<h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER II</h2></div>
<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c009'>Gumbril senior occupied a tall, narrow-shouldered
and rachitic house in a little obscure
square not far from Paddington. There were
five floors, and a basement with beetles, and nearly a
hundred stairs, which shook when any one ran too rudely
down them. It was a prematurely old and decaying house
in a decaying quarter. The square in which it stood was
steadily coming down in the world. The houses which a
few years ago had all been occupied by respectable families,
were now split up into squalid little maisonnettes, and from
the neighbouring slums, which along with most other
unpleasant things the old bourgeois families had been able
to ignore, invading bands of children came to sport on
the once sacred pavements.</p>
<p class='c010'>Mr. Gumbril was almost the last survivor of the old
inhabitants. He liked his house, and he liked his square.
Social decadence had not affected the fourteen plane trees
which adorned its little garden, and the gambols of the dirty
children did not disturb the starlings who came, evening
by evening in summer-time, to roost in their branches.</p>
<p class='c010'>On fine evenings he used to sit out on his balcony waiting
for the coming of the birds. And just at sunset, when the
sky was most golden, there would be a twittering overhead,
and the black, innumerable flocks of starlings would come
sweeping across on the way from their daily haunts to their
roosting-places, chosen so capriciously among the tree-planted
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>squares and gardens of the city and so tenaciously
retained, year after year, to the exclusion of every other
place. Why his fourteen plane trees should have been
chosen, Mr. Gumbril could never imagine. There were
plenty of larger and more umbrageous gardens all round;
but they remained birdless, while every evening, from the
larger flocks, a faithful legion detached itself to settle
clamorously among his trees. They sat and chattered
till the sun went down and twilight was past, with intervals
every now and then of silence that fell suddenly and
inexplicably on all the birds at once, lasted through a few
seconds of thrilling suspense, to end as suddenly and senselessly
in an outburst of the same loud and simultaneous
conversation.</p>
<p class='c010'>The starlings were Mr. Gumbril’s most affectionately
cherished friends; sitting out on his balcony to watch and
listen to them, he had caught at the shut of treacherous
evenings many colds and chills on the liver, he had laid
up for himself many painful hours of rheumatism. These
little accidents did nothing, however, to damp his affection
for the birds; and still on every evening that could possibly
be called fine, he was always to be seen in the twilight,
sitting on the balcony, gazing up, round-spectacled and
rapt, at the fourteen plane trees. The breezes stirred in
his grey hair, tossing it up in long, light wisps that fell
across his forehead and over his spectacles; and then he
would shake his head impatiently, and the bony hand would
be freed for a moment from its unceasing combing and
clutching of the sparse grey beard to push back the strayed
tendrils, to smooth and reduce to order the whole ruffled
head. The birds chattered on, the hand went back to its
clutching and combing; once more the wind blew;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>darkness came down, and the gas lamps round the square
lit up the outer leaves of the plane trees, touched the privet
bushes inside the railings with an emerald light; behind
them was impenetrable night; instead of shorn grass and
bedded geraniums there was mystery, there were endless
depths. And the birds at last were silent.</p>
<p class='c010'>Mr. Gumbril would get up from his iron chair, stretch
his arms and his stiff cold legs and go in through the French
window to work. The birds were his diversion; when
they were silent, it was time to think of serious matters.</p>
<p class='c010'>To-night, however, he was not working; for always on
Sunday evenings his old friend Porteous came to dine and
talk. Breaking in unexpectedly at midnight, Gumbril
Junior found them sitting in front of the gas fire in his
father’s study.</p>
<p class='c010'>“My dear fellow, what on earth are you doing here?”
Gumbril Senior jumped up excitedly at his son’s entrance.
The light silky hair floated up with the movement, turned
for a moment into a silver aureole, then subsided again.
Mr. Porteous stayed where he was, calm, solid and undishevelled
as a seated pillar-box. He wore a monocle on a
black ribbon, a black stock tie that revealed above its double
folds a quarter of an inch of stiff white collar, a double-breasted
black coat, a pair of pale checked trousers and
patent leather boots with cloth tops. Mr. Porteous was
very particular about his appearance. Meeting him casually
for the first time, one would not have guessed that Mr.
Porteous was an expert on Late Latin poetry; and he did
not mean that you should guess. Thin-limbed, bent and
agile in his loose, crumpled clothes, Gumbril Senior had
the air, beside Mr. Porteous, of a strangely animated
scarecrow.</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>“What on earth?” the old gentleman repeated his question.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Junior shrugged his shoulders. “I was bored,
I decided to cease being a schoolmaster.” He spoke with a
fine airy assumption of carelessness. “How are you, Mr.
Porteous?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Thank you, invariably well.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well, well,” said Gumbril Senior, sitting down again,
“I must say I’m not surprised. I’m only surprised that
you stood it, not being a born pedagogue, for as long as you
did. What ever induced you to think of turning usher,
I can’t imagine.” He looked at his son first through his
spectacles, then over the top of them; the motives of the
boy’s conduct revealed themselves to neither vision.</p>
<p class='c010'>“What else was there for me to do?” asked Gumbril
Junior, pulling up a chair towards the fire. “You gave me
a pedagogue’s education and washed your hands of me.
No opportunities, no openings. I had no alternative.
And now you reproach me.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mr. Gumbril made an impatient gesture. “You’re
talking nonsense,” he said. “The only point of the kind of
education you had is this, it gives a young man leisure to
find out what he’s interested in. You apparently weren’t
sufficiently interested in anything——”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I am interested in everything,” interrupted Gumbril
Junior.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Which comes to the same thing,” said his father parenthetically,
“as being interested in nothing.” And he went
on from the point at which he had been interrupted. “You
weren’t sufficiently interested in anything to want to devote
yourself to it. That was why you sought the last refuge
of feeble minds with classical educations, you became a
schoolmaster.”</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>“Come, come,” said Mr. Porteous. “I do a little teaching
myself; I must stand up for the profession.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Senior let go his beard and brushed back the
hair that the wind of his own vehemence had brought
tumbling into his eyes. “I don’t denigrate the profession,”
he said. “Not at all. It would be an excellent
profession if every one who went into it were as much
interested in teaching as you are in your job, Porteous, or
I in mine. It’s these undecided creatures like Theodore,
who ruin it by drifting in. Until all teachers are geniuses
and enthusiasts, nobody will learn anything, except what
they teach themselves.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Still,” said Mr. Porteous, “I wish I hadn’t had to
learn so much by myself. I wasted a lot of time finding
out how to set to work and where to discover what I
wanted.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Junior was lighting his pipe. “I have come to
the conclusion,” he said, speaking in little jerks between
each suck of the flame into the bowl, “that most people ...
ought never ... to be taught anything at all.”
He threw away the match. “Lord have mercy upon us,
they’re dogs. What’s the use of teaching them anything
except to behave well, to work and obey. Facts, theories,
the truth about the universe—what good are those to them?
Teach them to understand—why, it only confuses them;
makes them lose hold of the simple real appearance. Not
more than one in a hundred can get any good out of a
scientific or literary education.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“And you’re one of the ones?” asked his father.</p>
<p class='c010'>“That goes without saying,” Gumbril Junior replied.</p>
<p class='c010'>“I think you mayn’t be so far wrong,” said Mr. Porteous.
“When I think of my own children, for example....”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>he sighed, “I thought they’d be interested in the things
that interested me; they don’t seem to be interested in
anything but behaving like little apes—not very anthropoid
ones either, for that matter. At my eldest boy’s age I used
to sit up most of the night reading Latin texts. He sits
up—or rather stands, reels, trots up—dancing and drinking.
Do you remember St. Bernard? ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vigilet tota nocte
luxuriosus non solum patienter</span>’ (the ascetic and the scholar
only watch patiently); ‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">sed et libenter, ut suam expleat
voluptatem</span>.’ What the wise man does out of a sense of
duty, the fool does for fun. And I’ve tried very hard to
make him like Latin.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well in any case,” said Gumbril Junior, “you didn’t
try to feed him on history. That’s the real unforgivable
sin. And that’s what I’ve been doing, up till this evening—encouraging
boys of fifteen and sixteen to specialize in
history, hours and hours a week, making them read bad
writers’ generalizations about subjects on which only our
ignorance allows us to generalize; teaching them to reproduce
these generalizations in horrid little ‘Essays’
of their own; rotting their minds, in fact, with a diet of
soft vagueness; scandalous it was. If these creatures are
to be taught anything, it should be something hard and
definite. Latin—that’s excellent. Mathematics, physical
science. Let them read history for amusement, certainly.
But for Heaven’s sake don’t make it the staple of education!”
Gumbril Junior spoke with the greatest earnestness,
as though he were an inspector of schools, making a
report. It was a subject on which, at the moment, he felt
very profoundly; he felt profoundly on all subjects while he
was talking about them. “I wrote a long letter to the
Headmaster about the teaching of history this evening,”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>he added. “It’s most important.” He shook his head
thoughtfully, “Most important.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Hora novissima, tempora pessimma sunt, vigilemus</span>,”
said Mr. Porteous, in the words of St. Peter Damianus.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Very true,” Gumbril Senior applauded. “And talking
about bad times, Theodore, what do you propose to do now,
may I ask?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I mean to begin by making some money.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Senior put his hands on his knees, bent forward
and laughed, “Ha, ha, ha!” He had a profound bell-like
laugh that was like the croaking of a very large and melodious
frog. “You won’t,” he said, and shook his head till the
hair fell into his eyes. “You won’t,” and he laughed again.</p>
<p class='c010'>“To make money,” said Mr. Porteous, “one must be
really interested in money.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“And he’s not,” said Gumbril Senior. “None of us are.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“When I was still uncommonly hard up,” Mr. Porteous
continued, “we used to lodge in the same house with a
Russian Jew, who was a furrier. That man was interested
in money, if you like. It was a passion, an enthusiasm, an
ideal. He could have led a comfortable, easy life, and still
have made enough to put by something for his old age.
But for his high abstract ideal of money he suffered more
than Michelangelo ever suffered for his art. He used to
work nineteen hours a day, and the other five he slept,
lying under his bench, in the dirt, breathing into his lungs
the stink and the broken hairs. He is now very rich indeed
and does nothing with his money, doesn’t want to do
anything, doesn’t know what one does do with it. He
desires neither power nor pleasure. His desire for lucre
is purely disinterested. He reminds me of Browning’s
‘Grammarian.’ I have a great admiration for him.”</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>Mr. Porteous’s own passion had been for the poems of
Notker Balbulus and St. Bernard. It had taken him nearly
twenty years to get himself and his family out of the house
where the Russian furrier used to lodge. But Notker was
worth it, he used to say; Notker was worth even the
weariness and the pallor of a wife who worked beyond her
strength, even the shabbiness of ill-dressed and none too
well-fed children. He had readjusted his monocle and
gone on. But there had been occasions when it needed
more than the monocle and the careful, distinguished
clothes to keep up his <em>morale</em>. Still, those times were over
now; Notker had brought him at last a kind of fame—even,
indirectly, a certain small prosperity.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Senior turned once more towards his son.
“And how do you propose,” he asked, “to make this
money?”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Junior explained. He had thought it all out
in the cab on the way from the station. “It came to me
this morning,” he said, “in chapel, during service.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Monstrous,” put in Gumbril Senior, with a genuine
indignation, “monstrous these mediæval survivals in
schools! Chapel, indeed!”</p>
<p class='c010'>“It came,” Gumbril Junior went on, “like an apocalypse,
suddenly, like a divine inspiration. A grand and luminous
idea came to me—the idea of Gumbril’s Patent Small-Clothes.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“And what are Gumbril’s Patent Small-Clothes?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“A boon to those whose occupation is sedentary”;
Gumbril Junior had already composed his prospectus and his
first advertisements: “a comfort to all travellers, civilization’s
substitute for steatopygism, indispensable to first-nighters,
the concert-goers’ friend, the....”</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lectulus Dei floridus</span>,” intoned Mr. Porteous.</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c011'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>“<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Gazophylacium Ecclesiæ,</span></div>
<div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cithara benesonans Dei,</span></div>
<div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cymbalum jubilationis Christi,</span></div>
<div class='line'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Promptuarium mysteriorum fidei, ora pro nobis.</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c012'>Your small-clothes sound to me very like one of my old
litanies, Theodore.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“We want scientific descriptions, not litanies,” said
Gumbril Senior. “What <em>are</em> Gumbril’s Patent Small-Clothes?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Scientifically, then,” said Gumbril Junior, “my Patent
Small-Clothes may be described as trousers with a pneumatic
seat, inflateable by means of a tube fitted with a
valve; the whole constructed of stout seamless red rubber,
enclosed between two layers of cloth.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I must say,” said Gumbril Senior on a tone of somewhat
grudging approbation, “I have heard of worse inventions.
You are too stout, Porteous, to be able to appreciate the
idea. We Gumbrils are all a bony lot.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“When I have taken out a patent for my invention,” his
son went on, very business-like and cool, “I shall either sell
it to some capitalist, or I shall exploit it commercially
myself. In either case, I shall make money, which is more,
I may say, than you or any other Gumbril have ever done.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Quite right,” said Gumbril Senior, “quite right”; and
he laughed very cheerfully. “And nor will you. You
can be grateful to your intolerable Aunt Flo for having
left you that three hundred a year. You’ll need it. But
if you really want a capitalist,” he went on, “I have exactly
the man for you. He’s a man who has a mania for buying
Tudor houses and making them more Tudor than they are.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>I’ve pulled half a dozen of the wretched things to pieces
and put them together again differently for him.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“He doesn’t sound much good to me,” said his son.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Ah, but that’s only his vice. Only his amusement.
His business,” Gumbril Senior hesitated.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well, what is his business?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well, it seems to be everything. Patent medicine,
trade newspapers, bankrupt tobacconist’s stock—he’s talked
to me about those and heaps more. He seems to flit like
a butterfly in search of honey, or rather money.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“And he makes it?”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well, he pays my fees and he buys more Tudor houses,
and he gives me luncheons at the Ritz. That’s all I
know.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“Well, there’s no harm in trying.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I’ll write to him,” said Gumbril Senior. “His name
is Boldero. He’ll either laugh at your idea or take it and
give you nothing for it. Still,” he looked at his son over
the top of his spectacles, “if by any conceivable chance
you ever should become rich; if, if, if....” And he
emphasized the remoteness of the conditional by raising
his eyebrows a little higher, by throwing out his hands in a
dubious gesture a little farther at every repetition of the
word, “if—why, then I’ve got exactly the thing for you.
Look at this really delightful little idea I had this afternoon.”
He put his hand in his coat pocket and after some sorting
and sifting produced a sheet of squared paper on which
was roughly drawn the elevation of a house. “For any one
with eight or ten thousand to spend, this would be—this
would be....” Gumbril Senior smoothed his hair and
hesitated, searching for something strong enough to say
of his little idea. “Well, this would be much too good for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>most of the greasy devils who do have eight or ten thousand
to spend.”</p>
<p class='c010'>He passed the sheet to Gumbril Junior, who held it out
so that both Mr. Porteous and himself could look at it.
Gumbril Senior got up from his chair and, standing behind
them, leant over to elucidate and explain.</p>
<p class='c010'>“You see the idea,” he said, anxious lest they should
fail to understand. “A central block of three stories, with
low wings of only one, ending in pavilions with a second
floor. And the flat roofs of the wings are used as gardens—you
see?—protected from the north by a wall. In the
east wing there is the kitchen and the garage, with the
maids’ rooms in the pavilion at the end. The west is a
library, and it has an arcaded loggia along the front. And
instead of a solid superstructure corresponding to the maids’
rooms, there’s a pergola with brick piers. You see? And
in the main block there’s a Spanish sort of balcony along
the whole length at first-floor level; that gives a good
horizontal line. And you get the perpendiculars with
coigns and raised panels. And the roof’s hidden by a
balustrade, and there are balustrades along the open sides
of the roof gardens on the wings. All in brick it is. This
is the garden front; the entrance front will be admirable
too. Do you like it?”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Junior nodded. “Very much,” he said.</p>
<p class='c010'>His father sighed and taking the sketch put it back in his
pocket. “You must hurry up with your ten thousand,”
he said. “And you Porteous, and you. I’ve been waiting
so long to build your splendid house.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Laughing, Mr. Porteous got up from his chair. “And
long, dear Gumbril,” he said, “may you continue to wait.
For my splendid house won’t be built this side of New
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>Jerusalem, and you must go on living a long time yet.
A long, long time,” Mr. Porteous repeated; and carefully
he buttoned up his double-breasted coat, carefully, as
though he were adjusting an instrument of precision, he
took out and replaced his monocle. Then, very erect and
neat, very soldierly and pillar-boxical, he marched towards
the door. “You’ve kept me very late to-night,” he said.
“Unconscionably late.”</p>
<p class='c010'>The front door closed heavily behind Mr. Porteous’s
departure. Gumbril Senior came upstairs again into the
big room on the first floor smoothing down his hair, which
the impetuosity of his ascent had once more disarranged.</p>
<p class='c010'>“That’s a good fellow,” he said of his departed guest, “a
splendid fellow.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“I always admire the monocle,” said Gumbril Junior
irrelevantly. But his father turned the irrelevance into
relevance.</p>
<p class='c010'>“He couldn’t have come through without it, I believe.
It was a symbol, a proud flag. Poverty’s squalid, not fine
at all. The monocle made a kind of difference, you understand.
I’m always so enormously thankful I had a little
money. I couldn’t have stuck it without. It needs
strength, more strength than I’ve got.” He clutched his
beard close under the chin and remained for a moment
pensively silent. “The advantage of Porteous’s line of
business,” he went on at last, reflectively, “is that it can
be carried on by oneself, without collaboration. There’s
no need to appeal to any one outside oneself, or to have
any dealings with other people at all, if one doesn’t want
to. That’s so deplorable about architecture. There’s no
privacy, so to speak; always this horrible jostling with
clients and builders and contractors and people, before one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>can get anything done. It’s really revolting. I’m not
good at people. Most of them I don’t like at all, not at
all,” Mr. Gumbril repeated with vehemence. “I don’t
deal with them very well; it isn’t my business. My business
is architecture. But I don’t often get a chance of practising
it. Not properly.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Senior smiled rather sadly. “Still,” he said,
“I can do something. I have my talent, I have my imagination.
They can’t take those from me. Come and see
what I’ve been doing lately.”</p>
<p class='c010'>He led the way out of the room and mounted, two steps
at a time, towards a higher floor. He opened the door of
what should have been, in a well-ordered house, the Best
Bedroom, and slipped into the darkness.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Don’t rush in,” he called back to his son, “for God’s
sake don’t rush in. You’ll smash something. Wait till
I’ve turned on the light. It’s so like these asinine electricians
to have hidden the switch behind the door like
this.” Gumbril Junior heard him fumbling in the darkness;
there was suddenly light. He stepped in.</p>
<p class='c010'>The only furniture in the room consisted of a couple of
long trestle tables. On these, on the mantelpiece and all
over the floor, were scattered confusedly, like the elements
of a jumbled city, a vast collection of architectural models.
There were cathedrals, there were town halls, universities,
public libraries, there were three or four elegant little
sky-scrapers, there were blocks of offices, huge warehouses,
factories, and finally dozens of magnificent country mansions,
complete with their terraced gardens, their noble
flights of steps, their fountains and ornamental waters
and grandly bridged canals, their little rococo pavilions
and garden houses.</p>
<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>“Aren’t they beautiful?” Gumbril Senior turned
enthusiastically towards his son. His long grey hair floated
wispily about his head, his spectacles flashed, and behind
them his eyes shone with emotion.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Beautiful,” Gumbril Junior agreed.</p>
<p class='c010'>“When you’re really rich,” said his father, “I’ll build
you one of these.” And he pointed to a little village of
Chatsworths clustering, at one end of a long table, round
the dome of a vaster and austerer St. Peter’s. “Look at
this one, for example.” He picked his way nimbly across
the room, seized the little electric reading-lamp that stood
between a railway station and a baptistery on the mantelpiece,
and was back again in an instant, trailing behind him a
long flex that, as it tautened out, twitched one of the crowning
pinnacles off the top of a sky-scraper near the fireplace.
“Look,” he repeated, “look.” He switched on the current,
and moving the lamp back and forth, up and down in front
of the miniature palace. “See the beauty of the light
and shade,” he said. “There, underneath the great,
ponderous cornice, isn’t that fine? And look how splendidly
the pilasters carry up the vertical lines. And then
the solidity of it, the size, the immense, impending bleakness
of it!” He threw up his arms, he turned his eyes
upwards as though standing overwhelmed at the foot of
some huge precipitous façade. The lights and shadows
vacillated wildly through all the city of palaces and domes
as he brandished the lamp in ecstasy above his head.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And then,” he had suddenly stooped down, he was
peering and pointing once more into the details of his
palace, “then there’s the doorway—all florid and rich
with carving. How magnificently and surprisingly it
flowers out of the bare walls! Like the colossal writing of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>Darius, like the figures graven in the bald face of the precipice
over Behistun—unexpected and beautiful and human,
human in the surrounding emptiness.”</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Senior brushed back his hair and turned, smiling,
to look at his son over the top of his spectacles.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Very fine,” Gumbril Junior nodded to him. “But
isn’t the wall a little too blank? You seem to allow very
few windows in this vast palazzo.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“True,” his father replied, “very true.” He sighed.
“I’m afraid this design would hardly do for England. It’s
meant for a place where there’s some sun—where you do
your best to keep the light out, instead of letting it in,
as you have to do here. Windows are the curse of architecture
in this country. Your walls have to be like sieves,
all holes, it’s heart-breaking. If you wanted me to build
you this house, you’d have to live in Barbados or somewhere
like that.”</p>
<p class='c010'>“There’s nothing I should like better,” said Gumbril
Junior.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Another great advantage of sunny countries,” Gumbril
Senior pursued, “is that one can really live like an aristocrat,
in privacy, by oneself. No need to look out on the dirty
world or to let the dirty world look in on you. Here’s
this great house, for example, looking out on the world
through a few dark portholes and a single cavernous doorway.
But look inside.” He held his lamp above the
courtyard that was at the heart of the palace. Gumbril
Junior leaned and looked, like his father. “All the life
looks inwards—into a lovely courtyard, a more than Spanish
<em>patio</em>. Look there at the treble tiers of arcades, the vaulted
cloisters for your cool peripatetic meditations, the central
Triton spouting white water into a marble pool, the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>mosaic work on the floor and flowering up the walls,
brilliant against the white stucco. And there’s the archway
that leads out into the gardens. And now you must
come and have a look at the garden front.”</p>
<p class='c010'>He walked round with his lamp to the other side of the
table. There was suddenly a crash; the wire had twitched
a cathedral from off the table. It lay on the floor in disastrous
ruin as though shattered by some appalling cataclysm.</p>
<p class='c010'>“Hell and death!” said Gumbril Senior in an outburst
of Elizabethan fury. He put down the lamp and ran to
see how irreparable the disaster had been. “They’re so
horribly expensive, these models,” he explained, as he bent
over the ruins. Tenderly he picked up the pieces and
replaced them on the table. “It might have been worse,”
he said at last, brushing the dust off his hands. “Though
I’m afraid that dome will never be quite the same again.”
Picking up the lamp once more, he held it high above his
head and stood looking out, with a melancholy satisfaction,
over his creations. “And to think,” he said after a pause,
“that I’ve been spending these last days designing model
cottages for workmen at Bletchley! I’m in luck to have
got the job, of course, but really, that a civilized man
should have to do jobs like that! It’s too much. In the
old days these creatures built their own hovels, and very
nice and suitable they were too. The architects busied
themselves with architecture—which is the expression of
human dignity and greatness, which is man’s protest, not
his miserable acquiescence. You can’t do much protesting
in a model cottage at seven hundred pounds a time. A
little, no doubt, you can protest a little; you can give your
cottage decent proportions and avoid sordidness and
vulgarity. But that’s all; it’s really a negative process.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>You can only begin to protest positively and actively when
you abandon the petty human scale and build for giants—when
you build for the spirit and the imagination of man,
not for his little body. Model cottages, indeed!”</p>
<p class='c010'>Mr. Gumbril snorted with indignation. “When I think
of Alberti!” And he thought of Alberti—Alberti, the
noblest Roman of them all, the true and only Roman. For
the Romans themselves had lived their own actual lives,
sordidly and extravagantly in the middle of a vulgar empire.
Alberti and his followers in the Renaissance lived the ideal
Roman life. They put Plutarch into their architecture.
They took the detestable real Cato, the Brutus of history,
and made of them Roman heroes to walk as guides and
models before them. Before Alberti there were no true
Romans, and with Piranesi’s death the race began to wither
towards extinction.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And when I think of Brunelleschi!” Gumbril Senior
went on to remember with passion the architect who had
suspended on eight thin flying ribs of marble the lightest
of all domes and the loveliest.</p>
<p class='c010'>“And when of Michelangelo! The grim, enormous
apse.... And of Wren and of Palladio, when I think of
all these——” Gumbril Senior waved his arms and was
silent. He could not put into words what he felt when he
thought of them.</p>
<p class='c010'>Gumbril Junior looked at his watch. “Half-past
two,” he said. “Time to go to bed.”</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>
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