
the Straits of Dover. All goes well for a while with the
|
|
pedestrians. The wet woods are full of scents in the noontide. At a
|
|
certain cross, where there is a guardhouse, they make a halt, for the
|
|
forester's wife is the daughter of their good host at Barbizon. And
|
|
so there they are hospitably received by the comely woman, with one
|
|
child in her arms and another prattling and tottering at her gown,
|
|
and drink some syrup of quince in the back parlour, with a map of the
|
|
forest on the wall, and some prints of love-affairs and the great
|
|
Napoleon hunting. As they draw near the Quadrilateral, and hear once
|
|
more the report of the big guns, they take a by-road to avoid the
|
|
sentries, and go on a while somewhat vaguely, with the sound of the
|
|
cannon in their ears and the rain beginning to fall. The ways grow
|
|
wider and sandier; here and there there are real sand-hills, as
|
|
though by the sea-shore; the fir-wood is open and grows in clumps
|
|
upon the hillocks, and the race of sign-posts is no more. One begins
|
|
to look at the other doubtfully. 'I am sure we should keep more to
|
|
the right,' says one; and the other is just as certain they should
|
|
hold to the left. And now, suddenly, the heavens open, and the rain
|
|
falls 'sheer and strong and loud,' as out of a shower-bath. In a
|
|
moment they are as wet as shipwrecked sailors. They cannot see out
|
|
of their eyes for the drift, and the water churns and gurgles in
|
|
their boots. They leave the track and try across country with a
|
|
gambler's desperatin, for it seems as if it were impossible to make
|
|
the situation worse; and, for the next hour, go scrambling from
|
|
boulder to boulder, or plod along paths that are now no more than
|
|
rivulets, and across waste clearings where the scattered shells and
|
|
broken fir-trees tell all too plainly of the cannon in the distance.
|
|
And meantime the cannon grumble out responses to the grumbling
|
|
thunder. There is such a mixture of melodrama and sheer discomfort
|
|
about all this, it is at once so grey and so lurid, that it is far
|
|
more agreeable to read and write about by the chimney-corner than to
|
|
suffer in the person. At last they chance on the right path, and
|
|
make Franchard in the early evening, the sorriest pair of wanderers
|
|
that ever welcomed English ale. Thence, by the Bois d'Hyver, the
|
|
Ventes-Alexandre, and the Pins Brules, to the clean hostelry, dry
|
|
clothes, and dinner.
|
|
|
|
THE WOODS IN SPRING
|
|
|
|
I think you will like the forest best in the sharp early springtime,
|
|
when it is just beginning to reawaken, and innumerable violets peep
|
|
from among the fallen leaves; when two or three people at most sit
|
|
down to dinner, and, at table, you will do well to keep a rug about
|
|
your knees, for the nights are chill, and the salle-a-manger opens on
|
|
the court. There is less to distract the attention, for one thing,
|
|
and the forest is more itself. It is not bedotted with artists'
|
|
sunshades as with unknown mushrooms, nor bestrewn with the remains of
|
|
English picnics. The hunting still goes on, and at any moment your
|
|
heart may be brought into your mouth as you hear far-away horns; or
|
|
you may be told by an agitated peasant that the Vicomte has gone up
|
|
the avenue, not ten minutes since, 'A FOND DE TRAIN, MONSIEUR, ET
|
|
AVEC DOUZE PIPUERS.'
|
|
|
|
If you go up to some coign of vantage in the system of low hills that
|
|
permeates the forest, you will see many different tracts of country,
|
|
each of its own cold and melancholy neutral tint, and all mixed
|
|
together and mingled the one into the other at the seams. You will
|
|
see tracts of leafless beeches of a faint yellowish grey, and
|
|
leafless oaks a little ruddier in the hue. Then zones of pine of a
|
|
solemn green; and, dotted among the pines, or standing by themselves
|
|
in rocky clearings, the delicate, snow-white trunks of birches,
|
|
spreading out into snow-white branches yet more delicate, and crowned
|
|
and canopied with a purple haze of twigs. And then a long, bare
|
|
ridge of tumbled boulders, with bright sand-breaks between them, and
|
|
wavering sandy roads among the bracken and brown heather. It is all
|
|
rather cold and unhomely. It has not the perfect beauty, nor the
|
|
gem-like colouring, of the wood in the later year, when it is no more
|
|
than one vast colonnade of verdant shadow, tremulous with insects,
|
|
intersected here and there by lanes of sunlight set in purple
|
|
heather. The loveliness of the woods in March is not, assuredly, of
|
|
this blowzy rustic type. It is made sharp with a grain of salt, with
|
|
a touch of ugliness. It has a sting like the sting of bitter ale;
|
|
you acquire the love of it as men acquire a taste for olives. And
|
|
the wonderful clear, pure air wells into your lungs the while by
|
|
voluptuous inhalations, and makes the eyes bright, and sets the heart
|
|
tinkling to a new tune - or, rather, to an old tune; for you remember
|
|
in your boyhood something akin to this spirit of adventure, this
|
|
thirst for exploration, that now takes you masterfully by the hand,
|
|
plunges you into many a deep grove, and drags you over many a stony
|
|
crest. it is as if the whole wood were full of friendly voice,
|
|
calling you farther in, and you turn from one side to another, like
|
|
Buridan's donkey, in a maze of pleasure.
|
|
|
|
Comely beeches send up their white, straight, clustered branches,
|
|
barred with green moss, like so many fingers from a half-clenched
|
|
hand. Mighty oaks stand to the ankles in a fine tracery of
|
|
underwood; thence the tall shaft climbs upwards, and the great forest
|
|
of stalwart boughs spreads out into the golden evening sky, where the
|
|
rooks are flying and calling. On the sward of the Bois d'Hyver the
|
|
firs stand well asunder with outspread arms, like fencers saluting;
|
|
and the air smells of resin all around, and the sound of the axe is
|
|
rarely still. But strangest of all, and in appearance oldest of all,
|
|
are the dim and wizard upland districts of young wood. The ground is
|
|
carpeted with fir-tassel, and strewn with fir-apples and flakes of
|
|
fallen bark. Rocks lie crouching in the thicket, guttered with rain,
|
|
tufted with lichen, white with years and the rigours of the changeful
|
|
seasons. Brown and yellow butterflies are sown and carried away
|
|
again by the light air - like thistledown. The loneliness of these
|
|
coverts is so excessive, that there are moments when pleasure draws
|
|
to the verge of fear. You listen and listen for some noise to break
|
|
the silence, till you grow half mesmerised by the intensity of the
|
|
strain; your sense of your own identity is troubled; your brain
|
|
reels, like that of some gymnosophist poring on his own nose in
|
|
Asiatic jungles; and should you see your own outspread feet, you see
|
|
them, not as anything of yours, but as a feature of the scene around
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
Still the forest is always, but the stillness is not always unbroken.
|
|
You can hear the wind pass in the distance over the tree-tops;
|
|
sometimes briefly, like the noise of a train; sometimes with a long
|
|
steady rush, like the breaking of waves. And sometimes, close at
|
|
band, the branches move, a moan goes through the thicket, and the
|
|
wood thrills to its heart. Perhaps you may hear a carriage on the
|
|
road to Fontainebleau, a bird gives a dry continual chirp, the dead
|
|
leaves rustle underfoot, or you may time your steps to the steady
|
|
recurrent strokes of the woodman's axe. From time to time, over the
|
|
low grounds, a flight of rooks goes by; and from time to time the
|
|
cooing of wild doves falls upon the ear, not sweet and rich and near
|
|
at hand as in England, but a sort of voice of the woods, thin and far
|
|
away, as fits these solemn places. Or you hear suddenly the hollow,
|
|
eager, violent barking of dogs; scared deer flit past you through the
|
|
fringes of the wood; then a man or two running, in green blouse, with
|
|
gun and game-bag on a bandoleer; and then, out of the thick of the
|
|
trees, comes the jar of rifle-shots. Or perhaps the hounds are out,
|
|
and horns are blown, and scarlet-coated huntsmen flash through the
|
|
clearings, and the solid noise of horses galloping passes below you,
|
|
where you sit perched among the rocks and heather. The boar is
|
|
afoot, and all over the forest, and in all neighbouring villages,
|
|
there is a vague excitement and a vague hope; for who knows whither
|
|
the chase may lead? and even to have seen a single piqueur, or spoken
|
|
to a single sportsman, is to be a man of consequence for the night.
|
|
|
|
Besides men who shoot and men who ride with the hounds, there are few
|
|
people in the forest, in the early spring, save woodcutters plying
|
|
their axes steadily, and old women and children gathering wood for
|
|
the fire. You may meet such a party coming home in the twilight:
|
|
the old woman laden with a fagot of chips, and the little ones
|
|
hauling a long branch behind them in her wake. That is the worst of
|
|
what there is to encounter; and if I tell you of what once happened
|
|
to a friend of mine, it is by no means to tantalise you with false
|
|
hopes; for the adventure was unique. It was on a very cold, still,
|
|
sunless morning, with a flat grey sky and a frosty tingle in the air,
|
|
that this friend (who shall here be nameless) heard the notes of a
|
|
key-bugle played with much hesitation, and saw the smoke of a fire
|
|
spread out along the green pine-tops, in a remote uncanny glen, hard
|
|
by a hill of naked boulders. He drew near warily, and beheld a
|
|
picnic party seated under a tree in an open. The old father knitted
|
|
a sock, the mother sat staring at the fire. The eldest son, in the
|
|
uniform of a private of dragoons, was choosing out notes on a key-
|
|
bugle. Two or three daughters lay in the neighbourhood picking
|
|
violets. And the whole party as grave and silent as the woods around
|
|
them! My friend watched for a long time, he says; but all held their
|
|
peace; not one spoke or smiled; only the dragoon kept choosing out
|
|
single notes upon the bugle, and the father knitted away at his work
|
|
and made strange movements the while with his flexible eyebrows.
|
|
They took no notice whatever of my friend's presence, which was
|
|
disquieting in itself, and increased the resemblance of the whole
|
|
party to mechanical waxworks. Certainly, he affirms, a wax figure
|
|
might have played the bugle with more spirit than that strange
|
|
dragoon. And as this hypothesis of his became more certain, the
|
|
awful insolubility of why they should be left out there in the woods
|
|
with nobody to wind them up again when they ran down, and a growing
|
|
disquietude as to what might happen next, became too much for his
|
|
courage, and he turned tail, and fairly took to his heels. It might
|
|
have been a singing in his ears, but he fancies he was followed as he
|
|
ran by a peal of Titanic laughter. Nothing has ever transpired to
|
|
clear up the mystery; it may be they were automata; or it may be (and
|
|
this is the theory to which I lean myself) that this is all another
|
|
chapter of Heine's 'Gods in Exile'; that the upright old man with the
|
|
eyebrows was no other than Father Jove, and the young dragoon with
|
|
the taste for music either Apollo or Mars.
|
|
|
|
MORALITY
|
|
|
|
Strange indeed is the attraction of the forest for the minds of men.
|
|
Not one or two only, but a great chorus of grateful voices have
|
|
arisen to spread abroad its fame. Half the famous writers of modern
|
|
France have had their word to say about Fontainebleau.
|
|
Chateaubriand, Michelet, Beranger, George Sand, de Senancour,
|
|
Flaubert, Murger, the brothers Goncourt, Theodore de Banville, each
|
|
of these has done something to the eternal praise and memory of these
|
|
woods. Even at the very worst of times, even when the picturesque
|
|
was anathema in the eyes of all Persons of Taste, the forest still
|
|
preserved a certain reputation for beauty. It was in 1730 that the
|
|
Abbe Guilbert published his HISTORICAL DESCRIPTION OF THE PALACE,
|
|
TOWN, AND FOREST OF FONTAINEBLEAU. And very droll it is to see him,
|
|
as he tries to set forth his admiration in terms of what was then
|
|
permissible. The monstrous rocks, etc., says the Abbe 'sont admirees
|
|
avec surprise des voyageurs qui s'ecrient aussitot avec Horace: Ut
|
|
mihi devio rupee et vacuum nemus mirari libet.' The good man is not
|
|
exactly lyrical in his praise; and you see how he sets his back
|
|
against Horace as against a trusty oak. Horace, at any rate, was
|
|
classical. For the rest, however, the Abbe likes places where many
|
|
alleys meet; or which, like the Belle-Etoile, are kept up 'by a
|
|
special gardener,' and admires at the Table du Roi the labours of the
|
|
Grand Master of Woods and Waters, the Sieur de la Falure, 'qui a fait
|
|
faire ce magnifique endroit.'
|
|
|
|
But indeed, it is not so much for its beauty that the forest makes a
|
|
claim upon men's hearts, as for that subtle something, that quality
|
|
of the air, that emanation from the old trees, that so wonderfully
|
|
changes and renews a weary spirit. Disappointed men, sick Francis
|
|
Firsts and vanquished Grand Monarchs, time out of mind have come here
|
|
for consolation. Hither perplexed folk have retired out of the press
|
|
of life, as into a deep bay-window on some night of masquerade, and
|
|
here found quiet and silence, and rest, the mother of wisdom. It is
|
|
the great moral spa; this forest without a fountain is itself the
|
|
great fountain of Juventius. It is the best place in the world to
|
|
bring an old sorrow that has been a long while your friend and enemy;
|
|
and if, like Beranger's your gaiety has run away from home and left
|
|
open the door for sorrow to come in, of all covers in Europe, it is
|
|
here you may expect to find the truant hid. With every hour you
|
|
change. The air penetrates through your clothes, and nestles to your
|
|
living body. You love exercise and slumber, long fasting and full
|
|
meals. You forget all your scruples and live a while in peace and
|
|
freedom, and for the moment only. For here, all is absent that can
|
|
stimulate to moral feeling. Such people as you see may be old, or
|
|
toil-worn, or sorry; but you see them framed in the forest, like
|
|
figures on a painted canvas; and for you, they are not people in any
|
|
living and kindly sense. You forget the grim contrariety of
|
|
interests. You forget the narrow lane where all men jostle together
|
|
in unchivalrous contention, and the kennel, deep and unclean, that
|
|
gapes on either hand for the defeated. Life is simple enough, it
|
|
seems, and the very idea of sacrifice becomes like a mad fancy out of
|
|
a last night's dream.
|
|
|
|
Your ideal is not perhaps high, but it is plain and possible. You
|
|
become enamoured of a life of change and movement and the open air,
|
|
where the muscles shall be more exercised than the affections. When
|
|
you have had your will of the forest, you may visit the whole round
|
|
world. You may buckle on your knapsack and take the road on foot.
|
|
You may bestride a good nag, and ride forth, with a pair of saddle-
|
|
bags, into the enchanted East. You may cross the Black Forest, and
|
|
see Germany wide-spread before you, like a map, dotted with old
|
|
cities, walled and spired, that dream all day on their own
|
|
reflections in the Rhine or Danube. You may pass the spinal cord of
|
|
Europe and go down from Alpine glaciers to where Italy extends her
|
|
marble moles and glasses her marble palaces in the midland sea. You
|
|
may sleep in flying trains or wayside taverns. You may be awakened
|
|
at dawn by the scream of the express or the small pipe of the robin
|
|
in the hedge. For you the rain should allay the dust of the beaten
|
|
road; the wind dry your clothes upon you as you walked. Autumn
|
|
should hang out russet pears and purple grapes along the lane; inn
|
|
after inn proffer you their cups of raw wine; river by river receive
|
|
your body in the sultry noon. Wherever you went warm valleys and
|
|
high trees and pleasant villages should compass you about; and light
|
|
fellowships should take you by the arm, and walk with you an hour
|
|
upon your way. You may see from afar off what it will come to in the
|
|
end - the weather-beaten red-nosed vagabond, consumed by a fever of
|
|
the feet, cut off from all near touch of human sympathy, a waif, an
|
|
Ishmael, and an outcast. And yet it will seem well - and yet, in the
|
|
air of the forest, this will seem the best - to break all the network
|
|
bound about your feet by birth and old companionship and loyal love,
|
|
and bear your shovelful of phosphates to and fro, in town country,
|
|
until the hour of the great dissolvent.
|
|
|
|
Or, perhaps, you will keep to the cover. For the forest is by
|
|
itself, and forest life owns small kinship with life in the dismal
|
|
land of labour. Men are so far sophisticated that they cannot take
|
|
the world as it is given to them by the sight of their eyes. Not
|
|
only what they see and hear, but what they know to be behind, enter
|
|
into their notion of a place. If the sea, for instance, lie just
|
|
across the hills, sea-thoughts will come to them at intervals, and
|
|
the tenor of their dreams from time to time will suffer a sea-change.
|
|
And so here, in this forest, a knowledge of its greatness is for much
|
|
in the effect produced. You reckon up the miles that lie between you
|
|
and intrusion. You may walk before you all day long, and not fear to
|
|
touch the barrier of your Eden, or stumble out of fairyland into the
|
|
land of gin and steam-hammers. And there is an old tale enhances for
|
|
the imagination the grandeur of the woods of France, and secures you
|
|
in the thought of your seclusion. When Charles VI. hunted in the
|
|
time of his wild boyhood near Senlis, there was captured an old stag,
|
|
having a collar of bronze about his neck, and these words engraved on
|
|
the collar: 'Caesar mihi hoc donavit.' It is no wonder if the minds
|
|
of men were moved at this occurrence and they stood aghast to find
|
|
themselves thus touching hands with forgotten ages, and following an
|
|
antiquity with hound and horn. And even for you, it is scarcely in
|
|
an idle curiosity that you ponder how many centuries this stag had
|
|
carried its free antlers through the wood, and how many summers and
|
|
winters had shone and snowed on the imperial badge. If the extent of
|
|
solemn wood could thus safeguard a tall stag from the hunter's hounds
|
|
and houses, might not you also play hide-and-seek, in these groves,
|
|
with all the pangs and trepidations of man's life, and elude Death,
|
|
the mighty hunter, for more than the span of human years? Here,
|
|
also, crash his arrows; here, in the farthest glade, sounds the
|
|
gallop of the pale horse. But he does not hunt this cover with all
|
|
his hounds, for the game is thin and small: and if you were but
|
|
alert and wary, if you lodged ever in the deepest thickets, you too
|
|
might live on into later generations and astonish men by your
|
|
stalwart age and the trophies of an immemorial success.
|
|
|
|
For the forest takes away from you all excuse to die. There is
|
|
nothing here to cabin or thwart your free desires. Here all the
|
|
impudencies of the brawling world reach you no more. You may count
|
|
your hours, like Endymion, by the strokes of the lone woodcutter, or
|
|
by the progression of the lights and shadows and the sun wheeling his
|
|
wide circuit through the naked heavens. Here shall you see no
|
|
enemies but winter and rough weather. And if a pang comes to you at
|
|
all, it will be a pang of healthful hunger. All the puling sorrows,
|
|
all the carking repentance, all this talk of duty that is no duty, in
|
|
the great peace, in the pure daylight of these woods, fall away from
|
|
you like a garment. And if perchance you come forth upon an
|
|
eminence, where the wind blows upon you large and fresh, and the
|
|
pines knock their long stems together, like an ungainly sort of
|
|
puppets, and see far away over the plain a factory chimney defined
|
|
against the pale horizon - it is for you, as for the staid and simple
|
|
peasant when, with his plough, he upturns old arms and harness from
|
|
the furrow of the glebe. Ay, sure enough, there was a battle there
|
|
in the old times; and, sure enough, there is a world out yonder where
|
|
men strive together with a noise of oaths and weeping and clamorous
|
|
dispute. So much you apprehend by an athletic act of the
|
|
imagination. A faint far-off rumour as of Merovingian wars; a legend
|
|
as of some dead religion.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI - A MOUNTAIN TOWN IN FRANCE A FRAGMENT 1879
|
|
ORIGINALLY INTENDED TO SERVE AS THE OPENING CHAPTER OF 'TRAVELS WITH
|
|
A DONKEY IN THE CEVENNES.'
|
|
|
|
LE MONASTIER is the chief place of a hilly canton in Haute Loire, the
|
|
ancient Velay. As the name betokens, the town is of monastic origin;
|
|
and it still contains a towered bulk of monastery and a church of
|
|
some architectural pretensions, the seat of an arch-priest and
|
|
several vicars. It stands on the side of hill above the river
|
|
Gazeille, about fifteen miles from Le Puy, up a steep road where the
|
|
wolves sometime pursue the diligence in winter. The road, which is
|
|
bound for Vivarais, passes through the town from end to end in a
|
|
single narrow street; there you may see the fountain where women fill
|
|
their pitchers; there also some old houses with carved doors and
|
|
pediment and ornamental work in iron. For Monastier, like Maybole in
|
|
Ayrshire, was a sort of country capital, where the local aristocracy
|
|
had their town mansions for the winter; and there is a certain baron
|
|
still alive and, I am told, extremely penitent, who found means to
|
|
ruin himself by high living in this village on the hills. He
|
|
certainly has claims to be considered the most remarkable spendthrift
|
|
on record. How he set about it, in a place where there are no
|
|
luxuries for sale, and where the board at the best inn comes to
|
|
little more than a shilling a day, is a problem for the wise. His
|
|
son, ruined as the family was, went as far as Paris to sow his wild
|
|
oats; and so the cases of father and son mark an epoch in the history
|
|
of centralisation in France. Not until the latter had got into the
|
|
train was the work of Richelieu complete.
|
|
|
|
It is a people of lace-makers. The women sit in the streets by
|
|
groups of five or six; and the noise of the bobbins is audible from
|
|
one group to another. Now and then you will hear one woman
|
|
clattering off prayers for the edification of the others at their
|
|
work. They wear gaudy shawls, white caps with a gay ribbon about the
|
|
head, and sometimes a black felt brigand hat above the cap; and so
|
|
they give the street colour and brightness and a foreign air. A
|
|
while ago, when England largely supplied herself from this district
|
|
with the lace called TORCHON, it was not unusual to earn five francs
|
|
a day; and five francs in Monastier is worth a pound in London. Now,
|
|
from a change in the market, it takes a clever and industrious work-
|
|
woman to earn from three to four in the week, or less than an eighth
|
|
of what she made easily a few years ago. The tide of prosperity came
|
|
and went, as with our northern pitmen, and left nobody the richer.
|
|
The women bravely squandered their gains, kept the men in idleness,
|
|
and gave themselves up, as I was told, to sweethearting and a merry
|
|
life. From week's end to week's end it was one continuous gala in
|
|
Monastier; people spent the day in the wine-shops, and the drum or
|
|
the bagpipes led on the BOURREES up to ten at night. Now these
|
|
dancing days are over. 'IL N'Y A PLUS DE JEUNESSE,' said Victor the
|
|
garcon. I hear of no great advance in what are thought the
|
|
essentials of morality; but the BOURREE, with its rambling, sweet,
|
|
interminable music, and alert and rustic figures, has fallen into
|
|
disuse, and is mostly remembered as a custom of the past. Only on
|
|
the occasion of the fair shall you hear a drum discreetly in a wine-
|
|
shop or perhaps one of the company singing the measure while the
|
|
others dance. I am sorry at the change, and marvel once more at the
|
|
complicated scheme of things upon this earth, and how a turn of
|
|
fashion in England can silence so much mountain merriment in France.
|
|
The lace-makers themselves have not entirely forgiven our country-
|
|
women; and I think they take a special pleasure in the legend of the
|
|
northern quarter of the town, called L'Anglade, because there the
|
|
English free-lances were arrested and driven back by the potency of a
|
|
little Virgin Mary on the wall.
|
|
|
|
From time to time a market is held, and the town has a season of
|
|
revival; cattle and pigs are stabled in the streets; and pickpockets
|
|
have been known to come all the way from Lyons for the occasion.
|
|
Every Sunday the country folk throng in with daylight to buy apples,
|
|
to attend mass, and to visit one of the wine-shops, of which there
|
|
are no fewer than fifty in this little town. Sunday wear for the men
|
|
is a green tailcoat of some coarse sort of drugget, and usually a
|
|
complete suit to match. I have never set eyes on such degrading
|
|
raiment. Here it clings, there bulges; and the human body, with its
|
|
agreeable and lively lines, is turned into a mockery and laughing-
|
|
stock. Another piece of Sunday business with the peasants is to take
|
|
their ailments to the chemist for advice. It is as much a matter for
|
|
Sunday as church-going. I have seen a woman who had been unable to
|
|
speak since the Monday before, wheezing, catching her breath,
|
|
endlessly and painfully coughing; and yet she had waited upwards of a
|
|
hundred hours before coming to seek help, and had the week been twice
|
|
as long, she would have waited still. There was a canonical day for
|
|
consultation; such was the ancestral habit, to which a respectable
|
|
lady must study to conform.
|
|
|
|
Two conveyances go daily to Le Puy, but they rival each other in
|
|
polite concessions rather than in speed. Each will wait an hour or
|
|
two hours cheerfully while an old lady does her marketing or a
|
|
gentleman finishes the papers in a cafe. The COURRIER (such is the
|
|
name of one) should leave Le Puy by two in the afternoon and arrive
|
|
at Monastier in good on the return voyage, and arrive at Monastier in
|
|
good time for a six-o'clock dinner. But the driver dares not
|
|
disoblige his customers. He will postpone his departure again and
|
|
again, hour after hour; and I have known the sun to go down on his
|
|
delay. These purely personal favours, this consideration of men's
|
|
fancies, rather than the hands of a mechanical clock, as marking the
|
|
advance of the abstraction, time, makes a more humorous business of
|
|
stage-coaching than we are used to see it.
|
|
|
|
As far as the eye can reach, one swelling line of hill top rises and
|
|
falls behind another; and if you climb an eminence, it is only to see
|
|
new and father ranges behind these. Many little rivers run from all
|
|
sides in cliffy valleys; and one of them, a few miles from Monastier,
|
|
bears the great name of Loire. The mean level of the country is a
|
|
little more than three thousand feet above the sea, which makes the
|
|
atmosphere proportionally brisk and wholesome. There is little
|
|
timber except pines, and the greater part of the country lies in
|
|
moorland pasture. The country is wild and tumbled rather than
|
|
commanding; an upland rather than a mountain district; and the most
|
|
striking as well as the most agreeable scenery lies low beside the
|
|
rivers. There, indeed, you will find many corners that take the
|
|
fancy; such as made the English noble choose his grave by a Swiss
|
|
streamlet, where nature is at her freshest, and looks as young as on
|
|
the seventh morning. Such a place is the course of the Gazeille,
|
|
where it waters the common of Monastier and thence downwards till it
|
|
joins the Loire; a place to hear birds singing; a place for lovers to
|
|
frequent. The name of the river was perhaps suggested by the sound
|
|
of its passage over the stones; for it is a great warbler, and at
|
|
night, after I was in bed at Monastier, I could hear it go singing
|
|
down the valley till I fell asleep.
|
|
|
|
On the whole, this is a Scottish landscape, although not so noble as
|
|
the best in Scotland; and by an odd coincidence, the population is,
|
|
in its way, as Scottish as the country. They have abrupt, uncouth,
|
|
Fifeshire manners, and accost you, as if you were trespassing, an
|
|
'Ou'st-ce que vous allez?' only translatable into the Lowland 'Whaur
|
|
ye gaun?' They keep the Scottish Sabbath. There is no labour done
|
|
on that day but to drive in and out the various pigs and sheep and
|
|
cattle that make so pleasant a tinkling in the meadows. The lace-
|
|
makers have disappeared from the street. Not to attend mass would
|
|
involve social degradation; and you may find people reading Sunday
|
|
books, in particular a sort of Catholic MONTHLY VISITOR on the doings
|
|
of Our Lady of Lourdes. I remember one Sunday, when I was walking in
|
|
the country, that I fell on a hamlet and found all the inhabitants,
|
|
from the patriarch to the baby, gathered in the shadow of a gable at
|
|
prayer. One strapping lass stood with her back to the wall and did
|
|
the solo part, the rest chiming in devoutly. Not far off, a lad lay
|
|
flat on his face asleep among some straw, to represent the worldly
|
|
element.
|
|
|
|
Again, this people is eager to proselytise; and the postmaster's
|
|
daughter used to argue with me by the half-hour about my heresy,
|
|
until she grew quite flushed. I have heard the reverse process going
|
|
on between a Scotswoman and a French girl; and the arguments in the
|
|
two cases were identical. Each apostle based her claim on the
|
|
superior virtue and attainments of her clergy, and clenched the
|
|
business with a threat of hell-fire. 'PAS BONG PRETRES ICI,' said
|
|
the Presbyterian, 'BONG PRETRES EN ECOSSE.' And the postmaster's
|
|
daughter, taking up the same weapon, plied me, so to speak, with the
|
|
butt of it instead of the bayonet. We are a hopeful race, it seems,
|
|
and easily persuaded for our good. One cheerful circumstance I note
|
|
in these guerilla missions, that each side relies on hell, and
|
|
Protestant and Catholic alike address themselves to a supposed
|
|
misgiving in their adversary's heart. And I call it cheerful, for
|
|
faith is a more supporting quality than imagination.
|
|
|
|
Here, as in Scotland, many peasant families boast a son in holy
|
|
orders. And here also, the young men have a tendency to emigrate.
|
|
It is certainly not poverty that drives them to the great cities or
|
|
across the seas, for many peasant families, I was told, have a
|
|
fortune of at least 40,000 francs. The lads go forth pricked with
|
|
the spirit of adventure and the desire to rise in life, and leave
|
|
their homespun elders grumbling and wondering over the event. Once,
|
|
at a village called Laussonne, I met one of these disappointed
|
|
parents: a drake who had fathered a wild swan and seen it take wing
|
|
and disappear. The wild swan in question was now an apothecary in
|
|
Brazil. He had flown by way of Bordeaux, and first landed in
|
|
America, bareheaded and barefoot, and with a single halfpenny in his
|
|
pocket. And now he was an apothecary! Such a wonderful thing is an
|
|
adventurous life! I thought he might as well have stayed at home;
|
|
but you never can tell wherein a man's life consists, nor in what he
|
|
sets his pleasure: one to drink, another to marry, a third to write
|
|
scurrilous articles and be repeatedly caned in public, and now this
|
|
fourth, perhaps, to be an apothecary in Brazil. As for his old
|
|
father, he could conceive no reason for the lad's behaviour. 'I had
|
|
always bread for him,' he said; 'he ran away to annoy me. He loved
|
|
to annoy me. He had no gratitude.' But at heart he was swelling
|
|
with pride over his travelled offspring, and he produced a letter out
|
|
of his pocket, where, as he said, it was rotting, a mere lump of
|
|
paper rags, and waved it gloriously in the air. 'This comes from
|
|
America,' he cried, 'six thousand leagues away!' And the wine-shop
|
|
audience looked upon it with a certain thrill.
|
|
|
|
I soon became a popular figure, and was known for miles in the
|
|
country. OU'ST QUE VOUS ALLEZ? was changed for me into QUOI, VOUS
|
|
RENTREZ AU MONASTIER and in the town itself every urchin seemed to
|
|
know my name, although no living creature could pronounce it. There
|
|
was one particular group of lace-makers who brought out a chair for
|
|
me whenever I went by, and detained me from my walk to gossip. They
|
|
were filled with curiosity about England, its language, its religion,
|
|
the dress of the women, and were never weary of seeing the Queen's
|
|
head on English postage-stamps, or seeking for French words in
|
|
English Journals. The language, in particular, filled them with
|
|
surprise.
|
|
|
|
'Do they speak PATOIS in England?' I was once asked; and when I told
|
|
them not, 'Ah, then, French?' said they.
|
|
|
|
'No, no,' I said, 'not French.'
|
|
|
|
'Then,' they concluded, 'they speak PATOIS.'
|
|
|
|
You must obviously either speak French or PATIOS. Talk of the force
|
|
of logic - here it was in all its weakness. I gave up the point, but
|
|
proceeding to give illustrations of my native jargon, I was met with
|
|
a new mortification. Of all PATIOS they declared that mine was the
|
|
most preposterous and the most jocose in sound. At each new word
|
|
there was a new explosion of laughter, and some of the younger ones
|
|
were glad to rise from their chairs and stamp about the street in
|
|
ecstasy; and I looked on upon their mirth in a faint and slightly
|
|
disagreeable bewilderment. 'Bread,' which sounds a commonplace,
|
|
plain-sailing monosyllable in England, was the word that most
|
|
delighted these good ladies of Monastier; it seemed to them
|
|
frolicsome and racy, like a page of Pickwick; and they all got it
|
|
carefully by heart, as a stand-by, I presume, for winter evenings. I
|
|
have tried it since then with every sort of accent and inflection,
|
|
but I seem to lack the sense of humour.
|
|
|
|
They were of all ages: children at their first web of lace, a
|
|
stripling girl with a bashful but encouraging play of eyes, solid
|
|
married women, and grandmothers, some on the top of their age and
|
|
some falling towards decrepitude. One and all were pleasant and
|
|
natural, ready to laugh and ready with a certain quiet solemnity when
|
|
that was called for by the subject of our talk. Life, since the fall
|
|
in wages, had begun to appear to them with a more serious air. The
|
|
stripling girl would sometimes laugh at me in a provocative and not
|
|
unadmiring manner, if I judge aright; and one of the grandmothers,
|
|
who was my great friend of the party, gave me many a sharp word of
|
|
judgment on my sketches, my heresy, or even my arguments, and gave
|
|
them with a wry mouth and a humorous twinkle in her eye that were
|
|
eminently Scottish. But the rest used me with a certain reverence,
|
|
as something come from afar and not entirely human. Nothing would
|
|
put them at their ease but the irresistible gaiety of my native
|
|
tongue. Between the old lady and myself I think there was a real
|
|
attachment. She was never weary of sitting to me for her portrait,
|
|
in her best cap and brigand hat, and with all her wrinkles tidily
|
|
composed, and though she never failed to repudiate the result, she
|
|
would always insist upon another trial. It was as good as a play to
|
|
see her sitting in judgment over the last. 'No, no,' she would say,
|
|
'that is not it. I am old, to be sure, but I am better-looking than
|
|
that. We must try again.' When I was about to leave she bade me
|
|
good-bye for this life in a somewhat touching manner. We should not
|
|
meet again, she said; it was a long farewell, and she was sorry. But
|
|
life is so full of crooks, old lady, that who knows? I have said
|
|
good-bye to people for greater distances and times, and, please God,
|
|
I mean to see them yet again.
|
|
|
|
One thing was notable about these women, from the youngest to the
|
|
oldest, and with hardly an exception. In spite of their piety, they
|
|
could twang off an oath with Sir Toby Belch in person. There was
|
|
nothing so high or so low, in heaven or earth or in the human body,
|
|
but a woman of this neighbourhood would whip out the name of it, fair
|
|
and square, by way of conversational adornment. My landlady, who was
|
|
pretty and young, dressed like a lady and avoided PATOIS like a
|
|
weakness, commonly addressed her child in the language of a drunken
|
|
bully. And of all the swearers that I ever heard, commend me to an
|
|
old lady in Gondet, a village of the Loire. I was making a sketch,
|
|
and her curse was not yet ended when I had finished it and took my
|
|
departure. It is true she had a right to be angry; for here was her
|
|
son, a hulking fellow, visibly the worse for drink before the day was
|
|
well begun. But it was strange to hear her unwearying flow of oaths
|
|
and obscenities, endless like a river, and now and then rising to a
|
|
passionate shrillness, in the clear and silent air of the morning.
|
|
In city slums, the thing might have passed unnoticed; but in a
|
|
country valley, and from a plain and honest countrywoman, this
|
|
beastliness of speech surprised the ear.
|
|
|
|
The CONDUCTOR, as he is called, OF ROADS AND BRIDGES was my principal
|
|
companion. He was generally intelligent, and could have spoken more
|
|
or less falsetto on any of the trite topics; but it was his specially
|
|
to have a generous taste in eating. This was what was most
|
|
indigenous in the man; it was here he was an artist; and I found in
|
|
his company what I had long suspected, that enthusiasm and special
|
|
knowledge are the great social qualities, and what they are about,
|
|
whether white sauce or Shakespeare's plays, an altogether secondary
|
|
question.
|
|
|
|
I used to accompany the Conductor on his professional rounds, and
|
|
grew to believe myself an expert in the business. I thought I could
|
|
make an entry in a stone-breaker's time-book, or order manure off the
|
|
wayside with any living engineer in France. Gondet was one of the
|
|
places we visited together; and Laussonne, where I met the
|
|
apothecary's father, was another. There, at Laussonne, George Sand
|
|
spent a day while she was gathering materials for the MARQUIS DE
|
|
VILLEMER; and I have spoken with an old man, who was then a child
|
|
running about the inn kitchen, and who still remembers her with a
|
|
sort of reverence. It appears that he spoke French imperfectly; for
|
|
this reason George Sand chose him for companion, and whenever he let
|
|
slip a broad and picturesque phrase in PATOIS, she would make him
|
|
repeat it again and again till it was graven in her memory. The word
|
|
for a frog particularly pleased her fancy; and it would be curious to
|
|
know if she afterwards employed it in her works. The peasants, who
|
|
knew nothing of betters and had never so much as heard of local
|
|
colour, could not explain her chattering with this backward child;
|
|
and to them she seemed a very homely lady and far from beautiful:
|
|
the most famous man-killer of the age appealed so little to Velaisian
|
|
swine-herds!
|
|
|
|
On my first engineering excursion, which lay up by Crouzials towards
|
|
Mount Mezenc and the borders of Ardeche, I began an improving
|
|
acquaintance with the foreman road-mender. He was in great glee at
|
|
having me with him, passed me off among his subalterns as the
|
|
supervising engineer, and insisted on what he called 'the gallantry'
|
|
of paying for my breakfast in a roadside wine-shop. On the whole, he
|
|
was a man of great weather-wisdom, some spirits, and a social temper.
|
|
But I am afraid he was superstitious. When he was nine years old, he
|
|
had seen one night a company of BOURGEOIS ET DAMES QUI FAISAIENT LA
|
|
MANEGE AVEC DES CHAISES, and concluded that he was in the presence of
|
|
a witches' Sabbath. I suppose, but venture with timidity on the
|
|
suggestion, that this may have been a romantic and nocturnal picnic
|
|
party. Again, coming from Pradelles with his brother, they saw a
|
|
great empty cart drawn by six enormous horses before them on the
|
|
road. The driver cried aloud and filled the mountains with the
|
|
cracking of his whip. He never seemed to go faster than a walk, yet
|
|
it was impossible to overtake him; and at length, at the comer of a
|
|
hill, the whole equipage disappeared bodily into the night. At the
|
|
time, people said it was the devil QUI S'AMUSAIT A FAIRE CA.
|
|
|
|
I suggested there was nothing more likely, as he must have some
|
|
amusement.
|
|
|
|
The foreman said it was odd, but there was less of that sort of thing
|
|
than formerly. 'C'EST DIFFICILE,' he added, 'A EXPLIQUER.'
|
|
|
|
When we were well up on the moors and the CONDUCTOR was trying some
|
|
road-metal with the gauge -
|
|
|
|
'Hark!' said the foreman, 'do you hear nothing?'
|
|
|
|
We listened, and the wind, which was blowing chilly out of the east,
|
|
brought a faint, tangled jangling to our ears.
|
|
|
|
'It is the flocks of Vivarais,' said he.
|
|
|
|
For every summer, the flocks out of all Ardeche are brought up to
|
|
pasture on these grassy plateaux.
|
|
|
|
Here and there a little private flock was being tended by a girl, one
|
|
spinning with a distaff, another seated on a wall and intently making
|
|
lace. This last, when we addressed her, leaped up in a panic and put
|
|
out her arms, like a person swimming, to keep us at a distance, and
|
|
it was some seconds before we could persuade her of the honesty of
|
|
our intentions.
|
|
|
|
The CONDUCTOR told me of another herdswoman from whom he had once
|
|
asked his road while he was yet new to the country, and who fled from
|
|
him, driving her beasts before her, until he had given up the
|
|
information in despair. A tale of old lawlessness may yet be read in
|
|
these uncouth timidities.
|
|
|
|
The winter in these uplands is a dangerous and melancholy time.
|
|
Houses are snowed up, and way-farers lost in a flurry within hail of
|
|
their own fireside. No man ventures abroad without meat and a bottle
|
|
of wine, which he replenishes at every wine-shop; and even thus
|
|
equipped he takes the road with terror. All day the family sits
|
|
about the fire in a foul and airless hovel, and equally without work
|
|
or diversion. The father may carve a rude piece of furniture, but
|
|
that is all that will be done until the spring sets in again, and
|
|
along with it the labours of the field. It is not for nothing that
|
|
you find a clock in the meanest of these mountain habitations. A
|
|
clock and an almanac, you would fancy, were indispensable in such a
|
|
life. . .
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII - RANDOM MEMORIES: ROSA QUO LOCORUM
|
|
|
|
THROUGH what little channels, by what hints and premonitions, the
|
|
consciousness of the man's art dawns first upon the child, it should
|
|
be not only interesting but instructive to inquire. A matter of
|
|
curiosity to-day, it will become the ground of science to-morrow.
|
|
From the mind of childhood there is more history and more philosophy
|
|
to be fished up than from all the printed volumes in a library. The
|
|
child is conscious of an interest, not in literature but in life. A
|
|
taste for the precise, the adroit, or the comely in the use of words,
|
|
comes late; but long before that he has enjoyed in books a delightful
|
|
dress rehearsal of experience. He is first conscious of this
|
|
material - I had almost said this practical - pre-occupation; it does
|
|
not follow that it really came the first. I have some old fogged
|
|
negatives in my collection that would seem to imply a prior stage
|
|
'The Lord is gone up with a shout, and God with the sound of a
|
|
trumpet' - memorial version, I know not where to find the text -
|
|
rings still in my ear from my first childhood, and perhaps with
|
|
something of my nurses accent. There was possibly some sort of image
|
|
written in my mind by these loud words, but I believe the words
|
|
themselves were what I cherished. I had about the same time, and
|
|
under the same influence - that of my dear nurse - a favourite
|
|
author: it is possible the reader has not heard of him - the Rev.
|
|
Robert Murray M'Cheyne. My nurse and I admired his name exceedingly,
|
|
so that I must have been taught the love of beautiful sounds before I
|
|
was breeched; and I remember two specimens of his muse until this
|
|
day:-
|
|
|
|
'Behind the hills of Naphtali
|
|
The sun went slowly down,
|
|
Leaving on mountain, tower, and tree,
|
|
A tinge of golden brown.'
|
|
|
|
There is imagery here, and I set it on one side. The other - it is
|
|
but a verse - not only contains no image, but is quite unintelligible
|
|
even to my comparatively instructed mind, and I know not even how to
|
|
spell the outlandish vocable that charmed me in my childhood:
|
|
|
|
'Jehovah Tschidkenu is nothing to her'; -
|
|
|
|
I may say, without flippancy, that he was nothing to me either, since
|
|
I had no ray of a guess of what he was about; yet the verse, from
|
|
then to now, a longer interval than the life of a generation, has
|
|
continued to haunt me.
|
|
|
|
I have said that I should set a passage distinguished by obvious and
|
|
pleasing imagery, however faint; for the child thinks much in images,
|
|
words are very live to him, phrases that imply a picture eloquent
|
|
beyond their value. Rummaging in the dusty pigeon-holes of memory, I
|
|
came once upon a graphic version of the famous Psalm, 'The Lord is my
|
|
shepherd': and from the places employed in its illustration, which
|
|
are all in the immediate neighbourhood of a house then occupied by my
|
|
father, I am able, to date it before the seventh year of my age,
|
|
although it was probably earlier in fact. The 'pastures green' were
|
|
represented by a certain suburban stubble-field, where I had once
|
|
walked with my nurse, under an autumnal sunset, on the banks of the
|
|
Water of Leith: the place is long ago built up; no pastures now, no
|
|
stubble-fields; only a maze of little streets and smoking chimneys
|
|
and shrill children. Here, in the fleecy person of a sheep, I seemed
|
|
to myself to follow something unseen, unrealised, and yet benignant;
|
|
and close by the sheep in which I was incarnated - as if for greater
|
|
security - rustled the skirt, of my nurse. 'Death's dark vale' was a
|
|
certain archway in the Warriston Cemetery: a formidable yet beloved
|
|
spot, for children love to be afraid, - in measure as they love all
|
|
experience of vitality. Here I beheld myself some paces ahead
|
|
(seeing myself, I mean, from behind) utterly alone in that uncanny
|
|
passage; on the one side of me a rude, knobby, shepherd's staff, such
|
|
as cheers the heart of the cockney tourist, on the other a rod like a
|
|
billiard cue, appeared to accompany my progress; the stiff sturdily
|
|
upright, the billiard cue inclined confidentially, like one
|
|
whispering, towards my ear. I was aware - I will never tell you how
|
|
- that the presence of these articles afforded me encouragement. The
|
|
third and last of my pictures illustrated words:-
|
|
|
|
'My table Thou hast furnished
|
|
In presence of my foes:
|
|
My head Thou dost with oil anoint,
|
|
And my cup overflows':
|
|
|
|
and this was perhaps the most interesting of the series. I saw
|
|
myself seated in a kind of open stone summer-house at table; over my
|
|
shoulder a hairy, bearded, and robed presence anointed me from an
|
|
authentic shoe-horn; the summer-house was part of the green court of
|
|
a ruin, and from the far side of the court black and white imps
|
|
discharged against me ineffectual arrows. The picture appears
|
|
arbitrary, but I can trace every detail to its source, as Mr. Brock
|
|
analysed the dream of Alan Armadale. The summer-house and court were
|
|
muddled together out of Billings' ANTIQUITIES OF SCOTLAND; the imps
|
|
conveyed from Bagster's PILGRIM'S PROGRESS; the bearded and robed
|
|
figure from any one of the thousand Bible pictures; and the shoe-horn
|
|
was plagiarised from an old illustrated Bible, where it figured in
|
|
the hand of Samuel anointing Saul, and had been pointed out to me as
|
|
a jest by my father. It was shown me for a jest, remark; but the
|
|
serious spirit of infancy adopted it in earnest. Children are all
|
|
classics; a bottle would have seemed an intermediary too trivial -
|
|
that divine refreshment of whose meaning I had no guess; and I seized
|
|
on the idea of that mystic shoe-horn with delight, even as, a little
|
|
later, I should have written flagon, chalice, hanaper, beaker, or any
|
|
word that might have appealed to me at the moment as least
|
|
contaminate with mean associations. In this string of pictures I
|
|
believe the gist of the psalm to have consisted; I believe it had no
|
|
more to say to me; and the result was consolatory. I would go to
|
|
sleep dwelling with restfulness upon these images; they passed before
|
|
me, besides, to an appropriate music; for I had already singled out
|
|
from that rude psalm the one lovely verse which dwells in the minds
|
|
of all, not growing old, not disgraced by its association with long
|
|
Sunday tasks, a scarce conscious joy in childhood, in age a companion
|
|
thought:-
|
|
|
|
'In pastures green Thou leadest me,
|
|
The quiet waters by.'
|
|
|
|
The remainder of my childish recollections are all of the matter of
|
|
what was read to me, and not of any manner in the words. If these
|
|
pleased me it was unconsciously; I listened for news of the great
|
|
vacant world upon whose edge I stood; I listened for delightful plots
|
|
that I might re-enact in play, and romantic scenes and circumstances
|
|
that I might call up before me, with closed eyes, when I was tired of
|
|
Scotland, and home, and that weary prison of the sick-chamber in
|
|
which I lay so long in durance. ROBINSON CRUSOE; some of the books
|
|
of that cheerful, ingenious, romantic soul, Mayne Reid; and a work
|
|
rather gruesome and bloody for a child, but very picturesque, called
|
|
PAUL BLAKE; these are the three strongest impressions I remember:
|
|
THE SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON came next, LONGO INTERVALLO. At these I
|
|
played, conjured up their scenes, and delighted to hear them
|
|
rehearsed unto seventy times seven. I am not sure but what PAUL
|
|
BLAKE came after I could read. It seems connected with a visit to
|
|
the country, and an experience unforgettable. The day had been warm;
|
|
H- and I had played together charmingly all day in a sandy wilderness
|
|
across the road; then came the evening with a great flash of colour
|
|
and a heavenly sweetness in the air. Somehow my play-mate had
|
|
vanished, or is out of the story, as the sages say, but I was sent
|
|
into the village on an errand; and, taking a book of fairy tales,
|
|
went down alone through a fir-wood, reading as I walked. How often
|
|
since then has it befallen me to be happy even so; but that was the
|
|
first time: the shock of that pleasure I have never since forgot,
|
|
and if my mind serves me to the last, I never shall, for it was then
|
|
that I knew I loved reading.
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
To pass from hearing literature to reading it is to take a great and
|
|
dangerous step. With not a few, I think a large proportion of their
|
|
pleasure then comes to an end; 'the malady of not marking' overtakes
|
|
them; they read thenceforward by the eye alone and hear never again
|
|
the chime of fair words or the march of the stately period. NON
|
|
RAGIONIAM of these. But to all the step is dangerous; it involves
|
|
coming of age; it is even a kind of second weaning. In the past all
|
|
was at the choice of others; they chose, they digested, they read
|
|
aloud for us and sang to their own tune the books of childhood. In
|
|
the future we are to approach the silent, inexpressive type alone,
|
|
like pioneers; and the choice of what we are to read is in our own
|
|
hands thenceforward. For instance, in the passages already adduced,
|
|
I detect and applaud the ear of my old nurse; they were of her
|
|
choice, and she imposed them on my infancy, reading the works of
|
|
others as a poet would scarce dare to read his own; gloating on the
|
|
rhythm, dwelling with delight on assonances and alliterations. I
|
|
know very well my mother must have been all the while trying to
|
|
educate my taste upon more secular authors; but the vigour and the
|
|
continual opportunities of my nurse triumphed, and after a long
|
|
search, I can find in these earliest volumes of my autobiography no
|
|
mention of anything but nursery rhymes, the Bible, and Mr. M'Cheyne.
|
|
|
|
I suppose all children agree in looking back with delight on their
|
|
school Readers. We might not now find so much pathos in 'Bingen on
|
|
the Rhine,' 'A soldier of the Legion lay dying in Algiers,' or in
|
|
'The Soldier's Funeral,' in the declamation of which I was held to
|
|
have surpassed myself. 'Robert's voice,' said the master on this
|
|
memorable occasion, 'is not strong, but impressive': an opinion
|
|
which I was fool enough to carry home to my father; who roasted me
|
|
for years in consequence. I am sure one should not be so deliciously
|
|
tickled by the humorous pieces:-
|
|
|
|
'What, crusty? cries Will in a taking,
|
|
Who would not be crusty with half a year's baking?'
|
|
|
|
I think this quip would leave us cold. The 'Isles of Greece' seem
|
|
rather tawdry too; but on the 'Address to the Ocean,' or on 'The
|
|
Dying Gladiator,' 'time has writ no wrinkle.'
|
|
|
|
'Tis the morn, but dim and dark,
|
|
Whither flies the silent lark?' -
|
|
|
|
does the reader recall the moment when his eye first fell upon these
|
|
lines in the Fourth Reader; and 'surprised with joy, impatient as the
|
|
wind,' he plunged into the sequel? And there was another piece, this
|
|
time in prose, which none can have forgotten; many like me must have
|
|
searched Dickens with zeal to find it again, and in its proper
|
|
context, and have perhaps been conscious of some inconsiderable
|
|
measure of disappointment, that it was only Tom Pinch who drove, in
|
|
such a pomp of poetry, to London.
|
|
|
|
But in the Reader we are still under guides. What a boy turns out
|
|
for himself, as he rummages the bookshelves, is the real test and
|
|
pleasure. My father's library was a spot of some austerity; the
|
|
proceedings of learned societies, some Latin divinity, cyclopaedias,
|
|
physical science, and, above all, optics, held the chief place upon
|
|
the shelves, and it was only in holes and corners that anything
|
|
really legible existed as by accident. The PARENT'S ASSISTANT, ROB
|
|
ROY, WAVERLEY, and GUY MANNERING, the VOYAGES OF CAPTAIN WOODS
|
|
ROGERS, Fuller's and Bunyan's HOLY WARS, THE REFLECTIONS OF ROBINSON
|
|
CRUSOE, THE FEMALE BLUEBEARD, G. Sand's MARE AU DIABLE - (how came it
|
|
in that grave assembly!), Ainsworth's TOWER OF LONDON, and four old
|
|
volumes of Punch - these were the chief exceptions. In these latter,
|
|
which made for years the chief of my diet, I very early fell in love
|
|
(almost as soon as I could spell) with the Snob Papers. I knew them
|
|
almost by heart, particularly the visit to the Pontos; and I remember
|
|
my surprise when I found, long afterwards, that they were famous, and
|
|
signed with a famous name; to me, as I read and admired them, they
|
|
were the works of Mr. Punch. Time and again I tried to read ROB ROY,
|
|
with whom of course I was acquainted from the TALES OF A GRANDFATHER;
|
|
time and again the early part, with Rashleigh and (think of it!) the
|
|
adorable Diana, choked me off; and I shall never forget the pleasure
|
|
and surprise with which, lying on the floor one summer evening, I
|
|
struck of a sudden into the first scene with Andrew Fairservice.
|
|
'The worthy Dr. Lightfoot' - 'mistrysted with a bogle' - 'a wheen
|
|
green trash' - 'Jenny, lass, I think I ha'e her': from that day to
|
|
this the phrases have been unforgotten. I read on, I need scarce
|
|
say; I came to Glasgow, I bided tryst on Glasgow Bridge, I met Rob
|
|
Roy and the Bailie in the Tolbooth, all with transporting pleasure;
|
|
and then the clouds gathered once more about my path; and I dozed and
|
|
skipped until I stumbled half-asleep into the clachan of Aberfoyle,
|
|
and the voices of Iverach and Galbraith recalled me to myself. With
|
|
that scene and the defeat of Captain Thornton the book concluded;
|
|
Helen and her sons shocked even the little schoolboy of nine or ten
|
|
with their unreality; I read no more, or I did not grasp what I was
|
|
reading; and years elapsed before I consciously met Diana and her
|
|
father among the hills, or saw Rashleigh dying in the chair. When I
|
|
think of that novel and that evening, I am impatient with all others;
|
|
they seem but shadows and impostors; they cannot satisfy the appetite
|
|
which this awakened; and I dare be known to think it the best of Sir
|
|
Walter's by nearly as much as Sir Walter is the best of novelists.
|
|
Perhaps Mr. Lang is right, and our first friends in the land of
|
|
fiction are always the most real. And yet I had read before this GUY
|
|
MANNERING, and some of WAVERLEY, with no such delighted sense of
|
|
truth and humour, and I read immediately after the greater part of
|
|
the Waverley Novels, and was never moved again in the same way or to
|
|
the same degree. One circumstance is suspicious: my critical
|
|
estimate of the Waverley Novels has scarce changed at all since I was
|
|
ten. ROB ROY, GUY MANNERING, and REDGAUNTLET first; then, a little
|
|
lower; THE FORTUNES OF NIGEL; then, after a huge gulf, IVANHOE and
|
|
ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN: the rest nowhere; such was the verdict of the
|
|
boy. Since then THE ANTIQUARY, ST. RONAN'S WELL, KENILWORTH, and THE
|
|
HEART OF MIDLOTHIAN have gone up in the scale; perhaps IVANHOE AND
|
|
ANNE OF GEIERSTEIN have gone a trifle down; Diana Vernon has been
|
|
added to my admirations in that enchanted world of ROB ROY; I think
|
|
more of the letters in REDGAUNTLET, and Peter Peebles, that dreadful
|
|
piece of realism, I can now read about with equanimity, interest, and
|
|
I had almost said pleasure, while to the childish critic he often
|
|
caused unmixed distress. But the rest is the same; I could not
|
|
finish THE PIRATE when I was a child, I have never finished it yet;
|
|
PEVERIL OF THE PEAK dropped half way through from my schoolboy hands,
|
|
and though I have since waded to an end in a kind of wager with
|
|
myself, the exercise was quite without enjoyment. There is something
|
|
disquieting in these considerations. I still think the visit to
|
|
Ponto's the best part of the BOOK OF SNOBS: does that mean that I
|
|
was right when I was a child, or does it mean that I have never grown
|
|
since then, that the child is not the man's father, but the man? and
|
|
that I came into the world with all my faculties complete, and have
|
|
only learned sinsyne to be more tolerant of boredom? . . .
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII - THE IDEAL HOUSE
|
|
|
|
Two things are necessary in any neighbourhood where we propose to
|
|
spend a life: a desert and some living water.
|
|
|
|
There are many parts of the earth's face which offer the necessary
|
|
combination of a certain wildness with a kindly variety. A great
|
|
prospect is desirable, but the want may be otherwise supplied; even
|
|
greatness can be found on the small scale; for the mind and the eye
|
|
measure differently. Bold rocks near hand are more inspiriting than
|
|
distant Alps, and the thick fern upon a Surrey heath makes a fine
|
|
forest for the imagination, and the dotted yew trees noble mountains.
|
|
A Scottish moor with birches and firs grouped here and there upon a
|
|
knoll, or one of those rocky seaside deserts of Provence overgrown
|
|
with rosemary and thyme and smoking with aroma, are places where the
|
|
mind is never weary. Forests, being more enclosed, are not at first
|
|
sight so attractive, but they exercise a spell; they must, however,
|
|
be diversified with either heath or rock, and are hardly to be
|
|
considered perfect without conifers. Even sand-hills, with their
|
|
intricate plan, and their gulls and rabbits, will stand well for the
|
|
necessary desert.
|
|
|
|
The house must be within hail of either a little river or the sea. A
|
|
great river is more fit for poetry than to adorn a neighbourhood; its
|
|
sweep of waters increases the scale of the scenery and the distance
|
|
of one notable object from another; and a lively burn gives us, in
|
|
the space of a few yards, a greater variety of promontory and islet,
|
|
of cascade, shallow goil, and boiling pool, with answerable changes
|
|
both of song and colour, than a navigable stream in many hundred
|
|
miles. The fish, too, make a more considerable feature of the
|
|
brookside, and the trout plumping in the shadow takes the ear. A
|
|
stream should, besides, be narrow enough to cross, or the burn hard
|
|
by a bridge, or we are at once shut out of Eden. The quantity of
|
|
water need be of no concern, for the mind sets the scale, and can
|
|
enjoy a Niagara Fall of thirty inches. Let us approve the singer of
|
|
|
|
'Shallow rivers, by whose falls
|
|
Melodious birds sing madrigals.'
|
|
|
|
If the sea is to be our ornamental water, choose an open seaboard
|
|
with a heavy beat of surf; one much broken in outline, with small
|
|
havens and dwarf headlands; if possible a few islets; and as a first
|
|
necessity, rocks reaching out into deep water. Such a rock on a calm
|
|
day is a better station than the top of Teneriffe or Chimborazo. In
|
|
short, both for the desert and the water, the conjunction of many
|
|
near and bold details is bold scenery for the imagination and keeps
|
|
the mind alive.
|
|
|
|
Given these two prime luxuries, the nature of the country where we
|
|
are to live is, I had almost said, indifferent; after that inside the
|
|
garden, we can construct a country of our own. Several old trees, a
|
|
considerable variety of level, several well-grown hedges to divide
|
|
our garden into provinces, a good extent of old well-set turf, and
|
|
thickets of shrubs and ever-greens to be cut into and cleared at the
|
|
new owner's pleasure, are the qualities to be sought for in your
|
|
chosen land. Nothing is more delightful than a succession of small
|
|
lawns, opening one out of the other through tall hedges; these have
|
|
all the charm of the old bowling-green repeated, do not require the
|
|
labour of many trimmers, and afford a series of changes. You must
|
|
have much lawn against the early summer, so as to have a great field
|
|
of daisies, the year's morning frost; as you must have a wood of
|
|
lilacs, to enjoy to the full the period of their blossoming.
|
|
Hawthorn is another of the Spring's ingredients; but it is even best
|
|
to have a rough public lane at one side of your enclosure which, at
|
|
the right season, shall become an avenue of bloom and odour. The old
|
|
flowers are the best and should grow carelessly in corners. Indeed,
|
|
the ideal fortune is to find an old garden, once very richly cared
|
|
for, since sunk into neglect, and to tend, not repair, that neglect;
|
|
it will thus have a smack of nature and wildness which skilful
|
|
dispositions cannot overtake. The gardener should be an idler, and
|
|
have a gross partiality to the kitchen plots: an eager or toilful
|
|
gardener misbecomes the garden landscape; a tasteful gardener will be
|
|
ever meddling, will keep the borders raw, and take the bloom off
|
|
nature. Close adjoining, if you are in the south, an olive-yard, if
|
|
in the north, a swarded apple-orchard reaching to the stream,
|
|
completes your miniature domain; but this is perhaps best entered
|
|
through a door in the high fruit-wall; so that you close the door
|
|
behind you on your sunny plots, your hedges and evergreen jungle,
|
|
when you go down to watch the apples falling in the pool. It is a
|
|
golden maxim to cultivate the garden for the nose, and the eyes will
|
|
take care of themselves. Nor must the ear be forgotten: without
|
|
birds a garden is a prison-yard. There is a garden near Marseilles
|
|
on a steep hill-side, walking by which, upon a sunny morning, your
|
|
ear will suddenly be ravished with a burst of small and very cheerful
|
|
singing: some score of cages being set out there to sun their
|
|
occupants. This is a heavenly surprise to any passer-by; but the
|
|
price paid, to keep so many ardent and winged creatures from their
|
|
liberty, will make the luxury too dear for any thoughtful pleasure-
|
|
lover. There is only one sort of bird that I can tolerate caged,
|
|
though even then I think it hard, and that is what is called in
|
|
France the Bec-d'Argent. I once had two of these pigmies in
|
|
captivity; and in the quiet, hire house upon a silent street where I
|
|
was then living, their song, which was not much louder than a bee's,
|
|
but airily musical, kept me in a perpetual good humour. I put the
|
|
cage upon my table when I worked, carried it with me when I went for
|
|
meals, and kept it by my head at night: the first thing in the
|
|
morning, these MAESTRINI would pipe up. But these, even if you can
|
|
pardon their imprisonment, are for the house. In the garden the wild
|
|
birds must plant a colony, a chorus of the lesser warblers that
|
|
should be almost deafening, a blackbird in the lilacs, a nightingale
|
|
down the lane, so that you must stroll to hear it, and yet a little
|
|
farther, tree-tops populous with rooks.
|
|
|
|
Your house should not command much outlook; it should be set deep and
|
|
green, though upon rising ground, or, if possible, crowning a knoll,
|
|
for the sake of drainage. Yet it must be open to the east, or you
|
|
will miss the sunrise; sunset occurring so much later, you can go up
|
|
a few steps and look the other way. A house of more than two stories
|
|
is a mere barrack; indeed the ideal is of one story, raised upon
|
|
cellars. If the rooms are large, the house may be small: a single
|
|
room, lofty, spacious, and lightsome, is more palatial than a
|
|
castleful of cabinets and cupboards. Yet size in a house, and some
|
|
extent and intricacy of corridor, is certainly delightful to the
|
|
flesh. The reception room should be, if possible, a place of many
|
|
recesses, which are 'petty retiring places for conference'; but it
|
|
must have one long wall with a divan: for a day spent upon a divan,
|
|
among a world of cushions, is as full of diversion as to travel. The
|
|
eating-room, in the French mode, should be AD HOC: unfurnished, but
|
|
with a buffet, the table, necessary chairs, one or two of Canaletto's
|
|
etchings, and a tile fire-place for the winter. In neither of these
|
|
public places should there be anything beyond a shelf or two of
|
|
books; but the passages may be one library from end to end, and the
|
|
stair, if there be one, lined with volumes in old leather, very
|
|
brightly carpeted, and leading half-way up, and by way of landing, to
|
|
a windowed recess with a fire-place; this window, almost alone in the
|
|
house, should command a handsome prospect. Husband and wife must
|
|
each possess a studio; on the woman's sanctuary I hesitate to dwell,
|
|
and turn to the man's. The walls are shelved waist-high for books,
|
|
and the top thus forms a continuous table running round the wall.
|
|
Above are prints, a large map of the neighbourhood, a Corot and a
|
|
Claude or two. The room is very spacious, and the five tables and
|
|
two chairs are but as islands. One table is for actual work, one
|
|
close by for references in use; one, very large, for MSS. or proofs
|
|
that wait their turn; one kept clear for an occasion; and the fifth
|
|
is the map table, groaning under a collection of large-scale maps and
|
|
charts. Of all books these are the least wearisome to read and the
|
|
richest in matter; the course of roads and rivers, the contour lines
|
|
and the forests in the maps - the reefs, soundings, anchors, sailing
|
|
marks and little pilot-pictures in the charts - and, in both, the
|
|
bead-roll of names, make them of all printed matter the most fit to
|
|
stimulate and satisfy the fancy. The chair in which you write is
|
|
very low and easy, and backed into a corner; at one elbow the fire
|
|
twinkles; close at the other, if you are a little inhumane, your cage
|
|
of silver-bills are twittering into song.
|
|
|
|
Joined along by a passage, you may reach the great, sunny, glass-
|
|
roofed, and tiled gymnasium, at the far end of which, lined with
|
|
bright marble, is your plunge and swimming bath, fitted with a
|
|
capacious boiler.
|
|
|
|
The whole loft of the house from end to end makes one undivided
|
|
chamber; here are set forth tables on which to model imaginary or
|
|
actual countries in putty or plaster, with tools and hardy pigments;
|
|
a carpenter's bench; and a spared corner for photography, while at
|
|
the far end a space is kept clear for playing soldiers. Two boxes
|
|
contain the two armies of some five hundred horse and foot; two
|
|
others the ammunition of each side, and a fifth the foot-rules and
|
|
the three colours of chalk, with which you lay down, or, after a
|
|
day's play, refresh the outlines of the country; red or white for the
|
|
two kinds of road (according as they are suitable or not for the
|
|
passage of ordnance), and blue for the course of the obstructing
|
|
rivers. Here I foresee that you may pass much happy time; against a
|
|
good adversary a game may well continue for a month; for with armies
|
|
so considerable three moves will occupy an hour. It will be found to
|
|
set an excellent edge on this diversion if one of the players shall,
|
|
every day or so, write a report of the operations in the character of
|
|
army correspondent.
|
|
|
|
I have left to the last the little room for winter evenings. This
|
|
should be furnished in warm positive colours, and sofas and floor
|
|
thick with rich furs. The hearth, where you burn wood of aromatic
|
|
quality on silver dogs, tiled round about with Bible pictures; the
|
|
seats deep and easy; a single Titian in a gold frame; a white bust or
|
|
so upon a bracket; a rack for the journals of the week; a table for
|
|
the books of the year; and close in a corner the three shelves full
|
|
of eternal books that never weary: Shakespeare, Moliere, Montaigne,
|
|
Lamb, Sterne, De Musset's comedies (the one volume open at CARMOSINE
|
|
and the other at FANTASIO); the ARABIAN NIGHTS, and kindred stories,
|
|
in Weber's solemn volumes; Borrow's BIBLE IN SPAIN, the PILGRIM'S
|
|
PROGRESS, GUY MANNERING and ROB ROY, MONTE CRISTO and the VICOMTE DE
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BRAGELONNE, immortal Boswell sole among biographers, Chaucer,
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Herrick, and the STATE TRIALS.
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The bedrooms are large, airy, with almost no furniture, floors of
|
|
varnished wood, and at the bed-head, in case of insomnia, one shelf
|
|
of books of a particular and dippable order, such as PEPYS, the
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|
PASTON LETTERS, Burt's LETTERS FROM THE HIGHLANDS, or the NEWGATE
|
|
CALENDAR. . . .
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CHAPTER IX - DAVOS IN WINTER
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|
A MOUNTAIN valley has, at the best, a certain prison-like effect on
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|
the imagination, but a mountain valley, an Alpine winter, and an
|
|
invalid's weakness make up among them a prison of the most effective
|
|
kind. The roads indeed are cleared, and at least one footpath
|
|
dodging up the hill; but to these the health-seeker is rigidly
|
|
confined. There are for him no cross-cuts over the field, no
|
|
following of streams, no unguided rambles in the wood. His walks are
|
|
cut and dry. In five or six different directions he can push as far,
|
|
and no farther, than his strength permits; never deviating from the
|
|
line laid down for him and beholding at each repetition the same
|
|
field of wood and snow from the same corner of the road. This, of
|
|
itself, would be a little trying to the patience in the course of
|
|
months; but to this is added, by the heaped mantle of the snow, an
|
|
almost utter absence of detail and an almost unbroken identity of
|
|
colour. Snow, it is true, is not merely white. The sun touches it
|
|
with roseate and golden lights. Its own crushed infinity of
|
|
crystals, its own richness of tiny sculpture, fills it, when regarded
|
|
near at hand, with wonderful depths of coloured shadow, and, though
|
|
wintrily transformed, it is still water, and has watery tones of
|
|
blue. But, when all is said, these fields of white and blots of
|
|
crude black forest are but a trite and staring substitute for the
|
|
infinite variety and pleasantness of the earth's face. Even a
|
|
boulder, whose front is too precipitous to have retained the snow,
|
|
seems, if you come upon it in your walk, a perfect gem of colour,
|
|
reminds you almost painfully of other places, and brings into your
|
|
head the delights of more Arcadian days - the path across the meadow,
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|
the hazel dell, the lilies on the stream, and the scents, the
|
|
colours, and the whisper of the woods. And scents here are as rare
|
|
as colours. Unless you get a gust of kitchen in passing some hotel,
|
|
you shall smell nothing all day long but the faint and choking odour
|
|
of frost. Sounds, too, are absent: not a bird pipes, not a bough
|
|
waves, in the dead, windless atmosphere. If a sleigh goes by, the
|
|
sleigh-bells ring, and that is all; you work all winter through to no
|
|
other accompaniment but the crunching of your steps upon the frozen
|
|
snow.
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It is the curse of the Alpine valleys to be each one village from one
|
|
end to the other. Go where you please, houses will still be in
|
|
sight, before and behind you, and to the right and left. Climb as
|
|
high as an invalid is able, and it is only to spy new habitations
|
|
nested in the wood. Nor is that all; for about the health resort the
|
|
walks are besieged by single people walking rapidly with plaids about
|
|
their shoulders, by sudden troops of German boys trying to learn to
|
|
jodel, and by German couples silently and, as you venture to fancy,
|
|
not quite happily, pursuing love's young dream. You may perhaps be
|
|
an invalid who likes to make bad verses as he walks about. Alas! no
|
|
muse will suffer this imminence of interruption - and at the second
|
|
stampede of jodellers you find your modest inspiration fled. Or you
|
|
may only have a taste for solitude; it may try your nerves to have
|
|
some one always in front whom you are visibly overtaking, and some
|
|
one always behind who is audibly overtaking you, to say nothing of a
|
|
score or so who brush past you in an opposite direction. It may
|
|
annoy you to take your walks and seats in public view. Alas! there
|
|
is no help for it among the Alps. There are no recesses, as in
|
|
Gorbio Valley by the oil-mill; no sacred solitude of olive gardens on
|
|
the Roccabruna-road; no nook upon Saint Martin's Cape, haunted by the
|
|
voice of breakers, and fragrant with the threefold sweetness of the
|
|
rosemary and the sea-pines and the sea.
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|
For this publicity there is no cure, and no alleviation; but the
|
|
storms of which you will complain so bitterly while they endure,
|
|
chequer and by their contrast brighten the sameness of the fair-
|
|
weather scenes. When sun and storm contend together - when the thick
|
|
clouds are broken up and pierced by arrows of golden daylight - there
|
|
will be startling rearrangements and transfigurations of the mountain
|
|
summits. A sun-dazzling spire of alp hangs suspended in mid-sky
|
|
among awful glooms and blackness; or perhaps the edge of some great
|
|
mountain shoulder will be designed in living gold, and appear for the
|
|
duration of a glance bright like a constellation, and alone 'in the
|
|
unapparent.' You may think you know the figure of these hills; but
|
|
when they are thus revealed, they belong no longer to the things of
|
|
earth - meteors we should rather call them, appearances of sun and
|
|
air that endure but for a moment and return no more. Other
|
|
variations are more lasting, as when, for instance, heavy and wet
|
|
snow has fallen through some windless hours, and the thin, spiry,
|
|
mountain pine trees stand each stock-still and loaded with a shining
|
|
burthen. You may drive through a forest so disguised, the tongue-
|
|
tied torrent struggling silently in the cleft of the ravine, and all
|
|
still except the jingle of the sleigh bells, and you shall fancy
|
|
yourself in some untrodden northern territory - Lapland, Labrador, or
|
|
Alaska.
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|
|
|
Or, possibly, you arise very early in the morning; totter down stairs
|
|
in a state of somnambulism; take the simulacrum of a meal by the
|
|
glimmer of one lamp in the deserted coffee-room; and find yourself by
|
|
seven o'clock outside in a belated moonlight and a freezing chill.
|
|
The mail sleigh takes you up and carries you on, and you reach the
|
|
top of the ascent in the first hour of the day. To trace the fires
|
|
of the sunrise as they pass from peak to peak, to see the unlit tree-
|
|
tops stand out soberly against the lighted sky, to be for twenty
|
|
minutes in a wonderland of clear, fading shadows, disappearing
|
|
vapours, solemn blooms of dawn, hills half glorified already with the
|
|
day and still half confounded with the greyness of the western heaven
|
|
- these will seem to repay you for the discomforts of that early
|
|
start; but as the hour proceeds, and these enchantments vanish, you
|
|
will find yourself upon the farther side in yet another Alpine
|
|
valley, snow white and coal black, with such another long-drawn
|
|
congeries of hamlets and such another senseless watercourse bickering
|
|
along the foot. You have had your moment; but you have not changed
|
|
the scene. The mountains are about you like a trap; you cannot foot
|
|
it up a hillside and behold the sea as a great plain, but live in
|
|
holes and corners, and can change only one for another.
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|
|
CHAPTER X - HEALTH AND MOUNTAINS
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|
|
|
THERE has come a change in medical opinion, and a change has followed
|
|
in the lives of sick folk. A year or two ago and the wounded
|
|
soldiery of mankind were all shut up together in some basking angle
|
|
of the Riviera, walking a dusty promenade or sitting in dusty olive-
|
|
yards within earshot of the interminable and unchanging surf - idle
|
|
among spiritless idlers; not perhaps dying, yet hardly living either,
|
|
and aspiring, sometimes fiercely, after livelier weather and some
|
|
vivifying change. These were certainly beautiful places to live in,
|
|
and the climate was wooing in its softness. Yet there was a later
|
|
shiver in the sunshine; you were not certain whether you were being
|
|
wooed; and these mild shores would sometimes seem to you to be the
|
|
shores of death. There was a lack of a manly element; the air was
|
|
not reactive; you might write bits of poetry and practise
|
|
resignation, but you did not feel that here was a good spot to repair
|
|
your tissue or regain your nerve. And it appears, after all, that
|
|
there was something just in these appreciations. The invalid is now
|
|
asked to lodge on wintry Alps; a ruder air shall medicine him; the
|
|
demon of cold is no longer to be fled from, but bearded in his den.
|
|
For even Winter has his 'dear domestic cave,' and in those places
|
|
where he may be said to dwell for ever tempers his austerities.
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|
|
|
Any one who has travelled westward by the great transcontinental
|
|
railroad of America must remember the joy with which he perceived,
|
|
after the tedious prairies of Nebraska and across the vast and dismal
|
|
moorlands of Wyoming, a few snowy mountain summits alone, the
|
|
southern sky. It is among these mountains in the new State of
|
|
Colorado that the sick man may find, not merely an alleviation of his
|
|
ailments, but the possibility of an active life and an honest
|
|
livelihood. There, no longer as a lounger in a plaid, but as a
|
|
working farmer, sweating at his work, he may prolong and begin anew
|
|
his life. Instead of the bath-chair, the spade; instead of the
|
|
regulated walk, rough journeys in the forest, and the pure, rare air
|
|
of the open mountains for the miasma of the sick-room - these are the
|
|
changes offered him, with what promise of pleasure and of self-
|
|
respect, with what a revolution in all his hopes and terrors, none
|
|
but an invalid can know. Resignation, the cowardice that apes a kind
|
|
of courage and that lives in the very air of health resorts, is cast
|
|
aside at a breath of such a prospect. The man can open the door; he
|
|
can be up and doing; he can be a kind of a man after all and not
|
|
merely an invalid.
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|
|
|
But it is a far cry to the Rocky Mountains. We cannot all of us go
|
|
farming in Colorado; and there is yet a middle term, which combines
|
|
the medical benefits of the new system with the moral drawbacks of
|
|
the old. Again the invalid has to lie aside from life and its
|
|
wholesome duties; again he has to be an idler among idlers; but this
|
|
time at a great altitude, far among the mountains, with the snow
|
|
piled before his door and the frost flowers every morning on his
|
|
window. The mere fact is tonic to his nerves. His choice of a place
|
|
of wintering has somehow to his own eyes the air of an act of bold
|
|
contract; and, since he has wilfully sought low temperatures, he is
|
|
not so apt to shudder at a touch of chill. He came for that, he
|
|
looked for it, and he throws it from him with the thought.
|
|
|
|
A long straight reach of valley, wall-like mountains upon either hand
|
|
that rise higher and higher and shoot up new summits the higher you
|
|
climb; a few noble peaks seen even from the valley; a village of
|
|
hotels; a world of black and white - black pine-woods, clinging to
|
|
the sides of the valley, and white snow flouring it, and papering it
|
|
between the pine-woods, and covering all the mountains with a
|
|
dazzling curd; add a few score invalids marching to and fro upon the
|
|
snowy road, or skating on the ice-rinks, possibly to music, or
|
|
sitting under sunshades by the door of the hotel - and you have the
|
|
larger features of a mountain sanatorium. A certain furious river
|
|
runs curving down the valley; its pace never varies, it has not a
|
|
pool for as far as you can follow it; and its unchanging, senseless
|
|
hurry is strangely tedious to witness. It is a river that a man
|
|
could grow to hate. Day after day breaks with the rarest gold upon
|
|
the mountain spires, and creeps, growing and glowing, down into the
|
|
valley. From end to end the snow reverberates the sunshine; from end
|
|
to end the air tingles with the light, clear and dry like crystal.
|
|
Only along the course of the river, but high above it, there hangs
|
|
far into the noon, one waving scarf of vapour. It were hard to fancy
|
|
a more engaging feature in a landscape; perhaps it is harder to
|
|
believe that delicate, long-lasting phantom of the atmosphere, a
|
|
creature of the incontinent stream whose course it follows. By noon
|
|
the sky is arrayed in an unrivalled pomp of colour - mild and pale
|
|
and melting in the north, but towards the zenith, dark with an
|
|
intensity of purple blue. What with this darkness of heaven and the
|
|
intolerable lustre of the snow, space is reduced again to chaos. An
|
|
English painter, coming to France late in life, declared with natural
|
|
anger that 'the values were all wrong.' Had he got among the Alps on
|
|
a bright day he might have lost his reason. And even to any one who
|
|
has looked at landscape with any care, and in any way through the
|
|
spectacles of representative art, the scene has a character of
|
|
insanity. The distant shining mountain peak is here beside your eye;
|
|
the neighbouring dull-coloured house in comparison is miles away; the
|
|
summit, which is all of splendid snow, is close at hand; the nigh
|
|
slopes, which are black with pine trees, bear it no relation, and
|
|
might be in another sphere. Here there are none of those delicate
|
|
gradations, those intimate, misty joinings-on and spreadings-out into
|
|
the distance, nothing of that art of air and light by which the face
|
|
of nature explains and veils itself in climes which we may be allowed
|
|
to think more lovely. A glaring piece of crudity, where everything
|
|
that is not white is a solecism and defies the judgment of the
|
|
eyesight; a scene of blinding definition; a parade of daylight,
|
|
almost scenically vulgar, more than scenically trying, and yet hearty
|
|
and healthy, making the nerves to tighten and the mouth to smile:
|
|
such is the winter daytime in the Alps.
|
|
|
|
With the approach of evening all is changed. A mountain will
|
|
suddenly intercept the sun; a shadow fall upon the valley; in ten
|
|
minutes the thermometer will drop as many degrees; the peaks that are
|
|
no longer shone upon dwindle into ghosts; and meanwhile, overhead, if
|
|
the weather be rightly characteristic of the place, the sky fades
|
|
towards night through a surprising key of colours. The latest gold
|
|
leaps from the last mountain. Soon, perhaps, the moon shall rise,
|
|
and in her gentler light the valley shall be mellowed and misted, and
|
|
here and there a wisp of silver cloud upon a hilltop, and here and
|
|
there a warmly glowing window in a house, between fire and starlight,
|
|
kind and homely in the fields of snow.
|
|
|
|
But the valley is not seated so high among the clouds to be eternally
|
|
exempt from changes. The clouds gather, black as ink; the wind
|
|
bursts rudely in; day after day the mists drive overhead, the snow-
|
|
flakes flutter down in blinding disarray; daily the mail comes in
|
|
later from the top of the pass; people peer through their windows and
|
|
foresee no end but an entire seclusion from Europe, and death by
|
|
gradual dry-rot, each in his indifferent inn; and when at last the
|
|
storm goes, and the sun comes again, behold a world of unpolluted
|
|
snow, glossy like fur, bright like daylight, a joy to wallowing dogs
|
|
and cheerful to the souls of men. Or perhaps from across storied and
|
|
malarious Italy, a wind cunningly winds about the mountains and
|
|
breaks, warm and unclean, upon our mountain valley. Every nerve is
|
|
set ajar; the conscience recognises, at a gust, a load of sins and
|
|
negligences hitherto unknown; and the whole invalid world huddles
|
|
into its private chambers, and silently recognises the empire of the
|
|
Fohn.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI - ALPINE DIVERSIONS
|
|
|
|
THERE will be no lack of diversion in an Alpine sanitarium. The
|
|
place is half English, to be sure, the local sheet appearing in
|
|
double column, text and translation; but it still remains half
|
|
German; and hence we have a band which is able to play, and a company
|
|
of actors able, as you will be told, to act. This last you will take
|
|
on trust, for the players, unlike the local sheet, confine themselves
|
|
to German and though at the beginning of winter they come with their
|
|
wig-boxes to each hotel in turn, long before Christmas they will have
|
|
given up the English for a bad job. There will follow, perhaps, a
|
|
skirmish between the two races; the German element seeking, in the
|
|
interest of their actors, to raise a mysterious item, the KUR-TAXE,
|
|
which figures heavily enough already in the weekly bills, the English
|
|
element stoutly resisting. Meantime in the English hotels home-
|
|
played farces, TABLEAUX-VIVANTS, and even balls enliven the evenings;
|
|
a charity bazaar sheds genial consternation; Christmas and New Year
|
|
are solemnised with Pantagruelian dinners, and from time to time the
|
|
young folks carol and revolve untunefully enough through the figures
|
|
of a singing quadrille.
|
|
|
|
A magazine club supplies you with everything, from the QUARTERLY to
|
|
the SUNDAY AT HOME. Grand tournaments are organised at chess,
|
|
draughts, billiards and whist. Once and again wandering artists drop
|
|
into our mountain valley, coming you know not whence, going you
|
|
cannot imagine whither, and belonging to every degree in the
|
|
hierarchy of musical art, from the recognised performer who announces
|
|
a concert for the evening, to the comic German family or solitary
|
|
long-haired German baritone, who surprises the guests at dinner-time
|
|
with songs and a collection. They are all of them good to see; they,
|
|
at least, are moving; they bring with them the sentiment of the open
|
|
road; yesterday, perhaps, they were in Tyrol, and next week they will
|
|
be far in Lombardy, while all we sick folk still simmer in our
|
|
mountain prison. Some of them, too, are welcome as the flowers in
|
|
May for their own sake; some of them may have a human voice; some may
|
|
have that magic which transforms a wooden box into a song-bird, and
|
|
what we jeeringly call a fiddle into what we mention with respect as
|
|
a violin. From that grinding lilt, with which the blind man, seeking
|
|
pence, accompanies the beat of paddle wheels across the ferry, there
|
|
is surely a difference rather of kind than of degree to that
|
|
unearthly voice of singing that bewails and praises the destiny of
|
|
man at the touch of the true virtuoso. Even that you may perhaps
|
|
enjoy; and if you do so you will own it impossible to enjoy it more
|
|
keenly than here, IM SCHNEE DER ALPEN. A hyacinth in a pot, a
|
|
handful of primroses packed in moss, or a piece of music by some one
|
|
who knows the way to the heart of a violin, are things that, in this
|
|
invariable sameness of the snows and frosty air, surprise you like an
|
|
adventure. It is droll, moreover, to compare the respect with which
|
|
the invalids attend a concert, and the ready contempt with which they
|
|
greet the dinner-time performers. Singing which they would hear with
|
|
real enthusiasm - possibly with tears - from a corner of a drawing-
|
|
room, is listened to with laughter when it is offered by an unknown
|
|
professional and no money has been taken at the door.
|
|
|
|
Of skating little need be said; in so snowy a climate the rinks must
|
|
be intelligently managed; their mismanagement will lead to many days
|
|
of vexation and some petty quarrelling, but when all goes well, it is
|
|
certainly curious, and perhaps rather unsafe, for the invalid to
|
|
skate under a burning sun, and walk back to his hotel in a sweat,
|
|
through long tracts of glare and passages of freezing shadow. But
|
|
the peculiar outdoor sport of this district is tobogganing. A
|
|
Scotchman may remember the low flat board, with the front wheels on a
|
|
pivot, which was called a HURLIE; he may remember this contrivance,
|
|
laden with boys, as, laboriously started, it ran rattling down the
|
|
brae, and was, now successfully, now unsuccessfully, steered round
|
|
the corner at the foot; he may remember scented summer evenings
|
|
passed in this diversion, and many a grazed skin, bloody cockscomb,
|
|
and neglected lesson. The toboggan is to the hurlie what the sled is
|
|
to the carriage; it is a hurlie upon runners; and if for a grating
|
|
road you substitute a long declivity of beaten snow, you can imagine
|
|
the giddy career of the tobogganist. The correct position is to sit;
|
|
but the fantastic will sometimes sit hind-foremost, or dare the
|
|
descent upon their belly or their back. A few steer with a pair of
|
|
pointed sticks, but it is more classical to use the feet. If the
|
|
weight be heavy and the track smooth, the toboggan takes the bit
|
|
between its teeth; and to steer a couple of full-sized friends in
|
|
safety requires not only judgment but desperate exertion. On a very
|
|
steep track, with a keen evening frost, you may have moments almost
|
|
too appalling to be called enjoyment; the head goes, the world
|
|
vanishes; your blind steed bounds below your weight; you reach the
|
|
foot, with all the breath knocked out of your body, jarred and
|
|
bewildered as though you had just been subjected to a railway
|
|
accident. Another element of joyful horror is added by the formation
|
|
of a train; one toboggan being tied to another, perhaps to the number
|
|
of half a dozen, only the first rider being allowed to steer, and all
|
|
the rest pledged to put up their feet and follow their leader, with
|
|
heart in mouth, down the mad descent. This, particularly if the
|
|
track begins with a headlong plunge, is one of the most exhilarating
|
|
follies in the world, and the tobogganing invalid is early reconciled
|
|
to somersaults.
|
|
|
|
There is all manner of variety in the nature of the tracks, some
|
|
miles in length, others but a few yards, and yet like some short
|
|
rivers, furious in their brevity. All degrees of skill and courage
|
|
and taste may be suited in your neighbourhood. But perhaps the true
|
|
way to toboggan is alone and at night. First comes the tedious
|
|
climb, dragging your instrument behind you. Next a long breathing-
|
|
space, alone with snow and pinewoods, cold, silent and solemn to the
|
|
heart. Then you push of; the toboggan fetches way; she begins to
|
|
feel the hill, to glide, to, swim, to gallop. In a breath you are
|
|
out from under the pine trees, and a whole heavenful of stars reels
|
|
and flashes overhead. Then comes a vicious effort; for by this time
|
|
your wooden steed is speeding like the wind, and you are spinning
|
|
round a corner, and the whole glittering valley and all the lights in
|
|
all the great hotels lie for a moment at your feet; and the next you
|
|
are racing once more in the shadow of the night with close-shut teeth
|
|
and beating heart. Yet a little while and you will be landed on the
|
|
highroad by the door of your own hotel. This, in an atmosphere
|
|
tingling with forty degrees of frost, in a night made luminous with
|
|
stars and snow, and girt with strange white mountains, teaches the
|
|
pulse an unaccustomed tune and adds a new excitement to the life of
|
|
man upon his planet.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII - THE STIMULATION OF THE ALPS
|
|
|
|
To any one who should come from a southern sanitarium to the Alps,
|
|
the row of sun-burned faces round the table would present the first
|
|
surprise. He would begin by looking for the invalids, and he would
|
|
lose his pains, for not one out of five of even the bad cases bears
|
|
the mark of sickness on his face. The plump sunshine from above and
|
|
its strong reverberation from below colour the skin like an Indian
|
|
climate; the treatment, which consists mainly of the open air,
|
|
exposes even the sickliest to tan, and a tableful of invalids comes,
|
|
in a month or two, to resemble a tableful of hunters. But although
|
|
he may be thus surprised at the first glance, his astonishment will
|
|
grow greater, as he experiences the effects of the climate on
|
|
himself. In many ways it is a trying business to reside upon the
|
|
Alps: the stomach is exercised, the appetite often languishes; the
|
|
liver may at times rebel; and because you have come so far from
|
|
metropolitan advantages, it does not follow that you shall recover.
|
|
But one thing is undeniable - that in the rare air, clear, cold, and
|
|
blinding light of Alpine winters, a man takes a certain troubled
|
|
delight in his existence which can nowhere else be paralleled. He is
|
|
perhaps no happier, but he is stingingly alive. It does not,
|
|
perhaps, come out of him in work or exercise, yet he feels an
|
|
enthusiasm of the blood unknown in more temperate climates. It may
|
|
not be health, but it is fun.
|
|
|
|
There is nothing more difficult to communicate on paper than this
|
|
baseless ardour, this stimulation of the brain, this sterile
|
|
joyousness of spirits. You wake every morning, see the gold upon the
|
|
snow-peaks, become filled with courage, and bless God for your
|
|
prolonged existence. The valleys are but a stride to you; you cast
|
|
your shoe over the hilltops; your ears and your heart sing; in the
|
|
words of an unverified quotation from the Scotch psalms, you feel
|
|
yourself fit 'on the wings of all the winds' to 'come flying all
|
|
abroad.' Europe and your mind are too narrow for that flood of
|
|
energy. Yet it is notable that you are hard to root out of your bed;
|
|
that you start forth, singing, indeed, on your walk, yet are
|
|
unusually ready to turn home again; that the best of you is volatile;
|
|
and that although the restlessness remains till night, the strength
|
|
is early at an end. With all these heady jollities, you are half
|
|
conscious of an underlying languor in the body; you prove not to be
|
|
so well as you had fancied; you weary before you have well begun; and
|
|
though you mount at morning with the lark, that is not precisely a
|
|
song-bird's heart that you bring back with you when you return with
|
|
aching limbs and peevish temper to your inn.
|
|
|
|
It is hard to say wherein it lies, but this joy of Alpine winters is
|
|
its own reward. Baseless, in a sense, it is more than worth more
|
|
permanent improvements. The dream of health is perfect while it
|
|
lasts; and if, in trying to realise it, you speedily wear out the
|
|
dear hallucination, still every day, and many times a day, you are
|
|
conscious of a strength you scarce possess, and a delight in living
|
|
as merry as it proves to be transient.
|
|
|
|
The brightness - heaven and earth conspiring to be bright - the
|
|
levity and quiet of the air; the odd stirring silence - more stirring
|
|
than a tumult; the snow, the frost, the enchanted landscape: all
|
|
have their part in the effect and on the memory, 'TOUS VOUS TAPENT
|
|
SUR LA TETE'; and yet when you have enumerated all, you have gone no
|
|
nearer to explain or even to qualify the delicate exhilaration that
|
|
you feel - delicate, you may say, and yet excessive, greater than can
|
|
be said in prose, almost greater than an invalid can bear. There is
|
|
a certain wine of France known in England in some gaseous disguise,
|
|
but when drunk in the land of its nativity still as a pool, clean as
|
|
river water, and as heady as verse. It is more than probable that in
|
|
its noble natural condition this was the very wine of Anjou so
|
|
beloved by Athos in the 'Musketeers.' Now, if the reader has ever
|
|
washed down a liberal second breakfast with the wine in question, and
|
|
gone forth, on the back of these dilutions, into a sultry, sparkling
|
|
noontide, he will have felt an influence almost as genial, although
|
|
strangely grosser, than this fairy titillation of the nerves among
|
|
the snow and sunshine of the Alps. That also is a mode, we need not
|
|
say of intoxication, but of insobriety. Thus also a man walks in a
|
|
strong sunshine of the mind, and follows smiling, insubstantial
|
|
meditations. And whether he be really so clever or so strong as he
|
|
supposes, in either case he will enjoy his chimera while it lasts.
|
|
|
|
The influence of this giddy air displays itself in many secondary
|
|
ways. A certain sort of laboured pleasantry has already been
|
|
recognised, and may perhaps have been remarked in these papers, as a
|
|
sort peculiar to that climate. People utter their judgments with a
|
|
cannonade of syllables; a big word is as good as a meal to them; and
|
|
the turn of a phrase goes further than humour or wisdom. By the
|
|
professional writer many sad vicissitudes have to be undergone. At
|
|
first he cannot write at all. The heart, it appears, is unequal to
|
|
the pressure of business, and the brain, left without nourishment,
|
|
goes into a mild decline. Next, some power of work returns to him,
|
|
accompanied by jumping headaches. Last, the spring is opened, and
|
|
there pours at once from his pen a world of blatant, hustling
|
|
polysyllables, and talk so high as, in the old joke, to be positively
|
|
offensive in hot weather. He writes it in good faith and with a
|
|
sense of inspiration; it is only when he comes to read what he has
|
|
written that surprise and disquiet seize upon his mind. What is he
|
|
to do, poor man? All his little fishes talk like whales. This
|
|
yeasty inflation, this stiff and strutting architecture of the
|
|
sentence has come upon him while he slept; and it is not he, it is
|
|
the Alps, who are to blame. He is not, perhaps, alone, which
|
|
somewhat comforts him. Nor is the ill without a remedy. Some day,
|
|
when the spring returns, he shall go down a little lower in this
|
|
world, and remember quieter inflections and more modest language.
|
|
But here, in the meantime, there seems to swim up some outline of a
|
|
new cerebral hygiene and a good time coming, when experienced
|
|
advisers shall send a man to the proper measured level for the ode,
|
|
the biography, or the religious tract; and a nook may be found
|
|
between the sea and Chimborazo, where Mr. Swinburne shall be able to
|
|
write more continently, and Mr. Browning somewhat slower.
|
|
|
|
Is it a return of youth, or is it a congestion of the brain? It is a
|
|
sort of congestion, perhaps, that leads the invalid, when all goes
|
|
well, to face the new day with such a bubbling cheerfulness. It is
|
|
certainly congestion that makes night hideous with visions, all the
|
|
chambers of a many-storeyed caravanserai, haunted with vociferous
|
|
nightmares, and many wakeful people come down late for breakfast in
|
|
the morning. Upon that theory the cynic may explain the whole affair
|
|
- exhilaration, nightmares, pomp of tongue and all. But, on the
|
|
other hand, the peculiar blessedness of boyhood may itself be but a
|
|
symptom of the same complaint, for the two effects are strangely
|
|
similar; and the frame of mind of the invalid upon the Alps is a sort
|
|
of intermittent youth, with periods of lassitude. The fountain of
|
|
Juventus does not play steadily in these parts; but there it plays,
|
|
and possibly nowhere else.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII - ROADS - 1873
|
|
|
|
No amateur will deny that he can find more pleasure in a single
|
|
drawing, over which he can sit a whole quiet forenoon, and so
|
|
gradually study himself into humour with the artist, than he can ever
|
|
extract from the dazzle and accumulation of incongruous impressions
|
|
that send him, weary and stupefied, out of some famous picture-
|
|
gallery. But what is thus admitted with regard to art is not
|
|
extended to the (so-called) natural beauties no amount of excess in
|
|
sublime mountain outline or the graces of cultivated lowland can do
|
|
anything, it is supposed, to weaken or degrade the palate. We are
|
|
not at all sure, however, that moderation, and a regimen tolerably
|
|
austere, even in scenery, are not healthful and strengthening to the
|
|
taste; and that the best school for a lover of nature is not to the
|
|
found in one of those countries where there is no stage effect -
|
|
nothing salient or sudden, - but a quiet spirit of orderly and
|
|
harmonious beauty pervades all the details, so that we can patiently
|
|
attend to each of the little touches that strike in us, all of them
|
|
together, the subdued note of the landscape. It is in scenery such
|
|
as this that we find ourselves in the right temper to seek out small
|
|
sequestered loveliness. The constant recurrence of similar
|
|
combinations of colour and outline gradually forces upon us a sense
|
|
of how the harmony has been built up, and we become familiar with
|
|
something of nature's mannerism. This is the true pleasure of your
|
|
'rural voluptuary,' - not to remain awe-stricken before a Mount
|
|
Chimborazo; not to sit deafened over the big drum in the orchestra,
|
|
but day by day to teach himself some new beauty - to experience some
|
|
new vague and tranquil sensation that has before evaded him. It is
|
|
not the people who 'have pined and hungered after nature many a year,
|
|
in the great city pent,' as Coleridge said in the poem that made
|
|
Charles Lamb so much ashamed of himself; it is not those who make the
|
|
greatest progress in this intimacy with her, or who are most quick to
|
|
see and have the greatest gusto to enjoy. In this, as in everything
|
|
else, it is minute knowledge and long-continued loving industry that
|
|
make the true dilettante. A man must have thought much over scenery
|
|
before he begins fully to enjoy it. It is no youngling enthusiasm on
|
|
hilltops that can possess itself of the last essence of beauty.
|
|
Probably most people's heads are growing bare before they can see all
|
|
in a landscape that they have the capability of seeing; and, even
|
|
then, it will be only for one little moment of consummation before
|
|
the faculties are again on the decline, and they that look out of the
|
|
windows begin to be darkened and restrained in sight. Thus the study
|
|
of nature should be carried forward thoroughly and with system.
|
|
Every gratification should be rolled long under the tongue, and we
|
|
should be always eager to analyse and compare, in order that we may
|
|
be able to give some plausible reason for our admirations. True, it
|
|
is difficult to put even approximately into words the kind of
|
|
feelings thus called into play. There is a dangerous vice inherent
|
|
in any such intellectual refining upon vague sensation. The analysis
|
|
of such satisfactions lends itself very readily to literary
|
|
affectations; and we can all think of instances where it has shown
|
|
itself apt to exercise a morbid influence, even upon an author's
|
|
choice of language and the turn of his sentences. And yet there is
|
|
much that makes the attempt attractive; for any expression, however
|
|
imperfect, once given to a cherished feeling, seems a sort of
|
|
legitimation of the pleasure we take in it. A common sentiment is
|
|
one of those great goods that make life palatable and ever new. The
|
|
knowledge that another has felt as we have felt, and seen things,
|
|
even if they are little things, not much otherwise than we have seen
|
|
them, will continue to the end to be one of life's choicest
|
|
pleasures.
|
|
|
|
Let the reader, then, betake himself in the spirit we have
|
|
recommended to some of the quieter kinds of English landscape. In
|
|
those homely and placid agricultural districts, familiarity will
|
|
bring into relief many things worthy of notice, and urge them
|
|
pleasantly home to him by a sort of loving repetition; such as the
|
|
wonderful life-giving speed of windmill sails above the stationary
|
|
country; the occurrence and recurrence of the same church tower at
|
|
the end of one long vista after another: and, conspicuous among
|
|
these sources of quiet pleasure, the character and variety of the
|
|
road itself, along which he takes his way. Not only near at hand, in
|
|
the lithe contortions with which it adapts itself to the interchanges
|
|
of level and slope, but far away also, when he sees a few hundred
|
|
feet of it upheaved against a hill and shining in the afternoon sun,
|
|
he will find it an object so changeful and enlivening that he can
|
|
always pleasurably busy his mind about it. He may leave the river-
|
|
side, or fall out of the way of villages, but the road he has always
|
|
with him; and, in the true humour of observation, will find in that
|
|
sufficient company. From its subtle windings and changes of level
|
|
there arises a keen and continuous interest, that keeps the attention
|
|
ever alert and cheerful. Every sensitive adjustment to the contour
|
|
of the ground, every little dip and swerve, seems instinct with life
|
|
and an exquisite sense of balance and beauty. The road rolls upon
|
|
the easy slopes of the country, like a long ship in the hollows of
|
|
the sea. The very margins of waste ground, as they trench a little
|
|
farther on the beaten way, or recede again to the shelter of the
|
|
hedge, have something of the same free delicacy of line - of the same
|
|
swing and wilfulness. You might think for a whole summer's day (and
|
|
not have thought it any nearer an end by evening) what concourse and
|
|
succession of circumstances has produced the least of these
|
|
deflections; and it is, perhaps, just in this that we should look for
|
|
the secret of their interest. A foot-path across a meadow - in all
|
|
its human waywardness and unaccountability, in all the GRATA
|
|
PROTERVITAS of its varying direction - will always be more to us than
|
|
a railroad well engineered through a difficult country. No reasoned
|
|
sequence is thrust upon our attention: we seem to have slipped for
|
|
one lawless little moment out of the iron rule of cause and effect;
|
|
and so we revert at once to some of the pleasant old heresies of
|
|
personification, always poetically orthodox, and attribute a sort of
|
|
free-will, an active and spontaneous life, to the white riband of
|
|
road that lengthens out, and bends, and cunningly adapts itself to
|
|
the inequalities of the land before our eyes. We remember, as we
|
|
write, some miles of fine wide highway laid out with conscious
|
|
aesthetic artifice through a broken and richly cultivated tract of
|
|
country. It is said that the engineer had Hogarth's line of beauty
|
|
in his mind as he laid them down. And the result is striking. One
|
|
splendid satisfying sweep passes with easy transition into another,
|
|
and there is nothing to trouble or dislocate the strong
|
|
continuousness of the main line of the road. And yet there is
|
|
something wanting. There is here no saving imperfection, none of
|
|
those secondary curves and little trepidations of direction that
|
|
carry, in natural roads, our curiosity actively along with them. One
|
|
feels at once that this road has not has been laboriously grown like
|
|
a natural road, but made to pattern; and that, while a model may be
|
|
academically correct in outline, it will always be inanimate and
|
|
cold. The traveller is also aware of a sympathy of mood between
|
|
himself and the road he travels. We have all seen ways that have
|
|
wandered into heavy sand near the sea-coast, and trail wearily over
|
|
the dunes like a trodden serpent. Here we too must plod forward at a
|
|
dull, laborious pace; and so a sympathy is preserved between our
|
|
frame of mind and the expression of the relaxed, heavy curves of the
|
|
roadway. Such a phenomenon, indeed, our reason might perhaps resolve
|
|
with a little trouble. We might reflect that the present road had
|
|
been developed out of a tract spontaneously followed by generations
|
|
of primitive wayfarers; and might see in its expression a testimony
|
|
that those generations had been affected at the same ground, one
|
|
after another, in the same manner as we are affected to-day. Or we
|
|
might carry the reflection further, and remind ourselves that where
|
|
the air is invigorating and the ground firm under the traveller's
|
|
foot, his eye is quick to take advantage of small undulations, and he
|
|
will turn carelessly aside from the direct way wherever there is
|
|
anything beautiful to examine or some promise of a wider view; so
|
|
that even a bush of wild roses may permanently bias and deform the
|
|
straight path over the meadow; whereas, where the soil is heavy, one
|
|
is preoccupied with the labour of mere progression, and goes with a
|
|
bowed head heavily and unobservantly forward. Reason, however, will
|
|
not carry us the whole way; for the sentiment often recurs in
|
|
situations where it is very hard to imagine any possible explanation;
|
|
and indeed, if we drive briskly along a good, well-made road in an
|
|
open vehicle, we shall experience this sympathy almost at its
|
|
fullest. We feel the sharp settle of the springs at some curiously
|
|
twisted corner; after a steep ascent, the fresh air dances in our
|
|
faces as we rattle precipitately down the other side, and we find it
|
|
difficult to avoid attributing something headlong, a sort of ABANDON,
|
|
to the road itself.
|
|
|
|
The mere winding of the path is enough to enliven a long day's walk
|
|
in even a commonplace or dreary country-side. Something that we have
|
|
seen from miles back, upon an eminence, is so long hid from us, as we
|
|
wander through folded valleys or among woods, that our expectation of
|
|
seeing it again is sharpened into a violent appetite, and as we draw
|
|
nearer we impatiently quicken our steps and turn every corner with a
|
|
beating heart. It is through these prolongations of expectancy, this
|
|
succession of one hope to another, that we live out long seasons of
|
|
pleasure in a few hours' walk. It is in following these capricious
|
|
sinuosities that we learn, only bit by bit and through one coquettish
|
|
reticence after another, much as we learn the heart of a friend, the
|
|
whole loveliness of the country. This disposition always preserves
|
|
something new to be seen, and takes us, like a careful cicerone, to
|
|
many different points of distant view before it allows us finally to
|
|
approach the hoped-for destination.
|
|
|
|
In its connection with the traffic, and whole friendly intercourse
|
|
with the country, there is something very pleasant in that succession
|
|
of saunterers and brisk and business-like passers-by, that peoples
|
|
our ways and helps to build up what Walt Whitman calls 'the cheerful
|
|
voice of the public road, the gay, fresh sentiment of the road.' But
|
|
out of the great network of ways that binds all life together from
|
|
the hill-farm to the city, there is something individual to most,
|
|
and, on the whole, nearly as much choice on the score of company as
|
|
on the score of beauty or easy travel. On some we are never long
|
|
without the sound of wheels, and folk pass us by so thickly that we
|
|
lose the sense of their number. But on others, about little-
|
|
frequented districts, a meeting is an affair of moment; we have the
|
|
sight far off of some one coming towards us, the growing definiteness
|
|
of the person, and then the brief passage and salutation, and the
|
|
road left empty in front of us for perhaps a great while to come.
|
|
Such encounters have a wistful interest that can hardly be understood
|
|
by the dweller in places more populous. We remember standing beside
|
|
a countryman once, in the mouth of a quiet by-street in a city that
|
|
was more than ordinarily crowded and bustling; he seemed stunned and
|
|
bewildered by the continual passage of different faces; and after a
|
|
long pause, during which he appeared to search for some suitable
|
|
expression, he said timidly that there seemed to be a GREAT DEAL OF
|
|
MEETING THEREABOUTS. The phrase is significant. It is the
|
|
expression of town-life in the language of the long, solitary country
|
|
highways. A meeting of one with one was what this man had been used
|
|
to in the pastoral uplands from which he came; and the concourse of
|
|
the streets was in his eyes only an extraordinary multiplication of
|
|
such 'meetings.'
|
|
|
|
And now we come to that last and most subtle quality of all, to that
|
|
sense of prospect, of outlook, that is brought so powerfully to our
|
|
minds by a road. In real nature, as well as in old landscapes,
|
|
beneath that impartial daylight in which a whole variegated plain is
|
|
plunged and saturated, the line of the road leads the eye forth with
|
|
the vague sense of desire up to the green limit of the horizon.
|
|
Travel is brought home to us, and we visit in spirit every grove and
|
|
hamlet that tempts us in the distance. SEHNSUCHT - the passion for
|
|
what is ever beyond - is livingly expressed in that white riband of
|
|
possible travel that severs the uneven country; not a ploughman
|
|
following his plough up the shining furrow, not the blue smoke of any
|
|
cottage in a hollow, but is brought to us with a sense of nearness
|
|
and attainability by this wavering line of junction. There is a
|
|
passionate paragraph in WERTHER that strikes the very key. 'When I
|
|
came hither,' he writes, 'how the beautiful valley invited me on
|
|
every side, as I gazed down into it from the hill-top! There the
|
|
wood - ah, that I might mingle in its shadows! there the mountain
|
|
summits - ah, that I might look down from them over the broad
|
|
country! the interlinked hills! the secret valleys! Oh to lose
|
|
myself among their mysteries! I hurried into the midst, and came
|
|
back without finding aught I hoped for. Alas! the distance is like
|
|
the future. A vast whole lies in the twilight before our spirit;
|
|
sight and feeling alike plunge and lose themselves in the prospect,
|
|
and we yearn to surrender our whole being, and let it be filled full
|
|
with all the rapture of one single glorious sensation; and alas! when
|
|
we hasten to the fruition, when THERE is changed to HERE, all is
|
|
afterwards as it was before, and we stand in our indigent and cramped
|
|
estate, and our soul thirsts after a still ebbing elixir.' It is to
|
|
this wandering and uneasy spirit of anticipation that roads minister.
|
|
Every little vista, every little glimpse that we have of what lies
|
|
before us, gives the impatient imagination rein, so that it can
|
|
outstrip the body and already plunge into the shadow of the woods,
|
|
and overlook from the hill-top the plain beyond it, and wander in the
|
|
windings of the valleys that are still far in front. The road is
|
|
already there - we shall not be long behind. It is as if we were
|
|
marching with the rear of a great army, and, from far before, heard
|
|
the acclamation of the people as the vanguard entered some friendly
|
|
and jubilant city. Would not every man, through all the long miles
|
|
of march, feel as if he also were within the gates?
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV - ON THE ENJOYMENT OF UNPLEASANT PLACES - 1874
|
|
|
|
IT is a difficult matter to make the most of any given place, and we
|
|
have much in our own power. Things looked at patiently from one side
|
|
after another generally end by showing a side that is beautiful. A
|
|
few months ago some words were said in the PORTFOLIO as to an
|
|
'austere regimen in scenery'; and such a discipline was then
|
|
recommended as 'healthful and strengthening to the taste.' That is
|
|
the text, so to speak, of the present essay. This discipline in
|
|
scenery, it must be understood, is something more than a mere walk
|
|
before breakfast to whet the appetite. For when we are put down in
|
|
some unsightly neighbourhood, and especially if we have come to be
|
|
more or less dependent on what we see, we must set ourselves to hunt
|
|
out beautiful things with all the ardour and patience of a botanist
|
|
after a rye plant. Day by day we perfect ourselves in the art of
|
|
seeing nature more favourably. We learn to live with her, as people
|
|
learn to live with fretful or violent spouses: to dwell lovingly on
|
|
what is good, and shut our eyes against all that is bleak or
|
|
inharmonious. We learn, also, to come to each place in the right
|
|
spirit. The traveller, as Brantome quaintly tells us, 'FAIT DES
|
|
DISCOURS EN SOI POUR SOUTENIR EN CHEMIN'; and into these discourses
|
|
he weaves something out of all that he sees and suffers by the way;
|
|
they take their tone greatly from the varying character of the scene;
|
|
a sharp ascent brings different thoughts from a level road; and the
|
|
man's fancies grow lighter as he comes out of the wood into a
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clearing. Nor does the scenery any more affect the thoughts than the
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thoughts affect the scenery. We see places through our humours as
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|
through differently coloured glasses. We are ourselves a term in the
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|
equation, a note of the chord, and make discord or harmony almost at
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|
will. There is no fear for the result, if we can but surrender
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ourselves sufficiently to the country that surrounds and follows us,
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|
so that we are ever thinking suitable thoughts or telling ourselves
|
|
some suitable sort of story as we go. We become thus, in some sense,
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a centre of beauty; we are provocative of beauty, much as a gentle
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and sincere character is provocative of sincerity and gentleness in
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others. And even where there is no harmony to be elicited by the
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quickest and most obedient of spirits, we may still embellish a place
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with some attraction of romance. We may learn to go far afield for
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associations, and handle them lightly when we have found them.
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Sometimes an old print comes to our aid; I have seen many a spot lit
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up at once with picturesque imaginations, by a reminiscence of
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Callot, or Sadeler, or Paul Brill. Dick Turpin has been my lay
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figure for many an English lane. And I suppose the Trossachs would
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hardly be the Trossachs for most tourists if a man of admirable
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romantic instinct had not peopled it for them with harmonious
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figures, and brought them thither with minds rightly prepared for the
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impression. There is half the battle in this preparation. For
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|
instance: I have rarely been able to visit, in the proper spirit,
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the wild and inhospitable places of our own Highlands. I am happier
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where it is tame and fertile, and not readily pleased without trees.
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I understand that there are some phases of mental trouble that
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harmonise well with such surroundings, and that some persons, by the
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dispensing power of the imagination, can go back several centuries in
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spirit, and put themselves into sympathy with the hunted, houseless,
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unsociable way of life that was in its place upon these savage hills.
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Now, when I am sad, I like nature to charm me out of my sadness, like
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David before Saul; and the thought of these past ages strikes nothing
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|
in me but an unpleasant pity; so that I can never hit on the right
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|
humour for this sort of landscape, and lose much pleasure in
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|
consequence. Still, even here, if I were only let alone, and time
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|
enough were given, I should have all manner of pleasures, and take
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many clear and beautiful images away with me when I left. When we
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|
cannot think ourselves into sympathy with the great features of a
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|
country, we learn to ignore them, and put our head among the grass
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|
for flowers, or pore, for long times together, over the changeful
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|
current of a stream. We come down to the sermon in stones, when we
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|
are shut out from any poem in the spread landscape. We begin to peep
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|
and botanise, we take an interest in birds and insects, we find many
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|
things beautiful in miniature. The reader will recollect the little
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|
summer scene in WUTHERING HEIGHTS - the one warm scene, perhaps, in
|
|
all that powerful, miserable novel - and the great feature that is
|
|
made therein by grasses and flowers and a little sunshine: this is
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|
in the spirit of which I now speak. And, lastly, we can go indoors;
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|
interiors are sometimes as beautiful, often more picturesque, than
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|
the shows of the open air, and they have that quality of shelter of
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which I shall presently have more to say.
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|
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With all this in mind, I have often been tempted to put forth the
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paradox that any place is good enough to live a life in, while it is
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only in a few, and those highly favoured, that we can pass a few
|
|
hours agreeably. For, if we only stay long enough we become at home
|
|
in the neighbourhood. Reminiscences spring up, like flowers, about
|
|
uninteresting corners. We forget to some degree the superior
|
|
loveliness of other places, and fall into a tolerant and sympathetic
|
|
spirit which is its own reward and justification. Looking back the
|
|
other day on some recollections of my own, I was astonished to find
|
|
how much I owed to such a residence; six weeks in one unpleasant
|
|
country-side had done more, it seemed, to quicken and educate my
|
|
sensibilities than many years in places that jumped more nearly with
|
|
my inclination.
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|
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|
The country to which I refer was a level and tree-less plateau, over
|
|
which the winds cut like a whip. For miles and miles it was the
|
|
same. A river, indeed, fell into the sea near the town where I
|
|
resided; but the valley of the river was shallow and bald, for as far
|
|
up as ever I had the heart to follow it. There were roads,
|
|
certainly, but roads that had no beauty or interest; for, as there
|
|
was no timber, and but little irregularity of surface, you saw your
|
|
whole walk exposed to you from the beginning: there was nothing left
|
|
to fancy, nothing to expect, nothing to see by the wayside, save here
|
|
and there an unhomely-looking homestead, and here and there a
|
|
solitary, spectacled stone-breaker; and you were only accompanied, as
|
|
you went doggedly forward, by the gaunt telegraph-posts and the hum
|
|
of the resonant wires in the keen sea-wind. To one who had learned
|
|
to know their song in warm pleasant places by the Mediterranean, it
|
|
seemed to taunt the country, and make it still bleaker by suggested
|
|
contrast. Even the waste places by the side of the road were not, as
|
|
Hawthorne liked to put it, 'taken back to Nature' by any decent
|
|
covering of vegetation. Wherever the land had the chance, it seemed
|
|
to lie fallow. There is a certain tawny nudity of the South, bare
|
|
sunburnt plains, coloured like a lion, and hills clothed only in the
|
|
blue transparent air; but this was of another description - this was
|
|
the nakedness of the North; the earth seemed to know that it was
|
|
naked, and was ashamed and cold.
|
|
|
|
It seemed to be always blowing on that coast. Indeed, this had
|
|
passed into the speech of the inhabitants, and they saluted each
|
|
other when they met with 'Breezy, breezy,' instead of the customary
|
|
'Fine day' of farther south. These continual winds were not like the
|
|
harvest breeze, that just keeps an equable pressure against your face
|
|
as you walk, and serves to set all the trees talking over your head,
|
|
or bring round you the smell of the wet surface of the country after
|
|
a shower. They were of the bitter, hard, persistent sort, that
|
|
interferes with sight and respiration, and makes the eyes sore. Even
|
|
such winds as these have their own merit in proper time and place.
|
|
It is pleasant to see them brandish great masses of shadow. And what
|
|
a power they have over the colour of the world! How they ruffle the
|
|
solid woodlands in their passage, and make them shudder and whiten
|
|
like a single willow! There is nothing more vertiginous than a wind
|
|
like this among the woods, with all its sights and noises; and the
|
|
effect gets between some painters and their sober eyesight, so that,
|
|
even when the rest of their picture is calm, the foliage is coloured
|
|
like foliage in a gale. There was nothing, however, of this sort to
|
|
be noticed in a country where there were no trees and hardly any
|
|
shadows, save the passive shadows of clouds or those of rigid houses
|
|
and walls. But the wind was nevertheless an occasion of pleasure;
|
|
for nowhere could you taste more fully the pleasure of a sudden lull,
|
|
or a place of opportune shelter. The reader knows what I mean; he
|
|
must remember how, when he has sat himself down behind a dyke on a
|
|
hillside, he delighted to hear the wind hiss vainly through the
|
|
crannies at his back; how his body tingled all over with warmth, and
|
|
it began to dawn upon him, with a sort of slow surprise, that the
|
|
country was beautiful, the heather purple, and the far-away hills all
|
|
marbled with sun and shadow. Wordsworth, in a beautiful passage of
|
|
the 'Prelude,' has used this as a figure for the feeling struck in us
|
|
by the quiet by-streets of London after the uproar of the great
|
|
thoroughfares; and the comparison may be turned the other way with as
|
|
good effect:-
|
|
|
|
'Meanwhile the roar continues, till at length,
|
|
Escaped as from an enemy, we turn
|
|
Abruptly into some sequester'd nook,
|
|
Still as a shelter'd place when winds blow loud!'
|
|
|
|
I remember meeting a man once, in a train, who told me of what must
|
|
have been quite the most perfect instance of this pleasure of escape.
|
|
He had gone up, one sunny, windy morning, to the top of a great
|
|
cathedral somewhere abroad; I think it was Cologne Cathedral, the
|
|
great unfinished marvel by the Rhine; and after a long while in dark
|
|
stairways, he issued at last into the sunshine, on a platform high
|
|
above the town. At that elevation it was quite still and warm; the
|
|
gale was only in the lower strata of the air, and he had forgotten it
|
|
in the quiet interior of the church and during his long ascent; and
|
|
so you may judge of his surprise when, resting his arms on the sunlit
|
|
balustrade and looking over into the PLACE far below him, he saw the
|
|
good people holding on their hats and leaning hard against the wind
|
|
as they walked. There is something, to my fancy, quite perfect in
|
|
this little experience of my fellow-traveller's. The ways of men
|
|
seem always very trivial to us when we find ourselves alone on a
|
|
church-top, with the blue sky and a few tall pinnacles, and see far
|
|
below us the steep roofs and foreshortened buttresses, and the silent
|
|
activity of the city streets; but how much more must they not have
|
|
seemed so to him as he stood, not only above other men's business,
|
|
but above other men's climate, in a golden zone like Apollo's!
|
|
|
|
This was the sort of pleasure I found in the country of which I
|
|
write. The pleasure was to be out of the wind, and to keep it in
|
|
memory all the time, and hug oneself upon the shelter. And it was
|
|
only by the sea that any such sheltered places were to be found.
|
|
Between the black worm-eaten head-lands there are little bights and
|
|
havens, well screened from the wind and the commotion of the external
|
|
sea, where the sand and weeds look up into the gazer's face from a
|
|
depth of tranquil water, and the sea-birds, screaming and flickering
|
|
from the ruined crags, alone disturb the silence and the sunshine.
|
|
One such place has impressed itself on my memory beyond all others.
|
|
On a rock by the water's edge, old fighting men of the Norse breed
|
|
had planted a double castle; the two stood wall to wall like semi-
|
|
detached villas; and yet feud had run so high between their owners,
|
|
that one, from out of a window, shot the other as he stood in his own
|
|
doorway. There is something in the juxtaposition of these two
|
|
enemies full of tragic irony. It is grim to think of bearded men and
|
|
bitter women taking hateful counsel together about the two hall-fires
|
|
at night, when the sea boomed against the foundations and the wild
|
|
winter wind was loose over the battlements. And in the study we may
|
|
reconstruct for ourselves some pale figure of what life then was.
|
|
Not so when we are there; when we are there such thoughts come to us
|
|
only to intensify a contrary impression, and association is turned
|
|
against itself. I remember walking thither three afternoons in
|
|
succession, my eyes weary with being set against the wind, and how,
|
|
dropping suddenly over the edge of the down, I found myself in a new
|
|
world of warmth and shelter. The wind, from which I had escaped, 'as
|
|
from an enemy,' was seemingly quite local. It carried no clouds with
|
|
it, and came from such a quarter that it did not trouble the sea
|
|
within view. The two castles, black and ruinous as the rocks about
|
|
them, were still distinguishable from these by something more
|
|
insecure and fantastic in the outline, something that the last storm
|
|
had left imminent and the next would demolish entirely. It would be
|
|
difficult to render in words the sense of peace that took possession
|
|
of me on these three afternoons. It was helped out, as I have said,
|
|
by the contrast. The shore was battered and bemauled by previous
|
|
tempests; I had the memory at heart of the insane strife of the
|
|
pigmies who had erected these two castles and lived in them in mutual
|
|
distrust and enmity, and knew I had only to put my head out of this
|
|
little cup of shelter to find the hard wind blowing in my eyes; and
|
|
yet there were the two great tracts of motionless blue air and
|
|
peaceful sea looking on, unconcerned and apart, at the turmoil of the
|
|
present moment and the memorials of the precarious past. There is
|
|
ever something transitory and fretful in the impression of a high
|
|
wind under a cloudless sky; it seems to have no root in the
|
|
constitution of things; it must speedily begin to faint and wither
|
|
away like a cut flower. And on those days the thought of the wind
|
|
and the thought of human life came very near together in my mind.
|
|
Our noisy years did indeed seem moments in the being of the eternal
|
|
silence; and the wind, in the face of that great field of stationary
|
|
blue, was as the wind of a butterfly's wing. The placidity of the
|
|
sea was a thing likewise to be remembered. Shelley speaks of the sea
|
|
as 'hungering for calm,' and in this place one learned to understand
|
|
the phrase. Looking down into these green waters from the broken
|
|
edge of the rock, or swimming leisurely in the sunshine, it seemed to
|
|
me that they were enjoying their own tranquillity; and when now and
|
|
again it was disturbed by a wind ripple on the surface, or the quick
|
|
black passage of a fish far below, they settled back again (one could
|
|
fancy) with relief.
|
|
|
|
On shore too, in the little nook of shelter, everything was so
|
|
subdued and still that the least particular struck in me a
|
|
pleasurable surprise. The desultory crackling of the whin-pods in
|
|
the afternoon sun usurped the ear. The hot, sweet breath of the
|
|
bank, that had been saturated all day long with sunshine, and now
|
|
exhaled it into my face, was like the breath of a fellow-creature. I
|
|
remember that I was haunted by two lines of French verse; in some
|
|
dumb way they seemed to fit my surroundings and give expression to
|
|
the contentment that was in me, and I kept repeating to myself -
|
|
|
|
'Mon coeur est un luth suspendu,
|
|
Sitot qu'on le touche, il resonne.'
|
|
|
|
I can give no reason why these lines came to me at this time; and for
|
|
that very cause I repeat them here. For all I know, they may serve
|
|
to complete the impression in the mind of the reader, as they were
|
|
certainly a part of it for me.
|
|
|
|
And this happened to me in the place of all others where I liked
|
|
least to stay. When I think of it I grow ashamed of my own
|
|
ingratitude. 'Out of the strong came forth sweetness.' There, in
|
|
the bleak and gusty North, I received, perhaps, my strongest
|
|
impression of peace. I saw the sea to be great and calm; and the
|
|
earth, in that little corner, was all alive and friendly to me. So,
|
|
wherever a man is, he will find something to please and pacify him:
|
|
in the town he will meet pleasant faces of men and women, and see
|
|
beautiful flowers at a window, or hear a cage-bird singing at the
|
|
corner of the gloomiest street; and for the country, there is no
|
|
country without some amenity - let him only look for it in the right
|
|
spirit, and he will surely find.
|
|
|
|
End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Essays of Travel by Stevenson
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