PART I--THE DAMSEL
CHAPTER ONE--YOUNG POWELL AND HIS
CHANCE
I believe he had seen us out of
the window coming off to dine in the dinghy of a fourteen-ton yawl
belonging to Marlow my host and skipper. We helped the boy we had
with us to haul the boat up on the landing-stage before we went up
to the riverside inn, where we found our new acquaintance eating
his dinner in dignified loneliness at the head of a long table,
white and inhospitable like a snow bank.
The red tint of his clear-cut
face with trim short black whiskers under a cap of curly iron-grey
hair was the only warm spot in the dinginess of that room cooled by
the cheerless tablecloth. We knew him already by sight as the owner
of a little five-ton cutter, which he sailed alone apparently, a
fellow yachtsman in the unpretending band of fanatics who cruise at
the mouth of the Thames. But the first time he addressed the waiter
sharply as 'steward' we knew him at once for a sailor as well as a
yachtsman.
Presently he had occasion to
reprove that same waiter for the slovenly manner in which the
dinner was served. He did it with considerable energy and then
turned to us.
"If we at sea," he declared,
"went about our work as people ashore high and low go about theirs
we should never make a living. No one would employ us. And moreover
no ship navigated and sailed in the happy-go- lucky manner people
conduct their business on shore would ever arrive into port."
Since he had retired from the sea
he had been astonished to discover that the educated people were
not much better than the others. No one seemed to take any proper
pride in his work: from plumbers who were simply thieves to, say,
newspaper men (he seemed to think them a specially intellectual
class) who never by any chance gave a correct version of the
simplest affair. This universal inefficiency of what he called "the
shore gang" he ascribed in general to the want of responsibility
and to a sense of security.
"They see," he went on, "that no
matter what they do this tight little island won't turn turtle with
them or spring a leak and go to the bottom with their wives and
children."
From this point the conversation
took a special turn relating exclusively to sea-
life. On that subject he got
quickly in touch with Marlow who in his time had followed the sea.
They kept up a lively exchange of reminiscences while I listened.
They agreed that the happiest time in their lives was as youngsters
in good ships, with no care in the world but not to lose a watch
below when at sea and not a moment's time in going ashore after
work hours when in harbour.
They agreed also as to the
proudest moment they had known in that calling which is never
embraced on rational and practical grounds, because of the glamour
of its romantic associations. It was the moment when they had
passed successfully their first examination and left the seamanship
Examiner with the little precious slip of blue paper in their
hands.
"That day I wouldn't have called
the Queen my cousin," declared our new acquaintance
enthusiastically.
At that time the Marine Board
examinations took place at the St. Katherine's Dock House on
Tower Hill, and he informed us that he had a special affection for
the view of that historic locality, with the Gardens to the left,
the front of the Mint to the right, the miserable tumble-down
little houses farther away, a cabstand, boot-blacks squatting on
the edge of the pavement and a pair of big policemen gazing with an
air of superiority at the doors of the Black Horse public-house
across the road. This was the part of the world, he said, his eyes
first took notice of, on the finest day of his life. He had emerged
from the main entrance of St.
Katherine's Dock House a
full-fledged second mate after the hottest time of his life with
Captain R-, the most dreaded of the three seamanship Examiners who
at the time were responsible for the merchant service officers
qualifying in the Port of London.
"We all who were preparing to
pass," he said, "used to shake in our shoes at the idea of going
before him. He kept me for an hour and a half in the torture
chamber and behaved as though he hated me. He kept his eyes shaded
with one of his hands. Suddenly he let it drop saying, "You will
do!" Before I realised what he meant he was pushing the blue slip
across the table. I jumped up as if my chair had caught fire.
"Thank you, sir," says I,
grabbing the paper.
"Good morning, good luck to you,"
he growls at me.
"The old doorkeeper fussed out of
the cloak-room with my hat. They always do. But he looked very hard
at me before he ventured to ask in a sort of timid whisper: "Got
through all right, sir?" For all answer I dropped a half-crown into
his soft broad palm. "Well," says he with a sudden grin from ear to
ear, "I never knew him keep any of you gentlemen so long. He failed
two second mates this
morning before your turn came.
Less than twenty minutes each: that's about his usual time."
"I found myself downstairs
without being aware of the steps as if I had floated down the
staircase. The finest day in my life. The day you get your first
command is nothing to it. For one thing a man is not so young then
and for another with us, you know, there is nothing much more to
expect. Yes, the finest day of one's life, no doubt, but then it is
just a day and no more. What comes after is about the most
unpleasant time for a youngster, the trying to get an officer's
berth with nothing much to show but a brand-new certificate. It is
surprising how useless you find that piece of ass's skin that you
have been putting yourself in such a state about. It didn't strike
me at the time that a Board of Trade certificate does not make an
officer, not by a long long way. But the slippers of the ships I
was haunting with demands for a job knew that very well. I don't
wonder at them now, and I don't blame them either. But this 'trying
to get a ship' is pretty hard on a youngster all the same . . .
"
He went on then to tell us how
tired he was and how discouraged by this lesson of disillusion
following swiftly upon the finest day of his life. He told us how
he went the round of all the ship-owners' offices in the City where
some junior clerk would furnish him with printed forms of
application which he took home to fill up in the evening. He used
to run out just before midnight to post them in the nearest
pillar-box. And that was all that ever came of it. In his own
words: he might just as well have dropped them all properly
addressed and stamped into the sewer grating.
Then one day, as he was wending
his weary way to the docks, he met a friend and former shipmate a
little older than himself outside the Fenchurch Street Railway
Station.
He craved for sympathy but his
friend had just "got a ship" that very morning and was hurrying
home in a state of outward joy and inward uneasiness usual to a
sailor who after many days of waiting suddenly gets a berth. This
friend had the time to condole with him but briefly. He must be
moving. Then as he was running off, over his shoulder as it were,
he suggested: "Why don't you go and speak to Mr. Powell in the
Shipping Office." Our friend objected that he did not know Mr.
Powell from Adam. And the other already pretty near round the
corner shouted back advice: "Go to the private door of the Shipping
Office and walk right up to him. His desk is by the window. Go up
boldly and say I sent you."
Our new acquaintance looking from
one to the other of us declared: "Upon my word, I had grown so
desperate that I'd have gone boldly up to the devil himself on the
mere hint that he had a second mate's job to give away."
It was at this point that
interrupting his flow of talk to light his pipe but holding us
with his eye he inquired whether we had known Powell. Marlow with a
slight reminiscent smile murmured that he "remembered him very
well."
Then there was a pause. Our new
acquaintance had become involved in a vexatious difficulty with his
pipe which had suddenly betrayed his trust and disappointed his
anticipation of self-indulgence. To keep the ball rolling I asked
Marlow if this Powell was remarkable in any way.
"He was not exactly remarkable,"
Marlow answered with his usual nonchalance. "In a general way it's
very difficult for one to become remarkable. People won't take
sufficient notice of one, don't you know. I remember Powell so well
simply because as one of the Shipping Masters in the Port of London
he dispatched me to sea on several long stages of my sailor's
pilgrimage. He resembled Socrates. I mean he resembled him
genuinely: that is in the face. A philosophical mind is but an
accident. He reproduced exactly the familiar bust of the immortal
sage, if you will imagine the bust with a high top hat riding far
on the back of the head, and a black coat over the shoulders. As I
never saw him except from the other side of the long official
counter bearing the five writing desks of the five Shipping
Masters, Mr. Powell has remained a bust to me."
Our new acquaintance advanced now
from the mantelpiece with his pipe in good working order.
"What was the most remarkable
about Powell," he enunciated dogmatically with his head in a cloud
of smoke, "is that he should have had just that name. You see, my
name happens to be Powell too."
It was clear that this
intelligence was not imparted to us for social purposes. It
required no acknowledgment. We continued to gaze at him with
expectant eyes.
He gave himself up to the
vigorous enjoyment of his pipe for a silent minute or two. Then
picking up the thread of his story he told us how he had started
hot foot for Tower Hill. He had not been that way since the day of
his examination-- the finest day of his life--the day of his
overweening pride. It was very different now. He would not have
called the Queen his cousin, still, but this time it was from a
sense of profound abasement. He didn't think himself good enough
for anybody's kinship. He envied the purple-nosed old cab-drivers
on the stand, the boot-black boys at the edge of the pavement, the
two large bobbies pacing slowly along the Tower Gardens railings in
the consciousness of their infallible might, and the bright scarlet
sentries walking smartly to and fro before the Mint. He envied them
their places in the scheme of world's labour. And he envied also
the
miserable sallow, thin-faced
loafers blinking their obscene eyes and rubbing their greasy
shoulders against the door-jambs of the Black Horse pub, because
they were too far gone to feel their degradation.
I must render the man the justice
that he conveyed very well to us the sense of his youthful
hopelessness surprised at not finding its place in the sun and no
recognition of its right to live.
He went up the outer steps of St.
Katherine's Dock House, the very steps from which he had some six
weeks before surveyed the cabstand, the buildings, the policemen,
the boot-blacks, the paint, gilt, and plateglass of the Black
Horse, with the eye of a Conqueror. At the time he had been at the
bottom of his heart surprised that all this had not greeted him
with songs and incense, but now (he made no secret of it) he made
his entry in a slinking fashion past the doorkeeper's glass box. "I
hadn't any half-crowns to spare for tips," he remarked grimly. The
man, however, ran out after him asking: "What do you require?" but
with a grateful glance up at the first floor in remembrance of
Captain R-'s examination room (how easy and delightful all that had
been) he bolted down a flight leading to the basement and found
himself in a place of dusk and mystery and many doors. He had been
afraid of being stopped by some rule of no-admittance.
However he was not pursued.
The basement of St. Katherine's
Dock House is vast in extent and confusing in its plan. Pale shafts
of light slant from above into the gloom of its chilly
passages.
Powell wandered up and down there
like an early Christian refugee in the catacombs; but what little
faith he had in the success of his enterprise was oozing out at his
finger-tips. At a dark turn under a gas bracket whose flame was
half turned down his self- confidence abandoned him
altogether.
"I stood there to think a
little," he said. "A foolish thing to do because of course I got
scared. What could you expect? It takes some nerve to tackle a
stranger with a request for a favour. I wished my namesake
Powell had been the devil himself. I felt somehow it would have
been an easier job. You see, I never believed in the devil enough
to be scared of him; but a man can make himself very unpleasant. I
looked at a lot of doors, all shut tight, with a growing conviction
that I would never have the pluck to open one of them. Thinking's
no good for one's nerve. I concluded I would give up the whole
business. But I didn't give up in the end, and I'll tell you what
stopped me. It was the recollection of that confounded doorkeeper
who had called after me. I felt sure the fellow would be on the
look- out at the head of the stairs. If he asked me what I had been
after, as he had the right to do, I wouldn't know what to answer
that wouldn't make me look silly if no worse. I got very hot. There
was no chance of slinking out of this business.
"I had lost my bearings somehow
down there. Of the many doors of various sizes, right and left, a
good few had glazed lights above; some however must have led merely
into lumber rooms or such like, because when I brought myself to
try one or two I was disconcerted to find that they were locked. I
stood there irresolute and uneasy like a baffled thief. The
confounded basement was as still as a grave and I became aware of
my heart beats. Very uncomfortable sensation. Never happened to me
before or since. A bigger door to the left of me, with a large
brass handle looked as if it might lead into the Shipping Office. I
tried it, setting my teeth. "Here goes!"
"It came open quite easily. And
lo! the place it opened into was hardly any bigger than a
cupboard. Anyhow it wasn't more than ten feet by twelve; and as
I in a way expected to see the big shadowy cellar-like extent of
the Shipping Office where I had been once or twice before, I was
extremely startled. A gas bracket hung from the middle of the
ceiling over a dark, shabby writing-desk covered with a litter of
yellowish dusty documents. Under the flame of the single burner
which made the place ablaze with light, a plump, little man was
writing hard, his nose very near the desk. His head was perfectly
bald and about the same drab tint as the papers. He appeared pretty
dusty too.
"I didn't notice whether there
were any cobwebs on him, but I shouldn't wonder if there were
because he looked as though he had been imprisoned for years in
that little hole. The way he dropped his pen and sat blinking my
way upset me very much. And his dungeon was hot and musty; it smelt
of gas and mushrooms, and seemed to be somewhere 120 feet below the
ground. Solid, heavy stacks of paper filled all the corners
half-way up to the ceiling. And when the thought flashed upon me
that these were the premises of the Marine Board and that this
fellow must be connected in some way with ships and sailors and the
sea, my astonishment took my breath away. One couldn't imagine why
the Marine Board should keep that bald, fat creature slaving down
there. For some reason or other I felt sorry and ashamed to have
found him out in his wretched captivity. I asked gently and
sorrowfully: "The Shipping Office, please."
He piped up in a contemptuous
squeaky voice which made me start: "Not here. Try the passage on
the other side. Street side. This is the Dock side. You've lost
your way . . . "
He spoke in such a spiteful tone
that I thought he was going to round off with the words: "You fool"
. . . and perhaps he meant to. But what he finished sharply with
was: "Shut the door quietly after you."
And I did shut it quietly--you
bet. Quick and quiet. The indomitable spirit of that chap impressed
me. I wonder sometimes whether he has succeeded in
writing himself into liberty and
a pension at last, or had to go out of his gas- lighted grave
straight into that other dark one where nobody would want to
intrude. My humanity was pleased to discover he had so much kick
left in him, but I was not comforted in the least. It occurred to
me that if Mr. Powell had the same sort of temper . . . However, I
didn't give myself time to think and scuttled across the space at
the foot of the stairs into the passage where I'd been told to try.
And I tried the first door I came to, right away, without any
hanging back, because coming loudly from the hall above an amazed
and scandalized voice wanted to know what sort of game I was up to
down there. "Don't you know there's no admittance that way?" it
roared. But if there was anything more I shut it out of my hearing
by means of a door marked Private on the outside. It let me into a
six-feet wide strip between a long counter and the wall, taken off
a spacious, vaulted room with a grated window and a glazed door
giving daylight to the further end. The first thing I saw right in
front of me were three middle-aged men having a sort of romp
together round about another fellow with a thin, long neck and
sloping shoulders who stood up at a desk writing on a large sheet
of paper and taking no notice except that he grinned quietly to
himself. They turned very sour at once when they saw me. I heard
one of them mutter 'Hullo! What have we here?'
"'I want to see Mr. Powell,
please,' I said, very civil but firm; I would let nothing scare me
away now. This was the Shipping Office right enough. It was after 3
o'clock and the business seemed over for the day with them. The
long-necked fellow went on with his writing steadily. I observed
that he was no longer grinning. The three others tossed their heads
all together towards the far end of the room where a fifth man had
been looking on at their antics from a high stool. I walked up to
him as boldly as if he had been the devil himself. With one foot
raised up and resting on the cross-bar of his seat he never stopped
swinging the other which was well clear of the stone floor. He had
unbuttoned the top of his waistcoat and he wore his tall hat very
far at the back of his head. He had a full unwrinkled face and such
clear-shining eyes that his grey beard looked quite false on
him, stuck on for a disguise. You said just now he resembled
Socrates-- didn't you? I don't know about that. This Socrates was a
wise man, I believe?"
"He was," assented Marlow. "And a
true friend of youth. He lectured them in a peculiarly exasperating
manner. It was a way he had."
"Then give me Powell every time,"
declared our new acquaintance sturdily. "He didn't lecture me in
any way. Not he. He said: 'How do you do?' quite kindly to my
mumble. Then says he looking very hard at me: 'I don't think I know
you--do I?'
"No, sir," I said and down went
my heart sliding into my boots, just as the time
had come to summon up all my
cheek. There's nothing meaner in the world than a piece of
impudence that isn't carried off well. For fear of appearing
shamefaced I started about it so free and easy as almost to
frighten myself. He listened for a while looking at my face with
surprise and curiosity and then held up his hand. I was glad enough
to shut up, I can tell you.
"Well, you are a cool hand," says
he. "And that friend of yours too. He pestered me coming here every
day for a fortnight till a captain I'm acquainted with was good
enough to give him a berth. And no sooner he's provided for than he
turns you on. You youngsters don't seem to mind whom you get into
trouble."
"It was my turn now to stare with
surprise and curiosity. He hadn't been talking loud but he lowered
his voice still more.
"Don't you know it's
illegal?"
"I wondered what he was driving
at till I remembered that procuring a berth for a sailor is a penal
offence under the Act. That clause was directed of course
against the swindling practices of the boarding-house crimps.
It had never struck me it would apply to everybody alike no matter
what the motive, because I believed then that people on shore did
their work with care and foresight.
"I was confounded at the idea,
but Mr. Powell made me soon see that an Act of Parliament hasn't
any sense of its own. It has only the sense that's put into
it; and that's precious little sometimes. He didn't mind helping
a young man to a ship now and then, he said, but if we kept on
coming constantly it would soon get about that he was doing it for
money.
"A pretty thing that would be:
the Senior Shipping-Master of the Port of London hauled up in a
police court and fined fifty pounds," says he. "I've another four
years to serve to get my pension. It could be made to look very
black against me and don't you make any mistake about it," he
says.
"And all the time with one knee
well up he went on swinging his other leg like a boy on a gate and
looking at me very straight with his shining eyes. I was confounded
I tell you. It made me sick to hear him imply that somebody would
make a report against him.
"Oh!" I asked shocked, "who would
think of such a scurvy trick, sir?" I was half disgusted with him
for having the mere notion of it.
"Who?" says he, speaking very
low. "Anybody. One of the office messengers maybe. I've risen to be
the Senior of this office and we are all very good friends
here, but don't you think that my
colleague that sits next to me wouldn't like to go up to this desk
by the window four years in advance of the regulation time? Or even
one year for that matter. It's human nature."
"I could not help turning my
head. The three fellows who had been skylarking when I came in were
now talking together very soberly, and the long-necked chap was
going on with his writing still. He seemed to me the most dangerous
of the lot. I saw him sideface and his lips were set very tight. I
had never looked at mankind in that light before. When one's young
human nature shocks one. But what startled me most was to see the
door I had come through open slowly and give passage to a head in a
uniform cap with a Board of Trade badge. It was that blamed old
doorkeeper from the hall. He had run me to earth and meant to dig
me out too. He walked up the office smirking craftily, cap in
hand.
"What is it, Symons?" asked Mr.
Powell.
"I was only wondering where this
'ere gentleman 'ad gone to, sir. He slipped past me upstairs,
sir."
I felt mighty
uncomfortable.
"That's all right, Symons. I know
the gentleman," says Mr. Powell as serious as a judge.
"Very well, sir. Of course, sir.
I saw the gentleman running races all by 'isself down 'ere, so I .
. ."
"It's all right I tell you," Mr.
Powell cut him short with a wave of his hand; and, as the old fraud
walked off at last, he raised his eyes to me. I did not know what
to do: stay there, or clear out, or say that I was sorry.
"Let's see," says he, "what did
you tell me your name was?"
"Now, observe, I hadn't given him
my name at all and his question embarrassed me a bit. Somehow or
other it didn't seem proper for me to fling his own name at him as
it were. So I merely pulled out my new certificate from my pocket
and put it into his hand unfolded, so that he could read Charles
Powell written very plain on the parchment.
"He dropped his eyes on to it and
after a while laid it quietly on the desk by his side. I didn't
know whether he meant to make any remark on this coincidence.
Before he had time to say anything the glass door came open with a
bang and a tall, active man rushed in with great strides. His face
looked very red below his
high silk hat. You could see at
once he was the skipper of a big ship.
"Mr. Powell after telling me in
an undertone to wait a little addressed him in a friendly
way.
"I've been expecting you in every
moment to fetch away your Articles, Captain. Here they are all
ready for you." And turning to a pile of agreements lying at his
elbow he took up the topmost of them. From where I stood I could
read the words: "Ship Ferndale" written in a large round hand on
the first page.
"No, Mr. Powell, they aren't
ready, worse luck," says that skipper. "I've got to ask you to
strike out my second officer." He seemed excited and bothered. He
explained that his second mate had been working on board all the
morning. At one o'clock he went out to get a bit of dinner and
didn't turn up at two as he ought to have done. Instead there came
a messenger from the hospital with a note signed by a doctor.
Collar bone and one arm broken. Let himself be knocked down by
a pair horse van while crossing the road outside the dock gate, as
if he had neither eyes nor ears. And the ship ready to leave the
dock at six o'clock to-morrow morning!
"Mr. Powell dipped his pen and
began to turn the leaves of the agreement over. "We must then take
his name off," he says in a kind of unconcerned sing-song.
"What am I to do?" burst out the
skipper. "This office closes at four o'clock. I can't find a man in
half an hour."
"This office closes at four,"
repeats Mr. Powell glancing up and down the pages and touching up a
letter here and there with perfect indifference.
"Even if I managed to lay hold
some time to-day of a man ready to go at such short notice I
couldn't ship him regularly here--could I?"
"Mr. Powell was busy drawing his
pen through the entries relating to that unlucky second mate and
making a note in the margin.
"You could sign him on yourself
on board," says he without looking up. "But I don't think you'll
find easily an officer for such a pier-head jump."
"Upon this the fine-looking
skipper gave signs of distress. The ship mustn't miss the next
morning's tide. He had to take on board forty tons of dynamite and
a hundred and twenty tons of gunpowder at a place down the river
before proceeding to sea. It was all arranged for next day. There
would be no end of fuss and complications if the ship didn't turn
up in time . . . I couldn't help hearing all
this, while wishing him to take
himself off, because I wanted to know why Mr. Powell had told me to
wait. After what he had been saying there didn't seem any object in
my hanging about. If I had had my certificate in my pocket I
should have tried to slip away quietly; but Mr. Powell had turned
about into the same position I found him in at first and was
again swinging his leg. My certificate open on the desk was under
his left elbow and I couldn't very well go up and jerk it
away.
"I don't know," says he
carelessly, addressing the helpless captain but looking fixedly at
me with an expression as if I hadn't been there. "I don't know
whether I ought to tell you that I know of a disengaged second mate
at hand."
"Do you mean you've got him
here?" shouts the other looking all over the empty public part of
the office as if he were ready to fling himself bodily upon
anything resembling a second mate. He had been so full of his
difficulty that I verify believe he had never noticed me. Or
perhaps seeing me inside he may have thought I was some
understrapper belonging to the place. But when Mr. Powell nodded in
my direction he became very quiet and gave me a long stare. Then he
stooped to Mr. Powell's ear--I suppose he imagined he was
whispering, but I heard him well enough.
"Looks very respectable."
"Certainly," says the
shipping-master quite calm and staring all the time at me. "His
name's Powell."
"Oh, I see!" says the skipper as
if struck all of a heap. "But is he ready to join at once?"
"I had a sort of vision of my
lodgings--in the North of London, too, beyond Dalston, away to the
devil--and all my gear scattered about, and my empty sea- chest
somewhere in an outhouse the good people I was staying with had at
the end of their sooty strip of garden. I heard the Shipping Master
say in the coolest sort of way:
"He'll sleep on board
to-night."
"He had better," says the Captain
of the Ferndale very businesslike, as if the whole thing were
settled. I can't say I was dumb for joy as you may suppose. It
wasn't exactly that. I was more by way of being out of breath with
the quickness of it. It didn't seem possible that this was
happening to me. But the skipper, after he had talked for a while
with Mr. Powell, too low for me to hear became visibly
perplexed.
"I suppose he had heard I was
freshly passed and without experience as an officer, because he
turned about and looked me over as if I had been exposed for
sale.
"He's young," he mutters. "Looks
smart, though . . . You're smart and willing (this to me very
sudden and loud) and all that, aren't you?"
"I just managed to open and shut
my mouth, no more, being taken unawares. But it was enough for him.
He made as if I had deafened him with protestations of my smartness
and willingness.
"Of course, of course. All
right." And then turning to the Shipping Master who sat there
swinging his leg, he said that he certainly couldn't go to sea
without a second officer. I stood by as if all these things were
happening to some other chap whom I was seeing through with it.
Mr. Powell stared at me with those shining eyes of his. But that
bothered skipper turns upon me again as though he wanted to snap my
head off.
"You aren't too big to be told
how to do things--are you? You've a lot to learn yet though you
mayn't think so."
"I had half a mind to save my
dignity by telling him that if it was my seamanship he was alluding
to I wanted him to understand that a fellow who had survived being
turned inside out for an hour and a half by Captain R- was equal to
any demand his old ship was likely to make on his competence.
However he didn't give me a chance to make that sort of fool of
myself because before I could open my mouth he had gone round on
another tack and was addressing himself affably to Mr. Powell who
swinging his leg never took his eyes off me.
"I'll take your young friend
willingly, Mr. Powell. If you let him sign on as second- mate at
once I'll take the Articles away with me now."
"It suddenly dawned upon me that
the innocent skipper of the Ferndale had taken it for granted
that I was a relative of the Shipping Master! I was quite
astonished at this discovery, though indeed the mistake was
natural enough under the circumstances. What I ought to have
admired was the reticence with which this misunderstanding had
been established and acted upon. But I was too stupid then to
admire anything. All my anxiety was that this should be
cleared up. I was ass enough to wonder exceedingly at Mr. Powell
failing to notice the misapprehension. I saw a slight twitch come
and go on his face; but instead of setting right that mistake the
Shipping Master swung round on his stool and addressed me as
'Charles.' He did. And I detected him taking a hasty squint
at
my certificate just before,
because clearly till he did so he was not sure of my christian
name. "Now then come round in front of the desk, Charles," says he
in a loud voice.
"Charles! At first, I declare to
you, it didn't seem possible that he was addressing himself to me.
I even looked round for that Charles but there was nobody behind me
except the thin-necked chap still hard at his writing, and the
other three Shipping Masters who were changing their coats and
reaching for their hats, making ready to go home. It was the
industrious thin-necked man who without laying down his pen lifted
with his left hand a flap near his desk and said kindly:
"Pass this way."
I walked through in a trance,
faced Mr. Powell, from whom I learned that we were bound to Port
Elizabeth first, and signed my name on the Articles of the ship
Ferndale as second mate--the voyage not to exceed two years.
"You won't fail to join--eh?"
says the captain anxiously. "It would cause no end of trouble and
expense if you did. You've got a good six hours to get your gear
together, and then you'll have time to snatch a sleep on board
before the crew joins in the morning."
"It was easy enough for him to
talk of getting ready in six hours for a voyage that was not to
exceed two years. He hadn't to do that trick himself, and with his
sea- chest locked up in an outhouse the key of which had been
mislaid for a week as I remembered. But neither was I much
concerned. The idea that I was absolutely going to sea at six
o'clock next morning hadn't got quite into my head yet. It had been
too sudden.
"Mr. Powell, slipping the
Articles into a long envelope, spoke up with a sort of cold
half-laugh without looking at either of us.
"Mind you don't disgrace the
name, Charles." "And the skipper chimes in very kindly:
"He'll do well enough I dare say.
I'll look after him a bit."
"Upon this he grabs the Articles,
says something about trying to run in for a minute to see that poor
devil in the hospital, and off he goes with his heavy swinging step
after telling me sternly: "Don't you go like that poor fellow and
get yourself run over by a cart as if you hadn't either eyes or
ears."
"Mr. Powell," says I timidly
(there was by then only the thin-necked man left in the office with
us and he was already by the door, standing on one leg to turn the
bottom of his trousers up before going away). "Mr. Powell," says I,
"I believe the Captain of the Ferndale was thinking all the time
that I was a relation of yours."
"I was rather concerned about the
propriety of it, you know, but Mr. Powell didn't seem to be in the
least.
"Did he?" says he. "That's funny,
because it seems to me too that I've been a sort of good uncle to
several of you young fellows lately. Don't you think so yourself?
However, if you don't like it you may put him right--when you get
out to sea." At this I felt a bit queer. Mr. Powell had rendered me
a very good service:- because it's a fact that with us merchant
sailors the first voyage as officer is the real start in life. He
had given me no less than that. I told him warmly that he had done
for me more that day than all my relations put together ever
did.
"Oh, no, no," says he. "I guess
it's that shipment of explosives waiting down the river which has
done most for you. Forty tons of dynamite have been your best
friend to-day, young man."
"That was true too, perhaps.
Anyway I saw clearly enough that I had nothing to thank myself for.
But as I tried to thank him, he checked my stammering.
"Don't be in a hurry to thank
me," says he. "The voyage isn't finished yet."
Our new acquaintance paused, then
added meditatively: "Queer man. As if it made any difference. Queer
man."
"It's certainly unwise to admit
any sort of responsibility for our actions, whose consequences we
are never able to foresee," remarked Marlow by way of assent.
"The consequence of his action
was that I got a ship," said the other. "That could not do much
harm," he added with a laugh which argued a probably unconscious
contempt of general ideas.
But Marlow was not put off. He
was patient and reflective. He had been at sea many years and I
verily believe he liked sea-life because upon the whole it is
favourable to reflection. I am speaking of the now nearly vanished
sea-life under sail. To those who may be surprised at the statement
I will point out that this life secured for the mind of him who
embraced it the inestimable advantages of solitude and silence.
Marlow had the habit of pursuing general ideas in a peculiar
manner, between jest and earnest.
"Oh, I wouldn't suggest," he
said, "that your namesake Mr. Powell, the Shipping Master, had done
you much harm. Such was hardly his intention. And even if it had
been he would not have had the power. He was but a man, and
the incapacity to achieve anything distinctly good or evil is
inherent in our earthly condition. Mediocrity is our mark. And
perhaps it's just as well, since, for the most part, we cannot be
certain of the effect of our actions."
"I don't know about the effect,"
the other stood up to Marlow manfully. "What effect did you expect
anyhow? I tell you he did something uncommonly kind."
"He did what he could," Marlow
retorted gently, "and on his own showing that was not a very great
deal. I cannot help thinking that there was some malice in the way
he seized the opportunity to serve you. He managed to make you
uncomfortable. You wanted to go to sea, but he jumped at the chance
of accommodating your desire with a vengeance. I am inclined to
think your cheek alarmed him. And this was an excellent occasion to
suppress you altogether. For if you accepted he was relieved of you
with every appearance of humanity, and if you made objections
(after requesting his assistance, mind you) it was open to him to
drop you as a sort of impostor. You might have had to decline
that berth for some very valid reason. From sheer necessity
perhaps. The notice was too uncommonly short. But under the
circumstances you'd have covered yourself with ignominy."
Our new friend knocked the ashes
out of his pipe.
"Quite a mistake," he said. "I am
not of the declining sort, though I'll admit it was something like
telling a man that you would like a bath and in consequence being
instantly knocked overboard to sink or swim with your clothes on.
However, I didn't feel as if I were in deep water at first. I left
the shipping office quietly and for a time strolled along the
street as easy as if I had a week before me to fit myself out. But
by and by I reflected that the notice was even shorter than it
looked. The afternoon was well advanced; I had some things to get,
a lot of small matters to attend to, one or two persons to see.
One of them was an aunt of mine, my only relation, who
quarrelled with poor father as long as he lived about some silly
matter that had neither right nor wrong to it. She left her money
to me when she died. I used always to go and see her for
decency's sake. I had so much to do before night that I didn't
know where to begin. I felt inclined to sit down on the kerb and
hold my head in my hands. It was as if an engine had been started
going under my skull. Finally I sat down in the first cab that came
along and it was a hard matter to keep on sitting there I can tell
you, while we rolled up and down the streets, pulling up here and
there, the parcels accumulating round me and the engine in my
head gathering more way every minute. The composure of the people
on the pavements was provoking to a
degree, and as to the people in
shops, they were benumbed, more than half frozen--imbecile. Funny
how it affects you to be in a peculiar state of mind: everybody
that does not act up to your excitement seems so confoundedly
unfriendly. And my state of mind what with the hurry, the worry and
a growing exultation was peculiar enough. That engine in my head
went round at its top speed hour after hour till eleven at about at
night it let up on me suddenly at the entrance to the Dock before
large iron gates in a dead wall."
* * * * *
These gates were closed and
locked. The cabby, after shooting his things off the roof of his
machine into young Powell's arms, drove away leaving him alone with
his sea-chest, a sail cloth bag and a few parcels on the pavement
about his feet. It was a dark, narrow thoroughfare he told us. A
mean row of houses on the other side looked empty: there wasn't the
smallest gleam of light in them. The white- hot glare of a gin
palace a good way off made the intervening piece of the street
pitch black. Some human shapes appearing mysteriously, as if they
had sprung up from the dark ground, shunned the edge of the faint
light thrown down by the gateway lamps. These figures were wary in
their movements and perfectly silent of foot, like beasts of prey
slinking about a camp fire. Powell gathered up his belongings and
hovered over them like a hen over her brood. A gruffly
insinuating voice said:
"Let's carry your things in,
Capt'in! I've got my pal 'ere."
He was a tall, bony, grey-haired
ruffian with a bulldog jaw, in a torn cotton shirt and moleskin
trousers. The shadow of his hobnailed boots was enormous and
coffinlike. His pal, who didn't come up much higher than his elbow,
stepping forward exhibited a pale face with a long drooping nose
and no chin to speak of. He seemed to have just scrambled out of a
dust-bin in a tam-o'shanter cap and a tattered soldier's coat much
too long for him. Being so deadly white he looked like a horrible
dirty invalid in a ragged dressing gown. The coat flapped open in
front and the rest of his apparel consisted of one brace which
crossed his naked, bony chest, and a pair of trousers. He blinked
rapidly as if dazed by the faint light, while his patron, the old
bandit, glowered at young Powell from under his beetling
brow.
"Say the word, Capt'in. The
bobby'll let us in all right. 'E knows both of us."
"I didn't answer him," continued
Mr. Powell. "I was listening to footsteps on the other side of the
gate, echoing between the walls of the warehouses as if in an
uninhabited town of very high buildings dark from basement to roof.
You could never have guessed that within a stone's throw there was
an open sheet of water
and big ships lying afloat. The
few gas lamps showing up a bit of brick work here and there,
appeared in the blackness like penny dips in a range of
cellars--and the solitary footsteps came on, tramp, tramp. A dock
policeman strode into the light on the other side of the gate, very
broad-chested and stern.
"Hallo! What's up here?"
"He was really surprised, but
after some palaver he let me in together with the two loafers
carrying my luggage. He grumbled at them however and slammed the
gate violently with a loud clang. I was startled to discover how
many night prowlers had collected in the darkness of the street in
such a short time and without my being aware of it. Directly we
were through they came surging against the bars, silent, like a mob
of ugly spectres. But suddenly, up the street somewhere, perhaps
near that public-house, a row started as if Bedlam had broken
loose: shouts, yells, an awful shrill shriek--and at that noise all
these heads vanished from behind the bars.
"Look at this," marvelled the
constable. "It's a wonder to me they didn't make off with your
things while you were waiting."
"I would have taken good care of
that," I said defiantly. But the constable wasn't impressed.
"Much you would have done. The
bag going off round one dark corner; the chest round another. Would
you have run two ways at once? And anyhow you'd have been tripped
up and jumped upon before you had run three yards. I tell you
you've had a most extraordinary chance that there wasn't one of
them regular boys about to-night, in the High Street, to twig your
loaded cab go by. Ted here is honest . . . You are on the honest
lay, Ted, ain't you?"
"Always was, orficer," said the
big ruffian with feeling. The other frail creature seemed dumb and
only hopped about with the edge of its soldier coat touching the
ground.
"Oh yes, I dare say," said the
constable. "Now then, forward, march . . . He's that because he
ain't game for the other thing," he confided to me. "He hasn't got
the nerve for it. However, I ain't going to lose sight of them two
till they go out through the gate. That little chap's a devil. He's
got the nerve for anything, only he hasn't got the muscle. Well!
Well! You've had a chance to get in with a whole skin and with all
your things."
"I was incredulous a little. It
seemed impossible that after getting ready with so much hurry and
inconvenience I should have lost my chance of a start in life
from such a cause. I asked:
"Does that sort of thing happen
often so near the dock gates?"
"Often! No! Of course not often.
But it ain't often either that a man comes along with a cabload of
things to join a ship at this time of night. I've been in the dock
police thirteen years and haven't seen it done once."
"Meantime we followed my
sea-chest which was being carried down a sort of deep narrow lane,
separating two high warehouses, between honest Ted and his little
devil of a pal who had to keep up a trot to the other's stride. The
skirt of his soldier's coat floating behind him nearly swept the
ground so that he seemed to be running on castors. At the corner
of the gloomy passage a rigged jib boom with a dolphin-striker
ending in an arrow-head stuck out of the night close to a cast iron
lamp-post. It was the quay side. They set down their load in the
light and honest Ted asked hoarsely:
"Where's your ship,
guv'nor?"
"I didn't know. The constable was
interested at my ignorance.
"Don't know where your ship is?"
he asked with curiosity. "And you the second officer! Haven't you
been working on board of her?"
"I couldn't explain that the only
work connected with my appointment was the work of chance. I told
him briefly that I didn't know her at all. At this he
remarked:
"So I see. Here she is, right
before you. That's her."
"At once the head-gear in the gas
light inspired me with interest and respect; the spars were big,
the chains and ropes stout and the whole thing looked powerful and
trustworthy. Barely touched by the light her bows rose faintly
alongside the narrow strip of the quay; the rest of her was a black
smudge in the darkness.
Here I was face to face with my
start in life. We walked in a body a few steps on a greasy pavement
between her side and the towering wall of a warehouse and I hit my
shins cruelly against the end of the gangway. The constable
hailed her quietly in a bass undertone 'Ferndale there!' A feeble
and dismal sound, something in the nature of a buzzing groan,
answered from behind the bulwarks.
"I distinguished vaguely an
irregular round knob, of wood, perhaps, resting on the rail. It did
not move in the least; but as another broken- down buzz like a
still fainter echo of the first dismal sound proceeded from it I
concluded it must
be the head of the ship-keeper.
The stalwart constable jeered in a mock-official manner.
"Second officer coming to join.
Move yourself a bit."
"The truth of the statement
touched me in the pit of the stomach (you know that's the spot
where emotion gets home on a man) for it was borne upon me that
really and truly I was nothing but a second officer of a ship just
like any other second officer, to that constable. I was moved by
this solid evidence of my new dignity.
Only his tone offended me.
Nevertheless I gave him the tip he was looking for. Thereupon he
lost all interest in me, humorous or otherwise, and walked away
driving sternly before him the honest Ted, who went off grumbling
to himself like a hungry ogre, and his horrible dumb little pal in
the soldier's coat, who, from first to last, never emitted the
slightest sound.
"It was very dark on the quarter
deck of the Ferndale between the deep bulwarks overshadowed by the
break of the poop and frowned upon by the front of the warehouse.
I plumped down on to my chest near the after hatch as if my legs
had been jerked from under me. I felt suddenly very tired and
languid. The ship- keeper, whom I could hardly make out hung over
the capstan in a fit of weak pitiful coughing. He gasped out
very low 'Oh! dear! Oh! dear!' and struggled for breath so long
that I got up alarmed and irresolute.
"I've been took like this since
last Christmas twelvemonth. It ain't nothing."
"He seemed a hundred years old at
least. I never saw him properly because he was gone ashore and out
of sight when I came on deck in the morning; but he gave me the
notion of the feeblest creature that ever breathed. His voice was
thin like the buzzing of a mosquito. As it would have been cruel to
demand assistance from such a shadowy wreck I went to work myself,
dragging my chest along a pitch-black passage under the poop deck,
while he sighed and moaned around me as if my exertions were more
than his weakness could stand. At last as I banged pretty heavily
against the bulkheads he warned me in his faint breathless wheeze
to be more careful.
"What's the matter?" I asked
rather roughly, not relishing to be admonished by this forlorn
broken-down ghost.
"Nothing! Nothing, sir," he
protested so hastily that he lost his poor breath again and I felt
sorry for him. "Only the captain and his missus are sleeping on
board. She's a lady that mustn't be disturbed. They came about
half-past eight, and we had a permit to have lights in the cabin
till ten to-night."
"This struck me as a considerable
piece of news. I had never been in a ship where the captain
had his wife with him. I'd heard fellows say that captains'
wives could work a lot of mischief on board ship if they happened
to take a dislike to anyone; especially the new wives if young and
pretty. The old and experienced wives on the other hand fancied
they knew more about the ship than the skipper himself and had an
eye like a hawk's for what went on. They were like an extra chief
mate of a particularly sharp and unfeeling sort who made his report
in the evening. The best of them were a nuisance. In the general
opinion a skipper with his wife on board was more difficult to
please; but whether to show off his authority before an admiring
female or from loving anxiety for her safety or simply from
irritation at her presence--nobody I ever heard on the subject
could tell for certain.
"After I had bundled in my things
somehow I struck a match and had a dazzling glimpse of my berth;
then I pitched the roll of my bedding into the bunk but took no
trouble to spread it out. I wasn't sleepy now, neither was I tired.
And the thought that I was done with the earth for many many months
to come made me feel very quiet and self-contained as it were.
Sailors will understand what I mean."
Marlow nodded. "It is a strictly
professional feeling," he commented. "But other professions or
trades know nothing of it. It is only this calling whose primary
appeal lies in the suggestion of restless adventure which holds out
that deep sensation to those who embrace it. It is difficult to
define, I admit."
"I should call it the peace of
the sea," said Mr. Charles Powell in an earnest tone but looking at
us as though he expected to be met by a laugh of derision and were
half prepared to salve his reputation for common sense by joining
in it. But neither of us laughed at Mr. Charles Powell in whose
start in life we had been called to take a part. He was lucky in
his audience.
"A very good name," said Marlow
looking at him approvingly. "A sailor finds a deep feeling of
security in the exercise of his calling. The exacting life of the
sea has this advantage over the life of the earth that its claims
are simple and cannot be evaded."
"Gospel truth," assented Mr.
Powell. "No! they cannot be evaded."
That an excellent understanding
should have established itself between my old friend and our new
acquaintance was remarkable enough. For they were exactly
dissimilar--one individuality projecting itself in length and the
other in breadth, which is already a sufficient ground for
irreconcilable difference. Marlow who was lanky, loose, quietly
composed in varied shades of brown robbed of every
vestige of gloss, had a narrow,
veiled glance, the neutral bearing and the secret irritability
which go together with a predisposition to congestion of the liver.
The other, compact, broad and sturdy of limb, seemed extremely full
of sound organs functioning vigorously all the time in order to
keep up the brilliance of his colouring, the light curl of his
coal-black hair and the lustre of his eyes, which asserted
themselves roundly in an open, manly face. Between two such
organisms one would not have expected to find the slightest
temperamental accord. But I have observed that profane men living
in ships like the holy men gathered together in monasteries develop
traits of profound resemblance. This must be because the service of
the sea and the service of a temple are both detached from the
vanities and errors of a world which follows no severe rule.
The men of the sea understand
each other very well in their view of earthly things, for
simplicity is a good counsellor and isolation not a bad educator.
A turn of mind composed of innocence and scepticism is common to
them all, with the addition of an unexpected insight into motives,
as of disinterested lookers-on at a game. Mr. Powell took me aside
to say,
"I like the things he
says."
"You understand each other pretty
well," I observed.
"I know his sort," said Powell,
going to the window to look at his cutter still riding to the
flood. "He's the sort that's always chasing some notion or other
round and round his head just for the fun of the thing."
"Keeps them in good condition," I
said. "Lively enough I dare say," he admitted.
"Would you like better a man who
let his notions lie curled up?"
"That I wouldn't," answered our
new acquaintance. Clearly he was not difficult to get on with. "I
like him, very well," he continued, "though it isn't easy to make
him out. He seems to be up to a thing or two. What's he
doing?"
I informed him that our friend
Marlow had retired from the sea in a sort of half- hearted fashion
some years ago.
Mr. Powell's comment was:
"Fancied had enough of it?"
"Fancied's the very word to use
in this connection," I observed, remembering the subtly provisional
character of Marlow's long sojourn amongst us. From year to year he
dwelt on land as a bird rests on the branch of a tree, so tense
with the
power of brusque flight into its
true element that it is incomprehensible why it should sit still
minute after minute. The sea is the sailor's true element, and
Marlow, lingering on shore, was to me an object of incredulous
commiseration like a bird, which, secretly, should have lost its
faith in the high virtue of flying.
CHAPTER TWO--THE FYNES AND THE
GIRL-FRIEND
We were on our feet in the room
by then, and Marlow, brown and deliberate, approached the window
where Mr. Powell and I had retired. "What was the name of your
chance again?" he asked. Mr. Powell stared for a moment.
"Oh! The Ferndale. A Liverpool
ship. Composite built." "Ferndale," repeated Marlow thoughtfully.
"Ferndale." "Know her?"
"Our friend," I said, "knows
something of every ship. He seems to have gone about the seas
prying into things considerably."
Marlow smiled.
"I've seen her, at least
once."
"The finest sea-boat ever
launched," declared Mr. Powell sturdily. "Without exception."
"She looked a stout, comfortable
ship," assented Marlow. "Uncommonly comfortable. Not very fast
tho'."
"She was fast enough for any
reasonable man--when I was in her," growled Mr. Powell with his
back to us.
"Any ship is that--for a
reasonable man," generalized Marlow in a conciliatory tone. "A
sailor isn't a globe-trotter."
"No," muttered Mr. Powell.
"Time's nothing to him," advanced
Marlow.
"I don't suppose it's much," said
Mr. Powell. "All the same a quick passage is a feather in a man's
cap."
"True. But that ornament is for
the use of the master only. And by the by what was his name?"
"The master of the Ferndale?
Anthony. Captain Anthony."
"Just so. Quite right," approved
Marlow thoughtfully. Our new acquaintance looked over his
shoulder.
"What do you mean? Why is it more
right than if it had been Brown?"
"He has known him probably," I
explained. "Marlow here appears to know something of every soul
that ever went afloat in a sailor's body."
Mr. Powell seemed wonderfully
amenable to verbal suggestions for looking again out of the window,
he muttered:
"He was a good soul."
This clearly referred to Captain
Anthony of the Ferndale. Marlow addressed his protest to me.
"I did not know him. I really
didn't. He was a good soul. That's nothing very much out of the
way--is it? And I didn't even know that much of him. All I knew of
him was an accident called Fyne.
At this Mr. Powell who evidently
could be rebellious too turned his back squarely on the
window.
"What on earth do you mean?" he
asked. "An--accident--called Fyne," he repeated separating the
words with emphasis.
Marlow was not
disconcerted.
"I don't mean accident in the
sense of a mishap. Not in the least. Fyne was a good little man in
the Civil Service. By accident I mean that which happens blindly
and without intelligent design. That's generally the way a
brother-in-law happens into a man's life."
Marlow's tone being apologetic
and our new acquaintance having again turned to the window I took
it upon myself to say:
"You are justified. There is very
little intelligent design in the majority of marriages; but they
are none the worse for that. Intelligence leads people astray as
far as passion sometimes. I know you are not a cynic."
Marlow smiled his retrospective
smile which was kind as though he bore no
grudge against people he used to
know.
"Little Fyne's marriage was quite
successful. There was no design at all in it. Fyne, you must
know, was an enthusiastic pedestrian. He spent his holidays
tramping all over our native land. His tastes were simple. He put
infinite conviction and perseverance into his holidays. At the
proper season you would meet in the fields, Fyne, a
serious-faced, broad- chested, little man, with a shabby
knap-sack on his back, making for some church steeple. He had a
horror of roads. He wrote once a little book called the 'Tramp's
Itinerary,' and was recognised as an authority on the footpaths of
England. So one year, in his favourite over-the-fields, back-way
fashion he entered a pretty Surrey village where he met Miss
Anthony. Pure accident, you see. They came to an understanding,
across some stile, most likely. Little Fyne held very solemn views
as to the destiny of women on this earth, the nature of our
sublunary love, the obligations of this transient life and so on.
He probably disclosed them to his future wife. Miss Anthony's
views of life were very decided too but in a different way. I don't
know the story of their wooing. I imagine it was carried on
clandestinely and, I am certain, with portentous gravity, at the
back of copses, behind hedges . . .
"Why was it carried on
clandestinely?" I inquired.
"Because of the lady's father. He
was a savage sentimentalist who had his own decided views of his
paternal prerogatives. He was a terror; but the only evidence of
imaginative faculty about Fyne was his pride in his wife's
parentage. It stimulated his ingenuity too. Difficult--is it
not?--to introduce one's wife's maiden name into general
conversation. But my simple Fyne made use of Captain Anthony
for that purpose, or else I would never even have heard of the man.
"My wife's sailor-brother" was the phrase. He trotted out the
sailor-brother in a pretty wide range of subjects: Indian and
colonial affairs, matters of trade, talk of travels, of
seaside holidays and so on. Once I remember "My wife's
sailor-brother Captain Anthony" being produced in connection with
nothing less recondite than a sunset. And little Fyne never failed
to add "The son of Carleon Anthony, the poet--you know." He used to
lower his voice for that statement, and people were impressed or
pretended to be."
The late Carleon Anthony, the
poet, sang in his time of the domestic and social amenities of our
age with a most felicitous versification, his object being, in his
own words, "to glorify the result of six thousand years' evolution
towards the refinement of thought, manners and feelings." Why he
fixed the term at six thousand years I don't know. His poems read
like sentimental novels told in verse of a really superior quality.
You felt as if you were being taken out for a delightful country
drive by a charming lady in a pony carriage. But in his
domestic life that same Carleon
Anthony showed traces of the primitive cave- dweller's temperament.
He was a massive, implacable man with a handsome face,
arbitrary and exacting with his dependants, but marvellously suave
in his manner to admiring strangers. These contrasted displays must
have been particularly exasperating to his long-suffering family.
After his second wife's death his boy, whom he persisted by a mere
whim in educating at home, ran away in conventional style and,
as if disgusted with the amenities of civilization, threw himself,
figuratively speaking, into the sea. The daughter (the elder of the
two children) either from compassion or because women are naturally
more enduring, remained in bondage to the poet for several years,
till she too seized a chance of escape by throwing herself into the
arms, the muscular arms, of the pedestrian Fyne. This was either
great luck or great sagacity. A civil servant is, I should imagine,
the last human being in the world to preserve those traits of the
cave-dweller from which she was fleeing. Her father would never
consent to see her after the marriage. Such unforgiving selfishness
is difficult to understand unless as a perverse sort of
refinement. There were also doubts as to Carleon Anthony's complete
sanity for some considerable time before he died.
Most of the above I elicited from
Marlow, for all I knew of Carleon Anthony was his unexciting but
fascinating verse. Marlow assured me that the Fyne marriage was
perfectly successful and even happy, in an earnest, unplayful
fashion, being blessed besides by three healthy, active, self-
reliant children, all girls. They were all pedestrians too. Even
the youngest would wander away for miles if not restrained. Mrs.
Fyne had a ruddy out-of-doors complexion and wore blouses with
a starched front like a man's shirt, a stand-up collar and a long
necktie.
Marlow had made their
acquaintance one summer in the country, where they were accustomed
to take a cottage for the holidays . . .