<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">The food question.—Objections to
paraffine oil as an atmosphere.—Advantages of cheese as a
travelling companion.—A married woman deserts her
home.—Further provision for getting upset.—I
pack.—Cussedness of tooth-brushes.—George and Harris
pack.—Awful behaviour of Montmorency.—We retire to
rest.</p>
<p>Then we discussed the food question. George said:</p>
<p>“Begin with breakfast.” (George is so
practical.) “Now for breakfast we shall want a
frying-pan”—(Harris said it was indigestible; but we
merely urged him not to be an ass, and George went
on)—“a tea-pot and a kettle, and a methylated spirit
stove.”</p>
<p>“No oil,” said George, with a significant look;
and Harris and I agreed.</p>
<p>We had taken up an oil-stove once, but “never
again.” It had been like living in an oil-shop that
week. It oozed. I never saw such a thing as paraffine
oil is to ooze. We kept it in the nose of the boat, and,
from there, it oozed down to the rudder, impregnating the whole
boat and everything in it on its way, and it oozed over the
river, and saturated the scenery and spoilt the atmosphere.
Sometimes a westerly oily wind blew, and at other times an
easterly oily wind, and sometimes it blew a northerly oily wind,
and maybe a southerly oily wind; but whether it came from the
Arctic snows, or was raised in the waste of the desert sands, it
came alike to us laden with the fragrance of paraffine oil.</p>
<p>And that oil oozed up and ruined the sunset; and as for the
moonbeams, they positively reeked of paraffine.</p>
<p>We tried to get away from it at Marlow. We left the boat
by the bridge, and took a walk through the town to escape it, but
it followed us. The whole town was full of oil. We
passed through the church-yard, and it seemed as if the people
had been buried in oil. The High Street stunk of oil; we
wondered how people could live in it. And we walked miles
upon miles out Birmingham way; but it was no use, the country was
steeped in oil.</p>
<p>At the end of that trip we met together at midnight in a
lonely field, under a blasted oak, and took an awful oath (we had
been swearing for a whole week about the thing in an ordinary,
middle-class way, but this was a swell affair)—an awful
oath never to take paraffine oil with us in a boat again-except,
of course, in case of sickness.</p>
<p>Therefore, in the present instance, we confined ourselves to
methylated spirit. Even that is bad enough. You get
methylated pie and methylated cake. But methylated spirit
is more wholesome when taken into the system in large quantities
than paraffine oil.</p>
<p>For other breakfast things, George suggested eggs and bacon,
which were easy to cook, cold meat, tea, bread and butter, and
jam. For lunch, he said, we could have biscuits, cold meat,
bread and butter, and jam—but <i>no cheese</i>.
Cheese, like oil, makes too much of itself. It wants the
whole boat to itself. It goes through the hamper, and gives
a cheesy flavour to everything else there. You can’t
tell whether you are eating apple-pie or German sausage, or
strawberries and cream. It all seems cheese. There is
too much odour about cheese.</p>
<p>I remember a friend of mine, buying a couple of cheeses at
Liverpool. Splendid cheeses they were, ripe and mellow, and
with a two hundred horse-power scent about them that might have
been warranted to carry three miles, and knock a man over at two
hundred yards. I was in Liverpool at the time, and my
friend said that if I didn’t mind he would get me to take
them back with me to London, as he should not be coming up for a
day or two himself, and he did not think the cheeses ought to be
kept much longer.</p>
<p>“Oh, with pleasure, dear boy,” I replied,
“with pleasure.”</p>
<p>I called for the cheeses, and took them away in a cab.
It was a ramshackle affair, dragged along by a knock-kneed,
broken-winded somnambulist, which his owner, in a moment of
enthusiasm, during conversation, referred to as a horse. I
put the cheeses on the top, and we started off at a shamble that
would have done credit to the swiftest steam-roller ever built,
and all went merry as a funeral bell, until we turned the
corner. There, the wind carried a whiff from the cheeses
full on to our steed. It woke him up, and, with a snort of
terror, he dashed off at three miles an hour. The wind
still blew in his direction, and before we reached the end of the
street he was laying himself out at the rate of nearly four miles
an hour, leaving the cripples and stout old ladies simply
nowhere.</p>
<p>It took two porters as well as the driver to hold him in at
the station; and I do not think they would have done it, even
then, had not one of the men had the presence of mind to put a
handkerchief over his nose, and to light a bit of brown
paper.</p>
<p>I took my ticket, and marched proudly up the platform, with my
cheeses, the people falling back respectfully on either
side. The train was crowded, and I had to get into a
carriage where there were already seven other people. One
crusty old gentleman objected, but I got in, notwithstanding;
and, putting my cheeses upon the rack, squeezed down with a
pleasant smile, and said it was a warm day.</p>
<p>A few moments passed, and then the old gentleman began to
fidget.</p>
<p>“Very close in here,” he said.</p>
<p>“Quite oppressive,” said the man next him.</p>
<p>And then they both began sniffing, and, at the third sniff,
they caught it right on the chest, and rose up without another
word and went out. And then a stout lady got up, and said
it was disgraceful that a respectable married woman should be
harried about in this way, and gathered up a bag and eight
parcels and went. The remaining four passengers sat on for
a while, until a solemn-looking man in the corner, who, from his
dress and general appearance, seemed to belong to the undertaker
class, said it put him in mind of dead baby; and the other three
passengers tried to get out of the door at the same time, and
hurt themselves.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p49b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Railway carriage" title= "Railway carriage" src="images/p49s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>I smiled at the black gentleman, and said I thought we were
going to have the carriage to ourselves; and he laughed
pleasantly, and said that some people made such a fuss over a
little thing. But even he grew strangely depressed after we
had started, and so, when we reached Crewe, I asked him to come
and have a drink. He accepted, and we forced our way into
the buffet, where we yelled, and stamped, and waved our umbrellas
for a quarter of an hour; and then a young lady came, and asked
us if we wanted anything.</p>
<p>“What’s yours?” I said, turning to my
friend.</p>
<p>“I’ll have half-a-crown’s worth of brandy,
neat, if you please, miss,” he responded.</p>
<p>And he went off quietly after he had drunk it and got into
another carriage, which I thought mean.</p>
<p>From Crewe I had the compartment to myself, though the train
was crowded. As we drew up at the different stations, the
people, seeing my empty carriage, would rush for it.
“Here y’ are, Maria; come along, plenty of
room.” “All right, Tom; we’ll get in
here,” they would shout. And they would run along,
carrying heavy bags, and fight round the door to get in
first. And one would open the door and mount the steps, and
stagger back into the arms of the man behind him; and they would
all come and have a sniff, and then droop off and squeeze into
other carriages, or pay the difference and go first.</p>
<p>From Euston, I took the cheeses down to my friend’s
house. When his wife came into the room she smelt round for
an instant. Then she said:</p>
<p>“What is it? Tell me the worst.”</p>
<p>I said:</p>
<p>“It’s cheeses. Tom bought them in Liverpool,
and asked me to bring them up with me.”</p>
<p>And I added that I hoped she understood that it had nothing to
do with me; and she said that she was sure of that, but that she
would speak to Tom about it when he came back.</p>
<p>My friend was detained in Liverpool longer than he expected;
and, three days later, as he hadn’t returned home, his wife
called on me. She said:</p>
<p>“What did Tom say about those cheeses?”</p>
<p>I replied that he had directed they were to be kept in a moist
place, and that nobody was to touch them.</p>
<p>She said:</p>
<p>“Nobody’s likely to touch them. Had he smelt
them?”</p>
<p>I thought he had, and added that he seemed greatly attached to
them.</p>
<p>“You think he would be upset,” she queried,
“if I gave a man a sovereign to take them away and bury
them?”</p>
<p>I answered that I thought he would never smile again.</p>
<p>An idea struck her. She said:</p>
<p>“Do you mind keeping them for him? Let me send
them round to you.”</p>
<p>“Madam,” I replied, “for myself I like the
smell of cheese, and the journey the other day with them from
Liverpool I shall ever look back upon as a happy ending to a
pleasant holiday. But, in this world, we must consider
others. The lady under whose roof I have the honour of
residing is a widow, and, for all I know, possibly an orphan
too. She has a strong, I may say an eloquent, objection to
being what she terms ‘put upon.’ The presence
of your husband’s cheeses in her house she would, I
instinctively feel, regard as a ‘put upon’; and it
shall never be said that I put upon the widow and the
orphan.”</p>
<p>“Very well, then,” said my friend’s wife,
rising, “all I have to say is, that I shall take the
children and go to an hotel until those cheeses are eaten.
I decline to live any longer in the same house with
them.”</p>
<p>She kept her word, leaving the place in charge of the
charwoman, who, when asked if she could stand the smell, replied,
“What smell?” and who, when taken close to the
cheeses and told to sniff hard, said she could detect a faint
odour of melons. It was argued from this that little injury
could result to the woman from the atmosphere, and she was
left.</p>
<p>The hotel bill came to fifteen guineas; and my friend, after
reckoning everything up, found that the cheeses had cost him
eight-and-sixpence a pound. He said he dearly loved a bit
of cheese, but it was beyond his means; so he determined to get
rid of them. He threw them into the canal; but had to fish
them out again, as the bargemen complained. They said it
made them feel quite faint. And, after that, he took them
one dark night and left them in the parish mortuary. But
the coroner discovered them, and made a fearful fuss.</p>
<p>He said it was a plot to deprive him of his living by waking
up the corpses.</p>
<p>My friend got rid of them, at last, by taking them down to a
sea-side town, and burying them on the beach. It gained the
place quite a reputation. Visitors said they had never
noticed before how strong the air was, and weak-chested and
consumptive people used to throng there for years afterwards.</p>
<p>Fond as I am of cheese, therefore, I hold that George was
right in declining to take any.</p>
<p>“We shan’t want any tea,” said George
(Harris’s face fell at this); “but we’ll have a
good round, square, slap-up meal at seven—dinner, tea, and
supper combined.”</p>
<p>Harris grew more cheerful. George suggested meat and
fruit pies, cold meat, tomatoes, fruit, and green stuff.
For drink, we took some wonderful sticky concoction of
Harris’s, which you mixed with water and called lemonade,
plenty of tea, and a bottle of whisky, in case, as George said,
we got upset.</p>
<p>It seemed to me that George harped too much on the
getting-upset idea. It seemed to me the wrong spirit to go
about the trip in.</p>
<p>But I’m glad we took the whisky.</p>
<p>We didn’t take beer or wine. They are a mistake up
the river. They make you feel sleepy and heavy. A
glass in the evening when you are doing a mouch round the town
and looking at the girls is all right enough; but don’t
drink when the sun is blazing down on your head, and you’ve
got hard work to do.</p>
<p>We made a list of the things to be taken, and a pretty lengthy
one it was, before we parted that evening. The next day,
which was Friday, we got them all together, and met in the
evening to pack. We got a big Gladstone for the clothes,
and a couple of hampers for the victuals and the cooking
utensils. We moved the table up against the window, piled
everything in a heap in the middle of the floor, and sat round
and looked at it.</p>
<p>I said I’d pack.</p>
<p>I rather pride myself on my packing. Packing is one of
those many things that I feel I know more about than any other
person living. (It surprises me myself, sometimes, how many
of these subjects there are.) I impressed the fact upon
George and Harris, and told them that they had better leave the
whole matter entirely to me. They fell into the suggestion
with a readiness that had something uncanny about it.
George put on a pipe and spread himself over the easy-chair, and
Harris cocked his legs on the table and lit a cigar.</p>
<p>This was hardly what I intended. What I had meant, of
course, was, that I should boss the job, and that Harris and
George should potter about under my directions, I pushing them
aside every now and then with, “Oh,
you—!” “Here, let me do it.”
“There you are, simple enough!”—really teaching
them, as you might say. Their taking it in the way they did
irritated me. There is nothing does irritate me more than
seeing other people sitting about doing nothing when I’m
working.</p>
<p>I lived with a man once who used to make me mad that
way. He would loll on the sofa and watch me doing things by
the hour together, following me round the room with his eyes,
wherever I went. He said it did him real good to look on at
me, messing about. He said it made him feel that life was
not an idle dream to be gaped and yawned through, but a noble
task, full of duty and stern work. He said he often
wondered now how he could have gone on before he met me, never
having anybody to look at while they worked.</p>
<p>Now, I’m not like that. I can’t sit still
and see another man slaving and working. I want to get up
and superintend, and walk round with my hands in my pockets, and
tell him what to do. It is my energetic nature. I
can’t help it.</p>
<p>However, I did not say anything, but started the
packing. It seemed a longer job than I had thought it was
going to be; but I got the bag finished at last, and I sat on it
and strapped it.</p>
<p>“Ain’t you going to put the boots in?” said
Harris.</p>
<p>And I looked round, and found I had forgotten them.
That’s just like Harris. He couldn’t have said
a word until I’d got the bag shut and strapped, of
course. And George laughed—one of those irritating,
senseless, chuckle-headed, crack-jawed laughs of his. They
do make me so wild.</p>
<p>I opened the bag and packed the boots in; and then, just as I
was going to close it, a horrible idea occurred to me. Had
I packed my tooth-brush? I don’t know how it is, but
I never do know whether I’ve packed my tooth-brush.</p>
<p>My tooth-brush is a thing that haunts me when I’m
travelling, and makes my life a misery. I dream that I
haven’t packed it, and wake up in a cold perspiration, and
get out of bed and hunt for it. And, in the morning, I pack
it before I have used it, and have to unpack again to get it, and
it is always the last thing I turn out of the bag; and then I
repack and forget it, and have to rush upstairs for it at the
last moment and carry it to the railway station, wrapped up in my
pocket-handkerchief.</p>
<p><SPAN href="images/p57b.jpg">
<ANTIMG class='floatright' alt="Boot" title= "Boot" src="images/p57s.jpg" /></SPAN>Of course I had to turn every mortal thing out now, and, of
course, I could not find it. I rummaged the things up into
much the same state that they must have been before the world was
created, and when chaos reigned. Of course, I found
George’s and Harris’s eighteen times over, but I
couldn’t find my own. I put the things back one by
one, and held everything up and shook it. Then I found it
inside a boot. I repacked once more.</p>
<p>When I had finished, George asked if the soap was in. I
said I didn’t care a hang whether the soap was in or
whether it wasn’t; and I slammed the bag to and strapped
it, and found that I had packed my tobacco-pouch in it, and had
to re-open it. It got shut up finally at 10.05 p.m., and
then there remained the hampers to do. Harris said that we
should be wanting to start in less than twelve hours’ time,
and thought that he and George had better do the rest; and I
agreed and sat down, and they had a go.</p>
<p>They began in a light-hearted spirit, evidently intending to
show me how to do it. I made no comment; I only
waited. When George is hanged, Harris will be the worst
packer in this world; and I looked at the piles of plates and
cups, and kettles, and bottles and jars, and pies, and stoves,
and cakes, and tomatoes, &c., and felt that the thing would
soon become exciting.</p>
<p>It did. They started with breaking a cup. That was
the first thing they did. They did that just to show you
what they <i>could</i> do, and to get you interested.</p>
<p>Then Harris packed the strawberry jam on top of a tomato and
squashed it, and they had to pick out the tomato with a
teaspoon.</p>
<p>And then it was George’s turn, and he trod on the
butter. I didn’t say anything, but I came over and
sat on the edge of the table and watched them. It irritated
them more than anything I could have said. I felt
that. It made them nervous and excited, and they stepped on
things, and put things behind them, and then couldn’t find
them when they wanted them; and they packed the pies at the
bottom, and put heavy things on top, and smashed the pies in.</p>
<p>They upset salt over everything, and as for the butter!
I never saw two men do more with one-and-twopence worth of butter
in my whole life than they did. After George had got it off
his slipper, they tried to put it in the kettle. It
wouldn’t go in, and what <i>was</i> in wouldn’t come
out. They did scrape it out at last, and put it down on a
chair, and Harris sat on it, and it stuck to him, and they went
looking for it all over the room.</p>
<p>“I’ll take my oath I put it down on that
chair,” said George, staring at the empty seat.</p>
<p>“I saw you do it myself, not a minute ago,” said
Harris.</p>
<p>Then they started round the room again looking for it; and
then they met again in the centre, and stared at one another.</p>
<p>“Most extraordinary thing I ever heard of,” said
George.</p>
<p>“So mysterious!” said Harris.</p>
<p>Then George got round at the back of Harris and saw it.</p>
<p>“Why, here it is all the time,” he exclaimed,
indignantly.</p>
<p>“Where?” cried Harris, spinning round.</p>
<p>“Stand still, can’t you!” roared George,
flying after him.</p>
<p>And they got it off, and packed it in the teapot.</p>
<p>Montmorency was in it all, of course.
Montmorency’s ambition in life, is to get in the way and be
sworn at. If he can squirm in anywhere where he
particularly is not wanted, and be a perfect nuisance, and make
people mad, and have things thrown at his head, then he feels his
day has not been wasted.</p>
<p>To get somebody to stumble over him, and curse him steadily
for an hour, is his highest aim and object; and, when he has
succeeded in accomplishing this, his conceit becomes quite
unbearable.</p>
<p>He came and sat down on things, just when they were wanted to
be packed; and he laboured under the fixed belief that, whenever
Harris or George reached out their hand for anything, it was his
cold, damp nose that they wanted. He put his leg into the
jam, and he worried the teaspoons, and he pretended that the
lemons were rats, and got into the hamper and killed three of
them before Harris could land him with the frying-pan.</p>
<p>Harris said I encouraged him. I didn’t encourage
him. A dog like that don’t want any
encouragement. It’s the natural, original sin that is
born in him that makes him do things like that.</p>
<p>The packing was done at 12.50; and Harris sat on the big
hamper, and said he hoped nothing would be found broken.
George said that if anything was broken it was broken, which
reflection seemed to comfort him. He also said he was ready
for bed. We were all ready for bed. Harris was to
sleep with us that night, and we went upstairs.</p>
<p>We tossed for beds, and Harris had to sleep with me. He
said:</p>
<p>“Do you prefer the inside or the outside, J.?”</p>
<p>I said I generally preferred to sleep <i>inside</i> a bed.</p>
<p>Harris said it was old.</p>
<p>George said:</p>
<p>“What time shall I wake you fellows?”</p>
<p>Harris said:</p>
<p>“Seven.”</p>
<p>I said:</p>
<p>“No—six,” because I wanted to write some
letters.</p>
<p>Harris and I had a bit of a row over it, but at last split the
difference, and said half-past six.</p>
<p>“Wake us at 6.30, George,” we said.</p>
<p>George made no answer, and we found, on going over, that he
had been asleep for some time; so we placed the bath where he
could tumble into it on getting out in the morning, and went to
bed ourselves.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
<SPAN href="images/p61b.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="Luggage with dog on top" title= "Luggage with dog on top" src="images/p61s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
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