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<h2> CHAPTER XVII </h2>
<p>The other day, while looking through a limbo of a drawer wherein have been
cast from time to time a medley of maimed, half-soiled, abortive things,
too unfitted for the paradise of publication, and too good (so my vanity
will have it) for the damnation of the waste-paper basket, I came across,
at the very bottom, the manuscript of the preceding autobiographical
narrative, the last words of which I wrote at Mustapha Superieur three
years ago. At first I carried it about with me, not caring to destroy it
and not knowing what in the world to do with it until, with the malice of
inanimate things, the dirty dog's-eared bundle took to haunting me,
turning up continually in inconvenient places and ever insistently
demanding a new depository. At last I began to look on it with loathing;
and one day in a fit of inspiration, creating the limbo aforesaid, I
hurled the manuscript, as I thought, into everlasting oblivion. I had no
desire to carry on the record of my life any further, and there, in limbo,
it has remained for three years. But the other day I took it out for
reference; and now as I am holiday-making in a certain little backwater of
the world, where it is raining in a most unholiday fashion, it occurs to
me that, as everything has happened to me which is likely to happen
(Heaven knows I want no more excursions and alarums in my life's drama), I
may as well bring the narrative up to date. I therefore take up the
thread, so far as I can, from where I left off.</p>
<p>Lola, having nothing to do in Algiers, which had grown hateful to us both,
accompanied me to London. As, however, the weather was rough, and she was
a very bad sailor, I saw little of her on the voyage. For my own part, I
enjoyed the stormy days, the howling winds and the infuriated waves
dashing impotently over the steamer. They filled me with a sense of
conflict and of amusement. It is always good to see man triumphing over
the murderous forces of nature. It puts one in conceit with one's kind.</p>
<p>At Waterloo I handed Lola over to her maid, who had come to meet her, and,
leaving Rogers in charge of my luggage, I drove homeward in a cab.</p>
<p>It was only as I was crossing Waterloo Bridge and saw the dark mass of the
Houses of Parliament looming on the other side of the river, and the light
in the tower which showed that the House was sitting, that I began to
realise my situation. As exiles in desert lands yearn for green fields, so
yearned I for those green benches. In vain I represented to myself how
often I had yawned on them, how often I had cursed my folly in sitting on
them and listening to empty babble when I might have been dining cosily,
or talking to a pretty woman or listening to a comic opera, or performing
some other useful and soul-satisfying action of the kind; in vain I told
myself what a monument of futility was that building; I longed to be in it
and of it once again. And when I realised that I yearned for the
impossible, my heart was like a stone. For, indeed, I, Simon de Gex, with
London once a toy to my hand, was coming into it now a penniless
adventurer to seek my fortune.</p>
<p>The cab turned into the Strand, which greeted me as affably as a
pandemonium. Motor omnibuses whizzed at me, cabs rattled and jeered at me,
private motors and carriages passed me by in sleek contempt; policemen
regarded me scornfully as, with uplifted hand regulating the traffic, they
held me up; pavements full of people surged along ostentatiously showing
that they did not care a brass farthing for me; the thousands of lights
with their million reflections, from shop fronts, restaurants, theatres,
and illuminated signs glared pitilessly at me. A harsh roar of derision
filled the air, like the bass to the treble of the newsboys who yelled in
my face. I was wearing a fur-lined coat—just the thing a penniless
adventurer would wear. I had a valet attending to my luggage—just
the sort of thing a penniless adventurer would have. I was driving to the
Albany—just the sort of place where a penniless adventurer would
live. And London knew all this—and scoffed at me in stony
heartlessness. The only object that gave me the slightest sympathy was
Nelson on top of his column. He seemed to say, “After all, you <i>can't</i>
feel such a fool and so much out in the cold as I do up here.”</p>
<p>At Piccadilly Circus I found the same atmosphere of hostility. My cab was
blocked in the theatre-going tide, and in neighbouring vehicles I had
glimpses of fair faces above soft wraps and the profiles of moustached
young men in white ties. They assumed an aggravating air of ownership of
the blazing thoroughfare, the only gay and joyous spot in London. I, too,
had owned it once, but now I felt an alien; and the whole spirit of
Piccadilly Circus rammed the sentiment home—I was an alien and an
undesirable alien. I felt even more lost and friendless as I entered the
long, cold arcade (known as the Ropewalk) of the Albany.</p>
<p>I found my sister Agatha waiting for me in the library. I had telegraphed
to her from Southampton. She was expensively dressed in grey silk, and
wore the family diamonds. We exchanged the family kiss and the usual
incoherent greetings of our race. She expressed her delight at my
restoration to health and gave me satisfactory tidings of Tom Durrell, her
husband, of the children, and of our sister Jane. Then she shook her head
at me, and made me feel like a naughty little boy. This I resented. Being
the head of the family, I had always encouraged the deferential attitude
which my sisters, dear right-minded things, had naturally assumed from
babyhood.</p>
<p>“Oh, Simon, what a time you've given us!”</p>
<p>She had never spoken to me like this in her life.</p>
<p>“That's nothing, my dear Agatha,” said I just a bit tartly, “to the time
I've given myself. I'm sorry for you, but I think you ought to be a little
sorry for me.”</p>
<p>“I am. More sorry than I can say. Oh, Simon, how could you?”</p>
<p>“How could I what?” I cried, unwontedly regardless of the refinements of
language.</p>
<p>“Mix yourself up in this dreadful affair?”</p>
<p>“My dear girl,” said I, “if you had got mixed up in a railway collision, I
shouldn't ask you how you managed to do it. I should be sorry for you and
feel your arms and legs and inquire whether you had sustained any internal
injuries.”</p>
<p>She is a pretty, spare woman with a bird-like face and soft brown hair
just turning grey; and as good-hearted a little creature as ever adored
five healthy children and an elderly baronet with disastrous views on
scientific farming.</p>
<p>“Dear old boy,” she said in milder accents, “I didn't mean to be unkind. I
want to be good to you and help you, so much so that I asked Bingley”—Bingley
is my housekeeper—“whether I could stay to dinner.”</p>
<p>“That's good of you—but this magnificence——?”</p>
<p>“I'm going on later to the Foreign Office reception.”</p>
<p>“Then you do still mingle with the great and gorgeous?” I said.</p>
<p>“What do you mean? Why shouldn't I?”</p>
<p>I laughed, suspecting rightly that my sisters' social position had not
been greatly imperilled by the profligacy of their scandal-bespattered
brother.</p>
<p>“What are people saying about me?” I asked suddenly.</p>
<p>She made a helpless gesture. “Can't you guess? You have told us the facts,
and, of course, we believe you; we have done our best to spread abroad the
correct version—but you know what people are. If they're told they
oughtn't to believe the worst, they're disappointed and still go on
believing it so as to comfort themselves.”</p>
<p>“You cynical little wretch!” said I.</p>
<p>“But it's true,” she urged. “And, after all, even if they were well
disposed, the correct version makes considerable demands on their faith.
Even Letty Farfax—”</p>
<p>“I know! I know!” said I. “Letty Farfax is typical. She would love to be
on the side of the angels, but as she wouldn't meet the best people there,
she ranges herself with the other party.”</p>
<p>Presently we dined, and during the meal, when the servants happened to be
out of the room, we continued, snippet-wise, the inconclusive
conversation. Like a good sister Agatha had come to cheer a lonely and
much abused man; like a daughter of Eve she had also come to find out as
much as she possibly could.</p>
<p>“I think I must tell you something which you ought to know,” she said.
“It's all over the town that you stole the lady from Dale Kynnersley.”</p>
<p>“If I did,” said I, “it was at his mother's earnest entreaty. You can tell
folks that. You can also tell them Madame Brandt is not the kind of woman
to be stolen by one man from another. She is a thoroughly virtuous, good,
and noble woman, and there's not a creature living who wouldn't be
honoured by her friendship.”</p>
<p>As I made this announcement with an impetuosity which reminded me (with a
twinge of remorse) of poor Dale's dithyrambics, Agatha shot at me a quick
glance of apprehension.</p>
<p>“But, my dear Simon, she used to act in a circus with a horse!”</p>
<p>“I fail to see,” said I, growing angry, “how the horse could have imbued
her with depravity, and I'm given to understand that the tone of the
circus is not quite what it used to be in the days of the Empress
Theodora.”</p>
<p>A ripple passed over Agatha's bare shoulders, which I knew to be a
suppressed shrug.</p>
<p>“I suppose men and women look at these things differently,” she remarked,
and from the stiffness of her tone I divined that the idea of moral
qualities lurking in the nature of Lola Brandt occasioned her considerable
displeasure.</p>
<p>“I hope——” She paused. There was another ripple. “No. I had
better not say it. It's none of my business, after all.”</p>
<p>“I don't think it is, my dear,” said I.</p>
<p>Rogers bringing in the cutlets ended the snippet of talk.</p>
<p>It was not the cheeriest of dinners. I took advantage of the next interval
of quiet to inquire after Dale. I learned that the poor boy had almost
collapsed after the election and was now yachting with young Lord
Essendale somewhere about the Hebrides. Agatha had not seen him, but Lady
Kynnersley had called on her one day in a distracted frame of mind,
bitterly reproaching me for the unhappiness of her son. I should never
have suspected that such fierce maternal love could burn beneath Lady
Kynnersley's granite exterior. She accused me of treachery towards Dale
and, most illogically, of dishonourable conduct towards herself.</p>
<p>“She said things about you,” said Agatha, “for which, even if they were
true, I couldn't forgive her. So that's an end of that friendship. Indeed,
it has been very difficult, Simon,” she continued, “to keep up with our
common friends. It has placed us in the most painful and delicate
position. And now you're back, I'm afraid it will be worse.”</p>
<p>Thus under all Agatha's affection there ran the general hostility of
London. Guilty or not, I had offended her in her most deeply rooted
susceptibilities, and as yet she only knew half the imbroglio in which I
was enmeshed. Over coffee, however, she began to take a more optimistic
view of affairs.</p>
<p>“After all, you'll be able to live it down,” she said with a cheerful air
of patronage. “People soon forget. Before the year is out you'll be going
about just as usual, and at the General Election you'll find a seat
somewhere.”</p>
<p>I informed her that I had given up politics. What then, she asked, would I
do for an occupation?</p>
<p>“Work for my living,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Work?” She arched her eyebrows, as if it were the most extraordinary
thing a man could do. “What kind of work?”</p>
<p>“Road-sweeping or tax-collecting or envelope-addressing.”</p>
<p>She selected a cigarette from the silver box in front of her, and did not
reply until she had lit it and inhaled a puff or two.</p>
<p>“I wish you wouldn't be so flippant, Simon.”</p>
<p>From this remark I inferred that I still was in the criminal dock before
this lady Chief Justice. I smiled at the airs the little woman gave
herself now that I was no longer the impeccable and irreproachable
dictator of the family. Mine was the experience of every fallen tyrant
since the world began.</p>
<p>“My dear Agatha, I've had enough shocks during the last few weeks to knock
the flippancy out of a Congregational minister. In November I was
condemned to die within six months. The sentence was final and absolute. I
thought I would do the kind of good one can't do with a lifetime in front
of one, and I wasted all my substance in riotous giving. In the elegant
phraseology of high society I am stone-broke. As my training has not
fitted me to earn my living in high-falutin ways, I must earn it in some
humble capacity. Therefore, if you see me call at your house for the water
rate, you'll understand that I am driven to that expedient by necessity
and not by degradation.”</p>
<p>Naturally I had to elaborate this succinct statement before my sister
could understand its full significance. Then dismay overwhelmed her.
Surely something could be done. The fortunes of Jane and herself were at
my disposal to set me on my feet again. We were brother and sisters; what
was theirs was mine; they couldn't see me starve. I thanked her for her
affection—the dear creatures would unhesitatingly have let me play
ducks and drakes with their money, but I explained that though poor, I was
still proud and prized the independence of the tax-collector above the
position of the pensioner of Love's bounty.</p>
<p>“Tom must get you something to do,” she declared.</p>
<p>“Tom must do nothing of the kind. Let me say that once and for all,” I
returned peremptorily. “I've made my position clear to you, because you're
my sister and you ought to be spared any further misinterpretation of my
actions. But to have you dear people intriguing after billets for me would
be intolerable.”</p>
<p>“But what are you going to <i>do</i>?” she cried, wringing her hands.</p>
<p>“I'm going for my first omnibus ride to-morrow,” said I heroically.</p>
<p>Upon which assertion Rogers entered announcing that her ladyship's
carriage had arrived. A while later I accompanied her downstairs and along
the arcade.</p>
<p>“I shall be so miserable, thinking of you, poor old boy,” she said
affectionately, as she bade me good-bye.</p>
<p>“Don't, I am going to enjoy myself for the first time in my life.”</p>
<p>These were “prave 'orts,” but I felt doleful enough when I re-entered the
chambers where I had lived in uncomplaining luxury for fourteen years.</p>
<p>“There's no help for it,” I murmured. “I must get rid of the remainder of
my lease, sell my books and pictures and other more or less expensive
household goods, dismiss Rogers and Bingley, and go and live on thirty
shillings a week in a Bloomsbury boarding-house. I think,” I continued,
regarding myself in the Queen Anne mirror over the mantelpiece, “I think
that it will better harmonise with my fallen fortunes if I refrain from
waxing the ends of my moustache. There ought to be a modest droop about
the moustache of a tax-collector.”</p>
<p>The next morning I gave my servants a months' notice. Rogers, who had been
with me for many years, behaved in the correctest manner. He neither
offered to lend me his modest savings nor to work for me for no wages. He
expressed his deep regret at leaving my service and his confidence that I
would give him a good character. Bingley wept after the way of women.
There was also a shadowy housemaidy young person in a cap who used to make
meteoric appearances and whom I left to the diplomacy of Bingley. These
dismal rites performed, I put my chambers into the hands of a house agent
and interviewed a firm of auctioneers with reference to the sale. It was
all exceedingly unpleasant. The agent was so anxious to let my chambers,
the auctioneer so delighted at the chance of selling my effects, that I
felt myself forthwith turned neck and crop out of doors. It was a bright
morning in early spring, with a satirical touch of hope in the air.
London, no longer to be my London, maintained its hostile attitude to me.
If any one had prophesied that I should be a stranger in Piccadilly, I
should have laughed aloud. Yet I was.</p>
<p>Walking moodily up Saint James's street I met the omniscient and expansive
Renniker. He gave me a curt nod and a “How d'ye do?” and passed on. I felt
savagely disposed to slash his jaunty silk hat off with my walking-stick.
A few months before he would have rushed effusively into my arms and
bedaubed me with miscellaneous inaccuracies of information. At first I was
furiously indignant. Then I laughed, and swinging my stick, nearly wreaked
my vengeance on a harmless elderly gentleman.</p>
<p>It was my first experience of social ostracism. Although I curled a
contumelious lip, I smarted under the indignity. It was all very well to
say proudly “<i>io son' io</i>”; but <i>io</i> used to be a person of some
importance who was not cavalierly “how d'ye do'd” by creatures like
Renniker. This and the chance encounters of the next few weeks gave me
furiously to think. I knew that in one respect my sister Agatha was right.
These good folks who shied now at the stains of murder with which my
reputation was soiled would in time get used to them and eventually forget
them altogether. But I reflected that I should not forget, and I
determined that I should not be admitted on sufferance, as at first I
should have to be admitted, into any man's club or any woman's
drawing-room.</p>
<p>One day Colonel Ellerton, Maisie Ellerton's father, called on me. He used
to be my very good friend; we sat on the same side of the House and voted
together on innumerable occasions in perfect sympathy and common lack of
conviction. He was cordial enough, congratulated me on my marvellous
restoration to health, deplored my absence from Parliamentary life, and
then began to talk confusedly of Russia. It took a little perspicacity to
see that something was weighing on the good man's mind; something he had
come to say and for his honest life could not get out. His plight became
more pitiable as the interview proceeded, and when he rose to go, he grew
as red as a turkey-cock and began to sputter. I went to his rescue.</p>
<p>“It's very kind of you to have come to see me, Ellerton,” I said, “but if
I don't call yet awhile to pay my respects to your wife, I hope you'll
understand, and not attribute it to discourtesy.”</p>
<p>I have never seen relief so clearly depicted on a human countenance. He
drew a long breath and instinctively passed his handkerchief over his
forehead. Then he grasped my hand.</p>
<p>“My dear fellow,” he cried, “of course we'll understand. It was a shocking
affair—terrible for you. My wife and I were quite bowled over by
it.”</p>
<p>I did not attempt to clear myself. What was the use? Every man denies
these things as a matter of course, and as a matter of course nobody
believes him.</p>
<p>Once I ran across Elphin Montgomery, a mysterious personage behind many
musical comedy enterprises. He is jewelled all over like a first-class
Hindoo idol, and is treated as a god in fashionable restaurants, where he
entertains riff-raff at sumptuous banquets. I had some slight acquaintance
with the fellow, but he greeted me as though I were a long lost intimate—his
heavy sensual face swagged in smiles—and invited me to a supper
party. I declined with courtesy and walked away in fury. He would not have
presumed to ask me to meet his riff-raff before I became disgustingly and
I suppose to some minds, fascinatingly, notorious. But now I was
hail-fellow-well-met with him, a bird of his own feather, a rogue of his
own kidney, to whom he threw open the gates of his bediamonded and
befrilled Alsatia. A pestilential fellow! As if I would mortgage my
birthright for such a mess of pottage.</p>
<p>So I stiffened and bade Society high and low go packing. I would neither
seek mine own people, nor allow myself to be sought by Elphin
Montgomery's. I enwrapped myself in a fine garment of defiance. My sister
Jane, who was harder and more worldly-minded than Agatha, would have had
me don a helmet of brass and a breastplate of rhinoceros hide and force my
way through reluctant portals; but Agatha agreed with me, clinging,
however, to the hope that time would not only reconcile Society to me, but
would also reconcile me to Society.</p>
<p>“If the hope comforts you, my dear Agatha,” said I, “by all means cherish
it. In the meantime, allow me to observe that the character of Ishmael is
eminently suited to the profession of tax-collecting.”</p>
<p>During these early days of my return the one person with whom I had no
argument was Lola. She soothed where others scratched, and stimulated
where others goaded. The intimacy of my convalescence continued. At first
I acquainted her, as far as was reasonably necessary, with my change of
fortune, and accepted her offer to find me less expensive quarters. The
devoted woman personally inspected every flat in London, with that
insistence of which masculine patience is incapable, and eventually
decided on a tiny bachelor suite somewhere in the clouds over a block of
flats in Victoria Street where the service is included in the rent. Into
this I moved with such of my furniture as I withdrew from the auctioneer's
hammer, and there I prepared to stay until necessity should drive me to
the Bloomsbury boarding-house. I thought I would graduate my descent.
Before I moved, however, she came to the Albany for the first and only
time to see the splendour I was about to quit. In a modest way it was
splendour. My chambers were really a large double flat to the tasteful
furnishing of which I had devoted the thought and interest of many years.
She went with me through the rooms. The dining-room was all Chippendale,
each piece a long-coveted and hunted treasure; the library old oak; the
drawing-room a comfortable and cunning medley. There were bits of old
china, pieces of tapestry, some rare prints, my choice collection of
mezzotints, a picture or two of value—one a Lancret, a very dear
possession. And there were my books—once I had a passion for rare
bindings. Every thing had to me a personal significance, and I hated the
idea of surrender more than I dared to confess even to myself. But I said
to Lola:</p>
<p>“Vanity of vanities! All things expensive are vanity!”</p>
<p>Her eyes glistened and she slipped her arm through mine and patted the
back of my hand.</p>
<p>“If you talk like that I shall cry and make a fool of myself,” she said in
a broken manner.</p>
<p>It is not so much the thing that is done or the thing that is said that
matters, but the way of doing or saying it. In the commonplace pat on the
hand, in the break in the commonplace words there was something that went
straight to my heart. I squeezed her arm and whispered:</p>
<p>“Thank you, dear.”</p>
<p>This sympathy so sure and yet so delicately conveyed was mine for the
trouble of mounting the stairs that led to her drawing-room in Cadogan
Gardens. She seemed to be watching my heart the whole time, so that
without my asking, without my knowledge even, she could touch each sore
spot as it appeared, with the healing finger. For herself she made no
claims, and because she did not in any way declare herself to be unhappy,
I, after the manner of men, took her happiness for granted. For lives
there a man who does not believe that an uncomplaining woman has nothing
to complain of? It is his masculine prerogative of density. Besides, does
not he himself when hurt bellow like a bull? Why, he argues, should not
wounded woman do the same? So, when I wanted companionship, I used to sit
in the familiar room and make Adolphus, the Chow dog, shoulder arms with
the poker, and gossip restfully with Lola, who sprawled in her old
languorous, loose-limbed way among the cushions of her easy chair.
Gradually my habitual reserve melted from me, and at last I gave her my
whole confidence, telling her of my disastrous pursuit of eumoiriety, of
Eleanor Faversham, of the attitude of Society, in fact, of most of what I
have set down in the preceding pages. She was greatly interested in
everything, especially in Eleanor Faversham. She wanted to know the colour
of her eyes and hair and how she dressed. Women are odd creatures.</p>
<p>The weeks passed.</p>
<p>Besides ministering to my dilapidated spirit, Lola found occupation in
looking after the cattery of Anastasius Papadopoulos, which the little man
had left in the charge of his pupil and assistant, Quast. This Quast
apparently was a faithful, stolid, but unintelligent and incapable German
who had remained loyally at his post until Lola found him there in a state
of semi-starvation. The sum of money with which Anastasius had provided
him had been eked out to the last farthing. The cats were in a pitiable
condition. Quast, in despair, was trying to make up his dull mind whether
to sell them or eat them. Lola with superb feminine disregard of legal
rights, annexed the whole cattery, maintained Quast in his position of
pupil and assistant and informed the landlord that she would be
responsible for the rent. Then she set to work to bring the cats into
their proper condition of sleekness, and, that done, to put them through a
systematic course of training. They had been thoroughly demoralised, she
declared, under Quast's maladministration, and had almost degenerated into
the unhistrionic pussies of domestic life. As for Hephaestus, the great
ferocious tom, he was more like an insane tiger than a cat. He flew at the
gate over which he used to jump, and clawed and bit it to matchwood, and
after spitting in fury at the blazing hoop, sprang at the unhappy Quast as
if he had been the contriver of the indignities to which he was being
subjected. These tales of feline backsliding I used to hear from Lola, and
when I asked her why she devoted her energies to the unproductive
education of the uninspiring animals, she would shrug her shoulders and
regard me with a Giaconda smile.</p>
<p>“In the first place it amuses me. You seem to forget I'm a <i>dompteuse</i>,
a tamer of beasts; it's my profession, I was trained to it. It's the only
thing I can do, and it's good to feel that I haven't lost my power. It's
odd, but I feel a different woman when I'm impressing my will on these
wretched cats. You must come one of these days and see a performance, when
I've got them ship-shape. They'll astonish you. And then,” she would add,
“I can write to Anastasius and tell him how his beloved cats are getting
on.”</p>
<p>Well, it was an interest in her life which, Heaven knows, was not crowded
with exciting incidents. Now that I can look back on these things with a
philosophic eye, I can imagine no drearier existence than that of a
friendless, unoccupied woman in a flat in Cadogan Gardens. At that time, I
did not realise this as completely as I might have done. Because her old
surgeon friend, Sir Joshua Oldfield, now and then took her out to dinner,
I considered she was leading a cheerful if not a merry life. I smiled
indulgently at Lola's devotion to the cats and congratulated her on having
found another means whereby to beguile the <i>tedium vitae</i> which is
the arch-enemy of content.</p>
<p>“I wish I could find such a means myself,” said I.</p>
<p>I not only had the wish, but the imperative need to so do. To stand like
Ajax defying the lightning is magnificent, but as a continuous avocation
it is wearisome and unprofitable, especially if carried on in a tiny
bachelor suite, an eyrie of a place, at the top of a block of flats in
Victoria Street. Indeed, if I did not add soon to the meagre remains of my
fortune, I should not be able to afford the luxury of the bachelor suite.
Conscious of this, I left the lightning alone, after a last denunciatory
shake of the fist, and descended into the busy ways of men to look for
work.</p>
<p>Thus I entered on the second stage of my career—that of a soldier of
Fortune. At first I was doubtful as to what path to glory and
bread-and-butter I could carve out for myself. Hitherto I had been
Fortune's darling instead of her mercenary, and she had most politely
carved out my paths for me, until she had played her jade's trick and left
me in the ditch. Now things were different. I stood alone, ironical,
ambitionless, still questioning the utility of human effort, yet
determined to play the game of life to its bitter end. What could I do?</p>
<p>It is true that I had been called to the Bar in my tentative youth, while
I drafted documents for my betters to pull to pieces and rewrite at the
Foreign Office; but I had never seen a brief, and my memories of Gaius,
Justinian, Williams's “Real Property,” and Austin's “Jurisprudence,” were
as nebulous as those of the Differential Calculus over whose facetiae I
had pondered during my schooldays. The law was as closed to me as
medicine. I had no profession. I therefore drifted into the one pursuit
for which my training had qualified me, namely, political journalism. I
had written much, in my amateur way, during my ten years' membership of
Parliament; why, I hardly know—not because I needed money, not
because I had thoughts which I burned to express, and certainly not
through vain desire of notoriety. Perhaps the motive was twofold, an
ingrained Puckish delight in the incongruous—it seemed incongruous
for an airy epicurean like myself to spend stodgy hours writing stodgier
articles on Pauper Lunacy and Poor Law Administration—and the same
inherited sense of gentlemanly obligation to do something for one's king
and country as made my ancestors, whether they liked it or not, clothe
themselves in uncomfortable iron garments and go about fighting other
gentlemen similarly clad, to their own great personal danger. At any rate,
it complemented my work at St. Stephen's, and doubtless contributed to a
reputation in the House which I did not gain through my oratory. I could
therefore bring to editors the stock-in-trade of a fairly accurate
knowledge of current political issues, an appreciation of personalities,
and a philosophical subrident estimate of the bubbles that are for ever
rising on the political surface. I found Finch of <i>The Universal Review</i>,
James of <i>The Weekly</i>, and one or two others more than willing to
give me employment. I put my pen also at the disposal of Raggles. It was
as uplifting and about as mechanical as tax-collecting; but it involved
less physical exertion and less unpleasant contact with my fellow
creatures. I could also keep the ends of my moustache waxed, which was a
great consolation.</p>
<p>My sister Agatha commended my courage and energy, and Lola read my
articles with a glowing enthusiasm, which compensated for lack of exact
understanding; but I was not proud of my position. It is one thing to
stand at the top of a marble staircase and in a debonair, jesting fashion
to fling insincere convictions to a recipient world. It is another to sell
the same worthless commodity for money. I began, to my curious discomfort,
to suspect that life had a meaning after all.</p>
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