<SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>
<h3> II </h3>
<h3> A YOUNG CITIZEN OF THE WORLD </h3>
<p>He had been in London more than once before, but not to the lodgings in
Philibert Place. When he was brought a second or third time to a town
or city, he always knew that the house he was taken to would be in a
quarter new to him, and he should not see again the people he had seen
before. Such slight links of acquaintance as sometimes formed
themselves between him and other children as shabby and poor as himself
were easily broken. His father, however, had never forbidden him to
make chance acquaintances. He had, in fact, told him that he had
reasons for not wishing him to hold himself aloof from other boys. The
only barrier which must exist between them must be the barrier of
silence concerning his wanderings from country to country. Other boys
as poor as he was did not make constant journeys, therefore they would
miss nothing from his boyish talk when he omitted all mention of his.
When he was in Russia, he must speak only of Russian places and Russian
people and customs. When he was in France, Germany, Austria, or
England, he must do the same thing. When he had learned English,
French, German, Italian, and Russian he did not know. He had seemed to
grow up in the midst of changing tongues which all seemed familiar to
him, as languages are familiar to children who have lived with them
until one scarcely seems less familiar than another. He did remember,
however, that his father had always been unswerving in his attention to
his pronunciation and method of speaking the language of any country
they chanced to be living in.</p>
<p>"You must not seem a foreigner in any country," he had said to him.
"It is necessary that you should not. But when you are in England, you
must not know French, or German, or anything but English."</p>
<p>Once, when he was seven or eight years old, a boy had asked him what
his father's work was.</p>
<p>"His own father is a carpenter, and he asked me if my father was one,"
Marco brought the story to Loristan. "I said you were not. Then he
asked if you were a shoemaker, and another one said you might be a
bricklayer or a tailor—and I didn't know what to tell them." He had
been out playing in a London street, and he put a grubby little hand on
his father's arm, and clutched and almost fiercely shook it. "I wanted
to say that you were not like their fathers, not at all. I knew you
were not, though you were quite as poor. You are not a bricklayer or a
shoemaker, but a patriot—you could not be only a bricklayer—you!" He
said it grandly and with a queer indignation, his black head held up
and his eyes angry.</p>
<p>Loristan laid his hand against his mouth.</p>
<p>"Hush! hush!" he said. "Is it an insult to a man to think he may be a
carpenter or make a good suit of clothes? If I could make our clothes,
we should go better dressed. If I were a shoemaker, your toes would
not be making their way into the world as they are now." He was
smiling, but Marco saw his head held itself high, too, and his eyes
were glowing as he touched his shoulder. "I know you did not tell them
I was a patriot," he ended. "What was it you said to them?"</p>
<p>"I remembered that you were nearly always writing and drawing maps, and
I said you were a writer, but I did not know what you wrote—and that
you said it was a poor trade. I heard you say that once to Lazarus.
Was that a right thing to tell them?"</p>
<p>"Yes. You may always say it if you are asked. There are poor fellows
enough who write a thousand different things which bring them little
money. There is nothing strange in my being a writer."</p>
<p>So Loristan answered him, and from that time if, by any chance, his
father's means of livelihood were inquired into, it was simple enough
and true enough to say that he wrote to earn his bread.</p>
<p>In the first days of strangeness to a new place, Marco often walked a
great deal. He was strong and untiring, and it amused him to wander
through unknown streets, and look at shops, and houses, and people. He
did not confine himself to the great thoroughfares, but liked to branch
off into the side streets and odd, deserted-looking squares, and even
courts and alleyways. He often stopped to watch workmen and talk to
them if they were friendly. In this way he made stray acquaintances in
his strollings, and learned a good many things. He had a fondness for
wandering musicians, and, from an old Italian who had in his youth been
a singer in opera, he had learned to sing a number of songs in his
strong, musical boy-voice. He knew well many of the songs of the
people in several countries.</p>
<p>It was very dull this first morning, and he wished that he had
something to do or some one to speak to. To do nothing whatever is a
depressing thing at all times, but perhaps it is more especially so
when one is a big, healthy boy twelve years old. London as he saw it in
the Marylebone Road seemed to him a hideous place. It was murky and
shabby-looking, and full of dreary-faced people. It was not the first
time he had seen the same things, and they always made him feel that he
wished he had something to do.</p>
<p>Suddenly he turned away from the gate and went into the house to speak
to Lazarus. He found him in his dingy closet of a room on the fourth
floor at the back of the house.</p>
<p>"I am going for a walk," he announced to him. "Please tell my father
if he asks for me. He is busy, and I must not disturb him."</p>
<p>Lazarus was patching an old coat as he often patched things—even shoes
sometimes. When Marco spoke, he stood up at once to answer him. He
was very obstinate and particular about certain forms of manner.
Nothing would have obliged him to remain seated when Loristan or Marco
was near him. Marco thought it was because he had been so strictly
trained as a soldier. He knew that his father had had great trouble to
make him lay aside his habit of saluting when they spoke to him.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," Marco had heard Loristan say to him almost severely, once
when he had forgotten himself and had stood at salute while his master
passed through a broken-down iron gate before an equally
broken-down-looking lodging-house—"perhaps you can force yourself to
remember when I tell you that it is not safe—IT IS NOT SAFE! You put
us in danger!"</p>
<p>It was evident that this helped the good fellow to control himself.
Marco remembered that at the time he had actually turned pale, and had
struck his forehead and poured forth a torrent of Samavian dialect in
penitence and terror. But, though he no longer saluted them in public,
he omitted no other form of reverence and ceremony, and the boy had
become accustomed to being treated as if he were anything but the
shabby lad whose very coat was patched by the old soldier who stood "at
attention" before him.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," Lazarus answered. "Where was it your wish to go?"</p>
<p>Marco knitted his black brows a little in trying to recall distinct
memories of the last time he had been in London.</p>
<p>"I have been to so many places, and have seen so many things since I
was here before, that I must begin to learn again about the streets and
buildings I do not quite remember."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said Lazarus. "There HAVE been so many. I also forget.
You were but eight years old when you were last here."</p>
<p>"I think I will go and find the royal palace, and then I will walk
about and learn the names of the streets," Marco said.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," answered Lazarus, and this time he made his military salute.</p>
<p>Marco lifted his right hand in recognition, as if he had been a young
officer. Most boys might have looked awkward or theatrical in making
the gesture, but he made it with naturalness and ease, because he had
been familiar with the form since his babyhood. He had seen officers
returning the salutes of their men when they encountered each other by
chance in the streets, he had seen princes passing sentries on their
way to their carriages, more august personages raising the quiet,
recognizing hand to their helmets as they rode through applauding
crowds. He had seen many royal persons and many royal pageants, but
always only as an ill-clad boy standing on the edge of the crowd of
common people. An energetic lad, however poor, cannot spend his days in
going from one country to another without, by mere every-day chance,
becoming familiar with the outer life of royalties and courts. Marco
had stood in continental thoroughfares when visiting emperors rode by
with glittering soldiery before and behind them, and a populace
shouting courteous welcomes. He knew where in various great capitals
the sentries stood before kingly or princely palaces. He had seen
certain royal faces often enough to know them well, and to be ready to
make his salute when particular quiet and unattended carriages passed
him by.</p>
<p>"It is well to know them. It is well to observe everything and to
train one's self to remember faces and circumstances," his father had
said. "If you were a young prince or a young man training for a
diplomatic career, you would be taught to notice and remember people
and things as you would be taught to speak your own language with
elegance. Such observation would be your most practical accomplishment
and greatest power. It is as practical for one man as another—for a
poor lad in a patched coat as for one whose place is to be in courts.
As you cannot be educated in the ordinary way, you must learn from
travel and the world. You must lose nothing—forget nothing."</p>
<p>It was his father who had taught him everything, and he had learned a
great deal. Loristan had the power of making all things interesting to
fascination. To Marco it seemed that he knew everything in the world.
They were not rich enough to buy many books, but Loristan knew the
treasures of all great cities, the resources of the smallest towns.
Together he and his boy walked through the endless galleries filled
with the wonders of the world, the pictures before which through
centuries an unbroken procession of almost worshiping eyes had passed
uplifted. Because his father made the pictures seem the glowing,
burning work of still-living men whom the centuries could not turn to
dust, because he could tell the stories of their living and laboring to
triumph, stories of what they felt and suffered and were, the boy
became as familiar with the old masters—Italian, German, French,
Dutch, English, Spanish—as he was with most of the countries they had
lived in. They were not merely old masters to him, but men who were
great, men who seemed to him to have wielded beautiful swords and held
high, splendid lights. His father could not go often with him, but he
always took him for the first time to the galleries, museums,
libraries, and historical places which were richest in treasures of
art, beauty, or story. Then, having seen them once through his eyes,
Marco went again and again alone, and so grew intimate with the wonders
of the world. He knew that he was gratifying a wish of his father's
when he tried to train himself to observe all things and forget
nothing. These palaces of marvels were his school-rooms, and his
strange but rich education was the most interesting part of his life.
In time, he knew exactly the places where the great Rembrandts,
Vandykes, Rubens, Raphaels, Tintorettos, or Frans Hals hung; he knew
whether this masterpiece or that was in Vienna, in Paris, in Venice, or
Munich, or Rome. He knew stories of splendid crown jewels, of old
armor, of ancient crafts, and of Roman relics dug up from beneath the
foundations of old German cities. Any boy wandering to amuse himself
through museums and palaces on "free days" could see what he saw, but
boys living fuller and less lonely lives would have been less likely to
concentrate their entire minds on what they looked at, and also less
likely to store away facts with the determination to be able to recall
at any moment the mental shelf on which they were laid. Having no
playmates and nothing to play with, he began when he was a very little
fellow to make a sort of game out of his rambles through
picture-galleries, and the places which, whether they called themselves
museums or not, were storehouses or relics of antiquity. There were
always the blessed "free days," when he could climb any marble steps,
and enter any great portal without paying an entrance fee. Once
inside, there were plenty of plainly and poorly dressed people to be
seen, but there were not often boys as young as himself who were not
attended by older companions. Quiet and orderly as he was, he often
found himself stared at. The game he had created for himself was as
simple as it was absorbing. It was to try how much he could remember
and clearly describe to his father when they sat together at night and
talked of what he had seen. These night talks filled his happiest
hours. He never felt lonely then, and when his father sat and watched
him with a certain curious and deep attention in his dark, reflective
eyes, the boy was utterly comforted and content. Sometimes he brought
back rough and crude sketches of objects he wished to ask questions
about, and Loristan could always relate to him the full, rich story of
the thing he wanted to know. They were stories made so splendid and
full of color in the telling that Marco could not forget them.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />