<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class='c007'>Lionel Somerville woke at 8 a.m. in the freshest
of spirits. All the frenzy of the night before
had vanished, and as he lay on his bed, smiling,
he tried to think over what had happened.</p>
<p>“Did I not kill myself last night? Anyway, I
did not succeed, or perhaps it was all a delusion!
I must have been in a bad way. It is that
infernal wound that troubles me; I have never
been quite myself since I came home.—Well!
what is the matter with this place?—Where are
the curtains, the carpet?” Sitting up in his
bed he stared all round. “And the blankets,
sheets—oh! my shirt is gone!” And as he
jumped up from the bed on to the bare floor,
he stood as the Almighty had made him. He
rushed to the window, saw the streets empty,
the doors of all the houses closed, and no one
going in or out of them. After staring out of
the window he spotted but one boy coming
along leisurely on his tricycle cart, the butcher’s
boy no doubt; a fit of laughter seized him,
followed by hilarious convulsions, as he saw
the water-cart coming across the square, with
its street Neptune indolently reclining on the
seat.</p>
<p>“This is funny! What the devil does it
mean? Have these people gone clean mad?
Why does not the police stop them?”</p>
<p>Lionel left the window and rang the bell. A
few seconds after there was a gentle knock at
the door.</p>
<p>“Yes, my lord.” It was the suave voice of
Temple, my lord’s faithful valet.</p>
<p>“I say, Temple”—Lionel spoke through the
door—“what’s the meaning of all this?”</p>
<p>“I cannot tell, my lord. Your lordship’s
bathroom is ready, and breakfast is on the
table.”</p>
<p>“You must be mad, Temple! How am I to
get out of this room without my clothes? Bring
in something—anything—a wrap of some sort, a
bath-rug.”</p>
<p>“Not one to be found, my lord, and all the
shops are closed.”</p>
<p>“How are you clad, Temple?”</p>
<p>“I’ve nothing on, my lord, and Willows, Mr
Jacques, are all in the same condition. But I can
assure your lordship that the morning is very
hot.”</p>
<p>“And you think that sufficient, do you? Well,
I don’t! I am blowed if I can make this out, or
if I know what I am going to do. Bring me a
tub, a large can of hot water, and later on bring
me a tray with a couple of eggs and tea. I am
famished!”</p>
<p>Footsteps retreated; Lionel walked round and
round his spacious bedroom. Everything was in
its usual place as far as furniture went, but there
was not a vestige of drapery or carpeting; the
cushions had disappeared, and only the down lay
on the floor; the chairs, easy <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fauteuils</span></i>, the couch
were despoiled of all covering and showed their
bare construction of wood and cane-work. The
bed was a simple pallet, the rugs had vanished.
Lionel entered his dressing-room, the cupboards
were open, and empty, when yesterday they had
been crammed with all his clothes. The drawers
were hanging out of their chest—empty; shirts,
flannels, silk pyjamas, neckties, waistcoats, all the
arsenal of a young man about town had dissolved
into thin air. This was more than strange, and
the Earl became more and more amazed as he
went on opening boxes, baskets, and gaping at
the empty receptacles. He again looked out of
the window—his dressing-room had a full view of
Grosvenor Square—and saw many more boys on
tricycle carts; several satyr-milkmen were rattling
their cans down the fashionable areas, and the
water-cart went on slowly spouting its L.C.C.
Niagara over dusty roads. The effect was decidedly
comical. He came back to his bedroom,
and once more looked out of the window. Looking
up at the opposite house he saw a form passing
to and fro. That was Lady Vera’s house. Could
it be she? He smiled. It might be the maid.
Who knows? There were few of his lady friends
he would recognise again in this new garb. After
his tub and breakfast he felt in buoyant spirits
and physically fit, although he could not quite
account for this new mood of his, for nothing had
altered in his life. He gave a side glance at
himself in the cheval-glass; he was always the
Earl of Somerville, heir to vast riches, engaged to
Gwendolen Towerbridge, and this joke would pass.
It was perhaps the new trick of some gang of
thieves, whom the police would be able to catch
in a few days. The thing to find out was whether
it was the same all over London. Temple told
Lord Somerville, as he brought the breakfast tray
to the door, that the areas down the streets and
the square were a bevy of buzzing gossipers.
Admiral B., who lived two doors off, was in the
same plight, and was using strong language to his
poor wife; and as to Field-Marshal W., whose
house was in the square, he was beside himself,
had howled at his man for his pyjamas and sent
the fellow rolling down the passage for appearing
in his presence in an Adamitic vestment. Temple
thought this very unjust, as the Field-Marshal
was in the same dilemma; but then Temple had
no sense of the fitness of things, and certainly
had no sense of humour, as he came to ask his
master what were his orders for Marshall, the
coachman. Lionel naturally sent Marshall to
the devil.</p>
<p>“Does he think I am going to drive in an open
Victoria as I am, with him on the box as he is?”
And he raved at the poor valet, and asked him
what they all felt in the housekeeper’s room. To
which Temple replied, that the men did not so
much mind, and that the women would get used to
it. They had all their work cut out for them, and
no time to think about difficult problems. Evidently
it was different with them, and the Earl
dropped the subject, inquiring whether the <cite>Times</cite>
had come. But the postman had not yet arrived.</p>
<p>“What on earth can I do?” murmured Lionel.
Then he thought of sending Temple to get him a
pile of new French novels to while away the
tedious hours. By the way, he thought suddenly,
he would like to know something definite about
last night’s adventure; he did not like to tell his
man about his foolish attempt, but if he had seen
the revolver on the carpet, he was prepared to give
him some sort of explanation. Temple came back
saying that every book had disappeared, and gave
a graphic description of what was once the
library of my lord. Lionel timidly inquired if he
had not noticed anything peculiar on the floor, nor
any stray object lying about? No, Temple had
seen nothing except the total disappearance of all
draperies, chair coverings, carpets, books, etc.
There was nothing on the floor, only a little more
dust than before in front of the writing-desk. This
satisfied Lionel, who made up his mind that the
whole thing was the effect of his own imagination,
very probably occasioned by this miserable wound
which at times was a great worry to him; and he
settled down to forget the past and to solve the
present in trying to explain this strange event.
But in vain did he endeavour to do so, his eyes persistently
went back to the window, and he constantly
got up to watch the opposite house and
the few strollers that ventured out; of course they
were all servants who so immodestly exposed
themselves to his investigation, still it amused
him much more to watch the street than to ponder
these grave questions.</p>
<p>“Well, I think I was a damned fool last night,
provided I did such a foolish thing as to try and
blow my brains out. This is worth living for, and
I have not been amused for many years as I am
now. It must have something to do with last
night’s storm. If this is going to last, I suppose
the old fellows at the Royal Institute will make
it their business to ponder this stupendous
phenomenon.”</p>
<p>Temple brought the luncheon tray about 1.30;
only a couple of kidneys, a glass of Apollinaris
water; it would be sufficient for that day, as he
could not get out that afternoon and have a ride.
Then more thinking, with as little attention as
before. After that, tea with a bit of toast and no
butter, and more thinking, interrupted at times by
sudden glances through the window. Temple
came once or twice to his master’s door with all
the news that was afloat in the areas, butlers’
pantries, saddle-rooms, and although this gossip
originated on the backstairs, it was welcomed by
the heir of great estates, for, at this moment he
could get no direct information, and what his valet
brought him was as good as he could ever get.
The valet had reminded my lord that to-day was
the Levee, which the latter was to attend. This
amused him very much, for was it likely that the
Admiral, the Field-Marshal, the latest V.C. would
ever venture beyond their bed-rug—oh! that even
was gone—to go and meet their ruler in their
skins? No, these things were impossible, and the
structure of Society would soon crumble to ashes
if one man unadorned was to meet another man
unclad. Of course Lord Somerville was very
anxious to know whether all London was in the
same condition, to which the faithful valet replied,
that he had it from the milkman that Belgravia
was as silent as a tomb, Bayswater a wilderness,
and Buckingham Palace a desert. As to the omnibuses,
after one journey up and down they had
given up running at all, as no one wanted a drive,
and the few servants and working-men about
preferred walking. Towards seven o’clock, Lionel
felt inclined to have a little food, and he ordered a
grilled sole and a custard. That would do for
him, but evidently it did not do for Temple, who
was quite shocked at his master’s abstemiousness,
and recoiled before appearing in front of the cook
with such a meagre menu. “He would be capable
of throwing a dish at my head, my lord; he hardly
believed me when I told him your lordship wanted
two kidneys for lunch.”</p>
<p>But Lionel was determined, and would hear of
nothing more for dinner and sent the cook to
Jericho through the intermediary of Temple,
adding that he could not eat more when he had
no proper exercise, that he had had sufficient,
having eaten when he felt hungry and left off
when he had had enough—which he had not
done for many years.</p>
<p>“Yes, my lord,” had respectfully answered the
faithful valet, who perhaps at the same time
thought his master’s remark a wise one.</p>
<p>The evening went by, bringing no change in
the situation; and by nine o’clock it was universally
known, and partly accepted, that from the Lord
Chancellor to the Carlton waiter, frock-coat or no
coat, woolsack or three-legged crock, a man was
to be a man for a’ that. One great calamity had
befallen them all, and in one minute levelled the
whole of London’s inhabitants to the state of
nature. The question arose in my lord’s mind
whether they were sufficiently fitted for that state?
Could they face the God Pan with as much composure
as they had faced all the other gods?
He heard the heavy footsteps of the lamplighter
methodically going through his work. It
was strange that he had never once thought of
stopping his nocturnal routine. Evidently
whatever happened, the streets had to be lighted,
and Lionel mused long and deeply on these
questions of duty and force of habit, as he looked
out of the window into the street and observed
the long shadow descending over London.</p>
<p>“Was it the sense of duty that prompted the
actions of these menials?” He could not bring
himself to think that, and he could not help
believing that amongst his own superior class
the sense of duty was always accompanied by a
powerful sense of the fitness of things, so that
if a virtue clashed with prejudices and the
accepted standard of propriety, it was desirable
that they should build up some new duty more
in harmony with their worldly principles. There,
no doubt, lay the difference between the upper
classes and the lower, and which made the former
shrink before breaking the laws of decorum, when
the latter saw no objection to performing daily
pursuits in their skins, unconcerned with higher
motives of purity and exalted ideals.</p>
<p>Whether Lord Somerville had touched the keynote
of social ethics remained unknown, but he
retired early to his pallet and slept soundly
through the still night.</p>
<p>Next day was the same, the day after identical,
and the week passed thus without any change in
the London phenomenon. Had the carpet in the
Arabian tales carried the whole metropolis to
some undiscovered planet, the wonderment could
not have been greater. After a few days, Lionel
observed that the L.C.C. Neptune had acquired
more ease, more <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">laisser-aller</span></i> in his movements
and postures, and decidedly sat less stiffly on his
high perch; the butcher’s boy also carried his
tray on his shoulder with distinct dash and
comeliness. From his daily observations he
came to the conclusion that London life, in its
mechanical working, was going on pretty much
as usual. He questioned his faithful valet, who
by this time had become more than a servant,
being newsagent and Court circular rolled into
one. What he learned through the keyhole was
astounding. No House of Commons, no Upper
House were sitting! How could anything go on
at that rate? Ah! that was the strangest part
of it, for materially everything seemed to be as
usual; the tradespeople came round for orders,
and there was no danger of starving. The wheels
of life kept on rolling, for, those who represented
the axle were still in the centre of the wheel, and
nothing could remove them. It was the upper
part of the edifice that had given way, or at
least had willingly retired into modest seclusion.
The wheels might run for a long time without the
coach, but the coach had no power to advance in
any way without the wheels. This is what puzzled
Lionel so much; he had always believed that if
Society took it into its head to strike, the world
would come to a standstill; and here was a
colossal emergency in which one part of the
edifice went on as if nothing had happened,
while the other—in his eyes the important one—was
forced to retire behind its walls, if it meant
to keep sacred the principles of modesty and
decorum; and still the whole structure had not
foundered. Of course it could not last for ever.
Nothing did last; and this axiom consoled Lord
Somerville, as he cradled himself into the belief
that the present condition would never answer
in this eminently aristocratic empire. Why had
not such a thing happened to Parisians? “I
could safely declare that they would not have
made such a fuss about it. They would have
taken the adventure as it is, if transient, and
would have accepted the joke with rollicking fun;
if serious, they would have made the best of it,
seen the plastic side of the situation, and at once
endeavoured to live up to it as gracefully as
possible. Yes, there lay the whole difference
between the Latin race and the Anglo-Saxon;
the former aimed at beauty, and the other, as
the Bishop of Sunbury had said at Islington,
aimed at a moral attitude.</p>
<p>“I suppose there is a certain amount of truth in
this,” thought the Earl, as he sipped his cup of
tea, “for here am I living up to a standard of
punctilious modesty, which would even put the
chaste Susannah to shame; and Heaven knows I
never have been overburdened with principles,
but, quite on the contrary, was oblivious of any
moral attitude. It must be that the ambiante of
this country is of a superior quality to that of any
other.”</p>
<p>There was a gentle knock at the door: “The
Bishop of Welby has sent round to know whether
your lordship would allow your women-servants
to help in the finding of a suitable text for a
sermon he wishes to deliver when this state has
ceased? His lordship is in a great stress, being
unable to lay his hand on his Bible, and finds himself
at a loss to recall all the contents of the Holy
Scriptures.”</p>
<p>“By all means, Temple—I am always delighted
to be of any use to the bishop, although, for my
part, I regret I cannot help him in this. Can you
remember any suitable text, Temple?”</p>
<p>Temple made no reply.</p>
<p>“I say, Temple, how do the dowagers take
this kind of thing? I am rather curious to know
how they manage.”</p>
<p>The valet inquired from the upper housemaid,
who very soon gathered information from her
friends along the areas, and in an hour the faithful
newsagent had collected a bushel of gossip.
The attitude of the dowagers towards the social
calamity was one of stubborn resistance and of
fervent prayer. The old Lady Pendelton had
said to her maid, through the keyhole, that it was
only a question of time, and that with a little
display of self-control, for which the race was so
celebrated, they would soon pull through this
ghastly experience. Some of the old ladies,
whose bedrooms were contiguous to those of their
daughters, knocked on the wall exhorting their
virtuous progeny to persevere in the ways of
the righteous and to keep up a good heart.
Out-door gossips would be supplied to them:
“Sarah does not mind going out,” had shouted
through the wall one of the pillars of female
Society, “you see, dear Evelyn, these sort of
people do not possess the same quality of
modesty that we do—they have to toil, not to
feel.” So thought the dowager, and many more
believed this to be true. What a load of injustice
was settled by such an argument!</p>
<p>When the first shock was over, and Lord
Somerville had ceased wondering at a class of
people who did not mind being seen in their
Edenic attire, he dropped into a humorous mood,
and passed in review a good many of his friends,
men and women.</p>
<p>“By Jove!” he exclaimed in a fit of laughter,
“I wonder what old Bentham looks like in his
skin? The Stock Exchange will be a rum
circus when they all race for cash as modern
gladiators! And what of Pender, and of Clavebury;
and Gladys Ventnor, Arabella Chale and
<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tutti quanti</span></i>?”</p>
<p>Then he thought of his friend, Victor de
Laumel, of the Jockey Club in Paris. He felt
convinced Victor would tell him, “I say, my
good fellow, why do you mind? Go out and give
the example of simplicity and good-humour.”</p>
<p>After all, it was not that he minded much, and
if the Upper Ten appointed between themselves
a day and hour in which they would all go out
together, it would not be so bad; but it was the
idea of appearing before and mixing with an
indiscriminate crowd. It would be really annoying
to have your butler look you up and down,
and to stand the flitting sneer on the lips of your
groom. Of course there was nothing in the
abstract against an Edenic garment; but one
must not forget that Adam and Eve were alone in
Paradise, and had no crowd to pass unpleasant
remarks over their personal appearance. It was
only when that interfering <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Tertium quid</span></i> had
sneaked round the corner that they had lost all
the fun in life. Well, if one reptile had the power
to make them feel ashamed of themselves, what
would it be now that thousands of little twinkling
eyes were glaring, and that myriads of sharp
tongues hissed and stung? It was quite evident
that clothes kept the world within bounds of
decency, besides restraining the overbearance of
the lower classes and enforcing their respect for
their superiors. What could our civilisation be
without the cap-and-apron ethics? It is difficult
enough to keep up a certain standard in the
world with the help of smart surroundings; but
how could one command deference from, and give
orders to one’s domesticity in this attire?</p>
<p>On the eleventh day of this prison life, Lord
Somerville woke with a sharp pain in his side, and
as he sat up on his pallet he was seized with
giddiness. This was a premonition which filled
him with awe. His liver was hopelessly out of
order, and no doubt many of his friends’ livers
were in the same condition owing to this sedentary
life. Hard thinking and solitary confinement would
be sure to have a fatal effect on a race accustomed
to exercise and deep drinking. The area gossip
was ominous, and what Temple recorded to his
master boded no good to the Upper Ten, who
were suffering from a general attack of dyspepsia.
It was a very serious question, a race doomed to
sequestration; and there was a fear that eventually
London, the well-drained, well-watered, well-lighted
and altogether well-County-Councilled,
would be turned into a vast lunatic asylum. When
ethics meant apoplexy, it was time to halt and
loosen the strings of propriety; and it was the
duty of the sporting duke, the rubicund brewer,
and of all the fastidious do-nothings, to weave for
themselves in the seclusion of their chambers a
new tissue of principles to suit their abnormal
condition. Lionel inquired whether the Bishop
had come to any conclusion about his text.
Temple did not know about that, but he knew that
the prelate had complained of insomnia and sickness,
and asked for <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">sal volatile</span></i>. Lady Pendelton
had been heard by her maid to fall on the floor.
Was her ladyship better now? had asked Lionel.
Yes, but her maid could hear her tottering in her
room and moaning piteously.</p>
<p>“It is very bad this, Temple. I think something
ought to be done for the good of the public;
but what?”</p>
<p>“I believe that if your lordship would only show
yourself—I beg your pardon, my lord—but an
example would be beneficial, and your lordship is
so popular, I am sure you would carry the day.”</p>
<p>“Do you really believe that my showing myself
would be a general signal? You see, Temple, I
do not want to find myself all alone in the streets
of London, with all the dowagers grinning at their
windows. That would never do.”</p>
<p>“Oh! your lordship need not fear. There is a
great feeling of discontent among the higher
classes; and before you could say Jack Robinson
they would all follow your example.”</p>
<p>“That is certainly very encouraging. Bring
me some boiling water to drink. No breakfast,
thanks.”</p>
<p>The wave of revolt was rising furiously and
threatening to drown all principles of decency.
Utter disgust filled the hearts of Londoners when
they retired to rest on the eleventh night of their
voluntary seclusion. It is then, when large
shadows envelop the city, that common-sense
creepingly visits the bedside of each inhabitant;
and as the mysterious hour that is supposed to
unnerve the bravest man approaches, great
principles give way, and practical reasoning comes
to the fore, to ease the questionist out of his moral
jungle.</p>
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