<h2><SPAN name="THE_PURPLE_PILEUS" id="THE_PURPLE_PILEUS">THE PURPLE PILEUS</SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Mr. Coombes</span> was sick of life. He walked
away from his unhappy home, and, sick not
only of his own existence, but of everybody
else’s, turned aside down Gaswork Lane to avoid the
town, and, crossing the wooden bridge that goes over
the canal to Starling’s Cottages, was presently alone
in the damp pinewoods and out of sight and sound
of human habitation. He would stand it no longer.
He repeated aloud with blasphemies unusual to him
that he would stand it no longer.</p>
<p>He was a pale-faced little man, with dark eyes and
a fine and very black moustache. He had a very
stiff, upright collar slightly frayed, that gave him an
illusory double chin, and his overcoat (albeit shabby)
was trimmed with astrachan. His gloves were a bright
brown with black stripes over the knuckles, and split
at the finger ends. His appearance, his wife had said
once in the dear, dead days beyond recall,—before
he married her, that is,—was military. But now she
called him— It seems a dreadful thing to tell of
between husband and wife, but she called him “a
little grub.” It wasn’t the only thing she had called
him, either.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The row had arisen about that beastly Jennie
again. Jennie was his wife’s friend, and, by no
invitation of Mr. Coombes, she came in every blessed
Sunday to dinner, and made a shindy all the afternoon.
She was a big, noisy girl, with a taste for
loud colours and a strident laugh; and this Sunday
she had outdone all her previous intrusions by bringing
in a fellow with her, a chap as showy as herself.
And Mr. Coombes, in a starchy, clean collar and his
Sunday frock-coat, had sat dumb and wrathful at his
own table, while his wife and her guests talked foolishly
and undesirably, and laughed aloud. Well, he
stood that, and after dinner (which, “as usual,” was
late), what must Miss Jennie do but go to the piano
and play banjo tunes, for all the world as if it were a
week-day! Flesh and blood could not endure such
goings on. They would hear next door, they would
hear in the road, it was a public announcement of their
disrepute. He had to speak.</p>
<p>He had felt himself go pale, and a kind of rigour
had affected his respiration as he delivered himself.
He had been sitting on one of the chairs by the
window—the new guest had taken possession of the
arm-chair. He turned his head. “Sun Day!” he
said over the collar, in the voice of one who warns.
“Sun Day!” What people call a “nasty” tone
it was.</p>
<p>Jennie had kept on playing, but his wife, who was
looking through some music that was piled on the
top of the piano, had stared at him. “What’s wrong
now?” she said; “can’t people enjoy themselves?”</p>
<p>“I don’t mind rational ’njoyment, at all,” said little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>
Coombes, “but I ain’t a-going to have week-day tunes
playing on a Sunday in this house.”</p>
<p>“What’s wrong with my playing now?” said Jennie,
stopping and twirling round on the music-stool with
a monstrous rustle of flounces.</p>
<p>Coombes saw it was going to be a row, and opened
too vigorously, as is common with your timid, nervous
men all the world over. “Steady on with that music-stool!”
said he; “it ain’t made for ’eavy weights.”</p>
<p>“Never you mind about weights,” said Jennie,
incensed. “What was you saying behind my back
about my playing?”</p>
<p>“Surely you don’t ’old with not having a bit of
music on a Sunday, Mr. Coombes?” said the new
guest, leaning back in the arm-chair, blowing a cloud
of cigarette smoke and smiling in a kind of pitying
way. And simultaneously his wife said something to
Jennie about “Never mind ’im. You go on, Jinny.”</p>
<p>“I do,” said Mr. Coombes, addressing the new guest.</p>
<p>“May I arst why?” said the new guest, evidently
enjoying both his cigarette and the prospect of an
argument. He was, by the bye, a lank young man,
very stylishly dressed in bright drab, with a white
cravat and a pearl and silver pin. It had been
better taste to come in a black coat, Mr. Coombes
thought.</p>
<p>“Because,” began Mr. Coombes, “it don’t suit me.
I’m a business man. I ’ave to study my connection.
Rational ’njoyment”—</p>
<p>“His connection!” said Mrs. Coombes scornfully.
“That’s what he’s always a-saying. We got to do
this, and we got to do that”—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“If you don’t mean to study my connection,” said
Mr. Coombes, “what did you marry me for?”</p>
<p>“I wonder,” said Jennie, and turned back to the
piano.</p>
<p>“I never saw such a man as you,” said Mrs.
Coombes. “You’ve altered all round since we were
married. Before”—</p>
<p>Then Jennie began at the tum, tum, tum again.</p>
<p>“Look here!” said Mr. Coombes, driven at last to
revolt, standing up and raising his voice. “I tell you
I won’t have that.” The frock-coat heaved with his
indignation.</p>
<p>“No vi’lence, now,” said the long young man in
drab, sitting up.</p>
<p>“Who the juice are you?” said Mr. Coombes
fiercely.</p>
<p>Whereupon they all began talking at once. The
new guest said he was Jennie’s “intended,” and
meant to protect her, and Mr. Coombes said he was
welcome to do so anywhere but in his (Mr. Coombes’)
house; and Mrs. Coombes said he ought to be
ashamed of insulting his guests, and (as I have
already mentioned) that he was getting a regular
little grub; and the end was, that Mr. Coombes
ordered his visitors out of the house, and they
wouldn’t go, and so he said he would go himself.
With his face burning and tears of excitement in
his eyes, he went into the passage, and as he
struggled with his overcoat—his frock-coat sleeves
got concertinaed up his arm—and gave a brush at
his silk hat, Jennie began again at the piano, and
strummed him insultingly out of the house. Tum,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
tum, tum. He slammed the shop door so that the
house quivered. That, briefly, was the immediate
making of his mood. You will perhaps begin to
understand his disgust with existence.</p>
<p>As he walked along the muddy path under the firs,—it
was late October, and the ditches and heaps of
fir needles were gorgeous with clumps of fungi,—he
recapitulated the melancholy history of his marriage.
It was brief and commonplace enough. He now
perceived with sufficient clearness that his wife had
married him out of a natural curiosity and in order
to escape from her worrying, laborious, and uncertain
life in the workroom; and, like the majority of her
class, she was far too stupid to realise that it was her
duty to co-operate with him in his business. She was
greedy of enjoyment, loquacious, and socially-minded,
and evidently disappointed to find the restraints of
poverty still hanging about her. His worries exasperated
her, and the slightest attempt to control
her proceedings resulted in a charge of “grumbling.”
Why couldn’t he be nice—as he used to be? And
Coombes was such a harmless little man, too, nourished
mentally on <em>Self-Help</em>, and with a meagre
ambition of self-denial and competition, that was
to end in a “sufficiency.” Then Jennie came in as
a female Mephistopheles, a gabbling chronicle of
“fellers,” and was always wanting his wife to go to
theatres, and “all that.” And in addition were aunts
of his wife, and cousins (male and female), to eat up
capital, insult him personally, upset business arrangements,
annoy good customers, and generally blight his
life. It was not the first occasion by many that Mr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
Coombes had fled his home in wrath and indignation,
and something like fear, vowing furiously and even
aloud that he wouldn’t stand it, and so frothing away
his energy along the line of least resistance. But
never before had he been quite so sick of life as on
this particular Sunday afternoon. The Sunday dinner
may have had its share in his despair—and the greyness
of the sky. Perhaps, too, he was beginning to
realise his unendurable frustration as a business man
as the consequence of his marriage. Presently bankruptcy,
and after that— Perhaps she might have
reason to repent when it was too late. And destiny,
as I have already intimated, had planted the path
through the wood with evil-smelling fungi, thickly
and variously planted it, not only on the right side,
but on the left.</p>
<p>A small shopman is in such a melancholy position,
if his wife turns out a disloyal partner. His
capital is all tied up in his business, and to leave
her, means to join the unemployed in some strange
part of the earth. The luxuries of divorce are
beyond him altogether. So that the good old
tradition of marriage for better or worse holds inexorably
for him, and things work up to tragic
culminations. Bricklayers kick their wives to death,
and dukes betray theirs; but it is among the small
clerks and shopkeepers nowadays that it comes
most often to a cutting of throats. Under the circumstances
it is not so very remarkable—and you
must take it as charitably as you can—that the mind
of Mr. Coombes ran for a while on some such glorious
close to his disappointed hopes, and that he thought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
of razors, pistols, bread-knives, and touching letters
to the coroner denouncing his enemies by name, and
praying piously for forgiveness. After a time his
fierceness gave way to melancholia. He had been
married in this very overcoat, in his first and only
frock-coat that was buttoned up beneath it. He
began to recall their courting along this very walk,
his years of penurious saving to get capital, and the
bright hopefulness of his marrying days. For it all
to work out like this! Was there no sympathetic
ruler anywhere in the world? He reverted to death
as a topic.</p>
<p>He thought of the canal he had just crossed, and
doubted whether he shouldn’t stand with his head
out, even in the middle, and it was while drowning
was in his mind that the purple pileus caught his eye.
He looked at it mechanically for a moment, and
stopped and stooped towards it to pick it up, under
the impression that it was some such small leather
object as a purse. Then he saw that it was the
purple top of a fungus, a peculiarly poisonous-looking
purple: slimy, shiny, and emitting a sour odour.
He hesitated with his hand an inch or so from it, and
the thought of poison crossed his mind. With that
he picked the thing, and stood up again with it in his
hand.</p>
<p>The odour was certainly strong—acrid, but by no
means disgusting. He broke off a piece, and the
fresh surface was a creamy white, that changed like
magic in the space of ten seconds to a yellowish-green
colour. It was even an inviting-looking change.
He broke off two other pieces to see it repeated.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
They were wonderful things these fungi, thought Mr.
Coombes, and all of them the deadliest poisons, as his
father had often told him. Deadly poisons!</p>
<p>There is no time like the present for a rash resolve.
Why not here and now? thought Mr. Coombes. He
tasted a little piece, a very little piece indeed—a
mere crumb. It was so pungent that he almost spat
it out again, then merely hot and full-flavoured. A
kind of German mustard with a touch of horse-radish
and—well, mushroom. He swallowed it in the excitement
of the moment. Did he like it or did he
not? His mind was curiously careless. He would
try another bit. It really wasn’t bad—it was good.
He forgot his troubles in the interest of the immediate
moment. Playing with death it was. He took
another bite, and then deliberately finished a mouthful.
A curious tingling sensation began in his finger-tips
and toes. His pulse began to move faster. The
blood in his ears sounded like a mill-race. “Try bi’
more,” said Mr. Coombes. He turned and looked
about him, and found his feet unsteady. He saw and
struggled towards a little patch of purple a dozen
yards away. “Jol’ goo’ stuff,” said Mr. Coombes.
“E—lomore ye’.” He pitched forward and fell on
his face, his hands outstretched towards the cluster of
pilei. But he did not eat any more of them. He
forgot forthwith.</p>
<p>He rolled over and sat up with a look of astonishment
on his face. His carefully brushed silk hat had
rolled away towards the ditch. He pressed his hand
to his brow. Something had happened, but he could
not rightly determine what it was. Anyhow, he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
no longer dull—he felt bright, cheerful. And his
throat was afire. He laughed in the sudden gaiety
of his heart. Had he been dull? He did not
know; but at anyrate he would be dull no longer.
He got up and stood unsteadily, regarding the
universe with an agreeable smile. He began to
remember. He could not remember very well,
because of a steam roundabout that was beginning
in his head. And he knew he had been disagreeable
at home, just because they wanted to be
happy. They were quite right; life should be as gay
as possible. He would go home and make it up,
and reassure them. And why not take some of this
delightful toadstool with him, for them to eat? A
hatful, no less. Some of those red ones with white
spots as well, and a few yellow. He had been a dull
dog, an enemy to merriment; he would make up for
it. It would be gay to turn his coat-sleeves inside
out, and stick some yellow gorse into his waistcoat
pockets. Then home—singing—for a jolly evening.</p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p>After the departure of Mr. Coombes, Jennie discontinued
playing, and turned round on the music-stool
again. “What a fuss about nothing,” said
Jennie.</p>
<p>“You see, Mr. Clarence, what I’ve got to put up
with,” said Mrs. Coombes.</p>
<p>“He is a bit hasty,” said Mr. Clarence judicially.</p>
<p>“He ain’t got the slightest sense of our position,”
said Mrs. Coombes; “that’s what I complain of. He
cares for nothing but his old shop; and if I have a bit
of company, or buy anything to keep myself decent,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
or get any little thing I want out of the housekeeping
money, there’s disagreeables. ‘Economy,’ he says;
‘struggle for life,’ and all that. He lies awake of
nights about it, worrying how he can screw me out of
a shilling. He wanted us to eat Dorset butter once.
If once I was to give in to him—there!”</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Jennie.</p>
<p>“If a man values a woman,” said Mr. Clarence
lounging back in the arm-chair, “he must be prepared
to make sacrifices for her. For my own part,” said
Mr. Clarence, with his eye on Jennie, “I shouldn’t
think of marrying till I was in a position to do the
thing in style. It’s downright selfishness. A man
ought to go through the rough-and-tumble by himself,
and not drag her”—</p>
<p>“I don’t agree altogether with that,” said Jennie.
“I don’t see why a man shouldn’t have a woman’s
help, provided he doesn’t treat her meanly, you know.
It’s meanness”—</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t believe,” said Mrs. Coombes. “But
I was a fool to ’ave ’im. I might ’ave known. If it
’adn’t been for my father, we shouldn’t have had not a
carriage to our wedding.”</p>
<p>“Lord! he didn’t stick out at that?” said Mr.
Clarence, quite shocked.</p>
<p>“Said he wanted the money for his stock, or some
such rubbish. Why, he wouldn’t have a woman in
to help me once a week if it wasn’t for my standing
out plucky. And the fusses he makes about money—comes
to me, well, pretty near crying, with sheets
of paper and figgers. ‘If only we can tide over this
year,’ he says, ‘the business is bound to go.’ ‘If only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
we can tide over this year,’ I says; ‘then it’ll be, if
only we can tide over next year. I know you,’ I says.
‘And you don’t catch me screwing myself lean and
ugly. Why didn’t you marry a slavey?’ I says, ‘if
you wanted one—instead of a respectable girl,’ I
says.”</p>
<p>So Mrs. Coombes. But we will not follow this
unedifying conversation further. Suffice it that Mr.
Coombes was very satisfactorily disposed of, and they
had a snug little time round the fire. Then Mrs.
Coombes went to get the tea, and Jennie sat coquettishly
on the arm of Mr. Clarence’s chair until the
tea-things clattered outside. “What was that I
heard?” asked Mrs. Coombes playfully, as she
entered, and there was badinage about kissing.
They were just sitting down to the little circular
table when the first intimation of Mr. Coombes’
return was heard.</p>
<p>This was a fumbling at the latch of the front door.</p>
<p>“’Ere’s my lord,” said Mrs. Coombes. “Went out
like a lion and comes back like a lamb, I’ll lay.”</p>
<p>Something fell over in the shop: a chair, it sounded
like. Then there was a sound as of some complicated
step exercise in the passage. Then the door opened
and Coombes appeared. But it was Coombes transfigured.
The immaculate collar had been torn carelessly
from his throat. His carefully-brushed silk hat,
half-full of a crush of fungi, was under one arm; his
coat was inside out, and his waistcoat adorned with
bunches of yellow-blossomed furze. These little
eccentricities of Sunday costume, however, were quite
overshadowed by the change in his face; it was livid<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
white, his eyes were unnaturally large and bright,
and his pale blue lips were drawn back in a cheerless
grin. “Merry!” he said. He had stopped dancing
to open the door. “Rational ’njoyment. Dance.”
He made three fantastic steps into the room, and
stood bowing.</p>
<p>“Jim!” shrieked Mrs. Coombes, and Mr. Clarence
sat petrified, with a dropping lower jaw.</p>
<p>“Tea,” said Mr. Coombes. “Jol’ thing, tea. Tose-stools,
too. Brosher.”</p>
<p>“He’s drunk,” said Jennie in a weak voice. Never
before had she seen this intense pallor in a drunken
man, or such shining, dilated eyes.</p>
<p>Mr. Coombes held out a handful of scarlet agaric
to Mr. Clarence. “Jo’ stuff,” said he; “ta’ some.”</p>
<p>At that moment he was genial. Then at the sight
of their startled faces he changed, with the swift
transition of insanity, into overbearing fury. And it
seemed as if he had suddenly recalled the quarrel of
his departure. In such a huge voice as Mrs. Coombes
had never heard before, he shouted, “My house. I’m
master ’ere. Eat what I give yer!” He bawled this,
as it seemed, without an effort, without a violent
gesture, standing there as motionless as one who
whispers, holding out a handful of fungus.</p>
<p>Clarence approved himself a coward. He could
not meet the mad fury in Coombes’ eyes; he rose to
his feet, pushing back his chair, and turned, stooping.
At that Coombes rushed at him. Jennie saw her
opportunity, and, with the ghost of a shriek, made
for the door. Mrs. Coombes followed her. Clarence
tried to dodge. Over went the tea-table with a smash<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
as Coombes clutched him by the collar and tried to
thrust the fungus into his mouth. Clarence was
content to leave his collar behind him, and shot out
into the passage with red patches of fly agaric still
adherent to his face. “Shut ’im in!” cried Mrs.
Coombes, and would have closed the door, but her
supports deserted her; Jennie saw the shop door
open, and vanished thereby, locking it behind her,
while Clarence went on hastily into the kitchen.
Mr. Coombes came heavily against the door, and
Mrs. Coombes, finding the key was inside, fled
upstairs and locked herself in the spare bedroom.</p>
<p>So the new convert to <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">joie de vivre</i> emerged upon
the passage, his decorations a little scattered, but that
respectable hatful of fungi still under his arm. He
hesitated at the three ways, and decided on the
kitchen. Whereupon Clarence, who was fumbling
with the key, gave up the attempt to imprison his
host, and fled into the scullery, only to be captured
before he could open the door into the yard. Mr.
Clarence is singularly reticent of the details of what
occurred. It seems that Mr. Coombes’ transitory
irritation had vanished again, and he was once more
a genial playfellow. And as there were knives and
meat choppers about, Clarence very generously
resolved to humour him and so avoid anything tragic.
It is beyond dispute that Mr. Coombes played with
Mr. Clarence to his heart’s content; they could not
have been more playful and familiar if they had
known each other for years. He insisted gaily on
Clarence trying the fungi, and after a friendly tussle,
was smitten with remorse at the mess he was making<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
of his guest’s face. It also appears that Clarence was
dragged under the sink and his face scrubbed with
the blacking brush,—he being still resolved to humour
the lunatic at any cost,—and that finally, in a somewhat
dishevelled, chipped, and discoloured condition,
he was assisted to his coat and shown out by the
back door, the shopway being barred by Jennie.
Mr. Coombes’ wandering thoughts then turned to
Jennie. Jennie had been unable to unfasten the shop
door, but she shot the bolts against Mr. Coombes’
latch-key, and remained in possession of the shop for
the rest of the evening.</p>
<p>It would appear that Mr. Coombes then returned
to the kitchen, still in pursuit of gaiety, and, albeit a
strict Good Templar, drank (or spilt down the front
of the first and only frock-coat) no less than five
bottles of the stout Mrs. Coombes insisted upon
having for her health’s sake. He made cheerful
noises by breaking off the necks of the bottles with
several of his wife’s wedding-present dinner-plates,
and during the earlier part of this great drunk he
sang divers merry ballads. He cut his finger rather
badly with one of the bottles,—the only bloodshed in
this story,—and what with that, and the systematic
convulsion of his inexperienced physiology by the
liquorish brand of Mrs. Coombes’ stout, it may be the
evil of the fungus poison was somehow allayed. But
we prefer to draw a veil over the concluding incidents
of this Sunday afternoon. They ended in the coal
cellar, in a deep and healing sleep.</p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p>An interval of five years elapsed. Again it was a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
Sunday afternoon in October, and again Mr. Coombes
walked through the pinewood beyond the canal.
He was still the same dark-eyed, black-moustached
little man that he was at the outset of the story, but
his double chin was now scarcely so illusory as it had
been. His overcoat was new, with a velvet lapel,
and a stylish collar with turn-down corners, free of
any coarse starchiness, had replaced the original all-round
article. His hat was glossy, his gloves newish—though
one finger had split and been carefully
mended. And a casual observer would have noticed
about him a certain rectitude of bearing, a certain
erectness of head that marks the man who thinks
well of himself. He was a master now, with three
assistants. Beside him walked a larger sunburnt
parody of himself, his brother Tom, just back from
Australia. They were recapitulating their early
struggles, and Mr. Coombes had just been making
a financial statement.</p>
<p>“It’s a very nice little business, Jim,” said brother
Tom. “In these days of competition you’re jolly
lucky to have worked it up so. And you’re jolly
lucky, too, to have a wife who’s willing to help like
yours does.”</p>
<p>“Between ourselves,” said Mr. Coombes, “it wasn’t
always so. It wasn’t always like this. To begin
with, the missus was a bit giddy. Girls are funny
creatures.”</p>
<p>“Dear me!”</p>
<p>“Yes. You’d hardly think it, but she was downright
extravagant, and always having slaps at me.
I was a bit too easy and loving, and all that, and she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
thought the whole blessed show was run for her.
Turned the ’ouse into a regular caravansery, always
having her relations and girls from business in, and
their chaps. Comic songs a’ Sunday, it was getting
to, and driving trade away. And she was making
eyes at the chaps, too! I tell you, Tom, the place
wasn’t my own.”</p>
<p>“Shouldn’t ’a’ thought it.”</p>
<p>“It was so. Well—I reasoned with her. I said,
‘I ain’t a duke, to keep a wife like a pet animal. I
married you for ’elp and company.’ I said, ‘You got
to ’elp and pull the business through.’ She wouldn’t
’ear of it. ‘Very well,’ I says; ‘I’m a mild man till
I’m roused,’ I says, ‘and it’s getting to that.’ But she
wouldn’t ’ear of no warnings.”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“It’s the way with women. She didn’t think I ’ad
it in me to be roused. Women of her sort (between
ourselves, Tom) don’t respect a man until they’re a
bit afraid of him. So I just broke out to show her.
In comes a girl named Jennie, that used to work with
her, and her chap. We ’ad a bit of a row, and I
came out ’ere—it was just such another day as this—and
I thought it all out. Then I went back and
pitched into them.”</p>
<p>“You did?”</p>
<p>“I did. I was mad, I can tell you. I wasn’t going
to ’it ’er, if I could ’elp it, so I went back and licked
into this chap, just to show ’er what I could do.
’E was a big chap, too. Well, I chucked him, and
smashed things about, and gave ’er a scaring, and she
ran up and locked ’erself into the spare room.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“That’s all. I says to ’er the next morning, ‘Now
you know,’ I says, ‘what I’m like when I’m roused.’
And I didn’t ’ave to say anything more.”</p>
<p>“And you’ve been happy ever after, eh?”</p>
<p>“So to speak. There’s nothing like putting your
foot down with them. If it ’adn’t been for that afternoon
I should ’a’ been tramping the roads now, and
she’d ’a’ been grumbling at me, and all her family
grumbling for bringing her to poverty—I know their
little ways. But we’re all right now. And it’s a very
decent little business, as you say.”</p>
<p>They proceed on their way meditatively. “Women
are funny creatures,” said brother Tom.</p>
<p>“They want a firm hand,” says Coombes.</p>
<p>“What a lot of these funguses there are about
here!” remarked brother Tom presently. “I can’t see
what use they are in the world.”</p>
<p>Mr. Coombes looked. “I dessay they’re sent for
some wise purpose,” said Mr. Coombes.</p>
<p>And that was as much thanks as the purple pileus
ever got for maddening this absurd little man to the
pitch of decisive action, and so altering the whole
course of his life.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span></p>
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