<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2><span>BOOK II</span> <span class="smaller">MR. COOTE, THE CHAPERON</span></h2>
<hr />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2><span>CHAPTER I</span> <span class="smaller">THE NEW CONDITIONS</span></h2>
<p class="center">§1</p>
<p>There comes a gentlemanly figure into these events and for a space takes
a leading part therein, a Good Influence, a refined and amiable figure,
Mr. Chester Coote. You must figure him as about to enter our story,
walking with a curious rectitude of bearing through the evening dusk
towards the Public Library, erect, large-headed—he had a great, big
head full of the suggestion of a powerful mind, well under control—with
a large, official-looking envelope in his white and knuckly hand. In the
other he carries a gold-handled cane. He wears a silken grey jacket
suit, buttoned up, and anon he coughs behind the official envelope. He
has a prominent nose, slatey grey eyes and a certain heaviness about the
mouth. His mouth hangs breathing open, with a slight protrusion of the
lower jaw. His straw hat is pulled down a little in front, and he looks
each person he passes in the eye, and directly his look is answered looks away.</p>
<p>Thus Mr. Chester Coote, as he was on the evening when he came upon
Kipps. He was a local house<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></SPAN></span> agent and a most active and gentlemanly
person, a conscious gentleman, equally aware of society and the serious
side of life. From amateur theatricals of a nice, refined sort to
science classes, few things were able to get along without him. He
supplied a fine, full bass, a little flat and quavery perhaps, but very
abundant, to the St. Stylites' choir....</p>
<p>He passes on towards the Public Library, lifts the envelope in
salutation to a passing curate, smiles and enters....</p>
<p>It was in the Public Library that he came upon Kipps.</p>
<p>By that time Kipps had been rich a week or more, and the change in his
circumstances was visible upon his person. He was wearing a new suit of
drab flannels, a Panama hat and a red tie for the first time, and he
carried a silver-mounted stick with a tortoise shell handle. He felt
extraordinarily different, perhaps more different than he really was,
from the meek Improver of a week ago. He felt as he felt Dukes must
feel, yet at bottom he was still modest. He was leaning on his stick and
regarding the indicator with a respect that never palled. He faced round
to meet Mr. Coote's overflowing smile.</p>
<p>"What are you doang hea?" said Mr. Chester Coote.</p>
<p>Kipps was momentarily abashed. "Oh," he said slowly, and then, "Mooching
round a bit."</p>
<p>That Coote should address him with this easy familiarity was a fresh
reminder of his enhanced <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></SPAN></span>social position. "Jes' mooching round," he
said. "I been back in Folkestone free days now. At my 'ouse, you know."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Mr. Coote. "I haven't yet had an opportunity of
congratulating you on your good fortune."</p>
<p>Kipps held out his hand. "It was the cleanest surprise that ever was,"
he said. "When Mr. Bean told me of it—you could have knocked me down
with a feather."</p>
<p>"It must mean a tremendous change for you."</p>
<p>"Oo. Rather. Change. Why, I'm like the chap in the song they sing, I
don't 'ardly know where I are. <i>You</i> know."</p>
<p>"An extraordinary change," said Mr. Coote. "I can quite believe it. Are
you stopping in Folkestone?"</p>
<p>"For a bit. I got a 'ouse, you know. What my gran'father 'ad. I'm
stopping there. His housekeeper was kep' on. Fancy—being in the same
town and everything!"</p>
<p>"Precisely," said Mr. Coote. "That's it!" and coughed like a sheep
behind four straight fingers.</p>
<p>"Mr. Bean got me to come back to see to things. Else I was out in New
Romney, where my Uncle and Aunt live. But it's a Lark coming back. In a way...."</p>
<p>The conversation hung for a moment.</p>
<p>"Are you getting a book?" asked Coote.</p>
<p>"Well, I 'aven't got a ticket yet. But I shall get<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></SPAN></span> one all right, and
have a go in at reading. I've often wanted to. Rather. I was just 'aving
a look at this Indicator. First-class idea. Tells you all you want to know."</p>
<p>"It's simple," said Coote, and coughed again, keeping his eyes fixed on
Kipps. For a moment they hung, evidently disinclined to part. Then Kipps
jumped at an idea he had cherished for a day or more,—not particularly
in relation to Coote, but in relation to anyone.</p>
<p>"You doing anything?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Just called with a papah about the classes."</p>
<p>"Because——. Would you care to come up and look at my 'ouse and 'ave a
smoke and a chat. Eh?" He made indicative back jerks of the head, and
was smitten with a horrible doubt whether possibly this invitation might
not be some hideous breach of etiquette. Was it, for example, the
correct hour? "I'd be awfully glad if you would," he added.</p>
<p>Mr. Coote begged for a moment while he handed the official-looking
envelope to the librarian and then declared himself quite at Kipps'
service. They muddled a moment over precedence at each door they went
through and so emerged to the street.</p>
<p>"It feels awful rum to me at first, all this," said Kipps "'Aving a
'ouse of my own and all that. It's strange, you know. 'Aving all day.
Reely I don't 'ardly know what to do with my time.</p>
<p>"D'ju smoke?" he said suddenly, proffering a magnificent gold decorated
pigskin cigarette case,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN></span> which he produced from nothing, almost as
though it was some sort of trick. Coote hesitated and declined, and
then, with great liberality, "Don't let me hinder you...."</p>
<p>They walked a little way in silence, Kipps being chiefly concerned to
affect ease in his new clothes and keeping a wary eye on Coote. "It's
rather a big windfall," said Coote presently. "It yields you an
income——?"</p>
<p>"Twelve 'undred a year," said Kipps. "Bit over—if anything."</p>
<p>"Do you think of living in Folkestone?"</p>
<p>"Don't know 'ardly yet. I <i>may</i>. Then again, I may not. I got a
furnished 'ouse, but I may let it."</p>
<p>"Your plans are undecided?"</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"Very beautiful sunset it was to-night," said Coote, and Kipps said,
"Wasn't it?" and they began to talk of the merits of sunsets. Did Kipps
paint? Not since he was a boy. He didn't believe he could now. Coote
said his sister was a painter and Kipps received this intimation with
respect. Coote sometimes wished he could find time to paint
himself,—but one couldn't do everything and Kipps said that was "jest it."</p>
<p>They came out presently upon the end of the Leas and looked down to
where the squat dark masses of the Harbour and Harbour Station, gemmed
with pinpoint lights, crouched against the twilit grey of the sea. "If
one could do <i>that</i>," said Coote, and Kipps was inspired to throw his
head back, cock it on one<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN></span> side, regard the Harbour with one eye shut
and say that it would take some doing. Then Coote said something about
"Abend," which Kipps judged to be in a foreign language and got over by
lighting another cigarette from his by no means completed first one.
"You're right, <i>puff</i>, <i>puff</i>."</p>
<p>He felt that so far he had held up his end of the conversation in a very
creditable manner, but that extreme discretion was advisable.</p>
<p>They turned away and Coote remarked that the sea was good for crossing,
and asked Kipps if he had been over the water very much. Kipps said he
hadn't been—"much," but he thought very likely he'd have a run over to
Boulogne soon, and Coote proceeded to talk of the charms of foreign
travel, mentioning quite a number of unheard-of places by name. He had
been to them! Kipps remained on the defensive, but behind his defences
his heart sank. It was all very well to pretend, but presently it was
bound to come out. <i>He</i> didn't know anything of all this....</p>
<p>So they drew near the house. At his own gate Kipps became extremely
nervous. It was a fine, impressive door. He knocked neither a single
knock nor a double, but about one and a half—an apologetic half. They
were admitted by an irreproachable housemaid, with a steady eye, before
which Kipps cringed dreadfully. He hung up his hat and fell about over
hall chairs and things. "There's a fire in the study, Mary?" he had the
audacity to ask, though evidently he knew, and led the way upstairs
panting.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN></span> He tried to shut the door and discovered the housemaid behind
him coming to light his lamp. This enfeebled him further. He said
nothing until the door closed behind her. Meanwhile to show his <i>sang
froid</i> he hummed and flitted towards the window, and here and there.</p>
<p>Coote went to the big hearthrug and turned and surveyed his host. His
hand went to the back of his head and patted his occiput—a gesture
frequent with him.</p>
<p>"'Ere we are," said Kipps, hands in his pockets and glancing round him.</p>
<p>It was a gaunt Victorian room, with a heavy, dirty cornice, and the
ceiling enriched by the radiant plaster ornament of an obliterated gas
chandelier. It held two large glass fronted bookcases, one of which was
surmounted by a stuffed terrier encased in glass. There was a mirror
over the mantel and hangings and curtains of magnificent crimson
patternings. On the mantel were a huge black clock of classical design,
vases in the Burslem Etruscan style, spills and toothpicks in large
receptacles of carved rock, large lava ash trays and an exceptionally
big box of matches. The fender was very great and brassy. In a
favourable position, under the window, was a spacious rosewood writing
desk, and all the chairs and other furniture were of rosewood and well
stuffed.</p>
<p>"This," said Kipps, in something near an undertone, "was the o'
gentleman's study—my grandfather that was. 'E used to sit at that desk
and write."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Books?"</p>
<p>"No. Letters to the <i>Times</i>, and things like that. 'E's got 'em all cut
out—stuck in a book.... Leastways, he <i>'ad</i>. It's in that bookcase....
Won't you sit down?"</p>
<p>Coote did, bowing very slightly, and Kipps secured his vacated position
on the extensive black skin rug. He spread out his legs compass-fashion
and tried to appear at his ease. The rug, the fender, the mantel and
mirror conspired with great success to make him look a trivial and
intrusive little creature amidst their commonplace hauteur, and his own
shadow on the opposite wall seemed to think everything a great lark and
mocked and made tremendous fun of him....</p>
<p class="center">§2</p>
<p>For a space Kipps played a defensive game and Coote drew the lines of
the conversation. They kept away from the theme of Kipps' change of
fortune, and Coote made remarks upon local and social affairs. "You must
take an interest in these things now," was as much as he said in the way
of personalities. But it speedily became evident that he was a person of
wide and commanding social relationships. He spoke of "society" being
mixed in the neighbourhood and of the difficulty of getting people to
work together, and "do" things; they were cliquish. Incidentally he
alluded quite familiarly to men with military titles, and once even to
someone with a title, a Lady <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN></span>Punnet. Not snobbishly, you understand,
nor deliberately, but quite in passing. He had, it appeared, talked to
Lady Punnet about private theatricals! In connection with the Hospitals.
She had been unreasonable and he had put her right, gently of course,
but firmly. "If you stand up to these people," said Coote, "they like
you all the better." It was also very evident he was at his ease with
the clergy; "My friend, Mr. Densemore—a curate, you know, and rather
curious, the Reverend <i>and</i> Honourable." Coote grew visibly in Kipps'
eyes as he said these things; he became, not only the exponent of
"Vagner or Vargner," the man whose sister had painted a picture to be
exhibited at the Royal Academy, the type of the hidden thing called
culture, but a delegate, as it were, or at least an intermediary from
that great world "up there," where there were men servants, where there
were titles, where people dressed for dinner, drank wine at meals, wine
costing very often as much as three and sixpence the bottle, and
followed through a maze of etiquette, the most stupendous practices....</p>
<p>Coote sat back in the armchair smoking luxuriously and expanding
pleasantly, with the delightful sense of Savoir Faire; Kipps sat
forward, his elbows on his chair arm alert, and his head a little on one
side. You figure him as looking little and cheap and feeling smaller and
cheaper amidst his new surroundings. But it was a most stimulating and
interesting conversation. And soon it became less general and more
serious and intimate. Coote spoke of people who had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN></span> got on, and of
people who hadn't, of people who seemed to be <i>in</i> everything and people
who seemed to be <i>out</i> of everything, and then he came round to Kipps.</p>
<p>"You'll have a good time," he said abruptly, with a smile that would
have interested a dentist.</p>
<p>"I dunno," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"There's mistakes, of course."</p>
<p>"That's jest it."</p>
<p>Coote lit a new cigarette. "One can't help being interested in what you
will do," he remarked. "Of course—for a young man of spirit, come
suddenly into wealth—there's temptations."</p>
<p>"I got to go careful," said Kipps. "O' Bean told me that at the very first."</p>
<p>Coote went on to speak of pitfalls, of Betting, of Bad Companions. "I
know," said Kipps, "I know." "There's Doubt again," said Coote. "I know
a young fellow—a solicitor—handsome, gifted. And yet, you
know—utterly sceptical. Practically altogether a Sceptic."</p>
<p>"Lor'!" said Kipps, "not a Natheist?"</p>
<p>"I fear so," said Coote. "Really, you know, an awfully fine young
fellow—Gifted! But full of this dreadful Modern Spirit—Cynical! All
this Overman stuff. Nietzsche and all that.... I wish I could do
something for him."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Kipps and knocked the ash off his cigarette. "I know a
chap—one of our apprentices he was—once. Always scoffing.... He lef'!"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>He paused. "Never wrote for his refs," he said, in the deep tone proper
to a moral tragedy, and then, after a pause—"Enlisted!"</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Coote.</p>
<p>"And often," he said, after a pause, "it's just the most spirited chaps,
just the chaps one likes best, who Go Wrong."</p>
<p>"It's temptation," Kipps remarked.</p>
<p>He glanced at Coote, leant forward, knocked the ash from his cigarette
into the mighty fender. "That's jest it," he said; "you get tempted.
Before you know where you are."</p>
<p>"Modern life," said Coote, "is so—complex. It isn't everyone is Strong.
Half the young fellows who go wrong, aren't really bad."</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"One gets a tone from one's surroundings——"</p>
<p>"That's exactly it," said Kipps.</p>
<p>He meditated. "<i>I</i> picked up with a chap," he said. "A Nacter. Leastways
he writes plays. Clever fellow. But——"</p>
<p>He implied extensive moral obloquy by a movement of his head. "Of course
it's seeing life," he added.</p>
<p>Coote pretended to understand the full implications of Kipps' remark.
"Is it <i>worth</i> it?" he asked.</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps.</p>
<p>He decided to give some more. "One gets talking," he said. "Then it's
''ave a drink!' Old Methusaleh four stars—and where <i>are</i> you? <i>I</i>
been<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN></span> drunk," he said in a tone of profound humility, and added, "lots
of times."</p>
<p>"Tt. Tt.," said Coote.</p>
<p>"Dozens of times," said Kipps, smiling sadly, and added, "lately."</p>
<p>His imagination became active and seductive. "One thing leads to
another. Cards, p'raps. Girls——"</p>
<p>"I know," said Coote; "I know."</p>
<p>Kipps regarded the fire and flushed slightly. He borrowed a sentence
that Chitterlow had recently used. "One can't tell tales out of school,"
he said.</p>
<p>"I can imagine it," said Coote.</p>
<p>Kipps looked with a confidential expression into Coote's face. "It was
bad enough when money was limited," he remarked. "But now——" He spoke
with raised eyebrows, "I got to steady down."</p>
<p>"You <i>must</i>," said Coote, protruding his lips into a sort of whistling
concern for a moment.</p>
<p>"I must," said Kipps, nodding his head slowly with raised eyebrows. He
looked at his cigarette end and threw it into the fender. He was
beginning to think he was holding his own in this conversation rather
well, after all.</p>
<p>Kipps was never a good liar. He was the first to break silence. "I don't
mean to say I been reely bad or reely bad drunk. A 'eadache
perhaps—three or four times, say. But there it is!"</p>
<p>"I have never tasted alcohol in my life," said Coote, with an immense
frankness, "never!"</p>
<p>"No?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Never. I don't feel <i>I</i> should be likely to get drunk at all—it isn't
that. And I don't go so far as to say even that in small quantities—at
meals—it does one harm. But if I take it, someone else who doesn't know
where to stop—you see?"</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps, with admiring eyes.</p>
<p>"I smoke," admitted Coote. "One doesn't want to be a Pharisee."</p>
<p>It struck Kipps what a tremendously Good chap this Coote was, not only
tremendously clever and educated and a gentleman and one knowing Lady
Punnet, but Good. He seemed to be giving all his time and thought to
doing good things to other people. A great desire to confide certain
things to him arose. At first Kipps hesitated whether he should confide
an equal desire for Benevolent activities or for further
Depravity—either was in his mind. He rather affected the pose of the
Good Intentioned Dog. Then suddenly his impulses took quite a different
turn, fell indeed into what was a far more serious rut in his mind. It
seemed to him Coote might be able to do for him something he very much
wanted done.</p>
<p>"Companionship accounts for so much," said Coote.</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps. "Of course, you know, in my new
position——. That's just the difficulty."</p>
<p>He plunged boldly at his most secret trouble. He knew that he wanted
refinement—culture. It was all very well—but he knew. But how was one
to get it?<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN></span> He knew no one, knew no people——. He rested on the broken
sentence. The shop chaps were all very well, very good chaps and all
that, but not what one wanted. "I feel be'ind," said Kipps. "I feel out
of it. And consequently I feel it's no good. And then if temptation
comes along——"</p>
<p>"Exactly," said Coote.</p>
<p>Kipps spoke of his respect for Miss Walshingham and her freckled friend.
He contrived not to look too self-conscious. "You know, I'd like to talk
to people like that, but I can't. A chap's afraid of giving himself away."</p>
<p>"Of course," said Coote, "of course."</p>
<p>"I went to a middle-class school, you know. You mustn't fancy I'm one of
these here board-school chaps, but you know it reely wasn't a
first-class affair. Leastways he didn't take pains with us. If you
didn't want to learn you needn't—I don't believe it was <i>much</i> better
than one of these here national schools. We wore mortarboards, o'
course. But what's <i>that</i>?</p>
<p>"I'm a regular fish out of water with this money. When I got it—it's a
week ago—reely I thought I'd got everything I wanted. But I dunno what
to <i>do</i>."</p>
<p>His voice went up into a squeak. "Practically," he said, "it's no good
shuttin' my eyes to things—I'm a gentleman."</p>
<p>Coote indicated a serious assent.</p>
<p>"And there's the responsibilities of a gentleman," he remarked.</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"There's calling on people," said Kipps. "If you want to go on knowing
Someone you knew before like. People that's refined." He laughed
nervously. "I'm a regular fish out of water," he said, with expectant
eyes on Coote.</p>
<p>But Coote only nodded for him to go on.</p>
<p>"This actor chap," he meditated, "is a good sort of chap. But 'e isn't
what <i>I</i> call a gentleman. I got to 'old myself in with 'im. 'E'd make
me go it wild in no time. 'E's pretty near the on'y chap I know. Except
the shop chaps. They've come round to 'ave supper once already and a bit
of a sing song afterwards. I sang. I got a banjo, you know, and I vamp a
bit. Vamping—you know. Haven't got far in the book—'Ow to Vamp—but
still I'm getting on. Jolly, of course, in a way, but what does it lead
to?... Besides that, there's my Aunt and Uncle. <i>They're</i> very good old
people—very—jest a bit interfering p'r'aps and thinking one isn't
grown up, but Right enough. Only——. It isn't what I <i>want</i>. I feel
I've got be'ind with everything. I want to make it up again. I want to
get with educated people who know 'ow to do things—in the regular,
proper way."</p>
<p>His beautiful modesty awakened nothing but benevolence in the mind of
Chester Coote.</p>
<p>"If I had someone like you," said Kipps, "that I knew regular like——"</p>
<p>From that point their course ran swift and easy. "If I <i>could</i> be of any
use to you," said Coote....</p>
<p>"But you're so busy and all that."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Not <i>too</i> busy. You know, your case is a very interesting one. It was
partly that made me speak to you and draw you out. Here you are with all
this money and no experience, a spirited young chap——"</p>
<p>"That's jest it," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"I thought I'd see what you were made of, and I must confess I've rarely
talked to anyone that I've found quite so interesting as you have
been——"</p>
<p>"I seem able to say things to you like somehow," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"I'm glad. I'm tremendously glad."</p>
<p>"I want a Friend. That's it—straight."</p>
<p>"My dear chap, if I——"</p>
<p>"Yes, but——"</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> want a Friend, too."</p>
<p>"Reely?"</p>
<p>"Yes. You know, my dear Kipps—if I may call you that."</p>
<p>"Go on," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"I'm rather a lonely dog myself. <i>This</i> to-night——. I've not had
anyone I've spoken to so freely of my Work for months."</p>
<p>"No?"</p>
<p>"You. And, my dear chap, if I can do anything to guide or help you——"</p>
<p>Coote displayed all his teeth in a kindly tremulous smile and his eyes
were shiny. "Shake 'ands," said Kipps, deeply moved, and he and Coote
rose and clasped with mutual emotion.</p>
<p>"It's reely too good of you," said Kipps.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Whatever I can do I will," said Coote.</p>
<p>And so their compact was made. From that moment they were Friends,
intimate, confidential, high-thinking, <i>sotto voce</i> friends. All the
rest of their talk (and it inclined to be interminable) was an expansion
of that. For that night Kipps wallowed in self-abandonment and Coote
behaved as one who had received a great trust. That sinister passion for
pedagoguery to which the Good Intentioned are so fatally liable, that
passion of infinite presumption that permits one weak human being to
arrogate the direction of another weak human being's affairs, had Coote
in its grip. He was to be a sort of lay confessor and director of Kipps,
he was to help Kipps in a thousand ways, he was in fact to chaperon
Kipps into the higher and better sort of English life. He was to tell
him his faults, advise him about the right thing to do——</p>
<p>"It's all these things I don't know," said Kipps. "I don't know, for
instance, what's the right sort of dress to wear—I don't even know if
I'm dressed right now——"</p>
<p>"All these things"—Coote stuck out his lips and nodded rapidly to show
he understood—"Trust me for that," he said, "trust me."</p>
<p>As the evening wore on Coote's manner changed, became more and more the
manner of a proprietor. He began to take up his rôle, to survey Kipps
with a new, with a critical affection. It was evident the thing fell in
with his ideas. "It will be awfully <span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN></span>interesting," he said. "You know,
Kipps, you're really good stuff." (Every sentence now he said "Kipps" or
"my dear Kipps" with a curiously authoritative intonation.)</p>
<p>"I know," said Kipps, "only there's such a lot of things I don't seem to
be up to some'ow. That's where the trouble comes in."</p>
<p>They talked and talked, and now Kipps was talking freely. They rambled
over all sorts of things. Among others Kipps' character was dealt with
at length. Kipps gave valuable lights on it. "When I'm reely excited,"
he said, "I don't seem to care <i>what</i> I do. I'm like that." And again,
"I don't like to do anything under'and. I <i>must</i> speak out...."</p>
<p>He picked a piece of cotton from his knee, the fire grimaced behind his
back, and his shadow on the wall and ceiling was disrespectfully
convulsed.</p>
<p class="center">§3</p>
<p>Kipps went to bed at last with an impression of important things
settled, and he lay awake for quite a long time. He felt he was lucky.
He had known—in fact Buggins and Carshot and Pierce had made it very
clear indeed—that his status in life had changed and that stupendous
adaptations had to be achieved, but how they were to be effected had
driven that adaptation into the incredible. Here in the simplest,
easiest way was the adapter. The thing had become possible. Not of
course easy, but possible.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was much to learn, sheer intellectual toil, methods of address,
bowing, an enormous complexity of laws. One broken, you are an outcast.
How, for example, would one encounter Lady Punnet? It was quite possible
some day he might really have to do that. Coote might introduce him.
"Lord!" he said aloud to the darkness between grinning and dismay. He
figured himself going into the Emporium to buy a tie, for example, and
there in the face of Buggins, Carshot, Pierce and the rest of them,
meeting "my friend, Lady Punnet!" It might not end with Lady Punnet! His
imagination plunged and bolted with him, galloped, took wings and soared
to romantic, to poetical altitudes....</p>
<p>Suppose some day one met Royalty. By accident, say! He soared to that!
After all,—twelve hundred a year is a lift, a tremendous lift. How did
one address Royalty? "Your Majesty's Goodness," it will be, no
doubt—something like that—and on the knees. He became impersonal. Over
a thousand a year made him an Esquire, didn't it? He thought that was
it. In which case, wouldn't he have to be presented at Court? Velvet
cycling breeches like you wear cycling, and a sword! What a curious
place a court must be! Kneeling and bowing, and what was it Miss Mergle
used to talk about? Of course!—ladies with long trains walking about
backward. Everybody walked about backward at court, he knew, when not
actually on their knees. Perhaps, though, some people regular stood up
to the King! Talked<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN></span> to him, just as one might talk to Buggins, say.
Cheek of course! Dukes, it might be, did that—by permission?
Millionnaires?...</p>
<p>From such thoughts this free citizen of our Crowned Republic passed
insensibly into dreams, turgid dreams of that vast ascent which
constitutes the true-born Briton's social scheme, which terminates with
retrogressive progression and a bending back.</p>
<p class="center">§4</p>
<p>The next morning he came down to breakfast looking grave—a man with
much before him in the world....</p>
<p>Kipps made a very special thing of his breakfast. Daily once hopeless
dreams came true then. It had been customary in the Emporium to
supplement Shalford's generous, indeed unlimited, supply of bread and
butter-substitute, by private purchases, and this had given Kipps very
broad, artistic conceptions of what the meal might be. Now there would
be a cutlet or so or a mutton chop—this splendour Buggins had reported
from the great London clubs—haddock, kipper, whiting or fish-balls,
eggs, boiled or scrambled, or eggs and bacon, kidney also frequently and
sometimes liver. Amidst a garland of such themes, sausages, black and
white puddings, bubble-and-squeak, fried cabbage and scallops came and
went. Always as camp followers came potted meat in all varieties, cold
bacon, German sausage, brawn,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN></span> marmalade and two sorts of jam, and when
he had finished these he would sit among his plates and smoke a
cigarette and look at all these dishes crowded round him with a beatific
approval. It was his principal meal. He was sitting with his cigarette
regarding his apartment with that complacency begotten of a generous
plan of feeding successfully realized, when newspapers and post arrived.</p>
<p>There were several things by the post, tradesmen's circulars and cards
and two pathetic begging letters—his luck had got into the papers—and
there was a letter from a literary man and a book to enforce his request
for 10/—to put down Socialism. The book made it very clear that prompt
action on the part of property owners was becoming urgent, if property
was to last out the year. Kipps dipped in it and was seriously
perturbed. And there was a letter from old Kipps saying it was difficult
to leave the shop and come over and see him again just yet, but that he
had been to a sale at Lydd the previous day and bought a few good old
books and things it would be difficult to find the equal of in
Folkestone. "They don't know the value of these things out here," wrote
old Kipps, "but you may depend upon it they are valuable," and a brief
financial statement followed. "There is an engraving someone might come
along and offer you a lot of money for one of these days. Depend upon
it, these old things are about the best investment you could make...."</p>
<p>Old Kipps had long been addicted to sales, and his<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN></span> nephew's good
fortune had converted what had once been but a looking and a craving—he
had rarely even bid for anything in the old days except the garden tools
or the kitchen gallipots or things like that, things one gets for
sixpence and finds a use for—into a very active pleasure. Sage and
penetrating inspection, a certain mystery of bearing, tactical bids and
Purchase!—Purchase!—the old man had had a good time.</p>
<p>While Kipps was rereading the begging letters and wishing he had the
sound, clear common sense of Buggins to help him a little, the Parcels
Post brought along the box from his uncle. It was a large, insecure
looking case held together by a few still loyal nails, and by what the
British War Office would have recognised at once as an Army Corps of
string, rags and odds and ends tied together. Kipps unpacked it with a
table knife, assisted at a critical point by the poker, and found a
number of books and other objects of an antique type.</p>
<p>There were three bound volumes of early issues of Chambers' Journal, a
copy of Punch's Pocket Book for 1875, Sturm's Reflections, an early
version of Gill's Geography (slightly torn), an illustrated work on
Spinal Curvature, an early edition of Kirke's Human Physiology, The
Scottish Chiefs and a little volume on the Language of Flowers. There
was a fine steel engraving, oak-framed and with some rusty spots, done
in the Colossal style and representing the Handwriting on the Wall.
There were also a copper<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></span> kettle, a pair of candle snuffers, a brass
shoehorn, a tea caddy to lock, two decanters (one stoppered) and what
was probably a portion of an eighteenth century child's rattle.</p>
<p>Kipps examined these objects one by one and wished he knew more about
them. Turning over the pages of the Physiology again he came upon a
striking plate in which a youth of agreeable profile displayed his
interior in an unstinted manner to the startled eye. It was a new view
of humanity altogether for Kipps, and it arrested his mind.</p>
<p>This anatomised figure made him forget for a space that he was
"practically a gentleman" altogether, and he was still surveying its
extraordinary complications when another reminder of a world quite
outside those spheres of ordered gentility into which his dreams had
carried him overnight, arrived (following the servant) in the person of Chitterlow.</p>
<p class="center">§5</p>
<p>"Ul-<i>lo</i>!" said Kipps, rising.</p>
<p>"Not busy?" said Chitterlow, enveloping Kipps' hand for a moment in one
of his own and tossing the yachting cap upon the monumental carved oak
sideboard.</p>
<p>"Only a bit of reading," said Kipps.</p>
<p>"Reading, eh?" Chitterlow cocked the red eye at the books and other
properties for a moment and then, "I've been expecting you 'round again
one night."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I been coming 'round," said Kipps. "On'y there's a chap 'ere——. I
was coming 'round last night on'y I met 'im."</p>
<p>He walked to the hearthrug. Chitterlow drifted around the room for a
time, glancing at things as he talked. "I've altered that play
tremendously since I saw you," he said. "Pulled it all to pieces."</p>
<p>"What play's that, Chit'low?"</p>
<p>"The one we were talking about. You know. You said something—I don't
know if you meant it—about buying half of it. Not the tragedy. I
wouldn't sell my twin brother a share in that. That's my investment.
That's my Serious Work. No! I mean that new farce I've been on to. Thing
with the business about a beetle."</p>
<p>"Oo yes," said Kipps. "<i>I</i> remember."</p>
<p>"I thought you would. Said you'd take a fourth share for a hundred
pounds. <i>You</i> know."</p>
<p>"I seem to remember something——"</p>
<p>"Well, it's all different. Every bit of it. I'll tell you. You remember
what you said about a butterfly? You got confused, you know—Old Meth.
Kept calling the beetle a butterfly and that set me off. I've made it
quite different. Quite different. Instead of Popplewaddle—thundering
good farce name that, you know; for all that it came from a Visitors'
List—instead of Popplewaddle getting a beetle down his neck and rushing
about, I've made him a collector—collects butterflies, and this one you
know's a rare one. Comes in at window, centre." Chitterlow began to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span>
illustrate with appropriate gestures. "Pop rushes about after it.
Forgets he mustn't let on he's in the house. After that——. Tells 'em.
Rare butterfly, worth lots of money. Some are, you know. Everyone's on
to it after that. Butterfly can't get out of room, every time it comes
out to have a try, rush and scurry. Well, I've worked on that. Only——"</p>
<p>He came very close to Kipps. He held up one hand horizontally and tapped
it in a striking and confidential manner with the fingers of the other.
"Something else," he said. "That's given me a Real Ibsenish Touch—like
the Wild Duck. You know that woman—I've made her lighter—and she sees
it. When they're chasing the butterfly the third time, she's on! She
looks. 'That's me!' she says. Bif! Pestered Butterfly. <i>She's</i> the
Pestered Butterfly. It's legitimate. Much more legitimate than the Wild
Duck—where there isn't a duck!</p>
<p>"Knock 'em! The very title ought to knock 'em. I've been working like a
horse at it.... You'll have a gold mine in that quarter share, Kipps....
<i>I</i> don't mind. It's suited me to sell it, and suited you to buy. Bif!"</p>
<p>Chitterlow interrupted his discourse to ask, "You haven't any brandy in
the house, have you? Not to drink, you know. But I want just an
eggcupful to pull me steady. My liver's a bit queer.... It doesn't
matter, if you haven't. Not a bit. I'm like that. Yes, whiskey'll do.
Better!"</p>
<p>Kipps hesitated for a moment, then turned and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span> fumbled in the cupboard
of his sideboard. Presently he disinterred a bottle of whiskey and
placed it on the table. Then he put out first one bottle of soda water
and after the hesitation of a moment another. Chitterlow picked up the
bottle and read the label. "Good old Methusaleh," he said. Kipps handed
him the corkscrew and then his hand fluttered up to his mouth. "I'll
have to ring now," he said, "to get glasses." He hesitated for a moment
before doing so, leaning doubtfully as it were towards the bell.</p>
<p>When the housemaid appeared he was standing on the hearthrug with his
legs wide apart, with the bearing of a desperate fellow. And after they
had both had whiskeys—"You know a decent whiskey," Chitterlow remarked
and took another "just to drink."—Kipps produced cigarettes and the
conversation flowed again.</p>
<p>Chitterlow paced the room. He was, he explained, taking a day off; that
was why he had come around to see Kipps. Whenever he thought of any
extensive change in a play he was writing he always took a day off. In
the end it saved time to do so. It prevented his starting rashly upon
work that might have to be rewritten. There was no good in doing work
when you might have to do it over again, none whatever.</p>
<p>Presently they were descending the steps by the Parade <i>en route</i> for
the Warren, with Chitterlow doing the talking and going with a dancing
drop from step to step....</p>
<p>They had a great walk, not a long one, but a great<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span> one. They went up by
the Sanatorium, and over the East Cliff and into that queer little
wilderness of slippery and tumbling clay and rock under the chalk
cliffs, a wilderness of thorn and bramble, wild rose and wayfaring tree,
that adds so greatly to Folkestone's charm. They traversed its
intricacies and clambered up to the crest of the cliffs at last by a
precipitous path that Chitterlow endowed in some mysterious way with
suggestions of Alpine adventure. Every now and then he would glance
aside at sea and cliffs with a fresh boyishness of imagination that
brought back New Romney and the stranded wrecks to Kipps' memory; but
mostly he bored on with his great obsession of plays and playwriting,
and that empty absurdity that is so serious to his kind, his Art. That
was a thing that needed a monstrous lot of explaining. Along they went,
sometimes abreast, sometimes in single file, up the little paths, and
down the little paths, and in among the bushes and out along the edge
above the beach, and Kipps went along trying ever and again to get an
insignificant word in edgeways, and the gestures of Chitterlow flew wide
and far and his great voice rose and fell, and he said this and he said
that and he biffed and banged into the circumambient Inane.</p>
<p>It was assumed that they were embarked upon no more trivial enterprise
than the Reform of the British Stage, and Kipps found himself classed
with many opulent and even royal and noble amateurs—the Honourable
Thomas Norgate came in here—who<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN></span> had interested themselves in the
practical realisation of high ideals about the Drama. Only he had a
finer understanding of these things, and instead of being preyed upon by
the common professional—"and they <i>are</i> a lot," said Chitterlow; "I
haven't toured for nothing"—he would have Chitterlow. Kipps gathered
few details. It was clear he had bought the quarter of a farcical
comedy—practically a gold mine—and it would appear it would be a good
thing to buy the half. A suggestion, or the suggestion of a suggestion,
floated out that he should buy the whole play and produce it forthwith.
It seemed he was to produce the play upon a royalty system of a new
sort, whatever a royalty system of any sort might be. Then there was
some doubt, after all, whether that farcical comedy was in itself
sufficient to revolutionise the present lamentable state of the British
Drama. Better perhaps for such a purpose was that tragedy—as yet
unfinished—which was to display all that Chitterlow knew about women,
and which was to centre about a Russian nobleman embodying the
fundamental Chitterlow personality. Then it became clearer that Kipps
was to produce several plays. Kipps was to produce a great number of
plays. Kipps was to found a National Theatre.</p>
<p>It is probable that Kipps would have expressed some sort of disavowal,
if he had known how to express it. Occasionally his face assumed an
expression of whistling meditation, but that was as far as he got
towards protest.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>In the clutch of Chitterlow and the Incalculable, Kipps came round to
the house in Fenchurch Street and was there made to participate in the
midday meal. He came to the house, forgetting certain confidences, and
was reminded of the existence of a Mrs. Chitterlow (with the finest
completely untrained Contralto voice in England) by her appearance. She
had an air of being older than Chitterlow, although probably she wasn't,
and her hair was a reddish brown, streaked with gold. She was dressed in
one of those complaisant garments that are dressing gowns or tea gowns
or bathing wraps or rather original evening robes according to the
exigencies of the moment—from the first Kipps was aware that she
possessed a warm and rounded neck, and her well-moulded arms came and
vanished from the sleeves—and she had large, expressive brown eyes that
he discovered ever and again fixed in an enigmatical manner upon his
own.</p>
<p>A simple but sufficient meal had been distributed with careless
spontaneity over the little round table in the room with the photographs
and looking glass, and when a plate had by Chitterlow's direction been
taken from under the marmalade in the cupboard and the kitchen fork and
a knife that was not loose in its handle had been found for Kipps they
began and she had evidently heard of Kipps before, and he made a
tumultuous repast. Chitterlow ate with quiet enormity, but it did not
interfere with the flow of his talk. He introduced Kipps to his wife
very briefly;<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span> made it vaguely evident that the production of the comedy
was the thing chiefly settled. His reach extended over the table, and he
troubled nobody. When Mrs. Chitterlow, who for a little while seemed
socially self-conscious, reproved him for taking a potato with a jab of
his fork, he answered, "Well, you shouldn't have married a man of
Genius," and from a subsequent remark it was perfectly clear that
Chitterlow's standing in this respect was made no secret of in his
household.</p>
<p>They drank old Methusaleh and syphon soda, and there was no clearing
away, they just sat among the plates and things, and Mrs. Chitterlow
took her husband's tobacco pouch and made a cigarette and smoked and
blew smoke and looked at Kipps with her large, brown eyes. Kipps had
seen cigarettes smoked by ladies before, "for fun," but this was real
smoking. It frightened him rather. He felt he must not encourage this
lady—at any rate in Chitterlow's presence.</p>
<p>They became very cheerful after the repast, and as there was now no
waste to deplore, such as one experiences in the windy, open air,
Chitterlow gave his voice full vent. He fell to praising Kipps very
highly and loudly. He said he had known Kipps was the right sort, he had
seen it from the first, almost before he got up out of the mud on that
memorable night. "You can," he said, "sometimes. That was why——" he
stopped, but he seemed on the verge of explaining that it was his
certainty of Kipps being the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span> right sort had led him to confer this
great Fortune upon him. He left that impression. He threw out a number
of long sentences and material for sentences of a highly philosophical
and incoherent character about Coincidences. It became evident he
considered dramatic criticism in a perilously low condition....</p>
<p>About four Kipps found himself stranded, as it were, by a receding
Chitterlow on a seat upon the Leas.</p>
<p>He was chiefly aware that Chitterlow was an overwhelming personality. He
puffed his cheeks and blew.</p>
<p>No doubt this was seeing life, but had he particularly wanted to see
life that day? In a way Chitterlow had interrupted him. The day he had
designed for himself was altogether different from this. He had been
going to read through a precious little volume called "Don't" that Coote
had sent round for him, a book of invaluable hints, a summary of British
deportment that had only the one defect of being at points a little out
of date.</p>
<p>That reminded him he had intended to perform a difficult exercise called
an Afternoon Call upon the Cootes, as a preliminary to doing it in
deadly earnest upon the Walshinghams. It was no good to-day, anyhow,
now.</p>
<p>He came back to Chitterlow. He would have to explain to Chitterlow he
was taking too much for granted, he would have to do that. It was so
difficult<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></span> to do in Chitterlow's presence though; in his absence it was
easy enough. This half share, and taking a theatre and all of it, was
going too far.</p>
<p>The quarter share was right enough, he supposed, but even that——! A
hundred pounds! What wealth is there left in the world after one has
paid out a hundred pounds from it?</p>
<p>He had to recall that in a sense Chitterlow had indeed brought him his
fortune before he could face even that.</p>
<p>You must not think too hardly of him. To Kipps you see there was as yet
no such thing as proportion in these matters. A hundred pounds went to
his horizon. A hundred pounds seemed to him just exactly as big as any
other large sum of money.</p>
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